Showing posts with label White Zion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label White Zion. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Survivalism: Response to Racial Chaos

Editorial by Dr. William L. Pierce,  National Vanguard magazine, IssuNo. 831981
New Phenomenon Signals Rising Vote of "No Confidence" in System
 
There's an interesting psycho-social syndrome which has been quietly growing in America for the past two decades or so and has finally caught the attention of the controlled mass media: it is "survivalism."
 
Actually, that term covers a fairly wide range of phenomena.  The end of the survivalisspectrum the media have seized on recently is the grab-your-guns-and-head-for-the-hills end, because it lenditself most easily to a sensationalistic treatment.
 
Athe other end are the timid folks who wouldn't dream of grabbing a gun, under any circumstances, and are far too citified to survive in the hills anyway, buwho have quietly laid in a two-year supply of dehydrated foods. And there are all sorts of marginal offshoots:  for example, the retired couple who have made up their mindto sell the family home and move into a condominium, but who are only looking at ads for places which offer a high wall all around with electronically controlled gates, closed-circuit TV surveillance, and an armed security patrol on the grounds.
 
Of coursemany people are attracted by real estate advertisements which stress security featuressimply because they are aware of the rising crime statistics and want to feel secure in their own homes. They should no more be classified as survivalists than the fellow who keeps a sock full of Krugerrands hidden under his mattress – just in case.
 
For manyhowever, it goes deeper than that. Among the real estate customers who wouldn't consider buying a place which can be broken into with anything less than an M-60 tank are a few – a growing few – who feel a sick fear in the pits of their stomachs, the consequence not only of the soaring burglary statistics but also of the conviction thaburglaries will keep on increasing, yeaafter year, and that the police and the government will never again be able to offer any real protection to law-abiding citizens.  These few have concluded that, if they want tbe safe in their homes, they'rgoing to have to find virtually impregnable places to livewhere they don't have to count on the government to keep burglars or rioteroutThey are survivalists.
 
And among those whare laying in a long-term supply of dehydrated foodor converting half of each paycheck into gold coins there are also a growing few who are convinced that some day – they don't know exactly when, but some day in the next few years – they’re actually going to have to eat their dehydrated larder, because the supermarkeshelves will have been stripped bare by hungry mobs, or they're going to need those gold coins in order to purchase the necessities of lifebecause Federal Reserve notes will be worthless.  They, tooare survivalistsof a sort.
 
There is one element which is common to the entire survivalisspectrum. It is a losof faith in the System. 
 
There has always been a certain amount of paranoia in the population, a certain number of people who deeply distrust the government and are sure something awful is bound to happen soonThe survivalist syndrome is much more than that, howeverIt affects more than right-wing gun nuts and elderly cranks with funny theories about money.  More and more perfectly normal people are simply looking very carefully at what is going on around them in America, and the sight is raising the hairs othe backs of their necks.
 

[Updated graphic] SURVIVALIST publications have been sprouting up like mushrooms after a summer rain. They range from slick, multicolor magazines for the newsstands to mimeographed newsletters with tips on edible roots, knife fighting, and homemade explosives. Readership – just as involvement in survivalism – is almost completely White, as a glance at the advertisements reveals, although Jews are moving into the sale of survival equipment and supplies.
 
 
They are schoolteachers and truck drivers and physicians and government clerks who have to work in America'cities among hostile, undisciplined Blacks, Levantines, Orientals, and Chicanos who are noticeably more numerous and noticeably more aggressive with each passing year, and they have said to themselves in a tone of rising panic, "My God, things can't go on this way!"
 
Having also observed that their government not only is not doing anything to stem the non-White flood but is leaving no stone unturned in its efforts to increase it, they don't waste their time writing letters to Congress.  Instead they begin thinking seriously about the relative merits of 5.56mm semiautomatic rifles with 30-round magazines, and 12-gauge pump-action shotguns loaded with No. 4 buckshot for fending off dusky hordes of frizzy-headed marauders.
 
Even liberals are beginning to take note of what the policies they have mindlessly advocated for the past 50 years have done to the world, and it scares the hell out of them.  Although they would never admit it to the other liberals they rub elbows and snort coke with at fashionable cocktail parties in Washington and New York, a few of them have also been quietly laying plans for a quick getaway when the day of reckoning comes.
 
Some readers with long memories may recall the fallout-shelter debate of the 1950's:  the "cold war" era when the government was at least dabbling in civil defense preparations, and many citizens were taking the idea of a nuclear attack on the United States by the Soviet Union quite seriously.  Cellars were stockedGeiger counters were purchased, and much hand wringing was wasted on the ethical problem of the grasshopper and the ant.  Many of the "ants" – those who had prepared and stocked fallout shelters for their families – indicated that they would not hesitate to shoot any improvident, grasshopper-type neighbors who came pounding on the doors of their shelters after an attack.  Predictably, the media pundits were horrified and were very much on the side of the grasshoppers.


 
Some of the "ants" of the 1950's may properly be considered survivalists, but the majority of them were by no means alienated from the System. Many, in fact, were political conservatives, who liked things the way they were and thought of the System as a bulwark against communism and chaos. That was before JFK, LBJ, and the "civil rights" revolution of the 1960's, of course.
 
Today the all-out survivalist recognizes the government as the primary threat to his survival.  Far from wanting to keep things as they are, he finds conditions increasingly intolerable.  He is intelligent enough, or has good enough instincts, to realize that the policies the U.S. government has been following for the last few decades are inevitably leading to a total disaster.  He finds himself in a surrealistic, almost nightmare situation, in which he sees the people all around him blithely marching to their own destruction.
 
He does not know whether or not he is the only sane person in a world gone mad, but he does know that he does not intend to be destroyed along with everyone else, if he can help it. He has become totally alienated from the suicide-bent society in which he lives, and he is looking desperately for a way to get off the boat and far enough away from it so that he won't be sucked under when it goes down.
 
So, one can recognize three distinguishing traits in the survivalista sturdy sense of personal identity, which allows him to think independently and choose a course separate from that of the herd; a strong will to survive; and alienation from the present society and the System which rules it.  In addition, many survivalists have a fourth traitan intuitive spiritual rejection of modern society which goes beyond mere political alienation.
 
This last trait – which many who are not survivalists also share - manifests itself in various ways. In some it is expressed as a desire to "get back to Nature"; in others it takes the more negative form of hostility to modern technology.  It is based on an intuition that the modern, urban-industrial lifestyle is unnatural and unhealthy, as well as personally unsatisfying and even repugnant.
 
Thus, one finds among survivalists many with unusual dietary notions and a prejudice in favor of "natural" foods; a strong interest in useful, pioneer-type arts and crafts, such as the preservation of meat and other foods without refrigeration, or home weaving or home cobbling; an itch to build windmills, waterwheels, and other gadgets typical of an earlier and less interdependent era; a tendency to distrust the medical profession, with all its modern paraphernalia, and to rely instead on "home remedies," including home childbirth .
Part of this is rationally related to the survivalist's interest in enhancing his own survivability by making himself more self-sufficient, but part of it is often a confused rationalization of a deep-seated – even subconscious – feeling having more to do with instinctive behavior patterns than with modern technology.  At root it is not the jet engine, the transistor, or penicillin which the "back to Nature" streak in the survivalist is rebelling against; rather it is the laws, regulations, customs, and constraints of a modern mass-society.
 
Tools – even very complex tools – are "unnatural" to Western man, who has been a tool maker and a tooinnovator for a much longer time than he has been man. What is unnatural is the way in which his creative instinct, his fighting instinct, his adventurous instinct, his mating instinct, and his territorial instinct – to use loose and imprecise terminology – have been frustrated or subverted by a society in which the population density is vastly greater, the rules of behavior vastly different, and the channels of expression vastly more tortuous than those to which his genes have become accustomed over the several thousand generations prior to the last dozen or so.  
 
[Updated graphic] MEDIA attention is turning increasingly to survivalism as the phenomenon grows...Several recent television "documentaries" have also dealt with survivalism, concentrating on its gun-happy aspects.
 
The fully developed survivalist syndrome, then, might be personified by a man who is convinced that very hard times are ahead for Western civilization; who believes that with a little ingenuity and luck – and a lot of determination, hard work, and careful planning – he can personally avoid those hard times and survive physically while the blood runs ankle deep in America's cities; and who really won't be sorry to see the blood start running (whether he'll admit it or not), because he is alienated from the present System, feels threatened by it, and is looking forward to being rid of it.
 
In real life, of course, there are a lot of survivalists who are not fully developedEven among those that are, there are still relatively few who have carried their survivalism beyond the hobbying and daydreaming stage:  a study of the lore, a stash of hidden guns, an occasional weekend visit to a still-undeveloped homesite in the mountains.  Their survivalism is mostly a mental life preserver, something to help alleviate the sense of drowning in the chaos of today's sinking society.
 
Nevertheless, it is reassuring to see the survivalist phenomenon growing by leaps and bounds from year to year, just as it is heartening to see the booming growth of the "underground economy."  Both are direct consequences of the growing loss of faith in the System by people from every socioeconomic level.  Both are signs – preliminary still, to be sure, but nonetheless certain – that the Beast is dying.
 
What is less reassuring is the largely individualist approach to survivalism taken by most of those presently involved.  Family-size groups are entirely too small to weather what is coming.  An individual or a family of five or six memberholed up in a cabin in the hills with a well, a vegetable garden, a wind-driven generator, and a rifle or two may comfortably ride out a brief period of urban riotingbut in the event of a prolonged breakdown of governmental authority they will be sitting ducks for marauders.  A survival group with fewer than about 10 adult males organized into a structured defensive unit will be able to present little more than an amusing – and temporary – challenge to a determined gang of armed non-Whites roving the countryside.
 
Beyond this tactical inadequacy is the lack of anlong-range planning. There are virtually nsurvivalist groups with even tentative plans for educating their children in any comprehensive way, for going on the offensive against the cities when the conditions there have ripened sufficiently, and for eventuallbuilding a new society on a sounder basis than the old one.
 
As thgrowth of survivalism continues, however, one can expect to see an evolution from the short-range, single-family, bomb-shelter approach which prevails today to the beginning of a number of true survival communities.  Even at this time it is worthwhile to think seriously about the factors relevant to the viability of such communities. Three of these factors are defensibility, independence, and isolation.
 
Defensibility entails more than manpower and firepower. Natural cover for defenders – and lack of it for possible attackers; ground plan; building construction; security of water, fuel, food, and electrical power sources:  these are a few of the physical elements of defensibility to be taken into consideration.
 
None of these is as important as careful, intelligent planning and well-structured organization, however.  A community of libertarians – if one may use the word "community" to designate a mere geographical grouping of independent individuals – even if each were a former Green Beret and armed to the teeth, might be far less defensible than a strongly organized community ohalf as many individuals acting in concert under a single authority.
 
One of the tasks of defense planning is the consideration not only of the short-term threat of marauders armed with small arms, but also of the long-term possibility of attack by government-backed forces armed with heavy weapons.  Community defense under the latter circumstance assumes altogether new and different dimensions, but it by no means becomes impossible.
 
Independence is also a factor with both short-term and long-term dimensions.  In the short term one might be content with the ability to survive an interruption for a few weeks – or few months, at most – of the supply of life’s bare necessities from the outside worldIt might suffice to have a store of non-perishable food, a few drums of water, an underground tank of fuel.  A community with only such short-term capability for self-support becomes non-viable in the event of a general breakdown of the U.Seconomy, of course, unless it can create its own life-support system within a few weeks.
 
Much more satisfactory is a community which establishes its total independence in the realm of necessities – food, water, fuel, arms and ammunition, tools, spare parts, medicine, waste disposal – from the beginning and only depends upon the outside economy for nonessential goods and services. 
 
Better yet is a community which is self-sufficient in every way, although size will certainly play a determining role in this regard:  a community of 20 persons will be doing quite well to have one capable teacher for the community's children, one physician for its illsand one skilled mechanic to keep its tools in repair.  Many of the products and services available in the larger society will simply be denied to them.
 
With 100 carefully selected membershowever, the range of possibilities increases more than proportionately:  a blacksmith, a machinist, an armorer, an electronics technician, a dentist, an agronomist, a chemist, a glassblower, a stock breeder, a stonecutter, a tanner, a weaver, a miller, an aircraft pilot – even an artist, a poet, and a musician or two become feasible.  These last.named may be considered fully as valuable – i.e., functional – as the others, in the long term, when it is not just the physical life, but also the spiritual life of the community which must survive.
 
Of course, everything depends upon planning and selection.  A community of 100 persons thrown together in an emergency and without foresight would likely have not a single one of the specialists mentioned here among its members.  And it is our race's specialization, our division of labor, which has given us our efficiency and made possible our cultural progress.  A survival community, or any small community, has more use for generalists – versatile people who can do several things passably well (or can learn to do them) – than does a large community, but the specialist, who can do one essential, productive thing very wellremains an extraordinarily valuable asset.
 
Taking the very longest view, where one considers the most fundamental purpose for survival and accepts as that purpose not only the preservation of genes during a time of racial decay in the larger society, but also the continued progress of the race, its continued ascent of the long and slow path toward ever higher levels of self-consciousness, one sees in the cultural richness of a survival community, in the scope and depth of its specialization, more than functional value; one sees a part of the end as well as the means.
 
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[O]ne would do well to think of a White survival community as an ark and to plan it accordingly, 
to the extent possible.
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For the self-consciousnesof our race is advanced as much by the special genius which allows us to peer with growing understanding into the innermost secrets of the atom or the farthest reaches of distant galaxies, though in a different way, as it is by the special genius of a Beethoven or a Nietzsche or a Milton.  And it is, of course, not only our race's genes which are under assault today, but every aspect of our cultural heritage as well.  In the long term, thenone would do well to think of a White survival community as an ark and to plan it accordingly, to the extent possible.
 
The foregoing considerations accentuate the importance of geographical isolation.  A masonry apartment building in New York City or Chicago or San Francisco might be made defensible by bricking up the windows on the first few floors and installing a machine gun nest in the lobby (registered with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobaccoand Firearms, of course).  It might also be made reasonably independent, even in the long term, by drilling a well in the basement ·and erecting a wind-driven generator and greenhouses on the roof.
 
It is difficult to imagine any sort of White life surviving in such an urban enclave for more than a few years, however, as the life outside the walls becomes ever more alien and degenerate. Unless the building were virtually sealed off from the rest of the citylike a Trappist monastery, the cultural decay outside would inevitably penetrate the walls, and racial decay would follow.
 
The problems would be much like those faced by traditional-minded parents todaywho simply cannot cope with the influence of television, schools, and peers in determining their children's attitudes and behaviorno matter how much attention they devote to the task.  Even the Amish and other relatively isolated communities whose intent is to preserve traditional beliefs and life-styles are not immune to the degeneration which today is seeping in from the outside and causing an inevitable attrition.
 
In the coming months the National Alliance will be exploring the aspects of a White survival community mentioned here, and many other aspects as well, with the intention of building such a community in the future. Inquiries from interested readers of National Vanguard are invited. 

W.L.P

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Prospectus for a New Community



This document appears to have been written by Dr. Pierce in 1985 or 1986, meant to inform and inspire certain National Alliance members to think about moving to West Virginia to become a part of his Cosmotheist Church Community.   (See Dr. Pierce's White Zion speech from September 1984.)


HISTORY: The Cosmotheist Community began in 1974 as a religious discussion group which met weekly in the homes of interested persons in the Washington, D.C., area. These persons shared a concern for the fundamental values and goals -- or lack thereof -- on which the directions being taken by modern, American society depend. They felt that materialism, egoism, and a lack of any sense of responsibility to the future had become so widespread and so deeply entrenched that the spiritual that the spiritual and moral basis of Western civilization was being eroded dangerously.

In their meetings they explored the causes of this spiritual illness: the urbanization which has been growing rapidly since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, with the consequent breaking of the bonds between people and land; the historical failure of Christianity to take the physical basis of man's existence into consideration along with the spiritual basis and to build a community of blood as well as faith; the spread of democracy as a political doctrine, with the consequent decline in quality and responsibility of the leadership of the nations of the West, especially the United States. Underlying these trends they saw the common problem of wrong values, a problem made more intractable by an unnatural life-style.

The members of the discussion group formalized their association in February 1977 by organizing themselves as a church and adopting the name "Cosmotheist Community" (later changed to "Cosmotheist Community Church"). The Church's first publication, THE PATH, a statement of fundamental doctrine, appeared in the same year, and was followed by ON LIVING THINGS in 1979 and ON SOCIETY in 1984. Even before their formal organization they adopted as their symbol the Life Rune (also known as the Man Rune) from the Norse futhark (i.e., alphabet), with its meaning of creation, rebirth, and renewal.

The Cosmotheist doctrine has been expressed in part by many men. The great British playwright, George Bernard Shaw, was a Cosmotheist, and he spoke through such characters of his as Don Juan (in MAN AND SUPERMAN), who declared man's purpose to be the service of the Life Force in its eternal quest to know itself. The German giant of philosophy, Frederich Nietzsche, also was a Cosmotheist. His character Zarathustra expressed Don Juan's truth in different words; he saw man's purpose as preparing the way for a higher, more conscious, more nearly godlike man. And the English poet William Wadsworth was giving expression to his Cosmotheist awareness of divinity when he wrote: "And I have felt/A presence that disturbs me with the joy/Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime/Of something far more deeply interfused,/Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,/And the round ocean and the living air,/And the blue sky, and in the mind of man:/A motion and a spirit that impels/All thinking things, all objects of all thought,/And rolls through all things." Another English poet, Alexander Pope, summed up the Cosmotheist view very concisely in the words: "All are but parts of one stupendous whole/Whose body Nature is, and God the soul." The Cosmotheist doctrine may be epitomized very briefly in the following statements:


  • There is only one reality, and it is the Whole -- the purposeful, self-creating, self-evolving Cosmos, which has both material and spiritual aspects, inseparably conjoined. Thus, Creation and Creator, Cosmos and Theos, Whole and God, are but different names for the same reality.
  • Man is part of the Whole, and his consciousness is one manifestation of a universal, immanent consciousness.
  • Man's ordained or natural purpose is the same as the Creator's purpose, which is self-realization.
  • Man properly serves his ordained purpose by striving toward ever higher ever more conscious levels of existence, both biologically and spiritually. His ordained task is to advance, generation by generation, along the Creator's path of evolving self-consciousness. In the past he advanced blindly, driven by the immanent urge toward self-realization, self-completion. Now he must guide his advancement.
This doctrine imposes obligations on those who accept it. Since man is not only an agent, but also a part of the Creator, he is obliged to conduct himself accordingly. Since his purpose is service of the Creator's purpose, he is obliged to prepare himself to render service as effectively as possible. Effective service depends on knowledge, consciousness, and discipline. Each man and each woman has the obligation to know his identity and his purpose and to elevate that knowledge, through purposeful living, to an ever-present consciousness; furthermore, he has the obligation to be strong and fully in control of himself, so that he can apply his knowledge unfalteringly in his service.

Knowledge can be gained by diligent study almost anywhere, but consciousness is dependent on life-style and environment. And discipline is the product of lifelong training. The members of the church realized the impracticability of attempting to discharge their obligations in a satisfactory manner while living in an environment determined by values opposed to their own. They also recognized the formidable obstacles to raising children properly in such an environment.  With these problems in mind, in 1978 they began a building fund for the purpose of acquiring land where an environment more congenial to their needs could be established.

In October 1984 the Church purchased a 360-acre site on a mountainside in east-central West Virginia. The site was virtually in a natural state, with only one 100-year old farmhouse on it and no utilities. At the time of the purchase, one family moved into the farmhouse and began the preparatory work for bringing other families and single people onto the land. Wells were drilled, septic tanks dug, power and telephone cables brought in, and an internal road improved. A bathroom was added to the farmhouse, and mobile homes were brought in for additional  dwelling space. A second family settled on the land in mid-1985, and a large building was erected to serve as a church/community center, with a central area for meetings and religious services, a 7,000-volume reference library, shops, offices, and room for classrooms and other facilities. At this time the construction of the interior of the building, the improvement of dwelling units, and the development of other community facilities are ongoing projects.

PLANS FOR THE FUTURE: The most immediate need of the community is for suitable members to become members. The basic building unit of the community is the nuclear family, and so couples and a sexually balanced mix of single men and women are being sought. The aim is to integrate four or five new couples into the community each year, with an ultimate limit of perhaps 50 families (200-300 people, including children).

One of the most important functions of the community will be the education of its children. Classroom training will cover not only the traditional subject matter (language. sciences, mathematics, history, geography, music, art, and literature), but will focu on those areas of knowledge required as a basis for a strong sense of identity, and this training will be suplemented with instruction in ethics and religion designed to develop in each child a Cosmotheist way of thinking and viewing the world, and to guide him toward a purposeful adult life as a member of the community. Training outside the classroom to build consciousness, character, and self-discipline in each child will be at least as important as his formal instruction and will determine the nature of most of his waking activity each day, in both play and work.

The development and refinement of the community's educational facilities will proceed apace with its growth in numbers. The same is true of the development of other aspects of the community, such as its self-sufficiency. At this time most of the community's food is purchased outside the community, as also are its electrical energy,  much of its fuel, and nearly all of its building materials. The production of nearly all of the community's food on its own land is a goal which should be reached within the next two or three years. The achievement of energy independence through the use of wind power and available organic fuel on the land, together with advanced energy-efficient materials and techniques for the construction of dwellings and other buildings, should come within a few more years.

COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND OPERATION: Persons who become members of the community are expected to be full-time members, without outside commitments or activities. The community will be self-supporting through tax-exempt donations and through the mail-order sale of books and other materials to the public. Income will be sufficient to provide a living allowance for each member, but there will be no room for luxuries, and no comparison can be made with customary salaries or  expenses on the outside. Every adult member will be integrated into the economy of the community, by participation in the community's income-producing activity, its food-producing activity, its educational or construction activity, or a combination of these.

Although several aspects of the community's life -- those named in the preceding paragraph and its religious activity -- are communal by choice or by necessity, the individual family remains the basic community unit, and each family or single unit is accorded as large a degree of privacy as is consistent with community goals. The individual must accept the responsibility for those functions which properly fall within the household sphere, including the provision of meals, the maintenance of dwelling facilities, and child care.

The most essential attribute of the community is its purposeful, religious nature. It does not exist primarily for the sake of its members, but to serve the Creator's purpose. Therefore, the comments on privacy above notwithstanding, each member of the community is required to subordinate certain personal prerogatives to the community purpose. Commitment to the community's goals, obedience to its rules, and adherence to its doctrine are obligations for every member. Thus, for example, every member is expected to accept without reservation the community's rule against the use of intoxicating or addictive substances, including alcohol and tobacco. And every parent is expected to yield to the community's authority in matters relating to the education and character building of his children.

PERSONAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR PROSPECTIVE MEMBERS: Productive work is considered a primary virtue in the community. And as a practical matter, the community will be able to maintain its existence only by demanding a large effort from each member. That is especially the case during this early period of community development, when there is more work than can be handled by the few members available to do it. But hard work and a relatively demanding schedule are things which members should consider permanent features of their lives in the community. The current work schedule is six 11-hour workdays per week, with one day per week reserved for family activity, household maintenance, and similar private activity; and for community religious services and other religious activity. (Much of the work of female members with husbands or husbands and children to care for will necessarily be in their homes, although at least some community work will be expected from every able-bodied female.)

The community is a social one, with a large degree of communication and collaboration among members. At the same time, however, while it remains small there will not be as many opportunities for large-scale social intercourse as exist outside the community. Thus, members should be neither excessively individualistic, making collaboration with other members difficult, nor overly dependent on having large numbers of other people around them in order to be happy. The ideal member should have a good blend of self-reliance and altruism. He should be capable of functioning well by himself and also be flexible enough to work with others.

Two features of the community which may place special demands on some new members are its isolation and its austerity. The isolation is deliberate, so that the community can most easily remain free of the opposed values which are prevalent outside and develop its own values and life-style with the least interference. Thus, members should not be dependent on recreational or other facilities outside the community which will lead to a lot of coming and going. A trip into town for supplies every ten days or two weeks is reasonable; three times a week is not.

The austerity, although unavoidable at this time, also will be deliberate in the future. It accords better with the community's nature and purpose than does luxury. Although the community always will endeavor to have the best tools available and to use them to perform its work efficiently, it will not put a premium on physical comfort for its own sake or on reducing physical exertion to a minimum. Manual labor is an activity which should benefit every member, and discomfort in moderation is not necessarily to be shunned. Parsimony in the use of resources, whether personal or community, should be the rule rather than conspicuous consumption.

William L. Pierce