Jamal Thompson
I absolutely love this a lot and so much with all of this money and wealth that I'm completely so obsessed with it like crazy & I just love money, cash and dollar bills so much in this picture that I want to have me stacks of cash, piles of cash, mountains of cash, thousands of dollars, millions of dollars and even billions of dollars one day in real life so I can be a thousandnaire, a millionaire and a billionaire in life living in luxury, paradise and financial freedom with all of this cash around to play with this money have peace with this money & have good times with all of this money and cash right in my suitcase, briefcase, duffel bag, plastic bag, cardboard box, safe, table, bed, chair, floor, bathroom, backpack, clothes pockets stuffed with money, shirts stuffed with money, money belt, money truck, money gun, raining down dollar bills and cash everywhere, money machine and a wheelbarrow filled up with all of this cash and dollar bills
falah fakhriyah
A very good read, and a fun one at that as the author includes real life examples that are too funny (or wicked) to be true. The author ends the book with a fundamental question on how we want to define our lives as citizens of democratized countries.
Dylan Sklar
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Not absolutely worthless, but handles the morality of markets in an almost oversimplified way. The vast majority of the book is not-so-brief recantations of horrifying uses of marketing which leads to an unsatisfying call to action - let's talk about the morality of marketing. Overall, not terribly written, and the use of first person at least makes the terribly dry task of suffering through the exhaustive list of examples slightly more readable.
5 people found this review helpful