No doubt many of us Christians are world weary from the constant battles against the forces of darkness, death and degeneracy, and would like to withdraw from it all. Well, in America, this is being tried, and shows the way forward beyond the nation state, where each group founds their own “ethnostate,” be it based on race or religion. Rather than be ruled by the myth of diversity, this regime’s ideological justification for global capitalism, people would seek homogeneity:
  https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/01/retreat-christian-soldiers/603043/

“Half an hour down the highway from Topeka, Kansas, not far from the geographic center of the United States, sits the town of St. Marys. Like many towns in the region, it is small, quiet, and conservative. Unlike many towns in the region, it is growing. As waves of young people have abandoned the Great Plains in search of economic opportunity, St. Marys has managed to attract families from across the nation. The newcomers have made the radical choice to uproot their lives in pursuit of an ideological sanctuary, a place where they can raise their children according to values no longer common in mainstream America. St. Marys is home to a chapter of the Society of St. Pius X, or SSPX. Named for the early-20th-century pope who railed against the forces of modernism, the international order of priests was formed in the aftermath of the Second Vatican Council, the Catholic Church’s attempt, in the 1960s, to meet the challenges of contemporary life. Though not fully recognized by the Vatican, the priests of SSPX see themselves as defenders of the true practices of Roman Catholicism, including the traditional Latin Mass, celebrated each day in St. Marys. Perfumed with incense and filled with majestic Latin hymns, the service has an air of formality and grandeur. To most American Catholics under the age of 50, it would be unrecognizable. …

Newcomers are attracted by the opportunity to live beside like-minded neighbors. But many are pushed here as much as they are pulled. When they lived in other places, many SSPX families felt isolated by their faith, keenly aware that their theological convictions were out of step with America’s evolving cultural sensibilities and what they perceive as the growing liberalism of the Catholic Church, especially on issues such as gay marriage and abortion. They were wary of being labeled bigots by co-workers and even friends. They worried that their children would be exposed to sin: A friend’s parents might let their kids watch violent television shows; teens might encounter pornography on a classmate’s phone. “We can’t keep things out that we’d like to keep out completely,” Rutledge told me. But the environment in St. Marys is “as conducive as possible for children to save their souls.” …

Young leftist Jews skeptical of assimilation have founded a number of Yiddish-speaking farms in upstate New York, in an effort to preserve their ethnic heritage as well as Judaism’s agrarian tradition. Environmentalists have established sustainable settlements in rural Virginia, which serve as both utopian experiments in low-impact living and shelters for the climate disasters ahead. These groups ostensibly have little in common, but they share a sense that living according to their beliefs while continuing to participate in mainstream American life is not possible. They have elected to undertake what might be termed cultural secession. Katherine Dugan, an assistant professor of religion at Springfield College, in Massachusetts, who studies Catholicism in the U.S., describes the desire for protected, set-apart communities as “a natural American response to not liking what the cultural context is.”

     Cultural secession may be the ultimate fall-back position, given the mainstream populations’ general apathy about saving itself. And further, as our cities become living hellholes, full of violence and crime, there may be no option but to make a strategic retreat. Here is some more American literature on this. In Australia, only the Greenies, develop the 1960s hippy ideology of dropping out, have done anything along these lines. For conservatives, it is still a bit too radical.
  https://survivalblog.com/should-i-bug-out-or-survive-in-place-part-3-by-jonathan-hollerman/
  https://survivalblog.com/letter-re-the-history-of-societal-collapse-and-implications-for-the-american-redoubt/