The Optimistic Anarchist: Thinking in Terms of 'Personal Anarchy' and 'Enforcement Zones'

in #libertarian8 years ago

I no longer identify as an "Anarcho-Capitalist" and maybe you be won't either after I explain why. The main reason is that the concept “property” is ill-defined, and will be well into the foreseeable future. Right now, as it has always been and likely will always be, there are several different competing theories of property out there, and all justify violence under certain circumstances. For example, some anarchists vehemently believe that “taxation is theft” while others equally righteously believe that instead “property is theft”, and both groups believe something really "ought" to be done about it.

These competing theories of property are what fundamentally divide the assorted “anarchists-with-hypens” you see pontificating across the social media platforms (and in poorly produced YouTube videos). These disagreements over definitions stand firmly in the way of the critical-mass needed to usher in their particular brand of anarchist utopia where everyone will miraculously “just get along” (paraphrasing that iconic victim of state violence Rodney King).

Look, I like the idea of property rights and you probably do too. However, how we establish ‘what belongs to who’ is a long standing question with no clear answer in sight. Some people still adhere to Locke’s labor theory of value that says something becomes yours by magically mixing your labor with it. Others believe that it is homesteading that somehow magically makes something “yours” (e.g., the childhood concept of calling “dibs”, although many indigenous cultures can testify that such claims did little to stop imperialism). Yet others, such as the Georgists and Cherokee, believe that while you can own the fruits of your labor, the natural resources like water, trees and land are communal property. Some people even believe if something is not scarce then it cannot be considered “property” (i.e., some argue that intellectual “property” isn’t property at all on these same grounds).

There are a lot of variables involved with claims of property, and different people use those different variables to define what "is" and "is not" property to them. Personally, I don’t have any fancy deontological theory of property backed by Aquinas or Locke that I will bore you with. Believe me, there is already plenty of that out there.

Instead, I would like to share with you how I see property. I take a more anthropological approach. I see what we generally call property as a subset of a very natural occurrence within mammalian politics, namely territorialism. Grandiloquence be damned, it seems to me that we ultimately define “property” by our “territorial pissings” (to steal from the title of a Nirvana song). However, much to the chagrin of some propertarian libertarians, without a state to enforce these property rights, that which we call "property" (including the property we hold in our own bodies) really just boils down to that which you can defend (or hide) until someone with superior firepower and/or asymmetrical information decides that they want to use "your" property “their” way. Period.

A close corollary to this idea that “property is simply that which you defend (with either violence or the threat of violence) or hide (conceal via deception, confusion or omission) from others” is the closely related idea that “liberty is simply what you can get away with”. In this corollary I’ve tweaked a concept promulgated by the esteemed libertarian gadfly and guerilla ontologist Robert Anton Wilson who originally said, “reality is what you can get away with.” Now all this may or may not sound like a different justification and strategy for liberty than you are accustomed to, but for those interested in learning more, this line of reasoning comes from individualist anarchists like Max Stirner and Benjamin Tucker.

For me, thinking about liberty and property this way is liberating in itself. If you accept, like me, that people will never fully agree on the definition of property or on the definition of liberty, then you can begin to let go of the utopian thinking (and the inevitable disappointment that accompanies utopian thinking) and abandon the heavy sense of duty that you must convince everyone of “the one true way”.

Instead, you can come to realize that you actually already enjoy tons of what I like to call Personal Anarchy (PA) as long as you steer well clear of what I call “Enforcement Zones” (EZ). For clarity, I define an EZ as any place where rules/laws/codes are actively enforced with the threat of some sort of punishment. For example, when you drive the speed limit only because there is a highway patrol person watching you, then you are in an EZ. When you drive freely (and most likely illegally faster than the legal speed limit allows) as soon as the cop is gone, then you have left an EZ.

EZs are few and far between actually, especially IF you make a little effort to avoid them or conceal yourself from them. It is my opinion that my Personal Anarchism is the only sort of viable, sustainable anarchism since it really relies on nobody else’s participation. As the saying goes, “No cop, no stop”. In fact, if it is true that the average American commits three felonies a day, then that means that your average American is already an unwitting Personal Anarchist! All you have to do is wake them up from being hypnotized by the words of the state (aka “laws”) when they are outside the EZs.

Now, some of you may have noticed a kinship between my PA concept and the idea of a Temporary Autonomous Zones (TAZ). In some ways, my notion of PA flips the notion of a TAZ on its head, and this is where the ‘optimism” in the title comes in. To me, the TAZ concept seems more pessimistic; e.g., in a TAZ, freedom is only temporary and relegated to “zones”. PA, on the other hand, reminds us of the permanence and near ubiquity of liberty and that it is actually the EZs that are temporary and zoned.

In this sense, Personal Anarchists have already won and we only have a few small fires (EZs) to put out (or avoid). Remember, most EZs are small (there are exceptions unfortunately) and we can help keep it that way by embracing and promoting things that enhance PA like cryptography, supporting organizations like the EFF, etc. Just remember, in many ways the fight for privacy is the fight for personal anarchy. Any and all liberty to be had in the future will likely be some sort of crypto-enforced PA, whether it is a low-tech secret society type of shit (like secret handshakes, trust & reputation, etc.) or a high-tech variety (crypto-currencies, privacy apps, etc.).

What do you think?

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Good morning @discordian! I just wanted to drop in and let you know that this post has been featured in the second volume of "Unseen Treasures", my weekly post of articles I feel were under-valued. You can see it here, and when it pays out, I will be sending you 20% of the SBD reward (evenly split with the other featured authors). Keep up the great work!

Great article. I've thought about this too: instead of a "Galt's Gulch" type of freedom zone, where we need to physically separate ourselves from others, is there a way to "swim among" the rest of society, but in a free state of being?

I don't know how to put it in words, but maybe like Dollar Vigilante's Perpetual Traveler concept? Is there a way to "opt out" of the Statist requirements and "benefits"?

Good post. I'll need to think about this for awhile before I could really give you a good response. It gave me quite a bit to ponder.

I typically identify myself as an anarcho-capitalist though I've also had civil discussions with many anarcho-communists here on steemit. All I can say is I try to never rigidly confine myself to a box. I am frequently changing my mind. :)

One of the only areas I've debated with people in the ancap movement and I constantly have problems with is property.

If I make something for a purpose of my own and someone else simply can come and take it, or repurpose it without my input, that would lead to conflict.

As to homesteading and such, I've brought that up to which people have answered "the property has already been separated, just take the government out of it now". I don't quite buy into that. I'll mention something like "so, can the first people to Mars claim all of mars as theirs?" "do we have some radius of influence around us that means it is ours?"
"Who gets to make the rules?"
"Who enforces those rules?"
"How is that not a government?"

I have similar issues with the -Communist side of things. So like I said I'll need to think on this concept of yours for awhile. This is a good thing. :)

Interesting perspective and I agree about the EZs. Rule #1: Don't get caught.

Good article. I, as an an-cap, agree with a lot of what you said. I also think the Lockean idea of mixing your labor with the land makes it yours is bullshit. However, I don't think arguing over these semantics is helpful in any way, except for maybe making us look kooky. All that needs to be said, is that the market will figure it out better than the state will. Most land, for instance, is already owned. The absence of the state isn't going to change who owns the land. The free market will, through voluntary exchange.

I like it! The TAZ rap has always been a favourite...

We're seeing Terence's 'Archaic Revival' playing out in the anarchist community, in the form of Digital Tribalism, and physical nodes are beginning to take shape here and there. It's a dream, being able to hop from one lilly-pad free-zone to another, each one filled with fascinating people and projects to participate in.

  • welcome to the TAZ - where reality is as flexible as your Will can push it -

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