Achieving a healthy community of happy and companionable actors is a good goal, and one that is typically seen by bad actors as a resource to be exploited, degenerated, destroyed, or otherwise abused. Unaddressed problems for such communities include how to extricate themselves from such abusers, how to be healthy such that abusers find little or no future purchase in said communities, and how, in the context of those prior objectives, to define raison d'etre, and build understanding of community justification around a set of ethical practices. Clearly this presumes an inherent set of self-justifying ethical practices may be conceived, and that these are adequate to logically make said self-justification without self-delusion. As such, foundational axioms for such self-justification seem to be in mental health, stable and maximally healthy ecosystems, human rights, and happiness. These might also be stated as the list: ecosystem rights, human rights, mental health rights, and happiness rights. These very foundations may be subject for criticism, but they clearly have apparent evidence for being axiomatically such foundations.