Anarchy is governance through formal consensus.
I am still working out the kinks on my ideals tho, like consequences to murder, rape, assault, and theft in an anarchist society.
Anarchism should be a pacifist movement in my opinion. I see Militant anarchists as hypocrites. Creating an ideology around creating tension within society will create more tension. I don't participate in riots or demonstrations for this reason, since it is just going to create more divided-ness and friction. Anarchism from the idea of peace, love, and community will move towards peace, love, and community.
I like Guerin's definition of anarchism as "the abolition of exploitation of man by man," which according to him is a goal that can only be realized in the absence of government. That's a fancy way of saying equality. I think that's really central to anarchism. I think most anarchists dislike the state because it brings about injustice and inequality. If somehow a government created equality between everyone (which I don't think is possible in the first place), I don't think anarchists would continue to be discontent with the state just because it's the state. The thing is, gov't can't exist without some people being better than others - which is why anarchism and equality go hand in hand, I do believe.
the current psychological climate is not ready yet for a revolution (the proper climate being when people are aware of their status, the evils of the system, and collectively desire to do something about it).
if anyone thinks that inciting riots, bombing mother fuckers, and throwing bricks at police men will lead to anything other than getting themselves in a shit ton of trouble they have something comming.
while anarchists and communists essentially have the same goal, eliminating a hierarchial system of governance so as to create a system of equality and establish the "workers"/individual self governance.
but in reality we as westerners have the ability to build a society like that as well, given it wont be easy and certainly wont be looked kindly upon by 'normal people' one might be able to create a commune type community living in a very similar way. Its kind of a personal dream of mine to do so. though, as a few people that know about the ideas i have say its still in the "napkin stage."
So how does one measure societies "readiness". That kind of "wait and see" attitude seems strangely similar to a lot of Christian principles and I've encountered a lot of both.
Those things in and of themselves are mostly useless in a long term time line. I don't know how efficient passing out literature and speaking down to people about how they should live is any better. Anarchism has been around for hundreds of years and hasn't swayed many people yet.
I don't want any system of governance.
Pacifism is inept. But I'll take the bait here. If you should not revolt or promote insurrection, what are your ideas for destroying a centralized state with an economy and all that goes with that?
well whatever you want to do, thats your perogative. if you honestly think you can strike up a riot whenever and a revolution will follow you are more than welcome to try, but im pretty sure you know that wont happen today, tomarrow or five years from now.
how you measure readyness depends on the populations awareness of alternatives to the current system. also it depends upon the frustration of the people in said current system and their awareness of such frustrations. and it depends on the people's willingness to support radical alternative groups.
i would say inorder for a revolution to be successful you only need about 10 percent of the population to back the idea of violent revolution. thats about the percent of population in all of russia that backed the Bolsheviks, and it was successful. however about 70 percent of the population of St. Petersburg (the capitol of the Russian Provisional government) backed the Bolsheviks which had a great deal of influence in actually deposing the provisional government and establishing the St. Petersburg soviet in power.
im not suggesting handing pamphlets out, and "talking down" to people. education, and awareness is hardly talking down to people. what i suggest even more than activism is creating a lifestyle for yourself, which we talk about on this site, and in doing that showing people that there are alternatives to the way they live that are completely viable, self-sustaining, and liberating. thus really helping to raise the level of awareness of alternatives to the current system, raising the level of awareness of individual frustration with the current system.
and your reply to my use of the term Governance is simply an issue of symantics.
The idea is to promote decentralization of the state until it seizes to exists. What if you convinced everybody in your neighborhood to live communally with each other, live closer together to one another (physically and with relationships), stop relying on electricity and gas bills, and became autonomous? That is a whole neighborhood that is not giving money to utility companies, and since the utility companies are taxed by the government, that is less money to the government as well. See how autonomy can be applied in all aspects of life. If enough people lived like this, the government would die like a monster dieing from starvation. promoting peace, love, community, and autonomy is, i believe, the best way.
good and evil are both parts of the same coin. good cannot exist with out evil, and evil cannot exist with out good. By fighting off evil you actually reinforce the notion of war between good and evil. By accepting evil as it is we reinforce peace.
How the fuck are we supposed to win a battle against not just an army, but an entire civilization based upon violence!
Once it dies out, then anarchism will once again be a movement of libertarian socialists, anarchocommunists, anarchocollectivists, anarchosyndicalists, etc. just like the rest of the world is today. We will have learned some valuable lessons, and we will take advantage of the good things that the modern movement offered.
I'll just focus on issues that actually affect me.
Then make sure you don't stop at battling Capitalist centralized states, because that violence seems to be inherit in civilization.
Oh you mean the outdated dogmas that have resulted in nothing since their inception? The same ones based on outdated models of capitalist societies? It seems at least a lot of the newer schools of thought at least challenge or seek to challenge the root and move past the shortcomings of well, the past and the dichotomy of the supposed Left and Right because really Anarchy has no relation to Liberalism. There are definitely valuable lessons to move on with. Tons of shit to ditch from the newer schools as well.
That's one of the best things you could do.
I don't want to see anyone hurt, I especially don't want to have to hurt anyone, but most of all I don't want to be hurt for being different. Even though that shit, is THEIR fault, I'm not gonna sit around waiting for them to change all the while being victimized. I thought up a saying for myself on this matter, "If violence is their game, let violence be our name." So as long as you, or any other "innocents" aren't threatening me with violence, you don't have to worry about whether I am violent, hence insurrectionary or nor.
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Whoa! You just went and took the classic Communist line there. In every Communist revolution, after adopting Socialist economies as the "transition" from Capitalism to eventual Communism they end up always stopping short of that. That is, Socialism is supposed to be the grabbing of the state from Capitalists so they can slowly dissolve the state into Communism. Not only does that make little sense (why not outright destroy the state after seizing it?) but has never worked. At least Anarchism can cite some examples of "it happening" even if they were a few months at best.
I never said I'd want to nor did I mentioned "revolution".
Minus a few extremely short lived examples that doesn't seem to be realistic in civilized society.
Not only were the Bolshevik ideals different (in that they had organized and hierarchical armies and centralized command) but the difference between Russian society of 1917 and any modern Western post Industrial society are stark. There were a lot of internal and external stresses on a low tech decaying Russian empire. A similar force in say, the US could easily be crushed because of it's centralized structure and visibility. You pulled that 10 percent essentially out of thin air.
People will feel it's talking down. That's also another Christianesque feature of most strains of Anarchy, this evangelical fervor.
No, I literally want no governance. It's not that we both want "the people" to run a free mass society and we call it different things. I don't want a mass society.
Whoa! You just went and took the classic Communist line there. In every Communist revolution, after adopting Socialist economies as the "transition" from Capitalism to eventual Communism they end up always stopping short of that. That is, Socialism is supposed to be the grabbing of the state from Capitalists so they can slowly dissolve the state into Communism. Not only does that make little sense (why not outright destroy the state after seizing it?) but has never worked. At least Anarchism can cite some examples of "it happening" even if they were a few months at best.
I don't know where good and evil part came from, sounds kind of moralistic.