Nature Without Self-Determination is Unthinkable
ROTTEN to the core, the profoundly anti-natural motives of the contemporary Green movement may be observed in the way its leaders insist that everyone must place their trust in either the authority of career politicians or faceless corporations which claim to be working in the best interests of the environment.
Despite the fact that one might expect the Greens to be a living, breathing representation of the unbridled dynamism and energy at work in your average ecosystem, they are about as ‘natural’ as a discarded hamburger carton. There is no difference between the creative, regenerative potential of nature and the inherent power of the individual, so the last thing we humans need to do is hand over control to political and economic opportunists or suppress our latent capacity for self-reliance and personal autonomy.
Herein lies the important distinction between anthropomorphic capitulation to Big Business and a more positive conception of nature as a theomorphic entity in its own right. Once we become conscious of ourselves as reflections of the Universe, or Over-Soul, we will understand that attempts to make us dependent are simply another attack on the natural world. Nothing says ‘natural replenishment’ more than human empowerment in accordance with that same principle.


