The Fall of Home is a powerful and urgent reflection on the West’s slow-motion crisis—driven not by war, but by migration, coerced diversity, and the hollowing-out of national identity from within.
In the spirit of Douglas Murray, this book blends personal memory with political insight to show how unchecked immigration is reshaping societies across Europe and the Anglosphere. Rising crime, collapsing trust, and the erosion of tradition are not accidents—they’re the result of policies that reject roots, consent, and continuity.
While elites celebrate “openness,” ordinary people live with the fallout. From strained security, to demographic shifts that fracture cohesion rather than foster it, to speech laws that punish dissent, the costs are mounting. The UK’s Online Safety Act—and similar laws across the West—are turning disagreement into a punishable offense.
From English village greens to urban no-go zones, The Fall of Home tracks how the dream of postwar harmony has decayed into managed fragmentation. This is not a xenophobic rant—it’s a principled defense of nationhood, consent, and the right to belong.
A must-read for anyone concerned with war and migration, national sovereignty, and the survival of the West, this is a clear-eyed call to reclaim what was never meant to be given away.