The Great American Displacement: Part XXIV: (The 1871 Betrayal)

The Frozen Agony of Valley Forge: Blood in the Snow, Sacrifice for Posterity Imagine the frozen agony of Valley Forge in the winter of 1777-1778. Our ancestors—sturdy men of English, Scottish, Irish, German, and Dutch stock, the unyielding backbone of this fledgling republic—endured horrors that would break lesser souls. Barefoot in the biting snow, their …

The Great American Displacement: Part XXIII: (Taxation’s Tyranny)

In the grueling factories and mills of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, our Ethnic American forbearers—Irish fleeing the Great Famine, Germans escaping political turmoil, Italians and Poles arriving in search of opportunity—endured long hours, dangerous conditions, and meager wages to build lives under the promise of the Naturalization Act of 1790. This act …

My Personal Philosophy: Ethno-Originalism

My Quiet Reflections on a Path for Ethnic Americans As I sit down to share these thoughts, drawn from the articles I’ve written over time on ethnicamerican.org, I want to be absolutely clear: this is just my personal starting point in trying to explain my own emerging philosophy. I’ve been pondering this for many months …

The Great American Displacement: Part XXII: (Pharmaceutical Poisoning)

The Chemical Culling of Our People Envision the bold vision of our founding fathers in 1787, crafting a Constitution that secured the blessings of liberty for “ourselves and our posterity”—a covenant embracing all free white persons of good character under the 1790 Naturalization Act, uniting Europeans from various nations into one Ethnic American people without …

The Great American Displacement: Part XXI: (Our Failing Infrastructure)

Imagine the frozen hell of Valley Forge in the winter of 1777-1778. My ancestors—hardy men of European stock, the very sinew of this nascent republic—endured unimaginable hardships. Barefoot in the snow, feet wrapped in blood-stained rags, they huddled around meager fires, starving and freezing, yet unyielding. General George Washington walked among them, his presence a …

The Great American Displacement: Part XX: (Elite Betrayal)

The Billionaire Architects of Replacement In the frozen mud of Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, during the brutal winter of 1777-1778, General George Washington—born on American soil to parents of English heritage—led his ragtag Continental Army through unimaginable hardships of starvation and frostbite. These soldiers, Ethnic Americans descended from the European settlers who had braved the Atlantic’s …

The Ethnic American Library

© James Sewell 2006 – All rights reserved. Bookmark the Archive of Our Displacement We stand at a crossroads that our Founding Fathers could have scripted themselves. George Washington, in his Farewell Address of 1796, didn’t mince words about the perils of unchecked power: “If, in the apprehension of the wealthiest and most powerful governments …

That Time When We Expelled 60% of all Mexican Citizens in the US…

And We Can Do It Again, along with The Somalis, Indians, Haitians etc… In the bitter winter of 1777-1778, at Valley Forge, our ancestors—those hardy Ethnic Americans of English, Scottish, Irish, German, and Dutch stock—endured frozen feet wrapped in rags, starvation gnawing at their bellies, and the constant specter of death from disease and Hessen …

The Great Ethnic American Displacement Part XIX: (Judicial Overreach)

The Subversion of Justice As I reflect on my roots as an Ethnic American, with family stories passed down of those who crossed oceans to carve out a land of freedom and opportunity, the Declaration of Independence hits close to home. For those unfamiliar, this foundational document from 1776 lists 27 specific “grievances”—formal complaints—against King …

Heritage American: A Cowardly Dodge That Divides Our People

Stop using the term “Heritage American” Fellow Ethnic Americans—descendants of the European pioneers who forged this republic from wilderness, whether your kin landed at Jamestown in 1610 like mine aboard the Prosperous, or crossed the Atlantic later as free white persons ready to build and defend—we must confront the sly terms creeping into our discourse. …