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In the past, slavery was physical, but now it's debt slavery where money must be paid back with interest. Pareto's principle, originating in Italy, shows that 80% of land is owned by 20% of families. Modern banking began in Italy with gold exchanged for notes by the Jewish population. The formula "time times compound interest equals power" emphasizes the power of compounding numbers over time. Investing for 30 years with compounding numbers can lead to significant growth.

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Speaker 0: The Israelites is not Israel. And as Tony and I are both Catholic, and so when we talk about the Israelites that are talked about in the Bible, there is a clear distinction between this prophecy about the Israelites and the government of Israel and white Europeans settling into the holy land. Mhmm. And so when we say this, like, the Israelites, the Israelites in the bible are actually the Palestinian people who have been there for thousands of years, not the white European from Ukraine or Poland or America. The Israelites are the people who were indigenous to that land that lived there for thousands of years, and those are not the people who have Trump wrapped around his finger. It's this, like, settler colonial white Europeans that have settled into the land of the actual Israelites that have either blackmailed him or cut deals with him financially. I mean, we go back to greed. Right? Greed is always, like, a big factor decisions. So Trump, in all senses, is wrapped in intertwined with this government and the Zionist regime and the Rothschilds and the Vanderbilts and the 13 rich families that control the world, basically. Right.

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In this interview, Donald Trump discusses his popularity and wealth. He claims that most people love him and he speaks his mind. When asked about his net worth, he says he has no idea but suggests that each person in the audience could be worth $1 million. He owns four casinos and believes real estate brings in more money than the casinos. Trump refuses to disclose his wealth but hints that he could be worth $1 billion. He talks about his childhood and how he enjoys what he does. He criticizes New York City Mayor Ed Koch for his incompetence and mismanagement. Trump also expresses his frustration with other countries taking advantage of the United States. He mentions that he may not run for president but believes someone needs to address these issues.

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Speaker: The thing that makes the current system what they would call slavery is debt-based and secrecy. And the failure of their elected representatives to require, you know, to get obey the law. So you have lawlessness, you have debt-based, and you have secrecy. The problem is not that the currency is fiat. Because if you go back through history, if you read Alexander Del Mar, the most effective currencies in the world are fiat currencies that are well governed. We have a debt-based fiat currency that is not well governed in my opinion, but it could be. Now remember, there has been almost no support in the general population for managing it responsibly. Everybody was like, no. Don’t manage it responsibly. Get me my check. And if that means you’re irresponsible, that’s okay. I want my check. But you are not gonna fix this situation by going to gold and silver. You’re gonna make it much worse. Because while we’ve done this sort of hear no evil, see no evil, you know, speak no evil for thirty years, the central bankers have accumulated all the gold. So now that they have all the gold, you’re gonna tell me we’re gonna go to a gold system? Are you out of your mind? Because now they’ve got the gold. And if you start a gold transaction system, now you need gold from them, and they’ve got you over a barrel. Right? And what are you gonna do to get gold? You’re gonna have to sell your land. You’re gonna have to sell your kids. You’re gonna have to sell real assets to get their gold. Right? Why would you do that? Why would you create, you know, you’re dependent on your enemy now. You’re gonna increase your dependency on your enemy now? You’re out of your mind. Okay. That’s not a sound money system, especially because they wanna make it digital. And so they’re gonna have fiat gold, which is even— I mean, if you think fiat is bad, where do you see fiat gold when they own all the gold? So, what we want is we want a fiat system, and we want it with, you know, lawful and no secrecy or minimal secrecy. You’re gonna have to have some secrecy and a good governance system. Can we get there? Of course, we can get there. But we can’t get there if you have an entire population that is absolutely committed to corrupt short-term behavior.

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In 1990, Donald Trump faced a crisis with $3.4 billion in debt, $830 million of which he personally guaranteed, risking personal bankruptcy during a recession worse than the 2008 downturn. He restructured his debt with banks, agreeing to sell assets, which he found embarrassing, especially having to accept a $450,000 monthly allowance. The New Jersey Attorney General's Office found Trump's financial arrangements in Atlantic City so complex that they remained difficult to understand even years later; Trump intentionally managed information to maintain control. Contractors on projects like the Taj Mahal did not receive full payment in bankruptcy, which Trump justified as standard practice after they had already made substantial money. Trump ultimately became debt-free. While his deal-making skills and personal influence on real estate values played a role, he also employed a unique business style, prioritizing his own interests over fully repaying debts, especially during financial difficulties.

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The speaker owns 12,000 rental units acquired through debt, stating that more debt leads to more property and less tax. They believe paying taxes is a Marxist idea and against American principles. According to the speaker, Marx considered a progressive income tax essential for spreading communism. They claim America was founded as a tax-free nation until the creation of the Federal Reserve and the IRS in 1913. They assert that they legally pay no taxes, while those who work harder pay higher taxes, which they equate to communism. The speaker concludes it's an American duty not to pay taxes, citing the Communist Manifesto.

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The financial system is the main problem, creating debt and control. Mortgages symbolize this control, where banks own your home until paid off. The system benefits a small group who manipulate finance to gain power. Money is used to buy influence and control everything.

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Here's the ultimate tax loophole the rich exploit to live tax free. It's called Buy Borrow Die. Step one, buy appreciating assets—"Typically, they look at the stock market." Step two, borrow—"You use your portfolio as collateral and you take a loan out against it." They avoid selling because "there's no tax implication" on loans, while selling would incur capital gains tax. If the portfolio appreciates faster than the loan's interest, they could "take out another loan to pay back the old one and rinse and repeat." Step three: after death, they can "take their entire portfolio that's been appreciating for decades, pass it off to the heirs at a stepped up basis, and then the cycle can start anew." "Be sure to keep following for more money saving tax hacks."

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The financial system is the "head of the snake" and its purpose is to enslave through debt. A mortgage is a "death grip," as the bank owns the house until the mortgage is paid. Even buying a house outright does not guarantee ownership due to government taxes. The system is based on financial fraud, which takes power and gives it to a small group who control the world through finance. This group has an infinite supply of money and has used it to buy everything and everyone who can be bought.

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"Cool thing about how The US tax code works is that loans are never treated as income, but they are spendable money that you can consume and use." "And I can use those loans to live my life." "These are the strategies of the people who are ultra wealthy." "Either way, those loans are not a taxable event, and you can use them to further expand your business." "So this is an amazing strategy you can use to avoid the tax man and grow your business at the same time." "And when I die, they can they can rectify my account."

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Donald Trump is facing a case in New York where he is accused of inflating property values to get better loan terms. However, a Deutsche Bank executive testified that it is common for clients to overstate their net worth and that the bank does its own due diligence. Another executive stated that the bank has benefited from its business relationship with Trump and wants to continue it. This contradicts the civil fraud case against Trump. The executive also mentioned that no one was harmed by the alleged overestimates of Trump's worth. This situation is getting more intense.

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The US government prints its own money, so why borrow in the same currency? Confusion arises from the language and concepts surrounding this. The government prints money and sells bonds to borrow. This process leads to debt and deficit discussions.

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A thousand years after the death of Christ, money changers, those who loan out and manipulate the quantity of money, were active in medieval England. They were not bankers per se; the money changers generally were the goldsmiths. They were the first bankers because they started keeping other people's gold for safekeeping in their vaults. The first paper money was merely a receipt for gold left at the goldsmith. Paper money caught on because it was more convenient than carrying around a lot of heavy gold and silver coins. Eventually, goldsmiths noticed that only a small fraction of the depositors ever came in and demanded their gold at any one time. Goldsmiths started cheating on the system. They discovered that they could print more money than they had gold, and usually, no one would be the wiser. Then they could loan out this extra money and collect interest on it. This was the birth of fractional reserve banking, that is, loaning out many times more money than you have assets on deposit. So, if a thousand dollars in gold were deposited with them, they could loan out about $10,000 in paper money and draw interest payments on it, and no one would ever discover the deception. By this means, goldsmiths gradually accumulated more and more wealth and used this wealth to accumulate more and more gold. Today, this practice of loaning out more money than there are reserves is known as fractional reserve banking. Every bank in The United States is allowed to loan out at least 10 times more money than they actually have. That's why they get rich on charging, let's say, 8% interest. It's not really 8% per year, which is their income. It's 80%. That's why bank buildings are always the largest in town. But does that mean that all interest or all banking should be illegal? Hardly. In the Middle Ages, canon law, the law of the Catholic Church, forbade charging interest on loans. This concept followed the teachings of Aristotle and St. Thomas Aquinas. They taught that the purpose of money was to serve the members of society to facilitate the exchange of goods needed to lead a virtuous life. Interest, in their belief, hindered this purpose by putting an unnecessary burden on the use of money. In other words, interest was contrary to reason and justice. Reflecting Church law in the Middle Ages, Europe forbade charging interest on loans and made it a crime called usury. As commerce grew, and therefore opportunities for investment arose in the late Middle Ages, it came to be recognized that to loan money had a cost for the lender, both in risk and in lost opportunity. So some charges were allowed, but not interest per se. But all moralists, no matter what religion, condemn fraud, oppression of the poor, and injustice is clearly immoral. As we will see, fractional reserve lending is rooted in a fraud, results in widespread poverty, and reduces the value of everyone else's money. The ancient goldsmiths discovered that extra profits could be made by rowing the economy between easy money and tight money. When they made money easier to borrow, then the amount of money in circulation expanded. Money was plentiful. People took out more loans to expand their businesses. But then, the money changers would tighten the money supply. They would make loans more difficult to get. What would happen? Just what happens today. A certain percentage of people could not repay their previous loans and could not take out new loans to repay the old ones. Therefore, they went bankrupt and had to sell their assets to the goldsmiths for pennies on the dollar. The same thing is still going on today. Only today, we call this rowing of the economy up and down the business cycle. Like Julius Caesar, King Henry the first

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In New York, Donald Trump was ordered to pay $350 million for taking loans for real estate deals, not fraud. Kevin O'Leary explains that developers often borrow based on inflated property values, a common practice. The banks involved were satisfied, but New York still penalized Trump. The issue isn't about Trump but the system's integrity being jeopardized for political gain.

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I became rich by investing wisely and keeping money circulating. Stagnant money is useless. Investing in a corporation requires understanding financial reports. After investing, there is a consultation fee. Money should always be put to work to grow. Investing wisely is an art that stimulates the economy.

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The financial system is the main source of control in the world. It doesn't matter who we think runs the world, what matters is the mechanism used to exert control, which is finance. Finance is designed to put people in debt and enslave them. For example, a mortgage is a death grip because it means you don't really own your house, the bank does. Even if you own your house outright, the government can still tax you and take it away if you can't pay. This system gives a small group of individuals infinite power and they have used their money to buy everything and everyone they can.

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Speaker 0: So who are the people that actually get to be inflation? Well, they're the ones that are climbing up the network. They're the compromised ones. Why? What do they get? They get 0% money. The most corrupt money in the world is quantitative easing. Right? You essentially get the banks to buy the government's debt, and then central banks, put it on their balance sheet. So this is just pure corruption. This is below interest money. What about the banks? They get to create it for free. You know, they actually get to create it. They get a thousand decks on you you're paying 10%. They get they get to lever that up a 100 times. They get a thousand percent. And remember, this is all a debt based Ponzi scheme. The money to pay the interest doesn't exist, so you gotta find another person to take on the debt. You're either if you have a positive money in your in your bank balance, it's because somebody else is in debt. The money doesn't exist unless somebody else is in debt, and the money to pay the interest doesn't exist. So we create this economic environment where your money is continually being debased, and then you need to speculate in order to beat inflation. Now if you do a bit of speculation and you just invest some of your money in stocks, what happens? You're suddenly like, I don't know what stock to buy. I'm I'm not a professional trader. So there's a company out there, BlackRock, that will just buy all the stocks for me, and I just can give them a £100 a month or something. And, now I don't need to figure out what stock to buy. Okay. So now BlackRock is taking everyone's investment money that can't be bothered to figure out what stock through ETFs and index ones. Then they're taking everyone's pension. Then they're taking everyone's insurance contributions because you're trying to hedge some of the risk. And then when you get your house, you have to have insurance. And so where did BlackRock and all the asset managers in this financial industrial complex get all the money? It's your money. You paid for it. So then what do they do? Well, the banks create all of these. They they create new money every time they issue a mortgage. And then they say, do you know what? I don't even wanna take the risk of these mortgages anymore. What if can I just package it up and give it to someone else? So Larry Fink says, yeah. I've got all this money. All these people are putting these pension money in. Why don't we create something called a mortgage backed security? Let's package up all of these mortgages. Just put them into one product. And then what I can do is we can slap a credit rating on it. And if everyone complies, then they get this credit rating. Credit rating is not it's about compliance with the network. So now you've got all the banks are creating the money, and then they create these mortgage backed securities that allows them to control effectively all the real estate and transfer it. But who do they sell it to? They sell it to you. And so they created the money. They created the mortgage backed security, and then they sold it to your pension. So you paid for the very system for them to get the 0% money in the first place, and they're charging a fee for it. And what else do they get? They get a board seat on every company.

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When the economy and the real estate market plummeted in 1990, attorney Alan Pomerantz says Trump owed $4,000,000,000 to his debtors, including that billion dollars for which he was personally responsible. Because he personally guaranteed so much debt, the leverage shifted dramatically over to the banks because it was no longer an issue of a bank and a piece of real estate. It was a bank and Donald Trump's actual survival. Trump owed money all over town to 72 banks in all. Pomerantz represented them as a group. How close was he to going personally bankrupt? Very. Trump makes a point of saying he never went personally bankrupt, but there's a reason why the banks decided to keep Trump whole. We made the decision that he would be worth more alive to us than dead. Dead meaning in bankruptcy. Bankruptcy. We want him out in the world selling these assets for us. So you wanted him alive because he was a salesman and could best sell his own properties? That's correct. We kept him alive to help us.

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During the 1990 downturn, attorney Alan Pomerantz says Trump owed $4,000,000,000 to his debtors, including that billion dollars for which he was personally responsible. Trump owed money all over town to 72 banks in all, and Pomerantz represented them as a group. How close was he to going personally bankrupt? Very. The banks decided to keep Trump whole, "We made the decision that he would be worth more alive to us than dead. Dead meaning in bankruptcy. We want him out in the world selling these assets for us." So you wanted him alive because he was a salesman and could best sell his own properties? "That's correct. We kept him alive to help us."

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In this video, the speaker discusses a case involving real estate development. They explain that developers often borrow money from banks based on the value of their existing assets. The case in question is similar to what happens in real estate development everywhere. The speaker argues that if this case is successful, it would set a precedent that could affect all real estate developers. They believe that the case doesn't make sense and is ridiculous. The speaker acknowledges that while Trump has other legal issues, this case is not unique to him.

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Jeff: Gold is not a monetary instrument the way people often think. It’s actually easy to understand once you move away from the idea that gold is tied to dollar inflation. Gold is simply a portfolio asset, a store of value, and the preeminent safe haven store value. Gold doesn’t compete with the dollar; it competes with the stock market or risky credit markets. The notion of “de-dollarization” largely comes from political context rather than monetary mechanics. Mario: So gold prices rising—how should we think about that trade? Jeff: Gold tends to go up when people are concerned about risky assets because it’s a safe haven. It performed poorly as an inflation hedge in 2021–2022 when the economy seemed to recover and policymakers seemed to have hit the right policy mix. Now, with conditions leaning toward an economic downturn and “Nvidia AI stocks” looking bubbly, gold has revived as a safe haven. The last two months reflect the factors I’ve cited being priced into the gold market. Mario: People talk about the death of the US dollar. Is gold not tied to that? Jeff: They’ve been talking about de-dollarization for twenty years. The dollar remains dominant because there is no replacement for its functions; replacing it would be like recreating the Internet from scratch. The Eurodollar system grew because it could meet many needs in a flexible way, including for asset-holders who want to keep things in US-dollar terms. If you’re trying to hide assets, you keep them in US-dollar terms, and there are places to do so. Mario: The dollar’s share of foreign reserves has fallen from 72% to 58% in recent years. Doesn’t that show a shift away from the dollar? Jeff: That drop isn’t necessarily meaningful for reserve mechanics. What matters is the level of settlement and payments, which are still 90% in US dollars. The yuan is rising in FX settlements, but it’s not replacing the dollar; it’s competing with other currencies on the other side of the dollar. The dollar is as dominant as ever, and there’s no easy replacement because you’d have to replace all its functions. Replacing the dollar network would be like recreating the Internet—massive, complex, and gradual. Mario: What about the Eurodollar market itself? How big is it? Jeff: Nobody knows. It’s offshore, regulatory offshore, with little reporting; it’s a black hole. Eurodollars are “numbers on a screen,” ledger money, not physical dollars. The Eurodollar system lets money move quickly worldwide through bank-ledger networks, integrating various ledgers. It’s the global settlement mechanism, and its size is effectively unknowable, yet it’s the currency the world uses. Mario: Why do central banks buy gold now, especially China? Jeff: Gold is a portfolio asset, a diversification tool. Central banks must diversify reserves; they still need some US Treasuries for the eurodollar system, but gold helps balance risk. In China’s case, gold supports yuan stability and diversifies reserves beyond US assets. Mario: What happens if a conflict with China disrupts the system? What replaces the dollar or the eurodollar plumbing? Jeff: It’s the great unknown. If there’s a real shooting war, China could be cut off by many, and the dollar system would shrink to those willing to participate. The eurodollar would strengthen as a settlement medium, though with a smaller global footprint. The idea of replacing the eurodollar with a Chinese-led system is unlikely; gold’s role in cross-border settlement remains limited, and gold alone isn’t a reliable settlement instrument. Mario: Is China building a “gold corridor” to decouple from the dollar? Jeff: The gold corridor theory reflects ongoing speculation. There have been many schemes—Petro-dollar, digital currencies, Belt and Road—that have not proven game-changing in defeating the dollar system. Gold in that context is not a robust settlement mechanism across geographies; the eurodollar system arose to move away from gold settlement. Mario: Why are people hoarding gold? How does the US debt situation affect the dollar’s safety? Jeff: US debt is a concern, but safety and liquidity demand still drives demand for government debt, not gold. Gold is safe but illiquid as collateral; liquidity is why Treasuries remain central. The debt grows, but the treasury market has remained robust because it’s the deepest market and the safest liquid asset. The larger risk lies in the federal government's expanding footprint and the potential debt trap, where stimulus doesn’t spur growth and leads to rising debt. Mario: What about Bitcoin as a store of value? And how about Russia? Jeff: Bitcoin behaves like a Nasdaq stock—more of a store of value tied to tech equities than a broad currency. It’s not likely to become a widespread medium of exchange. Russia remains connected to the US system; it’s less about the Russian economy collapsing and more about how energy and sanctions interact. The eurodollar system has kept Russia afloat through channels like the UAE, and it’s unlikely that Russia’s fate hinges on a single currency shift. Mario: Will the US empire fall or evolve into a multipolar world? Jeff: Likely a multipolar world, not a complete fall of the US empire. I’m long-term optimistic on the US and global economy. The eurodollar system could slowly be replaced by private digital currencies, with stablecoins evolving toward independence. The transition would be gradual, with multiple private digital currencies emerging, while the eurodollar would persist in a rump form if needed.

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In Atlantic City, Donald Trump acquired three casinos. Despite the risk of overexpansion, he continued to build and enlarge his brand, attracting numerous banks. By the time the banks realized he was nearly a billion dollars in debt, he had become too big to foreclose on.

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The financial system is the "head of the snake" and its purpose is to enslave through debt. A mortgage is a "death grip," because the bank owns the house unless you can buy it outright. Even then, the government can seize the property for unpaid taxes. The system is based on financial fraud, which gives power to a small group who control the world through finance. They have an infinite supply of money, and from their "psychopathic point of view," they have bought everything and everyone who can be bought.

The BigDeal

How I Built 12 Income Streams Without Tons of Cash
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There is clear data that shows the most likely way to get rich: diversify with multiple income streams. The speaker cites that 65% of self-made millionaires have three or more income streams and argues the richest don’t just start new businesses; they buy them to generate cash flow from day one. He claims you can use acquisitions and creative financing to build 12 income streams from one business. To implement this, he explains three pillars buyers rely on: your own advisory team, your own investment committee, and a deal team. The path includes 10 steps: purchase clarity, origination, outreach, evaluation, offer and negotiation, due diligence, financing, close, and running the first 90 days. He shares a laundromat case: bought for 75K, integrated into our businesses. Now an operator runs it. I'm trying to make it a million-dollar-a-year business. Then we added vending machines; acquired a competitor; used asset deals to add machines; launched a delivery service; built a soap brand; and purchased the real estate, creating seven income streams in one business.

Keeping It Real

Grant Cardone’s FAIL PROOF blueprint to EXPLOSIVE WEALTH
Guests: Grant Cardone
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In this episode of Keeping It Real, Jillian Michaels sits down with Grant Cardone to dissect how money actually works and to question common assumptions about homeownership, college, and investment. Cardone contends that many Americans are not simply financially naive but cleverly conditioned by “house rules” that favor banks and government programs. He deconstructs the idea that buying a home is a universal path to wealth, arguing that a residence is often a liability for the individual while tax incentives and depreciation practices reward property holders and institutions. The conversation also challenges the return on investment of college, suggesting that debt-financed degrees rarely justify their price tag, and it invites listeners to rethink conventional routes to success. The dialogue then shifts to practical wealth-building strategies centered on real estate and entrepreneurship. Cardone advocates acquiring troubled businesses or underperforming assets instead of starting from scratch, underscoring cash flow, leverage, and tax benefits such as depreciation and 1031 exchanges. He details his own pivot from a sales career into real estate, explaining how he reinvested earnings into passive income and scaled to a multimillion-dollar portfolio. Michaels and Cardone analyze the fragility of personal finances in today’s economy, debating whether renting can sometimes outperform owning and how inflation, interest rates, and taxes influence investment choices. Beyond the personal finance lens, the episode engages broader political and social themes, including Cardone’s provocative take on a California “land grab.” He argues that regulatory bottlenecks, zoning hurdles, and costly permitting can erode wealth, provoking asset liquidation, capital flight, or relocation. The discussion touches housing policy, urban planning, and possible effects of federal bailouts, portraying state-level maneuvers as pieces in a larger system that rewards those who navigate bureaucracy. Throughout, the emphasis is on empowerment through financial education, calculated risk-taking, and owning income-producing assets as a path to freedom and resilience. Personal backstories illuminate Cardone’s philosophy, including early struggles, mentorship gaps, and a long road to recovery. He credits resilience to learning from failure, breaking debt-heavy habits, and committing to ongoing self-improvement. Michaels shares her own career arc, arguing that disciplined self-investment—expanding knowledge, building networks, and maintaining cash flow—propels lasting wealth more reliably than chasing quick wins. The episode closes with actionable resources, including Cardone’s real estate investing primer and a call to take control of one’s financial destiny. booksMentioned: ["Wealth Creation Formula"] topics_mapped_to_content: ["Wealth building and mindset","Real estate investing and leverage","Critique of traditional college and homeownership narratives","Tax strategy and depreciation in real estate"] otherTopics: ["Personal recovery stories","Mentorship and role models","Regulatory and policy commentary on housing"]
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