Juggernaut
A Paradigm Shift on Antisemitism
by Orr Leschziner
This is the price your customers see. Edit list price
About the Book
In Juggernaut, Orr Leschziner strips away the emotional and political layers of history to reveal a cold, systemic reality. Applying the laws of thermodynamics and civilizational entropy, Leschziner identifies the Jewish nation as the "Hebrew Constant"—a 4,000-year-old fixed point that remains stable while every "Universalist" empire around it eventually enters a terminal state of decay.
From the Roman Legions to the Soviet Union and the modern Liberal West, Juggernaut audits the "Software" of successive systems and explains why they inevitably crash when they attempt to overwrite the original source code of the Jewish people. This is not a book of opinions; it is a clinical verdict. Juggernaut provides the "Universal Compiler" needed to understand why the modern world is currently glitching. It is essential reading for anyone who suspects that the global system is running on a terminal error message.
This is a tool for those who wish to understand the architecture of the hatred they see on their screens and streets, to secure their future in a radicalizing civilization.
"Read slowly. Read historically. Read as if the past has not finished speaking. Because it has not."
Features & Details
- Primary Category: History
- Additional Categories Religion & Spirituality, Inspiration
-
Project Option: 6×9 in, 15×23 cm
# of Pages: 334 -
Isbn
- Hardcover, ImageWrap: 9789655978797
- Publish Date: Mar 06, 2026
- Language English
- Keywords religion, rome, antisemitism, history
About the Creator
In Juggernaut: A Paradigm Shift on Antisemitism, Orr Leschziner combines thirty years of research in mathematics, history, and cybersecurity to reverse-engineer the "Operating Systems" of human civilizations. The result is a groundbreaking and unapologetic diagnosis of humanity's oldest hatred: The Thermodynamic Law of History. Moving from the marble halls of Rome, the theological theft of the "Pauline Grift," the Islamic usurpation of the Levant, to the modern digital horrors of October 7th, this book asks a hard, cold question: Is Antisemitism merely a social pathology, or is it embedded in the very architecture of civilizations that try to replace what came before? You will not find a sentimental retelling of history here, nor a plea for sympathy. What you will find is an excavation. This is a tool for those who wish to understand the architecture of the hatred they see on their screens and streets, to secure their future in a radicalizing civilization.
