Wednesday, August 20, 2014

TOP TEN SIMPLE SECRETS OF MILLONAIRES



TOP SIMPLE SECRET OF MILLIONAIRES
1.The biggest secret is to be smart with your money. Invest for the future!!! The other big one comes as brains. They know how to use their money to make more money, and can get the amazing jobs with the big salaries. They are the ones who start the businesses, not work within them 0 this is the ONLY way (other than being a really big CEO) to earn money in business...

They have good business acumen, they naturally think this way. And some of them had these people as parents, grandparents etc...

2.   Most of them, upward of 90% I'd say, started out with enough of a money advantage to get more money. The possession of wealth is a decisive advantage in the pursuit of more wealth. The hereditary virtues of strength, dexterity, and intelligence aren't without some effect, of course, but their influence is like a dwarf beside a giant called "Prior Possession of Wealth."

The simple fact is this: money empowers because it can buy exosomatic (outside the body) energy resources, or tools that require much energy to make. Successful people want you to believe that their success is the result of their cleverness, or their decisiveness, or some other trait of mind or character. Nonsense. What enables rich people is their money-privileged access to fossil fuels. As long as there's gasoline to buy, rich men can pretend that the power of gasoline burning engines is power inherent in them as men. No one without money-privileged access to fossil fuels can compete against those who do.

When fossil fuels are depleted, the capitalist's delusion of inherent competence will be dispelled. The lumberjack will know himself stronger than the owner of the bulldozer. The engineer will again know that he is smarter than the company executive who once bossed him. And the banker will understand, at long last, that he is worthless.

Rich people admire  Ayn Rand's ideas because they flatter them, not because they are really as incisive as they were meant to sound.

3.  it's a combination of developing some skill that is valuable to society, and thus being well compensated -- whether as a high-paid surgeon or executive, or as a small business "capitalist" -- and then not be so stupid with your money that you squander it.

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