The Black Economy
Par :Formats :
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
- Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
- Pour les liseuses autres que Vivlio, vous devez utiliser le logiciel Adobe Digital Edition. Non compatible avec la lecture sur les liseuses Kindle, Remarkable et Sony

Notre partenaire de plateforme de lecture numérique où vous retrouverez l'ensemble de vos ebooks gratuitement
Pour en savoir plus sur nos ebooks, consultez notre aide en ligne ici
- FormatePub
- ISBN8230836490
- EAN9798230836490
- Date de parution01/07/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIndependently Published
Résumé
I didn't wake up one day with a passion for economics. I woke up one day tired. Tired of watching Black genius go broke. Tired of seeing our culture sold back to us for ten times the price. Tired of knowing we create the cool, but rarely own the coin. I come from communities where money feels like a ghost - always talked about, rarely seen, andeven more rarely understood. I've seen what happens when generations are left to figure it out ontheir own - no blueprint, no inheritance, just hustle and hope.
And I've watched how that cyclecrushes dreams, divides families, and burns out brilliance. So I made a choice: To speak up. To break it down. To build it back up. The Black economy is not some abstract theory to me - it's personal. It's every dollar we spend, every brand we build, every land title we don't own yet. It's the difference between survival and sovereignty. Between watching history and rewriting it.
This isn't just about wealth. It's about power. Because the truth is, we can't fully fight systems we still depend on. We can't build a legacy if we don't understand leverage. We can't free a people if we don't fund the plan. That's why I wrote The Black Economy. To give us more than conversation - to give us a code. This is about healing our money wounds, reclaiming our value, and circulating our dollars with purpose.
It's about making wealth something we pass down - not just dream about. So yeah, I speak on the Black economy. Loudly. Because silence won't save us, and because I believe we're not just the culture. We are the capital. And it's time we act like it.
And I've watched how that cyclecrushes dreams, divides families, and burns out brilliance. So I made a choice: To speak up. To break it down. To build it back up. The Black economy is not some abstract theory to me - it's personal. It's every dollar we spend, every brand we build, every land title we don't own yet. It's the difference between survival and sovereignty. Between watching history and rewriting it.
This isn't just about wealth. It's about power. Because the truth is, we can't fully fight systems we still depend on. We can't build a legacy if we don't understand leverage. We can't free a people if we don't fund the plan. That's why I wrote The Black Economy. To give us more than conversation - to give us a code. This is about healing our money wounds, reclaiming our value, and circulating our dollars with purpose.
It's about making wealth something we pass down - not just dream about. So yeah, I speak on the Black economy. Loudly. Because silence won't save us, and because I believe we're not just the culture. We are the capital. And it's time we act like it.
I didn't wake up one day with a passion for economics. I woke up one day tired. Tired of watching Black genius go broke. Tired of seeing our culture sold back to us for ten times the price. Tired of knowing we create the cool, but rarely own the coin. I come from communities where money feels like a ghost - always talked about, rarely seen, andeven more rarely understood. I've seen what happens when generations are left to figure it out ontheir own - no blueprint, no inheritance, just hustle and hope.
And I've watched how that cyclecrushes dreams, divides families, and burns out brilliance. So I made a choice: To speak up. To break it down. To build it back up. The Black economy is not some abstract theory to me - it's personal. It's every dollar we spend, every brand we build, every land title we don't own yet. It's the difference between survival and sovereignty. Between watching history and rewriting it.
This isn't just about wealth. It's about power. Because the truth is, we can't fully fight systems we still depend on. We can't build a legacy if we don't understand leverage. We can't free a people if we don't fund the plan. That's why I wrote The Black Economy. To give us more than conversation - to give us a code. This is about healing our money wounds, reclaiming our value, and circulating our dollars with purpose.
It's about making wealth something we pass down - not just dream about. So yeah, I speak on the Black economy. Loudly. Because silence won't save us, and because I believe we're not just the culture. We are the capital. And it's time we act like it.
And I've watched how that cyclecrushes dreams, divides families, and burns out brilliance. So I made a choice: To speak up. To break it down. To build it back up. The Black economy is not some abstract theory to me - it's personal. It's every dollar we spend, every brand we build, every land title we don't own yet. It's the difference between survival and sovereignty. Between watching history and rewriting it.
This isn't just about wealth. It's about power. Because the truth is, we can't fully fight systems we still depend on. We can't build a legacy if we don't understand leverage. We can't free a people if we don't fund the plan. That's why I wrote The Black Economy. To give us more than conversation - to give us a code. This is about healing our money wounds, reclaiming our value, and circulating our dollars with purpose.
It's about making wealth something we pass down - not just dream about. So yeah, I speak on the Black economy. Loudly. Because silence won't save us, and because I believe we're not just the culture. We are the capital. And it's time we act like it.