Friday 13 May 2011

World Collapse Explained in 3 Minutes

Robert Kiyosaki : America is still a great country for capitalism

Robert Kiyosaki : ...I think it is the end of the industrial age and the beginning of the information age , and in the information age the idea of a country is kind of an obsolete idea ..countries are segments of the industrial age the same as a job is a segment of the industrial age , today governments are broke State City national are broke so I think we are going to see the end of what we call government something else is going to happen and that's why I recommend to people t just become a sovereign individual , I have businesses throughout the world and so i am quite content I make money wherever I go , the web has made it easy for people to be sovereign individuals investing all over the world and I would do that rather who is going to be elected republicans or democrats I don't really care because I do not think they are going to fix the problem



Robert Kiyosaki, author of "Rich Dad Poor Dad" and "Unfair Advantage," tells http://www.FinancialSurvivalRadio.com why Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" story seems to be coming true in the United States.

Robert Kiyosaki - Goldseek Radio 04 May 2011



Go to http://kiyosaki-blog.blogspot.com for details

Mike Maloney: You Better Man the Life Boats



Michael Maloney, author of Rich Dad's Advisors: Guide to Investing In Gold and Silver and advisor on Robert Kiyosaki's "Rich Dad" team on Silver:How to Profit from the Greatest Wealth Transfer in History

THE WORLDS LARGEST GOLD COIN - 100KG = 3,527.4 OUNCES



Making of the world's largest gold coin, a 2007 Canadian $ 1,000.000 Maple Leaf. This coin breaks all records: It weighs a staggering 100 kilos and measures 53 cm in diameter. But the most remarkable thing about this impressive coin, which cannot even be lifted by two men, is that it is made exclusively of the purest, finest and most refined gold: 999.99/1000 gold.

Money and Markets TV - May 13, 2011



The recent rally in commodities resulted from the Fed's easy money policies, much like in 2007-2008, until the markets hit a tipping point. Mike Larson examines whether we're about to hit another tipping point in the economy and the markets.