179 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
179 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
![]() |
This file is an exerpt from The Book of Darkness, an official work of the Ordo
|
|||
|
Templi Satanis, P.O. Box 1093, Atwater, CA 95301. It is copyright 1991. All
|
|||
|
persons are hereby given permission to make copies and/or distribute this
|
|||
|
exerpt, so long as in so doing the contents of this work is not altered in any
|
|||
|
way, including this paragraph.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Satanic Aristocracy (From the Book of the World)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Given the premise that there is, indeed, a natural aristocracy at work in the
|
|||
|
population, the question must be raised: how should this aristocracy comport
|
|||
|
itself? By what strictures should it govern its own behavior?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At the onset, it should be remembered that it is unreasonable to assume the
|
|||
|
natural aristocracy would act according to the same restrictions and under the
|
|||
|
same assumptions as the Masses. Being possessed of abilities, inner drives, and
|
|||
|
creative forces totally beyond the ken of the ordinary masses, the natural
|
|||
|
aristocrat cannot be expected to lower himself to the level of the ordinary
|
|||
|
citizen. Indeed, it is the aristocrat who is called upon by society to engage
|
|||
|
in the grandest acts of self-sacrifice by being forced into the role of leader
|
|||
|
and driving impetus for society as a whole.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
No rational person, and certainly not the Satanic aristocrat, would think of
|
|||
|
engaging in such self-sacrifice (or indeed, in self-sacrifice of any kind)
|
|||
|
without expecting to receive some-thing in return. Whether the rewards for such
|
|||
|
endeavors are material or psychic, they should be forthcoming. For the most
|
|||
|
part, the economic system built into Western society provides the means for
|
|||
|
such rewards to be attained; power and wealth are usually quite readily
|
|||
|
attainable by anyone with the drive, ability, and desire of the Satanic
|
|||
|
aristocrat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This, then, becomes the motive for the Satanic aristocrats selfless actions of
|
|||
|
leadership and innovation. Bearing the brunt of economic, scientific, and
|
|||
|
cultural progress, the members of the aristocracy can naturally assume they
|
|||
|
will bear the chief portion of its output. The masses of humanity, lacking the
|
|||
|
special instincts and abilities of the members of the natural aristocracy, are
|
|||
|
merely drawn along in the currents thus created; going along for a free ride,
|
|||
|
as it were, on the coattails of the aristocracy. It is not too much to ask of
|
|||
|
the Masses that they contribute in some gross material way to the successes
|
|||
|
envisaged by the aristocracy. In this way, the interaction between the
|
|||
|
aristocracy and the Masses can be seen as a symbiotic relationship; the Satanic
|
|||
|
aristocrats provide the vision and the drive, while the herd-like masses
|
|||
|
provide the labor and gross raw materials required to bring about the
|
|||
|
realization of these visions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Satanist, in his role as natural aristocrat, creator, and visionary leader,
|
|||
|
must comport himself in a partial dichotomy. On the one hand, individual effort
|
|||
|
and self-reliance is the key which unlocks the creative drive which defines the
|
|||
|
Satanist. The greatest doom that a Satanist can bring upon himself is to adopt
|
|||
|
the herd mentality of the Masses; in so doing, the creative impulses are
|
|||
|
stifled and the very aristocratic qualities become numbed. It is quite possible
|
|||
|
for a Satanist to betray his own self and one day awake to find himself
|
|||
|
numbered among the herd.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On the other hand, the Satanist must act in concert with the other members of
|
|||
|
the Aristocracy, providing a consistent and coherent vision for the Masses to
|
|||
|
follow. Conflict between the members of the aristocracy, when they arise, must
|
|||
|
be dealt with swiftly and with a minimum of divulgence to the masses; the
|
|||
|
aristocracy must at all times appear as a monolithic, comforting, and stable
|
|||
|
institution. In order to maintain the malleability and complacency of the
|
|||
|
Masses, their feeling of comfort and stability must never be threatened by
|
|||
|
perceived internal dissension among the aristocracy. This is one reason why
|
|||
|
civil wars in particular strike such a distasteful chord in the mass psyche.
|
|||
|
Ordinary wars can be understood and even tolerated, but civil wars, where the
|
|||
|
leadership is seen to be at odds with itself, are intolerable. Note too that,
|
|||
|
despite all protestations to the contrary, and all the different -"isms" and
|
|||
|
ideologies at work in the world, there is still a subconscious perception that,
|
|||
|
whatever side they purport to represent, a leader is a leader, and ultimately
|
|||
|
all leaders are on the same side.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This necessary confluence of the aristocracy is mirrored on the individual
|
|||
|
level. Not only must the different members of the aristocracy act in concert,
|
|||
|
but so too the individual Satanist cannot be at odds against himself. This is
|
|||
|
important for a variety of reasons, magical and mundane, but it comes down to
|
|||
|
the fact that the Will is the key to the success of the Satanist, and the Will
|
|||
|
cannot be effectively employed and directed as long as the mind is divided
|
|||
|
against itself.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Satanist, then, must possess great stores of self discipline. At all times,
|
|||
|
the mind of the Satanist must be clear and unmuddled, free from exterior and
|
|||
|
internal factors that might serve to disrupt the flow of both the intellect and
|
|||
|
the Will. Specifically, this includes the use of psychotropic drugs, excessive
|
|||
|
use of alcohol, etc. The very idea of a Satanist being addicted to drugs or
|
|||
|
alcohol is self-contradictory: the Satanist by definition is a master of his
|
|||
|
own Will. How can one be the master of his own Will when he cannot even control
|
|||
|
an impulsive craving for a certain substance, especially a substance which
|
|||
|
limits, slows, and eventually destroys the very intellectual process that
|
|||
|
separates Satanists from the masses in the first place? No, the answer must lie
|
|||
|
in self-control at all times for the Satanist. It is impossible to achieve
|
|||
|
consistent, conscious acts of the Will when the Will itself is clouded.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The necessary individualism, when combined with the necessary self-discipline
|
|||
|
required of the Satanist, creates an essential dichotomy within each and every
|
|||
|
true member of the natural Satanic aristocracy. This inner tension is quite
|
|||
|
important to the creative process as well, and it can be said that it is these
|
|||
|
contradictory impulses which make an individual great. It must also be
|
|||
|
remembered that in no way does one impulse outweigh or negate the other. It is
|
|||
|
certainly possible, for instance, to achieve inner self-discipline without
|
|||
|
sacrificing individuality. So too is it possible to accept a certain amount of
|
|||
|
exteriorly imposed regimentation, as long as such is done by a conscious choice
|
|||
|
of the Will, and as long as the modes of individual expression and choice are
|
|||
|
not utterly extinguished in so doing. By way of an example, a Satanist could
|
|||
|
certainly join the military, which imposes a great deal of exterior order on
|
|||
|
the individual, without sacrificing all individualism. However, it would not be
|
|||
|
acceptable for the Satanist to, for example, join a group which practices overt
|
|||
|
psychological conditioning ("brain washing", "love bombing", "leader worship"),
|
|||
|
for the very nature of such procedures destroys the individual's ability to
|
|||
|
make unbiased conscious decisions. The Satanist must never allow any force,
|
|||
|
psychological, chemical, or otherwise, to exert control over his Will.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Satanic aristocracy sees the masses as tools; means by which the ends
|
|||
|
envisioned may be achieved. To this point of view, it must be added that
|
|||
|
individual suffering, as such, is irrelevant. The ends are all that matter to
|
|||
|
the Satanist; the means are chosen based on totally utilitarian and logical
|
|||
|
decisions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Does this mean that the Satanist should go around eliminating people merely
|
|||
|
because it happens to be expedient? Certainly not. Do you throw a brick through
|
|||
|
a window because it would be easier than opening that window? Of course not.
|
|||
|
Why, then, would the Satanist think so little of the tools that nature has
|
|||
|
provided that they would be squandered for a mere moment's pleasure, or merely
|
|||
|
to shave a few minutes off the completion of a task.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On the other hand, this should not be taken to mean that the Satanist will go
|
|||
|
out of his way to sustain the life of any individual, merely for its own sake.
|
|||
|
If one of the masses must be sacrificed in order to achieve a worthwhile goal,
|
|||
|
then the Satanist should have no qualms about doing so. For example, consider
|
|||
|
some of the great autocratic leaders of history; Ramses, Alexander, Caesar,
|
|||
|
Napoleon, and Hitler. All of them have three things in common. First, they were
|
|||
|
all autocratic tyrants who were directly responsible for the deaths of millions
|
|||
|
of people. Second, they lost; their empires were destroyed around them, usually
|
|||
|
in a vast Gotterdammerung. Lastly, all will live for aeons beyond their
|
|||
|
physical bodies, in the minds of the men that live after them. Given enough
|
|||
|
time, the barbarity of their deeds fades, and only their glory remains. This
|
|||
|
process is called remainfestation by some; the achievement of immortality
|
|||
|
through one's impact on history. Living beyond one's years in the hearts and
|
|||
|
minds of others.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
True, these are extreme examples of the principle, but still valid ones. No
|
|||
|
price is too great to pay for such immortalization. And, truth be told, the
|
|||
|
masses on whom those leaders built their reputations are also vicariously
|
|||
|
immortalized as well; where would Napoleon be without his armies? What would
|
|||
|
Ramses have done without the vast ranks of slaves to create his monuments?
|
|||
|
Whether you are a leader or a follower, immortality has a heavy price.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This idea also precludes the killing of an individual merely for personal
|
|||
|
pleasure, or for sport (unless, of course, that individual is fully cognizant
|
|||
|
of what is happening, and agrees to the process. There is nothing inherently
|
|||
|
wrong with suicide, if it makes the individual happy, free of a life of pain
|
|||
|
and anguish, truly happy, perhaps, for a brief moment, for the first time in a
|
|||
|
long and miserable life). This stricture is not based on any arbitrary and
|
|||
|
facetious respect for life, as such, but rather on very sound and concrete
|
|||
|
bases.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
First, to have the aristocracy go around and slay members of the masses with
|
|||
|
impunity would clearly and immediately undermine the position of power of the
|
|||
|
aristocracy. Such freedoms would instantly destabilize the social situation and
|
|||
|
would probably lead to a bloody revolt on the part of the masses aimed at the
|
|||
|
aristocracy. This was certainly a factor in the French Revolution. Such an
|
|||
|
upheaval would certainly lie squarely contrary to the interests of the
|
|||
|
aristocracy as a whole and its individual members. Such behavior on the part of
|
|||
|
the aristocrats would destroy the sense of complacency enjoyed by the masses,
|
|||
|
which is necessary for the smooth continuation of the path of societal
|
|||
|
evolution, and as such should be banned. To allow it would run counter to every
|
|||
|
goal of the aristocracy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Too, such a squandering of the lives of the masses would represent, ultimately,
|
|||
|
a sacrifice of material resources on the part of the aristocrat in question.
|
|||
|
Once more we are left to consider the question of the window; but in this
|
|||
|
instance you don't even want the window open; you merely want to hear the glass
|
|||
|
break. Is that worth the expense of a new window? Probably not.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Once more, however, we must reiterate the relativity of every decision. There
|
|||
|
is no way that every circumstance can be foreseen, and thus there is no way
|
|||
|
that any code of behavior can be totally applicable to every situation. In the
|
|||
|
end, the value of each individual life must be decided individually, bearing in
|
|||
|
mind that some lives are definitely worth more than others.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|