It's not anarchy, it's Anarchism |
Smash the state |
Domestic terrorists? |
I'm not a fascist, I like... |
Actually fascism is cool |
Edward Abbey (1927–1989) was an American author and essayist known for his radical environmental and anarchist tendencies as well as many witty quotes decrying pollution, urban expansion, and the bullshit of American politics. His most famous work, Desert Solitaire, details his endeavors as a park ranger at Arches National Monument in Utah and is regarded as a modern-day Walden. Hard greens love his books but mainly because of his hard-line anti-development stance and his fictional depiction of environmentalist sabotage, or "ecotage", in The Monkey Wrench Gang; he was often too politically incorrect for their tastes otherwise, and he had an excellent bullshit detector.
He was from western Pennsylvania and wound up in New Mexico, Utah, and Arizona, where he worked as a seasonal ranger, fire lookout, wildlife preserve steward, and other odd jobs mostly to support his writing habit. Brief attempts at taking jobs on the East Coast didn't work out, and he was always drawn back to his beloved Southwest. He is buried somewhere in the Arizona desert, but we bet you can't find his grave.
“”How [the Indians] could have made such a discovery without poisoning themselves to death nobody knows; but then nobody knows how so-called primitive man made his many other discoveries. We must concede that science is nothing new, that research, empirical logic, the courage to experiment are as old as humanity.
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—Desert Solitaire, talking about datura and its psychedelic properties |