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Pimping The Easiest Game on Earth
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8232034313
- EAN9798232034313
- Date de parution16/11/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurHamza elmir
Résumé
Everything in this world has a price. Everyone participates in the exchange. Most people simply refuse to admit it. In PIMPING: The Easiest Game on Earth, Jawanna Dean delivers a forensic investigation into the structures that govern human behavior, exposing the global marketplace of value that shapes every relationship, institution, and identity. Long before individuals understand desire, ambition, or choice, they are assessed, evaluated, and conditioned to perform roles that serve a larger system-one that operates through emotional, sexual, financial, corporate, religious, and digital transactions.
Dean reveals how people learn to package themselves with titles, appearances, credentials, charisma, bodies, or narratives in an effort to gain approval, security, access, or love. She demonstrates how the same dynamic that appears explicit on the street is replicated with greater sophistication in boardrooms, marriages, friendships, churches, factories, hospitals, law firms, entertainment industries, and every corner of modern digital culture.
Through an elevated, unsentimental lens, Dean examines how humans become both product and purchaser, both exploited and exploiter. She exposes the psychological conditions-fear, insecurity, hunger, ego, longing-that make individuals easy to manipulate and profitable to use. And she reveals how denial, performance, and cultural storytelling mask the transactions shaping daily life. This book offers a level of clarity most people avoid:.
how human value is assigned and extracted. how relationships often operate as negotiations. how corporate systems traffic labor through compliance. how social media functions as a global red-light district. how internal hunger becomes a gateway to exploitation. how psychological sovereignty renders a person impossible to controlPIMPING is not written to comfort or reassure. It is written to illuminate the architecture of the world with precision sharp enough to dispel illusion.
Once a reader sees the structure clearly, they cannot return to the narratives that once shaped their decisions. This is not entertainment. This is a reckoning. And for those ready to confront the truth, it is the beginning of liberation.
Dean reveals how people learn to package themselves with titles, appearances, credentials, charisma, bodies, or narratives in an effort to gain approval, security, access, or love. She demonstrates how the same dynamic that appears explicit on the street is replicated with greater sophistication in boardrooms, marriages, friendships, churches, factories, hospitals, law firms, entertainment industries, and every corner of modern digital culture.
Through an elevated, unsentimental lens, Dean examines how humans become both product and purchaser, both exploited and exploiter. She exposes the psychological conditions-fear, insecurity, hunger, ego, longing-that make individuals easy to manipulate and profitable to use. And she reveals how denial, performance, and cultural storytelling mask the transactions shaping daily life. This book offers a level of clarity most people avoid:.
how human value is assigned and extracted. how relationships often operate as negotiations. how corporate systems traffic labor through compliance. how social media functions as a global red-light district. how internal hunger becomes a gateway to exploitation. how psychological sovereignty renders a person impossible to controlPIMPING is not written to comfort or reassure. It is written to illuminate the architecture of the world with precision sharp enough to dispel illusion.
Once a reader sees the structure clearly, they cannot return to the narratives that once shaped their decisions. This is not entertainment. This is a reckoning. And for those ready to confront the truth, it is the beginning of liberation.
Everything in this world has a price. Everyone participates in the exchange. Most people simply refuse to admit it. In PIMPING: The Easiest Game on Earth, Jawanna Dean delivers a forensic investigation into the structures that govern human behavior, exposing the global marketplace of value that shapes every relationship, institution, and identity. Long before individuals understand desire, ambition, or choice, they are assessed, evaluated, and conditioned to perform roles that serve a larger system-one that operates through emotional, sexual, financial, corporate, religious, and digital transactions.
Dean reveals how people learn to package themselves with titles, appearances, credentials, charisma, bodies, or narratives in an effort to gain approval, security, access, or love. She demonstrates how the same dynamic that appears explicit on the street is replicated with greater sophistication in boardrooms, marriages, friendships, churches, factories, hospitals, law firms, entertainment industries, and every corner of modern digital culture.
Through an elevated, unsentimental lens, Dean examines how humans become both product and purchaser, both exploited and exploiter. She exposes the psychological conditions-fear, insecurity, hunger, ego, longing-that make individuals easy to manipulate and profitable to use. And she reveals how denial, performance, and cultural storytelling mask the transactions shaping daily life. This book offers a level of clarity most people avoid:.
how human value is assigned and extracted. how relationships often operate as negotiations. how corporate systems traffic labor through compliance. how social media functions as a global red-light district. how internal hunger becomes a gateway to exploitation. how psychological sovereignty renders a person impossible to controlPIMPING is not written to comfort or reassure. It is written to illuminate the architecture of the world with precision sharp enough to dispel illusion.
Once a reader sees the structure clearly, they cannot return to the narratives that once shaped their decisions. This is not entertainment. This is a reckoning. And for those ready to confront the truth, it is the beginning of liberation.
Dean reveals how people learn to package themselves with titles, appearances, credentials, charisma, bodies, or narratives in an effort to gain approval, security, access, or love. She demonstrates how the same dynamic that appears explicit on the street is replicated with greater sophistication in boardrooms, marriages, friendships, churches, factories, hospitals, law firms, entertainment industries, and every corner of modern digital culture.
Through an elevated, unsentimental lens, Dean examines how humans become both product and purchaser, both exploited and exploiter. She exposes the psychological conditions-fear, insecurity, hunger, ego, longing-that make individuals easy to manipulate and profitable to use. And she reveals how denial, performance, and cultural storytelling mask the transactions shaping daily life. This book offers a level of clarity most people avoid:.
how human value is assigned and extracted. how relationships often operate as negotiations. how corporate systems traffic labor through compliance. how social media functions as a global red-light district. how internal hunger becomes a gateway to exploitation. how psychological sovereignty renders a person impossible to controlPIMPING is not written to comfort or reassure. It is written to illuminate the architecture of the world with precision sharp enough to dispel illusion.
Once a reader sees the structure clearly, they cannot return to the narratives that once shaped their decisions. This is not entertainment. This is a reckoning. And for those ready to confront the truth, it is the beginning of liberation.






















