Defending the West
Western civilization, the inheritance of Greek reason, Roman law, and Judeo-Christian morality, is weakening. Institutions once designed to restrain human appetites increasingly amplify them, and that shift is visible in our governments, businesses, and churches.
For two thousand years, the West evolved and expanded by building institutions capable of disciplining our base instincts. Its endurance rested on restraints embedded in law, religion, family, and civic life. Those restraints are eroding, and the strain is evident across politics, business, culture, and the home.
Defending the West examines the forces fracturing these foundations and traces patterns that echo Rome’s decline. It begins with human nature—our need for status, belonging, and fairness—and shows how these impulses shaped the institutions of civilization. It then explains how reason, faith, and law once ordered those impulses toward stability, and how their weakening has opened the door to corruption, fragmentation, and rival powers seeking to exploit our confusion and division. From the roots of moral order to the loss of discipline in politics, family, and religion, the book follows the movement from coherence to disorder and outlines what restoring the West would require.
Renewal will not come from governments or slogans, but from individuals willing to recover the habits of discipline and responsibility that sustained earlier generations. The question is no longer whether the West can endure, but whether its people possess the resolve to do what preservation demands.
This book is available for purchase from various retailers in the following formats (more retailers to come, including print options):
Ebook - Readable with any ebook reader
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