What if the scales were always rigged — and someone finally brought their own?Spanning fifteen years of research across music, mathematics, monetary theory, and the margins of institutional power, The Conquest of DoughForge is unlike any book you have held. Part economic treatise, part self-publishing manifesto, part Welsh working-class elegy — it is a work that insists on weighing itself.At its heart is a simple, devastating question: who decides what counts as data, and who built the instruments doing the counting? Drawing on the Check-Weighman Principle — the miner's right to independent scales — Roger G. Lewis maps the collapse of UK housing affordability not as policy failure but as an engineered regime, measured by his original FAIR-Index across 27 years of evidence.But this is also a book about the act of writing it. With the W-Anchor Protocol, the SCGD Formula, and a curriculum for writers who refuse to be captured by platforms or publishers, Lewis offers tools as much as arguments. The anchor holds, or the build does not ship.For the check-weighmen. For Arby, Ken, and Charles. For anyone who has ever held the line in a comment thread at midnight.