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A map that shows the boundaries of the American Redoubt. The American Redoubt [1] is a political migration movement first proposed in 2011 by survivalist novelist and blogger James Wesley Rawles [2] [3] which designates Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming along with eastern parts of Oregon and Washington, as a safe haven for conservative Christians.
James Wesley Rawles (James Wesley, Rawles, born 1960) is an American author, former U.S. Army Intelligence officer, and survival retreat consultant. [1] [2] He is author of the best-selling thriller Patriots: Surviving the Coming Collapse, and proponent of the "American Redoubt", a survivalist refuge in the American Northwest.
The American Redoubt is the intermountain region where white Christian nationalists seek to take over local governments and cultivate Christian nationalist churches, all toward the goal of setting ...
American Redoubt – a political migration movement that covers a similar geographic area; The Base – a paramilitary group that wants to, among other goals, establish a white ethnostate in the Pacific Northwest; The Order – a paramilitary group that engaged in domestic terrorism to establish a white territorial imperative in the Pacific ...
Advocacy groups: Lakota Freedom Movement, [82] [83] Mohawk Warrior Society, American Indian Movement, American Indian Movement of Colorado, International Indian Treaty Council, Red Power movement; Southern US. Southern United States. Proposed state or autonomous region: Confederate States of America or Southern United States or Dixie or Dixieland
[3] [4] Some in the far-right use the term American Redoubt to describe a similar migration to the Northwestern United States. [5] Other areas have been looked into as sites for a potential White ethnostate by certain groups.
Rawles and Survivors were the centerpiece of a Vancouver Sun article by Kim Murphy about the American Redoubt movement that was run by dozens of newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times. [16] Marvin Olasky of World magazine called Survivors "...not as well-written as some articles Rawles has penned" [17]
An illustration of Devonshire Redoubt, Bermuda, 1614. A redoubt (historically redout) [1] [2] is a fort or fort system usually consisting of an enclosed defensive emplacement outside a larger fort, usually relying on earthworks, although some are constructed of stone or brick. [3]