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Having friends who are also Anarchists (this is a CG-friendly thread)

22 votes
?
by fullerov

It's hard.

Because He is my friend and I don't want to upset or offend him by telling him his political philosophy is moronic.

But.

His political philosophy is moronic.

fullerov | 18 Jun '08, 14:00 | Send note | Report this | Reply

My dad used to hang out with anarchists in the 70s

but they used to come round and eat all his bread so he realised maybe anarchism wasn't for a man who likes his bread to be left alone


reminds me of Jaroslav Hasek

joining an anarchist group then bartering the office bicycle of beer :D


does he really live it

and understand his stance properly?
Or is it one of those phases of youthful "rebellion"?


^ if its the first then i dont see how you could have a problem with it

its not any less valid than other philosophies really is it?


UUUUUUUuuuummm, yes.

It is less valid.


expand, or do what you usually do

and when challenged, dont respond.


Zing!


haha, CG fail


no idea


well

because whether he holds strongly held convictions or not, it's still a moronic political philosophy.

Not that hard...


oh i misunderstood your reply

i thought you were responding to my statement that its not really worse than any other philosophy. nevermind


I thought that too!

curse this stupid indent system


I think I might have accidentally replied

in the wrong place.


I've got out the set square

and it looks like you did reply in the right place.


Yeah

There are lots of thoughtful proponents of anarcho-related political philosophies, Chomsky for one. I'd hardly call his positions moronic.


i would.

linguistics people are dumb lol


His political philosophy is moronic.

Particular if hypocrisy becomes involved (for example anarchists who don't work 'cos they don't want to support the system but are happy to use the wlefare state).


most people who call themselves 'anarchist' might be

although i wouldnt say most anyway. but the philosophy itself isnt moronic


well done


yeah

well, i wouldn't normally agree with chilcheguevara, but he's right. anarchy in a 'developed' economic nation would be terrible.

i suppose more people would care about the social aspects, but the bigger effects would come from unregulated markets, monopolies, etc. laws have been put in place to protect people (such as minimum wage, maximum length of a working day), and have been fought for for a hugely long time and protect us from all kinds of abuses.

basically, anarchy would suck. democracy is better.


Exactly

Although the social aspects aren't great either.

Laws exist for a reason and they're often to protect vulnerable people. Under an anarchist system people could treat children/old people/very disabled people however they chose with no rules or laws to protect them. Rape, robbery and murders would be more frequent with no proection of the law and it would create a society where whoever punches hardest gets what they want.


So basically my view of anarachists

is that they tend to be either

a) misguided and naive people who don't really understand the importance social structures.

b) People who want a moral justification for the fact they don't want to get a job

or

c) People who actually want a world that I really wouldn't want to live in.


no because anarchy

suggest that peoples greed and whatever means that laws are required come from the capitalist democratic system that we live under. im not saying its right, but im not writing it off as moronic.


Which is precisely why it's moronic.

Capitalism Democracy has existed since the mid-18th century at its earliest (before that were Feudalism, Despotism and varios other systems. Laws to prevent greed have existed pre-date Capitalist Democracy by years.

Anyone who believes that greed is a product of capitalist democracy is bascially choosing to ignore all available evidence to the contrary and it is argubaly justifiable to call them a moron.


Nah

The whole point of anarchist systems is that different mechanisms protect people.

Anarchism =/= lack of order

Plus worries about rampant capitalism are pretty meaningless - if you're an anarchist that doesn't believe in private property, then there is no market or capitalism to go rampant. If you're an anarcho-capitalist, many of capitalism's (in its current form) problems stem from disenfranchisement by government being centralised away from populations. If you have more immediate control over resources than it provides inbuilt checks and balances to replace competition laws.

I feel there are a lot of people here talking about simply a society with no rules, rather than a completely different organisational structure, but then it's not as if anarchism has been popular or studied in depth by lots of people for decades (over a century, really). When 'anarchism' gets conflated with the popular conception of 'anarchy' it's bound to cause misunderstanding.


^ This

Anarchism isnt a homogenous political philosophy. Thats like saying every kind of conservative is the same, when we all know there are varying degrees, and of course there are varying degrees of anarchism. Before Im grossly misunderstood, I dont have much time for anarchism, but to use what you think is a roughly suitable definition of the term and to extrapolate that as all their is to anarchist philosophy is actually quite moronic. Also, I wouldnt be so audacious to write off the amazing things that happened in Spain during the revolution as "moronic".


Very much so

Those Spaniards were doing some highly effective worthwhile and interesting things before those fascists took over.


Its actually

quite depressing to see how easily people shut themselves off from information. Its quite easily accessible and available to them, and many of the arguments I have read in this thread are simply worthless. Lots of people seem to be arguing from a basis of seeming intuition, using vague dictionary definitions mixed with homespun wisdom to completely destroy (in their minds) any positive learning they could be doing. Its more than fine not to agree with anarchism, I dont agree with it, but at least read about it and dont throw around terms like "moronic". Its unbearably smug.


I still feel anarchism is based on a naive view of human nature.

I'm far from being soeone who takes a dystopian viewpoint but I think anarchism (along with Marxism) fall down in the same place - which is that as long as everyone's essentially selfless and altruistic the system's fine but they don't have appropriate means for dealing with selfish or self-interested behaviour and, as such, can only function as an ideal rather than as a practicla workable society.

Ultimately it's not capitalism and existing political systems that have shaped human nature but human nature that's shaped capitalism and existing political systems.


But if you have a system whereby the people grow up with a complete

abscence of greed and concept of looking out for themselves, they have no oppertunity to be selfish. You are looking at everything as if it has come from a revoloution, rather than just the system existing and working.


But early humans didn't have that and they developed it.

Ultimately what would happen in an anarchic state is the removla of the centralised state would lead to someone filling the vacuum.


But the point is I don't think it could work in practice.

Which I'd argue is a fundamental flaw in the principles.

It's an ideology I like it many ways and I can see why people believe in it but I honestly don't think it's a system that either could want in practice or that I'd want to happen.


Yeah i understand that totally

but given the current failings in the system, an alternative one that is equally flawed is hardly more moronic is it?


I don't believe for a second it'd be equally flawed.

I think it would be far, far, far more so.


well thats your take on it

i dont know enough about it to know for sure how flawed it would be, but i maintain its not moronic to agree with the philosopy.


^

a last word competition?


No

;(


Not every kind of anarchism does contend that, though

Only really the more classical, 19th century ones do, "property is theft," and so on. And even then it's not essential.

And Marx certainly didn't think people were essentially selfless, or capable of existing in such a society.

All "anarchism" denotes is a society which does not have a centralised state. What else follows from that depends on a huge number of moral and economic beliefs which are just as varied as those in the state-based liberal, conservative, fascist, etc systems.


Just to be clear I'm not disputing there are different kinds of anarchism*

but at the same time I do maintain the majority of anarachists I've met (whcih isn't a small number) do not have an intelligent well-reasoned and cohesive ideology.

That's not to say anarachists can't and I'm sure some do, I'm only speaking of my own personal experience of anarchists.

*although I would query whether in some cases they stray too far from its original ideology to be classed as anarchism

PS I don't really think it's moronic - I was just adopting the word Fullerov used.


i would think if its is a person that claims to be anarchist

but has no real idea about any of the principles, yeah you could call them a moron. But if someone clases themselves as an anarchist and can fully explain their beliefs, it would be hard to call them moronic.


agree with everything posted here

all people, whether they choose to admit it are not are to some degree selfish. It is part of human nature, and a part of human nature that renders communism (i don't have enough of a knowledge of anarchism to comment, but i expect that it applies to it as well) idealistic and ulitmately unworkable.


sorry, this was to theguywithno username

although the above one is good as well.


yeah but anarchists argue that this selfishness

is not ingrained in the human nature, more that various systems instill it in people. all people are selfish now, but if there is an abscence of personal property, how could you be selfish?


Animals can be selfish

and they don't have personal property.

I'm aware many anarchists argue that systems ingrain it on people but I fear they're wrong about that.


I guess that is a sticking point!

i definately think there is a degree of truth in it though. There is no doubt in my mind that consumerism, and the need to have loads of possessions is ingrained by society a great deal.


your post assumes that selfishness stems from material things only

which while you probably didn't mean it in that way, i will challenge it anyway.

people will always make selfish choices, even in the absence of material gain. It may include trying to improve ones social status, recognition or even, taking it to a baser level, sexual conquest.


but even stuff like that is combated by an anarchist community

social status would be less relevant, and whilst i agree that personal possessions is not the only thing people can be selfish about, its probably the most obvious one. I dont know how anarchism would deal with other aspects of selfishness, so i wont pretend i do!


good answer

the one about private property is especially important, i think. i was going to continue, but i've decided not to go any deeper.

whether its discussions of anarchy, liberal communism, libertarianism (etc), a lot of the arguments for and against have been played out so many times that very rarely are new points made.

at their best, they are all systems that could lead to a fairer, freer society. at their worst: highly manipulable systems, whether via authoritarian or corporatist interests (depending on the system)

the easiest thing to say about politics is that our democracy doesn't work a lot of the time, and we do not inhabit a very free or fair society. hence why people continue to discuss these things. but that is obvious....


^

urgh. that makes me sound so apathetic. i'm not...


i dont disagree with the belief in democracy

but i think to call anarchism moronic is stupid. its proven to work in small communities, and the fact is no one can really say it wouldnt work as it is a complete departure to any system we have at the moment. i think as a theory there is little wrong with it, just dunno how it would work in practise. that doesnt mean i can call it moronic


I can say "it wouldn't work".

And I'd be right.

I'm not sure what your experience is of small anarchist communities but, in my experience, they aren't any nicer or better-run places than non-anarchist communities. The same amounts of bullying, backstabbing and even bureaucracy have been in place in the anarchist communities I've experienced as to outside of them and perhaps they've been even worse.


yeah but thats not a problem with the philosophy

its the application of it. and you could say it wouldnt work, but you wouldnt know, and just because it might not work, doesnt mean someone who beleives in it is a moron? im sure they could put forward valid points to explain how our system isnt too great either.


But it's the application were discussing.

I mean a philosophy's fine but I thought your point was about how it'd work in practice and my experience is that, even in small communities, I've never seen it work effectively and I don't beleive it would work in wider practice.


No i dont actually believe it would work on large scales

but as a philosophy i think a lot of it is interesting, and often sensible. I was just trying to say a belief in anarchism isnt moronic.


As I say below

I don't actually think a belief in a form of anarchist system is moronic but vague non-specfic anarchism I do find a little silly* and disturbingly common place.

*I wouldn't have used the word moronic if it hadn't been the word in the original post and thus the 'theme' of the thread.


Yeah

i see your point, but i think defining yourself as having a particular set of beliefs without fully understand what you mean is moronic, whatever philosophy it is.


yeah

thats fine, and i agree it can work in small societies where people share concepts of social values. thats basically a commune, and would be ideal/amazing to live that kind of life - some people have done / still do.

the problem is when that is applied to a larger, 'developed' systems, where people are alienated by age, distance, class, etc. i don't think social systems that are full of alienating gaps could function anarchistically (such as are in our urban spaces).


poorly written ^


fair enough

and i woudlnt disagree with you, but i dont think anarchism, if used in its correct context- as people have pointed about above- is moronic.


It isn't

I was just being needlesly provocative. I still maintain it's impractical though.


Yeah i would agree with you

and thanks for admitting you was just winding me up :)

It probably is impractical, but i maintain that our current system is far from perfect. As it is, political systems can sound good in theory, but are undermined.


Just to clarify

when I did say "most anarchists are morons" I was really referring to a specific group of people that call themsleves 'anarchists' (in a vague-unspecified sense) rather than people who subscribe to specific political systems rooted in anarchism who I may disagree with but I don't think are morons.


I was

They really, really annoy me.

I mean if I'm honest I was ignoring the existence of the more intelligent anarchist philosophies rather than discounting them bt nonetheless I was still referring to the vague-unspecified anarchists.


No i know you were

i think we have reached a fair agreement really


people who wear Anarchist badges because they heard a sex pistols song once

annoy me more than anything. My friends got me a Punk Badges set from HMV for my birthday this year as a joke, possibly the wost thing ever.