Ordo Atlantica
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Atlantic Canadian Nationalists⚡️
14 Words

~ UNUM CUM VIRTUTE MULTORUM💪 ~

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"The answer to this is - first, that love and hate are not mutually antagonistic but mutually complementary; that love connotes hate, hate of the thing that denies or destroys or threatens the thing beloved: that love of good connotes hate of evil, love of truth hate of falsehood, love of freedom hate of oppression; that hate may be as pure and good a thing as love, just as love may be as impure and evil a thing as hate; that hate is no more ineffective and barren than love, both being as necessary to moral sanity and growth as sun and storm are to physical life and growth."

The Sovereign People (1916) - Pádraig Mac Piarais (Patrick Pearse)
Happy Confederate Flag Day to all!

On this date in 1861, the First National Confederate Flag "Stars and Bars" was adopted by the Flag and Seal committee of the CSA government.

Also on this date in 1865, the Third National Flag, "The Blood Dipped Banner" was adopted by the Confederate Congress as the last official flag of the CSA.
#LestWeForget
#CSAFlagDay2026
Forwarded from White Canada
The Anti-White system used a useful idiot tiktoker to have a member of Frontenac Active Club doxxed and fired. This man is a former Olympian who has now lost his coaching job for the crime of being a Nationalist. Please donate if you can.

https://www.givesendgo.com/Zardo
Giulio Zardo: Canadian Olympian and nationalist.

Zardo was born in Montreal, and studied science at Concordia University. Zardo began his athletic career as a football player, where he represented Canada at the Global Junior Championship in Atlanta, in 2000. He was also an avid power lifter.

In August 2001 bobsled pilot, Yannick Morin walked into a gym Montreal, and asked the owner who the strongest, and fastest person in the gym was. The owner pointed to Zardo.

Within a year he was off to the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Zardo was the brakeman for the Canadian bobsleigh team.

At six foot one, 238 pounds he was able to press above 450 pounds, and squat above 680 pounds. Zardo's fitness earned him the repuation as one of the sport's strongest pushers.

He won silver at the FIBT World Bobsleigh Championship in Lake Placid in 2003, and won gold the following year in Germany.

Zardo continues to serve Canada as a nationalist.
The mother of one of our Division members recently peacefully passed away.

After a long legal battle with the state, the soulless cronies cancelled her life insurance.

As her only son and heir, he is left to handle the funeral costs by himself.

Please pray for our comrade and his mother and donate what you can during this difficult time. Go raibh míle maith agaibh.

https://gofund.me/97c920664
“Indeed, the truth that many people never understand, until it is too late, is that the more you try to avoid suffering, the more you suffer, because smaller and more insignificant things begin to torture you, in proportion to your fear of being hurt. The one who does most to avoid suffering is, in the end, the one who suffers the most: and his suffering comes to him from things so little and so trivial that one can say that it is no longer objective at all. It is his own existence, his own being, that is at once the subject and the source of his pain, and his very existence and consciousness is his greatest torture.”

~Thomas Merton
Forwarded from Blair Cottrell 🇦🇺
This study found that immigration directly lowers local birth rates among families who rent, by driving up the price of rentals & increasing the financial strain of child-bearing.

The study is economic number-crunching, so it doesn’t even begin to explore the compounding effect increased crime, high congestion and lower trust has on the incentive among locals to start a family.

This is official and documented evidence and it’s been public since 2018. Those still pushing mass immigration today know exactly what they’re doing.

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40176-018-0126-6
Forwarded from Ordo Atlantica
From sea to shining sea, Our blood has fallen since time began, Now it boils, a storm unleashed, a fire within the man. Our energy stirs and grows, too strong to cage, Its rhythm beats within our hearts, a pulse that fuels our rage.

From sea to shining sea, Our blood has fallen since time began, I see their sneers, I hear their cheers, As our kin slip through their hands. We are not like those who bend, whose pride succumbs to sway, For honor burns within our souls, unbroken in the fray.
We are no dying ember, no flicker in the dark, But flames that light the ages, igniting ancient sparks.
Our fury is a righteous call, our fight a sacred creed, For we, like anchors in the storm, defy the tides of greed. We vow to guard the unborn kin who slumber in the earth, Their legacy, a roaring fire, to rise and claim their worth.
We will not falter, will not break; our steps will march unbound, Through gale and shore, our promise will resound. From sea to shining sea, Our blood has fallen since time began.
"Inactivity is death."

~ Mussolini
Forwarded from Canada Manifest
Prime Minister Wisdom

Borden's view was one which every orderly and healthy civilization had until a few decades ago.

Quality over quantity.


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"The facts of nature cannot, in the long run, be violated. Penetrating and seeping through everything like water, they will undermine any system that fails to take them into account."

~ Carl Jung
Forwarded from LeighStewy
Joel Davis’ GSG Goal has been raised to $50K.

https://www.givesendgo.com/SupportJoelDavis
🍀 There’s something about St. Patrick’s Day that just feels right at home here in Atlantic Canada.

Long before the parades and the green gear took over, Irish families were already putting down roots across New Brunswick—clearing land, building homesteads, settling in along the rivers, and helping shape the towns and communities.

That Irish thread never really left. You still see it in the family names, in the old church cemeteries, in the fiddle tunes, and that quiet, stubborn kindness that feels so much like home. It’s woven right into the fabric of who we are—right alongside our Scottish, Acadian, and Loyalist neighbours.

It’s not something you have to look hard for. It’s just... there. In the way people show up for one another, in the stories passed down, in the pride we take in this place.

So here’s to everyone across New Brunswick and all of Atlantic Canada—happy St. Patrick’s Day. May the road rise to meet you, and the kettle always be on.
Celtic Cross monument dedicated to the Irish settlers of Nova Scotia. Located in Halifax.
"You cannot teach a man anything; you can only help him find it within himself."

~ Galileo Galilei