Thanks for the links. I will read into them.
I see there was some confusion regarding the existence of libertarian socialism earlier. It's the school of political thought that I most identify with, especially this:
Adherents of libertarian socialism assert that a society based on freedom and equality can be achieved through abolishing authoritarian institutions that control certain means of production and subordinate the majority to an owning class or political and economic elite. Libertarian socialism also constitutes a tendency of thought that promotes the identification, criticism, and practical dismantling of illegitimate authority in all aspects of life.
Subjugate someone by direct force, and it will be seen as plain tyranny that will be opposed. Subjugate someone by claiming ownership of the things they depend on for a decent quality of life, or a life at all, and it will be seen as an unfortunate reality that must simply be drudged through. My belief is that latter is just as violent as the former. In the former, you accept subjugation or meet with violence. In the latter, you accept subjugation or make your choice between death by poverty or violence. This puts me at odds with all major state and economic models, because they are two sides of the same coin (any claim of ownership requires an institution to reinforce the legitimacy of that claim, i.e. some form of state or analogous organization) and are primarily concerned with detailing the process by which one group of people may subjugate the rest by exerting disproportionate influence over the distribution of resources.
Furthermore, authoritative hierarchy in any form poisons human relationships to the core. Barring psychological disorder, people are naturally repulsed by the idea of harming those they see as equal human beings. Hierarchy grants people the ability to be callous by giving them a culturally legitimized means of defining others as less important or even less human, and it works both ways, with trauma and resentment being increasingly likely towards the bottom.
There's the founding principles behind all my political beliefs, in summary, and I developed those ideas on my own long before I found anything about libertarian socialism or even knew who Chomsky was.