Uuuuuuuuuuughgggghghhghghgg
Anarchism
is not the opposite of order, it is opposed to
artificially applied order. I recall a beautiful analogy, quoted by Kropotkin:
We foresee millions and millions of groups freely constituting themselves for the satisfaction of all the varied needs of human beings . . . All these will be composed of human beings who will combine freely . . . 'Take pebbles,' said Fourier, 'put them in a box and shake them, and they will arrange themselves in a mosaic that you could never get by instructing to anyone the work of arranging them harmoniously.'
Anarchism says that we do not need rulers, that it is possible for peace and order to exist without someone creates the rules of that order and forcing us to comply to it. It is not "human nature" to be selfish, as many argue - humans are shaped by their environment. Nurture has always been the stronger of the two. If we no longer reward greed, then greed will cease to be a significant issue. Does society not reward those who value others less? I ask you, what sort of person will such a society produce?
*whew* calm down Doz.
I'm rather passionate about anarchism.
So uhm i opened this thread because i recently started playing Kaiserreich again now that its out for HOI IV and i finally gave up on playing the Authoritarian Democrats and bit the lemon and played Syndicalist France.
Syndies go home!
It's a red herring to think that "anarchism" means that nobody can be in charge of anything, at any time. Leaders exist, and people will follow them, but under an anarchist system, they can be recalled and replaced by their subordinates if they do a bad job.
I'm busy with homework, but I'd just like to note that an "anarchist state" is an oxymoron. Anarchism is anti-state, anti-hierarchy, and anti-ruler.
I sense a tension between these statements, depending on Dozebom's intended meaning.
I mis-spoke slightly. I meant
unjustified hierarchy - there is a hierarchy of skill, so ferex, a more skilled worker might be chosen to work on an important task that lives depend on. This is okay. There is a hierarchy of trust - a more trusted member of the community is more likely to convince other people. This is okay too. It is the unjustified hierarchies of power that anarchism opposes.
I could even conceive of a person or council of "leaders" in an anarchist society, but the crucial difference between an anleader and a ruler would be that the anleader has no power of their own; all power they have comes from the people, and transparency and such would be crucial. They would also be less common - especially in the CEO/President sense. Take a company as an example. If it were anarchist, instead of a CEO we would have the workers at top, who then delegate leadership to certain people if necessary (someone should oversee X), and so you could have either the delegated leaders or the democratic workers making decisions. In the end, though, the workers would have the final say. This is syndicalism IIRC.
Hey, is this the Anarchism thread?
I'm pretty sure this is the threat where we explore Syndies, both in real life and Kaiserreich, and the implications of them and their wars of aggression/defense against the German Imperialists.
...have anarchists ever fought wars of aggression, though?
Anarchism can have a state-like structure, but it can only rule by consent rather than force.
They might not have rulers, but all forms of anarchism have delegates, which are basically recallable rulers. So there can be something like a state but it does not have coercive force (unless it's self-defense, in which case it does).
So yes, an anarchist society can have police. The police intervene to protect the rights and freedoms of individuals from oppressors. They are delegated to do so by the collective. The same with military. Militias are volunteer organizations, and their duties are to protect the collective from external threats. A governing council can convene and the various collectives agree to send delegates who can vote on matters. That's not a problem for anarchism at all. But the council cannot turn around and force it's will on the collectives. The council makes the agreements, and the collectives carry out the rulings. Of course, the same structure exists inside a collective. If a collective doesn't like it's own internal delegates, they get voted out. If you don't like the will of the majority of your collective, you leave and start your own one or join a different one. That's the main difference between anarchist structures and statist structures. In a statist structure, the council rules the town and anyone in it has to abide by what the council orders. But in anarchism, a collective's rules only applies to it's own members and membership is voluntary.
This is accurate, but I'd like to note that there are many forms of anarchism - collectivist vs individualist, mainly, with variants such as syndicalism and anarcha-feminism (abolish the patriarchy along with all other rulers) and (ugh) "anarcho"-capitalism.