Thanks for the reply Hunter.
The short answer is that it doesn’t, at least not significantly. The biggest difference would be that defining what an American is, is a little harder than defining what a German was in the early 20th century. Our stance is that anyone of fully (95% or greater) European blood can be an American so long as they have lived here for 5+ years and have pledged themselves to the American culture and community. With that in mind, we essentially replace “German” with “American” in any policy put forth in “The German State on a National and Socialist Foundation” by Gottfried Feder and later actually in place in The Reich.
In practice we may differ from how the movement is carried out and gains momentum. We believe the best way forward is to abandon the current system by creating a parallel one, and when the current one inevitably collapses we can re-establish control and re-build what was lost. We differ in this way from some who may be deemed accelerationists because while they hope and drive society toward collapse, we merely acknowledge it’s approach and provide a way around it where our people can be spared and come out the other side on top and as in tact as possible.
Of course, if the opportunity to seize political power and alter destiny arises, then we will not balk at the chance, but we must first build up this base regardless. To do this, it first requires that our strongest advocates be able to go mask-off and avoid the consequences of being dox’d, which is where the parallel system comes into play. It seems that I may be rambling a tad, so I will end it here. Feel free to ask as much as you would like.