In His Signis Vincemus
The United States is two hundred and fifty years old today; America is not. America was already centuries into its process of national formation when the Declaration of Independence was signed; the Germanic race, from which we Americans descend, was already millennia old. The symbols of our race predate our race (in the formal sense); the symbols of our nation are (in some cases) younger, but they are still ours.
Today, there are many false churches, and they almost universally still display the cross (and other Christian symbols); only a madman or a fiend would suggest that we abandon these symbols because they have been coopted by wicked men. In fact, the enemy would not attempt to steal symbols if those symbols had neither meaning nor power — abusus usum non tollit. The misuse or abuse of a symbol confirms the existence of a correct use, much as the exception proves (the existence of) the rule. Our enemies do not get to dictate our symbols or the terms of their use.
Moderation is almost universally a virtue, although being a moderate is most certainly not; we must ensure that we neither fall off the left side of the horse (rejecting the symbols of our race and using only the symbols of our nation) nor fall off the right side of the horse (rejecting the symbols of our nation and using only the symbols of our race). The flags of our forefathers are still ours, and it would be wrong for us to break with tradition and not pass these symbols to our sons and grandsons. A political movement or group that falls off either side of the horse will, ultimately, not succeed.
To name and examine all of our symbols would take a lifetime to do properly, so I will narrow my focus here to four symbols and one category:
1. The American Flag
First, we must claim and use the American flag, for it has become a symbol of our nation and it is ours by right.

We must not cede this symbol to any others, and we must certainly not abandon it. Both the current form and a number of historical versions of this symbol must be maintained and used.
2. The Hakenkreuz
Second, we must claim and use the Hakenkreuz, for it is a symbol of our race and it is ours by right.

God placed this symbol into the night sky and it long ago became a symbol of our Germanic race. We must not cede this symbol to any others, and we must certainly not abandon it. That this symbol offends enemies and false friends alike and drives them into a frenzy is good and useful. In English, we may employ the German name or the translation: the hooked cross.
3. The Cross
Third, we must claim and use the Cross, for it is a symbol of our Lord and (by way of our religion) of our race, and it is ours by right.

As God clearly tells us (Genesis) through the mouth of Allfather Noah, we, the sons and daughters of Japheth, are the chosen race; to us God has entrusted His Kingdom on Earth — Christendom. We must not cede this symbol to any others, and we must certainly not abandon it. Together with the hooked cross, the crux immissa (the Latin cross — †) is a declaration to friend and enemy alike of our loyalty to race and to Lord. For either of these, you must be ready to die, for to die for the symbols of our race and our Lord is to die for the things thereby signified.
4. The Confederate Flag
Fourth, we must claim and use the Confederate flag, for it has become a symbol of our nation and is ours by right.


Discussion of the Civil War is hereby ended — we are not Notherners or Southerners, we are, first and foremost, American brothers. The foolish and tragic business of the Civil War must be left in the past; it is most certainly our history, but our great-grandchildren can debate and (finally) close the matter in peace in the future. We must first win that peace, and we do not need more distractions from the work that must be done. The Stars and Bars, the Battle Flag, and Old Glory must and will fly side by side. They are all our symbols and we must neither cede them to others nor abandon them. There will be no tolerance for geographical squabbling that goes beyond anything more than brotherly banter.
5. The Flags of our Fatherlands
Fifth, we must claim and use the flags of our forefathers, for they are symbols of our fatherlands and of our race.



Toward this end, we must and will fly the flags of the three great European nations whose contributions form the core of our American nation: Germany, Scotland, and England. There are certainly other European nations whose contributions we cannot ignore and do not mean to diminish, and their symbols may rightly be incorporated and employed when and where appropriate, but these great three are the very heart and soul of who and what we are and what we are fighting to preserve. We must not cede these symbols to any others, and we must certainly not abandon them. We sons and daughters of Western Europe are all brothers and sisters regardless of where we may now be found in the world. Our struggle is one, for our people are one. I am my brother’s keeper.
Our history did not start in 1776 and it will not end in 2026. The symbols of our race are older than the Sun, and we will abandon not one of them; the symbols of our nations are ours by right and we will cherish them all. Our divisions by language and geography must and will be subordinated to our unity in blood. I see in every American — whether he is a Northerner, a Southerner, an East Coaster, or a West Coaster — a brother or a sister, and the same is true of every son or daughter of Western Europe. We face an existential threat and an implacable enemy; we must face our enemies as a united front. Let these, then, be our symbols in this struggle and let no man attack or denigrate any of them. The symbols of our forefathers are part of our patrimony, and we will defend them with our lives.
May God see from Heaven and bless our struggle. May we each find it in ourselves to devote all that we have to this struggle and the good of our people. May the next two hundred and fifty years of America make the previous two hundred and fifty look like an opening act. May God bless the American nation.
God with us.