In Myth, Morality, and Empire: Jorge Majfud's Rewriting of the Western Frontier, Alexandere H. Hunter offers a rigorous and nuanced interpretation of Jorge Majfud's The Wild Frontier: 200 Years of Anglo-Saxon Fanaticism in Latin America. His study approaches Majfud's text as both a philosophical critique and a historical reflection on the moral foundations of Western civilization. Drawing upon thinkers such as Frantz Fanon, Edward Said, Michel Foucault, Walter Mignolo, and José Martí, Hunter examines how Majfud reimagines the idea of the "frontier" as an ethical and psychological construct rather than a geographical limit. Through this lens, the frontier becomes a moral boundary that defines the civilized and the barbaric, providing ideological justification for conquest, exclusion, and self-righteous violence. Hunter's analysis emphasizes the originality of Majfud's synthesis of critical theory and humanist ethics. He argues that Majfud bridges the gap between structural critique and moral introspection, transforming the discourse of power into a meditation on conscience and responsibility. By situating Majfud within the broader genealogy of decolonial thought, Hunter demonstrates how The Wild Frontier reintroduces an ethical dimension to contemporary critical theory, one that demands not only political awareness but also moral awakening. Ultimately, the study presents Majfud as a thinker who challenges the myths sustaining Western modernity and invites readers to reconsider the moral cost of progress.