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1793 lines
54 KiB
Plaintext
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The following is the introductory book chapter from one of the best
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introductory books on anarchism, which is unfortunately out of print. This
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is excerpted from *Reinventing Anarchy: What are the anarchists thinking
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these days?* edited by Howard J. and Carol Ehrlich and others, and
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published by Routledge & Kegan Paul in 1979.
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Questions and answers about anarchism
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The editors
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1 How would an anarchist revolution come about?
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For social anarchists revolution is a process, a process leading to the
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total deflation of state authority. That process entails self- and
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collective education and the building of alternative institutions as
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mechanisms of survival, of training and as models of a new society.
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Continuing parts of that process are repeated symbolic protests and direct
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assaults on ruling class institutions.
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As more and more people regard the anarchist alternatives as preferable to
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the status quo, state power begins to be deflated. When the state can no
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longer maintain the confidence of substantial segments of the population,
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its agents will have to rely increasingly on the mobilization of the police
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and the military. Of course, that increase in force has multiple possible
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outcomes, ranging from the total repression of the Left to the further
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leftward mobilization of the population that regards this increased use of
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force illegitimate.
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Our scenario does not rule out guerrilla warfare and armed struggle. But in
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the United States, for example, with its mammoth police apparatus,
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extensive files and surveillance of radicals, and its over 3,600
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underground 'emergency operating centers' for ruling-class and military
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retreats, the idea of a primarily military revolution is an atavistic
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Marxist fantasy.
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So where do we go from here? The next act in the revolutionary drama
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remains to be written. Drawing a battle plan today seems pointless. The
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overthrow of the state - the building of anarchist societies - will be an
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overwhelming majoritarian act. It cannot be otherwise. When, say, 5-10 per
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cent of the population identify themselves as anarchists, it is our guess
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that there would be a range of contingencies available that we could not
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possibly anticipate today.
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2 Who will make the anarchist revolution?
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Everyone. Every day in their daily lives.
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3 How can an anarchist society prevent the development of informal elites,
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new bureaucracies and a reconcentration of power?
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There is nothing integral to the nature of human social organization that
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makes hierarchy, centralization and elitism inescapable. These
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organizational forms persist, in part because they serve the interests of
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those at the top. They persist, too, because we have learned to accept
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roles of leadership and followership; we have come to define hierarchy as
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necessary, and centralization as efficient. All of this is to say that we
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learned the ideological justifications for elite organizational forms quite
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well.
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We could dismiss the question by pointing out that social motivations to
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power, elites and elitism and bureaucracy would not exist in an anarchist
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society. The question should not be dismissed, however, when we talk about
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building an anarchist society in the shell of another. In
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such a context we will inevitably be struggling against the life-denying
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values of our socialization. Hierarchy, dominance and submission,
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repression and power - these are facts of everyday life. Revolution is a
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process. and even the eradication of coercive institutions will not
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automatically create a liberatory society. We create that society by
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building new institutions, by changing the character of our social
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relationships. by changing ourselves - and throughout that process by
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changing the distribution of power in society. It is by the constant
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building of new forms of organization, by the continual critical evaluation
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of our successes and failures, that we prevent old ideas and old forms of
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organization from re-emerging.
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If we cannot begin this revolutionary project here and now, then we cannot
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make a revolution.
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4 How will decisions be made? by consensus? by majority?
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Groups will make decisions by consensus because majority rule is
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unacceptable for people who think that everyone should run his or her own
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life. Decision-making by majority rule means that the minority voluntarily
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gives up control over the policies that affect them.
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To operate by consensus, groups will discuss an issue until it is resolved
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to the satisfaction of everyone. This doesn't mean that there's only one
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way of doing things. People must accept that many ways can coexist. They
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also must realize that there can be multiple policies on most issues with
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people free to choose which policy they want.
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The principle of consensus can be effective because membership in a
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community is voluntary and because that membership entails agreements on
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its basic goals and values.
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The workings of consensual decisions have many advantages. It is the only
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way to prevent a permanent minority from developing. It takes into
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consideration the strength of feelings. It is more efficient for group
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action because people are genuinely involved in achieving consensus and are
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therefore more likely to act on their decisions.
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One of the things people have difficulty understanding about group
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consensus is that it does take into account the strength of feelings and
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differences in perspectives of all of the people involved. In a social
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anarchist meeting the process of decision-making is as important as the
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outcome itself.
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Of course, people will have to learn to recognize what they want and to
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express their desires in a constructive way. If they do not know what they
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want a false consensus develops because people are just trying to go along
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with the group so as not to make trouble. If decisions are reached this way
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people remain unhappy about the outcome; their
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participation may drop to a low level and they may ultimately feel that
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they have to leave the group.
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5 How can people be motivated to participate in decisions that affect them
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if they don't want to participate?
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In the kinds of societies in which we live now, this is a pseudo-question.
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People are managed; they are rarely asked to participate. The unmotivated
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citizen of the capitalist/socialist state has sized up the situation
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correctly, and has concluded that non-participation is the only realistic
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choice .
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What about an anarchist community, where everyone would have genuine
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control over his or her life? We would assume that nonparticipants would be
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few - but if they existed, we would have to ask why. This is no idle
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question: if it wished to survive, an anarchist community would have to
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solve this problem. If it failed to do so, the community would be on the
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road back to social inequality. And it would no longer be anarchist.
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There are two reasons why a person might not participate in making
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decisions. The first would be lack of time. But if a person is too busy,
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then either s/he has voluntarily taken on too much work, or the others are
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shirking. In neither case is the community functioning on genuine social
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anarchist principles.
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The second reason is quite different. Non-participation would be due not to
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working too much out of a misplaced sense of priorities, but to failure to
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see the linkage between personal autonomy and community functioning. Some
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people may feel that community decision-making is beneath them; this 'star'
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mentality needs to be effectively challenged every time it occurs. Others
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may genuinely believe that the community affords them everything they need
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for their physical and psychological well-being, so they are perfectly
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happy letting others make the decisions. Still others may feel alienated,
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or lack confidence in their ability to make competent decisions.
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All of these people are handicapped by 'old ideas.' These are well suited
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to a stratified society in which a few run the lives of everyone, but they
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are severely damaging to an anarchist community. People who think in these
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ways need loving support from others, a feeling of being an essential part
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of the community, and gentle (but firm) pressure to participate. This may
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take time, but it can be done.
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6 When does a community become too large to operate with direct
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participation by everyone? Is a system of representation ever justified?
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We do not really know the maximum or optimum size of a community that would
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still allow effective participation, but there are numerous examples of
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communities, some as large as 8,000 people, where all the people actively
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participated in self-government. For example, during the Spanish Revolution
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self-governed villages all over Spain formed into federations to
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co-ordinate decisions affecting all of them. In Denmark in 1971 about 600
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people occupied an army camp and set up a viable functioning community that
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not only lasted for years but was able to defend itself nonviolently from
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attacks by the government.
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In these examples everyone made decisions about the goals of the community
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and how to achieve them. Then the people who were actually doing the
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particular tasks were able to work in their own way.
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In a decentralized society that is composed of many communities the lines
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of communication go in multiple directions. Two-way television and other
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technological improvements make direct democracy possible in larger groups,
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but there will probably still be times when representatives will be
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necessary. Selection procedures for these representatives would no doubt
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vary. Sometimes representatives could be drawn by lot and other times on
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the basis of task-specific skills or abilities.
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The system of representation, however, must meet certain criteria.
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Representatives must come from the group of people whom they represent and
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they must be accountable to that group. To make them accountable,
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representatives should be assigned for a brief period of time or to do a
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specific task. In an anarchist society nobody could make a career of
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'politics.' The role of representative could be rotated among members of
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the community. All important decisions would be made by the group as a
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whole; the representatives would just communicate the decisions of their
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group to the larger group. Representatives must also be subject to
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immediate recall.
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The decisions about what functions best for one community or one group will
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have to be made by that group at the time depending upon the circumstances.
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But there is every reason to believe that people can effectively
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participate in managing their own lives.
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7 Will there still be experts and specialization? If so, how will experts
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be trained? How will we know they are competent? Can we have experts in a
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non-hierarchical society?
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Differences in skill and knowledge will continue to exist. Such differences
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are compatible with a free and egalitarian society. People may also want to
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develop their abilities in their own way. And this too is compatible with
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social anarchism.
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Much of the work that is now done by specialists can be learned in
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a relatively short time so that it could be done by nearly everyone. One
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problem with specialists in our society is that they restrain the number of
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people who are trained. Obviously there is some work, such as surgery or
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architecture, that requires a high degree of skill acquired through lengthy
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training. No one wants to be operated on by someone who has only two weeks
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of training, and few people would feel comfortable in a five-story building
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assembled without blueprints. The real problem becomes training specialists
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who will be accountable to the people they serve. We want co-operation
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between specialist and 'client,' not solidarity among specialists. To
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ensure this there could be no positions of privilege for specialists, and
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they must be committed to sharing their knowledge with everyone.
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In a decentralized or small society, judging the competence of someone
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whose labor is highly visible, such as a carpenter, is not difficult. In
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somewhat more complex cases, say in judging the competence of a surgeon,
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one possibility is to have the people who work with the surgeon along with
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those from the community be the judge of the quality of work .
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Expertise and non-hierarchy can co-exist only if specialization does not
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convey special privileges: only if people who are experts do not monopolize
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or control resources or information; and only if people are committed to
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co-operative and collective work rather than destructive competition.
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8 Who will do the dirty work?
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We all will. In an anarchist community, people wouldn't categorize work as
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'dirty' or clean,' as 'white-collar' or 'blue-collar.' That way of thinking
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can exist only in a class-stratified society - one that teaches its members
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that maintenance tasks are undignified, demeaning, and to be avoided if
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possible. For anarchists, all socially useful work has dignity. and
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everyone would co-operate to sustain the community at a mutually
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agreed-upon level of health, comfort and beauty. Those who refuse to
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collect the garbage, clean streets and buildings, trim the grass, provide a
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clean water supply and so on would be acting in a most irresponsible
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fashion. It they continued to refuse, they would be asked to leave.
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Does this seem coercive? A successfully self-governed community must be
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comprised of people who voluntarily live and work together, who agree on
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the necessary tasks, and who have the self-discipline to carry out their
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share of these tasks (no more and no less). Those who refuse are coercing
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others; they are implicitly saying that their time is to be spent doing
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more important things; that they are above such menial tasks. In an
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anarchist community no one is 'above' anyone else; no one is more important
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than anyone else. To think so will destroy both equality and freedom.
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One of the things that makes 'dirty' work so onerous is that only some
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people do it, and they work at it full-time. Very few maintenance tasks
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would seem totally awful if they were rotated, and each person knew s/he
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would be doing it for a short period of time. Short work periods on the
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garbage truck, or cleaning public bathrooms or fertilizing fields would
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seem - well. not ,fun of course (anarchists aren't stupid) but would be
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tolerable if each person knew they would end soon.
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9 Will any people have more money and property than others? Who will
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control the means of production and how will profits be distributed?
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In an anarchist society everyone will have an equal right to the basic
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liberties and material goods. which is consistent with a similar right for
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others. People would, of course, maintain personal possessions, but we
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would expect that the matter of the accumulation of property and property
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rights would be very different. Certainly the meaning of money and property
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would be quite different in an egalitarian and nonhierarchical society.
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It is hard to conceive of a serious alternative to a market economy.
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However, unlike the capitalist market place, the anarchist economy would
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not be based on the maximization of control and profit. Therefore, there
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would be no need to monopolize resources, expand markets or create useless
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products and/or consumer demands. Worker and community control of the
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workplace would be the organizational form for regulating productivity and
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profits in keeping with the needs of the community .
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While an anarchist economic theory remains to be written. its theorems will
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all have to be derived from principles of social justice, from principles
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that claim the maximum values of freedom and equality for all people.
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10 Aren't anarchists ignoring the complexity of urban life? Aren't they
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rejecting technology and industrial development? Don't they really
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want to go back to a simpler society?
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Any anarchists who ignore the complexities of modern urban-industrial
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societies are wrong. A return to a 'simpler' society' is a fantasy of
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escapists, not of persons seriously committed to building a new society.
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The underlying issue for us as social anarchists is the determination of
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the optimum size for urban settlements. The equation for an optimum
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size would doubtless have to balance factors of self-sufficiency, self
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governance and the minimizing of damage to the ecosystem.
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The related technological problems must be taken seriously by all
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anarchists. Can we satisfy our energy requirements with technologies that
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do minimal environmental damage? Can we develop a technology that can be
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comprehended by most people? Can we develop a technology that is a genuine
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substitute for human labor? The answer to these questions is yes. The
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technology and knowledge are already here: the issue is their
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implementation.
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The result of implementing such technological changes and building
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self-governing and relatively self-sufficient communities would probably
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bring about substantial differences in urban settlements. We suspect that
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these differences would yield even more 'complex' urban arrangements than
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we now have. We suspect, too, that they would result in more genuinely
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humane cities.
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11 How will an anarchist society meet the threat of foreign invasion?
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Paradoxically, the more successfully it meets the threat of armed force,
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the more likely it is to move away from anarchist principles. War always
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seems to turn relatively free and open societies into repressive ones. Why?
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Because war is irrational: it fosters fear and hopelessness in the gentle;
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it brings out aggression, hatred and brutality in the truculent; it
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destroys the balance between people and nature; it shrinks the sense of
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community down to one's immediately endangered group; and under conditions
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of starvation and deprivation it pits neighbor against neighbor in the
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fight for survival. If a besieged anarchist community did successfully
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resist foreign invasion, then it should immediately work to reestablish the
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interrelationships of trust, mutual aid, equality and freedom that have
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probably been damaged. 'War is the health of the state;' but it can be a
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fatal disease for an anarchist community.
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If war came, however, how would the society organize to defend itself? Let
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us assume that the anarchist federation of North America is invaded by
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troops of the Chinese, Swedish, Saudi Arabian or Brazilian government. What
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would happen? There would be no state apparatus to seize; instead, the
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invaders would have to conquer a network of small communities, one by one.
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There would be no single army to defeat, but an entire, armed population.
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The people would challenge the invasion with resistance - strikes,
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psychological warfare, and non-co-operation as well as with guerrilla
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tactics and larger armed actions. Under these circumstances, it is unlikely
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that the invaders would conquer the federation .
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12 What about crime?
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Much of what is now defined as crime would no longer exist. The
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communalization of property and an ethic of mutual aid would reduce both
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the necessity and the motivation for property crimes. Crimes against people
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seem more complex, but we reject the idea that they are rooted in 'original
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sin' or 'human nature.' To the degree that such crimes stem from societally
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based disorders of personality, we can only anticipate that their incidence
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- as well as their actual form - would be radically altered .
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In a social anarchist society, crime would be defined solely as an act
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harmful to the liberties of others. It would not be a crime to be different
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from other people, but it would be a crime to harm someone. Such hostile
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acts against the community could be prevented, above all, by inculcating a
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respect for the dignity of each person. Anarchist values would be
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reinforced with the strongest of human bonds, those of affection and
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self-respect.
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Remaining crimes would not be administered by masses of lawyers, police and
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judges; and criminals would not be tossed into prisons, which Kropotkin
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once labeled 'universities of crime.' Common law and regularly rotated
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juries could decide whether a particular act was a crime, and could
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criticize, censure, ostracize or even banish the criminal. However, in most
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cases we anticipate that criminals would be placed in the care and guidance
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of members of the community.
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13 How shall public health issues be handled?
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Public health issues would be handled like all other issues. This means
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that decisions about inoculations and other health issues would be made at
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the local level by the people who would be affected by the decision. This
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would result in a very different type of health care. Health care workers
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would be members of the community where they worked. Their function would
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be to provide day-to-day care and advice to people on how to remain
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healthy. People would have a chance to talk frequently with these workers
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and would know that they were really concerned about health and not about
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making money or gaining status in the community.
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If there were a threatened epidemic of some deadly flu and a vaccine were
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developed the people in the community would be able to get together to
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discuss the risks and benefits of the inoculations. Once the group decided
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that inoculations would benefit the community they would try to persuade
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everyone to be inoculated because the more people who were protected the
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less likelihood there would be of an epidemic. If there were a clear case
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of people being a danger to the health of the entire community then they
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would be asked to make a choice between being vaccinated and remaining in
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the community, or leaving to find another group that was more compatible.
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14 There are times when the state takes care of the sick and elderly, or
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protects individuals against coercion (for example, children brutalized
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by parents; blacks attacked by whites). If the state disappears, who will
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take over these functions?
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People who look at the world this way believe that there are only two
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possibilities: either there is state regulation and an orderly society, or
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there is a stateless chaos in which life is nasty, brutish and short. In
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fact, even when the state functions in a benevolent or protective manner,
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it is capricious: sometimes it helps the helpless; other times it doesn't.
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Sometimes social welfare workers remove a child from a vicious environment
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- and other times the child is left at home, perhaps to be further
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brutalized, even killed. Sometimes the state protects the civil rights of
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oppressed minorities; other times it ignores these rights, or even joins in
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the persecution. We cannot count on the state to do anything to protect us.
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It is, after all, the major task of the agents of the state to protect the
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distribution of power. Social justice is a secondary concern.
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In fact, we can only count on ourselves, or on those with whom we are
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freely associated in community. This means that helping functions will be
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performed by those groups that have always done them, with or without the
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state: voluntary associations. However, in an anarchist community, the need
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for such services will be less frequent. For example, if there is no longer
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systematic poisoning of the environment, diseases caused by this pollution
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(pesticide poisoning, asbestosis, Minimata disease) won t happen; if there
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are no longer extremes of wealth and poverty, diseases caused by lack of
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adequate food, shelter, and medical care will not exist; if children and
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adults can freely choose whether or not to live together, much violence
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against loved ones will disappear; if racism is systematically attacked,
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then the majority ethnic group won't harass minorities. There will, of
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course, still be a need for mutual aid and protection - but this will be
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provided by the community, for all its members.
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15 Would an anarchist society be less likely to be sexist? racist?
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Anarchists usually talk about the illegitimacy of authority, basing their
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arguments on the premise that no person should have power over another. A
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logical extension of this argument is to attack the power relationships in
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|
which men dominate women and some racial and ethnic groups dominate others.
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|
Thus anarchism creates the preconditions for abolishing sexism and racism
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|
Anarchism is philosophically opposed to all manifestations of racism and
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|
sexism. Equally important as its philosophical commitments is the fact that
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with anarchism there would be no economic basis to support racist or sexist
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ideas or practices. Work and income would be divided equitably, so there
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|
would be no need to subordinate a class of people to do the dirty work or
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|
to work at low pay to support the dominant class.
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Sexism and racism would not automatically disappear in the process of
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|
building an anarchist society. A conscious effort would have to be made to
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change old behavior and attitudes.
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16 What do anarchists think about sex, monogamy, and family?
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Anarchists believe that how you live your daily life is an important
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political statement. Most people in industrialized societies spend a
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|
significant portion of their lives in what may be the last bulwark of
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|
capitalism and state socialism - the monogamous nuclear family. The family
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|
serves as the primary agent for reproducing the dominant values of the
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|
society, both through the socialization of children and the social control
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|
of its members. Within the family all of the pathologies of the larger
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|
society are reproduced: privatized social relations escapism patriarchal
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|
dominance, economic dependency (in capitalist society), consumerism, and
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|
|
the treatment of people as property.
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|
In an anarchist society, social relations will be based on trust, mutual
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|
aid, friendship and love. These may occur in the context of the family (if
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|
|
people choose to live in a family setting), but they certainly do not have
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|
to. Indeed, these conditions may be more easily achieved outside the
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|
family.
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|
Will there be monogamous relations in an anarchist society? Clearly people
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|
will have the option to choose how they want to live with whom, and how
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|
|
long they want to live in these relationships. This will of course include
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|
the option of monogamy. However, without a system based on patriarchy.
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|
|
economic insecurity and religious or state authority, we doubt that
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|
monogamy would be anything more than an anachronism If and when people did
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|
elect to live monogamously. it presumably would be seen as a choice made by
|
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|
both persons. Today, of course, monogamy is considered far more important
|
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|
|
for women than for men. This is called the double standard: and it has no
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|
place in a society of free and equal women and men.
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|
The family? The nuclear family is not universal, but social systems for the
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|
|
rearing of the young, the care of the elderly, and companionate relations
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|
are. We think that whole new forms of communal and collective living
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|
arrangements will grow to replace the traditional family system .
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|
Sex? Of course. But this does not mean that all kinds of sexual behavior
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|
|
would be condoned. We cannot imagine a truly anarchist society condoning
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|
rape, sexual exploitation of children, or sex that inflicts pain or
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|
humiliation, or involves dominance and submission. In sexual behavior, as
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|
|
in all other forms of behavior, social anarchism is based on freedom, trust
|
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|
|
and respect for the dignity of others. In fact, in an anarchist society
|
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|
|
sexuality would lose all the inegalitarian and oppressive meanings it now
|
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|
|
has.
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17 Is it coercive to require education for children? What should its
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|
content and structure be?
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|
When people today worry about the coercive character of mandatory public
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|
|
education, we think that their concern really stems from the authoritarian
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|
|
character of schooling. Schools are an extension of the state; they
|
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|
|
reproduce the class, sex, race and other divisions on which the state is
|
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|
|
built. In an anarchist society, the social function of schools and the
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|
|
potential of education would be quite different.
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|
|
Even today, we think that the implications of withholding basic education
|
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|
|
from young children are far more coercive than the requirement that they be
|
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|
|
educated. Without at least a minimal level of literacy, people would be
|
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|
|
much worse off than they already are. In an anarchist society education
|
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|
|
would, of course, provide far more. Education would be fundamentally
|
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|
|
liberating because it would help people learn how to learn; and it would
|
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|
|
teach them much more than they could ever acquire on their own about the
|
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|
|
physical world and the world of ideas. It would also help them learn to be
|
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|
|
free and self-directed.
|
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|
Such education is so important for young children that neither they nor
|
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|
|
their parents should be able to decide that the child doesn't need it.
|
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|
Bakunin stated the reason well:
|
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|
|
Children do not constitute anyone's property . . . they belong only
|
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|
|
to their own future freedom. But in children this freedom is not yet
|
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|
|
real; it is only potential. For real freedom - . . . based upon a feeling
|
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|
|
of one's dignity and upon the genuine respect for someone else's
|
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|
|
freedom and dignity, i.e., upon justice - such freedom can develop in
|
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|
|
children only through the rational development of their minds,
|
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|
|
character, and will.
|
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|
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|
|
What would anarchist education teach the young? Intellectual and physical
|
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|
|
skills that help to develop literate, healthy and competent people should
|
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|
|
be taught. Essential intellectual materials would include some that
|
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|
|
children now learn, and some that they don't: reading and writing,
|
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|
|
self-care (emotional and physical), farming and carpentry, cooking, and
|
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|
|
physical education. Children in the upper elementary grades would be
|
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|
|
introduced to literature and the other arts, crosscultural materials, and
|
|
|
|
the principles of anarchist community organization and economics. However,
|
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|
|
the content of these materials should reflect anarchist values: it would be
|
|
|
|
senseless to teach the principles of capitalist politics and economics
|
|
|
|
(except perhaps as a horrible example), an acceptance of stratification, or
|
|
|
|
materials that advocate racist, sexist or other inegalitarian ideas.
|
|
|
|
Not only the content, but also the structure of anarchist education is
|
|
|
|
vitally important. It is difficult to develop liberatory modes of thought
|
|
|
|
and action in an atmosphere of intimidation, regimentation, boredom and
|
|
|
|
respect for authority. We do not mean to imply that children should devalue
|
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|
|
teachers; but genuine respect must be based upon what someone knows and how
|
|
|
|
effectively s/he teaches it, not upon position, age or credentials. It will
|
|
|
|
be difficult to create an atmosphere of mutual respect and orderly process
|
|
|
|
without imposing discipline. But liberatory education cannot take place in
|
|
|
|
an authoritarian setting.
|
|
|
|
What else? Well, schools should be small, so that each child can get the
|
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|
|
attention and stimulation s/he needs. Activities should be varied, and
|
|
|
|
distinctions between work and play narrowed as far as possible. Grading and
|
|
|
|
competition with each other would be eliminated. Students would learn to
|
|
|
|
set standards for themselves, and to try to meet them. (If they did not,
|
|
|
|
the child should not evaluate him/herself negatively. Guilt and
|
|
|
|
self-deprecation are enemies of autonomy and healthy functioning ) Teachers
|
|
|
|
would be selected on the basis of knowledge and interpersonal competence,
|
|
|
|
not upon the possession of formal
|
|
|
|
credentials. Probably few people would make a career of teaching, but many
|
|
|
|
members of the community (including some older children) would spend time
|
|
|
|
doing it. Schools would be integrated into the community, and everyone
|
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|
|
would participate in the direction of the schools.
|
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|
|
When would education end? Ideally, never. Instead of being a prison, which
|
|
|
|
inmates flee as soon as the guard's back is turned (which is what many
|
|
|
|
public schools are like today), the anarchist school would encourage people
|
|
|
|
to see education as a lifelong process. As the child becomes an adult,
|
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|
|
education would increasingly become an informal self-directed activity
|
|
|
|
which would take place outside the school. But people would return for
|
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|
|
further formal study as often, and as long, as they wish.
|
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|
18 What is the relation of children to authority?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The line between nurturance and the authoritarian control of children is
|
|
|
|
difficult to draw. Perhaps in an anarchist society that boundary line will
|
|
|
|
be more clearly sketched.
|
|
|
|
Infants and young children are unquestionably dependent on others for their
|
|
|
|
survival. Perhaps the difference between nurturance and authoritarianism
|
|
|
|
arises when a child has acquired the skills for her or his own survival. If
|
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|
|
we accept that boundary, then we will have to work at determining what
|
|
|
|
those skills minimally are. The skills themselves - once we go beyond the
|
|
|
|
acquisition of language - are not absolute. They are relative to the social
|
|
|
|
conditions under which people live. For example, under capitalism, where
|
|
|
|
income and work are tied together and where both are prerequisites for
|
|
|
|
food, housing, medical care and the like, survival training must last
|
|
|
|
longer. Partly because of this long period of dependency, there has been a
|
|
|
|
strong tradition in such settings to view the child (and young adult) as
|
|
|
|
property, hence at the disposal of the family or state. Certainly, the
|
|
|
|
political economy is one condition that fosters dependence on authority.
|
|
|
|
Fostering authoritarian dependence is, in fact, a major mechanism of social
|
|
|
|
control in capitalist and state socialist societies. Today it is easier to
|
|
|
|
catalog examples of dependence and authoritarian social conditions than it
|
|
|
|
is to provide examples of social conditions that encourage self-management
|
|
|
|
and autonomous behavior.
|
|
|
|
The quintessence of nurturant child-rearing in an anarchist community would
|
|
|
|
be the teaching of children to like themselves, to learn how to learn, and
|
|
|
|
how to set standards for self-evaluation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19 Has there ever been a successful anarchist organization? If so, why
|
|
|
|
don't they last longer?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Yes, there has been. In fact, there have been many groups that have been
|
|
|
|
organized without centralized government, hierarchy, privilege and formal
|
|
|
|
authority. Some have been explicitly anarchist: perhaps the best-known
|
|
|
|
examples are the Spanish industrial and agricultural collectives, which
|
|
|
|
functioned quite successfully for several years until destroyed by the
|
|
|
|
combined forces of the authoritarian Left and the Right.
|
|
|
|
Most anarchist organizations are not called that - even by their members.
|
|
|
|
Anthropological literature is full of descriptions of human societies that
|
|
|
|
have existed without centralized government or institutionalized authority.
|
|
|
|
(However, as contemporary feminist anthropologists point Gut, many
|
|
|
|
so-called 'egalitarian' cultures are sexist.)
|
|
|
|
Industrialized societies also contain many groups that are anarchist in
|
|
|
|
practice. As the British anarchist Colin Ward says, 'an anarchist society,
|
|
|
|
a society which organizes itself without authority, is always in existence,
|
|
|
|
like a seed beneath the snow.' Examples include the leaderless small groups
|
|
|
|
developed by radical feminists, co-ops, clinics, learning networks, media
|
|
|
|
collectives, direct action organizations such as the Clamshell Alliance;
|
|
|
|
the spontaneous groupings that occur in response to disasters, strikes,
|
|
|
|
revolutions and emergencies; community-controlled day-care centers;
|
|
|
|
neighborhood groups; tenant and workplace organizing; and so on. Not all
|
|
|
|
such groups are anarchist, of course, but a surprising number function
|
|
|
|
without leadership and authority to provide mutual aid, resist the
|
|
|
|
government, and develop better ways of doing things.
|
|
|
|
Why don't they last longer? People who ask this question expect anarchist
|
|
|
|
organizations to meet standards of permanence that most anarchists, who
|
|
|
|
value flexibility and change, do not hold; and that most non-anarchist
|
|
|
|
groups cannot meet. There is, of course, another reason why many anarchist
|
|
|
|
organizations do not last longer than they do. Anarchists are enemies of
|
|
|
|
the state - and the state managers do not react kindly to enemies.
|
|
|
|
Anarchist organizations are blocked, harassed, and sometimes (as in the
|
|
|
|
case of Spain, and more recently Portugal) deliberately smashed. Under such
|
|
|
|
circumstances, it is a tribute to the persistence and capabilities of many
|
|
|
|
anarchists that their organizations last as long as they often do.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
11 How will an anarchist society meet the threat of foreign invasion?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Paradoxically, the more successfully it meets the threat of armed force,
|
|
|
|
the more likely it is to move away from anarchist principles. War always
|
|
|
|
seems to turn relatively free and open societies into repressive ones. Why?
|
|
|
|
Because war is irrational: it fosters fear and hopelessness in the gentle;
|
|
|
|
it brings out aggression, hatred and brutality in the truculent; it
|
|
|
|
destroys the balance between people and nature; it shrinks the sense of
|
|
|
|
community down to one's immediately endangered group; and under conditions
|
|
|
|
of starvation and deprivation it pits neighbor against neighbor in the
|
|
|
|
fight for survival. If a besieged anarchist community did successfully
|
|
|
|
resist foreign invasion, then it should immediately work to reestablish the
|
|
|
|
interrelationships of trust, mutual aid, equality and freedom that have
|
|
|
|
probably been damaged. 'War is the health of the state;' but it can be a
|
|
|
|
fatal disease for an anarchist community.
|
|
|
|
If war came, however, how would the society organize to defend itself? Let
|
|
|
|
us assume that the anarchist federation of North America is invaded by
|
|
|
|
troops of the Chinese, Swedish, Saudi Arabian or Brazilian government. What
|
|
|
|
would happen? There would be no state apparatus to seize; instead, the
|
|
|
|
invaders would have to conquer a network of small communities, one by one.
|
|
|
|
There would be no single army to defeat, but an entire, armed population.
|
|
|
|
The people would challenge the invasion with resistance - strikes,
|
|
|
|
psychological warfare, and non-co-operation as well as with guerrilla
|
|
|
|
tactics and larger armed actions. Under these circumstances, it is unlikely
|
|
|
|
that the invaders would conquer the federation .
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12 What about crime?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Much of what is now defined as crime would no longer exist. The
|
|
|
|
communalization of property and an ethic of mutual aid would reduce both
|
|
|
|
the necessity and the motivation for property crimes. Crimes against people
|
|
|
|
seem more complex, but we reject the idea that they are rooted in 'original
|
|
|
|
sin' or 'human nature.' To the degree that such crimes stem from societally
|
|
|
|
based disorders of personality, we can only anticipate that their incidence
|
|
|
|
- as well as their actual form - would be radically altered .
|
|
|
|
In a social anarchist society, crime would be defined solely as an act
|
|
|
|
harmful to the liberties of others. It would not be a crime to be different
|
|
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from other people, but it would be a crime to harm someone. Such hostile
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acts against the community could be prevented, above all, by inculcating a
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respect for the dignity of each person. Anarchist values would be
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reinforced with the strongest of human bonds, those of affection and
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self-respect.
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Remaining crimes would not be administered by masses of lawyers, police and
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judges; and criminals would not be tossed into prisons, which Kropotkin
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once labeled 'universities of crime.' Common law and regularly rotated
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juries could decide whether a particular act was a crime, and could
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criticize, censure, ostracize or even banish the criminal. However, in most
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cases we anticipate that criminals would be placed in the care and guidance
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of members of the community.
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13 How shall public health issues be handled?
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Public health issues would be handled like all other issues. This means
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that decisions about inoculations and other health issues would be made at
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the local level by the people who would be affected by the decision. This
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would result in a very different type of health care. Health care workers
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would be members of the community where they worked. Their function would
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be to provide day-to-day care and advice to people on how to remain
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healthy. People would have a chance to talk frequently with these workers
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and would know that they were really concerned about health and not about
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making money or gaining status in the community.
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If there were a threatened epidemic of some deadly flu and a vaccine were
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developed the people in the community would be able to get together to
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discuss the risks and benefits of the inoculations. Once the group decided
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that inoculations would benefit the community they would try to persuade
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everyone to be inoculated because the more people who were protected the
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less likelihood there would be of an epidemic. If there were a clear case
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of people being a danger to the health of the entire community then they
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would be asked to make a choice between being vaccinated and remaining in
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the community, or leaving to find another group that was more compatible.
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14 There are times when the state takes care of the sick and elderly, or
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protects individuals against coercion (for example, children brutalized
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by parents; blacks attacked by whites). If the state disappears, who will
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take over these functions?
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People who look at the world this way believe that there are only two
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possibilities: either there is state regulation and an orderly society, or
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there is a stateless chaos in which life is nasty, brutish and short. In
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fact, even when the state functions in a benevolent or protective manner,
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it is capricious: sometimes it helps the helpless; other times it doesn't.
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Sometimes social welfare workers remove a child from a vicious environment
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- and other times the child is left at home, perhaps to be further
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brutalized, even killed. Sometimes the state protects the civil rights of
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oppressed minorities; other times it ignores these rights, or even joins in
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the persecution. We cannot count on the state to do anything to protect us.
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It is, after all, the major task of the agents of the state to protect the
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distribution of power. Social justice is a secondary concern.
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In fact, we can only count on ourselves, or on those with whom we are
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freely associated in community. This means that helping functions will be
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performed by those groups that have always done them, with or without the
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state: voluntary associations. However, in an anarchist community, the need
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for such services will be less frequent. For example, if there is no longer
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systematic poisoning of the environment, diseases caused by this pollution
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(pesticide poisoning, asbestosis, Minimata disease) won t happen; if there
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are no longer extremes of wealth and poverty, diseases caused by lack of
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adequate food, shelter, and medical care will not exist; if children and
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adults can freely choose whether or not to live together, much violence
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against loved ones will disappear; if racism is systematically attacked,
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then the majority ethnic group won't harass minorities. There will, of
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course, still be a need for mutual aid and protection - but this will be
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provided by the community, for all its members.
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15 Would an anarchist society be less likely to be sexist? racist?
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Anarchists usually talk about the illegitimacy of authority, basing their
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arguments on the premise that no person should have power over another. A
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logical extension of this argument is to attack the power relationships in
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which men dominate women and some racial and ethnic groups dominate others.
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Thus anarchism creates the preconditions for abolishing sexism and racism
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Anarchism is philosophically opposed to all manifestations of racism and
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sexism. Equally important as its philosophical commitments is the fact that
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with anarchism there would be no economic basis to support racist or sexist
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ideas or practices. Work and income would be divided equitably, so there
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would be no need to subordinate a class of people to do the dirty work or
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to work at low pay to support the dominant class.
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Sexism and racism would not automatically disappear in the process of
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building an anarchist society. A conscious effort would have to be made to
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change old behavior and attitudes.
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16 What do anarchists think about sex, monogamy, and family?
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Anarchists believe that how you live your daily life is an important
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political statement. Most people in industrialized societies spend a
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|
significant portion of their lives in what may be the last bulwark of
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capitalism and state socialism - the monogamous nuclear family. The family
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|
serves as the primary agent for reproducing the dominant values of the
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|
society, both through the socialization of children and the social control
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|
of its members. Within the family all of the pathologies of the larger
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society are reproduced: privatized social relations escapism patriarchal
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|
dominance, economic dependency (in capitalist society), consumerism, and
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|
the treatment of people as property.
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|
In an anarchist society, social relations will be based on trust, mutual
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|
aid, friendship and love. These may occur in the context of the family (if
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|
people choose to live in a family setting), but they certainly do not have
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|
to. Indeed, these conditions may be more easily achieved outside the
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|
family.
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|
Will there be monogamous relations in an anarchist society? Clearly people
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will have the option to choose how they want to live with whom, and how
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|
long they want to live in these relationships. This will of course include
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the option of monogamy. However, without a system based on patriarchy.
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|
economic insecurity and religious or state authority, we doubt that
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monogamy would be anything more than an anachronism If and when people did
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|
elect to live monogamously. it presumably would be seen as a choice made by
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|
both persons. Today, of course, monogamy is considered far more important
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|
for women than for men. This is called the double standard: and it has no
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|
place in a society of free and equal women and men.
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|
The family? The nuclear family is not universal, but social systems for the
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|
rearing of the young, the care of the elderly, and companionate relations
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|
are. We think that whole new forms of communal and collective living
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|
arrangements will grow to replace the traditional family system .
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|
Sex? Of course. But this does not mean that all kinds of sexual behavior
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|
would be condoned. We cannot imagine a truly anarchist society condoning
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|
rape, sexual exploitation of children, or sex that inflicts pain or
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|
humiliation, or involves dominance and submission. In sexual behavior, as
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|
|
in all other forms of behavior, social anarchism is based on freedom, trust
|
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|
|
and respect for the dignity of others. In fact, in an anarchist society
|
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|
|
sexuality would lose all the inegalitarian and oppressive meanings it now
|
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|
has.
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17 Is it coercive to require education for children? What should its
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|
content and structure be?
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|
When people today worry about the coercive character of mandatory public
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|
|
education, we think that their concern really stems from the authoritarian
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|
|
character of schooling. Schools are an extension of the state; they
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|
|
reproduce the class, sex, race and other divisions on which the state is
|
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|
|
built. In an anarchist society, the social function of schools and the
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|
|
potential of education would be quite different.
|
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|
|
Even today, we think that the implications of withholding basic education
|
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|
|
from young children are far more coercive than the requirement that they be
|
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|
|
educated. Without at least a minimal level of literacy, people would be
|
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|
|
much worse off than they already are. In an anarchist society education
|
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|
|
would, of course, provide far more. Education would be fundamentally
|
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|
|
liberating because it would help people learn how to learn; and it would
|
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|
|
teach them much more than they could ever acquire on their own about the
|
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|
|
physical world and the world of ideas. It would also help them learn to be
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|
|
free and self-directed.
|
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|
Such education is so important for young children that neither they nor
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|
|
their parents should be able to decide that the child doesn't need it.
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|
Bakunin stated the reason well:
|
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|
|
Children do not constitute anyone's property . . . they belong only
|
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|
|
to their own future freedom. But in children this freedom is not yet
|
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|
|
real; it is only potential. For real freedom - . . . based upon a feeling
|
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|
|
of one's dignity and upon the genuine respect for someone else's
|
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|
|
freedom and dignity, i.e., upon justice - such freedom can develop in
|
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|
|
children only through the rational development of their minds,
|
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|
|
character, and will.
|
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|
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|
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|
|
What would anarchist education teach the young? Intellectual and physical
|
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|
|
skills that help to develop literate, healthy and competent people should
|
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|
|
be taught. Essential intellectual materials would include some that
|
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|
|
children now learn, and some that they don't: reading and writing,
|
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|
|
self-care (emotional and physical), farming and carpentry, cooking, and
|
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|
|
physical education. Children in the upper elementary grades would be
|
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|
|
introduced to literature and the other arts, crosscultural materials, and
|
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|
|
the principles of anarchist community organization and economics. However,
|
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|
|
the content of these materials should reflect anarchist values: it would be
|
|
|
|
senseless to teach the principles of capitalist politics and economics
|
|
|
|
(except perhaps as a horrible example), an acceptance of stratification, or
|
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|
|
materials that advocate racist, sexist or other inegalitarian ideas.
|
|
|
|
Not only the content, but also the structure of anarchist education is
|
|
|
|
vitally important. It is difficult to develop liberatory modes of thought
|
|
|
|
and action in an atmosphere of intimidation, regimentation, boredom and
|
|
|
|
respect for authority. We do not mean to imply that children should devalue
|
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|
|
teachers; but genuine respect must be based upon what someone knows and how
|
|
|
|
effectively s/he teaches it, not upon position, age or credentials. It will
|
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|
|
be difficult to create an atmosphere of mutual respect and orderly process
|
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|
|
without imposing discipline. But liberatory education cannot take place in
|
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|
|
an authoritarian setting.
|
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|
|
What else? Well, schools should be small, so that each child can get the
|
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|
|
attention and stimulation s/he needs. Activities should be varied, and
|
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|
|
distinctions between work and play narrowed as far as possible. Grading and
|
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|
|
competition with each other would be eliminated. Students would learn to
|
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|
|
set standards for themselves, and to try to meet them. (If they did not,
|
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|
|
the child should not evaluate him/herself negatively. Guilt and
|
|
|
|
self-deprecation are enemies of autonomy and healthy functioning ) Teachers
|
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|
|
would be selected on the basis of knowledge and interpersonal competence,
|
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|
|
not upon the possession of formal
|
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|
|
credentials. Probably few people would make a career of teaching, but many
|
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|
|
members of the community (including some older children) would spend time
|
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|
|
doing it. Schools would be integrated into the community, and everyone
|
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|
|
would participate in the direction of the schools.
|
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|
|
When would education end? Ideally, never. Instead of being a prison, which
|
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|
|
inmates flee as soon as the guard's back is turned (which is what many
|
|
|
|
public schools are like today), the anarchist school would encourage people
|
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|
|
to see education as a lifelong process. As the child becomes an adult,
|
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|
|
education would increasingly become an informal self-directed activity
|
|
|
|
which would take place outside the school. But people would return for
|
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|
|
further formal study as often, and as long, as they wish.
|
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|
|
18 What is the relation of children to authority?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The line between nurturance and the authoritarian control of children is
|
|
|
|
difficult to draw. Perhaps in an anarchist society that boundary line will
|
|
|
|
be more clearly sketched.
|
|
|
|
Infants and young children are unquestionably dependent on others for their
|
|
|
|
survival. Perhaps the difference between nurturance and authoritarianism
|
|
|
|
arises when a child has acquired the skills for her or his own survival. If
|
|
|
|
we accept that boundary, then we will have to work at determining what
|
|
|
|
those skills minimally are. The skills themselves - once we go beyond the
|
|
|
|
acquisition of language - are not absolute. They are relative to the social
|
|
|
|
conditions under which people live. For example, under capitalism, where
|
|
|
|
income and work are tied together and where both are prerequisites for
|
|
|
|
food, housing, medical care and the like, survival training must last
|
|
|
|
longer. Partly because of this long period of dependency, there has been a
|
|
|
|
strong tradition in such settings to view the child (and young adult) as
|
|
|
|
property, hence at the disposal of the family or state. Certainly, the
|
|
|
|
political economy is one condition that fosters dependence on authority.
|
|
|
|
Fostering authoritarian dependence is, in fact, a major mechanism of social
|
|
|
|
control in capitalist and state socialist societies. Today it is easier to
|
|
|
|
catalog examples of dependence and authoritarian social conditions than it
|
|
|
|
is to provide examples of social conditions that encourage self-management
|
|
|
|
and autonomous behavior.
|
|
|
|
The quintessence of nurturant child-rearing in an anarchist community would
|
|
|
|
be the teaching of children to like themselves, to learn how to learn, and
|
|
|
|
how to set standards for self-evaluation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19 Has there ever been a successful anarchist organization? If so, why
|
|
|
|
don't they last longer?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Yes, there has been. In fact, there have been many groups that have been
|
|
|
|
organized without centralized government, hierarchy, privilege and formal
|
|
|
|
authority. Some have been explicitly anarchist: perhaps the best-known
|
|
|
|
examples are the Spanish industrial and agricultural collectives, which
|
|
|
|
functioned quite successfully for several years until destroyed by the
|
|
|
|
combined forces of the authoritarian Left and the Right.
|
|
|
|
Most anarchist organizations are not called that - even by their members.
|
|
|
|
Anthropological literature is full of descriptions of human societies that
|
|
|
|
have existed without centralized government or institutionalized authority.
|
|
|
|
(However, as contemporary feminist anthropologists point Gut, many
|
|
|
|
so-called 'egalitarian' cultures are sexist.)
|
|
|
|
Industrialized societies also contain many groups that are anarchist in
|
|
|
|
practice. As the British anarchist Colin Ward says, 'an anarchist society,
|
|
|
|
a society which organizes itself without authority, is always in existence,
|
|
|
|
like a seed beneath the snow.' Examples include the leaderless small groups
|
|
|
|
developed by radical feminists, co-ops, clinics, learning networks, media
|
|
|
|
collectives, direct action organizations such as the Clamshell Alliance;
|
|
|
|
the spontaneous groupings that occur in response to disasters, strikes,
|
|
|
|
revolutions and emergencies; community-controlled day-care centers;
|
|
|
|
neighborhood groups; tenant and workplace organizing; and so on. Not all
|
|
|
|
such groups are anarchist, of course, but a surprising number function
|
|
|
|
without leadership and authority to provide mutual aid, resist the
|
|
|
|
government, and develop better ways of doing things.
|
|
|
|
Why don't they last longer? People who ask this question expect anarchist
|
|
|
|
organizations to meet standards of permanence that most anarchists, who
|
|
|
|
value flexibility and change, do not hold; and that most non-anarchist
|
|
|
|
groups cannot meet. There is, of course, another reason why many anarchist
|
|
|
|
organizations do not last longer than they do. Anarchists are enemies of
|
|
|
|
the state - and the state managers do not react kindly to enemies.
|
|
|
|
Anarchist organizations are blocked, harassed, and sometimes (as in the
|
|
|
|
case of Spain, and more recently Portugal) deliberately smashed. Under such
|
|
|
|
circumstances, it is a tribute to the persistence and capabilities of many
|
|
|
|
anarchists that their organizations last as long as they often do.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|