
Afrasianet - A sensational investigative report by writer Lucas Mencini in the M Le magazine du Monde has revealed the establishment of the first enclosed apartment complex exclusively for white supremacist extremists in the United States.
The group, called Return to the Land, is a qualitative step toward entrenching the ideology of racial superiority and is based in the remote village of Ravenden, Arkansas.
The gathering currently includes about 40 people, including 12 children, young men in their 30s, who are Christian and openly racist, and they come from the most hardline factions in the MAGA galaxy that supports President Donald Trump. The place is described as resembling a secluded rural village, spread over 65 hectares, but behind its traditional façade lies a violent exclusionary project embodied in a "white supremacist neighborhood."
Racist Foundations
This "colony" accepts only white, heterosexual and Christian individuals, and presents themselves as a "private club" for individuals with a "traditional vision" and "common continental ancestors," polite phrases to describe overt racial discrimination. The complex hosted a huge gathering attended by about 250 representatives of the far right and the neo-Nazi movement, including prominent theorist Jared Taylor.
The project is justified by a fear of demographic changes, as Eric Orwell, the company's young president and former from a different world, explains that he was a actor before becoming a devout Christian:
"If we don't act, white people will soon become a minority in the United States and the world."
Admission to this gathering also requires a lengthy interview, proof of European ancestry through genealogy tests, and the sharing of extremist racist ideas, such as the false theory that "people of color do not have the same cognitive abilities as whites."
Circumventing the law
The report asserts that the "Back to the Land Complex" is clearly and explicitly in violation of the federal Housing Fair Act of 1968, which prohibits racial exclusion in access to housing.
Heidi Bayrich, co-founder of the Global Project to Combat Hate and Extremism, points out that "the Return to Land settlement is simply against federal law."
But thanks to the "leniency" of the Arkansas administration, which "looks away," according to the report, the founders, led by the intellectual Peter Cherry, known for his anti-Semitic rhetoric and accused of a previous murder attempt in Ecuador, were able to circumvent the law by selling "shares" in the company instead of selling plots of land, to avoid being labeled as housing law developers.
Although the state attorney general's office has opened an investigation, the rallies leaders are indifferent, expecting and even longing for a judicial confrontation, as they believe they are confident as long as Trump is in power, and Orwell warns that they will turn any loss into a symbolic victory: "Thanks to a trial, we can create a precedent for all groups like ours... If we lose, we will become victims/scapegoats."
Armed Society
The gathering reflects an extreme view of social and religious life: recruits must "promise to establish a family in which gender segregation is respected" and "prefer" the wife to be a childcare homemaker. Caitlin, a resident, exemplifies this model, homeschooling her five children, and in her podcast Return to Femininity, she describes her role as voluntary submission to her husband:
"It is an honour to find a good man, to follow him and have children for him."
The traditional image of the housewife is popular among Trump supporters, with one saying on Telegram: "I start my day by taking care of the housework and the goats on the farm, then I give the kids math and English classes at home, where no child is sent to public schools that are considered too 'progressive'.
The community is also based on the principle of "survival for the fittest," with one early resident (Scott Thomas) describing himself as a "survivaliste" who sold his house to buy an excavator to prepare the land.
The head of the community stresses that any attack on their neighborhood would be "suicidal", as the vast majority of the population owns firearms and trains on them regularly, declaring their full readiness to protect their "white castle" from any interference.

