Corrupt and Integral Tradition present the hottest book on radical environmentalism this year:
Pentti Linkola's "Can Life Prevail?"
Reader's comments about the book:
Environmentalism does not make sense when approached from most angles. Linkola's version makes perfect sense.
Linkola's cry, "Can Life Prevail?," does not just ask the question--it provides us with an answer to how we can win.
by Alex Birch

We work too much. And most of us are working too much at jobs that we hate. If more people realized how unnecessary it is and how we are in fact impoverishing ourselves in our efforts it is doubtful many people would bother turning up for work. We would replace the present government with one that offered a 20 hour week and we would settle for more leisure time with less junk around the house. But because we're working so hard we don't have the time to think such revolutionary thoughts. And that is kind of the point. Free time breeds radicalism.
Work was originally meant to support yourself and your community, but today we spend our lives supporting work and draining both ourselves and the wealth of the community. Money is changing hands from the working middle class to the globalist mafia elite. This cycle has to be broken and it starts with shorter working hours on fulfilling tasks, and a decrease in consumption thanks to a change in values and a simpler lifestyle. All would benefit from it, including our environment.
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