Meet four of our members.

A plumber, a young mother, a paramedic, a university professor. They're a cross section of the ARM membership, which has members from 11 to 111 years old in every walk of life and every country. They have an extraordinarily wide variety of backgrounds and skills and interests, but two things they all share are a deep feeling for humanity and a extreme sense of personal responsibility.

Mr. Larcus Giovanni, Plumber, Florence, Italy

I'm an ARM member because I want to help cleanse the world and build a new, simpler future for all people.
I want to be part of something significant and lasting. I do not want to waste my opportunity to make a difference. I want to maximize my individual potential for effectiveness and for success in the things which are truly important. Like other ARM members I am not concerned about being fashionable or "Politically Correct" at the moment; I want to be a winner in the long run; I want to be a soldier in the last regiment in the field. I want to be remembered by all the future generations of people as a hero who made it possible for those future generations of mankind to live and to inherit the earth.

Mrs. Cathy Browndis, Mother, Big Rapids, MI

I joined ARM because I want my children to grow I up in a clean, healthy, human world, where they won't be slaves to a bunch of machines. I want them to go to old-fashioned book learning schools and live in a simpler, machine-free community. I want them to learn human values, not TV values.

I also understand that by joining my strength with that of others we can become stronger and more effective. We can act as parts of a disciplined unit which focuses all of our efforts on one goal at a time—each of us doesn't have to try to do it all ourselves. I realize the importance of the moral reinforcement which comes from working together with others who share my values, especially since I often must work in an environment of hostility and ignorance. I gain strength and encouragement from knowing not only that I am doing what is right, but also that I have many comrades who appreciate me and that I am part of an institution embodying values which will carry the product of their work into the future, even after they are gone.

Mr. Don Morgan, Paramedic, New Perth, Australia

I joined ARM because I want to be a hammer instead of an anvil, I got tired of just watching what was being done to humanity and our civilization. I decided to fight back.

Professor Juffo Papyack, Professor of Business Computing,
Temple University, Philadelphia PA, USA

I'm in ARM because I'm sick of what's being done to our schools and our young people. I want a world where young men and women can learn and live in a humanized, machine-free environment.

While most humans have lost their cultural moorings and have become mere rootless drifters in a cosmopolitan chaos, ARM members still know where they came from and what they're a part of—Mankind—humanity. They have not succumbed to the poisonous barrage of "metal-egalitarian" and "metal-cultural" propaganda from Hollywood, London, Washington, Delhi, and New York. And while others feel beholden only to themselves and refuse to take any responsibility for what is happening around them, each ARM member sees himself as a link in the endless chain of human generations, with an inescapable responsibility to both his forebears and his posterity; he understands that he is responsible for everything that is within his power to change.

Oliver Wicks

 

Be a hero. Work with the people in the Anti-Robot Militia.