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SEX-BASED ECONOMY 

The reality that the modern American female does'nt have sex unless there is money involved.Such economy has always existed...but has been made more widely available to more women of varying degrees of savvy by that great class-leveling tool called:THE INTERNET.
If a woman is even barely attractive("6" or higher) she's:
1)Acting a/o directing a/o producing a/o selling porn.
2)Has a website(s) to that effect.
3)Is on numerous "modeling" sites.
4)Is on numerous "escort" sites.
5)Is on a coupla' porn casting agency sites.
6)Owns the casting agency.
7)Is stripping.
8)Earning money doing anything from "hot bod-bikini contests"...to repping for a liqour company at local bars...to being a spokesmodel for online gaming companies...to being the calendar/booth girl for import-tuner aftermarket car companies.
9)Got some guy(s) paying for anything from dinner...to rent
...to college...to cars...to real estate in her name...to
whatever the market will bear.
The maximum effective age band is between 18 and 35...much like a pro-ballplayer. Such gamesmanshp is no longer the province of the usual suspects...THEY'RE ALL DOING IT...because they can.
This new economic paradigm dovetails perfectly with the NEO-FEMINIST concept that as long as the money ends up in a womans pocket...anything goes.Women now define,re-define,and profit from their sexuality."WHORE" is no more an insult than two brothas' callin' each other "nigga"...And is usually delivered as a back-handed compliment from one woman to another in envy at ones ability to "game it" better.
This economy also weaves perfectly into the "traditional" legal/governmental set-up...in that even a most casual glance at the legal system finds women attorneys,judges,and politicians in abundance...Thus providing the institutional basis for protecting & bolstering this "new" economy.Yes,we are truly ... "a nation of laws and not of men."
BLIND IDIOT:"My woman and I relate to each other on a level
of love I've never known."

HONEST DRINKIN' BUDDY:"You're gonna make me puke!Check the scoreboard...She's 32...an ex-model who's been gaming the SEX-BASED ECONOMY since she was 16.She's toasted through her stamps...and you are happier n' a fly in shit to have her.
What's it like being a caddie?"
SEX-BASED ECONOMY by L.MARTIN October 19, 2005
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stimulating the economy 

Buying one or more item(s) for over 100 dollars.
Going on a shopping spree and spending more than 200 dollars in the span of 24 hours.
Girl one: You really bought that TV and surround sound?
Girl two: Yeah, I was stimulating the economy on friday

Sex economy 

An ecomomy where goods can be exchanged for sex,or money can be exchanged for sex as well as other goods. The main base of such an economy is sex. so that since about everyone can have sex they always have something to exchange for goods or money.
It is a new economic system proposed just recently and already has supporters.It was at first proposed because it was thought that humanity was to centered on money and as a way to give all people some value.
Sex economy by Deep blue 2012 December 3, 2009

Slakenet Economy 

(noun) /ˈsleɪkˌnɛt ɪˈkɒnəmi/

A self-sustaining economy driven by the utilization of data, browsing activity, and other valuable assets shared on the internet. In this economy, the act of using the internet serves as a means to fund internet connectivity, creating a cycle where internet usage sustains itself.
Hey Fred, we won't need to increase the budget if we switch to the Slakenet Economy.
Slakenet Economy by Slakenet February 6, 2024

Skepticism Economy

An economic system in which skepticism—the posture of doubt, debunking, and critical inquiry—is monetized through media, events, merchandise, and institutional funding. The skepticism economy rewards those who produce content that challenges popular beliefs, especially when the challenges are dramatic and the targets are stigmatized. It creates a market for “myth‑busting” and “conspiracy debunking,” often simplifying complex issues for mass consumption. Like the atheism economy, it turns a cognitive practice into a career.
Example: “The podcast earned six figures by debunking paranormal claims. The skepticism economy paid well for certainty dressed as inquiry.”

Skepticism Market

The competitive arena where skeptical content creators, organizations, and influencers vie for audience attention, donations, and professional opportunities. The skepticism market favors accessible targets (psychics, creationists, alternative medicine) over complex systemic critiques. It rewards performance of rationality—the right tone, the confident dismissal—rather than genuine epistemic humility. Market pressures can turn skepticism into a form of entertainment, where debunking is the hook and nuance is the enemy of engagement.

Example: “The video debunking homeopathy got millions of views; the follow‑up examining structural barriers to healthcare got almost none. The skepticism market had spoken.”

Smartphone Economy

An economic system structured around the capabilities of the smartphone: constant connectivity, location tracking, app ecosystems, and frictionless payment. The smartphone economy enables gig work (driving, deliveries), social commerce (shopping via feeds), and the monetisation of every idle moment (games, news, ads). It turns the phone into the primary interface for earning, spending, and living—making the device a necessity rather than a luxury.
Example: “Without her smartphone, she couldn’t work (delivery apps), pay (digital wallet), or even find her way (maps). The smartphone economy had made the device an invisible tax on participation.”

Smartphone Market

The marketplace of apps, services, and accessories built around smartphone platforms (iOS, Android). Unlike open markets, the smartphone market is controlled by two companies (Apple, Google) that dictate what apps are allowed, what commissions are taken, and what data is harvested. Developers compete for visibility within stores that act as gatekeepers, while users are locked into ecosystems that discourage switching. It is a market owned by its infrastructure.

Example: “His app was rejected from the store for vague reasons—the smartphone market, where the gatekeepers decide who gets to sell and who gets silenced.”