Imagen del autor

Ben Stein

Autor de How to Ruin Your Life

42+ Obras 1,120 Miembros 19 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Ben Stein is a lawyer, economist, writer, actor, teacher, and former game-show host (his show Win Ben Stein's Money won seven Emmys)

Incluye los nombres: Ben Stein, Benjamin J. Stein

Créditos de la imagen: Photo courtesy of Hay House, Inc.

Obras de Ben Stein

How to Ruin Your Life (2002) 153 copias
How to Ruin Your Love Life (2003) 39 copias
Hollywood Days and Nights (1988) 22 copias
On the Brink: A Novel (1977) 22 copias
Croesus Conspiracy (1978) 17 copias
Bunkhouse Logic (1981) 17 copias
Her Only Sin (1986) 16 copias
Ludes (1982) 16 copias
Dreemz (1978) 5 copias
More of Ben (2006) 4 copias
Financial Passages (1985) 3 copias
投资21戒 (2019) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

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Soapdish [1991 film] (1991) 40 copias
Wakko's Wish [1999 film] (1999) — Actor — 18 copias
The Wild Life [1984 film] (2014) — Actor — 4 copias
Men in White [1998 Film] (1998) 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
male

Miembros

Reseñas

An excellent selection of essays by Ben Stein, with his wit and perception mixed in well.
 
Denunciada
quinton.baran | Mar 29, 2021 |
If you want to be rich invest in index funds and leave the money there. The book says nothing more than that.
 
Denunciada
SydneySpaniel | otra reseña | Oct 28, 2017 |
Capitalist Apologist rampant on a field of green

“Corporations don’t start or wage wars, at least not large wars,” says Ben Stein in The Capitalist Code. This is typical of the apologies he makes for the system, in a remarkably naïve and superficial overview of how to survive in the capitalist system. Another is “Probably the worst thing the modern corporation does is oil spills.” I could go on, but you get the idea. He lives in a wonderful world where he benefits from the work of others. And you can too.

Stein of course is well versed in economics, and that makes reading this all the more painful. He wrote it at a less than basic level, to attract millennials who supposedly have no smarts or inclination in this area. This adds insult to injury.

Stein’s prescription is buy stock and hold forever. It did well for him and his idol, Warren Buffet. He ignores all the data that precious few investors do well, or that even fewer companies survive. It is a self-help book and he doles out standard-copy advice. Things like save before you spend, and have plenty of liquid assets before you buy a home. But the main point is to buy stocks, preferably index funds and ETFs that represent a broader swath than just a single firm. Stein repeats this mantra endlessly.

It’s a short little book that you can read in two hours, which does not excuse it. There is a slim column down the middle of the page, as if it were meant to be read on a phone. And lots of blank pages among the 125 or so of text. If you want financial advice, there is better out there.

David Wineberg
… (más)
 
Denunciada
DavidWineberg | otra reseña | Jul 29, 2017 |
An anti-self help book which true to its title comprises chapter upon chapter of Really Bad Advice. The unrelenting facetious tone became harder and harder to endure as the book progressed. I felt it would have benefitted greatly from a respite, perhaps in the form of interspersed or even alternate chapters detailing what actually happens to people who do these extremely inadvisable things. Anything to give the brain a rest from all that nudging and winking. That being said, it's all true: doing any of this stuff will ruin your financial life, and the rest of your life along with it.… (más)
 
Denunciada
muumi | otra reseña | Apr 13, 2016 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
42
También por
8
Miembros
1,120
Popularidad
#22,935
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
19
ISBNs
115
Idiomas
4
Favorito
1

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