Activism and civil society organizations operate under constant pressure. Governments issue takedown notices. Payment processors freeze accounts. Hosting providers comply with political pressure. Domain registrars—supposedly neutral infrastructure—buckle under legal threats or regulatory scrutiny. Your domain is your identity online. Lose it, and your audience disappears. Mainstream registrars (GoDaddy, Namecheap, even some 'privacy' services) reply to DMCA notices, comply with government requests without pushback, require KYC documentation, and flag accounts for "sensitive" content. They freeze domains mid-campaign. They hand over registrant data to hostile actors. For civil society—human rights groups, independent journalists, protest networks, political dissidents, marginalized communities—this infrastructure gap is existential. You need a registrar that doesn't play gatekeeper. One that won't fold when a regime demands your contact details. One that accepts cryptocurrency so payment can't be traced or reversed. One that treats your privacy as non-negotiable, not a marketing angle. Bunkerdomains exists because mainstream registrars have abandoned the principle of open internet infrastructure. We register domains. We don't moralise, don't censor, don't comply with takedowns unless legally impossible to ignore.