They are looking for volunteers and it sounds like if you are not getting sacraments they try to provide help. They had at least one Priest and a Sister, who at the time of my email were helping in Italy and were due back and would contact me, but like I said when I mentioned the conditional consecration, all communication stopped.
It is frustrating, because we don't need another stand alone group to add more politics to the Crisis.
You need to realize that there can and will never be any kind of unity without the Catholic papacy, and that any other unities out there are completely artificial. That is in fact why Bishop Williamson went with the current model of The Resistance, where there is no formal unity, just a loose-knit group of Catholics who cooperate because they think alike about the crisis.
It really does sound like YOU are the one who's politicizing this crisis, where you're looking for THE PERFECT seminary that lines up with all of YOUR positions. You can complain all you want about the different "stand alone groups," but you're doing the exact same thing, claiming that you cannot be affiliated with any of the existing groups due to your own "stand alone"-ish thinking. You're practically on the edge of home-alonism looking for the perfect group and the perfect seminary for your son.
You need to ...
1) recognize that many of the different opinions about the crisis are not dogmatic and that Catholics can agree to disagree on some things
2) find the best situation you can, not only in terms of doctrine, but also formation and spirituality
... and go with it and live with it, as the best you can do during this crisis.
Before Vatican II, there were myriad options and the priesthood was not a "one size fits all", but the options are more limited now.
You're really one step away from home-aloneism and are basically setting up your own mine "stand alone group" that apparently is incompatible with all the other "stand alone groups" you criticize.
There are many options for seminaries out there.
From what I understand about your own positions, Bishop Sanborn or the CMRI would be the best fit for you. Bishop Sanborn is sedeprivationist, but he makes it clear that you don't HAVE to be a sedeprivationist to be at his seminary ... though you'd better be prepared to defend your position from Catholic principles. But he's rather dogmatic anti-una-cuм and would not tolerate assistance at any una cuм Masses. CMRI are less dogmatic, but are not sedeprivationist (rather, straight SV). What exactly is your problem with them? Is it because they use the Pius XII Holy Week Rites? So what? So did the entire Catholic world in the late 1950s and early 1960s ... and the SVs have to admit that there can be nothing intrinsically evil or harmful about them (to remain consistent with their own principles). So you've dogmatized the Holy Week Rites to such an extent that your son couldn't co-exist at a seminary that uses them?
You 100% sound as though you'd try to get your son ordained and then consecrated a bishop (since no one else out there is good enough for you), and then start your OWN "stand alone group" ... while criticizing all the others for doing the same thing. I think you need to snap out of this.