The importance of having a core group
In Project Pureblood, I have a core group of thinkers, business owners, activists, researchers, adventurers, poets, artists, and a variety of others — lions showing up, bouncing ideas off of each other, and then venturing off into the world.
They are part of my core group.
They are not the most intimate people in my life, because we don’t talk about the things I talk about with let’s say — my family, my pastor, or in prayer with God.
But out of all the people I know and encounter, with the members of Project Pureblood is where I find myself having some of the hardest conversations.
They play an important role in my life.
I know I play an important role in some of their lives.
Also, I know, as is the case with any community, some of them play roles in each others lives that I could never even dream of playing.
It started out being about me — I was the initial draw to the online community, but it turned into so much more.
I recognize the manifold benefits of this process.
And I don’t want to break the bank for them.
I want them to never feel strained around money. If they want to be involved, I want them to be involved.
For example, the Project Pureblood discount I give each month off the various things I am up to is bigger than the cost of being a member of Project Pureblood.
That is one way that I believe I give more than I receive to the members of Project Pureblood.
I want to give more than I receive, but truthfully, with such an awesome group, I basically can’t keep up.
I get so much benefit out of the group, which is something that others have themselves told me over and again.
The projects I work on, I often unveil there and feel them out.
Some of my writing emerges from those discussions too.
This is what I’m doing with Project Pureblood: I’m gathering a great group of people.
Our era suggests a lot of things should be happening right now.
Gathering great groups of people together is not one of them.
We are supposed to see ourselves increasingly as individuals who do not need to rely on anyone.
That is the surest path to losing our individual liberties.
You see, we have individual liberties, and we are individuals made in the likeness of God, but we are not isolated beings who can exist without anyone else.
To propose so would be foolish.
We are the sum of those we spend the most time with.
We are strengthened and nurtured when we surround ourselves with people capable of doing exactly that.
So, what I am doing is gathering a great group of people.
This isn’t meant to be a group composed of everyone who has heard of me.
This isn’t meant to be Twitter — a group open to everyone with an internet connection.
This isn’t meant to be all my readers.
This isn’t meant to be all the people on my email list either — It is meant to be a special group and it is my intention that I will always watch out for each group member to the best of my capacity.
I want to be someone they turn to for life.
I want to be someone they mention problems to for life.
I want to be someone who makes introductions for them for life.
I have never gone out to random people and proposed such a thing as I am proposing above.
What I am doing is this — building a group that you can turn to for life.
Will it be here for life?
I don’t know.
I have every intention for it to be — both for me to have an interest in that and to have the cash flow through the group for it to be self sustaining.
But it takes time to build good things.
And this, I believe is one of the best things I have sought to built.
From March 2020, the most awful period in American history began.
I compare that to the Civil War in which some 3% of the nation was killed and many more injured and harmed.
I compare that to the American Revolution and multiple other wars that released terror on soldiers and the populace alike.
Those who are unable to at least entertain such an argument that we have entered into the very worst period of American history, are those who do not realize how much was either lost or sacrificed in exchange for temporary safety.
At the pinnacle of what should have been the grandest moment in American history (the richest, most powerful, most technologically advanced, and freest county to have ever existed in the history of the world) — at the pinnacle of what should have been the very best…
What did we did we do with it?
Well, I’m not just talking about 2020.
I’m talking about a good chunk of my lifetime.
There was the 1989 victory over Communism — which could have been a defining moment for freedom.
It was not.
It turned into an ever growing and controlling government that looked a lot worse in some ways than the USSR that we had beaten, and far more efficient, effective and capable in some of the worst ways imaginable.
We saw the attacks of 9/11 — which, again, could have been another defining moment for freedom, but which was instead followed by the awful fallout of the Twin Towers.
The tyranny crept along increasingly, taking great leaps with each new crisis, many of which emerged.
We saw the ides of March 2020 — Eventually, an illness was linked to Wuhan, China, which was followed not by another turn toward the freedom we claim to love, but was instead responded to with all of the horrible fallout that we have come to know of the Covid-19 pandemic declaration.
As I was a child growing up, I was being handed the freest, most prosperous, most advanced country this world had ever known.
What did we do with it?
We turned out nation into one living under a system of corona Communism, the most recent iteration of the last 40 years of creeping tyranny in America.
And some said “No.”
They made it through that difficult time.
They said “No,” and saw the moment for what it was.
They maybe had consented to all that had come before, but when 2020 came, they were taking a stand and saying “No.”
That, no matter the cost to them and the cost in their personal lives, they refused to wear that mask, they refused to take that shot.
They stood, even if they looked around and believed they were totally alone.
So you can understand perhaps why I appreciate them and seek to build them a community.
That is a community that has served them for the past year and will serve them for months, years, hopefully decades more into their lives.
That is the nature of Project Pureblood — serve the people who did right, build with the people who did right, forge the future of freedom in America alongside the people who did right.
And I do not know exactly what that looks like, but I know this: If you made those decisions, if you are a Pureblood, I am committed to doing that alongside you.
Do you wish to do that alongside me?
If so, tap here — https://realstevo.com/pureblood
With this email, I am going to make the last invitation to Project Pureblood for the month.
The price to join increased last month and may increase again before long, perhaps even this month.
No matter how high it goes, you will remain at the price you joined at.
So join now.
Get as much benefit out of this group as you can.
Help build its foundations, too.
Together we are making room for what the next draft of America looks like.
Sign up before the end of the day -- https://realstevo.com/pureblood
Allan Stevo