“There is a difference between being alive and being awake.”
That’s how Eduardo Verástegui opened his CPAC 2025 speech in Maryland. No teleprompter. No diplomatic varnish. Just a man with a mission, staring down an empire.
And what followed was not politics as usual. It was prophecy, rebellion, and resurrection all wrapped in one. It was the beginning of something ancient. A revolt with the soul of the past and the eyes of the future. Viva México is not a campaign. It is a revolt against the managed decline of a civilization—a spiritual insurrection forged in the furnace of faith and freedom, aimed straight at the heart of a globalist Leviathan.
Verástegui doesn’t just want to “fix” Mexico. He wants to free it.
The Collapse Before the Crusade
Mexico is dying in broad daylight. The cartels are no longer in the shadows—they are in city halls. The peso bends to foreign markets. The family unit fractures under imported ideologies. Children are taught to distrust their past. The nation-state has become a middleman between the people and the puppet-masters in Brussels, Davos, and Washington.
While the ruling class dines on imported doctrine, the people eat policy leftovers. And the libertarian dream? It’s gasping beneath layers of false populism and elite technocracy.
Enter Verástegui.
With Viva México, he isn’t proposing tweaks. He’s swinging an axe.
“This is not a party. This is an exorcism,” he declared at CPAC, to an eruption of applause. “We are not negotiating with evil. We are driving it out.”
What Makes Viva México Different?
In a world addicted to the illusion of choice—red vs. blue, left vs. right, puppet vs. puppet—Viva México offers something we haven’t seen in generations: a metaphysical resistance movement rooted in liberty.
This isn’t libertarianism reduced to tax cuts and Bitcoin memes. It’s liberty with blood in its veins and calluses on its hands. It remembers what freedom feels like. And it understands that sovereignty begins not in the marketplace, but in the soul.
Three things set this movement apart:
- Sovereignty Without Apology: Verástegui channels Milei’s fire and Hungary’s moral resolve. He wants Mexico to govern itself—fully, fearlessly, and finally. That means closed borders, hard currency, and an immediate end to international “governance” masquerading as philanthropy.
- Faith as a Firewall: In Verástegui’s world, faith isn’t ornamental—it’s the last defense against tyranny. His movement isn’t just pro-life—it’s pro-dignity. Not just anti-woke—it’s pro-truth. In a time when belief is seen as extremism, he carries his rosary like a sword.
- Defiance with Discipline: This isn’t chaos in cowboy hats. Viva México is building institutional legitimacy—already registered for full political status by 2027. But it won’t be another PRI or PAN. It’s not here to share power. It’s here to overthrow corruption, and replace technocratic consensus with raw accountability.
Why Libertarians Must Pay Attention
Some will say Verástegui is too loud, too Catholic, too “culture war.” But the libertarian movement has spent decades playing defense—debating policy while the soul of civilization is carved up by men in suits who never had to believe in anything.
Verástegui believes. And he bleeds for it.
What he offers is more than nationalism. It’s a total rejection of the post-political age. It’s not left, right, or center. It’s the fourth quadrant we’ve been waiting for—liberty through truth, sovereignty through faith, and courage over comfort.
In an era of scripted leaders and managed decline, here stands a man who’d rather be crucified than be compromised. That’s not politics. That’s legend.
The Final Word
Viva México is not just a movement. It’s the last stand of the human spirit in a world being automated, anesthetized, and absorbed.
It is a reminder that liberty is not a line item in a policy paper. It is a fire older than empires—and if we do not carry it forward, it will die with us.
Verástegui has chosen to carry it.
The question is—will we?