![]() ![]() Maybe it was his repetitive use of terms like “flatulence” and “big boobs”. There were a ton of other things that just irked me throughout the book, but I can’t put my finger on them. He contradicts himself a lot (he basically says “the law of attraction is bullshit and you are stupid for believing it” but in the same chapter he spews LOA concepts verbatim?). He talks to the reader like they are incompetent. I can’t believe I haven’t seen another review like this! He blatantly puts down some really well known books in this category (ie 4 hour work week by Tim Ferris - which he obviously didn’t even read based on the way he references it) in such a rude and condescending way. I think that because he isn’t a particularly funny or interesting person that this is the attitude he has developed. Someone should let the author know that you don’t have to be an asshole to get your point across. I’ve read white a few books like this now, and I made a point to get through the entire thing so I could write a fair review. Hit the Fastlane, crack the code to wealth, and find out how to live rich for a lifetime. Change lanes and find your explosive wealth accelerator. And shockingly, this road has nothing to do with jobs, 401(k), mutual funds, or a lifestyle of mediocrity.ĭemand more. For those who don't want a lifetime subscription to "settle-for-less", there is an alternative an expressway to extraordinary wealth capable of burning a trail to financial independence faster than any road out there. Do you really want hope to be the centerpiece of your family's financial plan?ĭrive the Slowlane road and you will find your life deteriorate into a miserable exhibition about what you cannot do, versus what you can. I call this soul-sucking, dream-stealing dogma "The Slowlane" - an impotent financial gamble that dubiously promises wealth in a wheelchair.Īccept the Slowlane as your financial roadmap and your financial future will blow carelessly asunder on a sailboat of hope: hope you can get a job and keep it, hope the stock market doesn't tank, hope the economy rebounds, hope, hope, and hope. Since you were old enough to hold a job, you've been hoodwinked to believe that wealth can be created by blindly trusting in the uncontrollable and unpredictable markets: the housing market, the stock market, and the job market. "Graduate from college, get a good job, save 10% of your paycheck, buy a used car, cancel the movie channels, quit drinking expensive Starbucks mocha lattes, save and penny-pinch your life away, trust your life-savings to the stock market, and one day, when you are oh, say, 65 years old, you can retire rich." Has the "settle-for-less" financial plan become your plan for wealth? That plan sounds a little something like this: ![]()
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