Havnt looked into the actual thinking behind anarchism. Played a lot of 2b2t.org back in my day so thats my reference point. Please enlighten me on your thinking.

  • mathemachristian [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 month ago

    the beginning of the redemption arc? I hear every anarchist mention “The Conquest of Bread” by Kropotkin, it’s gotta be good I just haven’t gotten around to reading it.

    • NaevaTheRat [she/her]@vegantheoryclub.org
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      1 month ago

      It’s kinda the foundational mutual aid text, but like you could read modern stuff if you want fresh ideas vs to learn the history of a movement.

      Also lmao, you are also a little surprised at who’s asking. We can only hope :)

      • mathemachristian [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        1 month ago

        Idk, what broke me into leftism was “Wage Labour and Capital” and what sealed the deal was “Socialism: From Utopian to Scientific”. It wasn’t the freshness of the ideas that blew me away but how solid and rigorous the foundations are.

        Before that I thought lefties just turn the “social programs” dial to 11 and the infighting was about how to best turn that dial and how social programs should work. To see such a rigorous approach to politics blew my socks off and broke with all my preconceived notions.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Are you looking for a general summary of the principles of anarchism? Or are you looking for a model of how it might look in real life if implemented? Or are you looking for a moral/ethical defense of anarchism vs other forms of governance?

      • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        Here’s a super short summary on those points:

        1. Anarchism is about horizontal power structures, mutuality, and community.
        • Horizontal power rejects the idea that a small number of people with very large amounts of power have a right/duty to rule over a much larger group of people. Systems of power, (meaning groups of people and organizations that have influence), should be distributed widely, not concentrated or centralized.
        • Mutuality means that the relationships that societies form with each other, both internally and externally, ought to be roughly equal. There are no relationships that fundamentally privilege one person of group above another. The rules apply equally to all people.
        • Community means that the primary consideration to any decision or action is how it affects the group first and foremost. For instance, instead of asking whether or not a certain action would generate profit, or make some specific person happier, the community involved as a whole should get to consider how said action would affect all of them.
        1. There are many examples of anarchistic societies both past and present. The Amish, Buddhist monasteries, Anabaptist communities, the Rojava autonomous region in Syria, the Zapatistas in Mexico. While none of these groups 100% adhere to fully anarchist principles, they share many of the same principles and structures. Most people wonder how a society could function with no central leadership or power. While there are many things that would have to change greatly to make that work, there isn’t anything about anarchism that inherently makes it impossible. Modern open source projects like the Fediverse we are on right now, operate in a pseudo-anarchistic way.
        2. There are many ways to argue against Statism and centralized power structures, what you might find compelling will depend largely on your other ethical and moral commitments. But I will say for me, I never heard any arguments that could justify the power of the state. All arguments that seemed to justify state power ultimately could be flipped to argue for other things that obviously are bad, like mob rule. I also found it incredibly interesting that when pressed, most people actually agreed with me that there was no convincing justification for state monopoly on power, but they still rejected anarchism for pragmatic reasons. They didn’t think modern societies could operated like that effectively.

        Some of the other commenters here have linked good resources, For me, understanding two key things caused me to move to my political views:

        • Capitalism is inherently self-defeating and unethical, which moved me to Socialism.
        • The state monopoly on power is unjustifiable, which moved me to Anarchism. The combination of those two conclusions firmly places me in the Anarcho-Socialist camp of political philosophy. The details of how that should look and operate on a practical level are still something I discuss and debate with folks, but we all agree on the general principles.
  • EABOD25@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Everything is based on humanity vs. An established order telling you what is right or wrong. IMO it is a simple, but flawed logic because it would mean that some of the most atrocious things can be done to people because it can be. For example, a thief steals a loaf of bread and the owner of the store can gather a mob to lynch a thief. Anarchy has the great potential to administer unproportional justice.

    Now with that being said, democratic solutions also have unproportional justice in very many cases when it comes to race and tax bracket, but the idea of proportional justice is present more than Anarchy. If you wanted a comparison

    • cacheson 💤@piefed.social
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      2 months ago

      For example, a thief steals a loaf of bread and the owner of the store can gather a mob to lynch a thief. Anarchy has the great potential to administer unproportional justice.

      You shouldn’t come into an anarchist community and start answering questions about anarchism when you clearly haven’t done your homework.

      But hey, since OP is interested in how anarchy would work, let’s go over how such a society would respond to the scenario that you’ve painted. Vigilante justice is never impossible in any society, but that doesn’t mean it would be tolerated. The requirement to have disputes arbitrated by a neutral third party is pretty universal. What differentiates anarchy is that arbiters are freely chosen by (possibly delegated) mutual agreement, instead of the state forcibly inserting itself into every dispute as the supreme arbiter.

      Let’s say the thief was a member of a commune. Since the thief is dead, their dispute with the baker and the lynch mob can be claimed by their next of kin, or closest equivalent. Either way, we’ll say that the dispute gets delegated to the commune as a whole, which collectively handles security and dispute resolution for its members.

      The baker has a contract with a company (probably organized as a workers cooperative) that offers security and dispute resolution services. For simplicity, let’s say that the members of the lynch mob also use this company’s services.

      The commune and the company might have different sets of rules that their members agree to, but it’s reasonable to assume that they both recognize:

      • The thief should not have stolen the bread, as it was a product of the baker’s labor and was not being offered for free. While the commune functions primarily via gift economy, they defer to local norms in these situations.
      • The baker would be entitled to restitution for both the stolen bread and the costs necessary to secure that restitution
      • Killing the thief to stop them from stealing in the moment would have been a wildly disproportionate response
      • This was not merely done as an act of immediate defense, but an act of retribution
      • The baker made no attempt to resolve this dispute through a neutral third party
      • The members of the lynch mob all acted as accomplices to the murder

      From there it’s just a matter of negotiating what restitution is owed to whom. Perhaps the commune and the company can’t come to an agreement on what exactly is owed, so they agree to defer to a neutral arbiter of their own. They may both be members of a local federation of dispute resolution bodies, which would simplify handling this.