• lugal@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Is it from Bullshit Jobs? Does anyone know?

    I read alot from him, I would even say he’s part of my journey towards anarchism. I’m a bit surprised to see him quoted in a communist community thought.

    Edit: I looked it up and the quote is from the preface of Bullshit Jobs so I guessed correctly

    • davel@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      Anarchists are right way more often than liberals, and are fellow travelers with other socialists, including communists. Communists & anarchists want largely the same ends; where they tend to disagree is the means.

      • lugal@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        True, anarchists believe in the unity of ends and means while communists believe in the end that justifies all means

        • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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          2 months ago

          No. Anarchists believe in the unity of ends and means, and Communists believe you can’t establish Communism through fiat and have to actually build it.

          • lugal@lemmy.ml
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            2 months ago

            Anarchists believe in building the new in the shell of the old. It’s all about building it instead of hoping for a leader who will do it for us.

            • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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              2 months ago

              Yes and no, Anarchists believe they can do away with the State overnight. Crucially, what Anarchists consider a state and what Marxists consider a state are not the same. Anarchists see states as representations of hierarchy, while Marxists see the state as a tool for class oppression, depending on who is in charge.

              The Communist strategy is not to “wait for a leader,” it’s to build up the productive forces rapidly so that economic democracy can be achieved.

              Have you read Marx, Engels, Lenin? Even if you don’t plan on agreeing with them, I think it would be useful for you to know what Communists actually believe. I can make a short reading list if you want.

              • lugal@lemmy.ml
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                2 months ago

                Anarchists believe they can do away with the State overnight.

                That’s a common strawman popularized by Engels I have never heard an anarchist say. Anarchists occupy houses, forests and land to try and live their ways. They build parallel structures in the here and now that have the potential to be the thing after the revolution (think of anarchist unions that can coordinate production while now do union stuff or Rojava which built their council structure before they had power).

                • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                  2 months ago

                  Anarchists occupy houses, forests and land to try and live their ways.

                  Yes, this is what I mean. What you refer to as “building out of the shell of the old,” Marxists would see as trying to abolish the state overnight, as though you can directly achieve Anarchism simply by getting more people to agree with it. It isn’t literally overnight.

                  They build parallel structures in the here and now that have the potential to be the thing after the revolution

                  This is largely the same mechanism Marxists suggest, the entire idea of “Dual Power.”

                  You seem quick to point out what you feel is a strawman against Anarchism, but make no effort to respond to my counter to what I believe to be a strawman against Communists, the “strong leader” idea, or the “ends justify the means” idea. I’d at least appreciate acknowledgement.

                  • lugal@lemmy.ml
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                    2 months ago

                    I’d at least appreciate acknowledgement.

                    I’ll give you that much: Communists don’t have a leader cult, it was wrong to imply it. They have the concept of “democratic centralism” which slowly but steadily shifts its emphasis from the first to the second bit.

                    Also “the ends that justify all means” was an exaggeration to emphasize the difference that anarchists focus on using only power structures they want to see in the liberated society while communists think they can get to a horizontal power structure via a vertical one. Anarchists say power structures reproduce themselves and that’s why it’s important to have the right one from the start. Communists lack any meaningful analysis of power structures but dismiss them as the superstructure that will follow the material base eventually.

                    So the “strong leader” is by no means core of communist ideology but merely a byproduct. Happy now?

                    simply by getting more people to agree with it.

                    That’s not what I said. Why do you insist on making it sound like some idealistic “market place of ideas” stuff?

                    It isn’t literally overnight.

                    What does that even mean? I never assumed it’s literally. Are we talking weeks now or months? Is that what you mean?

                    This is largely the same mechanism Marxists suggest, the entire idea of “Dual Power.”

                    Yes, that concept is used in anarchism, too. How does that fit to what you said before? Anarchists want it overnight (not literally but still) and communists suggest the same mechanism? What is the difference between the anarchist dual power that you dismiss as “not literally [but still] over night” and the Marxist one?

                    For me it’s the already mentioned lack of analysis of power structure. Communists want an “over night” revolution, put the right people in charge and they will sort things out. Anarchists will and have argued that (1.) power corrupts and (2.) positions of power attract the wrong people. I do believe Lenin that he came into power with good intentions but the power blinded him and he put “the cause” over everything else (like the workers in Kronstadt and let’s not get into Makhnov). For Stalin, well, see (2.).

                    Anarchists on the other hand say we need to build and work with horizontal power structures from the start and put a lot of emphasis not only on the critiques of existing hierarchies, but also into how hierarchies come into existence. There are “skill shares” for example to avoid “knowledge hierarchies” by teaching what you know to others and avoiding to be “the one and only expert”. Still, some people are better in things than others and will have a “natural authority” that never should succeed their expertise.

    • metaStatic@kbin.earth
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      2 months ago

      I would be surprised if the majority of people here aren’t Anarchists. The black flag comes in every colour except yellow.

      • lugal@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        Tbf I’m not active in this community so from what I know, it might be full of anarchist communists reading Kropotkin and Graeber