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*[[File:Savitri.png]] [[Hindutva|Savitri Devi]] (1905-1982) [[File:Cball-France.png]] France / [[File:Cball-Greece.png]] Greece / [[File:Cball-India.png]] India
*[[File:Saint-Loup.png]] [[National Primitivism|Saint-Loup]] (1908-1990) [[File:Cball-France.png]] France
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*[[File:Mansonism.png]] [[Cultism|Charles Manson]] (1934-2017) [[File:Cball-US.png]] USA
*[[File:NouvelleRésistance.png]] [[National Bolshevism|Christian Bouchet]] (1955-) [[File:Cball-France.png]] France
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These beliefs carried into the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%B6lkisch_movement ''Völkisch'' movement] of the late 19th century, which advocated for a return to agrarian civilization and stood as the bedrock for the cultural and biological beliefs of [[File: Nazi.png]] [[National Socialism]]. National Socialists rejected the anthropocentric view of ecology and ascertained that human society was subservient to the laws of nature, rather than the other way around. A strong government and rigid social order would be required to maintain this delicate balance between human expansion and nature. The slogan and doctrine of ''blood and soil'', which established a firm link between cultural flourishment, environmental conservation and racial purity, was popularized by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Walther_Darr%C3%A9 Richard Walther Darré]. Non-German fascist movements otherwise generally overlooked ecology, with the exception of the [[File:Legion.png]] [[Legionarism|Romanian Iron Guard]], which opposed capitalism for, among other things, its destruction of the Romanian countryside.
In his 1930 book ''A New Nobility of Blood and Soil'', Darré suggested the selective breeding of humans as a solution to genetic impurity (and consequently, environmental damage). Eugenicist ideas remain common in modern eco-fascist movements, such as those of [
===[[File:PaulGorguloff.png]] Paul Gorguloff Thought===
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