Replies (8)

The dialogues were super super cringe and boring. The ridiculous passivity and incoherent discussions on the collapse of the dollar seemed to be totally abstract and unbelievable. The whole premise of the story was just like reading gibberish for me. I also felt the author had a huge lack of knowledge on money and economics, a read of Lyn Alden or Saife's books would do him well. I literally could feel my brain cells dying reading this book and not just from the boredom of it.
Also fairly certain that book came out well before Aldens and Saife's. I thought the picture of the collapse of the dollar was pretty entertaining.
He could of touched on the important themes better then. Like Peter Schiff is more entertaining and educating than this author. Theres plenty of real life examples to drae from when things collapse too... yugoslavia, russia. Hell, if the author even caught a clue, he would know that in eastern europe under communism, they all had plenty of money.. so what was missing?
That's fair. I did the audiobook and enjoyed her writing. It was entertaining and still thought provoking. I'm not sure I was entertained by it so I don't think much was missing. I'm going off what you say for that. I'm not trying to change your mind just understand more of your prospective