Anarchism must be combined with some self-organizing principles to work. For example, in an anarcho-capitalist world "shame" and "shunning" are effective deters to the war-lord effect just as trust is an effective deterent against bad behavior. If the average individual, which includes the average wealthy citizen, believes theft and murder are wrong and should be punished socialy either by public ridicule or personal avoidance then the system has a check against violence. In a society of free-association, people are free to cease associating with evil-doers. Such a system necessitates brainwashing, such as through religion, of the general population. It can be difficult conquering the world when your "army" refuses to fire on innocent people simply defending their own property. Sure, you will just pay them more money but they will still have that unsure feeling about the work, making them eager to retreat while those fighting for "what is right" will be more likely to fight to the death. The brainwashing doesn't need to work on everyone, just enough of the population to ensure a critical mass of individuals "fighting for truth and justice" to deter individuals "murdering for personal gain." I can easily think of many ways in which concientious individuals can twart an up-and-coming emperor. His banker refuses to accept his deposits and call all his loans, his investors get skiddish and flee, he is berrated in the local press, his workers seek alternate employment, his renters move away. In some sense, these individuals would be acting in self preservation because by punishing the perpetrator they avoid punishment by association. "Hey, why are you working for/with so-and-so? Don't you know how he treats people that get in his way? I just cannot do business with people that condone that behavior."[Edited on November 3, 2005 at 11:21 PM. Reason : .,.]
11/3/2005 11:19:17 PM
Its worse then that.You can't support even an agricultural society without a government of some sort. Only small nomadic communities would be able to exist.
11/3/2005 11:20:43 PM
11/3/2005 11:21:37 PM
If you steal my stuff either me or my neighbor will shoot you. How do you think drug-lords manage to own nice things while living in the ghetto? What is considered theft? Ask your mother. What is a justified shooting? Ask my mother.
11/3/2005 11:23:48 PM
11/3/2005 11:28:41 PM
You guys are thinking too small, too localized and throwing in fantasy elements which operate on the false assumption that humanity as a whole could operate only under rational, logical thought. History proves this is not the case. Everything you've stated has existed from the dawn of civilization to the Native American communities of North America. Always the tendancy is towards government and proper order being established.You mentioned druglords which proves me point. They can leave cars with 10$ worth of coke in the street and not have it stolen. Why? Because they've already established order through fear: Stell his shit, you die. Is that an anarchy? No. In any society, no matter how decrepid there is an established social order.There are mothers in the world that wouldn't object to shooting Jews, or Muslims, or Westerners.
11/3/2005 11:29:15 PM
11/3/2005 11:33:36 PM
^ He didn't use the word law once, why did you turn around and use it so many times? If it is social convention for neighbors to look out for each others stuff that doesn't make it a law, it makes it a social convention. All anarchism means is a lack of government, not a lack of social conventions. Like I said, the word is usually joined with something to describe the form of the self-organizations. Anarcho-communism usually involves people being motivated by a sense of community to just volunteer to do good works for society without worrying about themselves. Anarcho-capitalism usually involves people being motivated by self-profit and self-preservation to both serve the community and punish the untrustworthy. etc. etc.
11/3/2005 11:44:04 PM
because earlier he was getting at how social conventions and protocol eventually leads to law. I think the gangster thing was supposed to be an example of that. Not to steal drugs is "gangster law."
11/3/2005 11:48:02 PM
11/3/2005 11:52:10 PM
AnywayWith a 6.6billion populationNothing without government would function in this world.So this thread really is pointless.
11/4/2005 12:00:07 AM
how come such things have and DO exist?you're just ignoring them
11/4/2005 12:24:23 AM
please give some examples.i'm wagering that there are none of significant size and longevity.
11/4/2005 12:26:15 AM
the Anabaptiststhe Diggerspre-1756 PennsylvaniaFinland before the Swedish conquest in 1100
11/4/2005 12:32:01 AM
11/4/2005 12:32:49 AM
11/4/2005 12:59:25 AM
so America during the Revolutionary War was small and generally isolated from the world/
11/4/2005 1:21:56 AM
11/4/2005 2:51:51 AM
11/4/2005 9:24:16 AM
I can spot an anachronism a mile away.
11/4/2005 9:31:03 AM
^^ If there were no police, people might be more willing to help out when someone is getting attacked/robbed. The reason for that would be that if you don't help them, there won't be anyone to help you. My idea of private property under an anarchist community is just that if you have immediate use of something then it's pretty much yours while you're using it but anything else should be freely given. This in itself would decrease the amount of robberies because say (and this is probably a bad example) I'm not using my stereo and someone else wants to have a stereo, they don't have to steal one because they can just use mine. Also, it wouldn't be "my" stereo, it would just be a stereo that is available to me for use.
11/4/2005 1:39:34 PM
I fully support the concept of private ownership of propertyand so do some anarchistshowever, I think if you own land and aren't developing it you don't own it
11/4/2005 2:19:57 PM
yea, that's pretty much what I was getting it.
11/4/2005 2:21:22 PM
its not like there is communal property thoughand turning a profit isn't a bad thing eitherbut the resources that are available belong to everyone
11/4/2005 2:31:06 PM
11/4/2005 3:35:58 PM
I suppose you're right... considering that government as it stands came about through Natural Lawand was in no way created or influenced by groups of people
11/4/2005 3:47:13 PM
Anarchy isn't chaos and disorder. States are.States don't protect us from crime, they create and encourage it. People respond to incentives. When states criminalize products and services that there is a demand for, like drugs and sexual favors, they don't eliminate these victimless "crimes." What they do is push them underground, creating hugely profitable black markets. These back markets, because of the government crackdown, lack many of the stabalizing social factors that an open economy can rely on, such as contracts, mediation or knowledge sharing. Violence becomes the normal mode of interaction, and the futile attempt to stamp out a victimless crime results in a surge in real crime. Because the criminals are making more than the cops and bureaucrats charged with enforcing the law, corruption inevitably sets in. Mob bosses can take dozens of arrests to be tried, numerous trials to be convicted, assuming they ever are at allRedistributionist welfare programs undermine the very fabric of a stable and orderly society, the network of family and community ties that bind together even a stated civilization. A "social safety net" reduces the cost of neglecting one's family and friends. As anyone whith any knowledge of economics can tell you, this will tend to increase neglect. Social security, in specific, reduces the incentive of parents to care for their children because they are no longer as dependent on them for their future well-being. At the same time, it reduces the incentive of children to care for their elders, instead passing them off as the responsibility of the state. At the same time, progressive taxation systematically punishes the characteristics that a stable and orderly society needs most in order to thrive. Thrift, far-sightedness, ambition, hard-work, saavy, personal responsibility, planning and investment are systematically discouraged. Meanwhile dozens of dole-out programs systematically reward sloth, shortsightedness, irresponsibility, ill health, incompetance, ignorange and ineptitude. By punishing future-orientation, rewarding present orientation, a "live in the moment" mentality, and fostering an entitlement complex, the state only makes crime more prevalent. If someone feels entitled to something from society, wants their gratification now, and is incapable of or unwilling to consider the future consequneces, then breakiing into your house to rip you off is a logical next step. In the meantime, the government protects criminals from law-abiding citizens by restricting their access to firearms and other weapons. Once again, it's simple economics, if fewer people have guns, crime is less dangerous. If it's less dangerous, it's more likely to happen. Waiting periods, background checks, storage requirements, concealed carry permits - with their fingerprints and registration - and other bureacratic barriers undoubtedly keep some people who would otherwise own guns or cary them from doing so. Far more egrigious, however, is the ban on so-called "saturday-night specials", low cost guns that are often all poor people in the most dangerous and crime-ridden neighborhoods can afford. None of these restrictions, however, seem to deter many criminals from acquiring and carrying arms.All of this doesn't even take into consideration the trillions the government annually steals as taxes in order to provide us with these wonderful services. This does not include the homes and businesses confiscated under eminant domain and given or sold to those with more connections than us. It does not include the billions in private property that is annually confiscated under asset forfeiture laws, usually without even going to trial. It doesn't include the tens of thousands of terminally ill patients each year who are denied the drugs that could save them by the FDA, because "they might not be safe". It doesn't include the lives ruined by arrest and incarceration for non-violent offenses that harm no one. It doesn't include the Americans and Iraqis who are daily being killed in a pointless war that we were lied into because there was no real justification available. It doesn't include the people who die because they can't afford the healthcare that the government has so royally fucked up in this country. No, even if you don't view the government itself as criminal, the conclusion that most of our crime is caused or enabled by the government is inescapable.
11/4/2005 4:04:39 PM
Right.Like I said, you can't intelligently argue that anarchy can support the current Human population.
11/4/2005 4:39:37 PM
^ By itself, of course not. But throw in some capitalism we'll have corporate farming and "Half off marijuana at Kroger!!!"
11/4/2005 8:15:29 PM
after seing Sympathy for Mr. Vengence I can tell you that fucking with anarchists is NOT a good idea
11/4/2005 8:20:26 PM
11/5/2005 12:04:45 AM
11/5/2005 1:03:13 AM
11/5/2005 6:44:17 AM
11/5/2005 10:14:50 AM
11/5/2005 10:57:00 AM
this is good stuff... keep it comingif anybody wants to write any manifestos I'd love to check it out
11/5/2005 7:05:54 PM
I'd be happy to give mine on why anarchy doesn't work:"Anarchy doesn't work because you cannot enforce it"
11/6/2005 1:20:05 AM
This may have been noted, but politics on the international scale is anarchy.Anarchy doesn't work because human systems tend to stabilize with some form of leadership.
11/6/2005 1:23:58 AM
11/6/2005 1:31:04 AM
bttt by request
10/29/2008 5:16:54 PM
there is a lot of stupid shit being said in this thread
10/29/2008 5:32:24 PM
^^ I was about to say... I hadn't seen Kris' name in years and was wondering when he started posting again.(Meant posting to the thread, not the things said in it)[Edited on October 29, 2008 at 6:19 PM. Reason : .]
10/29/2008 6:19:16 PM
10/29/2008 6:32:18 PM
i wish they sold us their oil really cheap
10/29/2008 6:34:16 PM
The main problem with anarchism is, as many have already said, is that it doesn't work indefinitely.Let's imagine that the anarchists of the US got their way and abolished all government tomorrow. Once the dust settled down and the rioting and looting ended, people would band together in small communities. I imagine that the "government" of these bands is rather egalitarian, which certainly would operate fine at this scale because everybody knows everybody. In fact, community rules can easily be enforced at this level because everybody knows everybody. Extenuating circumstances and mitigating factors can be much more easily weighed when those judging you know you pretty well. Social pressure is a much more viable deterrent because, as stated, everybody knows everybody; commit a really bad crime, and the community will either kill you in retaliation or banish you from town. Community decisions are also much easier to make because there are relatively few people to consider. Also, everyone has a chance to voice their opinion.But now imagine that a few decades pass and population density grows. You may even have communities growing large enough that they begin to run into other communities, but we'll ignore that for now. Now rules become harder to enforce, because everybody no longer knows everybody. Since there's no kinship between all peoples, reconciliations and retributions become harder to manage. At this point, you need an unbiased third party to deal with these issues (eg the police). In addition, decisions that affect the entire society become much more difficult to make. With so many people to consider, it becomes impossible to please everybody. And it becomes increasingly impractical for everybody to put forth their opinion on what should be done because each "vote" counts less and because, at some point, the community divides into pools of conflicting interests. This is typically where the chiefs, leaders, etc step in and assume power. Somebody has to step up and be willing to manage and coordinate the day-to-day operations of the community (such as how to finance and regulate that new policing system).I'm sure I didn't do a sufficient job of explaining it, but this is basically Jared Diamond's theory of human civilization in a nutshell. Human beings started off as simple nomadic tribes, but then they discovered agriculture and were able to settle down. However, as more people choose to settle in one particular place, the population density grows. As population density increases, social complexity increases. As stated, it's easier to arbitrate a dispute between two individuals who are practically family than it is to arbitrate a dispute between two strangers.The point I'm getting at is that anarchism demands relatively simple social interactions among people; don't disrupt me or my own and I will extend to you the same courtesy. This is all fine and dandy - if you're talking about a population on the scale of a couple hundred people. But once more and more people live together in the same area and start stepping on each other's toes, the simplistic methods of an anarchistic society can no longer meet everybody's needs. Populations on the order of tens of thousands is when you tend to start seeing the rise of government-like structures. Once you have too many people for anarchism to work, you need other ways to coerce cooperation. If 50,000 people lived together and there was a demand for canals that deliver water, which makes more sense? For 50,000 different canals to be built that infringes upon nobody's property, or to coordinate the efforts of all those people and build a single canal that can be used by everybody?So the short answer is this; anarchism doesn't work when it's applied to large groups of people. Kind of like communism and libertarianism. Is this to say that the system we have in place is perfect? No, the introduction of centralized rule does bring problems of its own that only time (or perhaps increased population density?) can answer. But the reason anarchism isn't indefinitely sustainable is, in short, that people like to have children.
10/29/2008 6:59:19 PM
wordsanarchy
10/29/2008 7:00:18 PM
Government, at the very least, needs to protect the individual rights of its citizens.
10/29/2008 10:25:16 PM
smash the state!!!!!
10/29/2008 10:30:25 PM
Thomas Jefferson for President, yall.
10/29/2008 11:38:05 PM
Oh, I'm going to have fun with this thread later.In the meantime:
10/30/2008 12:16:17 AM