No Jews allowed: White supremacists are building a segregated community in Arkansas.

‘Return to the Land’ is one of the most established white supremacist residential communities in the US,

Nearly 60 years after the United States outlawed racial and religious discrimination in housing, one group in Arkansas is openly reviving it.

“Return to the Land,” a white supremacist group co-founded by Eric Orwoll and Peter Csere in 2023, owns 160 acres in northeast Arkansas, according to the group’s website. Jews and non-whites are explicitly banned. Prospective residents must verify their “ancestral heritage” in a written application and interview before becoming paying members and residing in the off-grid settlement, according to the group’s Substack.

The organization hopes to replicate its whites-only settlements across the country, with the stated aim of “trying to put land back under the control of Europeans.”

Return to the Land is part of a long tradition of white supremacist groups that have sought to create isolated living communities, according to Moon. In the 1970s and ‘80s, white supremacists urged like-minded racists to move to the Pacific Northwest with the goal of transforming the area into a white ethnostate. In recent years, similar attempts at forming remote enclaves have cropped up in Kentucky, North Dakota, and Maine.

Would Jews be welcome here?

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Link to your outcry with this
 

‘Return to the Land’ is one of the most established white supremacist residential communities in the US,

Nearly 60 years after the United States outlawed racial and religious discrimination in housing, one group in Arkansas is openly reviving it.

“Return to the Land,” a white supremacist group co-founded by Eric Orwoll and Peter Csere in 2023, owns 160 acres in northeast Arkansas, according to the group’s website. Jews and non-whites are explicitly banned. Prospective residents must verify their “ancestral heritage” in a written application and interview before becoming paying members and residing in the off-grid settlement, according to the group’s Substack.

The organization hopes to replicate its whites-only settlements across the country, with the stated aim of “trying to put land back under the control of Europeans.”

Return to the Land is part of a long tradition of white supremacist groups that have sought to create isolated living communities, according to Moon. In the 1970s and ‘80s, white supremacists urged like-minded racists to move to the Pacific Northwest with the goal of transforming the area into a white ethnostate. In recent years, similar attempts at forming remote enclaves have cropped up in Kentucky, North Dakota, and Maine.

They should call themselves Columbia University.
 
I,m not surprise coming from a Magatard.
IMO, Hume is a 20something college-dropout woman who hates men. She has a lot of anger for both sides of the divide.

Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski recently commented about being a centrist and the hazards of being in the middle. Hume stands in the middle and angrily flips off everyone on either side. She's no centrist. Just a very disturbed young girl in a woman's body.


I think that there are... There are consequences when you voice your opinion. And when I say consequences, I'm not saying retribution, if you will, but you're subject to criticism, right? And I don't care whether you're in political office or whether you are a photographer. You speak up, you've got to now defend. I think what you're seeing is people are just, it's too wearying, I'm just not going to. That is worrisome because when people stop engaging, then those of us that are elected to office feel like, well, the signals we're getting from folks back home is everything's okay. Well, everything's not okay. Everything's not, okay. And so how can we encourage you? And this is where I guess one of the reasons why I felt it was still timely to focus on a book was because I think people need to have some level of hope and optimism. That maybe just maybe things can change, that maybe there are people who are willing to be that voice in the middle, even if it means that you're roadkill in the Middle. That's what happens when you stand in the the middle of the road. But there has to be encouragement to that.
 
IMO, Hume is a 20something college-dropout woman who hates men. She has a lot of anger for both sides of the divide.

Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski recently commented about being a centrist and the hazards of being in the middle. Hume stands in the middle and angrily flips off everyone on either side. She's no centrist. Just a very disturbed young girl in a woman's body.


I think that there are... There are consequences when you voice your opinion. And when I say consequences, I'm not saying retribution, if you will, but you're subject to criticism, right? And I don't care whether you're in political office or whether you are a photographer. You speak up, you've got to now defend. I think what you're seeing is people are just, it's too wearying, I'm just not going to. That is worrisome because when people stop engaging, then those of us that are elected to office feel like, well, the signals we're getting from folks back home is everything's okay. Well, everything's not okay. Everything's not, okay. And so how can we encourage you? And this is where I guess one of the reasons why I felt it was still timely to focus on a book was because I think people need to have some level of hope and optimism. That maybe just maybe things can change, that maybe there are people who are willing to be that voice in the middle, even if it means that you're roadkill in the Middle. That's what happens when you stand in the the middle of the road. But there has to be encouragement to that.
From what I have seen, he/she is rather unstable.
 

‘Return to the Land’ is one of the most established white supremacist residential communities in the US,

Nearly 60 years after the United States outlawed racial and religious discrimination in housing, one group in Arkansas is openly reviving it.

“Return to the Land,” a white supremacist group co-founded by Eric Orwoll and Peter Csere in 2023, owns 160 acres in northeast Arkansas, according to the group’s website. Jews and non-whites are explicitly banned. Prospective residents must verify their “ancestral heritage” in a written application and interview before becoming paying members and residing in the off-grid settlement, according to the group’s Substack.

The organization hopes to replicate its whites-only settlements across the country, with the stated aim of “trying to put land back under the control of Europeans.”

Return to the Land is part of a long tradition of white supremacist groups that have sought to create isolated living communities, according to Moon. In the 1970s and ‘80s, white supremacists urged like-minded racists to move to the Pacific Northwest with the goal of transforming the area into a white ethnostate. In recent years, similar attempts at forming remote enclaves have cropped up in Kentucky, North Dakota, and Maine.

That bunch of anti-vaxing inbred mother-fuckers won't last long. Not to worry.
 

‘Return to the Land’ is one of the most established white supremacist residential communities in the US,

Nearly 60 years after the United States outlawed racial and religious discrimination in housing, one group in Arkansas is openly reviving it.

“Return to the Land,” a white supremacist group co-founded by Eric Orwoll and Peter Csere in 2023, owns 160 acres in northeast Arkansas, according to the group’s website. Jews and non-whites are explicitly banned. Prospective residents must verify their “ancestral heritage” in a written application and interview before becoming paying members and residing in the off-grid settlement, according to the group’s Substack.

The organization hopes to replicate its whites-only settlements across the country, with the stated aim of “trying to put land back under the control of Europeans.”

Return to the Land is part of a long tradition of white supremacist groups that have sought to create isolated living communities, according to Moon. In the 1970s and ‘80s, white supremacists urged like-minded racists to move to the Pacific Northwest with the goal of transforming the area into a white ethnostate. In recent years, similar attempts at forming remote enclaves have cropped up in Kentucky, North Dakota, and Maine.

I warned y'all that this would eventually happen when colleges began segregating dorms and classes as part of a DEI initiative.
 
I warned y'all that this would eventually happen when colleges began segregating dorms and classes as part of a DEI initiative.
It's always been around. Texas has had its share of religion communes where leaders were marrying multiple wives as young as 14. Utah has been notorious for such groups.

April 7, 2008 / 8:06 AM EDT / CBS/AP
More than 400 children, mostly girls in pioneer dresses, were swept into state custody from a polygamist sect in what authorities described Monday as the largest child-welfare operation in Texas history.

The dayslong raid on the sprawling compound built by now-jailed polygamist leader Warren Jeffs was sparked by a 16-year-old girl's call to authorities that she was being abused and that girls as young as 14 and 15 were being forced into marriages with much older men.

Dressed in home-sewn, ankle-length dresses with their hair pinned up in braids, some 133 women left the Yearning for Zion Ranch of their own volition along with the children.


 
It's always been around. Texas has had its share of religion communes where leaders were marrying multiple wives as young as 14. Utah has been notorious for such groups.

April 7, 2008 / 8:06 AM EDT / CBS/AP
More than 400 children, mostly girls in pioneer dresses, were swept into state custody from a polygamist sect in what authorities described Monday as the largest child-welfare operation in Texas history.

The dayslong raid on the sprawling compound built by now-jailed polygamist leader Warren Jeffs was sparked by a 16-year-old girl's call to authorities that she was being abused and that girls as young as 14 and 15 were being forced into marriages with much older men.


Dressed in home-sewn, ankle-length dresses with their hair pinned up in braids, some 133 women left the Yearning for Zion Ranch of their own volition along with the children.


However, they will be able to likely get it sanctioned as a "safe space" as courts have upheld segregated housing at colleges. This is what I've warned about.

I mean, crap like this has been happening all the time, from Muslims and Communes creating "communities" to Nazi jackwipes and polygamist "LDS" sects we'd rather just crawled under rocks and were not part of "us". What I warn about is when courts start sanctioning segregation as "safe space" you will find that some folks you don't want to feel safe will ask for the same consideration.
 

‘Return to the Land’ is one of the most established white supremacist residential communities in the US,

Nearly 60 years after the United States outlawed racial and religious discrimination in housing, one group in Arkansas is openly reviving it.

“Return to the Land,” a white supremacist group co-founded by Eric Orwoll and Peter Csere in 2023, owns 160 acres in northeast Arkansas, according to the group’s website. Jews and non-whites are explicitly banned. Prospective residents must verify their “ancestral heritage” in a written application and interview before becoming paying members and residing in the off-grid settlement, according to the group’s Substack.

The organization hopes to replicate its whites-only settlements across the country, with the stated aim of “trying to put land back under the control of Europeans.”

Return to the Land is part of a long tradition of white supremacist groups that have sought to create isolated living communities, according to Moon. In the 1970s and ‘80s, white supremacists urged like-minded racists to move to the Pacific Northwest with the goal of transforming the area into a white ethnostate. In recent years, similar attempts at forming remote enclaves have cropped up in Kentucky, North Dakota, and Maine.



This is great. 12 assholes living off the grid in tents and shacks on 160 acres. VERY easy to keep an eye on, and separated from decent people.

I wonder why the tater head DOJ didn't go in with armored bulldozers. Think I'll write a note to both the AG of Arkansas and Pam Bondi.
 
Do you believe that this one case of banning Jews from 160 acres of U.S. land outnumbers the number of Muslims and
others that want to totally eliminate/kill the Israeli people with their River to the Sea and the growing call for Intifada?
And before Israel where do you think the antisemitism came from in this country?
 
And before Israel where do you think the antisemitism came from in this country?

Don't know what you're referring to as being before Israel. But much if not all of the anti Semitism in America
more than a half century ago came from Democrat KKKers along with the Democrat Grand Wizard Robert Byrd
who biden had a great relationship with.
 
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