Capitalism is broken. Executives are parasites. This is a story on power, deception, and survival in modern America. Exposing a world where masks replace authenticity and the boldest liars rise to the top. It’s a darkly compelling look at how truth collapses under the weight of performance. This razor-edged exploration of deception is the true engine of modern life—corporate, political, and personal. Blending social critique with vivid storytelling, the book argues that lies aren’t an aberration but the rule: masks we wear to get ahead, survive, and sometimes even thrive. From manipulative executives to everyday white lies, the book dissects how imitation and performance replace authenticity in a society built on appearances. The tone is sharp, cynical, and darkly satirical, exposing the hypocrisy of America’s business culture, politics, and social fabric. Characters embody the corrosive power of faking it until nothing real remains. At once a cultural critique and a cautionary tale, Imitator reads like a manifesto on the collapse of truth in a world where the best liar always wins. It’s provocative, unsettling, and uncomfortably honest—a mirror many readers may not want to look into, but probably should.