The Memo: Five Rules for Your Economic Liberation

The Memo: Five Rules for Your Economic Liberation

The Memo: Five Rules for Your Economic Liberation

The Memo: Five Rules for Your Economic Liberation

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Overview

True power in this world comes from economic independence, but too many people have too much month left at the end of their money. John Hope Bryant, founder and CEO of Operation HOPE, illuminates the path toward liberation that is hiding in plain sight. His message is simple: the supermajority of people who live in poverty, whom Bryant calls the invisible class, as well as millions in the struggling middle class, haven’t gotten “the memo”—until now.

Building on his personal experience of rising up from economically disadvantaged circumstances and his work with Operation HOPE, Bryant teaches readers five rules that lay the foundation for achieving financial freedom. He emphasizes the inseparable connection between “inner capital” (mindset, relationships, knowledge, and spirit) and “outer capital” (financial wealth and property). “If you have inner capital,” Bryant writes, “you can never be truly poor. If you lack inner capital, all the money in the world cannot set you free.”

Bryant gives readers tools for empowerment by covering everything from achieving basic financial literacy to investing in positive relationships and approaching wealth with a completely new attitude. He makes this bold and controversial claim: “Once you have satisfied your basic sustenance needs—food, water, health, and a roof over your head—poverty has more to do with your head than your wallet.”

Bryant wants to restore readers’ “silver rights,” giving them the ability to succeed and prosper no matter what very real roadblocks society puts in their way. We have more power than we realize, if only we can recognize and claim it. “We are our first capital,” Bryant writes. “We are the CEOs of our own lives.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781523088669
Publisher: Berrett-Koehler Publishers
Publication date: 03/31/2020
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 160
Sales rank: 674,763
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

John Hope Bryant is the founder, chairman, and CEO of Operation HOPE, Inc.; CEO of Bryant Group Ventures and The Promise Home Company; and cofounder of Global Dignity. He has been recognized by the last five US presidents and served as an advisor for the last three. Bryant is the recipient of hundreds of awards and citations for his work, including American Banker’s 2016 "Innovator of the Year,” Inc.’s “The World’s 10 Top CEOs” (honorable mention), and Time’s “50 for the Future.” He is the author of two bestselling books: How the Poor Can Save Capitalism and Love Leadership.


Jim Clifton is the chairman and CEO of Gallup and the author of The Coming Jobs War.

Read an Excerpt

History has shown that when societies fall apart, they fray first from  the bottom,  and  then  the top falls inward.

So it is an article of common  sense to me that we all need to work hard to strengthen the so-called bottom  of our society. Particularly because this is the group that has always made up the true strivers of society.

The bottom is where society’s builders come from every hundred years or so. We must once again become a Nation of Builders.

We must  continue  to work to revitalize hope  and  a sense of opportunity  for the people at the bottom—the  people for whom the system is not currently working—to create a path- way forward.

Expanding opportunity, providing a level playing field where the rules are published and there exists fair play for all, and ultimately  providing  the tools and essential  services for the true empowerment of the person—these are the aims of Operation HOPE.

Providing dignity for all. Building an economy for all. These and more are the building blocks of hope.

We live today in strained  and trying times, from racial tensions and poverty in the United States, to immigrant tensions and poverty in Europe, to military tensions  and poverty in the Middle East, to abusive tensions and poverty in Latin America, to authoritarian tensions and poverty throughout large parts of Asia and the African continent.  And then you have a toxic mix of these things in many truly troubled parts of the world. But consistent  among all the regions of the world is the challenge of poverty.

The poverty I speak of is different than the poverty you were taught about in school or you hear about in the news. The pov- erty you were taught about is what I call “sustenance poverty,” a numerical understanding of at what level the available food, shelter, and health care is simply not enough.  Beyond solving for the  critically important human dignity areas  of hunger, shelter,  and other  basic life necessities,  the sort of poverty I speak of here is the most devastating to the human spirit.

This poverty, which I first outlined  in the HOPE Doctrine on Poverty in How the Poor Can Save Capitalism, is first and foremost  one  of lost confidence  and  devastated  esteem  (the first 50 percent).

Bad role models and a negative, repressive environment fol- low (the next 25 percent).
The final 25 percent  consists  of a lack of aspiration,  which is a code word for hope, and no clear path to mainstream opportunity.

The most dangerous  person  in the world is a person  with no hope.

A poverty of the soul and spirit perverts the good direction of a person,  leading to a whole host of bad things,  including depression  and lost hope. This type of poverty is dangerous to the very fabric of a sustainable  global society. It is the one thing that works against our own well-being in the world the most.


I formed Operation HOPE to combat poverty in all its guises and forms.
 
 
The HOPE Doctrine on Wealth
 
 
This book is my view of the world—its problems  and its pos- sibilities—through an economic  lens. As I unpack  the book, I will refer to the commonly  used word capital in a different way. The word capital comes from the Latin root word capita or “knowledge in the head.” In other words, capital at its core has nothing  to do with money. And, by the way, neither does true, sustainable  wealth.
If I give a homeless  man a million dollars, he will be broke in six months. If I observe a rich man with no “knowledge in the head,” I will find him  broke within a generation  or less. As an early English proverb states, “A fool and his money are soon parted.”
And so, in this book, I present a new HOPE Doctrine on Wealth, outlined  below and  discussed  at length  later in the book.

True  wealth has little to do with money.  My own wealth, as an example, came from my embrace  of the free-enterprise system, my opportunity  mind-set, my critically important relationship capital, my entrepreneurial hustle, and finally my unwavering  belief in myself—my spiritual  capital. I unpack all of this in the book.

You will find that the wealthy in the world possess  confi- dence and self-esteem (the first 50 percent of true wealth).
 
Either through  their natural family or people they’ve met along  the  way, they all also have good role models  and  an enabling environment (the next 25 percent).
Finally, they have high aspirations  (hope), and they all gen- erally see opportunity  everywhere (the last 25 percent).

Together, these make up a formula for a new and achievable
HOPE Doctrine on Wealth.

But how do people get there?

What are the building blocks and the steps forward when almost none of these enabling factors are present in your life?

What is the  magic  sauce  that  the  wealthy and  successful have that the struggling  classes somehow missed out on?

Certainly,  it is not  because  one  group  is better  than  the other.  Because  they are not.  I have seen  brilliant  men  and women  who are homeless,  and  I have seen  idiots and  fools with money.
The missing  sauce is the Memo.
 
 
What Is the Memo and Who Didn’t Get It?
 
 
A super  majority  of people  here  in  the  United  States  and around  the world have one thing in common:  They never got what I call “the Memo.” They were never told how this world actually works.

How do you prosper? How do you excel? At a more defen- sive and basic level, how do you protect yourself from societal injustices and a lack of fair play in the twenty-first century?
These are questions  I address directly in this book (it’s less of a “how-to” and more of a “how-to-think”).

While I’ve placed the full version of the Memo at the beginning of the book, everything you really need to know can be summed up in just a couple of sentences:
 
Your power comes from economic independence, which
is also what protects you against social injustice, economic manipulation, and profiling on all levels. Nobody is going to give you that power. You must gain it for yourself. Don’t
waste time on anger; instead, use your inner capital to level the playing field.
 
This super majority of people who never got the Memo make up what I call the Invisible  Class. They come in all shapes, colors, and sizes.

The Invisible  Class includes  American  urban  youth  with too much time on their hands. Even when they have a real pas- sion for success and a desire for economic freedom, they don’t have enough education to differentiate themselves in a market economy. Worst of all, they don’t possess enough real opportu- nity in their lives to divert their attention  from the dangerous and life-altering call of the streets.

It includes  rural adults in small towns with a high school education, good hands, and a hearty work ethic that fifty years ago would have earned them a “family wage” with blue-collar skills. But these “assets” provide not much  of any real aspira- tional value today.

They are residents  of the poor and  disconnected  suburbs in cities throughout Europe. I am talking about people in the areas  right  outside  of Paris  and  London  who have rioted in recent years against the changes  they see happening to their way of living.

I am  talking  about  large swaths  of people  under  the  age of twenty-five in the Middle East and North  Africa region— increasingly, the majority of the populations  in countries such as Saudi Arabia and Morocco. Young, educated, Internet- connected, jobless, and frustrated.

The Invisible Class is the immigrants flooding into coun- tries from civil war–ravaged lands the world over.
The Invisible Class includes gang members and gang orga- nizers.  They are the illegal, unethical  entrepreneurs that the world knows to be drug dealers. Dumb (in terms of their busi- ness plans and chosen toxic professions), but far from stupid.

Some members of the Invisible Class join ISIS because they don’t fit in anywhere else and resent what feels like the unfair- ness of the world.

The Invisible Class also includes  the struggling  American middle class, people making an average of $50,000 a year and still having “too much month  at the end of their money.”

The Invisible Class is people who are outside of the economic system of success, and they don’t really know why, so understandably they get frustrated by it. They are angry with it. They don’t know how to get ahead in the midst of the growing global competition  for jobs and opportunity.

In the United States, for example, these are people who are not truly “seen” by the economy, by politicians, by public policy makers,  by big business  interests,  or even largely by academics and the media. Worst of all, increasingly, they don’t even see themselves. They don’t see their own potential. They—like the aspirational nation they live in—have lost what I call their “storyline.” They have lost connection  with that special sauce in America that made this nation successful in the first place. They have totally disconnected  from the fact that most of the wealth in this nation and in almost every other developed country in the world (with the exception of wealth through  government contracting or crime) came from poor people.


The Invisible Class is people who are experiencing a twenty-first-century  crisis  of  confidence   and  personal faith, which is impacting their self-esteem.

People in this group are giving in to fear and giving up hope that they can realize their dreams.  They don’t even think  that  their  children  will do better  than  they have. Truth be told, they are pretty confident that their children will do worse.

People in the Invisible Class don’t feel seen, and, this I know for sure, everyone wants to be seen. Everyone wants to know that they count. They want to know that they mat- ter and that what they believe, do, and think is important.

This group equals more than 150 million people in the United  States of America, and more  than  five billion of the world’s seven billion population  around the world.

These are people—black, white, brown, red, or yellow—who never got the Memo.

The people in this group have a lot in common  (despite racial differences), but they have been pitted against each other.

“Someone  (other than me) has to be the one to blame for the  mess  called my life,” goes the  narrative,  which plays on deep fears of a class environment and standards of living in constant decline.

This narrative is offensive to the soul, as it gets each subgroup  further and further from the essential truths about their respective lives, truths needed for a reawaken- ing of their potential.
 
 
 
Who Is This Book For?
 
 
In writing this book, my demographic changed. It expanded.

I wrote this book because it sticks in my brain that the wealthiest eighty-five individuals have more wealth than 3.5 billion people on the planet, and this is simply not sustainable. It is immoral.  It is not good—even for the wealthy that belong to the club of eighty-five.

Even more troubling to me, in the United States, the wealthi- est 1 percent  captured  95 percent  of the post–financial  crisis growth since 2009, while the bottom 90 percent became poorer.
This book is for the bottom 90 percent.

It is not just for people with low credit scores in rundown neighborhoods. It is for everyone who is struggling.  I am speaking to black and white, rich and poor, Republican and Democrat,  anyone  who is seeing  their  life seep  away—and wants their dream back.

This book is for you no matter where you are. You may have gotten one or two of the five rules of economic independence, but  you still don’t  feel economically  independent. You may have a 725 credit score, but you’re sitting at your computer  all day and your relationships are dwindling, and you’re unable to get ahead. You may be sitting there thinking,  “If I’m doing all the right things and still struggling, then the system has to be rigged.”

No, actually, there’s just some important stuff nobody told you. Nobody gave you the Memo.
I wrote this book for you.

Table of Contents

Foreword, ix,
Preface, xiii,
The Memo, xxv,
The Five Simple Rules for Economic Independence, xxvii,
Getting the Memo, xxix,
RULE 1

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