For over two thousand years, the West shaped the science, politics, and economy of the planet. Today it stands at an epochal crossroads, facing a crisis on three fronts that threatens its very survival in the twenty-first century.
The first is demographic. Fertility rates across the Western world have collapsed far below replacement level, setting in motion an inexorable contraction that no Western nation has escaped. The second is material. The West has grown dangerously dependent on rival powers for the resources, energy, and critical supply chains on which its economies run. The third is a crisis of sovereignty and identity, as Western nations appear fragmented, uncertain of their own foundations, and without a long-term strategic vision, just as cohesive authoritarian blocs rise to challenge them.
Pax Occidentalis rejects two false answers to this predicament: the impossible dream of a globalist utopia, and the passive acceptance of decline. In their place it argues for a pragmatic realism rooted in the hard logic of survival: the construction of a politically united, economically self-sufficient, and militarily strong Western Federation, uniting North America, Europe, and Oceania into a single civilizational bloc.
Across fifteen chapters, the book moves from diagnosis to blueprint. It examines the mathematics of demographic decline and the policies that might reverse it; the architecture of a federal government and its institutions; a commodity-backed monetary system and the reform of Western capitalism; industrial and energy sovereignty; the coming age of artificial intelligence; and a grand strategy built around the maritime and financial chokepoints that shape global power. The result is both an unflinching diagnosis of Western decline and a concrete, systematic plan for its renewal.
Rigorous, data-driven, and unafraid of hard conclusions, Pax Occidentalis is a manifesto for those who believe the West's decline is not inevitable, but a choice. Includes 27 original charts, diagrams, and maps illustrating the demographic, economic, and strategic arguments.