Thanks for responding! I’ll gloss over the pre-separator portion, there’s not much I can meaningfully respond to outside of agreeing that critique of authority is the major reason Marxists and anarchists have different means and ends.
Yes, precisely, that’s why I support no country and advocate for their abolition. This is a “gotcha” for the liberal she’s responding to, but not the anarchist who asked the question.
My biggest issue with this is that it draws no distinctions between worker controlled states and capitalist controlled states, and further ignores the problem of imperialism as the driving contradiction of the global state today.
Actually I agree with you here, namely that she expounded the Marxist argument very nicely, but she could have done that while critiquing, or at least acknowledging, or at least just not painting over anarchist concerns. Like I actually wouldn’t have said anything if she dunked on us because then at least we exist.
Fair enough, but in my view she generally has.
All states are authoritarian, and socialist states are not special just because we slap a hammer and sickle (or a circle-A, or any other sticker) on them. Some are more authoritarian than others (e.g. AmeriKKKa, Pissrael), but I’m not exactly a fan of any of any state, even when they do the right thing.
This, I take extreme issue with. I agree that all states are authoritarian, in that all states are the means by which one class oppresses others, but this itself isn’t a problem. Socialist states aren’t fundamentally, qualitatively liberatory for the working classes because there’s a symbol of communism on the flag, but because the working classes are in charge of the state, and use it to uplift themselves and protect the gains of revolution. Bakunin’s quote on the “people’s stick” is similarly terrible, it obfuscates the real fact that socialism is objectively, materially liberatory towards the working classes, and that the use of authority to protect this is a good thing.
But actually, my argument is that a lot more things that states are authoritarian, including some anarchist projects, and that authoritarian tendencies are something we all need to continuously root out of every aspect of existence.
What gives rise to “authoritarian tendencies?” Hierarchy isn’t inherently bad, in my opinion. Organizational structure often creates managerial positions out of necessity and efficiency, not out of a human desire to dominate, and at the scales of production and distribution that can most effectively satisfy the needs of everyone with the least amount of labor these become crucial for mitigating disaster and facilitating smooth logistics and production.
States are meant to be permanent and unbounded. If you want me to consent to be a part of your group, literally no matter how small, even a chess club, you gotta have bounds on the authority I have to grant you as a member, and you gotta be dissolvable. And not just on paper, but in reality.
States are not meant to be “permanent” or “impermanent.” States are meant to uphold a given ruling class. The basis of the state is in class struggle, and when the basis of class is eliminated, so too does what we think of as the “state,” as instruments of class oppression. To do so, we need to collectivize all of production and distribution, gradually. With equal relations to production and distribution, there is no class, and thus no basis for class struggle.
And I’m not even against “drastic” measures, we should be fucking destroying the bourgeoisie as hard as possible and if that makes me an authoritarian then I’m fine living and hopefully dying as an anarcho-hypocrite. Like I’m simply not interested in tolerating a future where we coexist with bourgeois nations for any amount of time, and IMO any project saying “we’ll coexist with the capitalists” (e.g. CNT at the end of the Spanish Civil War) is an indicator that the project has failed.
I think what’s happening here is you’re placing your ideals over what is materially achievable. There simply is no means to instantly destroy all of the bourgeoisie, unless you mean to nuke the world and hope an anarcho-primitivist society takes its place in the ashes. You cannot liquidate a class by killing them, but by sublimating the process of production and distribution, just like the bourgeoisie did when overtaking the aristocracy. The process of collectivization is gradual, not instang, and that means we will have to exist in the same world as the bourgeoisie, even if we spend that existence constantly struggling against them and trying to erode the basis of their existence through collectivization.
Another issue is that, despite the terrible things I personally want to do with my hands to the bourgeoisie, it isn’t in the best interests of the working class to actually be the most violent, most drastic versions of ourselves — in particular, in ways that pollute our future (i.e., establishing permanent, centralized, top-down, unbounded States). In my view, any communist project (anarchist, statist, or otherwise) is going to be polluted with the stench of the violence and terror that capitalists imposed on the world before it. We need to be constantly vigilant and work against those old haunts. One of those haunts is, in my view, the appeal to authority.
All societies are stamped with the old, but gradually work out those contradictions over time, dialectically. There isn’t a fatalism in any future society by virtue of rising from capitalism. Further, socialist states are both top-down and bottom-up, it’s both/and, not either-or, and the states themselves are transitional, not permanent. This idea of permanence itself is against reality.
I appreciate you answering, and I am not trying to be rude or mean, even if I sounded harsh on some of what I said. I do want to ask, above all else, have you studied dialectical materialism at all? Much of your analysis goes against how the world works in practice, and I think studying dialectical materialism would help greatly with reframing your analysis and giving you a deeper understanding of your own critique.
Thanks for responding! I’ll gloss over the pre-separator portion, there’s not much I can meaningfully respond to outside of agreeing that critique of authority is the major reason Marxists and anarchists have different means and ends.
My biggest issue with this is that it draws no distinctions between worker controlled states and capitalist controlled states, and further ignores the problem of imperialism as the driving contradiction of the global state today.
Fair enough, but in my view she generally has.
This, I take extreme issue with. I agree that all states are authoritarian, in that all states are the means by which one class oppresses others, but this itself isn’t a problem. Socialist states aren’t fundamentally, qualitatively liberatory for the working classes because there’s a symbol of communism on the flag, but because the working classes are in charge of the state, and use it to uplift themselves and protect the gains of revolution. Bakunin’s quote on the “people’s stick” is similarly terrible, it obfuscates the real fact that socialism is objectively, materially liberatory towards the working classes, and that the use of authority to protect this is a good thing.
What gives rise to “authoritarian tendencies?” Hierarchy isn’t inherently bad, in my opinion. Organizational structure often creates managerial positions out of necessity and efficiency, not out of a human desire to dominate, and at the scales of production and distribution that can most effectively satisfy the needs of everyone with the least amount of labor these become crucial for mitigating disaster and facilitating smooth logistics and production.
States are not meant to be “permanent” or “impermanent.” States are meant to uphold a given ruling class. The basis of the state is in class struggle, and when the basis of class is eliminated, so too does what we think of as the “state,” as instruments of class oppression. To do so, we need to collectivize all of production and distribution, gradually. With equal relations to production and distribution, there is no class, and thus no basis for class struggle.
I think what’s happening here is you’re placing your ideals over what is materially achievable. There simply is no means to instantly destroy all of the bourgeoisie, unless you mean to nuke the world and hope an anarcho-primitivist society takes its place in the ashes. You cannot liquidate a class by killing them, but by sublimating the process of production and distribution, just like the bourgeoisie did when overtaking the aristocracy. The process of collectivization is gradual, not instang, and that means we will have to exist in the same world as the bourgeoisie, even if we spend that existence constantly struggling against them and trying to erode the basis of their existence through collectivization.
All societies are stamped with the old, but gradually work out those contradictions over time, dialectically. There isn’t a fatalism in any future society by virtue of rising from capitalism. Further, socialist states are both top-down and bottom-up, it’s both/and, not either-or, and the states themselves are transitional, not permanent. This idea of permanence itself is against reality.
I appreciate you answering, and I am not trying to be rude or mean, even if I sounded harsh on some of what I said. I do want to ask, above all else, have you studied dialectical materialism at all? Much of your analysis goes against how the world works in practice, and I think studying dialectical materialism would help greatly with reframing your analysis and giving you a deeper understanding of your own critique.