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- Newsgroups: alt.society.anarchy
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!linac!uchinews!news
- From: sals@deirdre.uchicago.edu (red-head fancier)
- Subject: Re: What is Anarchism
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.000522.3916@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Sender: news@uchinews.uchicago.edu (News System)
- Organization: University of Chicago Computing Organizations
- References: <1993Jan24.011823.22440@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 00:05:22 GMT
- Lines: 77
-
- In article <1993Jan24.011823.22440@midway.uchicago.edu>
- gr2a@quads.uchicago.edu (david rolfe graeber) writes:
- > In article <1993Jan20.234401.26315@shearson.com>
- pmetzger@snark.shearson.com (Perry E. Metzger) writes:
- > >gr2a@midway.uchicago.edu writes:
- > > >
- > > Going to forget
- > >Nock. Hey, you go to UChicago. I might point out that David Friedman
- > >in your econ department is an anarchocapitalist, but then I'd be lying
- > >because after all no real anarchist could believe in private property.
- > (and so on and so forth interminably, the froth spewing from
- > his mouth...)
- >
- > You know, after reading this reply, I realize I should really
- > apologize for that last posting of mine because there was something I
- > wasn't taking into account when I wrote it: something which makes the
- > whole argument entirely irrelevent. I didn't realize that I was
- > responding to a person who was totally stupid.
- >
- > E. Metzger is like a man so incredibly pleased with himself
- > that he's managed to figure out how to get through a very very
- > simple rat's maze that he just keeps going round and round and round
- > for hours on end and think's he's impressing people by doing it.
- "Lysander
- > Spooner was an anarchist; I am an Anarchist; Medieval Iceland was
- > Anarchist; therefore all Anarchism is is the absence of the state;
- Lysander
- > Spooner was an anarchist..." and on and on until everyone else gets
- > bored and goes away and he figures that must mean he won.
- >
- > I know this is pointless, but I might as well give this one
- > last spin:
- >
- > You didn't reply to my main point, which is that while individual
- > thinkers have been known to say and call themselves anything, Anarchism
- > as a mass movement has always been socialist. That's because you can't.
- > Instead you merely list the names of individuals who believe capitalism
- > would work more conveniently without the state, some of whom even want
- to be
- > called anarchists, and say that their existence compells me to accept
- your
- > definition of anarchism. Why?
- Why does your statements about the existence of socialistic anarchists
- compell me (or peter or anyone else) to accept your notion that anarchists
- must be socialists? There are many people who call themselves
- anarcocapitalists. It could also be termed a mass movement. Spooner and
- others who wanted to be called anarchists are called anarchists by the
- majority of people. By your own reasoing doesn't that mean his definition
- of anarchy is a legitmate one. >
- > The meaning of words does not come from God. It comes from human
- > agreement. When you say "anarchism means X and nothing more", what you
- > are really saying, though you are obviously too thick to realize it, is
- > "I think it would be a good thing for all of us if we agreed to use my
- > definition of this term, for the following reasons..." This is because
- > you cannot force people to accept your definition (frustrating though
- > you obviously find this).
- No he cannot, but neither can you and you cannot convince the many
- anarchocapitalists that they are not anarchists.
- >
- > There are a large number of people, millions even over the years,
- > who have been engaged in a conversation with each other where they have
- > used the word "anarchism" to mean the opposition to all forms of
- > systematic power and coercion between human beings - political,
- economic,
- > social, sexual, ANY kind. They have explored the ways all these forms
- > of power and inequality reinforce one another, and tried develop
- > alternatives to them. The meaning of anarchism - as they see it (and I
- > like to count myself among their number) is a growing, developing thing.
- > Then suddenly, Perry Metzger shows up and starts screaming "there were
- > a couple of guys in the 1800s who said they were anarchists who didn't
- > believe any of that shit you're talking about,
- >
- Actually the first time I know of anarchists who opposed government and
- wanted private property were the Levelers of the 1600's. (So people have
- tried to paint them as socialists, but if you read THEIR own writings they
- strongly supported private property)
- >
-