The Wars of the Worlds and the Politics of Destruction
Political Thought
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3 Months Free
Buy Now for £13.79
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Narrated by:
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Ryan Currie
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By:
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Boris Kriger
War is not an aberration of civilization. It is civilization's shadow—cast in every direction, at every hour, by the very light that humanity imagines will guide it to peace.
In The Wars of the Worlds and the Politics of Destruction, Boris Kriger dismantles the comfortable fictions surrounding armed conflict—the myth of the just war, the fantasy of effective diplomacy, the delusion that territorial conquest still confers power—and reveals the machinery that keeps humanity locked in an endless cycle of organized violence. This is not a history of battles. It is a political anatomy of why wars begin, why they refuse to end, and why the people who suffer most are invariably those with the least say in the matter.
Drawing on political science, military strategy, psychology, and technology studies, Kriger traces the architecture of modern conflict across its many dimensions: hybrid warfare that blurs the line between soldier and civilian, migration weaponized as geopolitical coercion, private armies answering to corporate balance sheets rather than national flags, and artificial intelligence poised to become either the ultimate instrument of destruction or the last hope for prevention. The audiobook examines how friendly nations are systematically turned into enemies, how propaganda manufactures consent for slaughter, and how the exposure of war's true provocateurs paradoxically fails to stop the killing.
©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger