Anarchism Today


In lieu of attending the North American Anarchist Conference
(NAAC), I was asked: "what do you think of anarchism as an
existing and potential ideology and movement?" Well, I think
if anarchism were an ecology, it would be a tropical rain
forest--broad, wide, and deep, a many faceted organism. A
brief reply won't touch most of anarchism's facets, of
course, but perhaps I can address a part of the heart of the
matter.

Anarchist Focus

To me anarchist practice seeks liberation and decries
strategy that reproduces the contours of an oppressive past.
It rejects government that subordinates most of society to
elites in positions of power. This is Kropotkin, Bakunin,
Goldman, and Berkman's very impressive heritage. Their
anarchism means eliminating unjust authoritarian hierarchy.

But what about anarchism today? Well, it depends. If
"anarchism today" is like anarchism of old and is mainly an
anti-authoritarian practice, then I think anarchism today is
good for siding with those most oppressed by
authoritarianism, just as feminism today is good for siding
with those most oppressed by sexism. But if a social
activist says their whole mindset stems from anti-sexist
concepts, though I would support and welcome their work, I
would also feel it was narrow vis-a-vis the entire agenda we
face. And likewise, if a social activist says their whole
minset stems from anti-authoritarian concepts, though I
would support and welcome their work too, I would again feel
it was narrow vis-a-vis the entire agenda we face.

I am told, however, that instead of being centrally
anti-authoritarian, as in the old days, nowadays being an
anarchist implies having a gender, cultural, economic, and a
politically-rooted orientation, each aspect on a par with
and also informing the rest. This is new in my experience of
anarchism, and it is useful to recall that many anarchists
as little as a decade back, perhaps even more recently,
would have said that anarchism addresses everything, yes,
but via an anti-authoritarian focus rather than by elevating
other concepts in their own right. They thought, whether
implicitly or explicitly, that analysis from an
overwhelmingly anti-authoritarian angle could explain the
nuclear family better than an analysis based in kinship
concepts, and could explain race or religion better than an
analysis based in cultural concepts, and could explain
production, consumption, and allocation better than an
analysis based in economic concepts. They were wrong, and it
is good to hear that many modern anarchists know this.

Anarchist Vision?

There is much to celebrate in the breadth and depth of
anarchism, of course, but we must also overcome lingering
faults, and I think a primary fault to overcome is that
anarchism lacks vision.

Anarchists rightly teach that oppression rests not only on
forceful defense of advantage from above, but also on
convincing citizens below that there is no more liberating
social order that they can seek. Elites impose hopelessness
on the rest of us, that is, as a damper on our activism and
resistance. Why, then, I wonder, have anarchists been
largely silent about political vision?

I wouldn't expect anarchism to produce from within a
compelling vision of future religion, ethnic identification,
or cultural community, or of kinship, sexuality, procreation
or socialization, or of production, consumption, or
allocation. But regarding attaining, implementing, and
protecting against the abuse of shared political agendas, it
seems to me that anarchism ought to be where the action is,
and, indeed, that it even has a responsibility to be where
the action is. Nonetheless, has there been any serious
anarchist attempt to explain how what we call legal disputes
should be resolved? How legal adjudication should occur? How
laws and thus political coordination should be attained? How
violations and disruptions should be handled? And for that
matter how shared programs should be positively implemented?
In other words, what is the anarchist institutional
alternative to contemporary legislatures, courts, police,
and diverse executive agencies? What institutions do
anarchists seek that would advance solidarity, equity,
participatory self-management, diversity, and whatever other
life-affirming and liberatory values we support, while also
accomplishing needed political functions? I wonder why after
a century of opposing authoritarian political relations and
exploring these matters, anarchism still doesn't clearly,
widely, and with vigor offer a broad, overarching political
vision? How long until we realize that huge numbers of
citizens of developed societies are not going to risk what
they have, however little it may be in some cases, to pursue
a goal about which they have no clarity? How often do they
have to ask us what we are for, before we give them some
serious answers? Why hasn't anarchism reached the point
where its advocates can say that yes, we oppose the existing
state and its authoritarian hierarchies and implications --
and so here are the non-authoritarian political values and
institutions we favor instead.

Offering a political vision that encompasses legislation,
implementation, adjudication, and enforcement and that shows
how each of these functions would be accomplished in a
non-authoritarian way promoting values we favor, would not
only provide our contemporary activism much-needed long-term
values and hope, it would also inform our immediate
responses to today's electoral, law-making, law enforcement,
and court system, and all our strategic choices. So shouldn'
t today's anarchist community be generating such political
vision? I think so, and so I keep looking for it, eagerly
hoping it will be forthcoming.

Some Questionable Anarchist Practice

Finally, regarding anarchism and movements today, I have
another broad range of concerns having to do with personal
practice. I worry about certain strange formulations and
styles that keep percolating into view among self described
anarchists, but that I hope have very little support in the
broader anarchist community. I have in mind, for example,
views that technology is in itself an enemy of justice and
liberty. Or that all institutions by their very nature are
infringements on human freedom. Or that relating to existing
political or social structures in any sense at all is an
automatic sign of hypocrisy or fickle intent. Or that
reforms are by their very nature system-supportive and
therefore utterly to be avoided, those seeking them to be
chastised.

These odd views, which call themselves anarchist but
certainly aren't, are not getting to the heart of the matter
of contemporary social injustice, as their advocates
presumably think, but are instead jumping entirely off the
tracks of useful assessment and prescription into self
destructiveness and sectarianism. They confuse the social
relations of injustice with the physical, chemical, and
biological insights that become embodied in instruments that
are admittedly often used for bad ends -- or they even
confuse it with the very idea of instruments at all. They
mistake the necessary fact of humans working together in
sustained structures with lasting roles, which is to say in
institutions, with the admittedly horrific specific types of
institutions that we often find ourselves stuck in today --
corporations, political hierarchies, etc. They mistake
trying to self-consciously improve life for people suffering
in difficult contexts that impose diverse compromises on our
choices, with misunderstanding that the pains people now
endure owe themselves to the institutions around us. That
is, they confuse reforms with reformism, and confuse being a
revolutionary with being someone who a priori rejects
winning improvements now, even if the improvements not only
contribute to bettering people's lives today, but also to
winning further gains in the future.

Likewise, I am concerned about signs I sometimes see of a
life-style emphasis that exaggerates the importance and
efficacy of personal consumption choices, often seeing one's
own consumption preferences (in food, music, entertainment,
movies, culture, reading) as superior while harshly
disparaging other people's different choices as inferior,
all the while oblivious to the fact that different people
face different limitations and settings contouring the logic
of their options. And I am particularly concerned about
behaviors that denigrate the ways various constituencies
other than one's own try to find positive engagement and
entertainment in life, such as those who are religious or
those who play or enjoy sports, or those who watch TV, as if
by such pursuits one indicates that one is somehow an
unworthy person or otherwise deserves contempt. These kinds
of sectarian manifestation of what you would think would be
quite rare lifestyle preferences and attitudes matter quite
a lot when they become homogenous to movement memberships
and thus come to characterize a whole ideology or movement,
not least because they affect the quality of our behavior,
how we come across to others, what it seems we are in favor
of and oppose, and even our capacities for positive empathy
and enjoyment.

Thus, finally, to answer the question what do I think of
anarchism as an existing and potential ideology of movement,
I guess I would say that if anarchism has truly recognized
the need for culture-based, economy-based, and gender-based,
as well as polity-based concepts and practice, and if
anarchism can support vision arising from non-governmental
social dimensions while also itself providing serious and
compelling political vision, and if the anarchist community
can avoid or at least minimize lifestyle sectarianism as
well as strange confusions between bad technology and
technology per se, authoritarian government and political
structures per se, oppressive institutions and institutions
per se, and seeking to win reforms versus being reformist *
then I think anarchism has a whole lot going for it as a
source of movement inspiration and wisdom in the effort to
make our world a much better place.
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