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In this objection-addressing episode of Infinite Banking Daily, M.C. Laubscher tackles the most common pushback against Infinite Banking: "It's too expensive." This episode marks the beginning of Week 15, where M.C. systematically addresses the five most frequent objections people have when first encountering the private family banking system. The "too expensive" objection reveals a fundamental misunderstanding about what whole life insurance actually is and what you're paying for. M.C. explains that this objection almost always comes from comparing whole life insurance premiums to term insurance premiums—and concluding that whole life costs more for "the same thing." But this comparison is fundamentally flawed because you're not buying the same thing at all.
Key Concepts Covered
Core Principle
"Too expensive" compares whole life to term insurance—but they're fundamentally different. Term is temporary rental protection that expires worthless 98% of the time. Whole life is capital allocation into a warehouse that's safe, liquid, growing, and enables velocity. The premium isn't an expense—it's the strategic price of control, certainty, and a self-sustaining wealth-building system. Expensive compared to what? Savings earning nothing? Retirement accounts you can't access? Markets that crash? Banks charging lifetime interest?
Resources:
Keywords:
whole life insurance too expensive, Infinite Banking cost objection, whole life vs term insurance cost, is whole life insurance worth it, whole life premium breakdown, capital allocation not expense, strategic premium investment, whole life insurance value, term insurance expires worthless, whole life insurance benefits
Hashtags:
#WholeLifeTooExpensive #InfiniteBankingObjections #WholeLifeVsTerm #CapitalAllocation #StrategicPremium #WholeLifeWorth #InfiniteBanking #PremiumBreakdown #TermInsuranceExpires #WealthBuilding #CashValueInsurance #PolicyLoans #FinancialStrategy #InsuranceObjections #PermanentInsurance #WarehouseCapital #SelfSustainingWealth #TaxAdvantaged
By M.C. LaubscherIn this objection-addressing episode of Infinite Banking Daily, M.C. Laubscher tackles the most common pushback against Infinite Banking: "It's too expensive." This episode marks the beginning of Week 15, where M.C. systematically addresses the five most frequent objections people have when first encountering the private family banking system. The "too expensive" objection reveals a fundamental misunderstanding about what whole life insurance actually is and what you're paying for. M.C. explains that this objection almost always comes from comparing whole life insurance premiums to term insurance premiums—and concluding that whole life costs more for "the same thing." But this comparison is fundamentally flawed because you're not buying the same thing at all.
Key Concepts Covered
Core Principle
"Too expensive" compares whole life to term insurance—but they're fundamentally different. Term is temporary rental protection that expires worthless 98% of the time. Whole life is capital allocation into a warehouse that's safe, liquid, growing, and enables velocity. The premium isn't an expense—it's the strategic price of control, certainty, and a self-sustaining wealth-building system. Expensive compared to what? Savings earning nothing? Retirement accounts you can't access? Markets that crash? Banks charging lifetime interest?
Resources:
Keywords:
whole life insurance too expensive, Infinite Banking cost objection, whole life vs term insurance cost, is whole life insurance worth it, whole life premium breakdown, capital allocation not expense, strategic premium investment, whole life insurance value, term insurance expires worthless, whole life insurance benefits
Hashtags:
#WholeLifeTooExpensive #InfiniteBankingObjections #WholeLifeVsTerm #CapitalAllocation #StrategicPremium #WholeLifeWorth #InfiniteBanking #PremiumBreakdown #TermInsuranceExpires #WealthBuilding #CashValueInsurance #PolicyLoans #FinancialStrategy #InsuranceObjections #PermanentInsurance #WarehouseCapital #SelfSustainingWealth #TaxAdvantaged