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[–] Joe_McCarthy 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago  (edited ago)

Two established communities run by radicals in the US:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elohim_City,_Oklahoma

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_Creek_Community

The second is increasingly under fire by the Justice Department but the average person there is 13. The median age for whites in the US is 42.

These communities seem to work best when built around religion. Inviting racialist randoms might devolve into something resembling a Lord of the Flies scenario. These types tend to be extreme individualists personally despite their collectivist political beliefs and getting misfits and violence inclined screwballs may be unavoidable. This last point had much to do with why Aryan Nations lost its property in Idaho.

My own plan just involved pretty average, if conservative, white guys.

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[–] CervicalStrike [S] 0 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago 

Yes, I do agree that a religious component to this would be beneficial. My ideal scenario would involve some form of European Paganism that venerates forces of nature and our ancestors. I think this would be good both because I am interested in Europeans returning to pre-imported Judeo desert religion times and also because it would make us look more hippy-dippy and harmless to outsiders.

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[–] 9-11 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

paganism

really?

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[–] Quaestorr ago 

it is only now that I see the Varg Vikernes reference. While I personally have a soft spot for Varg (I even play the incidental Burzum record every once in a while), and think he has got some sensible things to say, I think that in general he is way too extreme/weird to see as some sort of a guide. I suppose it is okay to see him as a personal inspiration, but I would hesitate to regard him as some sort of authority on starting your own community: imho he's way too much a 'drop out' advocate.

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[–] Quaestorr ago 

pre-imported Judeo desert religion

That is indeed how I see the essential Christianity, but let us not forget that it was historically not perceived as such, and that for centuries it was a great inspiration to our ancestors. That, imho, is not to the credits of Christianity, but to the credits of our ancestors*! We've outgrown the religion; I realize that fact comes with its own problems, but pretending we still believe in the Hebrew YHWH is not a real solution. Paganism would require a lot of effort to get it to functioning properly, but I like how you see its relatively immature/weird imago as an advantage!

*(I like to compare European Christianity to a pearl: it is a beautiful gem, yet its essential core is an alien, potentially threatening irritant; the beautiful outer layers are in fact the result of the attacked organism's immune response.)

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[–] 6314955? ago 

What's wrong with something like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unitarian_Universalism