This reminds me of a certain buddhist religious group in Japan. Let me explain. They take care of their members. If a member is unmarried, they will arrange suitable social events involving other unmarried members who are also looking to find a partner. If a married couple among their members want to have children but are reluctant to do so because they worry about cost of education etc., the group run their own highly ranked schools, from kindergarten to university and technical vocational schools. If a member suffers hardship (death of a partner, illness, poverty etc.) the group has their back: they will send assistance, private tutors to educate their children, buy necessary textbooks and school supplies. If a member loses their job, the group will make sure a member business will offer them a job with a fitting salary to their needs. If a member starts a business of some sort, it will be patronized from the start by all members in the group (whether the business is a newspaper or a back street bakery or a touring theatre group). They also run their own political party. They grow organically (initially proselytizing was intense and widespread but these days they simply encourage their members to have as many children as they want). It isn't complicated. I am not personally a member of this group but I have many friends and business partners who are. What they are doing really actually works. If you can do some of these things in your own family, community, parish or town, you have an extremely decent chance at reaching sovereignty, through mutual aid and faith based cooperation.
"The Hungarian Embassy in London hosted the Roger Scruton Symposium on 21 October, bringing together scholars, diplomats and public figures to reflect on the conservative philosopher’s legacy. Organized by the Hungarian Scruton Hub and the Roger Scruton Legacy Foundation, the event featured four panels examining Scruton’s ideas on nationhood, culture, and the defence of Western civilization."