Localisation
Integralism rejects the facilitative society, in which individual convenience is most highly prized, and replaces it with a rational holistic approach. It replaces monetary ranking with specialization, and embraces diversity in a new form: localization.While moderns have been taught that diversity means having a crowd of different ethnic backgrounds, all doing the same things and being assimilated into the same culture, integralism instead embraces localization, or the idea that while all communities are part of a general social consensus, ideas vary according to local population.
By nature, each town or city will be different from others in some way, from local standards of public behavior to architecture. Instead of having one policy for all, integralists support having variation among smaller, localized populations. The advantage is that people of the same ethnocultural group can embrace diversity of idea within that group.
-taken from http://www.anus.com/zine/philosophy/index_integralism.html
hink of it all - of the life that is! Study your friends and foes!
Study the past! And answer this: "Are these times better than those?" The life-long quarrel, the paltry spite, the sting of your poisoned pride! No matter who fell it were better to fight as they did when the world was wide.