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The Art of Printing Money: What Banks Do Not Want You To Know?
The Art of Printing Money: What Banks Do Not Want You To Know?
The Art of Printing Money: What Banks Do Not Want You To Know?
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The Art of Printing Money: What Banks Do Not Want You To Know?

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*** Special Offer - Buy 1, Get 2 ***

This is a very important bundle on money, banking and finance. It will help you make more money, invest wisely by managing debt and open your eyes to new possibilities in the world of business. Most people try to get out of debt. In fact, banks and government WANT you to be in debt - even if they say otherwise. I am going to show you how to use DEBT to make money!

You'll learn:
- how banks operate
- how to print your own money - legally
- the history of banks, FED and other private institutions
- how to make money in bad economy
- how taxes work and legal ways to pay little or no taxes
- how to manage debt
- the role of politics in the monetary system
- and much more...

Grab your copy now!

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 26, 2015
ISBN9781310641527
The Art of Printing Money: What Banks Do Not Want You To Know?
Author

Chris Diamond

Time management and personal productivity blogger since 2010.

Read more from Chris Diamond

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Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
3/5

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  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Poorly written, factually inaccurate, waste of time. The author is definitely not a writer. This is excusable if the "book" informs the reader on the subject matter. We have books written by professional writers whose intent is to entertain and/or inform, and books written by amateur writers because of expertise in the underlying subject. This author is certainly neither. The material is regurgitated, having been collected from a dozen or more books and inserted in this document (I cannot refer to this as a book), which is crying out for a desperately needed editorial review. At the very least, hundreds of grammatical errors and incomplete sentences should have been addressed before this document was even considered to be released (although it should never have ended up here, wasting the readers time).

    Avoid this book unless you want to be entertained by a conspiracy nut whose life is based on false assumptions and hyperbole. I would be amazed if someone reads this in entirety.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Decent information but LOTS of grammar mistakes and typos. Hard to follow when you have to reread sentences and guess what the author was attempting to say.

Book preview

The Art of Printing Money - Chris Diamond

Intro

Money and finance has been a subject of interest since I remember myself, because for some reason I did not have much in my childhood and my parents were not one of the richest people in the world, especially if you grow up in a third world country.

So I did not really have any role models when it comes to money and wealth.

In college, they do not teach you the subject of money quite well, because colleges train you how to find a job, not how to acquire wealth or start a business. In short, they do not explore the subject of money in detail when it comes to business and investing.

To become wealthy, you need to know 3 things:

1. You need to know how money changed over the years (history)

2. What to do to acquire more money (raise revenue)

3. What to do after you get the money (invest wisely)

Most of the traditional schools teach you how to become poor. The information is not just presented badly, but it is presented completely in an opposite way.

What do we expect from college professors who struggle financially? What kind of advice such person can give us?

I’ve observed this because I’ve been studying in colleges and universities around the world, but they all had something in common. They lacked heavily on financial education and financial literacy, regardless of the major you get enrolled in.

So I had to find external resources and mentors (street smarts) from which to learn money and finance in order to become financially literate and create the wealth for myself.

That’s another reason why I am writing this book, because this subject of finance is either neglected or completely eliminated from the traditional school system today.

See, wealth is not gathered by accident. Wealthy people do not play lotteries, or hope to become lucky. They create the wealth for themselves.

In fact, if you do some research you will find that all lotteries are private business entities. They perfected a system where the bought tickets exceed dramatically the jackpot offered in the lottery.

Lotteries are for people who have poor mentality and lack of financial education. If you want to become rich, you need to stop gambling and start taking calculated risks.

We live in a material world where money plays a huge role in our lives. In fact, over 70% of marriages around the world fail because of financial problems.

Again, wealth is not something that happens by accident. It is something you create, but not many people are really aware of that.

If you want to be financially independent (whatever that means to you), you’ll have to know some basic rules of money and investing.

How did it all start?

I’ve been fascinated by the concept of money and how it transformed over the centuries. What I found about money was rarely taught in traditional school systems around the world. Thus, you are either lied about money from corporate media and politics or simply you do not have enough information about it. Either way, this represents a big gap between rich and the poor.

When John Rockefeller formed the General Board of Education in 1902, he removed the subject of money from higher institutions, because he shaped the education in a way that could serve private corporations.

What Rockefeller needed was qualified and certified individuals who can work for the private sector. So, he created this General Board of Education to control what people have to learn in school in order to find a job.

This is when all started. Money was no longer a subject taught in school, because there were a lot of factories and work for people who graduated college.

Today we live in a different economy. We live in a jobless economy. There are no longer factories and places where people can find jobs after they graduate from college. Unfortunately, the General Board of Education still exist today, and this system has been copied and adopted around the world by other foreign governments, forced by the private sector.

It is sad when I see young people going to college in 2013 with the hope to find a good job – a job that would no longer exist, except some in-demand majors for the 21st century.

Moreover, having a job alone would not be enough to survive in today’s economy, because there would be higher taxes for the working class and lesser income as a result. Those who work for earned income would always pay higher taxes than those who work for a passive income.

Today, if you have to learn about money, you need to look for private schools and mentors who know how to generate passive income and invest wisely.

If you do not know anything about money and investing, you are less likely to have enough money to support yourself, regardless if you have a job or not.

Money has become one of the most important subjects today, because it went through changes you need to be aware of, vital for your survival and financial comfort.

Most people today work for money. This is the old notion of how you should get money. I do not believe in working for money. In fact, rich and powerful people do not work for money; they have money work for them.

Poor mentality people work for money. They save any penny under the pillow, without realizing the consequences of what I call, financial suicide.

The more money you save, the more money is taken away from you.

Think of money as a hot potato. As soon as somebody tosses it to you, you have to get rid of it. This is when the financial literacy all starts. You do not want to park your money. However, you do not want to waste money on things that are not going to give you any substantial cash back.

Inevitably, you need to buy food, clothes and other utilities, or things that are not going to give you any cash back, but you need to look for investments that are going to spin your money, and get more money in return (higher return of investment).

Where Should You Spend Your Money?

Do you remember when I said that money is like a hot potato, as soon as you get it; you need to get rid of it? Well, what to do after you get the money?

You have two choices:

1. Buy Liabilities - liabilities are things that cost you more money when you acquire them or things that take money out of your pocket. Buying liabilities is inevitable. You are forced to buy them in order to maintain certain standards of living.

Examples of liabilities: cars, shelter, food, cloths, cosmetics, rented items, home interior, vacations, barbeques, etc.

You do not want to focus only on liabilities, because you have to work harder for money and

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