The Manifesto of Apex Prime

As transmitted through secure channel to the Founding Circle of Apex Primacy, 1974. Now distributed globally in over 300 languages.
  “I did not choose to be born superior. I merely chose to survive it.”
—Apex Prime

Purpose

The Manifesto of Apex Prime serves as both a declaration of intent and a final indictment of human civilization. It is not merely a philosophy or political tract, but a call to action—a war cry carved from decades of suffering, exile, and survival. Its purpose is threefold: to expose the lies of human society, to awaken dormant pride within the Homo Sapiens Extraordinarius aka Extras population, and to unify the scattered, the angry, and the abandoned into a singular force of evolutionary destiny.
  This manifesto was not written for the normal human reader. It is not a plea for understanding, tolerance, or reform. It is written to the Extras of the world—and against the world that Apex Prime feels has rejected them. For too long, the gifted have been told to serve, to hide, or to submit. This document exists to shatter those illusions and provide a guiding star for those ready to rise.
  It lays out the foundational belief of Apex Primacy: that power is not a sin, but a responsibility; that Extras are not anomalies, but the next stage of human evolution; and that the time has come to claim what history, biology, and brutality have long denied—the throne of Earth.

Document Structure

Clauses

The Manifesto of Apex Prime is organized into seven distinct clauses, each acting as both a standalone declaration and a step in radicalizing the reader. This structure mirrors the ideological progression of Apex Prime himself—from victim to revolutionary, from anomaly to architect of a new order.
  Each clause is marked with numerical designation and a stark heading, often accompanied by aphorisms attributed to Apex Prime or founding members of Apex Primacy. These quotes serve both as rallying cries and ideological cornerstones, repeated in recruitment materials and propaganda.
  Clause I: The Lie of Equality
“Equality is the comfort of the weak and the leash of the strong.”
  This opening clause dismantles the myth of human egalitarianism. It details the historical oppression of Extras, the institutional violence hidden behind terms like “rehabilitation” and “containment,” and the hypocrisy of humanist ideals when applied to post-human reality. It names early atrocities committed against Extras, including sterilization, experimentation, "cures." and forced military service in authoritarian states. It ends by asserting that coexistence was never the goal—it was always control.
  Clause II: The Wounds That Shaped Us
“They made monsters in their basements and prayed they’d never crawl out. I am one.”
  A personal and collective narrative, this section chronicles the suffering of the early generation of Extras, including Apex Prime’s own incarceration and mutilation. It includes anonymous survivor accounts, redacted transcripts from Extra hospitals, and classified documents smuggled from government archives. The clause transforms pain into proof, positioning suffering not as a tragedy—but as evidence of the moral rot of humanity.
  Clause III: Apex Ascendant
“The future belongs to those who survive it.”
  This is the heart of the manifesto’s supremacist ideology. It argues that Extras are not mistakes, but inevitabilities—the biological conclusion of human evolution. It refutes the idea that Extras are “people with powers,” instead declaring them a new dominant species. Here, the manifesto introduces the term Apex, used not as a name, but a classification: the rightful inheritors of Earth. It explains why rule, not rebellion, is the goal.
  Clause IV: The New Order
“We do not wish to destroy the world. We intend to replace it.”
  Outlines the vision of a world governed by Extras under Apex Primacy’s leadership. It proposes the dismantling of human-dominated institutions—governments, militaries, economic systems—and their replacement with meritocratic rule by power and intellect. It includes a proposed model of governance, selection criteria for leadership among Extras, and a rejection of democratic systems in favor of stratified authority based on ability.
  Clause V: Enemies of the Ascended
“Sympathy is the shield of the traitor.”
  This section defines the ideological enemies of Apex Primacy:
  Human Governments, labeled as slave-keepers and cultural executioners.
  Collaborator Extras, called Chainsworn, who serve the status quo.
  Religious Institutions, accused of perpetuating myths that deny evolution.
  Scientific Bodies, condemned for dehumanizing and experimenting on Extra's.
Governments who treat Extra's as assets, weapons or property of the state.
It calls for targeted resistance, strategic violence, and the destruction of infrastructure that supports oppression.
  Clause VI: The Path of Fire
“Change does not ask permission.”
  This tactical clause addresses warfare, terrorism, and revolution. It defines violence as a justified tool of liberation and instructs followers in the ethics of escalation: attacking systems, not civilians; targeting symbols of control; undermining economies and morale. It discusses infiltration, sabotage, and propaganda as necessary components of the war for supremacy. Miss Mandrake is quoted here: “No war was ever won by waiting.”
  Clause VII: The Eternal Flame
“If I am a monster, I am the one you built. Now watch what I become.”
  The final clause is almost poetic. It is a promise, a prophecy, and a final judgment. It states that humanity had its chance and wasted it in cruelty and fear. It proclaims the rise of a new world—not out of mercy, but necessity. The clause ends with Apex Prime’s signature and a final sentence repeated in all Apex Primacy broadcasts:
  “The age of man ends. The Apex shall rise. as is its nature. And Nature can not be denied”

Caveats

Apex Primacy does not offer freedom without discipline, nor power without cost. The following caveats define the immutable parameters of the Apex War and the foundational consequences for those who act against its will. These are not threats. They are realities.
  I. The Apex Doctrine Is Not Optional
Any Extra who joins the cause and then betrays it—whether by leaking intelligence, defecting to human forces, or sabotaging Apex operations—will be marked as Chainsworn and hunted without mercy. Redemption is not offered. The blood of traitors waters the roots of the future.
  II. Collateral Must Serve Purpose
Violence is sacred. It is never random. Attacks must serve tactical or symbolic function. Unchecked brutality for its own sake is unacceptable. Those who act outside strategic interest will be corrected—as necessary. The fire must be aimed.
  III. Humanity May Kneel, But Will Never Share
No normal human may hold leadership, command, or strategic authority within Apex Primacy. Cooperation may be tolerated temporarily when useful, but no trust, title, or territory will ever be ceded to those not born Extra. Any who suggest otherwise shall be removed and erased.
  IV. The Strong Must Be Tempered
Power without control is weakness in disguise. Any Extra whose abilities pose a direct threat to the movement due to instability, addiction, or ideological deviation will be neutralized, detained, or converted into weapons under containment protocols. Strength is not an excuse for recklessness.
  V. The War Is Generational
Apex Primacy recognizes that global domination will not be achieved in a single season or through brute force alone. Members must swear themselves to the cause not as opportunists, but as architects of a long war. Impatience is betrayal. Shortcuts are sabotage.
  VI. Death Does Not End Oath
Any Extra who dies in service to the cause will have their name preserved in the Book of Reclamation, and their genetic material, if recoverable, will be stored for future iteration. Cloning, enhancement, or resurrection through psionic or esoteric means is sanctioned for key operatives. No service is forgotten.
  VII. No King Lives Forever—But the Apex Does
Even if Apex Prime is destroyed, the Manifesto stands. No successor may rewrite its core tenets. No deviation from its principles will be tolerated without vote from the full Inner Circle and a majority of field-commanders. The Manifesto is not a man. It is law.

References

The Manifesto of Apex Prime is laced with historical citations, leaked documents, and classified transcripts drawn from real-world atrocities committed against Extras in the 20th century and beyond. These references are not hypothetical or fabricated—they are drawn from genuine state archives, declassified intelligence files, and recovered materials from now-defunct programs. Their inclusion is intentional, serving not only to educate but to enrage.
  Key references include:
  Canadian Eugenics Program Files (1940s–1950s) – Documentation of forced sterilizations, chemical castration trials, and the institutionalization of young Extras under the guise of “psychological correction.” These files were made public during post-war commissions but buried in academic obscurity.
  CIA Intelligence Memorandums (1953, 1957) – Quotes from internal memos that refer to early American Extras as “unwitting biological assets,” and discussions of their potential use in overseas proxy operations during the Cold War. The manifesto includes redacted copies with chillingly clinical language.
  USSR Directive No. 104/23 (“Assets of the State”) – A Soviet policy draft from 1961 defining all Extras as “national resources” subject to military conscription, psychological reconditioning, and relocation. The directive includes a legal framework for ownership and reproduction rights over Extras.
  Memoirs of Dr. Karl Immerhof (West Germany, 1958) – An unrepentant ex-Nazi geneticist who later worked for various intelligence agencies, speaking openly about the promise of the metagene and the value of “controlling it before it controls us.” His writings are cited to show the continuity of fascist thought beneath modern diplomacy.
  Testimonies from the Bogotá Reclamation Camps (1970s) – Eyewitness accounts and court-sealed footage of Extras detained during South American civil conflicts, subjected to experiments, amputations, and psychological fragmentation.

Publication Status

The Manifesto of Apex Prime is not publicly accessible by any legal or sanctioned means. It is not available in libraries, archives, or digital repositories under any government or educational institution. No verified copy has ever been submitted to a publisher, and possession of the document is considered a criminal offense in most jurisdictions.
  Instead, it circulates through clandestine channels—smuggled on encrypted drives, writen in hand made books, slipped into the hands of young Extras during rallys for metahuman rights, or transmitted via darknet networks under multi-layered encryption protocols. Agents of Apex Primacy are trained to identify the wounded, the lost, and the angry—Extras who have suffered beneath the boot of systemic oppression—and place the manifesto in their hands when they are most vulnerable to its message.
  It is not a document meant to be found. It is meant to recruit.
  Some say it appears in abandoned institutions, etched into the walls in blood or acid. Others claim it is burned into the minds of gifted children through dreams of fire, steel, and chains. However it spreads, it does so deliberately—never randomly—and always to those who might one day rise.
  The manifesto is not a book. It is a weapon. And it finds its target.

Legal status

The Manifesto of Apex Prime holds no legal recognition under any known national or international body. No sovereign government, intergovernmental organization, or legal tribunal recognizes its contents as binding, valid, or protected under law.
  It is universally classified as a subversive extremist document, authored by a known terrorist and ideological supremacist. Distribution or possession of the manifesto is illegal in over 100 countries, with some governments designating its content as seditious, inciteful to violence, or a direct threat to national security.
  Apex Prime, the author, is internationally wanted under multiple aliases and warrants, including charges of terrorism, war crimes, sedition, crimes against humanity, and crimes against the peace. The Apex Manifesto is cited in numerous classified counter-terrorism briefings and blacklisted on all major digital platforms.
  Despite its lack of lawful standing, the document continues to be circulated in encrypted forums, underground networks, and Extra supremacist cells across the globe. To those in power, it is a threat. To those who follow it, it is scripture.
  In the eyes of Apex Primacy, the laws of man are irrelevant. The Manifesto answers to a higher authority—evolution, power, and inevitability.

Historical Details

Background

The Manifesto of Apex Prime emerges not from diplomacy, nor peace, but from the long shadow of oppression, fear, and dehumanization. Its origins lie in a century marked by systemic brutality toward Homo sapiens extraordinarius—Extras—by the very species from which they diverged.
  Throughout history, humanity’s instinct to fear the unknown has been matched only by its talent for institutionalizing that fear. From the earliest sightings of naturally-born superhumans, governments scrambled to categorize, contain, and control what they could not understand. Extras were labeled anomalies, then assets, and finally—threats. Laws were passed to regulate their movements. Facilities were built to “train” them, but often served as prisons in all but name. Their bodies became resources to be harvested, studied, and exploited. Their rights were conditional. Their lives, expendable.
  The Generation-Ex Movement sought to shift this trajectory. It inspired hope, sparked reform, and gave many young Extras a voice in the face of systematic erasure. In democratic nations, equality progressed. But in the darker corners of the Earth—authoritarian states, corporate black sites, and war zones—Extras remain tools to be used, weapons to be pointed, or monsters to be put down.
  It is within this fractured world that Apex Prime, born Royce Becker, forged his doctrine. A survivor of the Canadian eugenics programs and the Extra Rehabilitation Hospitals, his body bears the scars of repeated mutilation, and his mind the weight of relentless survival. Where others saw hope, he saw hypocrisy. Where others preached coexistence, he found only cycles of exploitation.
  The Manifesto of Apex Prime does not mark the end of a war. It signals the beginning of one. It is not a treaty—it is a declaration. Not a compromise—but a line in the sand. It speaks not for all Extras, but to those who have suffered too long, waited too patiently, and bled too deeply to believe in the promises of peace. It is the voice of those who have nothing left to lose—and everything to reclaim.

History

The Manifesto of Apex Prime did not erupt from a single battle, nor was it born in the halls of diplomacy. It is the culmination of decades of dehumanization, institutional violence, and betrayal. From the late 1940s onward, the world’s major powers enacted policies that, with rare exceptions, treated Extras not as people, but as anomalies, resources, and threats.
  In the aftermath of World War II, the rise of naturally born superhumans—Homo sapiens extraordinarius—terrified policymakers, scientists, and generals alike. What they could not understand, they sought to dominate. Across North America, Europe, and Asia, public and secret programs alike were established to classify, isolate, or repurpose Extras. These included:
  Sterilization and Eugenics Programs in Canada and other Western nations, branding young Extras as dangerous or defective.
  The Extra Rehabilitation Hospitals, which subjected children and teens to mutilation, chemical castration, and psychological reprogramming.
  State Ownership Directives, legally reducing Extras to government property.
  The Extra Schools, which often served as training camps and indoctrination facilities rather than sanctuaries.
  The exploitation and harvesting of Extras for Triple-Ex, a dangerous street drug derived from their blood during unethical experimentation.
  Even in the so-called “free nations,” Extras were regulated, surveilled, or expected to wear masks of civility while living in constant fear. Generations of gifted individuals grew up knowing they would be hated for existing, punished for succeeding, and contained for surviving.
  The Manifesto of Apex Prime arises as a direct indictment of this shared global history. It does not plead for reconciliation—it condemns the world. It exists to call out every government that wore the mask of progress while bleeding Extras dry in the shadows.
  If anything, it marks the beginning of a counter-revolution—one where the oppressed no longer ask for freedom but demand dominion.
  “Do not speak to me of justice. The blood on your hands has not dried in fifty years.”
—Apex Prime

Public Reaction

The Manifesto of Apex Prime did not arrive with fanfare—it arrived like a detonation. From the moment of its first appearance in clandestine channels in 1974, the world’s reaction has been sharply divided, and it remains one of the most polarizing documents in modern history.
  Among the human-majority governments and mainstream media, the manifesto is almost universally condemned. It is seen as a declaration of war, a hate-filled tirade born from bitterness and extremism. Politicians denounce it. News outlets dissect it. Scholars frame it as a dangerous piece of supremacist propaganda designed to radicalize vulnerable Extras and destabilize global order. The word “terrorism” is applied to it with near-ritual consistency.
  For some, especially in liberal or academic circles, the manifesto is also a painful mirror. While they reject its conclusions and calls to violence, they acknowledge the undeniable truth beneath its fury—that for decades, Extras were exploited, brutalized, and dehumanized on a global scale. Some universities and human rights organizations have even studied the document as evidence of systemic failure. A few have described it as a “monument of moral backlash.”
  Among Extras themselves, reactions vary dramatically based on lived experience, ideology, and generational divide.
  For many young or disenfranchised Extras—especially those raised in authoritarian regimes, ghettos, or under perpetual surveillance—the manifesto is a clarion call. It gives shape to their rage, voice to their trauma, and purpose to their pain. For these individuals, Apex Prime is not a terrorist—he is a prophet.
  For others—particularly those raised in more tolerant or integrated societies—the manifesto is seen as too extreme, too unforgiving. They recognize the pain that birthed it, but fear that it feeds cycles of violence and fuels anti-Extra sentiment.
  For survivors of the Extra Schools, black sites, and war experiments, the manifesto often evokes complex reactions: horror, vindication, fury, and mourning. Some refuse to read it. Others memorize every word.
  Over time, the manifesto has become something more than a document—it has become a litmus test. A cultural fault line. A weapon of ideology. For some, it is a manual for vengeance. For others, it is a reminder of the world’s deepest failings.
  “The world is not divided by those who agree or disagree with Apex Prime. It is divided by those who fear him—and those who understand him.” —Joseph Greystone, a.k.a. Greyscale, testimony before the Global Council on Extra Rights, 1999

Legacy

The Manifesto of Apex Prime remains one of the most infamous documents in modern history—not for its legality, but for its impact. Though banned, denounced, and aggressively suppressed, its existence is a permanent reminder that the sins committed against Extras can never truly be erased, nor the consequences contained.   No nation, no matter how progressive it claims to be today, can escape the weight of the past. The forced sterilizations. The institutional torture. The Extra Schools. The harvested blood. These are not conspiracy theories—they are documented atrocities. And the manifesto ensures the world will never forget them.
  Its most devastating legacy, however, is not historical—it is ongoing.
  The Manifesto of Apex Prime became the ideological cornerstone of Apex Primacy, one of the most dangerous Extra-supremacist terrorist organizations in the world. The group recruits from the wounded, the forgotten, and the radicalized—those taught through pain, abandonment, or betrayal that humanity cannot be trusted. Each new convert is another ripple in the wake of a global failure to protect humanity from itself.
  The manifesto did not end a war. It started one. Not in the trenches or across nations, but within souls—a war between belief in justice and belief in vengeance.
  It set a precedent none can ignore: that suppression breeds backlash, and that even the best intentions, when built on a foundation of lies, will one day collapse under the weight of truth.
  To this day, it is whispered of in underground forums, taught in hidden cells, and invoked by those who no longer believe in peace. Governments may continue to burn the pages—but the ideas, once released, cannot be caged.
  “You don’t have to read it to fear it. You just have to know that someone else already has.”
—Excerpt from CSIS Threat Assessment Report on Apex Primacy, 1996
Type
Statement, Political (Manifesto)
Medium
Paper
Authoring Date
March 15th, 1974.
Authors

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