Vladislav Bogorov is a published author with a background in journalism. He was conscripted into the Bulgarian Army as a tankman. He is probably the only person who is a certified welder and who has won four cases before the European Court of Human Rights as a lawyer. Having been born in Bulgaria, Vladislav now resides in Glasgow, United Kingdom. He has an MSc in Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies and an MSc in Law. Having written many shopping lists and lottery tickets over the years, Allison is no stranger to writing. With only high school education, she learned about the Nazis from Allo, Allo! and Indiana Jones, and was surprised when Vladislav invited her to join in this book project. It was her ignorance of history that enabled her to edit the book so that it may be enjoyed by everyday people. She lives in Glasgow, UK.
'… a fast-paced, engaging, and well-documented look at how our intertwined world is difficult - if not impossible - to design and control. Their book provides a plethora of 20th (and now 21st) century examples of the old saying: The road to hell is paved with good intentions.' Elizabeth Weiss, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology at San José State University, California; 'The central theme of this remarkable book is that while real engineering is an experimental science that works because it is based on a mass of real-world experiments, social engineering is only based on hope and abstract theory, which is why it regularly fails. A whole wish list of fashionable causes, past and present, are dissected, from making the world safe for democracy, communism, and feminism, to the minimum wage, foreign aid, renewable energy, the cancel culture and immigration, and their fatal weaknesses displayed in brutal and eloquent detail, backed with a massive apparatus of notes. A few hours of easy reading will tell you things you never imagined.' C.R. Hallpike, Emeritus Professor of Anthropology, McMaster University, Ontario; 'An arresting comparison of slavery in the United States with slavery in the Soviet Union. These similarities and contrasts should be better known.' Stephen Hicks, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy at Rockford University, Illinois