The Anarchist's Gift

      by Marcel Votlucka

      Exclusive to STR

      February 7, 2007 

      I don't have just one reason to hate the State, I have over 180 million 
of them.  That is a conservative estimate of the number of people killed in the 
last century alone by governments, whether through wars, genocides, pogroms, 
and miscellaneous acts of murder and oppression.    

      All of these people died because some pig in a suit wanted more land, 
wealth, power, privilege, or just wanted to settle a grudge with his fellow 
rulers across the border.  All this at others' expense, no less.  Ultimately, 
all states are based on force, and politics is the tool by which people use 
that force to achieve what they want - even if they have to violate everybody 
else's rights in the process.  And because the State must, by necessity, be a 
monopoly on "legitimate" violence against others, there's no escaping this 
uncomfortable fact: politics kills.    

      And from there we can only conclude:  politics is a crime.   

      Yet if you dare question any aspect of statism, be prepared to face a 
volley of snide remarks and head-shaking.  Statists have a hysterical answer 
for every objection; they've had plenty of practice!  You might hear this 
delicately constructed argument:  "You're crazy!  We need government in order 
to survive!  Without it, everything would turn to chaos!  The wealthy and 
powerful would take advantage of the weak, there would be nobody to prevent 
people from killing and robbing and raping each other, we'd be without social 
services, and people would die in the streets!  The economy would collapse and 
we'd all live in poverty!  Terrorists would run amuck with no one to stop them! 
 What would we do?!"    

      They then conclude:  "Argh!  Stop being so, so.unrealistic!"   

      Well, that's all very cute, but the fact of the matter is we have all 
these kinds of problems now.  And in some cases the problems have only bred new 
ones.  We have bigger wars, indiscriminate terrorism, horrible weapons for mass 
murder, and the potential for nuclear holocaust thanks to big bombs and bigger 
egos.  We have extremes of poverty and wealth, slavery, and famine, bred and 
nurtured by socialist and corporate fascist policies.  We face Orwellian 
surveillance, social oppression, a polluted planet, and so on.     

      If people justify statism on the basis of eliminating or minimizing the 
problems aforementioned, they are sadly mistaken.    

      Indeed, would it be unfair to conclude that the State has failed?   

      So why do so many view the State, "good government" and constitutions 
with almost religious zeal?  Why do people believe in the State to begin with?  
Or rather, why don't people hold politicians to the same moral standard as 
everyone else?   

      They have been taught to never consider the alternative.   

      Thus, most folks would tell you that you're wrong to be anti-war and 
anti-State because it's not "realistic."  That is the extent of their 
intellectual arguments.  Therefore, we annoying curmudgeons need to accept it 
and shut the hell up.    

      Well, maybe they're right.  There may always be politicians, warmongers, 
tyrants, extortionists and con artists who take advantage of others for their 
own gain.  There will always be murder, rape, theft, extortion, oppression and 
other crimes.  But does that mean we should close our eyes and blindly accept 
it because, well, these things will always happen and it's "unrealistic" to 
point out exactly why they are wrong?  No!  We don't do that, do we?  I doubt 
you know anyone who would.  We eagerly condemn murder or theft as evil, and we 
condemn the people who commit such acts.  Yet we refuse to apply the same 
principle to those who do it on a grand scale . . . because it's "unrealistic." 
  

      Henry Kissinger would be so proud.   

      "Unrealistic" is a slur that only muddles the issues at hand.  It is 
neither fair nor correct to compare so-called "unrealistic" anarchist ideas and 
(I assume) "realistic" statist ideas side by side as if they were a contest 
between Republicans and Democrats; they're not just polar opposites but 
different worlds altogether.  Anarchism is a worldview based on concrete 
morality and sound ethics, while statism is an anti-moral worldview that relies 
on utilitarian ethics (in other words, based on the "it works" concept . . . 
but "it works" for whom?).   

      Above all else, we should define anarchism as a moral and ethical 
imperative.  We likely won't see a stateless society, universal acceptance of 
individual rights, or even any committed libertarian governments develop in our 
lifetimes, but in no way does that mean we should accept evil and make excuses 
for it in the meantime.  Right and wrong do indeed exist in the end - 
civilization would crumble without such a moral compass.  An anarchist, at 
their best, should aim to show people the very real and concrete differences 
between right and wrong, and then apply these principles to everyone; kings, 
preachers, CEOs, presidents, and members of Congress.  No exceptions, no 
excuses.   

      In short, anarchism boils down to the study of right and wrong.  We may 
not have all the answers, but we ask the right questions.  That is the mark of 
intellectual honesty.  Doing the right thing and preaching the right way are 
rarely popular.  But then, most of the best things in life refuse to come with 
ease.  Freedom is not easy, but it is right, just, and good.  To ask people to 
ignore these moral imperatives and expect to truly thrive . . . that's an 
unrealistic fantasy.   

      This is the anarchist's gift.  Now go out there and be generous. 

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      Marcel Votlucka is a writer and freelance journalist from Queens, NY.  He 
is a graduate of Stony Brook University, and is a frequent contributor to the 
Stony Brook Press and the Stony Brook Independent.  He is currently finishing 
work a novella, Neverland:  Voices From the Muslim Holocaust. 

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