Видимо Вам хотелось найти именно негативное ревью из тех 63-х, которые есть на амазоне с общей оценкой в 4 звезды (32 из 63 дали 5 звезд), что очень прилично. Вот с того же амазона:
This remarkable book is filled with factual information, both current and historical, and although that information may discourage or frighten some readers the book is written in such a casual style that it is almost as if its story is being told by your best friend. Only, in this case your friend actually knows what he is talking about. It is a great read, and the information it conveys is simply too valuable to miss. I only wish such books had been available forty or fifty years ago.
In any event, if you are a product of America’s public school system, you may very well have asked yourself, as I once did: “What have I learned in my twelve years of school that will help me get a job?” That’s certainly an interesting question, but, strangely enough, the answer is far less important than the question itself. For that question reveals a mindset that has been instilled in America’s children by our public education system, by conventional wisdom, and, in all probability, by almost every student’s parents for generations. Namely: Get an education, get a job, work hard, buy a house, save for the future, and someday you will be able to retire and live happily ever after.
That mindset, according to this book’s author, has doomed generations of Americans to a lifetime of hard work with little chance success, leading many to someday ask themselves: “Why is it that I have a good education and work hard at my job, but I never seem to be able to get ahead?” The answer, again according to this author, is that, despite the fact that America is a capitalist society, our public schools only train our children to be good employees, good soldiers, professionals, and small business owners, but teach them nothing about money and finance or how to properly invest and prosper in a capitalist system.
This book seeks to break that mindset by encouraging its readers to change their attitudes from “I can’t do that” to “How can I do that” and offers fairly specific suggestions and guidelines as to how individual successes might be achieved. The trick, Mr. Kiyosaki avers, is to first change your way of thinking, then study your chosen direction, and finally work toward getting out of what he terms the “Employee/Small Business” (E/S) quadrants, in which the odds are stacked against you; and into the “Big Business/Investor” (B/I) quadrants wherein lies greater opportunity, lower taxes, cash flow without labor, and the opportunity to exploit those in the E/S quadrants.
After reading this book, I came to the conclusion that it is invaluable, especially to young adults, and should be read by every thinking American. I also came to the conclusion, however, that the book’s title is something of a misnomer. It should really be entitled “The Conspiracy of the Super Rich,” for they, the politicians they control, and the heads of America’s largest banks are the ones who perpetrated and carry on the conspiracy.
So, yes, Virginia, there is a conspiracy of the rich, and if you reside in the E/S quadrants, as virtually all of us do, you are one of their Santa Clauses. But, strangely enough, “the rich” aren’t really those we are led to believe they are. They aren’t those making over $200,000 per year, who presumably should be punished for it, or minor millionaires. They are the anonymous “Super Rich” who make the rules and control the game. And they are well above it all.