
Providence Society is an American nationalist society committed to building the institutional basis of the nationalist movement into the second half of the twenty-first century. We understand that if our collective movement in America is to endure, it must create parallel structures capable of surviving beyond any single electoral cycle.
"Language, faith, culture, and history—and, yes, birth, blood, and soil—produce a people, not an ideology."

Vision
America is facing its greatest challenge since its founding: replacement. Conservatism has failed to conserve what America is, its people, and its character. Now more than ever, a nationalist alternative is needed to the strongly worded conservatism that remains dominant on the American right.
Approach
Providence Society does not exist to create new nationalists, as many already do that. We exist to effectively organize them. We recognize that personnel is policy, and that without our own networks to counter legacy institutions, nationalists will be undermined and reduced to death by a thousand cuts of subversion.
In 1965, Congress passed the Immigration and Nationality Act, known as the Hart-Celler Act. Sold to the American public as a minor reform that would not change the demographic composition of the country, it abolished the national origins quota system that had preserved America's European character since 1924. The result: the largest demographic transformation in human history, enacted without the consent of the American people.
Source: Migration Policy Institute, Census Bureau
In 1965, Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Hart-Celler Act, promising only minor technical reform. However, the Hart-Celler Act was the first step in a radical process of population replacement, opening the floodgates to third-world mass migration. The Immigration Act of 1990 removed the remaining barriers, leaving Americans without hope to stem the tide of their own replacement.
The descriptions of America as a "melting pot" and a "nation of immigrants" are both twentieth-century creations advanced by Israel Zangwill and John F. Kennedy, respectively. This false idea has since been used to justify the demographic replacement of the Americans who built this country. By 2045, Americans are projected to become a minority in their own country. America will no longer be America.
Source: Census Bureau, American Community Survey
For sixty years, America has absorbed the consequences of policies it never voted for. The results speak for themselves.
Communities that existed for generations have been transformed overnight. Neighborhoods where families built lives for decades now house populations with no connection to American tradition or history.
Wages stagnate while housing costs soar. Young Americans compete with an endless supply of foreign labor. The American Dream of homeownership and family formation slips further from reach each year.
What does it mean to be American when America has no coherent identity? Multiculturalism promised enrichment. It delivered fragmentation, resentment, and the erosion of shared values.
Mass immigration reshapes the electorate, dilutes the political power of Americans who built this country. Policy becomes disconnected from the interests of heritage Americans.

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This did not happen by accident. Our task is monumental, but it can be achieved. It begins with organization, it begins with Providence Society.

"Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious People. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other."