Frequently Asked Questions

  • The 1940s represent the peak of American social trust and cultural cohesion. During this era, before the radical shifts of the 1965 Hart-Celler Act, America was a high-functioning, homogeneous society where the tax base funded the future of its own children, not a globalist experiment. We seek to restore the demographic and cultural balance of that era to ensure that "The American Dream" is once again a protected inheritance for heritage Americans, rather than a prize for the rest of the world.

  • Yes. We recognize that "paper citizenship" granted by a corrupt, anti-white bureaucracy does not create a true national bond. The 1965 and 1990 Immigration Acts were legal subversions designed to dilute the American identity. While we distinguish between those who entered through fraud and those who followed the "rules" of the time, the end goal remains the same: a return to a cohesive national home. We prioritize Voluntary Repatriation Packages, providing the capital for these individuals to return and build their own motherlands.

  • Because it is the moral engine used to justify our replacement. Every time an American asks for secure borders or a "people-first" policy, they are silenced with the "Never Again" bludgeon. We believe that no historical event—regardless of the details—should be deified into a religion that demands the suicide of the West. By recanting the false religion of Holocaustianity, we break the psychological chains that prevent us from taking our own side and securing a future for our children.

  • Our mission is the Great Restoration, not a call to chaos. We advocate for a "Revolutionary Executive"—a leader with the expanded authority to implement remigration through law, tax policy, and the removal of the subsidies that currently incentivize the invasion. Our process begins with peace: ending the $1.5 trillion fraud cycles, offering departure grants, and closing the door. We believe that when the incentives to exploit America are removed, the majority will return to their own people. However, the sovereignty of the American nation is non-negotiable, and the state must have the resolve to ensure compliance with the new social contract.