this post was submitted on 23 Oct 2023
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Perhaps I was unclear, the "they" I was referring to in my original comment was tankies and fascists, as mentioned in the OP.
Anyways, this:
is a pretty vague and meaningless. In theory? Sure, sounds nice. In practice? It's twisted doublespeak for systems that are still fundamentally authoritarian.
Again, what is democracy, really? How are these metrics measured?
There's so much to unpack I'm not really sure where to start. Are you coming from a perspective of " capitalism can be reformed with democracy" or "voting with your dollar is democracy manifest" or smthn else?
Yeah I've got no quick 'n' easy answer to what you're putting on the table here, take it as a compliment, lol. As an anarchist I approach things with a certain worldview which I imagine you disagree with on a pretty fundamental level.
Overall, the system we live in is still governed by capitalist principles (and assumptions about society/humanity) even in cases like the nordic model which is considered "progressive" despite being a hybrid of social democracy and corporatism.
Even putting aside the whole discussion about the "tyranny of the majority", democracy in practice really isn't all that "democratic". Between lobbying, corruption, the class system, societal biases, the manipulation of information, the education system itself... if you believe all that can still add up to the best we can achieve, at least currently, and that if any change for the better is to be made it's through this system, and you're firmly rooted in this belief... yeah I guess there's not much else I can say to you.
Anarchism isn't about abandoning "all societal structure" though. Authority and law are not necessary for organisation.
Anarchism in praxis is largely about working towards the social change required to properly challenge/undermine the power structures that control our lives.
When anarchists talk about authority and hierarchy, they're talking about coercive/oppressive power structures. Organisation doesn't have to be founded in obedience and control, it can also be built upon mutual agreement/consent and cooperation. Are you really unable to imagine any examples of the latter?
As for laws, they really aren't all that good at preventing "crime", because they don't address the fundamental reasons why people turn to "crime" in the first place. Plus, there are plenty of legal things which are unethical and plenty of ethical things which are illegal.
Some (religious) people think that without fear of god humans are immoral. I think that if the only reason you're not murdering people is out of fear of god then there's something seriously wrong with you. Replace "god" with "the law" and the same reasoning applies.