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The black flag, a traditional anarchist symbol. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
I recently met a guy named ANDarchy who continually proclaims himself to be an Anarchist despite his utter lack of knowledge on ixactly what Anarchism is. Well his real name is Andy but I gave him the endearing name after asking him if he had ever heard of Emma Goldman and he responded with a dumb look while shaking his head no. Well this little educational blog entry is for all of the clueless punks and hip gangster wanna' be's who call themselves Anarchist but haven't got a clue and is dedicated you ANDarchy!
Anarchy 101
What is “anarchism”? What is “anarchy”? Who are “anarchists”?
Anarchism is an idea about the best way to live. Anarchy is a way of living.
Anarchism is the idea that government (the state) is unnecessary
and harmful. Anarchy is society without government. Anarchists are
people who believe in anarchism and desire to live in anarchy as all our
ancestors once did. People who believe in government (such as liberals,
conservatives, socialists and fascists) are known as “statists.”
It might sound like anarchism is purely negative — that it’s just against
something. Actually, anarchists have many positive ideas about life in a
stateless society. But, unlike Marxists, liberals and conservatives,
they don’t offer a blueprint.
Aren’t anarchists bomb-throwers?
No — at least not compared to, say the United States Government,
which drops more bombs every day on Iraq than anarchists have thrown in
the almost 150 years they have been a political movement. Why do we
never hear of “bomb-throwing Presidents”? Does it matter if bombs are
delivered horizontally by anarchists rather than vertically by the U.S.
Government?
Anarchists have been active for many years and in many countries,
under autocratic as well as democratic governments. Sometimes,
especially under conditions of severe repression, some anarchists have
thrown bombs. But that has been the exception. The “bomb-throwing
anarchist” stereotype was concocted by politicians and journalists in
the late 19th century, and they still won’t let go of it, but even back then it was a gross exaggeration.
Has there ever been an anarchist society that worked?
Yes, many thousands of them. For their first million years or more,
all humans lived as hunter-gatherers in small bands of equals, without
hierarchy or authority. These are our ancestors. Anarchist societies
must have been successful, otherwise none of us would be here. The state
is only a few thousand years old, and it has taken that long for it to
subdue the last anarchist societies, such as the San (Bushmen), the
Pygmies and the Australian aborigines.
But we can’t go back to that way of life.
Nearly all anarchists would agree. But it’s still an eye-opener, even
for anarchists, to study these societies, and perhaps to pick up some
ideas on how a completely voluntary, highly individualistic, yet
cooperative society might work. To take just one example, anarchist
foragers and tribesmen often have highly effective methods of conflict
resolution including mediation and nonbinding arbitration. Their methods
work better than our legal system because family, friends and neighbors
of the disputants encourage disputants to agree, helped by sympathetic
and trustworthy go-betweens, to find some reasonable resolution of the
problem. In the 1970s and 1980s, academic supposed experts tried to
transplant some of these methods into the American legal system.
Naturally the transplants withered and died, because they only live in a
free society.
Anarchists are naïve: they think human nature is essentially good.
Not so. It’s true that anarchists reject ideas of innate depravity or
Original Sin. Those are religious ideas which most people no longer
believe in. But anarchists don’t usually believe that human nature is
essentially good either. They take people as they are. Human beings
aren’t “essentially” anything. We who live under capitalism and its
ally, the state, are just people who have never had a chance to be
everything we can be.
Although anarchists often make moral appeals to the best in
people, just as often they appeal to enlightened self-interest.
Anarchism is not a doctrine of self-sacrifice, although anarchists have
fought and died for what they believe in. Anarchists believe that the
carrying-out of their basic idea would mean a better life for almost
everyone.
How can you trust people not to victimize each other without the state to control crime?
If you can’t trust ordinary people not to victimize each other, how
can you trust the state not to victimize us all? Are the people who get
into power so unselfish, so dedicated, so superior to the ones they
rule? The more you distrust your fellows, the more reason there is for
you to become an anarchist. Under anarchy, power is reduced and spread
around. Everybody has some, but nobody has very much. Under the state,
power is concentrated, and most people have none, really. Which kind of
power would you like to go up against?
But — let’s get real — what would happen if there were no police?
As anarchist Allen Thornton observes, “Police aren’t in the
protection business; they’re in the revenge business.” Forget about
Batman driving around interrupting crimes in progress. Police patrol
does not prevent crime or catch criminals. When police patrol was
discontinued secretly and selectively in Kansas City neighborhoods, the
crime rate stayed the same. Other research likewise finds that detective
work, crime labs, etc. have no effect on the crime rate. But when
neighbors get together to watch over each other and warn off would-be
criminals, criminals try another neighborhood which is protected only by
the police. The criminals know that they are in little danger there.
But the modern state is deeply involved in the regulation of
everyday life. Almost every activity has some sort of state connection.
That’s true — but when you think about it, everyday life is almost
entirely anarchist. Rarely does one encounter a policeman, unless he is
writing you a traffic ticket for speeding. Voluntary arrangements and
understandings prevail almost everywhere. As anarchist Rudolph Rocker
wrote: “The fact is that even under the worst despotism most of man’s
personal relations with his fellows are arranged by free agreement and
solidaric cooperation, without which social life would not be possible
at all.”
Family life, buying and selling, friendship, worship, sex, and
leisure are anarchist. Even in the workplace, which many anarchists
consider to be as coercive as the state, workers notoriously cooperate,
independent of the boss, both to minimize work and to get it done. Some
people say anarchy doesn’t work. But it’s almost the only thing that
does! The state rests, uneasily, on a foundation of anarchy, and so does
the economy.
Culture?
Anarchism has always attracted generous and creative spirits who have
enriched our culture. Anarchist poets include Percy Bysshe Shelley,
William Blake, Arthur Rimbaud, and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. American
anarchist essayists include Henry David Thoreau and, in the 20th century, the Catholic anarchist Dorothy Day, Paul Goodman, and Alex Comfort (author of The Joy of Sex).
Anarchist scholars include the linguist Noam Chomsky, the historian
Howard Zinn, and the anthropologists A.R. Radcliffe-Brown and Pierre
Clastres. Anarchist literary figures are way too numerous to list but
include Leo Tolstoy, Oscar Wilde, and Mary Shelley (author of Frankenstein).
Anarchist painters include Gustav Courbet, Georges Seurat, Camille
Pissarro, and Jackson Pollock. Other creative anarchists include such
musicians as John Cage, John Lennon, the band CRASS, etc.
Supposing you’re right, that anarchy is a better way to live than
what we have now, how can we possibly overthrow the state if it’s as
powerful and oppressive as you say it is?
Anarchists have always thought about this question. They have no
single, simple answer. In Spain, where there were one million anarchists
in 1936 when the military attempted a coup, they fought the Fascists at
the front at the same time that they supported workers in taking over
the factories, and the peasants in forming collectives on the land.
Anarchists did the same thing in the Ukraine in 1918–1920, where they
had to fight both the Czarists and the Communists. But that’s not how we
will bring down the system in the world of the 21st century.
Consider the revolutions that overthrew Communism in Eastern
Europe. There was some violence and death involved, more in some
countries than in others. But what brought down the politicians,
bureaucrats and generals — the same enemy we face — was most of the
population just refusing to work or do anything else to keep a rotten
system going. What were the commissars in Moscow or Warsaw to do, drop
nuclear weapons on themselves? Exterminate the workers that they were
living off?
Most anarchists have long believed that what they call a general strike could play a large part in crumbling the state. That is, a collective refusal to work.
If you’re against all government, you must be against democracy.
If democracy means that people control their own lives, then all
anarchists would be, as American anarchist Benjamin Tucker called them,
“unterrified Jeffersonian democrats” — they would be the only true
democrats. But that’s not what democracy really is. In real life, a part
of the people (in America, almost always a minority of the people)
elect a handful of politicians who control our lives by passing laws and
using unelected bureaucrats and police to enforce them whether the
majority want it or not.
As the French philosopher Rousseau (not an anarchist) once wrote,
in a democracy, people are only free at the moment they vote, the rest
of the time they are government slaves. The politicians in office and
the bureaucrats are usually under the powerful influence of big business
and often other special interest groups. Everyone knows this. But some
people keep silent because they are getting benefits from the
powerholders. Many others keep silent because they know that protesting
does no good and they might be called “extremists” or even “anarchists”
(!) if they tell it like it is. Some democracy!
Well, if you don’t elect officials to make the decisions, who
does make them? You can’t tell me that everybody can do as he personally
pleases without regard for others.
Anarchists have many ideas about how decisions would be made in a
truly voluntary and cooperative society. Most anarchists believe that
such a society must be based on local communities small enough for
people know each other, or people at least would share ties of family,
friendship, opinions or interests with almost everybody else. And
because this is a local community, people also share common knowledge of
their community and its environment. They know that they will have to
live with the consequences of their decisions. Unlike politicians or
bureaucrats, who decide for other people.
Anarchists believe that decisions should always be made at the
smallest possible level. Every decision which individuals can make for
themselves, without interfering with anybody else’s decisions for
themselves, they should make for themselves. Every decision made in
small groups (such as the family, religious congregations, co-workers,
etc.) is again theirs to make as far as it doesn’t interfere with
others. Decisions with significant wider impact, if anyone is concerned
about them, would go to an occasional face-to-face community assembly.
The community assembly, however, is not a legislature. No one is
elected. Anyone may attend. People speak for themselves. But as they
speak about specific issues, they are very aware that for them, winning
is not, as it was for football coach Vince Lombardi, “the only thing.”
They want everyone to win. They value fellowship with their neighbors.
They try, first, to reduce misunderstanding and clarify the issue. Often
that’s enough to produce agreement. If that’s not enough, they work for
a compromise. Very often they accomplish it. If not, the assembly may
put off the issue, if it’s something that doesn’t require an immediate
decision, so the entire community can reflect on and discuss the matter
prior to another meeting. If that fails, the community will explore
whether there’s a way the majority and minority can temporarily
separate, each carrying out its preference.
If people still have irreconcilable differences about the issue,
the minority has two choices. It can go along with the majority this
time, because community harmony is more important than the issue. Maybe
the majority can conciliate the minority with a decision about something
else. If all else fails, and if the issue is so important to the
minority, it may separate to form a separate community, just as various
American states (Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont, Kentucky, Maine,
Utah, West Virginia, etc.) have done. If their secession isn’t an
argument against statism, then it isn’t an argument against anarchy.
That’s not a failure for anarchy, because the new community will
recreate anarchy. Anarchy isn’t a perfect system — it’s just better than
all the others.
We can’t satisfy all our needs or wants at the local level.
Maybe not all of them, but there’s evidence from archaeology
of long-distance trade, over hundreds or even thousands of miles, in
anarchist, prehistoric Europe. Anarchist primitive societies visited by
anthropologists in the 20th century, such as the San
(Bushmen) hunter-gatherers and the tribal Trobriand Islanders, conducted
such trade between individual “trade-partners.” Practical anarchy has
never depended on total local self-sufficiency. But many modern
anarchists have urged that communities, and regions, should be as
self-sufficient as possible, so as not to depend on distant, impersonal
outsiders for necessities. Even with modern technology, which was often
designed specifically to enlarge commercial markets by breaking down
self-sufficiency, much more local self-sufficiency is possible than
governments and corporations want us to know.
One definition of “anarchy” is chaos. Isn’t that what anarchy would be — chaos?
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, the first person to call himself an
anarchist, wrote that “liberty is the mother, not the daughter of
order.” Anarchist order is superior to state-enforced order because it
is not a system of coercive laws, it is simply how communities of people
who know each other decide how to live together. Anarchist order is
based on common consent and common sense.
When was the philosophy of anarchism formulated?
Some anarchists think that anarchist ideas were expressed by Diogenes
the Cynic in ancient Greece, by Lao Tse in ancient China, and by
certain medieval mystics and also during the 17th century English Civil War. But modern anarchism began with William Godwin’s Political Justice published in England in 1793. It was revived in France by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon in the 1840s (What Is Property?). He inspired an anarchist movement among French workers. Max Stirner in The Ego and His Own
(1844) defined the enlightened egoism which is a basic anarchist value.
An American, Josiah Warren, independently arrived at similar ideas at
the same time and influenced the large-scale movement at the time to
found utopian communities. Anarchist ideas were developed further by the
great Russian revolutionary Michael Bakunin and by the respected
Russian scholar Peter Kropotkin. Anarchists hope that their ideas
continue to develop in a changing world.
This revolutionary stuff sounds a lot like Communism, which nobody wants.
Anarchists and Marxists have been enemies since the 1860s. Although
they have sometimes cooperated against common enemies like the Czarists
during the Russian Revolution and the Spanish Fascists during the
Spanish Civil War, the Communists have always betrayed the anarchists.
From Karl Marx to Joseph Stalin, Marxists have denounced anarchism.
Some anarchists, followers of Kropotkin, call themselves
“communists” — not Communists. But they contrast their free communism,
arising from below — the voluntary pooling of land, facilities and labor
in local communities where people know each other — to a Communism
imposed by force by the state, nationalizing land and productive
facilities, denying all local autonomy, and reducing workers to state
employees. How could the two systems be more different?
Anarchists welcomed and in fact participated in the fall of
European Communism. Some foreign anarchists had been assisting Eastern
Bloc dissidents — as the U.S. Government had not — for many years.
Anarchists are now active in all the former Communist countries.
The Communist collapse certainly did discredit much of the
American left, but not the anarchists, many of whom do not consider
themselves leftists anyway. Anarchists were around before Marxism and we
are still around after it.
Don’t anarchists advocate violence?
Anarchists aren’t nearly as violent as Democrats, Republicans, liberals and conservatives. Those people only seem
to be nonviolent because they use the state to do their dirty work — to
be violent for them. But violence is violence. Wearing a uniform or
waving a flag does not change that. The state is violent by definition.
Without violence against our anarchist ancestors — hunter-gatherers and
farmers — there would be no states today. Some anarchists advocate violence — but all states engage in violence every day.
Some anarchists, in the tradition of Tolstoy, are pacifist and
nonviolent on principle. A relatively small number of anarchists believe
in going on the offensive against the state. Most anarchists believe in
self-defense and would accept some level of violence in a revolutionary
situation.
The issue is not really violence vs. nonviolence. The issue is direct action.
Anarchists believe that people — all people — should take their fate
into their own hands, individually or collectively, whether doing that
is legal or illegal and whether it has to involve violence or it can be
accomplished nonviolently.
What exactly is the social structure of an anarchist society?
Most anarchists are not “exactly” sure. The world will be a very different place after government has been abolished.
Anarchists don’t usually offer blueprints, but they propose some guiding principles. They say that mutual aid — cooperation rather than competition — is the soundest basis for social life. They are individualists in the sense that they think society exists for the benefit of the individual, not the other way around. They favor decentralization,
meaning that the foundations of society should be local, face-to-face
communities. These communities then federate — in relations of mutual
aid — but only to coordinate activities which can’t be carried on by
local communities. Anarchist decentralization turns the existing
hierarchy upside down. Right now, the higher the level of government,
the more power it has. Under anarchy, higher levels of association
aren’t governments at all. They have no coercive power, and the higher
you go, the less responsibility is delegated to them from below. Still,
anarchists are aware of the risk that these federations might become
bureaucratic and statist. We are utopians but we are also realists. We
will have to monitor those federations closely. As Thomas Jefferson put
it, “eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.”
Any last words?
Winston Churchill, a deceased alcoholic English politician and war
criminal, once wrote that “democracy is the worst system of government,
except for all the others.” Anarchy is the worst system of society —
except for all the others. So far, all civilizations (state societies)
have collapsed and have been succeeded by anarchist societies. State
societies are inherently unstable. Sooner or later, ours will also
collapse. It’s not too soon to start thinking about what to put in its
place. Anarchists have been thinking about that for over 200 years. We
have a head start. We invite you to explore our ideas — and to join us
in trying to make the world a better place.
Bob Black
For more reading and edumufication of your cranium go check out
The Anarchist Library and visit
Anti-Society TV for some video courses about Anarchism.