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OverviewYou are paying for this. Not in some abstract, distant way. Right now. Every time you fill your gas tank, pay a medical bill, watch a wildfire consume a town on the evening news, or wonder why your grocery bill keeps climbing, you are paying for a system that was designed to extract everything it can, for as long as it can, and leave you with the bill. The companies doing this knew. That is not an opinion. That is documented fact. Internal memos. Suppressed studies. Funded denial campaigns. Decades of evidence showing that the people at the top of the fossil fuel and industrial agriculture industries understood exactly what they were doing to the planet, and to you, and chose to keep doing it anyway. The Biggest Crime in History is the case they never wanted made. Chapter by chapter, the evidence is laid out the way it would be in the trial of the century. The forests being stripped. The aquifers being drained. The oceans being acidified. The soils being poisoned. The air being loaded with particulates that kill hundreds of thousands of Americans every year, and more than eight million people globally. Each chapter brings a new witness to the stand, a new exhibit entered into the record, a new line item on a balance sheet that has never been shown to the public in full. The number at the bottom of that balance sheet will shock you. The average American household is already paying between $30,000 and $46,000 per year for the true cost of the current system, in healthcare, in disaster response, in subsidies handed directly to the industries destroying the planet, in the slow degradation of the natural systems that produce the food, water, and air that no amount of money can replace once they are gone. You were never told that. You were supposed to keep paying and never ask where the money went. This book tells you where it went. Who took it. How they did it. And why the jury, every person reading these words, is the only one with the power to deliver a verdict that matters. Paul Zurav spent thirty years building systems that solved problems others called unsolvable. He brings that same precision to the most consequential case in human history: not a crime committed in the dark, but one carried out in plain sight, funded by public money, protected by purchased politicians, and accelerating toward consequences that no future generation will be able to undo. This is not a book about the environment. This is a book about fraud. About complicity. About the largest theft in human history, and the people who are still getting away with it. Read it. Then decide what you believe the verdict should be. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Paul ZuravPublisher: Ctek LLC Imprint: Ctek LLC Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.358kg ISBN: 9798267300230Pages: 264 Publication Date: 04 July 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationPaul Zurav has spent more than two decades at the intersection of leadership, technology, and systems change. With executive experience as CEO and COO, he has led organizations through complex challenges in global supply chains, business consulting, and advanced systems engineering. His work in artificial intelligence and machine learning has focused on solving entrenched problems with innovative, practical solutions. Beyond the boardroom and laboratory, Paul is a passionate advocate for ecosystem restoration and preservation. His career has bridged the worlds of commerce and conservation, giving him a rare perspective on how economic systems can both destroy and rebuild the foundations of life. The Biggest Crime in History reflects this dual expertise. Drawing on his background in technology, business, and advocacy, Paul prosecutes the case against short-term exploitation and makes the argument for long-term prosperity through ecological stewardship. His voice is both prosecutorial and hopeful: calling out the crimes of the present while insisting on the possibilities of restoration. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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