Couverture de Superhuman - From Engineered Desire to Engineered Consent

Superhuman - From Engineered Desire to Engineered Consent

Superhuman - From Engineered Desire to Engineered Consent

De : Aaron Ping
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A grieving father’s search for answers and the century-long con that sold corporate freedom as our own.


When my son died, I started asking questions. The answers led me to places I never expected: a dinner party in Vienna, a railroad case nobody remembers, our constitutional rights hijacked as an excuse to look away while children die.

Superhuman is my search for what happened. Not just to my son, but to all of us.





© 2025 SnapPingBack Productions
Politique et gouvernement Sciences politiques Sciences sociales
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    Épisodes
    • Two Stacks
      Oct 16 2025

      Send us a text

      The episode opens by introducing the Superhuman series—how corporations became entities with more legal rights than humans but none of the accountability. This isn't just about technology or social media—it's about power, who wields it, and how we built a system where companies can harm children at scale and face no consequences.

      Then Laura Marquez-Garrett of the Social Media Victims Law Center, who represents over 4,000 families harmed by social media, walks us through the massive gap between what platforms claim and what actually happens. She exposes the hidden realities no safety guide mentions—what law enforcement knows but parents don't, why evidence vanishes by design, and how platforms' actual practices contradict their public promises.

      When my 15-year-old son Avery convinced me to let him use Snapchat in 10th grade, I thought I understood the risks. I'd read "The Anxious Generation." I worried about screen time and social pressure. I had no idea what was really happening on the platform. This episode covers the information I wish had been made more publicly available, so that I would have known what I was dealing with.

      00:00 - Two Stacks of Paper (Season Introduction)

      11:05 - Laura Introducton

      13:05 - Snapchat Knew

      18:04 - Colorado SB 86

      23:35 - Product Design

      29:15 - Reporting Criminal Activity to Snapchat

      32:21 - Perla Mendoza's Hunt for Justice

      39:13 - Unreported Crimes

      44:36 - Parents Can't Fathom the Truth

      Content warning: teen death, drug sales, and exploitation.

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      52 min
    • The Machine
      Oct 16 2025

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      This Episode explores how a century of manipulation techniques became smartphone features, through conversations with Jean Cavendish, a clinical psychiatrist who spent decades helping people escape cult programming. Jean died on November 19, 2025, a month after recording. This episode is a dedication to her life and work.

      The episode features testimony from Lori Schott about how Meta targets children's insecurities, and Taj Jensen, a fellow parent who lost his son to fentanyl purchased on Snapchat.

      At its core, this is about recognizing the systems designed to keep us scrolling, buying, and reacting—and asking the question that matters: What are you really hungry for?

      00:00 — Opening Reflection

      03:46 — The Birth of Influence

      07:26 — The King of the Engineers

      11:18 — The Toolkit of Persuasion

      13:03 — Selling Our Own Destruction

      14:29 — The Shame Machine ( testimony from Lori Schott)

      21:06 — Fear as a Business Model

      25:54 — The Science of Addiction

      30:55 — The Human Cost

      32:32 — The Wisdom of Jean Cavendish

      36:12 — The Teenage Brain

      38:15 — Hooked Forever

      43:08 — Receipts and Responsibility

      45:06 — Tanner’s Story (Guest Taj Jenson)

      50:19 — Breaking the Cycle

      Content warning: teen death, drug sales, and exploitation.

      Music by: Kjartan Abel CC BY-SA 4.0 https://kjartan-abel.com


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      56 min
    • Jeffersons Nightmare
      Oct 22 2025

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      How did corporations get more constitutional rights than your children?

      When a bookshelf tips over and harms one child, there's an immediate recall. When platform algorithms push suicide content to depressed teens, they claim First Amendment protection.

      To understand how we got here, Aaron traces the path from Jefferson's worst fears to today's reality. In 1886, a court reporter's unauthorized footnote gave corporations personhood. In 1971, the Powell Memo blueprinted corporate capture of democracy. In 2010, Citizens United unleashed unlimited dark money—corporations buying elections while hiding in shadows.

      These aren't ancient developments. You or your parents lived through most of this. The same First Amendment that platforms use to avoid accountability when children die is the one they use to pour millions into elections—anonymously.

      We traded away our democracy piece by piece, precedent by precedent. To reclaim it, we first have to see how we lost it.

      00:00 Cold Open — The Platform Claims the Right to Look Away

      02:10 Jefferson’s Nightmare & the Corporate Empires That Came Before

      06:52 The Tea That Started a Revolution

      10:00 Jefferson’s Vision & the Original Corporate Chains

      17:20 The Pendulum of Power — People vs. Corporations

      23:15 The Powell Memo — How Business Fought Back

      29:38 Citizens United & the Age of Corporate Speech

      36:45 The Tech Takeover — Lobbying, Loopholes, Immunity

      47:47 Section 230 & the Right to Look Away

      Social Media Online Child Sexual Exploitation Audio clips from C-SPAN


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      51 min
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