Depletion undermines future standing.

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Purpose

This principle recognizes that exhausting what is inherited weakens the authority and capacity of those who follow.

Principle

Depletion undermines future standing.

Meaning

When land, resources, knowledge, or institutional strength are diminished beyond recovery, future generations inherit reduced ability to govern, provide, and protect. Standing depends partly on what remains.

Loss today becomes limitation tomorrow.

What May Be Depleted

  • Natural systems and habitats.
  • Access to food and materials.
  • Legal clarity and precedent.
  • Cultural knowledge.
  • Trust and relationships.

Depletion may be gradual or sudden.

Why This Matters

  • Authority requires material and moral foundation.
  • Weak inheritance reduces independence.
  • Restoration may be costly or impossible.
  • Legitimacy may be questioned.

Standing and Capacity

Future leaders must work with what survives. Reduced resources mean reduced options.

Examples

  • Overharvest leaving little for renewal.
  • Agreements reducing jurisdiction.
  • Loss of language or practice.
  • Damage to long-term relationships.

Risks if Ignored

  • Greater reliance on outsiders*