Harm City
The Aggression Matrix: Defining Violence / Or, A Public Service For Those Who Do Not Wish To Become Criminal Food
Posted in Harm City 414 reads
Posted in Harm City 322 reads
The Troubled Plight Of A Bus Prophet: A Tame Negro Tale From Pre-Purge Baltimore
Posted in Harm City 499 reads
Surviving The War On Hitler And The War On Drugs
Posted in Harm City 522 reads 1 comment
How To Combat Coercion Every Day Of Your Life
Posted in Harm City 301 reads
An Abridged Archive From The Violence Project
Posted in Harm City 1,402 reads
An Actual Alien Invasion: The Army Beneath Our Feet, With 2014 Update
Posted in Harm City 1,376 reads 3 comments
Wading In The Shallow End Of The Gene Pool With Some Harm City Characters
Posted in Harm City 288 reads
Passive-Aggressive Intimidation: Who, How And Why
Posted in Harm City 312 reads
Why Beggars Should Starve
Posted in Harm City 430 reads 5 comments
When The Policeman Is Not Your Friend
Posted in Harm City 2,838 reads 3 comments
Defending Against The Biggest Aggressor Of Them All
Posted in Harm City 314 reads
Assessing The Lethality Of Your HabitatYou Wimpy Little Ape
Posted in Harm City 435 reads 1 comment
The First In A Series Of Guides On Hands-on Redistribution
Posted in Harm City 172 reads
A Public Service Guide For The Spry Ghettoite
Posted in Harm City 325 reads
Notes On The Author's Methodology
Posted in Harm City 293 reads
From Hood-rats To Heavy Metal Meat-munchers
Posted in Harm City 264 reads 1 comment
Two Rearguard Actions Against The Subhuman Hordes
Posted in Harm City 215 reads
Little Eddie Horn: Wonderboy Of Beggars
Posted in Harm City 247 reads 1 comment
Justifiable Armed Defense In Public Spaces
Posted in Harm City 208 reads 1 comment
Internet Dating Hazards From Kazan To Ulan Bator: Appendix To Your Trojan Whorse
Posted in Harm City 314 reads 3 comments
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() On The Overton Railroad
A Collection Of 11 Travel Books From 2018-19
In June 2018 James LaFond, an urban blight journalist from Baltimore, Maryland, was driven from his hometown by savage tribesmen. With a writing income of $230 per month, he was sustained by readers across the nation. The journals in this collection were written during that period. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |