The Templars were a fascinating group; a knightly order that reflected the unique religious philosophy of their time.
Their lifestyle was a massive departure from contemporary knightly life, one that has remained in the popular imagination for centuries.
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Formed in 1119, the Templars were initially intended to be a monastic order dedicated the protection of Christian pilgrims to the Holy Land, which had been secured in the First Crusade.
Since the region had come under Christian control, pilgrimage became immensely popular.
While the Crusader Kingdoms (or Outremer) were quite well-secured, with strong walls and modest garrisons…
…Pilgrims were regularly attacked on the journey from the coast to Jerusalem, or between cities and remote religious sites.
The effort to create a monastic order dedicated to their protection was spearheaded by two men:
French knight Hugues de Payens, who initially pitched the idea to King Baldwin II of Jerusalem, and the politically well-connected abbot Bernard of Clairvaux.
Baldwin granted the fledgling order its headquarters in 1119 — at Temple Mount, in what had once been the Al-Aqsa mosque.
However, at this point it was a small coalition rather than a true order — it would exist without a central code, surviving on donations, for 10 years.
Soon, Bernard of Clairvaux’s advocacy for the group in Europe caught some traction, and a council was called to formalize the Order’s code and raise support.
This was the Council of Troyes, and the churchmen there would go on to create the Knights Templar as we know them.
The Order had always been characterized by poverty and piety — its initial emblem depicted two knights on one horse, as members fought out of religiosity rather than for profit or glory.
But Troyes would redefine its ethos, forming a knightly order in the image of monastic life.
The rules set out at the Council of Troyes, called the Latin Rule, would define the image and lifestyle of the Knights Templar.
In the Latin Rule, we see a complete inversion of the knightly ethos, and a lifestyle characterized by asceticism.
This asceticism was meant to allow the the Templars to live completely in line with God — making them fearless instruments of the divine.
This warrior-monk status made them extremely unique, as they lived reserved lives, characterized by constant prayer, plainness in dress… and regular combat.
I wrote about this mindset before, classifying it as a distinctive adaptation of the “warrior religion”.
It was a method of psychological and spiritual elevation; living like a monk to purge all fears, and align one’s actions 100% with God. open.substack.com/pub/alarictheb…
This way of life was a far cry from “mainstream” knightly life, which in times of peace could become perhaps too comfortable.
Here’s a funny passage from Cahill’s Mysteries of the Middle Ages, describing the lifestyle of certain less-than-ideal knights: commonplaceapp.com/post/bae3e980-…
From this, we can see the drastic departure offered by the Knights Templar.
It wasn’t a life for most knights — only those with strong religious conviction, who wanted to actively seek out discomfort and regular battle.
Initiates would forgo all material comforts in exchange for a higher purpose — and much, much more fighting.
Skirmishes were often approached alone, in terrible conditions, and with hundreds of civilians to protect.
And many knights saw it as a challenge — a higher calling.
Interestingly, the rhetoric surrounding the Templars mirrored the mindset of today’s Tier 1 soldiers (SEALs, etc)
Leaving behind the comforts of home, embracing severe deprivation, seeking a crucible… & particularly the idea of being the “tip of the spear” against violent men.
From a pilgrim to the Holy Land’s account:
“They are the first to go and the last to return… As one person, they strongly seek out the units and wings of the battle, they never dare to give way, and they either completely break up the enemy or die.”
This philosophy was reflected in their combat role.
Besides escorting convoys of pilgrims, Templars often served as shock troops in large engagements, launching the first cavalry charges of a battle in tight formation to scatter enemy lines.
In the 1177 Battle of Montgisard, Templar charges heavily contributed to the Crusaders’ overwhelming victory.
With only some 500 knights, the Templar-supported force managed to decimate Saladin’s force of over 20,000.
This was the core goal of the Templars — to do more with less, in service of God.
Based on nothing but intuition, the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis has been discredited because it gets the causation backwards.
Language does not influence one's perception in the way proposed — but perhaps biological differences in perception express themselves through language. (1/6)
Pastoralists experience time differently than settled agrarian peoples, who experience time differently from hunter-gatherers, who experience time differently from... etc.
Whorf controversially argued that the Hopi don't have a concept of time, but the core idea is valid.
Again based on intuition, it is likely that the *concept* of precisely-measured time comes not from agrarian society but from pastoralists-turned-raiders.
Famously clocks came from the needs of monks and merchants, but this is not the *concept*, only a standardizing technology.
Picking up late night food. Accosted by DMV-type lady.
Polite “I actually had a second online order as well”
“ok CALM DOWN, we GETTIN it” at a shout. Drive home, both orders are wrong.
I can’t help but think this experience of US life is what 74M people just voted against.
This sort of thing is death by a thousand cuts, the gradual decline of goods and services especially since 2020
Besides being expensive, things are unpleasant, hostile — from customer service to bureaucratic processes to even interior design
Trump is, in part, a rebuke of this
Drugged-out foreign gas station clerks, the endless assault of TEMU “goods,” meals that somehow cost $25 for negative nutritional value, hostile and inflexible Online Systems for every aspect of life
This is the most visible Decline. But we don’t have to live like this.
This is the #1 type of media that people consume. Call it TikTok slop, call it ADHD TV, whatever (these are true assessments) but shortform content serves as the modern American’s staple crop media. Most of this content takes the form of “morality plays” — sort of awful Aesop’s Fables about proper behavior. They used to be mostly clipped from network TV, but increasingly they’re produced solely for shortform apps.
There is a self-insert, an antagonist, and a catharsis where the antagonist is punished. This type of thing serves to reinforce social rules, especially ones that the creator desires to see more widely adopted. It tells the viewer “this is what’s acceptable” on a basic level, and widespread interaction with the post tends to solidify this.
It’s slop, yes. But it’s not going anywhere as a format, and is currently ~90% leftwing agitprop. It’s also a lot cheaper to produce than TV, and this type of counter-propaganda can flood social media with relative ease. “These are the norms now” — gay sexual harassment is to be met with force, nonwhite criminals aren’t Aladdin, Dolores Umbridge types are the primary type of villain today, heterosexual white families are good by default, etc.
Ultimately it is this kind of lowbrow, background norm enforcement that shifts the tide in your favor — and frees up the most promising people from being dragged down by peer derangement.
(As an aside, shortform video can be wildly profitable.)
2. Ruthless social punishment
Name, shame, ruin. It’s ugly, but fantastically useful. The idea that conservatives are fighting against “cancel culture” as a concept was temporarily useful as an appeal to old norms — but we’re past that now.
In reality, every society has “cancel culture.” Everyone ostracizes people that break the rules. What’s really been in contention this whole time is who gets to write those rules. And it looks like it’s our turn.
So when some lickspittle administrator-type demands some awful thing of you, like the example below of allowing your child to be sexually harassed, eviscerate them on social media. Libs of TikTok them. No mercy. It doesn’t take many examples until the easily-swayed majority concede and accept new norms. But you can never take your foot off the gas.
The Home Depot Lady debate was well-intentioned but stupid. These people deserve nothing. When your enemy routs, you are *obligated* to chase them down and inflict losses. End the war there, or at least change the paradigm in your favor.
So many people immediately jump to salivate over a grimy cyberpunk dystopia, where they are a Gritty Revolutionary kept down by The Man with his Evil Robots
Grow up. You don’t do anything cool enough to be suppressed, & the state is already plenty capable — sans robots.
People have been trained by YA fiction to *want* this kind of thing, and to *want* to be “a revolutionary, just like Katniss Everdeen!”
When I say it is LARP, I mean it in the literal sense. This is one of the main media tropes today — people want to make it real.
There are some fields which demand, by their nature, pure dedication to one’s craft. Medicine is one of them. But now, with the dual factors of a growing % of jobs being fake and a cultural scorn against excellence, younger people expect all jobs to subscribe to make-work norms.
I don’t say this as a “kids these days!” jab, since I am fairly young. But if you want to become a surgeon or a soldier or something along those lines, you should expect the job to in many ways be your top priority and identity. If you don’t want that, become a remote SWE.
Media often presents this as an exclusively-bad thing. Of course there are rough aspects, like less time around one’s family — but is excellence for its own sake not a positive factor? Pride in one’s work and expertise? Why are these things seen as pointless?
And some still say “people have been getting more attractive, a normal person today would be a 10 in Antiquity”
If anything the opposite is true. Men & women are degenerating rapidly in terms of beauty; see also statues and illustrations made from live models in the 19th c.
“The ancients were ugly!” is just another form of “history was never cool, CHUD”
Even athletic prowess and beauty must be robbed from the past, lest you get any “dangerous” ideas.
In truth human beauty will inevitably decline without explicit movements dedicated to its preservation
The natural state of civilized man is a degeneration of athleticism & beauty. The Greeks, among others, were *exceptional.* Revolutionaries against the ills of civilized life