This post originally began life as an email exchange between a friend and I shortly after the Project Mohave Liberation Manifesto was released on May 15, 2009. Project Mojave is essentially a get rich quick scheme led by Clay Collins of the blog Finance Your Freedom (formerly the Growing Life). The project encourages its subscribers who pay $97 per month to find an expert in a field, create an information product with them such as an ebook and to sell it for $47 on the internet. The manifesto itself was written as a marketing tool for Mohave by Jonathan Mead, a personal development blogger and marketer who writes on IlluminatedMind.net and also as a guest writer on the ubiquitous ZenHabits.net. I have followed Jonathan’s blog, projects, and other social media identities for almost as long as he has been writing. Illuminated Mind began as a spiritually minded blog that explored simple Buddhist-like concepts and was critical of both productivity and personal development. However, over the past year the blog has changed into a guide to “become free” through a variety of “unconventional” methods, much like the ones highlighted later on in this post. (more…)
Posts Tagged ‘job slavery’
Marketing as Freedom: Mead’s Mojave Manifesto
Friday, August 21st, 2009Tags: Enlightenment, Four Hour Work Week, freedom business, get rich quick, Illuminated Mind, job slavery, Jonathan Mead, liberation manifesto, marketing, personal development, Project Mohave, social emancipation
Posted in Guru Criticism | 24891 Comments »http%3A%2F%2Fbeyondgrowth.net%2Fguru-criticism%2Fmarketing-as-freedom-meads-mohave-manifesto%2FMarketing+as+Freedom%3A+Mead%27s+Mojave+Manifesto2009-08-22+02%3A45%3A18Eric+Schillerhttp%3A%2F%2Fbeyondgrowth.net%2F%3Fp%3D248
About Beyond Growth
Beyond Growth is a collaborative blogging project focused on critiquing and expanding the personal development field. Noting a lack of critical discourse in personal development, Duff McDuffee and Eric Schiller founded Beyond Growth in the hopes of using it as a platform to foster growth and responsibility.

