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’The Stories Which Civilisation Holds As

Sacred’

Anonymous

2016

[ed. – The following was presented and followed by a discussion at the 2015 East Bay Anarchist
Book & Conversation Event in Oakland, U.S.A. One of the central prompts was; “Can there be an
anarchism that lives outside the box of the human social project?” The recommended conversation
which followed this reading can be found in the original audio, later released by the project Free
Radical Radio (now on hiatus). Any mistakes or omissions in the transcription, we take responsibility
for.]
In his profound work, Nature and Madness, human ecologist Paul Shepard offers what he feels
to be the culmination of his life's work. An interdisciplinary, comprehensive exploration of the 20-
year psychogenesis of the human animal, the environmental conditions that create that human
animal, and the consequences of removing the human animal from these conditions. One of
the many important ideas discussed in this beautiful text is Shepard's description of the general
stages of human development. Although I risk the painful reductionism or simplification of these
stages, for the sake of this talk it is pragmatic to understand them as a compounding, widening
series of relationships between a self and other.
At the beginning of a human life, the infant begins to make sense of its first experience of
self and other through its relationship to the mother. This is the primary relationship with other,
which will act as the base that supports all developmental stages to follow. As mobility and
awareness are gained, the infant enters the phase of childhood, and begins negotiating a rela-
tionship between self and other, where other is material environment. Much of this relationship
will be modeled after the pre-existing maternal relationship. During childhood, every substance
is put in the mouth, unknown locations must be explored, knowledge is literal and direct, and
non-human life is observed, categorised, named and mimicked – and is self-understood further
through likeness and difference during this play process. A vast amount of time and argument
could be expended on these two phases and their implications and expressions, but what I am
more concerned with today are the processes that follow.
The onset of adolescence marks the beginning of the third phase, which once again expands
and negotiates the relationship between self and other, where other is now social environment.
The framework for this process will still primarily be an extension of the relationships to oth-
erness formed throughout infancy and childhood. During adolescence, the complex aspects of
personality emerge, and a sense of place and identity within the social environment is understood
through negotiating relationships with peers, elders, social customs, and a guided preparation
for adulthood. The challenging adolescent phase of life comes to a close with the process of ini-
tiation, in which the youth identity formally ends and the new hard-won identity of adulthood
is not only taken on, but understood and recognised by all other participants in this social en-
vironment. At this point, the struggle for identity is ended, and the individual, now knowing
themselves, is free to begin the adult phase of life, in which the scope of relationship expands
once more to negotiate the question of self and other, where other is now a complex universe.
The problem here may be obvious to the listener. Most people unlucky enough to be
born within industrialised civilisation will rarely – if ever – even have the opportunity to inter-
act with a person who has made it to the fully-realised phase of self-development. Even fewer will
have chance to experience this transformation for themselves. This is not a reflection of personal
unworthiness or poor choices, but a result of the utter void of culture and deprivation of initi-
ation. The system of rewards and punishments that enforced the logic of industrial civilisation
worked very hard to prevent maturation out of indefinite adolescence. The permanent psychic
teenager – regardless of biological age – lives in a state of unending insecurity and doubt, expe-
riences a constant compelling confusion about the sense of self, and strongly prioritises battling
for a precarious position within the surrounding social environment. This is a completely an-
thropocentric [ed. – see Return Fire vol.2 pg11] experience, and creates and manages citizens
of empire wonderfully. The ache of indefinate adolescence and the empty promise of an
adulthood based on social indicators fuels nationalism, fuels the military, sells condos,
builds careers, populates cities. On the other hand, the cultivation of relationships to
the complex living world, where humans are not above all else, is one of the first things
that civilisation works to destroy upon making contact with an uncivilised group of
humans; and the annihilation and prevention of these non-human and non-material
relationships arguably defines civilisation itself.
In this absence of initiation, some people eventually still drag themselves away from ado-
lescence, and into something like a partial adulthood… to varying degrees. This process seems
mostly composed of slowly accumulating experiences that each inform small aspects of the per-
sons' relationship to the world around them, and gradually alter their core motivators away from
that which I have described as a solely adolescent experience. While this does not seem to fulfill all
the aspects of fully-matured psychic adulthood, nor operate on a time-frame that matches human
biological development, it is the best that most people have to work with, given the context.
In the absence of actual inter-generational cultures to be initiated into, the adolescent that feels
resistant to mainstream imperial void-culture has, since the mid-twentieth century, been offered
any number of aesthetic societal microcosms, in which to enjoy their pathologically-extended
teenager experience. By this process of subculture, even seemingly deviant elements of society
have a comfortable place to politic and jockey for unstable social capital, repeatedly attempt
to prove their worth through dramatic visible gestures, seek membership and validation in the
ways that appeal to them, and otherwise be solely driven by the same adolescent motivators that
industrial civilisation rewards constantly, and attempts to prolong. In fact, for a social environ-
ment to be a scene or subculture at all, it is essential that all content and relationships follow the
anthropocentric priority structure previously described.
When the adolescent subcultural environment intersects with an individual's inquisitive crawl
into partial adulthood, the reactions are often conflictual. The de-prioritisation of the adolescent

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value system is correctly perceived as posing a threat to the insecure and precarious social value
that others possess within that system. The defensive responses are commonly intense, and a
final result seems to often be a severing of relationships – not solely with the youth subculture
itself, but often with the ideas that subculture claims ownership of… which is where most of this
recuperative power is held.
This, however, never happens as an immediate transition, and many people hold on to large
aspects of social priority for a long time. Some simply reinvest in a new social identity, subculture
or location, beginning the process again and attempting to repetitively renegotiate the adolescent
experience throughout their lives.
What is most interesting in all this to me is the opportunity that this moment holds for con-
tinued exploration of the relationship between self and other, specifically the non-human other,
and the means by which civilised humans seek this out. While I recognise that word spirituality
can generate a strong reactionary response (in both people who have rejected their monotheistic
religious upbringing and those who cling tightly to their monotheistic secular upbringing), the
subjects that I am discussing may very accurately be described as matters of the spirit.
As people slowly begin to seek answer to questions which fall within the realms of
the spiritual, the loudest voices demanding to be heard are, of course, the stories which
civilisation holds as sacred. Sadly, for a lot of people these are the only voices that will
ever be heard.
For many people involved in this subculture, these mainstream spiritual paths will actually
feel familiar, and easy to transition into. The internal emotional experiences that drive people to
prefer one major world religion over others include childhood nostalgia, socio-political defensi-
bility, the romantic fetishisation of the underdog experience, pacifistic cowardice and narcissism,
and everything inbetween. Although it may outwardly appear that the practices of Christianity,
Judaism, Islam and Buddhism are all different, they all relate to and function in the world in the
same way. The differences in names, costumes and rituals between them is inconsequential from
an adult perspective; that is, to reiterate, a perspective concerned with expanding the relationship
between self and a complex, more-than-human world.
The primary focus of all these spiritual paths is to position the practitioner in a place of denial,
objectification, and anti-relational hostility to a complex living world. The adherent is asked to
reject their own lived perceptual engagement with the world around them, in favour of a set
of absolutist moral principles derived from a completely removed and humanistic other-world.
These monotheistic traditions look and see the world as profane; see the world as a prison cell; see
the world which must be transformed in the image of moral goodness and human safety; see the
world which was given to dominate; and see the world which is hated, and finally escaped. All that
is good and sacred are the lives of humanity; the acts of humanity; the desires of humanity; and
the one true God, who loves only humanity. Monotheism can not accurately be understood
as the intellectual belief in a solitary deity, but instead is a moral worldview based on
dualism and an anthropocentric refusal of relationship between the self and a complex,
more-than-human world.
Despite the hordes of devotees that still follow these classical moral religions of the world, ratio-
nal science is easily the most widely practiced and most dominant monotheistic faith in industrial
civilisation. As the inheritance of rationalism and a de-spiritualised Christianity, the religion of
science is currently the purest form of monotheism in the world. Having done away with a single
sacred other that lives outside of this world, science simply holds the sacred as its own mechan-

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ical philosophy of the universe, and the circular logic of self-defined, self-generating objective
truth. This holy writ is intended to be taken as unassailable and timeless; and the purpose of
this should sound familiar at this point. A straightforward outgrowth of traditional monotheism,
[rational] science is still based simply upon a fear and hatred of the living world. Its actual prac-
tice still follows a clear moral imperative to force this world into conformity with its vision of a
hypothetical and more tolerable humanistic world. The annihilation of the relationship between
the self and the non-human other is total within this state – with not even a jealous sky-dad
to reach out to. The complete dominion over the world which was once promised [ed. – in the
Judeo-Christian version] in the Book of Genesis is now called Progress [ed. – see Return Fire
vol.1 pg11], and is pursued with the fervour of unshakable zealots and the wealth of nations.
The creation of this current nightmare reality of alienation, toxicity and mass extinc-
tion is not so much a product of greed, but following a deeply moral religious mandate
to dominate the living world regardless of material consequence. Like all evangelical prac-
tices, the missionaries of rational science take to every corner of this world in order to teach their
faith to the poor ignorant locals, and bring that locality under the control of their religious law.
And like all evangelical practices, this is good, because what they have to offer and what they
teach are good. Some dream of taking to the stars, so that they might “go forth and multiply” [ed.
– imperative preached in Genesis] and enforce their practices and beliefs on entirely new worlds;
and the exceedingly devout and cowardly fringes of the scientific faith even hope to achieve a
more immediate salvation by uploading their 'digital souls' directly into internet-heaven1 , in or-
der to escape this world that they find so wretched and frightening, while retaining their isolated
sense of self.
All of this of course is comfortable and familiar to most humans raised within industrial civil-
isation. The morality, duality, objectivity, hatred of the living world, and neurotic devotion to
humanism that is the mythology of monotheism is taught to everyone in this culture, whether
religious or secular, and almost everyone embraces these myths deeply and lives by them. This
includes almost all subcultural radicals as well… if not especially. Most radicals are driven by
a deeply-entrenched belief in good and evil, and often an intense preoccupation with the im-
portance of human life. Even most of those who claim to have thrown off the morality of their
1
ed. – Such as the ’transhumanist’ movement (who envision and work towards a ’Singularity’ artificial intel-
ligence horizon and melding of the human body with digital technology), which has in recent years grown from an
obscure sect – in many ways keeping alive the old dream of eugenics (see Return Fire vol.3 pg28) – to mainstream
attention. Ray Kurzweil, as leading transhumanist ideologue, is now employed by Google, as was noted by those
who attacked the Google headquarters in Munich on 07.11.16 using red lacquer and bitumen: “The Google strategists
develop scenarios in which people can be replaced by artificial intelligence within a few decades. What comes as a
promise of a life without work and exploitation means, under capitalist conditions, that a large part of humanity will
become unnecessary. It is no coincidence that the Singularity University is located right near Google’s headquarters
in Silicon Valley. As an elite university, the institute that educates managers from all over the world in the fields of
AI [Artificial Intelligence], robotics, nanotechnology, bioinformatics, medicine and network technology is one of the
leading representatives of the transhumanist movement. In addition to the leadership of Facebook, people like Ray
Kurzweil and Larry Pager (co-founder of Google) gave speeches at its opening ceremony. The goal of transhuman-
ism is the fusion of humans and technology. According to their assessment, the human brain will be fully mapped
by 2030, creating the possibility to immortalize oneself in a post-biological life (a backup that will exist in computer
systems). Transhumanists are convinced that the way out of a world which they have decisively destroyed is the tran-
sition from human to machine. Its main players are made up of an ultra-neo-liberal right which has its starting point
at the Silicon Valley manufacturing center. The basic idea of efficient thinking regarding fallible bodies that become
old and sick has already had a concrete impact on employees in the IT sector with the [pressurised] introduction of
oocyte freezing to reduce infertility in women [ed. – i.e. to expand their working life for the company].”

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childhood teachings rarely do anything but indulge an reactionary teenage impulse, and strictly
follow the inverted form of their earlier moral lessons. Immorality is, simply, still a morality [ed.
– see Return Fire vol.1 pg41], a dualistic list of goods and bads, and is ultimately the same as
any other expression of monotheism in the way that its practitioner relates to the living world.
In this light, it seems not so strange to me at all that Marxist materialists might devote them-
selves to the worship of [undecipherable]; that humanitarian activists might begin praying to-
wards Mecca; that deviants and criminals might return to Wednesday Mass. For many, these
so-called changes and conversions are not really changes or conversions at all, but simply ad-
justments in word-driven language, practicing the same way to relate to the world which was
learned long ago.
And yet the questions that drive these impulses are real. In this void of guidance and culture,
some people still want to know how they are to relate to the living world around them; and I imag-
ine that many find it comforting to listen to even these stories of dominion and salvation. But
what other voices are there? What stories are there that speak of how to broker and negotiate
the relationships between the self and a complex living world in which humans are participants,
and neither masters nor exiles? What paths are there to follow, when friends speak quietly about
matters of the spirit, but still feel themselves to exist in an amoral reality, in which the beautiful
is wrapped inextricably with the terrible – and what of those poor souls who do not feel inclined
to abandon a worldview, even as they abandon the reactionary teenage subculture that claims to
own it?
It can become difficult to explore answers to these and more vulnerable questions
using the language of a culture in which these answers are not supposed to exist. What
I find most difficult in speaking about polytheism and animism is that not a single aspect of
these subjects can be easily or accurately approached using ideas defined by monotheism. Please
remember that, at least since the slaughter of the Canaanites2 , this culture has engaged in thou-
sands of years of genocide trying to erase these practices and beliefs from the world.
Commonly, polytheism is used to mean a belief in multiple iterations of what monotheistic
people mean when they use the word 'God'. This understanding misses the mark widely enough
to be useless. I described monotheism earlier not as the intellectual belief in a single deity, but
as an absolutist moral worldview regardless of the flavour of its expression. In that vein, I also
use a definition of polytheism as a comprehensive worldview in which the sacred is not remote,
but the very essence of the material world itself, forever intertwined with the banal and profane.
Polytheism does indeed lend itself to a belief in a plurality of divine entities, because it affirms
the plural character of reality itself. In this understanding, the monotheistic definitions of
entities like gods, spirits and the dead lose their meaning. While modern language fails to
accurately describe a polytheistic relationship to other, direct experiences of life serve to demon-
strate phenomena and truths that seem to prohibit, preclude and negate each other… yet exist
and intermingle all the same. For the polytheist, nothing in this complex living world can be re-

2
ed. – Canaan was a region in the Ancient Near East, and provides the main setting of the narrative of the
Hebrew Bible (i.e. the area of Israel, Philistia, Phoenicia, etc). Canaan is a character in the Bible who features in the
Curse of Ham, in which he is cursed with perpetual slavery because his father Ham had ”looked upon” the drunk
and naked Noah (Canaan’s grandfather). God later promises the land of Canaan to Abraham and his descendents, the
Israelites. The Canaanites are marked in the Book of Joshua as one of the nations to be exterminated, as they later are
by the Israelites, along with the Hittites, the Girgashites, the Amorites, the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites.
One of the 613 mitzvot (precisely no.596) prescribes that no inhabitants of the Canaanite cities were to be left alive.

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duced or isolated to a duality of any type, be it good and evil, objectivity and subjectivity, spirit
and flesh, or life and death. From the polytheistic viewpoint, agony could never be unwoven from
bliss, and the dead may walk alongside the living – even though they are not here.
When people speak of it at all, the world animism is commonly used to mean the belief that
everything in the material world possesses its own spirit and life. While this is not a statement
that I would call false, it glosses over most of depth and content that I find important,
and requests that monotheistic people in industrialised civilisation assign their own
definitions to the idea. Although it barely scratches the surface, I would like to offer a rough
working description of animism as a practice of relational engagement with the others encoun-
tered in a reality where everything is complex, interactive, and alive on its own terms – and in
ways that often do not feel familiar to civilised concepts. The key here is that animism is rela-
tional. There is a big difference between liking the idea of trees and brokering an ongoing mutual
relationship with an individual entity that is living an engaged existence rooted in the soil. Again,
this only scratches the surface, but is somewhere to begin.
The most common place that I run into conversations about animism is among anthropolo-
gists, and sometimes primitivists [ed. – see To Love the Inhuman] – supposing that those two
groups are in some way separate. I have often heard animism described in these circles as the
fairly uniform pre-religion of all primitive [sic] people, practiced before the belief in imaginary
gods seduced humanity's spiritual attention away from the material world. People like this de-
scription of animism, because it still works pretty well with the modern monotheistic worldview.
It places animism as a historic thing that other people – who do not exist anymore – used to do.
That perspective feels pretty safe, since it doesn't challenge the historian's personal practice of
monotheism with any other possible way of relating to the world. In that same vein, this an-
thropological view of animism also includes an inherent dismissal of polytheistic divinity, and
upholds the monotheistic separation of the divine from the material world. The other thing this
description does is cast animism as a religion, in the way that monotheism understands the word,
rather than as a perspective that determines the way in which any number of unique cultural
practices may be conducted.
This rears its head again when animism intersects with the inheritance of North American
environmentalism. Widely popularised by the writings of Thoreau [ed. – see Invasive], this moral
tendency only seeks to reinforce the concept of nature [ed. – see Return Fire vol.1 pg24] – which
is this culture's name for the imaginary outdoor place that is completely separate from humanity
and the sacred. Starting from this alienation, the environmentalist position then takes a bath in
its own self-loathing, with the belief that this separate nature is pure and perfect – precisely
insomuch as it is free of the taint of humanity.
This idea that nature is good and humans are bad is, then, essentially the same as
the original idea that nature is bad and humans are good: a shining example of the
uselessness of inverted morality, this attitude towards the living world continues to
simply confirm anti-relational monotheism.
This is still a popular and unexamined sentiment among radicals; many of whom recognise that
the consequences of industrial civilisation are counter to their own desires, but still inherently
accept the myth that this void-culture encompasses all of humanity itself. When this dualistic
thought process engages with the concept of animism as a religion, it is a short step to the ideal of
animism as pure and perfect spiritual connection with nature, free of the taint of human culture. I
find this vision of a pure animism to instead be a product of monotheistic story-telling, a familiar

6
voice that insists that no other cultural practices are actually possible. So, if it is not a religion,
or something to be intellectually believed in, it may be more accurate to say that a person does
not practice animism, but instead engages in a cultural practice that is animistic.
Let me return once again to the absence of initiation, the slow exploration away from
the anthropocentric obsessions and insecurities of adolescence. If this search for a way to
cultivate the relationships between a self and a complex universe is not stunted and prevented
by monotheism, then it will lead at some point to a world full of different traditional cultural
practices – which are animistic and polytheistic, and come from people of literally every back-
ground. While the human cultural aspects are unique in each of these traditions, they all have
origins in personal, relational engagement with the others in a living world; including those en-
tities which are often misunderstood by the modern language of gods and spirits. Most of these
independent cultural practices have another thing in common: and that is that their traditions
have been sundered, lost, and damaged by the genocide of this culture. This can create difficult
and uncomfortable questions for some people who want to walk these paths. Where is the value
in a partial tradition? What is the validity of a reconstructed practice? How can a person living in
one location practice a tradition that has its origins in another place? How can most people living in
industrial civilisation even claim access to one or more of these cultural traditions? And what about
the reality that many other people may already be claiming to practice these traditions in ways that
seem offensive or undesirable?
Within the subcultural social environment, this is quite a pot to stir. The adolescent relation-
ship with identity is defensive, precarious, and highly-prized. All manner and form of social and
personal politic come into play, as people battle for position and attempt to gain leverage over
others while remaining hyper-vigilant of attack and vulnerability… and none of this is very in-
teresting to me. Especially when compared to the question of whether or not a cultural practice
is indeed animistic or polytheistic.
I find that any cultural tradition, of any background, and any aesthetic, that a person con-
nects with deeply, can be a beautiful and important answer in this quest to follow a path out of
adolescence and into a human adulthood that cultivates relationships with the complex living
world. Provided, of course, that that cultural tradition in question in being practiced in a way
that actually does that. I say this because I feel that any tradition can also be expressed in
ways that ignore relationships, deny the plural experiences of life, and prioritise only
aspects of the social. The influence of this culture runs really deep. Cultural appropriation, for
instance, is an essentially adolescent phenomenon, where someone engages with a tradition in
a way that is aesthetic and social instead of prioritising relationships to the living non-human
world. Interestingly, the same thing is true of any 'spiritualised' nationalism. This is still just
a social identity and group-seeking, based around the aesthetics of cultural tradition. The con-
cept of xenophobia is just about as anti-relational as it gets. Just like cultural appropriation, the
nationalist trajectory can only manage to share imagery with the traditional cultural practices
that it steals from; because if the people doing it were actually interested in prioritising engaged
spiritual relationships with a complex living world, they would simply be doing that instead.

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ed. – Monism is the view that attributes oneness or singleness to a concept (e.g., existence), while pantheism is
the belief that everything composes an all-encompassing, immanent God, or that the universe (or nature) is identical
with divinity. H.P. Owen claimed that “[p]antheists are ‘monists’[…] they believe that there is only one Being, and
that all other forms of reality are either modes (or appearances) of it or identical with it.”

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Turning to a different set of practices, I would like to look at what more polytheistic prac-
tices can look like when they are stripped of an animistic perspective. Monism and pantheism3
are often spoken of as somehow being relevant to the polytheistic worldview… which I find to
be incorrect. While these practices certainly attempt to refute the dualism of scientific culture,
they do so by flattening the plurality of this world through total unification. Monism and panthe-
ism are also attempts to flatten the individualities of the many many gods by holding them all
as representatives of a single all-god. Not only is this directly counter to a polytheistic perspec-
tive, but representation itself is anti-relational. Both of these practices are neither polytheistic nor
animistic, but, by no coincidence, they are fairly compatible with industrial civilisation.
Another anti-relational way that people engage with the 'gods' is through archetypalism,
which recognises all of the individualities of the many gods; but recognises them only as
archetypal aspects of the human psyche. In this way, whatever cultural tradition the practitioner
enjoys can be engaged with simply as a set of anthropocentric thought-experiments. This
practice is pretty common among people who intellectually like the idea of polytheistic divinity,
but are still trying to work through the monotheistic secular sensibilities of their childhood.
(I suppose it is worth a quick aside to mention the many practices that fall under the general
heading of occultism. These popular and widely-practiced magic systems may or may not hold
a polytheistic perspective, but are united by their focus on the practitioner's cultivation and
accumulation of personal power. I find this to be anthropocentric and disinteresting from an
animistic perspective.)
So what does it look like to take on a tradition, and practice it in a way that is both polythe-
istic and animistic? Most people don't feel like they have points of access to cultures that not
enveloped them for their whole lives. Not only that; most people who find themselves born in
North America feel uneasy about the idea of lineage. What is available to people with diverse
or unknown family backgrounds? I think that it is important to remember here that basing a
person's entitlement to a spiritual practice on a hereditary determinism is the logic of racial na-
tionalism.
Another thing to think about is that this entire exploration is based on relationship. It can come
as a serious surprise to the children of this culture, but developing a relationship with strangers is
fundamentally the same; whether it's with plants, the 'gods', other living humans, or the mighty
dead themselves. A person has to make themselves available, and then engage with the others
that choose to engage with them. If a person has made it to the point in their life where they
are open and looking, they will almost certainly be called in no uncertain terms to the path they
are supposed to walk. In a plural living world, can anyone confidently separate the voice
of intuition from the loving guidance of the dead? The beautiful thing about engaging in
an animistic polytheistic tradition is that each person has the autonomy to practice as they wish
and develop relationships with non-human others that are actually based on free association and
mutual aid. The act of rejecting social fears, crossing the threshold into such a spiritual practice,
is a transformative moment in itself; maybe not the step that arrives at a finalised adulthood, but
certainly a step that begins the next leg of the journey through life. And it is one that most people
from this culture will never make.
In the end it turns out that a person cannot believe in animism; they can only be animistic. A
person cannot believe in polytheism; they can only be polytheistic. And a person cannot believe
in anarchism; they can only be anarchic. Unless they are still an adolescent… and then they can
be anarchistic!

8
The Anarchist Library
Anti-Copyright

Anonymous
'The Stories Which Civilisation Holds As Sacred'
2016

Return Fire vol.4


To read the articles referenced throughout this text in [square brackets], PDFs of Return Fire
and related publications can be read, downloaded and printed by searching
actforfree.nostate.net for "Return Fire", or emailing [email protected]

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