If you want to start a financial argument, just bring up credit cards around Kevin O'Leary and Dave Ramsey. These two might as well be debating from different galaxies.
O'Leary—better known as "Mr. Wonderful" from Shark Tank—thinks the whole credit card panic is overblown. In a November post on X, he laid out his philosophy in typically blunt fashion: "Credit cards aren't evil, bad discipline is."
His personal system is precise. He keeps three cards, each with a specific job. One has a high limit that he never uses for online purchases. Another is capped at $2,500 and handles all his digital transactions. The third is a joint card reserved strictly for shared household expenses. "Set limits, separate risk, and stay disciplined. It saves you a fortune," O'Leary explained. He pointed out that most people drown under 22–24% interest rates because they lose control of their balances, not because credit cards are inherently dangerous.
The Snake Metaphor
Dave Ramsey sees it differently. Very differently.
During a call on The Ramsey Show titled "Can I Have A Credit Card If I'm Responsible?", a listener named Josh from Youngstown, Ohio, asked whether it was fine to use credit cards solely for rewards—as long as he paid them off in full every month.
Ramsey's response was characteristically vivid: "It's like playing with a very large old snake that knows his stuff. He's gonna bite your freaking head off."
He told Josh, "You do what you want to do — but I wouldn't do it."
That snake analogy captures Ramsey's entire worldview on credit. It doesn't matter how smart you think you are or how carefully you handle things. Eventually, the system gets you. Ramsey even acknowledged that he has wealthy friends who use credit cards responsibly—but he still refused to endorse the practice.
The National Debt Picture
Ramsey's concerns aren't just theoretical. According to Ramsey Solutions, credit cards have become deeply embedded in American life: "Credit cards have become about as American as apple pie, baseball and reality dating shows. In fact, 8 in 10 American adults (82%) have at least one credit card."
The problem? All those cards have led to serious debt. "About $6,730 on average, to be exact," Ramsey notes.
Two Philosophies, One Question
So where does this leave the rest of us?
O'Leary's philosophy treats credit cards like power tools. They're useful, even essential, but only if you know what you're doing. His approach is built on compartmentalization, strict spending limits, and never letting a single card become a financial catch-all. He handles credit access the way a surgeon handles a scalpel—with precision and respect for what can go wrong.
Ramsey doesn't buy any of it. In his view, a tool that can destroy your financial life if mishandled has no business being in your house. Not even locked in a drawer. The risk isn't worth the reward, no matter how disciplined you think you are.
The debate ultimately comes down to one fundamental question: Do you believe in safe handling—or total abstinence?
O'Leary would say your behavior is the problem, not the plastic.
Ramsey would counter that the snake always bites eventually.
And with the average American sitting on nearly $7,000 in credit card debt, it's clear that plenty of people are still figuring out which philosophy actually works.