An Intro to Anarchism: Democratization and/or Privatization of Government
Anarchism is hated and misunderstood by a lot of people. There are really only two types of people who hate anarchism: people who are ignorant and don’t know enough about it and people who are evil fascists (e.g. authoritarian individuals who reject anarchism because it might limit their personal power over others). I’m writing this intro to anarchism(s) in the hope that the reader might be one of the former rather than the latter. I’m hoping that I can inform you about anarchism so that you might learn to sympathize with it or maybe even embrace it.
Anarchism is a political philosophy that advocates the abolition of the State. Anarchy does not mean “no government” or “no rules.” On the contrary, anarchists advocate certain types of government and support certain types of rules. What anarchy means is "no rulers". Anarchy means a form of governance without rulers, without the reign of one man over another—the abolition of kings, presidents, and politicians. Anarchism advocates the abolition of the arbitrary authority of man over man. Any authority or power relation that cannot be justified ought to be abolished. Thus, an anarchist might be okay with a person having some authority over another person who is mentally ill or who hasn’t yet reached the age of reason, since that authority is justified and necessary. The authority of one man over another sane adult, on the other hand, is unjustified and unnecessary, so the anarchist rejects it. Instead, the anarchist believes in the individual sovereignty and autonomy of all individuals. And anarchists advocate a stateless form of governance that recognizes the sovereignty of each individual over themselves.
Within anarchism, there have been two main trends. At times, each has denied the title of “anarchism” to the other, and at certain times both sides have been right in their condemnation of the other side. Two different types of anarchism(s) developed: one was democratic and federalist while the other was propertarian and market-oriented—one anarchism advocated the democratization of government while the other advocated the privatization of government. Modern anarchism tends to be so polarized, but there are also other anarchisms between the poles. There is a spectrum between propertarian individualism and communistic collectivism. The father of modern anarchism, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, does not clearly fall into one group or the other, and he can be seen as the inspiration for both forms of anarchism.
Anarchists have not advocated chaos or disorder. Instead, they have advocated the abolition of the State and its replacement with a new form of governance that continues to fulfill the necessary functions of the State without all the unnecessary bureaucracy, power relations, and infringements on liberty. There are certain things that cannot be tolerated in any civilized society. People must not be allowed to murder other people. They must not be allowed to physically abuse other people. They must not be allowed to rape other people. They must not be allowed to break in to their neighbors’ houses and steal all their food. They might, perhaps, be permitted to do some of these things without being punished if there are extenuating circumstances that would justify their actions. Perhaps the violence or killing was in self-defense. Perhaps the theft was necessary for survival. If a person is stranded in the woods and literally starving to death or freezing to death, it may be permissible for them to break into a cabin to procure enough food to survive or take shelter from the cold. Nevertheless, these are just the exceptions that prove the rule. Anarchists are no different than anyone else when it comes to such matters of social ethics. Like everyone else, we regard assault, theft, rape, and murder as crimes; and we want an organized system in place to prevent such crimes, to provide restitution to the victims, and to hold the criminals accountable. But we reject statist forms of governance and propose anarchic alternatives.
The State can be defined as an authoritarian government apart from, and above, the people. Statist forms of government are generally centralized, top-down, and arbitrary. Some anarchists have proposed abolishing the State by democratizing government. You can replace the centralized statist system of governance with a decentralized directly-democratic confederation. You can create a bottom-up system of governance by creating assemblies of fact-to-face democracy at the local level and confederating these assemblies into a democratic confederation. The decisions would be made directly by the people themselves. Some left-libertarians (AKA anarchists) have advocated majoritarian democracy but on a directly-democratic basis rather than on a republican/representative basis. Others have advocated various consensus or consensus-oriented democratic models. On the other hand, there are other anarchists who have proposed the abolition of the State through privatization. They have suggested that we could abolish the monopoly on government and allow private companies to take over the necessary functions of the State on a non-monopolistic and competitive basis. These anarchists suppose that the spontaneous order of the marketplace could be expanded to encompass governmental services. Law-enforcement and adjudication could be taken over by the private sector.
The democratization strain of anarchism was developed by Mikhail Bakunin, Peter Kropotkin, Errico Malatesta, among others, and finds its finest modern expression in the works of Murray Bookchin and Janet Biehl. The privatization strain was developed by Josiah Warren, Benjamin Tucker, and Lysander Spooner, and finds its modern expression in the works of Murray Rothbard and David Friedman. In many ways, these strains of anarchism can be seen as two entirely different philosophies, as they have very little in common apart from the rejection of the nation-state. In fact, each group tends to regard the other as faux-anarchists. The father of modern anarchism, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, however, has a more nuanced and dialectical perspective that leads to people on both sides claiming him as their own.
The Democratization Theory
The democratization camp within anarchism has advocated the establishment of directly-democratic institutions to replace top-down institutions. Instead of top-down corporations or “private businesses,” this camp has proposed the democratization of the workplace. We ought to replace corporations with worker-owned and worker-managed co-operatives. We ought to have direct democracy in the local community. People should get together in general assemblies and directly make decisions about the issues that matter. Some suggest that the local democratic assembly ought to have some control or ownership over industry. (There’s a wide range of opinions and ideas amongst anarchists within this camp, so there is no single model of democratic anarchism. Some want the workers in the factory to have exclusive control of their industry, some want the community as a whole to have exclusive control of industry, while others want something between the two.) Some democratic anarchists have proposed the combination of worker-owned industries into syndicates or confederations for the coordinated and cooperative production and distribution of goods on a socialistic basis. They’ve also proposed the formation of local democratic assemblies or councils and the confederation of these councils in order to form a democratic confederation capable of providing security and national defense.
The creation of rules or laws would be done on a democratic basis. The community could appoint people to serve as security guards or law-enforcement officers on a rotating basis. The officers could be appointed as public servants and treated as employees of the people. They could be recallable, so that it would be easy to remove a bad officer from the service through a simple democratic process. A system of juries or courts could be established or judges could be appointed democratically. These are just examples of possibilities. Obviously, a truly democratic process could lead to various different systems of law and order and justice. The best system will likely arise out of the democratic process, and I suspect that the best system is probably something that neither you nor I would have thought of. A directly-democratic system would have to allow discussion and debate before decisions could be made, and ordinary folks would be able to make proposals during the democratic process; some ordinary man or woman will likely make a proposal for how to replace the police or how to replace the courts that is infinitely more brilliant and more practical than anything we’ve ever dreamt of.
Additionally, local national guards and militias could be formed and these could be confederated into a well-organized military for the confederation. The superiors and higher ranking members of the service could be appointed through a democratic process. The lower ranking soldiers could vote for who ought to be in charge, and the communal democratic assemblies and the democratic confederation could reserve the right to remove superiors from the service or demote them through a democratic process.
The Privatization Theory
Gustave de Molinari appears to have been the first person to suggest the privatization of government. He pointed out that monopolies are generally bad. Monopolies tend to provide bad services at a high price. Without competition, there is no market mechanism to force down prices and induce companies to provide decent service. A monopoly can provide bad service and charge a high price because the consumer has no alternative. The consumer cannot opt out and go to a competitor, especially if the monopoly is the producer of some necessity. Molinari suggest that monopoly in security is like monopoly in any other field. Police with a monopoly can provide bad service at a high cost; and competition might be a good way to ensure that they provide the best service at the lowest possible price. Benjamin Tucker took up this line of reasoning and developed it further.
The school of thought that developed out of Molinari and Tucker’s ideas became known as individualist anarchism and ultimately developed into anarcho-capitalism. The individualist anarchists were socialists who rejected allodial and fee-simple property in favor of usufructuary property. They were quite critical of the sort of property arrangements that anarcho-capitalists favor. And there is legitimate grounds for arguing that anarcho-capitalism has departed from historical anarchism by supporting rulers whenever their rule is based on property. Individualist anarchists held that legitimate title to land ought to be based in occupancy and use, whereas anarcho-capitalists hold that any title is legitimate as long as the owner acquired the property through homesteading of unowned land or through purchase. Thus, the individualist anarchist would say that the landlord’s claim to rent is illegitimate because the property ought to rightfully belong to the tenant, whereas the anarcho-capitalist would recognize the right of the landlord to monopolize land for private profit. The individualist anarchist might say that the property claim of a capitalist over the means of production is illegitimate and that the workers in his factory have a more legitimate claim to ownership of the industry, whereas the anarcho-capitalist would regard the capitalist’s claim as totally legitimate. Thus, the anarcho-capitalists regard hierarchical and authoritarian landlord-tenant and employee-boss relationships as perfectly acceptable. The anarcho-capitalists, therefore, are not fully anarchist because they don’t oppose all rulers. They support rulers whenever their reign is predicated on allodial property arrangements.
The privatization camp in anarchism holds that police forces could be replaced with companies that double as insurance and security agencies. These insurance/security agencies would insure an individual’s person and property against theft and violence. If the individual is attacked and injured, the agency pays the victim for damages and seeks remuneration or reimbursement from the criminal. The agency would then act like a private detective company and a bounty hunter. They would investigate the crime and attempt to capture the criminal in order to get the criminal to pay for the damages (this would be a reimbursement to the agency for the expenses it paid out on the claim for the victim). And individuals could choose to insure their person and property with any one of these competitive agencies that they prefer. These private insurance/security agencies would not be “judge and executioner” though. There would also be a system of private courts or tribunals or arbitration services. Criminals would have to be found guilty in court before the agency could demand remuneration or reimbursement from them. And disputes between the various security agencies would have to go to court too.
Conclusion
Anarchism is not something to fear. Anarchists are not advocating violence or chaos. We are simply advocating an alternative form of social order. We want a fundamental change in the way society, the economy, and government are structured. Can you honestly look at the economy and government today and tell me that a fundamental restructuring of the system isn’t needed?
Personally, as an anarchist, I identify loosely as a mutualist in the tradition of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, although I have also been heavily influenced by later developments in anarchist theory. This means that I don’t really fall clearly into either of the camps mentioned above—or perhaps I fall into both. I think that the solution to our problems will involve a combination of democratic and market-oriented solutions. Furthermore, I don’t think the two are necessarily mutually exclusive, so I propose a democratic market solution. I am very much in favor of direct democracy, confederalism, and municipal socialism, but also in favor of money and markets. (You can check out my other Steemit posts or my website, AnarchistSocialDemocracy.com, for more about my own variety of anarchism.)
Anarchism refers to a variety of schools of thought, many of which have little in common with one another, but all of which propose to abolish the State and replace it with something more libertarian, more voluntary, more consensual. I have only covered two broad trends in anarchism and generalized their views. I have by no means covered everything and I would encourage you to look into anarchism for yourself.
Privatized statism (ancaps) look like CIA agents to me most likely hired by the Randians! Now there's a conspiracy for you.
BTW: my ideas are factoring in A.I.....This is something anarchist thinkers haven't had to consider but we sure as hell do now!
I also think limiting private property to 1 house per person is the sane compromise and sustainable way forward. The capitalist can still own the biggest house their honest merit can afford but they would only be able to own 1 title.
Anarcho-transhumanism is a small movement, I think. William Gillis addresses issues of AI, transhumanism, etc. from an anarchist perspective, although I really disagree with his views. I prefer Bookchin's approach of communalism and democratic confederalism to Gillis' individualist free association approach. There's also Aaron Bastani and "fully-automated luxury communism"...Bastani is definitely libertarian socialist, not entirely anarchist but close. But AI hasn't been sufficiently dealt with by anyone, from any political perspective. There's also the "workers of the world, relax!" folks and the labor abolitionists. Their approach to automation might have pushed them to address AI, but I'm not familiar enough with their works and ideas.
There's also Elon Musk, who advocates direct democracy and supports anarchism, definitely left-libertarian in his views (although his personal conduct has been criticized by the left). Musk focuses a lot on questions of AI. He's not exactly an anarchist theorist though.
Okay, got a chance to go through it all and didn't quite agree with this part:
"Allodial" is a new word for me:
Quite interesting.
I don't think anarcho-capitalists lump all landlord-tenant and employee-boss relationships as "perfectly acceptable" as a complete category. Instead, they value voluntary, mutually beneficial exchanges and relationships. The things you mention can fit nicely there and can also be radically abused and destructive to human well-being. I do not believe they are always destructive to human well-being. They can be hugely beneficial to everyone involved, especially to workers who do not want to the risk associated with ownership or the time and effort required obtain capital for investment to build a business, but enjoy the security of a steady income.
Anarcho capitalists certainly don't support "rulers" because they see market interactions as voluntary with no rulers in the sense of someone who controls you involuntarily. To argue market actions create hierarchies sounds similar to "nature is a hierarchical ruler over me" which, to me, isn't a very helpful mode of thought.
That said, land ownership and use is definitely a sticking point because it has been so heavily influenced by state governments for thousands of years. No one yet seems to have really good answers there, IMO.
I would argue that capitalistic property is nothing more than "legal privilege" or an artificial arrangement imposed by arbitrary violence. Usufructuary property is just what Thomas Hodgskin called "natural property," whereas capitalistic property is "artificial property." In any primitive society, usufructuary or possessory rights will naturally develop according to custom. Capitalistic property requires legal institutions, systems of enforcement, and violence.
If I acquire property, my possession of it naturally dictates my control of it. So, since I possess it, I can sell it. This is usufruct or possession. Capitalistic property is a legal arrangement that differs slightly. Capitalistic property isn't linked to possession (which is natural) but to title (which is artificial). Thus, I can own a title to a piece of land, and that title (an artificial document) is what makes me the owner. Thus, my ownership under capitalism is predicated on artificial legal arrangements. And this artificial property is in contrast to natural property. If there is abandoned and vacant land, under capitalism I cannot just homestead it, because someone else has the title even if they are not occupying or using the land—they have ownership even though they don't have possession. So, capitalistic property is kind of statist in the first place, being based on arbitrary legal titles/deeds rather than on natural rights. And capitalistic property rights can only be upheld by arbitrary aggression against non-aggressors. If a person walks on to a vacant/abandoned plot of land and tries to homestead it, the owner will call the police and have the man forcibly removed. So capitalistic property is based on the violation of the Non-Aggression Principle.
Furthermore, this sort of property leads to inequality and hierarchy. Land is currently monopolized. You can't just homestead land anymore, since every inch of land is claimed by someone. Most of the land isn't in use, so it is really in a state of nature—and you ought to be able to homestead it and claim it as your own. However, artificial titles are enforced by an authoritarian system of law and law-enforcement. Anarcho-capitalism wants privatized law and law-enforcement, but they still want the arbitrary and authoritarian system of legal privilege in regards to property titles. So anarcho-capitalism can be seen almost as advocating privatized statism instead of being on par with individualist anarchism.
Also, capitalistic property leads to wage-slavery. Once all the land is owned, there's a quasi-monopoly situation. So, some people have land and productive property and others don't. You wind up with haves and have-nots. Then you end up with a class of rentiers (landlords/capitalists) vs. a class of proletarians/wage-laborers. The one class rules over the other as bosses. The average man has little choice, being dispossessed, to do anything but sell himself as a wage-laborer to some capitalist. Sure, he can choose his employer, but that's just choosing a master, not enjoying real freedom.
If you want to read more on the property issue and the reasoning behind refusing to classify anarcho-capitalists as anarchists, you can check out my article on Proudhon's "Property is Theft": http://www.anarchistsocialdemocracy.com/pdf%20Documents/Property%20is%20Theft,%20Property%20is%20Liberty.pdf
I read the PDF and ended up doing a full post as a detailed reply. I hope you enjoy reading it! Thanks for a stimulating discussion.
Cool. I'll check it out.
anarchist capitalism is an oxymoron
Ancaps, how can you allow people to have full control over others and only give those others a choice of who can control them?
You left out the an-coms, we think everything should be free.
Everybody works, everybody eats, nobody pays rent.
Production for greed can never be satisfied, but only so many people need new shoes this week.
Managed properly we would usurp the big box stores to warehouse and obtain the goods while distributing them without money.
Keep working, stop paying and everything is free!!
Collectivism and communism fall under the democratization camp. In an intro to anarchism, I didn't think it was the appropriate place to go into great detail on specifics like collectivism vs. communism vs. mutualism vs. libertarian municipalism, etc. If you look at the names I listed under the "democratization camp," they're mostly communists. I did touch briefly on syndicalism and collectivizing industry though. I was trying to briefly outline general trends rather than get into great detail. The communist anarchists advocate direct democracy and confederation. I was concerned with democratization vs. privatization as ways of achieving anarchy. Within the democratization camp, there are several different economic perspectives. To cover them all in detail would have been beyond the scope of this essay. My real focus was "how do you replace the necessary functions of the State, like preventing crimes or holding criminals accountable?" Communism only has a very indirect relation to that question. For the most part, the democratic anarchists (whether communist, collectivist, or otherwise) are in agreement about democracy and confederation.
I got a similar comment from a Facebook friend. But I remain satisfied with the post as it is. And I don't want to get into the topic of communism without going into detail on the question of property itself. That will be the topic of my next post, where I intend to analyze Proudhon's critique of property (perhaps with a little Engels thrown in) and then go into possible alternative arrangements (e.g. usufructuary property, State-ownership, Georgism, municipal socialism, collectivism, full communism, distributism/mutualism, etc.). Trust me, communism is on my list of topics to talk about, but this post didn't seem like the right place.
You rock!
Thanks for your efforts,....
Great post. I had to skim it (time for bed), but I'm following for more and wIll re-read this in detail again later. This might be a post I can send to my statist friends who are open to anarchism, but still don't "get" it.
Thanks for this. I wouldn't class myself as an anarchist - because I need more research on it, but anarchist and anarchism has my full and total support based on what I do know and it's ideas! :)
http://theanarchistlibrary.org
The author link is at the bottom.
Proudhon, Bakunin, and Kropotkin are the big names, but Voltarine De Cleyre, Emma Goldman, and Lucy Parsons all have their contributions, as well.
Ricardo Flores Magon, if you want a Mexican viewpoint.
Some of those writers can be hard to read, especially for beginners. Reading Proudhon can be quite dreadful. I'll suggest a little lighter reading.
"The Politics of Social Ecology: Libertarian Municipalism" by Janet Biehl & "Democratic Confederalism" by Abdullah Ocalan are good places to go for the democratic strain of anarchism. Alexander Berkman's "The ABC of Anarchism" is good reading if you want to check into communist anarchism. Also, "Socialism: Utopian and Scientific" by Friedrich Engels is worth reading (it's not anarchist, but it will help you understand communist anarchism if you don't already).
For market-oriented stuff, there's "Individual Liberty" by Benjamin Tucker & "The Production of Security" by Gustave de Molinari. Maybe check out "What is Mutualism?" by Clarence Swartz. I'm definitely not an anarcho-capitalist, but some of their stuff is worth reading too. I'd recommend "The Private Production of Defense" by Hans-Hermann Hoppe & "Power & Market" by Murray Rothbard.
Great. This is what I was hoping to find - a list of text for people in their first stages of getting acquainted with anarchism. 👍
Excellent post, by the way, I have always been a supporter of anarchic ideas, but your post will help me structure all the information I have accumulated thus far from different sources. It will also come in handy next time I'm put into the position of defending anarchism against the most common misconception: that it is just a bunch of aggressive vandals running around destroying private and public property.
I'll have to check out those that I'm not already familiar with.
I know most of them and avoid the newbs due to the monarch influences.
I agree that tomes are often dreadful, and I'd go a little farther in saying that if the answers were in them we would be there already.
Here I condense my reading list: https://steemit.com/anarchylibrary/@freebornangel/this-is-for-you-larken-and-jared-too
I'm glad you are here in the struggle, as well.
There are more of us now than there was when I signed up in '85.
Hoppe sucks at life, but the particular book of his that I recommended is good.
I skimmed through the link; I'd actually already seen that post and added it to my reading list, but haven't gotten around to reading it yet. I noticed a few authors on there that I'm not familiar with, so I'll have to check them out.
I've never read Hoppe, or Locke, or a lot of others recommended in high school.
I have read this: https://archive.org/stream/RulesForRadicals/RulesForRadicals_djvu.txt
Perhaps you will enjoy it, too.
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