About the Founder


I go by Tyler Neutron, though it isn’t my real last name.

I was born in ’95, grew up and currently living in Northwest Georgia. I am a software engineer by profession but I have many other interests. I have been married for 4 years.

Growing up, my family was upper middle class. My mom pushed for church and good grades, my dad pushed for sports and outdoors. Though their vision for me may not have manifested perfectly, I have learned a lot from them.

I have always been on the nerdier side, loving games and cartoons growing up and to this day, I considered going into animation after high school but saw it was a much more difficult route, so I stuck with computers.

Ideologically I was very in to the Southern Baptist tradition I grew up in as a small child, while also being influenced by the cartoon worlds. As I aged I started to see the flaws and issue with Christianity, and tried to move away from it. Eventually some friends in high school helped me step away from it a little bit and develop more as a person.

But it wasn’t until college that I really had more freedom and opportunity to take a deeper dive. Around this time I was experimenting with cannabis and psychedelics, reading about topics like evolution, neuroscience, Buddhism, psychology, and generally learning more about the world and its problems while in and out of college. This deep dive helped me sort out who I was, and much about the world I was living in. It especially left me with a key understanding that building community was a key part of any endeavor and of life in general, and so that has become one of main my passions since.

Though I had detached heavily from society in order to know myself, the next period in my life was about reconnecting. I got back in school, I joined sports clubs, game clubs, and others, but felt that something was missing. I had developed quite a passion for psychedelics by this time and felt that it could be a key factor to build community around. So that’s what I did. I started an unformal organization called “The Psychedelic Club” in college. It shocked many people who saw me advertising out on the green “how was I able to do this”, considering the illegality of psychedelics. But this exemplifies one of the key lessons of my psychedelic experiences, which is that there are many rules you can “break” in our society. This organization reached close to 100 members with about 20 or 30 more active. Eventually we wanted to become more legitimate with the school so we rebranded to the Alternative Club. I had a hard time finding someone with enough passion and vision to take it over when I graduated, but it was a fun project nonetheless.

My next endeavor was to do something similar outside of the confines of college. Throughout college I had also networked through facebook and the various local music scenes (electronic, metal, indie) and met a variety of folks, all while building up a reputation as a internet comedian or meme shitposter. Through these networks I started to build the next org loosely name Greater Atlanta Occult/Esoteric/Magic, as by this time I had come to interpret a lot of my psychedelic and psychological understanding through the more arcane symbol systems throughout history and there were connections to these concepts through the scenes be it neopagans, witches, etc.

Around this time I was absorbing more truth, a lot of which are considered right wing, and become known as an edgelord. Some of my memes got me in hot water with some of the occult circles, and ultimately helped me start to build more of my initial political views, because this was around the time of the rise of cancel culture, PC police, etc, and I could immediately see how toxic this was to humor and productive debate.

Through further networking on facebook and mutuals in general I started to ally more with right leaning and truth seeking folks. Culminating in some of my subsequent community projects loosely named “The Forum” or “The Renaissance”

Through my heavy use of social media I started to see its limitations and how it might be better, this culminated in a project called Nector, a social networking app that could more easily facilitate connections between people. However one obstacle was that I realized many and most people are not as social, outgoing, and willing to meet new people as I am, so put it on the backburner.

After dating a few people after college I eventually met my wife at a company I worked for and our relationship flourished. And out of this I was inspired for a new project, which I called New Earth. Which was about building an ambitious vision for humanity, and working to build organization around it. It was inspired by everything I had learned up to this point, and there was definitely a central theme of Nature.

Any organization takes time to build, and being only one of my projects, it moved along slowly. Towards the beginning of 2023 I started hearing more about The Natural Law Institute through some of my circles and decided to check it out. I connected with many of the concepts like group evolutionary strategies, evolutionary computation, and trifunctionalism among others, and overall appreciated how far it had come as an organization and how much talent and support there was throughout. I rapidly drilled into the inner circles to see how I could contribute, and I saw that there was a big opportunity to develop something in the via-positiva(what should be done) space to complement the work they were doing in the via-negativa(what should not be done), as well as opportunity to help simplify some of the concepts for larger audiences, and bridge the gaps between various perspectives across the dissident right and beyond.

All of this is what led to the creation of The Natural Order, which I believe can fufill some of these objectives and more.