Holy Hell, here I was thinking that I'm not political, turns out pop-culture depictions of anarchism made me misunderstand the concept so badly I never looked closer into it, and thus didn't have the right framework to express my political beliefs. Thank you for giving me that Framework
@Malachite76 ай бұрын
Isn't it crazy how misinformative, impersonal media limits our thoughts? When we're told something, it's easy to take at face value until we're confronted with a contradiction. Something which informs a lot of my current beliefs is that I always strive to learn about a group from those that belong to it. Even if a group is not the most _reliable_ source of information on themselves, there is innate value in firsthand accounts. When a person speaks from the heart, they undoubtedly mean what they're saying, and they tend to come from a pretty well informed position!
@itstimuism6 ай бұрын
This is very similar to how I feel. I didn’t relate to anyone around me whenever “political discussions” came up. Very glad to have found my way in this realm of ideas. Glad for you as well!
@dogwalk36 ай бұрын
hell, i've been a socialist for a long time now & while i superficially loved my anarchist allies, i believed they were to politics as satanists are to religion: mostly focused on themselves or being (said lovingly) edge lords who also are super direct-action oriented with community gardens/support. for whatever reason, i finally did a deep dive the past two weeks & didn't realize how closely they were related. i was already decidedly not MLM, & seems i fall a lot more in love with anarcho-syndicalism; but knowing both socialist & anarchists have socialism as the end goal, im all for it - i also like the anarchic feelings towards hierarchies & focus on being anti-state. can't believe it took this long for me, but here we are.
@AL-lh2ht5 ай бұрын
real talk, no two annarchist agree what a anarcy based society would look like.
@russellrhoades30445 ай бұрын
Yeah me too! The popular conception of anarchism is really really bad lol
@ja-cobin6 ай бұрын
Thanks for tackling all these 'radical' ideas with thought and measure. It's refreshing to hear people genuinely think about a better way.
@Andrewism6 ай бұрын
My pleasure!
@thequarter26 ай бұрын
@@Andrewism A world without rule is at risk of self-destruction.... if there is no one to enforce any rule, then what stops one individual from commiting an atrocity against orders..... Freedom does not guarantee peace and peace does not guarantee freedom... So anarchy needs a compromise.... but this compromise comes at the cost of anarchy loosing its meaning and purpose.... What most of us consider Anarchy to be can only exist in an ideal world were everybody can tolerate and trust each other.... realism always kicks in in the end and people fall back to archy.....
@kkounal9746 ай бұрын
@@thequarter2That was always the case. What stops those at the top from commiting any atrocity? Nothing, it's worse now even given the amount of power a single individual can hold and the caste systems isolating them from others.
@thequarter26 ай бұрын
@@kkounal974 true... as humans, we are complex and our complexity makes it hard for us to unite and agree on one idea...
@cmaslan6 ай бұрын
Hey @@Andrewism ever heard of commonism(with o not u)... ... Here are some sources to start: Capital redefined A commonist value theory for liberating life. Commonist tendencies Mutual aid beyond communism. Commonism A new astetics of the real.
@EvanC8816 ай бұрын
It is so sad to me how much anxiety I and many people feel at the idea of "not knowing what to do" in an anarchic system. We are trained to look to an authority for guidance and permission before acting. The idea of a group of people going to fix a sewer without permission or central planning blew my mind. I am a teacher and in my classroom I have seen my students follow their impulses to solve problems. I hate how many times a day I stop students from doing so. I even stop them from helping each other. I have so much pressure to fit all that they need to learn into the school day and I don't have time for five kids to all dive to collect one student's fallen papers. But it's awful. I ask myself "how would the people in an anarchic society know what to do each day and what needs to get done?" But I know even within myself that I feel impulses to do things a certain way, like organize my class a certain way, but I'm constantly looking over my shoulder, checking in with my superiors, making sure I'm doing it the Right Way. I have lost the ability to trust my own judgement and I fear that my job is only to perpetuate the cycle to the next generation.
@Andrewism6 ай бұрын
Worse yet, many treat the absence of permission from authority or central planning as the absence of organisation or planning in general. They treat hierarchy as synonymous with society. It's unfortunate, and your observation of your role as a teacher under the current system rings true, but there's a vibrant history of anarchism and education that I intend to explore soon. Stay tuned!
@normandy25016 ай бұрын
If we're just talking about what people would do in a civil engineering sense, there could be some natural turnover process like for most production work. Even if people are discouraged from forming a chain of command, there would at least have to be some sort of tracking for what work was or wasn't done to avoid duplicate or needlessly destructive work. Someone could literally compile a list of what was done and hand that over to whoever comes by next. Intuitive problem solving on your own will always be a thing unless you just need someone to hold your hand through a job due to a lack of competency in that specific job, but it wouldn't be that safe for people to just walk up out of nowhere and just start doing maintenance on something like a plane or train with no relevant context 100% of the time. Most workers, from what I've noticed, are capable of huddling together and deciding who can take care of what, but there's also less that could possibly lost in translation in terms of what does or doesn't actually need to be done when at least one person is specifically tasked to gather that information so that it can be dispersed the same way it was received. If I use my PTO to come in later for a work day, it's much more effective for me to just ask the floor lead what the status of the shop is instead of talking to 5 different people all focused on their specific task. That floor lead could still be out on the floor working as well if we absolutely can't have a leader of any sort, but I'm naturally going to go to them first since they will objectively know more than me in that moment about what tasks they were left with as the person with the role of information gathering that day. Some people may not even want that role as well. I personally know that all I feel like doing at work is my job and clocking out at the end of the day. I'll gladly stand aside and wait for whatever the group feels like doing because I'm virtually on autopilot when I show up to work.
@dranorter6 ай бұрын
@@normandy2501 A floor lead doesn't need to have authority in order to keep track of what's going on. A group of people can recognize "Oh, Jim always seems to know what everyone is doing, hey thanks Jim". And Jim can be like "Yeah, I can do a better job of that if you want; come tell me when you start a task, and I won't have to run around as much." Honestly I think anarchy is already in use way more than people seem to think. What work people do at their jobs is a blend between what they're ordered to do, and the things they alone recognize need done and then put in the effort to make happen. At my workplace at least there's plenty of spontaneous stuff-doing followed by "oh hey, thanks for doing that, it made a big difference". Businesses seek out employees who can set their own goals and take initiative on stuff ("spearhead"). The main non-anarchic thing is that of course, the benefits of this work are distributed by those in charge. But even then -- not all businesses run on tightly controlled, top-down budgets as we seem to imagine. Small businesses are improvisational. Also, there are people who go around voluntarily repairing public drinking fountains or even highway signs. But that kind of anarchy is not common.
@bramvanduijn80866 ай бұрын
@@normandy2501 Having a central contact for floor related info is just delegation, it doesn't become hierarchist until that floor lead gets followers, bigger awards, and a bigger vote on who should have his role. A delegate that can be easily replaced is anarchist, a delegate that cannot be easily replaced is hierarchist.
@TreeHairedGingerAle6 ай бұрын
That's the crux of it. We _evolved_ to collaborate and work together, the instincts your children show are integral to our humanity. Yet they are instincts that the owning class needs trained out of people, if they are to continue to rule. We are all far more brainwashed and indoctrinated into dependence on authorities than we think, and it has beggared both our imaginations, and our collective confidence in our own skills and problem-solving capacities.
@iaminvincible4086 ай бұрын
Hmm... We are lacking anarchist youtubers, you really do make a difference
@blackdaylight6 ай бұрын
There are probably plenty, but the algorithms push shorts from tiktok & whatever else is the flavor of the moment instead of content that might actually improve the world
@Bleilock16 ай бұрын
@@blackdaylightbut he isnt wrong Anarchist content compared to others is lacking
@SolaVirtusNobilitat6 ай бұрын
@@blackdaylight Shoutout to @Anark his videos are excellent
@blackdaylight6 ай бұрын
@@Bleilock1 word, I'm not saying they were wrong, just there is a ton of good anarchist content & analysis on here now, when it used to essentially just be submedia or bust
@RaptieFeathers6 ай бұрын
Beau of the Fifth Column is ancom and he's got a huge following When he's not covering current topics, he's often literally teaching things Kropotkin advocated for :D
@Pablo-hq2ni6 ай бұрын
My grandfather was an anarchist in the spanish civil war. He was a poor farmer and in the thirties found a group of like minded individuals that was based on mutual aid. That's how he learned how to read, got essential resources and picked up boxing. When war broke out he was captured in combat and became a POW, where he met my grandma. Cool guy pt. 2 in the comments
@writingsurreal35846 ай бұрын
Straight up sounds like a protagonist in a Hemingway story
@Pablo-hq2ni6 ай бұрын
@@writingsurreal3584 theres waaaaaay more to it
@Pablo-hq2ni6 ай бұрын
@@writingsurreal3584 if i get 50 likes i will write part two
@mariamfall8096 ай бұрын
commenting to get notified
@emilyperrett66486 ай бұрын
@@Pablo-hq2ni We want part 2!
@fonsui6 ай бұрын
with the sheer amount of (quality) content focused primarily or entirely on what is _wrong_ (which is necessary information, if a bit depressing) it is refreshing to take an hour out to consider what would be _right._ i struggle to find good content that gives me what to chew on in terms of building the world i want to see, and i very much appreciate the time, energy, and heart you put in to these pieces.
@Andrewism6 ай бұрын
Thank you 🫶🏽
@DanTheElevator6 ай бұрын
Anarchy is so misunderstood, even by those on the left. We need more accessible videos like this to help people understand what anarchy really means (hint: it's not chaos) and what it can look like. Thank you for your valuable work!
@treboleekem4996 ай бұрын
I don't think anarchy is only a left wing idea
@blackdaylight6 ай бұрын
Truth!!
@brodyselby84066 ай бұрын
@@treboleekem499 Anarchy is only a left wing idea. Anarchy means, simply, no rulers. Under "Anarcho-Capitalism" CEO's and the wealthy are the rulers, therefore it is not an anarchist ideology. They merely adopt the aesthetics of Anarchy as an attempt to cheapen true Anarchism, in much the same way as Libertarianism was stolen from the Left by American right wingers.
@RD-oj4jw6 ай бұрын
@@treboleekem499Are you suggesting Anarchism is a right wing idea or are you suggesting that Anarchy transcends the concept of "the left".
@treboleekem4996 ай бұрын
@@RD-oj4jw I think it depends on your definition of left and right but I will say neither. I see anarchism as without government but it also doesn’t endorse a specific economic ideology. So like hypothetically if people chose for a more capitalist based economic system that would be fine. Or a socialist one is fine too. As long as the people can choose it. Like localized communities with their own sets of economic experimentation. To be super clear I came to anarchist by my own but when I got into it I was introduced to the “anarcho-capitalist” side of it. So my background was different. I cant stand ancaps tho because they have no motive to try to come to a general understanding with the left wing anarchists. And to be fair the left wing ones can be aholes too. But yeah basically anarchism is neither.
@mollyx91206 ай бұрын
As a burnt-out, tired audhd person, I appreciate so much that you are breaking down these concepts for us in a clear, concise way, with further readings suggested. I can’t do all the reading and studying that I wish right now, but these videos still help me learn and keep me in touch with my interests. The concepts in anarchy make me feel more human and more hopeful than anything else I’ve experienced and I appreciate that you make this videos, I can access different affirming ideas in a way that works for my disabilities
@dragosoros45546 ай бұрын
As another burnt-out, tired audhd person, I can really relate to that whole not reading as much as I want to and having to watch videos like these. I used to read audiobooks while doing other stuff but now I do nothing. It really does feel like the hierarchies of today are the only reason we are disordered (Which is a word I like because it's sort of like we oppose the current order) and our conflicts with society's mold are the symptoms, so anarchy gives me a lot of hope too. I hope we both find ways to cope and liberate ourselves even if there is no revolution in our time.
@wellesradio6 ай бұрын
Hope you all feel better. Remember, it’s not the ADHD that slows you down. It’s the burn out. I tell ADHD people all the time- you can read and enjoy studying books just as much as the next person. You’re not dumb. It’s about overcoming burn out and depression. If I told myself, “I have ADHD, so I can’t read,” then I might as well say I can’t read because I’m too dumb.
@thumper86846 ай бұрын
@@wellesradio ADHD is very often comorbid with dyslexia. Also have you tried reading a book while also having an argument with the author/yourself? I know reading is not passive for anyone, but it is a maze of off-ramps for anyone with ADHD. {edit} I should have said minefield instead of maze. For what it's worth. More interesting == more off-ramps. Better writing == fewer off-ramps.
@fdracnc6 ай бұрын
yes
@dragosoros45546 ай бұрын
@@thumper8684 Definitely relate to getting "off-ramped" as you say when reading. Honestly looking into dyslexia I relate pretty well, I just managed it well enough to not notice it was a problem. Story of my life, add that to the list of comorbidities!
@jeremy.oliver6 ай бұрын
53 minutes on anarchy? Oh what a gift.
@SimSetSoPalestine6 ай бұрын
A'men !I know little about Anarchy & are there any cross section with Libertarianm 🤔
@lilpwnage366 ай бұрын
@@SimSetSoPalestineA little? Both oppose authority, but anarchists tend to be left wing and/or communist
@rickdingenenzo6 ай бұрын
@@lilpwnage36what do you mean by "left wing and/or communist", communism is left wing so how could someone not be left wing but be communist
@pizzapastaparty30956 ай бұрын
more like what a GRIFT amiright
@takethebread7946 ай бұрын
@@SimSetSoPalestine left libertarianism, yes. Right libertarianism (ancaps) no.
@mollymcallister16716 ай бұрын
Me: "I dunno about this whole 'Anarchy' business." 10 minutes later: "Wait... wait-wait-wait... there is a distinction between 'Issuing Orders' and 'Giving Instructions'?" Mind = Blown!!
@Malachite76 ай бұрын
I'm so happy to hear about your learning! Keep it up! 😎
@KootFloris6 ай бұрын
Anarchy is a wonderful idea, yet has a quite a few hardcore weaknesses! These ones do need some consideration before it can ever have a kind of success, I fear. 1. Anarchists I met had often the most judgemental attitudes towards others, 'be part of the culture of be out' and no sense of humour. For me goes: If I can't play in it, I don't want to be part of the revolution. ;) 2.Freedom from state influence is often abused by big corporations or gangs. There's always people who'll consciously try the abuse the system and will exploit weaknesses. 3. This is a sad one, masculinity. The philosophy is too much a mental developed ideology that will only work when we all play along. Get it, anarchy demands playing along to work. Maybe not with authorities, but with the model, and everyone feeling able to judge others for breaking some rule. I support collaborative anarchy, or even better collaborative forms of regenerative design, as part of looking for a more human organic way to how people already love to organise and according to what nature needs. For if we fail to restore nature, or make space for it, all human squabble about how we should organise is a distraction, unless it seeks to help. For this is the one big indicator: are you seeking to help the bigger whole with your actions? And yes, democracy is sick and barbaric. It's ritual tribal warfare, with a lot of cheats. Yet how to grow above and beyond? Anarchy? For there is one last huge obstacle: convenience. A supermarket offers convenience. Run my own gardens, fruit orchard and have weekly meetings to make it work is just way too much fuzz. Nobody wants fuzz, and most are also caught in the abusive lie, that we don't have time for this, especially those caught in bullshit jobs. And at the same time, I love this channel, and its search for answers to huge social questions.
@strange71906 ай бұрын
Yeah a warlord coming into your land and pointing a gun at you is just "giving instructions"
@Ben-jj4pl6 ай бұрын
@@KootFlorisanarchism is when no grocery stores
@KootFloris6 ай бұрын
@@Ben-jj4pl as a solution or as the problem?
@begonia226 ай бұрын
The necessity of hierarchy have been so ingrained on all of us, that it is so difficult for people to imagine a world without it. Every time I talk to people about this, they say "But then nothing will get done!". We are so used to having other people tell us what to do, that we cannot imagine a world without someone leading us. I think that the problem is that having a leader actually comforts a lot of people, because it means they do not have to take responsibility for their actions in particular or for the state of the world in general. I think that is why hierarchical structures appeal to people that are not leaders themselves.
@dranorter6 ай бұрын
My gut instinct is kind of the opposite of "nothing will get done!". I think "nobody will get paid!" People are often very willing to do work they see needs done, and much less willing to ask for some form of compensation.
@iloveowls87486 ай бұрын
It's something that Daniel Baryon (Anark) calls hierarchical realism
@FunkyLittlePoptart6 ай бұрын
Are those all the kind of people who have been socialized to do nothing but work and binge watch garbage? Have they never met people with hobbies or causes? Nothing will get done? These are people who have never been to a makerspace or volunteered at a shelter or a food bank or taken their kids to a neighbourhood play group- I know a ton of people who "Get more done" outside the realm of paid labour than inside it. And none of them need anyone to tell them what to do. They see a thing, and they do it.
@Laach8266 ай бұрын
@@FunkyLittlePoptartwhat about people who cant get stuff done such as the disabled, elderly, children, etc.? Sure, theres no guarantee they get taken care of in current societies, but I'm still concerned about their chances in an anarchy.
@scottmuhlestein256 ай бұрын
I agree. Before I was in my current job I thought management and bosses were useless. But now being in that position I’ve realized that most people haven’t been taught how to lead themselves and be self directed. It would take a whole re-education for most people because everyone grows up without the responsibility of thinking for themselves because of our school system. I didn’t realize how deep that went for a long time because i was homeschooled. I think under the current mindset a boss is necessary, but I think mindsets could be changed
@echitester6 ай бұрын
thank you for the language around expertise. for years ive been saying "deferring is not the same as obeying" to describe the difference between taking direction from someone who has important skills or knowledge versus going along with an authority's demands. this is a much more concise way to describe it. we are forever in your debt. thank you.
@TreeHairedGingerAle3 ай бұрын
@@echitester 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾✨ EXACTLY!!
@floreii6 ай бұрын
this is a really good video, both rhetorically, artistically and theoretically. ive always supposed anarchic ideals to be the ultimate form of liberation, but have been dubious of the practicality of such and this video begins to help show that.
@Andrewism6 ай бұрын
Thank you for your kind words
@stephenwilliams1636 ай бұрын
Oh my god Andrew. I've been studying anarchism and engaging in anarchist projects for close to two decades now, and still you've taught me something new here. You've made some space for me to reevaluate some of my own ways of thinking. Well done and thank you!
@arsyn.kolgrim6 ай бұрын
i found this channel after someone posted a comment that Aaron Bushnell made on a Reddit thread naming this channel as one very educational source that he loved and recommended. i’ve fallen in love with this content, because it has given me the hope that the world will be brighter one day. the seeds of revolution have been sowed, we will not be crushed. long live the resistance ✊
@emmagibson38376 ай бұрын
I also found Andrewism through Aaron Bushnell ❤
@bramvanduijn80866 ай бұрын
I'm sad Aaron is gone, but I am happy you found this channel because of Aaron.
@gracelewis60716 ай бұрын
I am also here because of Aaron. May he rest in peace and power. Ive been a longtime anarchist. I have complex feelings about everything happening and that has happened over the last few months, but am happy to be in good company with Aaron and Andrew and many others.
@jessica_s96516 ай бұрын
I've been here for a bit longer than that, but this is super sweet to hear that Aaron brought you here. I also recommend Zoe Baker and Anark. They are also anarchist youtubers
@arsyn.kolgrim6 ай бұрын
@@jessica_s9651 i did find Anark when his videos came up in my recommended! i will absolutely look into Zoe Baker as well though :) thank you for the recommendation
@MeatyZeeg6 ай бұрын
As I get older I find myself moving closer and closer to an Anarchic need.
@NeoPokebonz6 ай бұрын
I love that you used the word need, cause that's how I've been feeling as I age
@ReapingTheHarvest6 ай бұрын
Interesting. I was an anarchist as a child, now I want to restore the monarchy.
@thequarter26 ай бұрын
A world without rule is at risk of self-destruction.... if there is no one to enforce any rule, then what stops one individual from commiting an atrocity against orders..... Freedom does not guarantee peace and peace does not guarantee freedom... So anarchy needs a compromise.... but this compromise comes at the cost of anarchy loosing its meaning and purpose.... What most of us consider Anarchy to be can only exist in an ideal world were everybody can tolerate and trust each other.... realism always kicks in in the end and people fall back to archy.....
@KoreGaJiyuuDa6 ай бұрын
@@thequarter2 The threat of retaliation usually is what stops them. Same reason we don't use atomic bombs. We could use them technically but it would also likely be the last time we use them haha!
@spartan28676 ай бұрын
@@ReapingTheHarvestjust curious, why?
@megbeasterfield10 күн бұрын
I have always felt a deep joy from being able to provide for those around me. Caring for my cat, baking for my wife, sharing with my neighbor. Anarchy seems so enabling in this, like if I and others find joy in gardening and sharing food, we can unite around that interest without having to ask permission to use the earth. We can still use good practices, and make clean and healthy food, but we won't have to jump through a million hoops just to care for those around us. It feels like such a natural, instinctual way of being-- to use my skills, my expertise, my joy, and my instinct to work with and care for those around me.
@TerrorSyxke10 күн бұрын
I think I best make anarchy the terms of what will become of the us if I and many others get too tired of what will come
@Stickssupremer7 күн бұрын
Sadly not everyone is so loving and caring, hence why a state is required. I deep-dived on this subject in my latest comment, i urge you to find it and see why so. I respect everyones opinion, tho hate to see Anarchist propaganda being spread, making it seem as a perfect world.
@ppleberrynd4 күн бұрын
@@Stickssupremer If uncaring people exist, why should we give them power? If unloving people exist, why should we give them power? Anarchists do not believe in a perfect world -- anarchism is not utopian, merely focusing on removing all hierarchical power structures.
@johncoltranesethic186 ай бұрын
Anachy is beautiful. It gives to human kind the maximum of dignity and realisation.
@Scolecite6 ай бұрын
Then go live in Alaska in the woods and you'll have your Anarchy.
@johncoltranesethic186 ай бұрын
@Scolecite I prefer Cordova, Andalusia. The weather is crazy down there, can you believe that there's a church INSIDE a mosque?
@thequarter26 ай бұрын
A world without rule is at risk of self-destruction.... if there is no one to enforce any rule, then what stops one individual from commiting an atrocity against orders..... Freedom does not guarantee peace and peace does not guarantee freedom... So anarchy needs a compromise.... but this compromise comes at the cost of anarchy loosing its meaning and purpose.... What most of us consider Anarchy to be can only exist in an ideal world were everybody can tolerate and trust each other.... realism always kicks in in the end and people fall back to archy.....
@johncoltranesethic186 ай бұрын
@@thequarter2 If you were in front of me i'll like to talk about it. But on the internet i believe it's quite impossibile to make a point that's not misunderstood in five seconds. I'm just curious: what do you think a just, fair world would look like? What is "good control"?
@thequarter26 ай бұрын
@@johncoltranesethic18 As stated before:: as a realist, all ideologies ever developed can only be practiced or purely executed in an ideal world where everybody can tolerate and trust each other (without fear, anger or hate).. but as humans, we are complex... so complex that our ideologies are rarely consistent. A just and fair world cannot exist because every ideology has its protesters, rioters, warmongers and detractors. My hope is for humans to come together and agree to work together for the greater good.... As humans, our complexity is both our biggest flaw and biggest strength.... we are unpredictable from the moment we are born... we want peace and freedom... but our versions and visions of such goal differs from individual to individual.... we call ourself the human race, but we refuse to run together or run on different lanes at different speeds... we all have our personal motive, some of which clash with others.... Tolerance is the only way Anarchy can come about... but until then... we are stuck with idealism... and the need to compromise.... Social Revolution is a slow and continuous process that compromises to adapt to different environments and ideals... hence, it will never reach a conclusion or a proper and acceptable destination.... What do you think... Freedom and peace are two ideals that we struggles to reconcile....
@leitnerpiper696 ай бұрын
my mother is an anarchist and watching my communities shift to more anarcho-adjacent ideas is so refreshing
@zephshoir6 ай бұрын
Thank you for your work Andrew, it is truly aspiring. Great timing too with International Worker's Day, and the recent Pro-Palestine protests at American Universities. You all give us all hope, and we can all work together to achieve a better work
@nathandavis98306 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure that this isn't what was meant (since you do talk about intentional organizing), but the repeated emphasis on things being "organic" felt reminiscent of how some activists will have a romantic ideal of movements developing spontaneously and thus neglect to put in the long-term, methodical work of active organizing that's necessary for movements to not just fizzle out or be co-opted. Regardless, I enjoyed the video and your perspective, as always.
@d0nj035 ай бұрын
Yeah, it feels like this side of the theory desperately needs to be coupled with AnRel's remarks that activities that don't get us closer to The Goal (liberation of all, or whatever you want to call it) aren't the right Direct Action, taking 3 steps forward and 3 steps back isn't the right Direct Action, stagnating politically isn't the right Direct Action etc.
@ariadgaia59325 ай бұрын
I've always felt that Anarchy as you define it, Andrew, is exactly as our world is supposed to be. It's how our ancestors in the deep past lived. I may concede to living in the world today as society demands, but in every corner of my life I practice anarchist principles.
@sykora95262 ай бұрын
How do we prevent violence between certain free associations? How do we stop discrimination? What if a group of fascists come together and make a free association with the intent of trying to reinstitute hierarchy and enacts violence on whichever minority they despise? Do we simply hope that another free association of people decide to protect that group? How do we prevent war? I view myself as a libertarian socialist, and I oppose most systems of hierarchy, but I don't know how we make a truly anarchist system resilient to the test of time. Hierarchy may not be natural, but it didn't come from nowhere. Groups of people fought over resources and they formed different groups to organise their fights over such resources and over 1000s of years, those groups built to fight over and control resources eventually formed the systems of hierarchy that we are familiar with today. We might one day succeed in making a horizontal anarchist society. But what would keep it from becoming corrupted? What would stop hierarchy from reinstituting itself? How do we protect minorities from violence/coercion by the majority? I don't know the answers to these questions and my fear is that the answer is that you can't. That hierarchy, domination, violence, and coercion are inevtiable. But I do hope that we can minimize these as much as possible, and I think anarchist teachings are vital to understanding these concepts and teaching us how to analyze systems of hierarchy/how power flows.
@LethalBubblesАй бұрын
before police, the powerful would hire assassins, and while still goes on in the presence of police, law and order and revenge are different solutions to similar problems. Military and war are a bit different as they are about your security from other rulers and your own resource use. Material security to sustain production really seems to be driving force bethind all war, inequality, class struggle. it begins with building 2 societies imo, one idealistic without hiearchy, and one realistic with hiearchy implemented in a way that is not so brutal, and use one to be a bridge to the other.
@Catthepunk6 ай бұрын
Can you talk about how people who inflict serious harm will be able to freely associate without people just deciding to lynch them? Can you talk about how bouncers are different to cops? Can you also talk about how food production, raw materials collection, distribution of food and materials, and water distribution can and or is being made more anarchic?
@anarchozoe6 ай бұрын
Interesting video. I have one slightly pedantic point and I hope I don't come across as aggressive. You claim at 23:00 that "early in his politics anarchist Errico Malatesta was in favour of majority voting within anarchist organisations when there was no consensus. Yet he still conceded that decisions should only be binding on those who favour them. Later on he would reject the rule of the majority entirely." I'm not aware of any evidence to support this interpretation. In the quote you cite Malatesta is just making a point he'd been making since he became an anarchist and which was just a standard position among anarchists within the 1st international and beyond: anarchism is against all forms of government, including democractic government/majority rule, and advocates free association. Italian anarchism emerged within the revolutionary republican movement and so was full of people who had initially been supporters of a democratic republic but now rejected it in favour of anarchy. So Malatesta rejected majority rule when he abandoned republicanism and became an anarchist at the age of 17/18. Malatesta consistently advocates the same position on anarchist decision-making over and over again: unanimous agreement/majority voting + decisions are only binding for those who vote in favour of them + free association. In 1884, when he was 31, he wrote, "in practice one would do what one could; everything is done to reach unanimity, and when this is impossible, one would vote and do what the majority wanted, or else put the decision in the hands of a third party who would act as arbitrator, respecting the inviolability of the principles of equality and justice which the society is based on." (Malatesta 1884) I wouldn't call this early in his politics. Elsewhere he clarified that he advocated majority voting under two circumstances. He explained in 1907 in response to anarchists who rejected all forms of voting: "the vote used to record opinions certainly has nothing anti-anarchist about it, just as the vote is not anti-anarchist when it is only a practical and freely accepted means to resolve practical issues that do not allow for multiple solutions at the same time, and when the minority is not obliged to submit to the majority, if this does not suit or please them" (Malatesta 2023, 258-9). In other words, majority voting as polling and as decision-making when one decision must be made and multiple solutions cannot co-exist eg if a person should be made editor of a newspaper or not. He did not regard either form of majority voting as a form of majority rule providing it occurs within a free association and does not consist of relations of domination. Compare the following quotes: 1897: "If a railroad, for instance, were under consideration, there would be a thousand questions as to the line of the road, the grade, the material, the type of the engines, the location of the stations, etc., etc., and opinions on all these subjects would change from day to day, but if we wish to finish the railroad we certainly cannot go on changing everything from day to day, and if it is impossible to exactly suit everybody, it is certainly better to suit the greatest possible number; always, of course, with the understanding that the minority has all possible opportunity to advocate its ideas, to afford them all possible facilities and materials to experiment, to demonstrate, and to try to become a majority. So in all matters not amenable to several solutions running simultaneously, or where differences of opinion are not so great as to make it worthwhile parting company, with each faction doing as it will, or where the duty of solidarity imposes unity, it is reasonable, fair, and necessary for the minority to defer to the majority. But the submission of the minority must be the effect of free will determined by a consciousness of necessity, must never be made a principle, a law, which must, therefore, be applied in all cases, even when there is no necessity for it. And just here is the difference between Anarchy and any kind of government" (Malatesta 2016, 18-19). 1927: "Certainly anarchists recognise that where life is lived in common it is often necessary for the minority to come to accept the opinion of the majority. When there is an obvious need or usefulness in doing something and, to do it requires the agreement of all, the few should feel the need to adapt to the wishes of the many. And usually, in the interests of living peacefully together and under conditions of equality, it is necessary for everyone to be motivated by a spirit of concord, tolerance and compromise. But such adaptation on the one hand by one group must on the other be reciprocal, voluntary and must stem from an awareness of need and from goodwill to prevent the running of social affairs from being paralysed by obstinacy. It cannot be imposed as a principle and statutory norm. This is an ideal which, perhaps, in daily life in general, is difficult to attain in entirety, but it is a fact that in every human grouping anarchy is that much nearer where agreement between majority and minority is free and spontaneous and exempt from any imposition that does not derive from the natural order of things." (Malatesta 2014, 488). Notice that the points are exactly the same and expressed in almost the same words. This includes the position you emphasize when citing the quote from his platformism critique: "the submission of the minority must be the effect of free will determined by a consciousness of necessity, must never be made a principle, a law, which must, therefore, be applied in all cases, even when there is no necessity for it." Malatesta, Errico. 1884. Between Peasants. Malatesta, Errico. 2014. The Method of Freedom: An Errico Malatesta Reader. Edited by Davide Turcato. Oakland, CA: AK Press. Malatesta, Errico. 2016. A Long and Patient Work: The Anarchist Socialism of L’Agitazione 1897-1898. Edited by Davide Turcato. Chico, CA: AK Press. Malatesta, Errico. 2023. The Armed Strike: The Long London Exile of 1900-1913. Edited by Davide Turcato. Chico, CA: AK Press.
@sharkythegw78436 ай бұрын
You wrote a whole essay with a works cited page 😭 No shade, though. I get the point that you're making. I love your videos btw. I also bought and read your book. It helped me better understand the concept of means and ends unity. You do great work :)
@Andrewism6 ай бұрын
Thank you for this contribution, it's definitely appreciated!
@jessica_s96516 ай бұрын
I love both your work. @anarchozoe is your personal position the same as Malatesta? I also wonder if free association has limitations where there is large disagreement especially over things like allocation of resources and projects that affect an entire society, etc?
@guyfauks25766 ай бұрын
@@sharkythegw7843zoe type of girl to read the terms and agreements, hit decline, and then make a 20 page rebuttal to the terms and agreements
@janosaideron73716 ай бұрын
Hey.. just a little thing… PROCEEDS TO WRITE AN ENTIRE DOCUMENTARY SCRIPT ON THE LITTLE THING
@N8ThaGr8r6 ай бұрын
I really really really want to believe in this. But listening to this gave me a 1000 more questions than it answered. And raised some serious concerns. I dont say that from malice but genuine concern and desire to find common ground
@jh54016 ай бұрын
Honestly, that is something I love about anarchism. I'm never in full agreement and I am very skeptical of a lot of the concepts I hear about- but pulling thst discomfort, disagreement, and skepticism apart is fascinating. I find even completely outside of ideological anarchism, in a society with a state and everything, anarchist concepts have so much value and that's what motivates me to learn more and explore those differences and questions, rather than finding an ideology that I 100% agree with or anything
@Anita.Cox.6 ай бұрын
Watching this video made me realize that I had no idea what anarchy and anarchism was until just now.
@Kahneq6 ай бұрын
I feel like the strong combination of prioritizing community connection/gathering, and self reflection/self inquiry, would gradually materialize anarchy as the common way of life.
@ununun99955 ай бұрын
In a vacuum
@MRuby-qb9bd5 ай бұрын
Yes, it definitely requires cultural homogeneity and a shared worldview to work.
@hdnfbpАй бұрын
@@MRuby-qb9bd That applies to all ideologies
@materialgurl4206 ай бұрын
Regarding democracy, my views against it were really solidified when I read about how democratic bodies and populations are almost always formed through political actors centralizing and consolidating power within a particular sphere. It is through the centralizing efforts of monarchs in Europe that bodies and identities were created that later went on to struggle against monarchs but within the polity that they created. Same applies to the democracy of the Greeks, and so on. And when these bodies are threatened, figures with remarkably undemocratic central powers come back into the fold (think dictators, etc). Democracy has always revolved around significant centralization around an abstract view of "the people", which is sometimes said to be "represented" by representatives, which in good times might be less centralized but in worse times under figures like dictators. This is inescapable because the priority and authority is given to an abstract representation of people, not real relationships and people.
@shyntrax6 ай бұрын
"Democracy of the Greek" 🤡🤢🤮
@helloocentral6 ай бұрын
seems like you're talking about what Marxists would call bourgeois democracy. it's narrowly defined societally as the one true Democracy by the west but I think small-d democracy could come in many forms/technologies (social and otherwise)
@ThePi314Man6 ай бұрын
You're heavily generalizing bourgeois representative democracy as democracy broadly. Anarchism cannot exist or meaningfully function without democratic organization of society.
@Quarter3246 ай бұрын
You characterization of democracy is true within the context of capitalism. Your reference to democracy's new formation under monarchic rule is accurate, however its formation was precipitated by the bourgeoisie - take England during the 17th and 18th centuries for example. Thus, I think your characterization of democracy, while true historically, is only true within the context of capitalism's formation within the historic revolutions of the bourgeoisie in Europe. I think that context is important to analyze if we, the *working class*, want to actualize democracy as it *should* exist (as it was conceptualized by Engels and Marx, rather), but I don't think democracy is worth writing off entirely because of that context. As Andrew said at the end of this video: anarchism has a troubled past and has yet to actualize in the forms theorized or hoped for by anarchists - Spain in the early 20th century, Ukraine, the European and American communes of the 19th century, etc.. That does not mean Anarchism should be forgotten or discounted because of those past failures, and I think the same applies to democracy.
@Anita.Cox.6 ай бұрын
@@ThePi314Man a democratic organization of society is nebulous, even if we had a direct democracy there will always be laws supported by a majority and not supported by the minority creating a system of domination and subordination. instead an anarchistic world would exist in a system of free association where anyone can help their community through organizations that can band together and separate whenever they please removing systems of domination and subordination.
@erininstereo476 ай бұрын
Communication and innovation are just as important for social structures as it is for technological advancement. Love your work, always gets me to see things in new ways!
@chasarch67066 ай бұрын
I thought I had a pretty good grasp on Anarchist thought until I watched this video. Now I realize I have so much more to learn. Thank you for your work and voice!
@Lucretia9166 ай бұрын
As a Marxist, I love your videos; your personal experiences used as examples for well-researched and thought out points that I can never disagree with. A problem I’ve often despised from my camp has been an obsession with beating capitalism at its own game - raving about the explosion of industrial productivity in the USSR for example instead of focusing on what that goal that was done for. A true revolutionary is fueled by love for mankind and I think you embody that completely. When Revolution comes I wish it looks like yours. And the Caribbean accent is always great to listen to lol
@tankiegirl5 ай бұрын
Isn't it natural for Marxists to want to point out how successful socialism irl has been?
@AL-lh2ht5 ай бұрын
@@tankiegirl by being better capitalists?
@tankiegirl5 ай бұрын
@@AL-lh2ht By materially improving the lives of people via revolution. Isn't that the point of left politics?
@RD-oj4jw4 ай бұрын
@@tankiegirl Ok, then why not support social democracy? At least social democracy can give the quality of life improvements that ML states have, without the genocides and authoritarianism.
@tankiegirl4 ай бұрын
@@RD-oj4jw Read Marx and/or Lenin and you'll find out why Marxists prefer dictatorship of the proletariat over reformist capitalism
@rosspirsigАй бұрын
"In order to change an existing paradigm you do not struggle to try and change the problematic model. You create a new model and make the old one obsolete." - Buckminster Fuller. Thanks for the video, very inspiring.
@mixedbagclips25114 ай бұрын
As presented Anarchism only works on small scale agricultural communities. I would love for you to provide an example of a big city and country with its countless industries and companies moving towards anarchism.
@Grundrisse4 ай бұрын
Your demand is incoherent. A big city is always equipped with Authority, centralization, statism, and its subordination/relation to a hinterland. A common error is thinking cities are merely large places where there are a lot of people packed densely enough, not realizing that that's just a vague notion; for example when does 'large' kick in? 100 people? 1000? 10000? One million? In urban literature, generally size alone does not a city make. A settlement must behave like a city. So how does a city behave? A city generally is a large and dense gathering of people that subordinates a rural countryside to its rule. In other words, a complex dense organization that subordinates a rural area. It is immobile, facilitates capital flow and economic activity, and has social differentiation (capitalist division of labor and/or bureaucracy/authority). Cities attract people to them by their opportunities (mostly for food, or through jobs which again provide food). Also, historically: >there has never been a city which was not a state, or subject to a state. The state always precedes and produces the city, as it did in the earliest (archaic) states. It did so in Mesopotamia, in China, in Mesoamerica and in Peru-Bolivia - the “pristine” states, i.e., “those whose origin was sui generis out of local conditions and not in response to pressures already emanating from an already highly organized but separate political entity.”[1005] All other historical states, and all existing states, are secondary states. The state preceded the city in archaic Greece, including Attica.[1006] Two archaeologists of Mesoamerica state the case succinctly: “While urbanized societies are invariably states, not all states are urban.”[1007] The statist origin of the city is not only a matter of inference, but of record. As Lewis Mumford states: “I suggest that one of the attributes of the ancient Egyptian god, Ptah, as revealed in a document derived from the third millennium B.C. - that he founded cities - is the special and all but universal function of kings.”[1008] In a comparative study of 23 early states, pristine and secondary, urbanisation was absent in eight of them.[1009] Truly urban agglomerations depend on the state, whose emergence is the political aspect of class society.[1010] That is the “more modern view,” according to Elman R. Service: “We now know that some archaic civilizations lacked cities, while others became states before their cities developed.”[1011] “Urbanization” can be very straightforward: “when a state-level society takes over and tries to control peoples who are not used to obeying kings and rulers (i.e., tribal and other nonstate peoples), a common practice is to force people to live in towns and cities where they can be watched and controlled more easily than if they live scattered across the landscape.”[1012] * Bob Black, Nightmares of Reason There's no accurate history of cities that can furnish an example to the contrary. As for country, that implies nation, borders, socially-constructed national identities, and thus the parasite of nationalism/patriotism. You're not looking for anarchism, you're looking for a typical image of capitalism as a thrust towards an "anarchist" Society. Why don't you instead look for neoliberal settler-colonialism with a side of green capitalism as a transitional phase towards democratic market socialism?
@EmonWBKstudios6 ай бұрын
This video could also be titled "Anarchy: what it actually is and how to build it" Too many people think Anarchy is The Joker (TM) or Zaheer from the worst Avatar series, and that therefore, as a political ideology, should be mocked and dismissed, while clinging to the exploitative ways of capital and its enslaving nature. I hope your vid changes many minds, and helps people break out of the neo-liberal mind prison.
@brandonmercado84386 ай бұрын
Anarchy most certainly should be mocked and dismissed. It has no feasible way of actually developing in the world and even less of a chance of remaining on any large scale. It is a pipe dream at best for those who want to be their own boss while disregarding everyone else.
@Grundrisse5 ай бұрын
@brandonmercado8438 Democacy should be mocked and dismissed. The "great image" of the large-scale Society (Capital S) you're touting builds itself on the backs of the proletarians (capitalism), patriarchy, settler-colonialism, needless destruction of environments and the animals living there, etc. etc. etc.
@caaaaats98906 ай бұрын
Thank you for always being accessible with your videos and always putting in real captions. It means a lot.
@Andrewism6 ай бұрын
Glad it's helpful! Honestly I'm not sure why most scripted KZbinrs don't just auto upload their script as captions.
@caaaaats98906 ай бұрын
@Andrewism you know, i never really thought of that being an option either! 😯
@anguisfalx16546 ай бұрын
We could do it. I really truly believe that it is our fear of the danger of change that holds us back, But We could do it. We've always been able to do it. Stand up, And be true.
@no_not_that_one6 ай бұрын
Just when I’ve been realizing that being at my painfully centrist college has almost deradicalized me by just not having other anarchists there, you come out with this banger, perfect timing (they do have a pro-Palestine movement though but it’s very small and outnumbered and forced by the college to be more moderate than it is, I do give them a ton of credit for existing here though)
@N1ghthavvk6 ай бұрын
I just hope they're not pro-Terrorist... there's a fine line to be tread here.
@af88286 ай бұрын
@@N1ghthavvk "i just hope the south african and algerian resistance arent pro terrorist" "i just hope the slaves revolting chattel slavery dont cross my liberal sensibilities"
@N1ghthavvk6 ай бұрын
@@af8828 I'm sorry, but were you actually there, on the ground in Gaza? I am basing my opinion on the facts I've been told by people who actually experienced what happened. And consequently there's only one side that I can reasonably empathize with: The civilian population victimized by both of their respective rulers. Anything else and you're falling for propaganda and lies by people who like to choose their truths. Hamas and Netanyahu (rightwing Israeli politics) have to go, if there's to be lasting peace. I recommend "Tom David Frey" here on YT, if you'd like to have some insight into ordinary perspectives (you don't need to understand the language - just watch).
@af88286 ай бұрын
@@N1ghthavvk people who experienced which event? Over 120 years of colonialism, multiple mass expulsions and 75 years of apartheid? Ohh or do you mean the literal extreme-right settlers (keyword: settlers, not civilians) squatting on kibbutzes attained illegally by violation of international law and immense violence, who were peft unprotected? Settlers who actively serve in the colonial occupation force? Riight.
@fonsui6 ай бұрын
@@N1ghthavvk you may have trouble defining terrorism without it including the united states, israel, and most other "first-world" nations; it is more useful to look at this conflict as oppression and resistance. we dont have to like the full set of values the resistance holds as individuals or as an organization, we just have to acknowledge that they are the ones resisting the oppressive power. when the oppression ends, we can address the problematic values that arise afterwards, but today our focus must remain on the oppression.
@decaydjk89226 ай бұрын
No bosses, no masters! This is a really great video, thanks comrade.
@Riotskunk893 ай бұрын
I am digging all this man. Been an anarchist since I was 15 years old. Still am. WE OUT HERE.
@TheBitterSarcasmOfMs.AnthropyАй бұрын
As an anarchist myself, anarchism requires a society full of disciplined, well educated, highly skilled people who have no ego, do not seek drama, status, power or control and can work as a team; look at all the people in this current society, filled with undisciplined greed, envy, pettiness, emotion and no practical education. Capitalism has done a great job of stifling any anarchist movement.
@anitamandekis4748Ай бұрын
Humans die and are born everyday, it's our nature not to follow rules. Anarchism would never work because people are too stupid to even make it work. That's just how it is, it's just a crazy social concept in theory. Every human in this world needs some sort of authority to keep them in check
@NeurodivergentLeftistАй бұрын
@@anitamandekis4748 "Humans die and are born every day..." Okay? This is irrelevant as far as I can tell. "It's our nature not to follow rules" Two things. First, this is a baseless statement with no backing and supporting, and to base an argument off of it is idiotic. Second, this is irrelevant to Anarchism and I could argue that this is in support of Anarchism, if anything. "Anarchism would never work because people are too stupid to even make it work." It worked for almost all of human history, except for a brief bit of feudalism, monarchy, and the likes, and an even briefer blip of capitalism and various socialist attempts. I'm not a anarchist myself, but to pretend it doesn't work is stupid. The only reason I'm not an anarchist at the moment is because I fail to see how it could come around again in a society so used to hierarchies and authorities -- hence my presence on this video. "That's just how it is" Prove it. "It's just a crazy social concept in theory." Again, this was how most of human history was -- it is far more than a theory. "Every human in this world needs some sort of authority to keep them in check" Prove it. Again, most of human history had no authority, no prisons, no police. To conclude, your argument is based off of unsubstantiated statements that don't even make a good argument against anarchism.
@r.w.bottorff77356 ай бұрын
What an excellent intro to anarchism, especially appreciate the helpful definition of authority! This video will change some minds. Ps that section on democracy was illuminating as well
@flavioryu59225 ай бұрын
The art pieces that you use throughout the whole video are so beautiful and perfectly in theme with the topics discussed wow
@occuworld72646 ай бұрын
direct democracy + free association. it is not supposed to impose control, it is a method of egalitarian social decision making. the term democracy has been usurped by aristocracy, renaming democracy as true democracy or direct democracy or classic democracy, a huge hint concerning the corruption of the term. consensus is the ultimate outcome of democracy, however it is not always achievable, and instead of forcing compliance, we rely on free association, which has the advantage of avoiding cultural homogenization and enhancing diversity. the use of democratic social decision making under anarchy is to help us do more than possible individually or with small assemblies, voluntarily. it is also a means to grow closer communally. as long as we desire society there will be a need for social decision making, and that process and its outcome should be anarchic, without hierarchy or coercion.
@Grundrisse6 ай бұрын
Oh hey, didn't know Bookchin is alive and has a burner account to further democratic nonsense.
@miguelcanais6 ай бұрын
Good luck enforcing direct democracy without a state of any kind...
@Anita.Cox.6 ай бұрын
you cant have free association and direct democracy as a minority voter will have to listen to those laws set in place which establishes forms of domination and subordination, instead we need full free association where someone joins a group for its ideas not its policies that can leave and join when you want.
@confusedpozole4066 ай бұрын
@@Anita.Cox.You absolutely can. It’s simple: When you feel like your voice isn’t being heard or your needs aren’t being met, you leave. Free association. That doesn’t mean direct democracy and consensus aren’t useful for helping a community meet those needs of the individual. If you just up and leave whenever things aren’t done your way, then nothing gets done. Compromise is a key component of Anarchism.
@Anita.Cox.6 ай бұрын
@@confusedpozole406 that's not direct democracy at that point that's as you mention free association that's leading to consensus.
@OutlawMaxV6 ай бұрын
This might very well be your best analysis yet, from the point of discussion and debate among likeminded fellows and due to its easy to digest format, as an easy introduction to those unfamiliar to concepts of Anarchism
@I-OGameDev6 ай бұрын
I'm a leftist trying to learn more, this is a fantastic resource. Thank you for your labour in pursuit of a greater world.
@LaserMissionDan6 ай бұрын
This is wonderful! It helped quell some of my own hesitations about anarchism and explained things in a simple, humble way. Thank you!!
@Malachite76 ай бұрын
I love the variety of art used here, and how much is credited! It's a passive thing, but it helps to show how traditional precepts of art, similar to society, need not be adhered to so rigidly. I think a lot of people can shed off the idea that abstract and modern art are just confusing red, yellow, and blue shapes on a canvas once they get a little exposure to different pieces; there's a lot to appreciate about the pieces featured in this video. I'm glad to learn the names and be able to look for their other works, too. Furthermore, I'm glad it's not only abstract and modern art! We should get used to seeing vastly different artworks side by side, and comparing their worth according to consistent standards. There are things easily achieved in realistic and abstract art alike, as well as things better conveyed in one over the other: both have immense, different value! You made great use of these and more, in ways that hierarchists (who apply their social values to art) could never. Keep shining a light on beauty in the world!
@SeanDDaily6 ай бұрын
I was going to ask if you had any books I could read about anarchy, but then I looked at your notes and, uh, wow.
@geislar76826 ай бұрын
How do you have checks and balances for incompetency or malace in a system of only free association? In the sewage system repair example in your revisiting consensus chapter. What if the people who choose to repair the sewage plant are incompetent, fail to repair the facility properly, and end up allowing a lethal pandemic to spread amongst the community? It might only take one incompetent individual to create such a catastrophy in many applications. How do you ensure competency? How do you maintain accountability towards individuals who may sabotage such a facility through deception and malice? Do you have free associating bands of vigilantes who hold such groups accountable? If so how would those vigilante groups be held accountable?
@rolfnoduk6 ай бұрын
Bit vague, but the answer is collectively - people will choose to do so because people care about it being done.
@evanblack10566 ай бұрын
@@rolfnodukbut like op said, if they are incompetent, what then?
@geislar76826 ай бұрын
@@rolfnoduk it just seems ripe for abuse. How does the collective prevent that small armed minority from overreach? A vague how, while great for the armchair philosopher, doesn't hold up when talking about conflicts with a high probability of violence is present in the physical and social world. How does anarchy prevent major problems like warlordism from such a self appointed vigilante group? How does anarchy handle whose responsible for trimming the hedges between two households? Who enforces the 'collective' decision? What if the losing party obstinately refuses to accept the consensus? How does anarchy prevent a socially powerful individual like a cult leader from reestablishing hierarchy? Even within a society of equals, without some system to maintain that equality, disparity will inevitably come back; likely mirroring the disparity that came about within our prehistorical time transitioning between the stone and bronze age.
@brandonmercado84386 ай бұрын
I'm glad that other rational people are coming in here to question this. This seems like a pipe dream that sounds good on paper where everyone is free, but as soon as you try to put any of this into practice, Human nature would destroy it as he has admitted has happened each and every time it was attempted.
@Shyguy51045 ай бұрын
Other people would be smart enough to recognise the incompetence and go fix it amazing how simple that is
@maxg9716 ай бұрын
this video is changing my views slightly and my definitions heavily and i actually dont think ill be calling myself pro democracy any longer great video!
@maxg9716 ай бұрын
What im having trouble wrapping my head around is how we would deal with problems that cannot be solved by disassociating like what to plant in a specific spot. what if i want to plant corn and you want to plant tomatoes? there is no consensus needed for action, so discussion should lead to consensus. that can still be entirely freely associated, but what if i agreed to plant tomatoes if i could have my corn next year, but when the time comes you disregard that decision? I obviously dont want to force you to abide by a decision you made last years, but i also dont want to be forced to move somewhere that i could have my corn. I think space might break the ideal of free association sometimes
@maxg9716 ай бұрын
Okay like literally your next paragraph states that solving something like this could be called consensus. Disregard
@normandy25016 ай бұрын
If you want to plant corn or tomatoes in your own garden, then do it.
@maxg9716 ай бұрын
@@normandy2501 dawg ownership wont exist in anarchy, youre a liberal if you think otherweise
@thequarter26 ай бұрын
A world without rule is at risk of self-destruction.... if there is no one to enforce any rule, then what stops one individual from commiting an atrocity against orders..... Freedom does not guarantee peace and peace does not guarantee freedom... So anarchy needs a compromise.... but this compromise comes at the cost of anarchy loosing its meaning and purpose.... What most of us consider Anarchy to be can only exist in an ideal world were everybody can tolerate and trust each other.... realism always kicks in in the end and people fall back to archy.....
@paranoikoc6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for spreading the word of libertarian communism! Many people, even "anarchists" seem to believe that anarchy=chaos, but the truth is, anarchy is the only realistic - and historically successful - way to achieve the abolishment of oppression, in all its forms.
@Grundrisse6 ай бұрын
Not all anarchisms are communism: There are mutualist tendencies, neo-Proudhonian anarchism prominent among them. To box the whole of "anarchism" into one single category you like (libertarian communism) is to ignore other tendencies that don't wish to belong to the category, and to monopolize term "anarchism." As for the boogeyman of chaos, the way you're using that word is so clearly a scare-tactic that I couldn't help myself. You're using 'chaos' the way governmentalists use largely that same word to describe anarchy. Anarchy can certainly be thought as a positive non-pejorative chaos. By putting anarchists who are sympathetic to chaotic forms of organization in scare quotes, you're implying that insurrectionist anarchists aren't anarchists, and neither is the anarchist writer Peter Gelderloos. His book, Worshipping Power, has a chapter dedicated to the idea that that anarchists challenge people to view chaotic ways of organizing and chaotic ways of decision-making as not inherently pejorative. "The reasoning is simple. Hierarchical societies are easier to control, and hierarchies cannot defend themselves from more powerful hierarchies. Officials from a state cannot easily communicate with members of a society in which decisions are made in open assemblies, or societies with chaotic rather than unitary decision-making. As an important aside, I would challenge the reader to accept chaotic organization as a superior form, even though we are usually only presented with a pejorative vision of chaos. In unitary decision-making, an entire polity must abide by a single decision, or there must be a clear hierarchy to govern and rank the decisions made at different levels, whether in a bureaucratic or federalistic system. All governments, from fascist dictatorships to direct formal democracies, share the principle of unitary decision-making and disseminate the assumptions on which such decision-making is based. Chaotic decision-making fosters the recognition that society can function spontaneously as a decentralized network, permits conflict as a healthy force in our lives, encourages a multiplicity of decision-making spaces pervading all moments of life, well beyond the formal, masculine sphere of the congress or the dictat, and allows different, even conflicting, decisions to be made at different points in the human network, while encouraging a collective consciousness so all decision-makers can maximize their intelligence and accordingly harmonize. Humans have an evolutionarily tested ability to utilize chaotic decision-making at a macro scale, and the only people who dispute this are those who wish to permanently infantilize their compatriots so as to control them by monopolizing decision-making in unitary structures." * Worshiping Power, Take Me to Your Leader: The Politics of Alien Invasion
@paranoikoc6 ай бұрын
@@Grundrisse indeed it is true that i used libertarian communism as a broader term, so thank you for clarifying that! As a person who has been in plenty protests (Greece), it is important to distinguish true, educated nihilists and the such from the uneducated, reactionary teens who just want to mindlessly smash things up; of course violence is important, but unorganised, uncoordinated violence is detrimental to everyone
@bramvanduijn80866 ай бұрын
There's a reason the A is entirely inside the O in the anarchist symbol.
@worknehfollow66886 ай бұрын
What is to stop a group with more power than you demanding things you can not provide? What happens when that group imposes their will upon you because you do not have the means to defend yourself?
@zerog10376 ай бұрын
Historically successful? 😂 cite the History then
@N1ghthavvk6 ай бұрын
I could imagine an anarchic system working, but there's a few issues I see that I can't seem to get ... solved. Perhaps somebody has ideas: * The transition from a globalized economy seems very hard, considering that we rely on specialized goods from parts of the world very far away, especially so if those parts are not yet anarchist too. How do you continue trading with them, when they want money, but an anarchist society doesn't use it? It may still be there, accessible for use if necessary to interact with the other parts of the world, but then... * How do you prevent bad actors from just taking all or most of the money and fleeing to a capitalist part of the world? The issue with free association is that a reaction to such a "crime" is presumably not immediate and would be too late to prevent the damage to the local society. Maybe somebody would be alerted if it was a heist, but whati f it was just social engineering, where the guardian of the money was tricked into handing it over, and would not expect it back anyways, on promise of some goods being delivered later, for somebody else, who'd only realize it too late? Effectively, you'd require people to do work in very similar "jobs" as before, but you can't prevent people from leaving, in an anarchist society, can you? * On a similar note, what about bad actors in different contexts? What if conflict escalates? What if a neighbouring empire decides to invade? Presumably the reaction would be too late to prevent entry, and would end in a guerilla warfare, where the attacker will presumably retreat, but only at the cost of way too many lives. This WILL definitely happen to the first bigger experiment. It might not to the next few, when it is established fact that invading would not be profitable, but some national actor will come for the "undefended" and "unrepresented" resources first. * How do you transition from a "call to arms" utilizing the follower-effect, to a truly anarchist movement? It feels impossible. Media will interview some person, claiming to be able to present the ideas (and there will be people like that, maybe somebody like you with the gift of communication). But such attention will naturally lead to more and more interviews, and more and more power ending up attributed to that person, even against them rejecting it as an anarchist. * Even in the actual event of an anarchist "region" establishing itself, communication to neighbouring political entities will be strained from the beginning: "What do you mean, you can't guarantee this treaty being upheld? But it's the Genova Convention! You're not a real country! We'll have to send blue-helmed troops to establish order until a new government is elected!" You may argue that this issue could be solved by free association, and I'd believe you, but the other countries wouldn't. You could send some (possibly) constantly changing people to represent the region in supra-national entities, but even if these people were to do their best, and the society as a whole would do their best too, it will be a struggle that I can't imagine anybody winning in the current political situation. No way, any of the main actors would allow an anarchist society to establish itself. It'd be much too unstable in their eyes. I think we won't see an actual anarchist society experiment succeed in our lifetimes. And I couldn't imagine myself defending it against the big guns. To be completely honest: I'm much too comfortable in my current and very privileged situation to consider radical change "worth it". I'm open to the small changes, and try to do my best to point any groups I'm a part of into the right direction, but that is all inside a casual athmosphere, where people are willing to listen. It's not inside of the workplace, or politics, where entrenched ideas are the established rule.
@Threnody2486 ай бұрын
I’m in a similar boat. It is clear to me, for many of the reasons you listed, that the establishment of an anarchic society within the current international order is impossible on a large scale. No society or organization exists in a vacuum. As long as states (or hierarchies in general) exist anywhere, anarchy will never be able to be sustained.
@JuniperHatesTwitterlikeHandles6 ай бұрын
Not going to reply to all of that but to point 2: If a group of people in an anarchist society rounded up all the money in the area and left... what would that do that you think merits a response? they leave with some bags of paper that have no value anymore now that the state that backed that currency isn't in power, and the community that's left has no need of money whatsoever, let alone the money backed by the state that just stopped existing, and they don't need or want the people who obviously very much didn't want to live in that community. So.. cool they escaped to capitalistville, hope they have good, long, and fulfilling lives there.
@N1ghthavvk6 ай бұрын
@@JuniperHatesTwitterlikeHandles Did you completely miss the point about money being necessary in a transition period, to keep up trade with other nations? It is not useless. Sure, you won't have your own money, but you'll need dollars to keep buying oil or whatever else the society might need. Or do you want to regress to the dark ages?
@Даниил-н8н6 ай бұрын
You guys are almost communists already. Read Lenin, Marx and Engels, you'll see something that makes sense to you that's for sure. All these concerns are actually the things they wrote about a lot.
@Lastings6 ай бұрын
There's a reason anarchist societies don't last long or only last at the largesse of a greater power. If resources are valuable and there's no established power structure to defend or exploit them, someone will figure out a way to do that. The reason that global capitalism is the dominant system is because it outcompeted the other ones, both on merits of function and merits of stomping the other ones out of existence. Not a moral or ethical judgment, but just sort of a historical fact.
@Dinofaustivoro6 ай бұрын
Right on International Workers Day, beautiful. You should do a colab with Zoe Baker, she rocks.
@mattb.70792 ай бұрын
'rule' (or 'dominion') is a secondary meaning of the word 'kratos'; primarily it just means 'strength' or 'power' without the implication of hierarchy. Democracy means 'strength of the people'; I understand the distaste for the word seeing how it's been used historically, but ultimately anarchism is direct democracy without majority rule
@heatherweaver75835 ай бұрын
While I wholeheartedly agree with the sentiment of anarchism, I can’t seem to get past the practical steps of getting there from where we are now. Part of me feels that we will need an intermediary period of something like socialism or communism, in order to change the sentiments that people have about organizing as a collective. While I could see anarchy being achieved within a century or two, I don’t anticipate seeing it in our lifetime, based on current trends.
@thepants14502 ай бұрын
Marxist Leninism is the answer
@louwrentius6 ай бұрын
Religion as a topic is missing. Yet religion has been a huge tool to exert power over others (men over women, clergy over flock).
@dontnoable6 ай бұрын
God above man Man above woman Adult above child Human above animal. Except we are all animals except god who isn't real.
@PhantasmalBlast6 ай бұрын
I do think there’s more nuance here depending on how you define religion. Spiritual beliefs and practices have been some of the strongest ways of holding communities together, and resisting the continuous assault of capitalism. Obviously top down hierarchical religion that exerts control and limits freedom are bad.
@Scolecite6 ай бұрын
Yea it was crazy when the Crusades happened and all the men stayed home cooking food and raising the kids and the women went to die in a foreign land, right?
@louwrentius6 ай бұрын
@@Scolecite deliberately misunderstanding my point doesn’t look good on you.
@louwrentius6 ай бұрын
@@PhantasmalBlast I’m not aware of any current religions that work without hierarchy of some form. Religion inevitably turns into a tool to abuse and gain power over people.
@alicec15336 ай бұрын
Andrew, your videos are a great breath of fresh air, even since I first stumbled upon them a few years ago. Really great anarchist content that KZbin sorely was missing. And the videos have only gotten better; these two recent videos are among your best :)
@eyjayy6 ай бұрын
loved this. the examples helped my comprehension significantly. i could use a whole video of examples of possible practical applications. dozens of examples. drown me in examples. barring that, more videos about anarchy are what im subscribing for
@ArgIRLLOL3 ай бұрын
I’m trying, but I kinda can’t 😂. The association of water will allow distribution based on the common good? Maybe. Hard to imagine being much better than now, especially when ‘power’ becomes entrenched, much like now.
@colinhill79216 ай бұрын
I just finished rewatching your degrowth video when i saw this upload. What a treat!
@adamwells93526 ай бұрын
Troubling challenge for free association: hasn't the Internet shown us that people will use this ability to isolate themselves from ideas that they find problematic? Is this an artifact of the technology, or otherwise explicable in ways other than an anti-anarchist natural tendency?
@MonarchRigel6 ай бұрын
conspiracy theorists have been secluded in information silos for as long as conspiracy theorists have been a thing. the tech doesn't promote it, merely acknowledging the ease with which it can happen.
@plasmanip39985 ай бұрын
The internet is not decentralized as it was when it was created.
@sillyspider5 ай бұрын
people do crap like that no matter what system it is. hopefully when pre-enforced stigmas and stereotypes are preached less, more people will have an open mind and be willing to learn things from different perspectives.
@MolecularMachine5 ай бұрын
@sillyspider That's like saying "Once human beings stop stealing from each other, we won't have to lock our doors".
@EntropyAndSingularity2 ай бұрын
I believe it is only natural tendency because of how we’ve grown up in a system that encourages those tendencies.
@1st1anarkissed6 ай бұрын
First thought on the title was bjork's line "I thought I could organize freedom."
@Birbface6 ай бұрын
how Scandinavian of you.
@oj37306 ай бұрын
It's great to see a video tackle the more practical aspects of anarchy, thank you. For more videos like this.! Keep up the good work
@Andrewism6 ай бұрын
More to come! Check my back catalogue in the meantime😁
@oj37306 ай бұрын
@@Andrewism you bet I will!
@kerishaw89916 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this, it was lovely.
@GynxShinx6 ай бұрын
I go back and forth on anarchy. Great intentions are behind it and it may well be the way we live in 5 centuries, but it's just too far in the future for me to tell. Democracy is inextricable from any modern powerful community effort. This is not an advocacy for untethered majority rule. But the best internal decision making pattern of a group of free association. I believe that anarchy is a description of the lack of state, not government. 2 people in a relationship living together as a household is a form of government. We should only seek to make these governments unbloated, peaceful, and equitable. I do sympathize with the belief that these simple governments in our lives need not be tied to invisible borders, but that is the thing I struggle most to imagine. At this point I advocate just for a very freeing and enabling society that not only allows, but enables the freedom of travel whenever practical.
@Grundrisse6 ай бұрын
"I believe that anarchy is a description of the lack of state, not government" Your belief doesn't change the fact that anarchy has been defined as a total absence of government since Proudhon and his contemporaries. >Anarchy, - the absence of a master, of a sovereign, - such is the form of government to which we are every day approximating, and which our accustomed habit of taking man for our rule, and his will for law, leads us to regard as the height of disorder and the expression of chaos. The story is told, that a citizen of Paris in the seventeenth century having heard it said that in Venice there was no king, the good man could not recover from his astonishment, and nearly died from laughter at the mere mention of so ridiculous a thing. So strong is our prejudice. As long as we live, we want a chief or chiefs; and at this very moment I hold in my hand a brochure, whose author - a zealous communist - dreams, like a second Marat, of the dictatorship. The most advanced among us are those who wish the greatest possible number of sovereigns, - their most ardent wish is for the royalty of the National Guard. Soon, undoubtedly, some one, jealous of the citizen militia, will say, “Everybody is king.” But, when he has spoken, I will say, in my turn, “Nobody is king; we are, whether we will or no, associated.” * What is Property? >Our destiny is to arrive at that state of ideal perfection where the nations will no longer need to be under the tutelage of a government or of another nation; it is the absence of government, it is anarchy, the highest expression of order. Those who do not think that the earth can ever pass from tutelage, those who do not believe in progress, are reactionaries. * Elisée Reclus, The Development of Liberty in the World This is only ten years after What is Property? and the same year as Anselme Bellegarrigue's Anarchie, Journal de l'Ordre (Anarchy, a Journal of Order). If you can't accept this fact, then you can just be a libertarian socialist and quit pretending governmentalism is somehow a dimension of anarchy. Not that the label matters today, since it is nothing but a historical relic. Two people in "a relationship living together as a household" is also not a form of government, that's the same level of nonsense as Engels' infamous attack on anarchism. While a social relationship between two people can be hierarchical, it need not be so and is not naturally hierarchical. Not all hierarchies constitute governments.
@endermix58596 ай бұрын
Great video! Greeting from Spain, one of the motherland of anarchism
@thequarter26 ай бұрын
A world without rule is at risk of self-destruction.... if there is no one to enforce any rule, then what stops one individual from commiting an atrocity against orders..... Freedom does not guarantee peace and peace does not guarantee freedom... So anarchy needs a compromise.... but this compromise comes at the cost of anarchy loosing its meaning and purpose.... What most of us consider Anarchy to be can only exist in an ideal world were everybody can tolerate and trust each other.... realism always kicks in in the end and people fall back to archy.....
@bramvanduijn80866 ай бұрын
@@thequarter2 You can't have atrocities without blind obedience. You can have injustices, and bad experiences, but for atrocities you need centralized control.
@thequarter26 ай бұрын
@@bramvanduijn8086 ignorance exists... if you are not informed or are at risk of being harm, atrocities may occur... Mass murderers commit atrocities without any control from anyone...
@sillyspider5 ай бұрын
@@thequarter2execpt all of them have reasons for what they did and ways in which it couldve been prevented
@AL-lh2ht5 ай бұрын
@@bramvanduijn8086 dude, I thinks acts of genocide because agreed about the genoicdes
@dannokk4743Ай бұрын
What would a theoretical city look like if it was converted from modern day to a solar punk anarchist city? From how is order maintained to what the average person would experience in a day
@melancholyentertainment6 ай бұрын
I feel “force” in the context of Anarchism is used to mean the opposite of consent, rather than literally using physical force. Thus placing it at the core of what Anarchy opposes.
@kakroom34075 ай бұрын
Anarchists are opposed to authority, and anarchists generally do not equate force with authority
@badger12966 ай бұрын
All Power to All People 🏴✊🚩
@Scolecite6 ай бұрын
Then nothing happens, nothing will get done and society will collapse. Also you have no understanding of evolutionary biology.
@00Platypus006 ай бұрын
@@Scolecite eVoLuTiOnArY bIoLoGy
@mk3c4 ай бұрын
To be honest, I found this video quite confusing - got the feeling more of a play with words, rather than a worked out view of the world. Still not sure how this version of "social revolution" would work? Wouldn't some people consciously need to persuade others about their viewpoint to start building "free associations"? And especially, how would you try to "mitigate conflicts in advance", when there isn't a basic agreement even in simpler things (for example, if "democracy" is good or bad - ignoring the classless approach to the question)?
@thepants14502 ай бұрын
You're not the only one. Semantic tap dancing and only 20 seconds of how to deal with reactionaries and opposing forces. "Organized force" yeah okay, good luck having that with zero authority and this nebulous idea of free association
@AmzzNotFoundАй бұрын
Thank you for informing me, i knew anarchy existed but i didnt know what it was really. This is exactly how i want to live, a community that choose to work together and actively work to thrive, no one person rules just people trying to live
@lumpjacket15 ай бұрын
Old anarchist living in the forest loves your passion and work. Good on you brother
@morphingfaces6 ай бұрын
This channel seems to always have a informative perspective thanks for the content!
@OnizJanniere6 ай бұрын
Preach! People fear anarchy like they fear chaos. These are not the same. A world full of anarchists is a world full of people worthy and capable of governing themselves. If you fear anarchy, you cannot be trusted without being told what to do. And thus, you are part of the problem.
@trevorstewart13086 ай бұрын
very thought provoking and well presented. thank you
@silentprophet7776 ай бұрын
Pausing at 43:25 and reading that entire block of text was very necessary for things to click for me
@dragonwisard6 ай бұрын
This was a very good video, and l learned a lot from it. However I still have some concerns and doubts that I unfortunately can't fully elaborate on in this comment. But I'm looking forward to watching more of your content and asking more questions in the future.
@happyhapsly5 ай бұрын
i know that you cant do anything about this but i really enjoy your accent. its refreshing to hear someoene talk about political theory that isnt some white british dude.
@fantasticsituation94616 ай бұрын
excellent video brother. thanks for everything you do. 💖🙏
@yogurt40136 ай бұрын
You're doing really great work, thank you.
@faithgrimes441810 күн бұрын
Needed this now more than ever.
@jamesgabor92846 ай бұрын
I was kind of thinking about this without even knowing it was anarchy. I was thinking, what if instead of states and governments there would be entirely separate entities for different purposes. For example, there might be a ‘government’ for providing education to people of a certain place, they have this goal but are not bound by a higher entity, overlayed with countless other ‘governments’ each with their own goal, interacting but not antagonizing each other. Another might be to defend or provide law to a certain region, but would not interfere with the affairs of any other structure. They wouldn’t have control over everything inside them and you could opt out. Or a completely separate system with the goal of providing food for people. Etc etc etc. The problem I see with anarchy though is that without rules how would we stop states from forming again? They could simply proclaim their laws and arrest anyone in their borders who don’t agree.
@l4zrh4wk6 ай бұрын
Anarchy might be able to exist, but only in a world with a much much smaller population. It’s naive to think millions of people who live on top of each other would all just get along without a social contract enshrined in law.
@SteveAkaDarktimes5 ай бұрын
it would splinter into factions, clans and families. Due to inefficiencies of smaller scale industries and production, ressources will be limited. these Groups will then compete and war for these ressources. Anarchy never really existed. even if implemented other systems will grow to supplant it. Ingroup, outgroup. those better at violence will exploit those worse skilled.
@Nightshift100005 ай бұрын
A social contract and so-called law are just words on paper, when those in power get on top, they rarely abide by them. And it’s just their way to keep the people imprisoned. Anarchy is the only option for even billions because it increases individualism, voluntarism, personal empowerment, and it means that all people are equal there are no involuntary and abusive hierarchies such as government and Lords. It appeals to first principles and the golden rule which is “Do unto others as you would have done unto you”, basically anarchism is the philosophy of do no harm, but take no shit, that is something all people can live by.
@yeboxxx_channel_25055 ай бұрын
@@Nightshift10000Let me put this into Perspective of how INCREDIBLY FRAGILE, are groups in general, political, Non-political, pro-state, Anti-State TO Fear, Close-mindedness and Pluralistic Ignorance combined.. How do you think North Korea, a Dictatorship where more than half the population are soldiers and suffer, won't already overthrow him? Because they don't know between each other who supports Kim Jong Un and who pretends to support him. If they risked it, were they in a truly loyal to Kim Jong Un society, which they are not, they would die. If they risked it, were they in a society that doesn't support Kim Jong Un, they would also die because they would peer pressure themselves into killing the non-loyalists, thinking they are surrounded by loyalists, which they are not. Should they risk it, and every individual knows what everyone wants, they could easily overthrow him. Seriously. Those issues will plague societies regardless of ideology unless they are highlighted in role of Politics. Which just means the State can also get reformed to fix this issue.
@l4zrh4wk4 ай бұрын
@@SteveAkaDarktimes Here here
@medorakea73276 ай бұрын
Thank you for the great subtitles ✨
@MutualAidWorks4 ай бұрын
This is a great video. I feel that the exploration of democracy and free association is especially important. Nice one Andrew.
@rodrigososa60986 күн бұрын
Thank you for using works of art rather than AI generated images, it changes so much the visual quality and it even gets your point across in a more beautiful and effective way
@Da3m0n26 ай бұрын
Maybe going into "anarchy mode" is like saying "let's abolish money" - in order to work/apply it perhaps we need to imagine or reshape the whole "society" we all go around.
@Its-Lulu6 ай бұрын
Thank you once again for another upload 🥰💗
@nelanequin6 ай бұрын
Something I right now think a lot about is this idea that expertise should give you chances to decide certain things - because in a lot of cases expertise currently is mostly bound to existing systems of power. I am lying in hospital right now, and I am very well read in regards to medical knowledge. So well read that in fact I correctly identified my health condition before any doctor did. However, for the simple reason that I do not have a medical degree, I was not listened too. Which in my case has been leading to more and more frustration, because the doctors will go: "Oh, but it also could be this very rare disease." While I am sitting there like: "Yeah, or it is the thing that the blood tests tell us, that secondary symptoms tell us and everything."
@kaiserruhsam6 ай бұрын
do you think your situation is more or less common than someone being completely wrong about such a self-diagnosis? How many people took horse dewormer rather than getting a vaccine?
@Andrewism6 ай бұрын
Wilbur actually talks about this in the context of expertise! I flash a footnote on it on screen but it might be missed. He calls it "authority-effect." Quote: "Authority-effect: The infamous “authority of the bootmaker,” from Bakunin’s “God and the State,” is probably the most familiar example of an instance where the uneven distribution of expertise, together with the staple nature of the object of expertise, combine to create a condition of quasi-authority, where an expert may be capable of “commanding” a situation, not because they have any right to do so, but because they occupy an advantageous position in society, thanks to the division of labor. We may be forced to take the advice of a specialist, but the source of their power to influence our decision is as much our lack of expertise and whatever exigencies we face as it is their own knowledge and skill. In a medical crisis, a doctor may be able to wield considerable power over patients without medical expertise, while in a time of good health or under circumstances where the patient has medical expertise, that power melts away. Certainly, we don’t bow to bootmakers when we don’t need boots, even if sufficient need on our part may create real power that they can wield. Credentialing systems may create a slightly different sort of authority effect, particularly where they are faulty or corrupt, by increasing the possibility of the false appearance of expertise or by limiting the ability of capable practitioners to meet the needs of others. Authority-effects are very real, in the sense that the combination of factors can compel obedience to just as great an extent as more formal authority, and they may continue to be a problem even under circumstances where the principle of authority has been rejected. But their ill effects will almost certainly be reduced as we move beyond a social model that treats authority as a foundational principle and learn to engage in anarchistic relations."
@AL-lh2ht5 ай бұрын
Dude literally thinks he is smart then a doctor on matters of health.
@MH-tr4kn6 ай бұрын
An extremely high-quality video and very thought-provoking, I can't say I agree but I am glad you made the video.
@funkbungus1376 ай бұрын
I will never tire of reading the comments under your channel, it fills me with a. um... i dont know how to word it.... a less naive optimism? a radical optimism.. its invigorating to see first-ish hand as people let themselves be challenged by that top shelf, Grade A, anarchic utopianism you bring to the square dance. or Table, wherever we're ploppin down the fresh and anarchic.
@JarMaxie6 ай бұрын
Thank you for yet another insightful and inspiring video. Disregard the willfully ignorant smart alecks who 1) have never even watched any of your videos let alone read any anarchist books and 2) feel threatened by even the theoretical dismantlement of a system they benefit from upholding at the expense of everyone else
@justin___6 ай бұрын
It's not much of a comment, but this is going to require a lot of thinking, hopefully not just with myself. I kept having to rewind the video because something you said prompted a question that I tried to answer myself, and then realized I hadn't listened to what you'd said for the previous 20 seconds. And that happened at least 5 or 6 times. And I still don't know if I satisfyingly answered those questions or whether or not I had more, I just realized I needed to stop asking them or answering them, otherwise I'd never finish the video! And I finally finished the video. So much to think about. So many questions that can easily be hand-waved with "well, eventually..." but doesn't answer the question of immediate action. Not immediate _revolution,_ as you warned was often misconstued as the road to change, but literally, what can I do right now, and tomorrow, and always, as Malatesta said. Yes, it's not necessary to have a blueprint for every day and I don't want to be submissive to someone else's thoughts and ideas and not thinking for myself, but who are the experts for slow transition. I ask not for who can authorize the change, but who (and how many?) can _lead_ such that the ball gets rolling and reaches critical mass. My only answer right now is the need for a great fictional story that lays out the entire process. What people _would_ need to do today, tomorrow, and always (not a forever long book, obviously) and how, realistically, the world would respond? It would have to be damned critical of itself, making sure to attack those anarchists in the book with everything that can possibly happen. Terrible things. Horrendous things. Things that will likely happen since so much force and authority currently exist in the world and will likely not give up without a fight. I don't know how to write such a book. And it'd need to be constantly revised, perhaps through methods used by Wikipedia. I don't know. As said at the beginning, this is going to require a lot of thinking. Thanks so much for this. If I were able, I'd be delighted to support you on Patreon, but right now it's just not possible.
@commanderpuffy10145 ай бұрын
Thank you for this great and informative video, i do have a few questions after discussing this at length with my firends where is some of the ideas we came upo with. 1) How does a free association deal with resource scarceity? How is it decided where these resources go? Would this be accompished through consensus to determine which project is of greater importance? What happens to those left out? 2) How does a free association deal with "crime"? Is it up to the individuals around at the time to conduct their own investigations and judge these people on their own or would this be another example of a consultive association acting as an invetsgatory service to determine the truth behind an action the negatively impact another. How would this person be dealt with? I would imagine everyone would be trained in a form of citizans arrest so that every person has the basic capacity for preventing actions against the collective such as using firearms against an active murderer or tackleing and temporarily detaining theives before the consultive association arrives. After that what then? Im assuming rehabilitiation is preffered to incarceration but what about people who simply dont care about the crime they commit or people who only wanted to needed to commit a crime once? What is the deterrant to crime against the collective. Residivisim in rehabilitation systems is low but not zero. 3) How would this society be affected by individual jealosy and greed. If this society operates off of equity that being the idea of everyone getting different things based off of their individual need how would this society resolve these perceived "unfairnesses" 4)Would you Vett people entering this society, including those that align with your views and turning away those who dont share the same ideas of cooperation? 5) How would you deal with sponges and those who wish to live easy and not contribute to the commune? would rehabilitation work or would you let them be.
@merarifreethought11 күн бұрын
Bravo! I loved every minute of it. Finally understand the root of all the problems I see in the world - hierarchies themselves. Looking forward to exploring more.
@rustylidrazzah51706 ай бұрын
Had to pause at one minute to say…. Wow!! That was an amazing introduction. I could imagine those words being part of a blockbuster movie scene. Well done.
@daniellewhite93986 ай бұрын
I love your channel, it gives me hope, and I really like your speaking voice.
@TheForeignersNetwork6 ай бұрын
Hot damn, I've never seen a video on anarchism that's as good as this one. Some of the ideas that you put forward are incredibly complicated, so I'm wondering how we should set about explaining them to people that have absolutely zero knowledge of politics, or that are perhaps even unaware that they're living within a political economy? For me, this is the biggest challenge to anarchists moving forward--Our theories are sublime but the way that we educate people about those theories is not.
@Jimmy19722 ай бұрын
Anarchy is impossible as long as there is a world hegemon.