What if many of the crises defining modern life are not separate events at all, but the same pattern repeating through different systems?
From contaminated water systems and housing disasters to public-health failures, institutional distrust, technological disruption, and the slow erosion of everyday security, this book examines what happens when the structures people depend on begin to fail in plain sight.
Built from real events, real places, and documented evidence, the book traces how breakdown moves through infrastructure, governance, labor, health, information, and ordinary daily life. Rather than treating each crisis as an isolated story, it reveals the deeper connections beneath them: deferred maintenance, fragmented responsibility, weakened oversight, incentive distortion, public neglect, and burdens pushed downward onto households and communities.
This is not a book of abstract theory or political slogans. It is a factual, readable investigation into the hidden architecture of modern breakdown and the human consequences that follow when systems stop protecting the people who live inside them.
For readers interested in society, public life, institutions, and the forces shaping the world now, this book offers a clear and unsettling answer to a pressing question:
What are we really living through?