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Pseudo-anarchists & Quasi-anarchists

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Friday April 19, 2002 22:42author by John Falconer, Phd.author email falconerjay at hotmail dot comReport this post to the editors

They have good ideas. But beware of the explosive, genuine anarchists.

We must not be deceived by quasi-anarchists and pseudo-anarchists and their misguided utopian daydreams which if implemented would produce terrifying nightmares, violent revolutions and dictatorial reigns of terror to restore order.

As everyone knows only too well by now, "utopia" has a double-meaning: "good-place" and "no-place." There can be no universal utopia on Earth, nor can any group or individual pursue happiness without some suffering. In any case, the realization of a particular utopia would require the exercise of force in a specific direction. Obviously many people will disagree with any particular definitive direction, otherwise no force would have to be exerted and the highest good would be had without resistance, as if the society were one god who could will everything in place just by thinking it. That simply cannot occur on Earth. Of course, painful progress toward various ideals will occur; in crucial situations that requires, as history has amply proven, the rule of social authority as represented by rulers, whether they be obeyed as legitimate authorities or as illegitimate tyrants. No matter how much those who have heads over their shoulders deny it, under natural law, higher states of organization require hierarchies for their existence.

No doubt the genuine anarchist is opposed to leading principles as well as to the governing authorities who represents those principles. The genuine anarchist is not a hypocrite like the hyphenated-anarchists. S/he will admit to the well-guarded meaning of 'anarchy': "an" (against or without)- "arche" (leader), or "leaderless." Let's not twist the meaning of words around to suit our confusion. Anarchy means "without a government", or "a state of lawlessness". Here are a few usages from The Oxford Dictionary, Clarendon, 1989:

(1539) Taverner: This unleful lyberty or lycnece of the multytude is called Anarchie.

(1605) Bacon: Pompey.. made it his design.. to cast the state into an absolute anarchy and confusion.

(1664) H. More: A Polity without a Head.. would be not a Polity, but Anarchy.

(1667) Milton: The waste Wide Anarchie of Chaos.

(1821) Byron: The satraps uncontroll'd, the gods unworshipp'd, And all things in the anarcy of sloth.

(1875) Hamerton: A moral anarchy difficult to conceive.

(1959) Daily Telegram: The spirit of anarchy today current in the visual arts... A form of emotional anarchy even more destructive of talent than the slovenly disregard of technique.

Anarchy has always been dismissed by reputable philosophers as inconceivable; the very idea of a "leaderless principle" is logically absurd and does not correspond to empirical observation - there is no "chaos" absent order. "Chaos theory" is an oxymoronic term, for "chaos" is nothing, for which there can be no valid theory - chaos theory is rather the observation of unexplained order and an attempt to explain how it is ruled.

Those who seriously style themselves as philosophical anarchists may be able to survive in a mental hospital until they are rehabilitated by critical theory; their anarchic propositions are unsupportable either in symbolic or in real action. They are either lying, telling a dangerous joke, or are deceived by their own hypocrisy. If the non-principle they propose were translated into action, they would be real anarchists in the classic sense, anarchists who are famous for bombs under their overcoats and incoherent manifestoes tucked in their pockets.

Modern anarchists will use assault rifles and handguns, but their preferred instrument until very recently has been the homemade bomb, a perfect symbol for the exploding ego. In psychic isolation one tends to blow little things way out of proportion to their size. In the physical world, bombs will do nicely. And what remains after an effective explosion? Etymological utopia, or no-place. Perhaps the bomber is still alive, however, at some remote undisclosed location, observing self-destruction, for the self is social: there is no individual identity without relation. The whole event is absurd and tragic. It is a colossal goof.

The anarchism of the anarchist can be expressed in a simple formula: Critical Reaction plus Explosive Means plus Nebulous Future equals Anarchism.

Yes, "anarchism" is just a label, but it should be properly applied. Unless one is a real anarchist, s/he might find a more appropriate or safer term such as "democracy." And for the religiously inclined, religions also have more generally acceptable terms to indicate the chaos that seems to support a conglomeration of contradictions.

Quasi- and pseudo-anarchists do offer many good ideas, and they do make many valuable contributions to society; yet rather than adopt the name for essential absurdity, rather than adopt "anarchy" as their preferred label and live out their lives as hypocrites, or waste time justifying an absurdity that cannot be justified and is understandably subject to ridicule, they would in my opinion be much better off working towards specific, directed, socially valuable ends.

As for self-styled anarchists who sincerely enjoy social criticism, critical theory would probably be their best and most practical guidelines. Critical theory is a theory with working principles. Critical theory supposes that a theory without a criterion is no theory at all. If society seems to warrant improvement, gather the facts, study the authorities, make proposals, engage in self-criticism and criticise the criticism, arrive at the best consensus possible, and if a decision is made to act, know what results are expected, and do make sure the project has competent leaders. In any case, do not use the absurd term "anarchy" in the project description.

author by C.publication date Sat Apr 20, 2002 01:57author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I also like wine, and loads of other good things that don't come from here.

That means global trade of some sort.

But I have no problem saying I am anti-globalisation unless I'm talking to some pedantic phd wank.


This post is news in which way? This post serves what purpose?

author by badmanpublication date Sat Apr 20, 2002 02:39author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Jesus, if you didn't know anything about physics, I hope you'd pause before writing a treatise on it. You know nothing about anarchism yet you are happy to wax lyrical about it and trot out the biggest load of uninformed nonsense I've heard in a long time. You display the intellectual arrogance of a man (or woman) who knows a couple of things about something and assumes that he/she has nothing left to learn. Unfortunately much of academia is focused on building up the egos of dunces who know a few things but understand nothing. Critical theory is probably the worst of the lot in this respect.

You seem not to realise that for most people:
no government (authority) automatically equals chaos.
Whereas anarchists believe that:
no government potentially equals freedom, freedom to organise ourselves from the bottom up.

This is why Proudhon chose the label 'anarchist', he recognised that the word had negative connotations, but more importantly he recognised that this was because most people really do believe that they need rulers. The challenge for anarchists is to change this conception, once that is done I reckon that there'll be no problems with the label.

Badman

author by Terrypublication date Sat Apr 20, 2002 19:13author address author phone Report this post to the editors

To say that Anarchy does not work is quite wrong.
Spain from 1936-37 worked quite well, until it
was destroyed by the Stalinist government and
by General Franco (on the Right) at the same time

The Open Source (software) movement follows quite
closely an anarchy model, where thousands of
individuals write, and contribute software code
and where those in charge of releases are
regularly democratically elected and only get
elected based on the amount they have already
done and their ability. They may also be ejected
from that position too. In the Open Source model
everything is free and the ownership of the code
is in the public domain.

Open Source has given us most of the tools of
the Internet. For example

Linux -UNIX operating system
C/C++ compiler
Apache Web Server (run by at least 50% webservers)
Perl programming language
Tcl/Tck programming lanugage
Tex/Latex desktop publishing
Star office
Mozilla Browser (formely Netscape)
EMACS editor
VI and VIM editors
GhostView -for reading postscript files

... and many many other useful programs.

author by GluttonManpublication date Sun Apr 21, 2002 00:48author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Dude! describing Free Software as "Open" gets you a free link to the Free Software Foundations explanation of why "Open" is not Free!
http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/free-software-for-freedom.html

author by chrispublication date Mon Apr 22, 2002 15:01author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Open Source software does not equal anarchy, not even close. There's still someone in charge of the project (ie Linux - Linus Torvalds) who decides what code is accepted and what code is rejected. There's still a strong hierarchy. There's still someone in charge. It is free, and you can look at the source code anytime you want... but there's no real grassroots process of consensus. There's a grassroots process of bugfixing and coding, which is finalized by a select few - the elite who manage the project. This doesn't sound anarchist to me by any stretch of the imagination.

chris

author by Badmanpublication date Mon Apr 22, 2002 15:27author address author phone Report this post to the editors

There are some parallels between the operation of the open source movement and anarchism. Firstly the OS attitude to property, its philosophy of knowledge and the need to share it, and the OS norm that those who do the (lion's share of the) work get to make the decisions. However the structure of the OS movement has failed to evolve any real democracy in development, most code being under the personal authority of whoever originally developed the particular project. This is a major weakness in the OS movement, as anybody who is familiar with it will know many OS projects are riven with turf-wars between coding egos (for some reason knowing how to make a computer say "hello world" seems to have a terrible effect on the ego ;-) OS would be well served by adopting models that allowed all who work on a project to have a say in what is included in the final code.

The second major failing of the OS movement (I'm talking about Linus in particular here) in terms of organisation is the lack of a federal structure between the different major subsections of the system. The subsystems are developed mostly in complete isolation and then a couple of people (Linus & Alan) get to decide what goes in and what doesn't. This has led to major integration problems, competing versions of subsystems and has dramatically hampered the development of a well functioning unified user interface. Again this is an area where the OS movement could learn a lot from anarchism

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