I was debating the merits of incorporating some anarchist ideology, since my professor has been introducing some things to us.

Anarchism, different types, has its appeal.

but I keep running into multiple positions that i can't for the life of me understand. This one in particular. How do you have solidarity when you can't support states or hierarchies?

Also the existence of states, and what it takes to abolish them is of great interest to me. Because it seems to be as simple as uh, implementing direct democracy? Or some form of democratic functions in all society. So all institutions and borders can exist, but if you're democratic you're good? Do all situations really have to involve everyone?

so is literally a few elections and renaming institutions enough to replace the nation state? Seems incredibly easy then, i dont know what the fuss is about. (Although i think democratic armies are stupid why should that be a thing.)

Also my professor has an annoying tendency to hate on former socialism whenever its brought up. Also the sort of stereotypical obsession with rojava (which explicitly enshrines the right of private property, but otherwise i support the fight of the kurdish population for liberation) and the Zapitistas (who denounce western anarchism and explicitly identify as a sort of their own ideological deviation from marxism. Libertarian socialism in reality. Not hating on the Zapitistas of course, they're cool as fuck and i support their fight against discrimination of ethnic minorities and natives. Other anarchists have a liking of Makhnovshchina, which gets a lot of undeserved hate in marxist circles but was more a warlord state than anarchist. But i'd be fine with that because it was a rough time and they were doing what they had to, but explicit denial of this and upholding it is very strange to me.

But these are... states??? Why is it Marxist states that get flak?

wait its probably the purges... yeah i'd be mad about that too if it was me...

Anarchists i think get lots of undue hate towards them as well, with many criticisms brushing them aside being equally applicable to marxism.

Also i dont want to see any marxists give a joking or sectarian answer, or ill report them. Im interested in learning the responses of anarchists, and the best ones i can find are usually here. I can get kind of defensive, i dont like being wrong, but i do genuinely want to learn.

  • mindlesscrollyparrot@discuss.tchncs.de
    ·
    1 month ago

    How do you and your friends decide what to do at the weekend when you don't have a state or a hierarchy? It's perfectly possible to make decisions by consensus.

    I would actually turn the question around: do you really have solidarity if it is enforced by a state or a hierarchy?

    Finally: is solidarity really so important? If the people are split in their opinion on an issue, exactly why is it so important to unite on one choice or the other? That seems like a terrible idea.

    • LesbianLiberty [she/her]
      ·
      1 month ago

      If the people are split in their opinion on an issue, exactly why is it so important to unite on one choice or the other? That seems like a terrible idea.

      Without unity of action your revolution can quickly be destroyed and the bourgeoisie can re-impose their domination. This has happened countless times and is in fact a huge source of the failure of the Paris Commune, what's the point of a revolution if it's not protected and the bourgeoisie reassert themselves?

      • mindlesscrollyparrot@discuss.tchncs.de
        ·
        1 month ago

        I am not sure what you are saying. If the Paris Commune had been able to order every man in Paris to fight, they would have been able to repel the French Army?

        If you want people to fight and die for the cause, surely it is only right that you have to convince them that it is a good cause first. And, if it is a good cause then surely that should be easy? Telling them that they have to do it because there was a majority vote simply doesn't cut it.

        • HelltakerHomosexual [she/her, comrade/them]
          hexagon
          ·
          1 month ago

          I am not sure what you are saying. If the Paris Commune had been able to order every man in Paris to fight, they would have been able to repel the French Army?

          to be fair, the french army was completely disorganized, and the seat of the french government was literally a few miles away in versailles. The French National Guard was the only organized army in the country and could have marched on the seat of power in versailles immediately instead of twiddling their thumbs. It was impossible with everyone arguing and wanting to do different things though. Especially with the social democrats whining their asses off. Spreading the revolution should have been the first thing they did.

          They also left the bank of france untouched, instead of seizing it for the workers. This allowed the capitalists to immediately get back into place. They didn't seize the state machinery, and not all workplaces were collectivized. this caused general chaos in the economy.

          They frankly didn't kill enough reactionaries. They literally captured the bourgeoisie and their government but let them go. Such weakness of the heart was immediately repaid in full with the slaughter of the commune.

          The dictatorship of the proletariat must be consolidated in that first revolutionary stage. it must fight against all reactionary forces until there are none left and then relax and let the previously necessary mechanisms die out.

          • mindlesscrollyparrot@discuss.tchncs.de
            ·
            1 month ago

            Your wording seems to imply that inability to make a decision is anarchism and/or that anarchists are unable to make decisions, even though you blame the social democrats for the failure to march on Versailles sooner.

            This is somewhat ironic. Obviously the anarchists could have dissuaded the National Guard from marching, but if they had the authority to prevent them, then they weren't anarchists!

            By contrast, in a setup where a decision needs to be made before people can act, then it's very possible for a faction to prevent it. For example, they can say that key stakeholders are not present and therefore the meeting has no authority. If you've never witnessed this, I envy you.

      • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
        ·
        1 month ago

        Without unity of action your revolution can quickly be destroyed and the bourgeoisie can re-impose their domination.

        This is often presented in the abstract. What's an example of how this unfolds?

        • HelltakerHomosexual [she/her, comrade/them]
          hexagon
          ·
          1 month ago

          Paris Commune, most city communes tbh, but that doesn't limit their importance. Mao was radicalized by the shanghai commune uprising. The paris commune provided the basis of modern marxism, and was the inspiration behind Lenin's break from revisionist marxism and re-establish the revolutionary basis of it.

          Unity of action is a sadly necessary thing when their is active destructive punishment for any wrong decision.

          • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
            ·
            1 month ago

            I mean like more specifically. What is happening in 1870s Paris where unity of action can be achieved by a centralized authority in a way that could not be done with a distributed authority?

    • HelltakerHomosexual [she/her, comrade/them]
      hexagon
      ·
      1 month ago

      How do you and your friends decide what to do at the weekend when you don't have a state or a hierarchy? It's perfectly possible to make decisions by consensus.

      while yes a state hierarchy is not necessary for such things, it becomes far different with an economy.

      and i can support a struggle under a state and if the struggle is in the form of a state. see the soviet support of the Viet Minh, Sino Communists, and many other revolutionary movements. I myself would be glad if my state was devoting the power of mass produced guns, military advisors, and diplomatic support to revolutionary movements. I do understand for a state that is not under a dictatorship of the working class, since it strangles solidarity actively. As well as some revolutionary states choosing pragmatism over solidarity due to the states inevitable self interests.

      Solidarity is the most important thing! how can you have internationalism without solidarity? How can you learn from other revolutions without actively broadcasting their plight and agitating their support.

      And for uniting which side to support, its mostly due to the concern of backing the 'revolutionary' side. What happens if they back say israel over palestine? Rhodesia over Zimbabwe?

      all these things i think are easily possible with any sort of anarchism i think, as anarchist mutual aid was the basis for communist state mutual aid.

      • mindlesscrollyparrot@discuss.tchncs.de
        ·
        1 month ago

        Yes, if individual people have solidarity, then that is not incompatible with anarchism. In fact, that is practically the definition of it! It is important, for all of the reasons you said.

        But you said "how can you have solidarity if you can't have states or hierarchies?". From that, I understand that you think that 'solidarity' can be something that is mandated by the state or hierarchy. I do not agree that that is important.

  • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
    ·
    1 month ago

    There is no such thing as a pure anarchist. It'd be hard to even define what that is.

    You've got the super queer anarcho-nihilists, the hippie anarchists, the avant-garde autonomists who call themselves communists but lean more heavily towards anarchism than Marxism, the standard An-Coms that would claim the legacy of anarchism since the 19th century, the anarchist punks, and even some primitivists. And that's just in America. All of these rather resemble spheres instead of formal ideological camps. There will certainly be a variety of stances from sphere to sphere on unified political programs, whether you should vote at all, the validity of Marxist class analysis, whether any kind of large structured formal organization is worth participating in, the acceptable levels of authority, proclivity for insurrection, whether to use direct democracy or consensus or pure self-direction or something else, and more.

    Some movements have general assemblies and movement congresses in which they make decisions thoroughly but excruciatingly slowly. The Zapatistas are used to this and call it "the pace of good governance".

    Defining the state is something you can split a lot of hairs over, but I think it can broadly be seen as a formal supra-human entity that exclusively dominates a territory and exercises rights of control not afforded to individuals or smaller groups. If it peacefully overlaps with another entity, or if it doesn't exercise any will that is not a direct wish of the people, or if it has no formal subordination of people and groups to itself but they participate voluntarily, you may call that governance without Government.

    Many anarchists have no problem with things being managed by officials at a local level, with safeguards against people monopolizing the seats of power. From there you would have some sort of loose federation of localities, regulating trade and standards and any collective defensive force.

    Solidarity without states or hierarchies is pretty easy, you just keep everything horizontal, and you have each person in charge of a part instead of 1 person everyone answers directly to. Sometimes you have someone who's an avowed anarchist yet still ends up sort of being in charge of all the things, drifting into a de facto leader. It sucks when this happens, because it can be a cycle of people deferring to that one person rather than trusting their own agency or pursuing their own development, and also because if anything changes for that person it ripples through all the groups they're a part of.

    If there's anything from anarchism you can inform your own politics by, let it be this. Leadership is an umbrella concept, it is a synthetic idea that most cultures did not have until the advent of capitalism, or contact with a bourgeois polity. It is a replacement for the idea of nobility that describes an essence that gives someone the right to rule. In fact, the bourgeois class had to invent the idea of leaders and leadership, in order to displace the ideology supporting feudalism. It is not the sine qua non of effective coordination. In many indigenous cultures, captains of war and spiritual masters have separate roles from the management of the rest of society. The latter is typically done by a group or council of elders, much like how the "alpha wolf" is a total myth, as the senior wolves in a pack are deferred to for their familial relations to other wolves. You don't need to give up the idea of a vanguard party that executes class struggle to embrace leaderlessness. In fact, I think it would make your vanguard party stronger. With separate and rigorous domains of influence, you allow more people to participate and pursue distinction, minimize conflict over who wants to be in charge, prevent most stratification from emerging groups of people who have certain levels of power and people who don't, and reduce any potential impact of infiltration, blackmail, or assassination.

    • HelltakerHomosexual [she/her, comrade/them]
      hexagon
      ·
      1 month ago

      Very interesting, especially the leaderless part. a helmsman is good, but really only for the founder phase, like lenin and stalin. After that you'll have people coming in and pulling it every which way. Thank you very much for your in depth answer!

      • SadArtemis [she/her]
        ·
        1 month ago

        After that you'll have people coming in and pulling it every which way

        IMO while this is natural and inevitable, this is also why the "vanguard party" (or something functioning as such) as championed by Lenin is necessary- the party, state, commune, whatever form it is that the revolution takes, has to maintain its revolutionary proletarian character (IMO).

        Maintaining the revolution's integrity- whether it is in some hypothetical commune, or in the state/party systems of AES or even many states born out of anti-imperialist struggle- is key to preventing the revolution's slow undoing and eventual destruction (as seen in the Soviet dissolution). Discussions of what compromises, by the collective proletariat, should be made (like Dengism, which seeing its successes I'd probably say I most align with- yet which also undeniably introduced its own issues which I believe the CPC is largely working towards resolving) are possible, but retaining the proletarian character, the proletarian dictatorship, is infinitely important (once again IMO).

        IMO the "helmsman" great man history image as is mainstream doesn't paint a good picture of most communist states' development (perhaps of all genuine communist states' development). Stalin, Lenin, and Mao may loom large, but none of them were the "dictatorial" or sole commanding forces of the revolutionary parties and then states they ran- though they undeniably had immense influence as individuals all the same. A helmsman can be good (and is probably necessary for the founding phase as you put it) and a figurehead IMO is probably inevitable, but IMO to what extent there are helmsmen, they only become irrelevant when and if the party can maintain, or build upon or pragmatically modify their guidance and character (though I'd argue all aforementioned helmsmen's greatest successes were in promoting and proving their own views in the broader party structure and society).

        In regards to the "anarchist" bit where this comes in- well admittedly obviously I have a bias (as I don't consider myself an anarchist and haven't exactly bothered to look overly much into their ideology). Yet IMO I'd say- to maintain this specific revolutionary character and prevent its undermining- on some level, the structures of the state and/or party discipline would have to be established, and if I'm not wrong (not a scholar and wouldn't know lol) I've heard that in what (extremely temporary) successful anarchist uprisings did exist so far they did essentially create just that (even while not necessarily calling it as such)

      • SadArtemis [she/her]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        Figured rather than edit should add on-

        Basically- I think it's a good thing for people to pull it every which way, or to try to, and argue their case, anyways. IMO naturally (or ideally anyways) this would lead to the most pragmatic approach while building socialist, progressive society. It just should ideally be within a broader framework designed to internally- for lack of a better word, "self-police" itself for the sake of preserving the revolution in a manner akin to how capitalism by its nature preserves the interests of capital accumulation and maintenance (while avoiding the pitfalls of ultraism, which for capital I'd call neoliberalism/neoconservative hegemonism)

      • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
        ·
        1 month ago

        a helmsman is good, but really only for the founder phase, like lenin and stalin.

        Do you mean a chief strategist to conceptualize things, or a chief taskmaster to get people to move, or a chief parliamentarian to make sure the discussions reach an agreement? Must all of these be the same person?

  • Nakoichi [they/them]M
    ·
    1 month ago

    My most basic stance. I would rather be an anarchist with high regard for contributions toward liberation from MLs in say China, than I would be an anarchist in the imperial core as I am.

    From another perspective if you are in the imperial core as an anarchist you should support AES critically as it undermines the state power of your own government and conversely it is good to support anarchist movements that direct their actions against the imperialist state because that strengthens AES. It's a symbiotic relationship so to speak.

  • belligerentkitten [they/them, it/its]
    ·
    1 month ago

    anarchists oppose the existence of all states. i would say this is a prerequisite for being an anarchist. but i certainly have solidarity with the people inside states. and of course there are situations in which although i still oppose all the states, given the state of reality i still think it's good that a state is defending against, or attacking, an imperialist power.

    i think one of the issues anarchists tend to have with marxists is the particular way in which they go about solidarity with states. obviously i understand the concept of critical support, and a lot of the way that this kind of discourse is more about not wanting to have to constantly add disclaimers about how you know that the state in question still does bad things, because you're simply trying to talk about the good thing it's doing. and i'm sympathetic to that. but i really dislike the way it seems to just turn into team sports where you support any state that opposes the west, and the critical part of critical support just never gets heard. and y'all also have a habit of dismissing any struggle or attempted revolution against authoritarian governments as western interference. which to us is a massive violation of our responsibility to have solidarity with the people, who are the ones who actually matter. it's not that we aren't aware of the possibility of western interference, and how it can corrupt a revolution with a communist and/or anarchist character into just fucking capitalism and liberal democracy and i don't think we're any happier about that than any of you. but the proper response to western interference in a situation like that is for anarchists (and i would argue, the communists as well) to act autonomously in support of the struggle, attacking the state directly, and also by trying to root out the western interference and participate in the more general organisation in ways that help preserve the leftist character of the revolution.

    as for why marxist states get all the flack... well i don't think this is entirely true. at least in my circles we're far more critical of capitalist and imperialist states. and the uh, actually politically active anarchists, we tend to attack the state that we're from, or living in. but yeah, we certainly are critical of marxist states.

    in theory, we should have a lot in common. our aim, anarchy, is perhaps not identical to, but at the very least compatible with and similar to the supposed endgame of marxism, stateless communism. but well, we don't trust you, or anyone else, with power. even before the marxist states of the 20th century, the classical anarchists were concerned that siezing control of the state would simply lead to their priorities being corrupted by that power. and thus though they may have started with good intentions, the state's primary purpose becomes its own maintenence. it ends up in direct opposition to the original aims of the revolution. i might not think it's the right approach but i would be fucking delighted if there were a marxist revolution that reached stateless communism in a timely fashion.

    and history has proven us right. marxist states have failed, become more concerned with protecting their power. to you, a state with a government which calls itself marxist, and which opposes western imperialism might not seem like a failure - but our priorities are the elimination of the state and all authority. so when we hear that is the goal, but the goal is never reached because the means used to achieve it aren't consistent with the actual intended result, yeah that's a failure. not to mention the fact that every time we have tried to cooperate with marxists, particularly MLs, they have betrayed us. i come from a historically anarchist area of spain, that still has a lot of us here. growing up i was introduced to anarchism by some of my school teachers and friends of my parents. and the mistrust of communists among spanish anarchists is incredibly strong over the civil war, and it's not like i don't understand why. tho i do have some significant criticisms of spanish anarchism too.

    and yeah, it's not like we've ever been allowed to say, create small-scale autonomous anarchist communes within communist states. or you know, stay alive.

    i hope that provides some context. i don't mean to be sectarian or start arguments about who did what in the spanish civil war. i meant to accurately convey what anarchists tend to think and why. but also like, i don't disagree. i'm actually p comfortable on hexbear and the non-sectarian rules make a big difference. but it's literally the first place i've ever had MLs be even remotely nice to me as an anarchist. i think this community works p well, but in terms of actually organising politically i don't really see how we can get beyond those differences.

    lastly i wanna address the stuff about how to achieve anarchy decisionmaking, and air a massive complaint about the kinds of anarchists u are likely to encounter online, which may actually help u to understand us/relate to us better.

    so like i have been active as an anarchist since i was 16, and i'm 29 now. and in that time i've had many, many good, serious, anarchist comrades. but though these kinds of people obviously do exist online, its not the typical person you expect to encounter online calling themself an anarchist and it's something that has frustrated me for years but i kinda came to terms with it. but i was talking to my partner about it recently and realised that it understandably really really upset them and i realised how it must look to people who don't have my background.

    most of the anarchists i meet online are not really anarchists. i don't mean they're ancaps (who are about as anarchist is national socialists are socialist), they are people who have heard a bit about it and think it's a good idea, but have no fucking clue as to any theory, praxis, or what applying anarchist principles really means. and i don't mean they haven't read theory in the elitist sense, cuz i do dislike when people act like having read all the classical leftist texts is a necessity when it can be kind of ableist and elitist. but u do need to understand the theory of your professed politics one way or another, even if it's learning from more experienced members of your group.

    i'm sure there are more reasons than the two i've come up with, but they're both definitely a thing. firstly, when some anarchist (and other leftist, tbf) commuities online start to suddenly increase their numbers, it's usually because some left-leaning liberals heard about it. and i used to agree with the people who made this mistake, i used to think it was a good thing, a way to teach people and bring them in. but i've since realised that it dilutes the serious people and serious conversation to such a degree that there it's not really an anarchist community anymore. it's just a place where liberals argue about electoralism and repost articles from mainstream media sites.

    and secondly, and most tragic to me as a trans person, i've found that a lot of the people causing the influx of libs is actually trans people. don't get me wrong there are many good serious trans anarchists, and certainly the ones who have been active for more than a few years became anarchists before the period of intense visibility and backlash against us really started. but because we face so much discrimination outside of leftist communities, and sometimes in them to a certain degree, it's seemed like a huge volume of rather lib trans people have flocked towards online anarchist communities as a safe place, without having worked through the lib brain worms. and that also creates a really heavy focus on US electoralism because ppl are scared of like, getting murdered or legislated out of existence if they're not pushing for this electorally insignificant political group to vote as hard as they can.

    if u wanna know proper anarchists, be very thourough when looking online. or go out and find irl groups who actually do things.

    achieving anarchy, is not about democracy. some anarchists use the term, but they use it essentially to mean the same kinds of non-hierarchical organisation that those of us who don't use the term want. the term has just been so corrupted by liberal democracy that i'd rather have nothing to do with it. achieving anarchy essentially requires two processes to happen side-by-side. since there is no possibility of using the existing mechanism of the state to organise after a revolution, the creative and destructive processes have to happen at the same time. we need to build our own methods of surviving, mutual aid networks, distribution and logistics, etc. we need to be able to survive when capitalism abandons us. but anyone who thinks that this is sufficient to do away with the power of the state and capital is sorely mistaken. the state must be destroyed by violent resistance just the same as any other revolutionary theory.

    in some cases we can take advantage of the fact that state power is actually decreasing in many rural areas. i'm part of a project that is doing that. and honestly i'm so burned out (not to mention disabled) by years of action, that i've been slightly checked out of the protest and direct action side of things. but i do hope to be able to return to that one day. but yeah the place our project is in, is in a rural area of spain that is more or less just abandoned by the state, and their ability to enforce or surveil is very limited. the most we ever see of any state interference is them occasionally dropping water on some trees when there is another wildfire. and that is p nice but us, and the other people living in this region, have gotta be able to deal with the fires on our own, because they can barely manage to do that.

    but yeah. violent resistance, revolution, insurrection, is necessary.

    gonna add another comment about decisionmaking since i guess i reached a character limit

    • belligerentkitten [they/them, it/its]
      ·
      1 month ago

      no, not everyone has to be involved in every decision. the general idea is that the people affected by the outcome of the decision should be involved in making it. and that a decision should be taken at the lowest level possible. to take an absurd example, no one is going to vote about whether or not i have breakfast because it only affects me. or a more concrete example, there is no referendum or laws passed about whether or not gay marriage is acceptable. there is no state to control marriage, no legitimacy to marriage beyond what we choose to give it. the only people who need to decide that are the people getting married. but thats just a non-decision almost by definition.

      so like, lets say there are people who produce food for a community. the people doing the work decide how it is done, perhaps in consultation with the community they are serving to properly understand their needs. but there is no community wide vote on how the farming is done, that is done by the people doing the work.

      also, there are differences of opinion about whether decisions need to be consensus-based, or whether or not there should be some sort of voting and threshold for the decision to be make. i think it actually makes sense to use them in different contexts. as an example, we currently have a smol commune and everyone has to be in complete agreement about a new member joining, because especially at our current size, a new person is such a big change to how things work that if one person isn't okay with it, it would be a massive disruption to the community. but if u have like a large activist org, or perhaps a meeting of federated smaller groups, a majority vote might be more appropriate.

      okay i'm done. sorry this was incredibly long. i guess i got in the zone.

  • juliebean@lemm.ee
    ·
    1 month ago

    How do you have solidarity when you can't support states or hierarchies?

    this line in particular is super interesting to me, as an anarchist, cause it seems to imply that you and I have completely different conceptions of what 'solidarity' even means. to me, solidarity is about supporting other people who're on my general side of this whole class war business, on a personal, individual, level. states don't enter into it. idk how one would even show 'solidarity' to that kind of inhuman authority, nor why you'd want to. what does solidarity have to do with states and hierarchies to you?

    i just got home from work and am heckin' tired, but i may come back and reply to more of your post later.