Dave Ramsey dropped another bombshell:
“Building wealth isn’t about income it’s about behavior.”
When you spend less than you earn, avoid debt, and invest consistently, you can build wealth at almost any income level.
It’s not flashy. It’s not exciting.
But it works.
Do you agree or disagree?
1 trillionaire.
30 million uninsured.
40 million living in poverty.
50 million relying on food assistance.
70 million workers earning wages that still don’t cover the basic cost of living.
No society can ignore numbers like these forever.
America needs change.
One thing I notice about Senator Warren and Senator Bernie Sanders is this:
When you see large groups of people complaining about someone accumulating enormous wealth, the question should be: if they were in Elon’s position today, would they willingly give most of that wealth away?
Even with the little they have now, how many people have they personally helped? How many debts have they paid off? How many families have they provided with housing, food, or educational opportunities?
Instead, they focus on a man who has contributed significantly to society through his companies, innovations, and investments.
Builders and problem solvers will always be rewarded.
Period.
Once your frontal lobe fully developed, you’ll realized that spending decades working a 9-5, nine hours a day, five days a week, just to hopefully enjoy a few years of freedom when u’re old is a terrible deal.
Working families are skipping doctor visits because they can’t afford the bill.
Parents are struggling to pay for childcare.
Rent keeps climbing faster than wages.
Grocery carts cost more and contain less.
Filling up the tank feels like a luxury.
Yet we’re told the real problem is the person receiving roughly $10 a day in food assistance.
Not the corporations collecting billions in subsidies and government contracts.
Not the executives whose wealth grows by more in a day than most people earn in a lifetime.
Sure. Let’s keep pretending the poor are the reason everyone else is struggling.
There’s a 52 year old who has been working since he was 15. He has no savings, no retirement, and doesn’t expect to ever own a home in his lifetime.
Yet he’s more concerned with why Elon Musk is a trillionaire than with the system that left him with so little after nearly four decades of work.
I’m tired of seeing people ridicule those who care about the environment. Clean air matters. Living forests matter. Healthy oceans matter. Animals matter. Biodiversity matters.
There is nothing radical about wanting a livable planet for future generations. The truly controversial position is acting as if none of it matters.
People are calling for mass deportations like it’s a simple solution. It isn’t. You don’t fix a broken system by treating everyone in it as a threat.
Immigration isn’t a crime. Most people who come here legally are simply trying to build a better life, not cause harm. Judging millions of people based on the actions of a few ignores how human behavior actually works.
“So you bought gold at $6,800 a few months ago because you believed it could reach $10,000?”
“Yes, Dave.”
“And now you want to sell it at $4,900 to buy the SpaceX IPO at a $2.1 trillion valuation because you think it can 10x from there?”
“Exactly, Dave.”
“Fascinating.”
Want less crime? Fight poverty.
The most effective way to reduce crime is to reduce poverty. The reason wealthier neighborhoods tend to have lower crime rates isn’t because they have more police, better alarm systems, or stronger neighborhood associations. It’s because more people have stable housing, food, healthcare, education, and economic opportunity.
When basic needs are met, desperation declines. Poverty doesn’t explain every crime, but it remains one of the strongest drivers of crime in society.
Bernie Sanders and AOC talk about redistributing wealth.
Meanwhile Elon Musk just create more than 4,00 millionaires with $SPCX IPO
That’s the difference between socialism and capitalism.
A boomer saw a young guy driving a Rolls-Royce and got upset, wondering where he got the money. The guy replied, “Daddy’s money.”
Honestly, I don’t know why people get so upset when someone admits they got their money from their parents. Isn’t that what most parents would want for their kids if they could afford it?
The biggest economic illusion in America is thinking $200,000 a year makes you rich.
Rent or a mortgage can eat thousands every month. Healthcare costs keep climbing. Groceries cost more than ever. Taxes take their cut. By the end of the month, many households making $200k are wondering where the money went.
The American Dream wasn’t abolished it was repriced.
Meanwhile the Older generations still treat six figures as a guaranteed ticket out of poverty.
Most people spend every day complaining about the effects of capitalism without ever recognizing the system behind them. They treat low wages, unaffordable housing, crushing debt, and rising costs as separate problems instead of symptoms of the same disease.
It’s wild how people will argue that a child should be born into hunger, abuse, sickness, and poverty no matter what but the same people rarely care what happens after that child arrives.
And somehow, billionaires living in luxury keep demanding higher birth rates while millions of children are already struggling to survive.
75% of U.S. homes are now unaffordable, and even Dave Ramsey is calling it “the most unrealistic real estate market in 100 years.”
When one of the biggest defenders of the system admits it’s broken, you know things have gotten absurd.
The Boomerest of Boomers is finally admitting what everyone under 40 has been screaming for years.
Apparently, wanting everyone to have food, housing, healthcare, and education makes me a radical leftist. If believing people shouldn’t suffer or die because they’re poor is radical, then so be it. I call that being a decent human being.
60 years ago: The average family spent around $1,200 a year on healthcare.
Today: Many families face healthcare costs that can exceed $30,000 a year when premiums, deductibles, and out of pocket expenses are included.
Cars cost more. Homes cost more. Education costs more. Starting a business costs more. Almost everything costs more.
Why? Because Washington keeps spending money it doesn’t have, running massive deficits, and printing debt onto future generations while working families are left paying the bill through higher prices and a lower standard of living.
So you’re telling me Social Security could be insolvent by 2032… after they’ve been taking money out of millions of ppl paycheck every single year for the past decade?
Where did all that money go?