The social and political structure of anarchy is parallel to that of the economic structure, i.e., it is based on a voluntary federation of decentralized, directly democratic policy-making bodies, the neighborhood and community assemblies. In these grassroots political units, the concept of "self-management" becomes that of municipal self-government, a form of civic organization in which people take back control of their living places from the bureaucratic state and the capitalist class whose interests it serves. As Kropotkin argued, "socialism must become more popular, more communalistic, and less dependent upon indirect government through elected representatives. It must become more self-governing." [Kropotkin's Revolutionary Pamphlets, p. 185]
This empowerment of ordinary citizens through decentralization and direct democracy will eliminate the alienation and apathy that are now rampant in the modern city, and (as always happens when people are free) unleash a flood of innovation in dealing with the social breakdown now afflicting our urban wastelands. The gigantic metropolis with its hierarchical and impersonal administration, its atomised and isolated "residents," will be transformed into a network of humanly scaled participatory communities (sometimes called "communes"), each with its own unique character and forms of self-government, which will be cooperatively linked through federation with other communities at several levels, from the municipal through the bioregional to the global.
Of course, it can (and has) been argued that people are just not interested in "politics." Further, some claim that this disinterest is why governments exist -- people delegate their responsibilities and power to others because they have better things to do. Anarchists, however, do not draw this conclusion from the current apathy that surrounds us. In fact, we argue that this apathy is not the cause of government but its result. Government is an inherently hierarchical system in which ordinary people are deliberately marginalised. The powerlessness people feel due to the workings of the system ensure that they are apathetic about it, thus guaranteeing that wealthy and powerful elites govern society without hindrance from the majority.
This result is not an accident, and the marginalisation or ordinary people is actually celebrated in "democratic" theory. As Noam Chomsky notes, "Twentieth century democratic theorists advise that 'The public must be put in its place,' so that the 'responsible men' may 'live free of the trampling and roar of a bewildered herd,' 'ignorant and meddlesome outsiders' whose 'function' is to be 'interested spectators of action,' not participants, lending their weight periodically to one or another of the leadership class (elections), then returning to their private concerns. (Walter Lippman). The great mass of the population, 'ignorant and mentally deficient,' must be kept in their place for the common good, fed with 'necessary illusion' and 'emotionally potent oversimplifications' (Wilson's Secretary of State Robert Lansing, Reinhold Niebuhr). Their 'conservative' counterparts are only more extreme in their adulation of the Wise Men who are the rightful rulers -- in the service of the rich and powerful, a minor footnote regularly forgotten" [Year 501, p. 18]
As discussed in Section B.2.6 (Who benefits from centralisation?) this marginalisation of the public from political life ensures that the wealthy can be "left alone" to use their power as they see fit. In other words, such marginalisation is a necessary part of a fully functioning capitalist society (as predicted by Thomas Jefferson, among others, when he said that "The end of democracy and the defeat of the American Revolution will occur when the government falls into the hands of banking institutions and monied incorporations"). Hence, under capitalism, libertarian social structures are to be discouraged. Or as Chomsky puts it, the "rabble must be instructed in the values of subordination and a narrow quest for personal gain within the parameters set by the institutions of the masters; meaningful democracy, with popular association and action, is a threat to be overcome." [Op. Cit., p. 18] This philosophy can be seen in the statement of a US Banker in Venezuela under the murderous Jimenez dictatorship: "You have the freedom here to do whatever you want to do with your money, and to me, that is worth all the political freedom in the world." [quoted by Chomsky, Op. Cit., p. 99]
Deterring libertarian alternatives to statism is a common feature of our current system. By marginalising and disempowering people, the ability of individuals to manage their own social activities is undermined and weakened. They develop a "fear of freedom" and embrace authoritarian institutions and "strong leaders," which in turn reinforces their marginalisation.
This consequence is hardly surprising. Anarchists maintain that the desire to participate and the ability to participate are in a symbiotic relationship: participation feeds on itself. By creating the social structures that allow participation, participation will increase. As people increasingly take control of their lives, so their ability to do so also increases. The challenge of having to take responsibility for decisions that make a difference is at the same time an opportunity for personal development. To begin to feel power, having previously felt powerless, to win access to the resources required for effective participation and learn how to use them, is a liberating experience. Once people become active subjects, making things happen in one aspect of their lives, they are less likely to remain passive objects, allowing things to happen to them, in other aspects.
Hence a meaningful communal life based on self-empowered individuals is a distinct possibility. It is the hierarchical structures in statism and capitalism, marginalising and disempowering the majority, which is at the root of the current social apathy in the face of increasing social and ecological disruption. Libertarian socialists therefore call for a radically new form of political system to replace the centralized nation-state, a form that would be based around confederations of self-governing communities. In other words "Society is a society of societies; a league of leagues of leagues; a commonwealth of commonwealths of commonwealths; a republic of republics of republics. Only there is freedom and order, only there is spirit, a spirit which is self-sufficiency and community, unity and independence." [Gustav Landauer, For Socialism, pp. 125-126]
To create such a system would require dismantling the nation-state and reconstituting relations between communities on the basis of self-determination and free and equal confederation from below. In this following subsections we will examine in more detail why this new system is needed and what it might look like. We will point out here that we are discussing the social structure of areas within which the inhabitants are predominately anarchists. It is obviously the case that areas in which the inhabitants are not anarchists will take on different forms depending upon the ideas that dominate there. Hence, assuming the end of the current state structure, we could see anarchist communities along with statist ones (capitalist or socialist) and these communities taking different forms depending on what their inhabitants want - communist to individualist communities in the case of anarchist ones, republician to private state organisations in the statist areas,, ones based on religious sects and so on. As it is up to non-anarchists to present their arguments in favour of their kind of statism, we will concentrate on discussing anarchist ideas on social organisation here.
As Murray Bookchin argues in The Rise of Urbanization and the Decline of
Citizenship, the modern city is a virtual appendage of the capitalist
workplace, being an outgrowth and essential counterpart of the factory
(where "factory" means any enterprise in which surplus value is extracted
from employees.) As such, cities are structured and administered primarily
to serve the needs of the capitalist elite -- employers -- rather than the
needs of the many -- their employees. From this standpoint, the city must
be seen as (1) a transportation hub for importing raw materials and
exporting finished products; and (2) a huge dormitory for wage slaves,
conveniently locating them near the enterprises where their labor is to
exploited, providing them with entertainment, clothing, medical
facilities, etc. as well as coercive mechanisms for controlling their
behavior.
The attitude behind the management of these "civic" functions by the
bureaucratic servants of the capitalist ruling class is purely
instrumental: worker-citizens are to be treated merely as means to
corporate ends, not as ends in themselves. This attitude is reflected in
the overwhelmingly alienating features of the modern city: its inhuman
scale; the chilling impersonality of its institutions and functionaries;
its sacrifice of health, comfort, pleasure, and aesthetic considerations
to bottom-line requirements of efficiency and "cost effectiveness"; the
lack of any real communal interaction among residents other than
collective consumption of commodities and amusements; their consequent
social isolation and tendency to escape into television, alcohol, drugs,
gangs, etc. Such features make the modern metropolis the very antithesis
of the genuine community for which most of its residents hunger. This
contradiction at the heart of the system contains the possibility of
radical social and political change.
The key to that change, from the anarchist standpoint, is the creation of
a network of participatory communities based on self-government through
direct, face-to-face democracy in grassroots neighbourhood and community
assemblies. These assemblies will be general meetings open to all citizens
in every neighbourhood, town, and village, and will be the source of and
final authority over public policy for all levels of confederal
coordination. Such "town meetings" will bring ordinary people directly
into the political process and give them an equal voice in the decisions
that affect their lives - "a people governing itself directly - when
possible - without intermediaries, without masters." [Peter Kropotkin,
The Great French Revolution Vol 1, p. 210] Traditionally, these "town
meetings" or participatory communities were called communes in anarchist
theory.
As Kropotkin pointed out, a "new form of political organisation has to be
worked out the moment that socialistic principles shall enter our life.
And it is self-evident that this new form will have to be more popular,
more decentralised, and nearer to the folk-mote self-government than
representative government can ever be." [Kropotkin's Revolutionary Pamphlets,
p. 184] He, like all anarchists, considered the idea that socialism could
be created by taking over the current state or creating a new one as
doomed to failure. Instead, he recognised that socialism would only be
built using new organisations that reflect the spirit of socialism (such
as freedom, self-government and so on). Kropotkin, like Proudhon and
Bakunin before him, therefore argued that "[t]his was the form that
the social revolution must take -- the independent commune. . .[whose]
inhabitants have decided that they will communalize the consumption of
commodities, their exchange and their production" [Op. Cit., p. 163]
The size of the neighbourhood assemblies will vary, but it will probably
fluctuate around some ideal size, discoverable in practice, that will
provide a viable scale of face-to-face interaction and allow for both a
variety of personal contacts and the opportunity to know and form a
personal estimation of everyone in the neighborhood. Some anarchists have
suggested that the ideal size for a neighbourhood assembly might be around
300 to 600 adults, meeting in neighborhoods of 500 to 1,000 people. (See,
for example, "Green Political and Social Change" by the Syracuse/Onandaga
County Greens, in Our Generation magazine, vol. 24, No 2. ). Such
assemblies would meet regularly, perhaps monthly, and deal with a variety
of issues. "Neighborhoods of this size can support their assemblies to
oversee the administration of elementary schools, child care centers,
retail outlets for basic home supplies, solar based energy sources,
community gardens, community handicraft and machine tool workshops,
community laundries, and much more, all within close walking distance"
[Ibid].
Community assemblies and councils would be larger political units covering
groups of neighborhoods involving perhaps 5,000 to 10,000 people. Like the
neighborhood assemblies, they would be based on direct, "town-meeting"-style
democracy. Most economies of scale are reached at this size:
"For example, assuming today's technology, division of labor,
and level of workforce participation, a community of 10,000 with 2,000
manufacturing workers would be able to staff three plants of current
average size in each of the thirteen basic manufacturing categories --
enough to supply the community with most of its manufacturing needs with
considerable variety. Add multi-purpose machines, miniaturization, and
cybernation, and the possibilities for a high degree of economic
self-reliance become obvious. At this scale, the community still remains
comprehensible, community control of the economy feasible, and such
measures as distribution according to need and the regular rotation of
people through a full range of types of work and public administrative
responsibilities can be easily introduced. Communities of 5,000 to 10,000
would combine community assemblies, meeting perhaps quarterly to decide on
basic policy, with community councils consisting of mandated, recallable,
and rotating delegates from the neighborhood assemblies to oversee day to
day coordination and administration of community policies" [Ibid]
Since not all issues are local, the neighbourhood and community assemblies
will also elect mandated and recallable delegates to the larger-scale
units of self-government in order to address issues affecting larger
areas, such as urban districts, the municipality as a whole, the county,
the bioregion, and ultimately the entire planet. Thus the assemblies
will confederate at several levels in order to develop and coordinate
common policies to deal with common problems.
This need for cooperation does not imply a centralised body. As Kropotkin
pointed out, anarchists "understand that if no central government was needed
to rule the independent communes, if national government is thrown
overboard and national unity is obtained by free federation, then a
central municipal government becomes equally useless and noxious. The
same federative principle would do within the commune." [Kropotkin's
Revolutionary Pamphlets, pp. 163-164]
As in the economic federation of syndicates, the lower levels will control
the higher, thus eliminating the current pre-emptive powers of centralised
government hierarchies. Delegates to higher-level coordinating councils or
conferences will be instructed, at every level of confederation, by the
assemblies they represent, on how to deal with any issue. These
instructions will be binding, committing delegates to a framework of
policies within which they must act and providing for their recall and the
nullification of their decisions if they fail to carry out their mandates.
Delegates may be selected by election and/or sortition (random selection
by lot, as for jury duty).
Most anarchists recognize that there will be a need for "public officials"
with delegated "powers" within the social confederation. However, "powers"
is not the best word to describe their activities, because their work is
essentially administrative in nature -- for example, an individual may be
elected to look into alternative power supplies for a community and report
back on what he or she discovers. Or one may be elected to overlook the
installation of a selected power supply. Because such a person is an elected
delegate of the community, he or she is a "public official" in the broadest
sense of the word, essentially an agent of the local community who is
controlled by, and accountable to, that community.
Therefore, such "officials" are unlike politicians. This is for two reasons.
Firstly, they cannot make policy decisions on behalf of those who elected
them, and so they do not have governmental power over those who elected them.
Taking the example of alternative power supplies, the elected "official"
would present findings to the body by which he or she had been mandated.
These findings are not a law which the electors are required to follow,
but a series of suggestions and information from which they chose what
they think is best. By this method the "officials" remain the servants of the
public and are not given power to make decisions for people. In addition,
these "officials" will be rotated frequently to prevent a professionalization
of politics and the problem of politicians being largely on their own once
elected.
Therefore, such "public officials" would be under the strict control of
the organisations that elected them to administration posts. But, as
Kropotkin argued, the general assembly of the community "in permanence -
the forum always open - is the only way . . .to assure an honest and
intelligent administration . . . [and is based upon] distrust of all
executive powers." [The Great French Revolution Vol.1, p. 211]
As Murray Bookchin argues, a "confederalist view involves a clear distinction
between policy making and the coordination and execution of adopted policies.
Policy making is exclusively the right of popular community assemblies based
on the practices of participatory democracy. Administration and coordination
are the responsibility of confederal councils, which become the means for
interlinking villages, towns, neighbourhoods, and cities into confederal
networks. Power flows from the bottom up instead of from the top down, and
in confederations, the flow of power from the bottom up diminishes with the
scope of the federal council ranging territorially from localities to
regions and from regions to ever-broader territorial areas." ["The Meaning
of Confederation", p. 48, Society and Nature No.3, pp. 41-54]
Thus the people will have the final word on policy, which is the essence
of self-government, and each citizen will have his or her turn to
participate in the coordination of public affairs. In other words, the
"legislative branch" of self-government will be the people themselves
organized in their community assemblies and their confederal coordinating
councils, with the "executive branch" (public officials) limited to
implementing policy formulated by the legislative branch, that is, by the
people.
Besides rotation of public officials, means to ensure the accountability
of such officials to the people will include a wider use of elections and
sortitions, open access to proceedings and records of "executive"
activities by computer or direct inspection, the right of citizen
assemblies to mandate delegates to higher-level confederal meetings,
recall their officials, and revoke their decisions, and the creation of
accountability boards, elected or selected by lot (as for jury duty), for
each important administrative branch, from local to national.
Virtually all the services and productive enterprises necessary to meet
the needs of the population are present in today's small cities of 50,000
to 100,000. Beyond this size, diseconomies of scale begin to appear due to
the complexities of coordinating urban services across wide areas and
large populations. Therefore a libertarian-socialist society would
probably form another level of confederation at the 50,000 to 100,000
range. Such units of confederation would include urban districts within
today's large cities, small cities, and rural districts composed of
several nearby towns. At this size, economies of scale can be achieved for
nearly all the remaining social needs such as universities, hospitals, and
cultural institutions.
However, face-to-face meetings of the whole population are impractical at
this size. Therefore, the legislative body at this level would be the
confederal council, which would consist of mandated, recallable, and
rotating delegates from the neighborhood assemblies. These delegates would
formulate policies to be discussed and voted on by the neighborhood
assemblies, with the votes being summed across the district to determine
district policy by majority rule.
To quote the Syracuse/Onandaga County Greens again, "Since almost all of
the economies of scale and public decisions necessary for social
self-management can be achieved by the time we reach the 50,000 to 100,000
scale, larger levels of confederation can be oriented mainly around
bioregional and cultural affinities and the few remaining but important
economic resources that must be shared at these scales." ["Green Political
and Social Change", Ibid]
Ties between bioregions or larger territories based on the distribution of
such things as geographically concentrated mineral deposits, climate dependent
crops, and production facilities that are most efficient when concentrated
in one area will unite communities confederally on the basis of common
material needs as well as values. At the bioregional and higher levels of
confederation, councils of mandated, recallable, and rotating delegates
will coordinate policies at those levels, but such policies will still be
subject to approval by the neighborhood and community assemblies through
their right to recall their representatives and revoke their decisions.
In the final analysis, libertarian socialism cannot function optimally --
and indeed may be fatally undermined -- unless the present system of
competing nation-states is replaced by a cooperative system of
decentralized bioregions of self-governing communities confederated on a
global scale. For, if a libertarian-socialist nation is forced to compete
in the global market for scarce raw materials and hard cash with which to
buy them, the problems of "petty-bourgeois cooperativism," previously noted,
will have merely been displaced to a higher level of organization. That
is, instead of individual cooperatives acting as collective capitalists
and competing against each other in the national market for profits, raw
materials, etc., the nation as a whole will become the "collective
capitalist" and compete against other nations in the global capitalist
market -- a situation that is bound to reintroduce many problems, e.g.
militarism, imperialism, and alienating/disempowering measures in the
workplace, justified in the name of "efficiency" and "global
competitiveness."
To some extent such problems can be reduced in the transition period by
achieving self-sufficiency within bioregions (which should be easier in a
libertarian-socialist economy where artificial needs are not manufactured
by massive advertising campaigns of giant profit-seeking corporations) and
by limiting interbioregional trade as much as possible to other members of
the libertarian-socialist federation. However, to eliminate the problem
completely, anarchists envision a global council of bioregional delegates
to coordinate global cooperation based on policies formulated and approved
at the grassroots by the confederal principles outlined above.
Firstly, we doubt that a free society will spend all its time in
assemblies or organising confederal conferences. As these congresses are
concerned purely with joint activity and coordination, it is likely that
they will not be called very often. Different associations and
cooperatives have a functional need for cooperation and so would meet more
regularly and take action on practical activity which affects a specific
section of a community or group of communities. Not every issue that a
member of a community is interested in is necessarily best discussed at a
meeting of all members of a community or at a confederal conference.
In other words, communal assemblies and conferences will have specific,
well defined agendas, and so there is little danger of "politics" taking
up everyone's time. Hence, far from discussing abstract laws and pointless
motions which no one actually knows much about, the issues discussed in
these conferences will be on specific issues which are important to those
involved. In addition, the standard procedure may be to elect a sub-group
to investigate an issue and report back at a later stage with
recommendations. The conference can change, accept, or reject any
proposals. As Kropotkin argued, anarchy would be based on "free agreement,
by exchange of letters and proposals, and by congresses at which
delegates met to discuss well specified points, and to come to an
agreement about them, but not to make laws. After the congress was over,
the delegates [would return]. . .not with a law, but with the draft of a
contract to be accepted or rejected" [Conquest of Bread, p. 131]
By reducing conferences to functional bodies based on concrete issues, the
problems of endless discussions can be reduced, if not totally eliminated.
In addition, as functional groups would exist outside of these communal
confederations (for example, industrial collectives would organise
conferences about their industry with invited participants from consumer
groups), there would be a limited agenda in most communal get-togethers.
The most important issues would be to agree on the guidelines for
industrial activity, communal investment (e.g. houses, hospitals, etc.)
and overall coordination of large scale communal activities. In this way
everyone would be part of the commonwealth, deciding on how resources
would be used to maximise human well-being and ecological survival. The
problems associated with "the tyranny of small decisions" would be
overcome without undermining individual freedom. (In fact, a healthy
community would enrich and develop individuality by encouraging
independent and critical thought, social interaction, and empowering
social institutions based on self-management).
Is such a system fantasy? As Murray Bookchin points out, "Paris in the late
eighteenth century was, by the standards of that time, one of the largest
and economically most complex cities in Europe: its population
approximated a million people. . .Yet in 1793, at the height of the French
Revolution, the city was managed institutionally almost entirely by [48]
citizen assemblies. . .and its affairs were coordinated by the Commune.
. .and often, in fact, by the assemblies themselves, or sections as they
were called, which established their own interconnections without recourse
to the Commune." [Society and Nature, issue no. 5, p. 96] Kropotkin
argued that these "sections" (as they were called) showed "the principles
of anarchism, expressed some years later in England by W. Godwin, . . .
had their origin, not in theoretical speculations, but in the deeds
of the Great French Revolution" [The Great French Revolution, Vol. 1,
p.204]
In other words, it is possible. It has worked. With the massive
improvements in communication technology it is even more viable than
before. Whether or not we reach such a self-managed society depends on
whether we desire to be free or not.
No. As we have seen in section B.2, a state can be defined both by its
structure and its function. As far as structure is concerned, a state
involves the politico-military and economic domination of a certain
geographical territory by a ruling elite, based on the delegation of power
into the hands of the few, resulting in hierarchy (centralised authority).
As Kropotkin argued, "the word 'State' . . . should be reserved for those
societies with the hierarchical system and centralisation." [Ethics,
p. 317f]
In a system of federated participatory communities, however, there is no
ruling elite, and thus no hierarchy, because power is retained by the
lowest-level units of confederation through their use of direct democracy
and mandated, rotating, and recallable delegates to meetings of
higher-level confederal bodies. This eliminates the problem in
"representative" democratic systems of the delegation of power leading to
the elected officials becoming isolated from and beyond the control of the
mass of people who elected them. As Kropotkin pointed out, an anarchist
society would make decisions by "means of congresses, composed of
delegates, who discuss among themselves, and submit proposals, not
laws, to their constituents" [The Conquest of Bread, p. 135], and so
is based on self-government, not representative government (i.e.
statism).
In addition, in representative democracy, elected officials who must make
decisions on a wide range of issues inevitably gather an unelected
bureaucracy around them to aid in their decision making, and because of
its control of information and its permanency, this bureaucracy soon has
more power than the elected officials (who themselves have more power than
the people). In the system we have sketched, policy proposals formulated
by higher-level confederal bodies would often be presented to the
grassroots political units for discussion and voting (though the
grassroots units could also formulate policy proposals directly), and
these higher-level bodies would often need to consult experts in
formulating such proposals. But these experts would not be retained as a
permanent bureaucracy, and all information provided by them would be
available to the lower-level units to aid in their decision making, thus
eliminating the control of information on which bureaucratic power is
based.
Perhaps it will be objected that communal decision making is just a form
of "statism" based on direct, as opposed to representative, democracy --
"statist" because the individual is still be subject to the rules of the
majority and so is not free. This objection, however, confuses statism
with free agreement (i.e. cooperation). Since participatory communities,
like productive syndicates, are voluntary associations, the decisions they
make are based on self-assumed obligations (see section A.2.11 - Why are
anarchists in favour of direct democracy?), and dissenters can leave the
association if they so desire.
In addition, in a free society, dissent and direct action can be used by
minorities to press their case (or defend their freedom) as well as debate.
As Carole Pateman argues, "Political disobedience is merely one
possible expression of the active citizenship on which a self-managing
democracy is based." In this way, individual liberty can be protected
in a communal system and society enriched by opposition, confrontation and
dissent. Without self-management and minority dissent, society would become
"an ideological cemetery" which would "stifle the dialectic of ideas that
thrives" on discussion, and we may had, stifle the development of the
individuals within that society. [Bookchin, "Communalism: The
Democratic Dimension of Anarchism", Democracy and Nature no. 8, p.9] Therefore it
is likely that a society based on voluntary agreements and self-management
would, out of interpersonal empathy and self-interest, create a society
that encouraged individuality and respect for minorities.
Therefore, a commune's participatory nature is the opposite of statism.
April Carter, in Authority and Democracy agrees. She states that
"commitment to direct democracy or anarchy in the socio-political sphere
is incompatible with political authority" [p. 69] and that the "only
authority that can exist in a direct democracy is the collective
'authority' vested in the body politic . . . it is doubtful if authority
can be created by a group of equals who reach decisions be a process of
mutual persuasion." [p. 380]
Anarchists assert that individuals and the institutions they create
cannot be considered in isolation. Authoritarian institutions will
create individuals who have a servile nature, who cannot govern themselves.
Anarchists, therefore, consider it commonsense that individuals, in order to
be free, must have take part in determining the general agreements they `
make with their neighbours which give form to their communities. Otherwise,
society itself could not exist and individual's would be subject to rules
others make for them (following orders is hardly libertarian). Therefore,
anarchists recognise the social nature of humanity and the fact any society
based on contracts (like capitalism) will be marked by authority, injustice
and inequality, not freedom. As Bookchin points out, "To speak of 'The
Individual' part from its social roots is as meaningless as to speak of a
society that contains no people or institutions." [Op. Cit., p. 15]
Society cannot be avoided and "[u]nless everyone is to be psychologically
homogeneous and society's interests so uniform in character that dissent
is simply meaningless, there must be room for conflicting proposals,
discussion, rational explication and majority decisions - in short,
democracy." [Op. Cit, pp. 15-16] Those who reject democracy in the name
of liberty (such as many supporters of capitalism) usually also see
the need for laws and hierarchical authority (particularly in the workplace).
This is unsurprising, as such authority is the only means left by which
collective activity can be coordinated if "democracy" is rejected (usually
as "statist", which is ironic as the resulting institutions, such as
a capitalist company, are far more statist than directly democratic ones).
However, it should be noted that communities can expel individuals or
groups of individuals who constantly hinder community decisions. As
Malatesta argued, "for if it is unjust that the majority should
oppress the minority, the contrary would be quite as unjust; and if the
minority has a right to rebel, the majority has a right to defend itself.
. . it is true that this solution is not completely satisfactory. The
individuals put out of the association would be deprived of many social
advantages, which an isolated person or group must do without, because
they can only be procured by the cooperation of a great number of human
beings. But what would you have? These malcontents cannot fairly demand
that the wishes of many others should be sacrificed for their sakes." [A
Talk about Anarchist-Communism, p. 29]
Nevertheless, such occurrences would be rare (for reasons discussed in
section I.5.6), and their possibility merely indicates that free
association also means the freedom not to associate. This a very
important freedom for both the majority and the minority, and must be
defended. However, as an isolated life is impossible, the need for
communal associations is essential. It is only by living together in a
supportive community can individuality be encouraged and developed along
with individual freedom.
Lastly, that these communities and confederations are not just states
with new names in indicated by two more considerations. Firstly, in regard
to the activities of the confederal conferences, it is clear that they
would not be passing laws on personal behaviour or ethics, i.e. not
legislating to restrict the liberty of those who live in these communities
they represent. For example, a community is unlikely to pass laws
outlawing homosexuality or censoring the press, for reasons discussed in
the next section. Hence they would not be "law-making bodies" in the modern
sense of the term, and thus not statist. Secondly, these confederations
have no means to enforce their decisions. In other words, if a confederal
congress makes a decision, it has no means to force people to act or not
act in a certain way. We can imagine that there will be ethical reasons
why participants will not act in ways to oppose joint activity -- as they
took part in the decision making process they would be considered childish
if they reject the final decision because it did not go in their favour.
So, far from being new states by which one section of a community imposes
its ethical standards on another, the anarchist commune is just a public
forum. In this forum, issues of community interest (for example,
management of the commons, control of communalised economic activity, and
so forth) are discussed and policy agreed upon. In addition, interests
beyond a local area are also discussed and delegates for confederal
conferences are mandated with the wishes of the community. Hence,
administration of things replaces government of people, with the community
of communities existing to ensure that the interests of all are managed by
all and that liberty, justice and equality are more than just ideals.
For these reasons, a libertarian-socialist society would not create a new
state as far as structure goes. But what about in the area of function?
As noted in section B.2.1, the function of the state is to enable the
ruling elite to exploit subordinate social strata, i.e. to derive an
economic surplus from them, which it does by protecting certain economic
monopolies from which the elite derives its wealth, and so its power. But
this function is completely eliminated by the economic structure of
anarchist society, which, by abolishing private property, makes it
impossible for a privileged elite to form, let alone exploit "subordinate
strata" (which will not exist, as no one is subordinate in power to anyone
else). In other words, by placing the control of productive resources in
the hands of the workers councils and community assemblies, every worker
is given free access to the means of production that he or she needs to
earn a living. Hence no one will be forced to pay usury (i.e. a use-fee)
in the form of appropriated surplus value (profits) to an elite class that
monopolizes the means of production. In short, without private property,
the state loses its reason for existence.
There is, of course, this danger in any system of democracy, direct or
indirect. However, while there is cause for concern (and anarchists are
at the forefront in expressing it), the "tyranny-of-the-majority"
objection fails to take note of the vast difference between direct and
"representative" forms of democracy.
In the current system, as we pointed out in section B.5, voters are mere
passive spectators of occasional, staged, and highly rehearsed debates
among candidates preselected by the corporate elite, who pay for campaign
expenses. More often the public is expected to choose simply on the basis
of political ads and news sound bites. Moreover, once the choice is made,
cumbersome and ineffective recall procedures insure that elected
representatives can act more or less as they (or rather, their wealthy
sponsors) please. The function, then, of the electorate in bourgeois
"representative government" is ratification of "choices" that have been
already made for them!
By contrast, in a direct, libertarian democracy, decisions are made
following public discussion in community assemblies open to all. After
decisions have been reached, outvoted minorities -- even minorities of one
-- still have ample opportunity to present reasoned and persuasive
counterarguments to try to change the decision. This process of debate,
disagreement, challenge, and counter-challenge, which goes on even after
the defeated minority has temporarily acquiesced in the decision of the
majority, is virtually absent in the representative system, where "tyranny
of the majority" is truly a problem. In addition, minorities can secede
from an association if the decision reached by it are truly offensive to
them.
And let's not forget that in all likelihood, issues of personal conduct or
activity will not be discussed in the neighbourhood assemblies. Why?
Because we are talking about a society in which most people consider
themselves to be unique, free individuals, who would thus recognise and
act to protect the uniqueness and freedom of others. Unless people are
indoctrinated by religion or some other form of ideology, they can be
tolerant of others and their individuality. If this is not the case now,
it has to do with the existence of authoritarian social relationships and
the type of person they create -- relationships that will be dismantled
under libertarian socialism.
Today an authoritarian worldview, characterized by an inability to think
beyond the categories of domination and submission, is imparted by
conditioning in the family, schools, religious institutions, clubs,
fraternities, the army, etc., and produces a type of personality that is
intolerant of any individual or group perceived as threatening to the
perpetuation of that worldview and its corresponding institutions and
values. Thus, as Bakunin argues, "public opinion" is potentially intolerant
"simply because hitherto this power has not been humanized itself; it has
not been humanized because the social life of which it is ever the
faithful expression is based. . .in the worship of divinity, not on
respect for humanity; in authority, not on liberty; on privilege, not on
equality; in the exploitation, not on the brotherhood, of men; on iniquity
and falsehood, not on justice and truth. Consequently its real action,
always in contradiction of the humanitarian theories which it professes,
has constantly exercised a disastrous and depraving influence" [God and
the State, p. 43ff].
In an anarchist society, however, a conscious effort will be made to
dissolve the institutional and traditional sources of the
authoritarian/submissive type of personality, and thus to free "public
opinion" of its current potential for intolerance. In addition, it should
be noted that as anarchists recognise that the practice of self-assumed
political obligation implied in free association also implies the right to
practice dissent and disobedience as well. As Carole Pateman notes, "[e]ven
if it is impossible to be unjust to myself, I do not vote for myself alone,
but alone with everyone else. Questions about injustice are always
appropriate in political life, for there is no guarantee that participatory
voting will actually result in decisions in accord with the principles
of political morality." [The Problem of Political Obligation, p. 160]
If an individual or group of individuals feel that a specific decision
threatens their freedom (which is the basic principle of political
morality in an anarchist society) they can (and must) act to defend that
freedom. "The political practice of participatory voting rests in a
collective self-consciousness about the meaning and implication of
citizenship. The members of the political association understand that to
vote is simultaneously to commit oneself, to commit one's fellow citizens,
and also to commit oneself to them in a mutual undertaking . . . a refusal
to vote on a particular occasion indicates that the refusers believe . . .
[that] the proposal . . . infringes the principle of political morality
on which the political association is based . . A refusal to vote [or the
use of direct action] could be seen as an appeal to the 'sense of justice'
of their fellow citizens." [Carole Pateman, Op. Cit., p. 161]
As they no longer "consent" to the decisions made by their community they
can appeal to the "sense of justice" of their fellow citizens by direct
action and indicate that a given decision may have impacts which the
majority were not aware. Hence direct action and dissent is a key aspect
of an anarchist society and help ensure against the tyranny of the majority.
Anarchism rejects the "love it or leave it" attitude that marks classical
liberalism as well as Rousseau (this aspect of his work being inconsistant
with its foundations in participation).
It should be stressed, however, that most anarchists do not think that the
way to guard against tyranny by the majority is to resort to
decision-making by consensus (where no action can be taken until every
person in the group agrees) or a property system (based in contracts).
Both consensus (see section A.2.12 - Is consensus an alternative to direct
democracy?) and contracts (see section A.2.14 - Why is voluntarism not
enough?) soon result in authoritarian social relationships developing in
the name of "liberty."
For example, decision making by consensus tends to eliminate the creative
role of dissent and mutate into a system that pressures people into
psychic and intellectual conformity -- hardly a libertarian ideal. In the
case of property- and contract-based systems, those with property have
more power than those without, and so they soon determine what can and
cannot be done -- in other words, the "tyranny of the minority" and
hierarchical authority. Both alternatives are deeply flawed. Hence most
anarchists have recognized that majority decision making, though not
perfect, is the best way to reach decisions in a political system based
on maximising freedom. Direct democracy in grassroots confederal
assemblies and workers' councils ensures that decision making is
"horizontal" in nature (i.e. between equals) and not hierarchical (i.e.
governmental, between order giver and order taker).
As would be expected, no one would be forced to join a commune nor take
part in its assemblies. To suggest otherwise would be contrary to
anarchist principles. We have already indicated why the communes would not
be likely to restrict individuals with new "laws". However, what about
individuals who live within the boundaries of a commune (obviously
individuals can leave to find communities more in line with their own
concepts of right and wrong if they cannot convince their neighbours of
the validity of their ideas)? For example, a local neighbourhood may include
households that desire to associate and a few that do not. Are the communal
decisions binding on non-members? Obviously not. If an individual or family
desire not to join (for whatever reason), their freedoms must be respected.
However, this also means that they cannot benefit from communal activity and
resources (such a free housing, hospitals, and so forth) and, possibly,
have to pay for their use. As long as they do not exploit or oppress
others, an anarchist community would respect their decision.
However, many who oppose anarchist direct democracy in the name of freedom
often do so because they desire to oppress and exploit others. In other
words, they oppose participatory communities because they (rightly) fear
that this would restrict their ability to oppress, exploit and grow rich off
the labour of others. This type of opposition can be seen from history, when
rich elites, in the name of liberty, have replaced democratic forms of
social decision making with representative or authoritarian ones (see
section B.2.6). Regardless of what defenders of capitalism claim,
"voluntary bilateral exchanges" affect third parties and can harm others
indirectly. This can easily be seen from examples like concentrations of
wealth which have effects across society, or crime in the local
community, or the ecological impacts of consumption and production.
As a way to minimize this problem, an anarchist revolution aims to
place social wealth (starting with the land) in the hands of all and to
protect only those uses of it which are considered just by society as a
whole. In other words, by recognising that "property" is a product of
society, an anarchist society will ensure than an individual's "property"
is protected by his or her fellows when it is based purely upon actual
occupancy and use. As Malatesta put it, some "seem almost to believe that
after having brought down government and private property we would allow
both to be quietly built up again, because of respect for the freedom
of those who might feel the need to be rulers and property owners. A
truly curious way of interpreting our ideas." [Anarchy, p. 41]
So, it goes without saying that the minority, as in any society,
will exist within the ethical norms of society and they will be "forced to
adhere" to them in the same sense that they are "forced to adhere" not to
murder people. Few people would say that forcing people not to commit murder
is a restriction of their liberty. Therefore, while allowing the maximum
of individual freedom of dissent, an anarchist community would still have
to apply its ethical standards to those beyond that community. Individuals
would not be allowed to murder or enslave others and claim that they are
allowed to do so because they are not part of the local community (see
section I.5.8 on crime in an anarchist society). Similarly, individuals
would not be allowed to develop private property (as opposed to possession)
simply because they wanted to. Such a "ban" on private property would not be
a restriction on liberty simply because stopping the development of
authority hardly counts as an authoritarian act (for an analogy, supporters
of capitalism do not think that banning theft is a restriction of liberty
and because this view is - currently - accepted by the majority, it is
enforced it on the minority). Even the word "ban" is wrong, as it is the
would-be capitalist who is trying to ban freedom for others from their
"property." Members of a free society would simply refuse to recognise the
claims of private property - "occupancy and use" (to use Tucker's term)
would be the limits of possession - and so property would become "that
control of a thing by a person which will receive either social sanction,
or else unanimous individual sanction, when the laws of social expediency
shall have been fully discovered." [B. Tucker, Instead of a Book, p. 131]
Therefore anarchists support the maximum of experimentations while ensuring
that the social conditions that allow this experimentation are protected
against concentrations of wealth and power. As Malatesta put it, "Anarchism
involves all and only those forms of life that respect liberty and recognise
that every person has an equal right to enjoy the good things of nature and
the products of their own activity." [The Anarchist Revolution, p. 14]
This means that Anarchists do not support the liberty of being a boss
(anarchists will happily work with someone but not for someone). Of
course, those who desire to create private property against the wishes of
others expect those others to respect their wishes. So, when the would-be
propertarians happily fence off their "property" and exclude others from it,
could not these others remember these words from Woody Guthrie's This Land
is Your Land, and act accordingly?
While happy to exclude others from "their" property, such owners seem more
than happy to use the resources held in common by others. They are the
ultimate "free riders," desiring the benefits of society but rejecting the
responsibilities that go with it. In the end, such "individualists" usually
end up supporting the state (an institution they claim to hate) precisely
because its the only means by which private property and their "freedom"
to exercise authority can be defended .
Therefore, individuals are free not to associate, but their claims of
"ownership" will be based around use rights, not property rights.
Individual's will be protected by their fellows only in so far as what
they claim to "own" is related to their ability to use said "property."
Without a state to back up and protect property "rights," we see that all
rights are, in the end, what society considers to be fair (the difference
between law and social custom is discussed in section I.7.3). What the
state does is to impose "rights" which do not have such a basis (i.e.
those that protect the property of the elite) or "rights" which have been
corrupted by wealth and would have been changed because of this corruption
had society been free to manage its own affairs.
In summary, individuals will be free not to join a participatory community,
and hence free to place themselves outside its decisions and activities
on most issues that do not apply to the fundamental ethical standards of
a society. Hence individuals who desire to live outside of anarchist
communities would be free to live as they see fit but would not be able
to commit murder, rape, create private property or other activities
that harmed individuals. It should be noted, moreover, that this does not
mean that their possessions will be taken from them by "society" or
that "society" will tell them what to do with their possessions. Freedom,
in a complex world, means that such individuals will not be in a position
to turn their possessions into property and thus recreate capitalism. (For
the distinction between "property" and "possessions," see B.3.1.) This will
not be done by "anarchist police" or by "banning" voluntary agreements,
but purely by recognising that "property" is a social creation and by
creating a social system that will encourage individuals to stand up for
their rights and cooperate with each other.
For anarchists, "crime" can best be described as anti-social acts, or
behavior which harms someone else or which invades their personal space.
Anarchists argue that the root cause for crime is not some perversity of
human nature or "original sin," but is due to the type of society by which
people are moulded. For example, anarchists point out that by eliminating
private property, crime could be reduced by about 90 percent, since about
90 percent of crime is currently motivated by evils stemming from private
property such as poverty, homelessness, unemployment, and alienation.
Moreover, by adopting anarchist methods of non-authoritarian child rearing
and education, most of the remaining crimes could also be eliminated,
because they are largely due to the anti-social, perverse, and cruel
"secondary drives" that develop because of authoritarian, pleasure-negative
child-rearing practices (See section J.6 - What
methods of child rearing do anarchists advocate?)
"Crime", therefore, cannot be divorced from the society within which it
occurs. Society, if you like, gets the criminals it deserves. For example,
anarchists do not think it unusual nor unexpected that crime exploded
under the pro-free market capitalist regimes of Thatcher and Reagan. Crime,
the most obvious symptom of social crisis, took 30 years to double in
Britain (from 1 million incidents in 1950 to 2.2 million in 1979. However,
between 1979 and 1992 the crime rate more than doubled, exceeding the 5
million mark in 1992. These 13 years were marked by a government firmly
committed to the "free market" and "individual responsibility." It
was entirely predictable that the social disruption, atomisation of
individuals, and increased poverty caused by freeing capitalism from
social controls would rip society apart and increase criminal activity.
Unsurprisingly (from an anarchist viewpoint), under these pro-market
governments we also saw a reduction in civil liberties, increased state
centralisation, and the destruction of local government. As Malatesta put
it, the classical liberalism which these governments represented could
have had no other effect, for "the government's powers of repression must
perforce increase as free competition results in more discord and
inequality" [Anarchy, p. 46]
Hence the paradox of governments committed to "individual rights," the
"free market" and "getting the state off our backs" increasing state power
and reducing rights while holding office during a crime explosion is no
paradox at all. "The conjucture of the rhectoric of individual freedom and
a vast increase in state power," argues Carole Pateman, "is not unexpected
at a time when the influence of contract doctrine is extending into the
last, most intimate nooks and crannies of social life. Taken to a conclusion,
contract undermines the conditions of its own existance. Hobbes showed
long ago that contract - all the way down - requires absolutism and the
sword to keep war at bay." [The Sexual Contract, p. 232]
Capitalism, and the contract theory on which it is built, will inevitably
rip apart society. Capitalism is based upon a vision of humanity as isolated
individuals with no connection other than that of money and contract. Such
a vision cannot help but institutionalise anti-social acts. As Kropotkin
argued "it is not love and not even sympathy upon which society is based
in [humanity]. It is the conscience - be it only at the stage of an instinct
- of human solidarity. It is the unconscious recognition of . . . the close
dependency of every one's happiness upon the happiness of all; and of the
sense of justice, or equity, which brings the individual to consider the
rights of every other individual as equal to [one's] own." [Mutual
Aid, p. xiv]
The social atomisation required and created by capitalism destroys the basic
bonds of society - namely human solidarity - and hierarchy crushes the
individuality required to understand that we share a common humanity with
others and so understand why we must be ethical and respect others
rights.
We should also point out that prisons have numerous negative affects on
society as well as often re-inforcing criminal (i.e. anti-social) behaviour.
Kropotkin originated the accurate description of prisons as "Universities
of Crime" wherein the first-time criminal learns new techniques and have
adapt to the prevailing ethical standards within them. Hence, prisons would
have the effect of increasing the criminal tendencies of those sent there
and so prove to be counter-productive. In addition, prisons do not affect
the social conditions which promote many forms of crime.
We are not saying, however, that anarchists reject the concept of individual
responsibility. While recognising that rape, for example, is the result of
a social system which represses sexuality and is based on patriarchy (i.e.
rape has more to do with power than sex), anarchists do not "sit back" and
say "it's society's fault." Individuals have to take responsibility for
their own actions and recognise that consequences of those actions. Part
of the current problem with "law codes" is that individuals have been
deprived of the responsibility for developing their own ethical code, and so
are less likely to develop "civilised" social standards (see section
I.7.3).
Therefore, while anarchists reject the ideas of law and a specialised
justice system, they are not blind to the fact that anti-social action may
not totally disappear in a free society. Therefore, some sort of "court"
system would still be necessary to deal with the remaining crimes and to
adjudicate disputes between citizens.
These courts would function on two levels. Firstly, if the parties
involved could agree to hand their case to a third party, then the "court"
in question would be the arrangements made by those parties. Secondly, if
the parties could not agree (or if the victim was dead), the issue could
be raised at a communal assembly and a "court" appointed to look into the
issue. These "courts" would be independent from the commune, their
independence strengthened by popular election instead of executive
appointment of judges, by protecting the jury system of selection of
random citizens by lot, and by informing jurors of their right to judge
the law itself, according to their conscience, as well as the facts of a
case. As Malatesta pointed out, "when differences were to arise between
men [sic!], would not arbitration voluntarily accepted, or pressure
of public opinion, be perhaps more likely to establish where the right
lies than through an irresponsible magistrature which has the right to
adjudicate on everything and everybody and is inevitably incompetent
and therefore unjust?" [Anarchy, p. 43]
In the case of a "police force," this would not exist as either a public
or private specialised body or company. If a local community did consider
that public safety required a body of people who could be called upon for
help, we imagine that a new system would be created. This system would be
based around a voluntary militia system, in which all members of the
community could serve if they so desired. Those who served would not
constitute a professional body; instead the service would be made up of
local people who would join for short periods of time and be replaced if
they abused their position. Hence the likelihood that a communal militia
would become corrupted by power, like the current police force or a
private security firm exercising a policing function, would be vastly
reduced.
Such a body would not have a monopoly on protecting others, but
would simply be on call if others required it. It would no more be a
"police force" than the current fire service is a police force (individuals
are not banned from putting out fires today because the fire service
exists, similarly individuals will be free to help stop anti-social crime
by themselves in an anarchist society).
Of course there are anti-social acts which occur without witnesses and
so the "guilty" party cannot be readily identified. If such acts did
occur we can imagine an anarchist community taking two courses of
action. The injured party may look into the facts themselves or appoint
an agent to do so or, more likely, an ad hoc group would be elected at
a community assembly to investigate specific crimes of this sort. Such
a group would be given the necessary "authority" to investigate the crime
and be subject to recall by the community if they start trying to abuse
whatever authority they had. Once the investigating body thought it had
enough evidence it would inform the community as well as the affected parties
and then organise a court. Of course, a free society will produce different
solutions to such problems, solutions no-one has considered yet and so
these suggestions are just that, suggestions.
As is often stated, prevention is better than cure. This is as true of
crime as of disease. In other words, crime is best fought by rooting out
its causes as opposed to punishing those who act in response to these
causes. For example, its hardly surprising that a culture that promotes
individual profit and consumerism would produce individuals who do not
respect other people (or themselves) and see them as purely means to
an end (usually increased consumption). And, like everything else in
a capitalist system, such as honour and pride, conscience is also available
at the right price -- hardly an environment which encourages consideration
for others, or even for oneself.
In addition, a society based on hierarchical authority will also tend to
produce anti-social activity because the free development and expression
it suppresses. Thus, irrational authority (which is often claimed to be
the only cure for crime) actually helps produce it. As Emma Goldman
argued, "Crime is naught but misdirected energy. So long as every institution
of today, economic, political, social, moral conspires to misdirect human
energy into wrong channels; so long as most people are out of place doing
things they hate to do, living a life they loathe to live, crime will be
inevitable, and all the laws on the statues can only increase, but never
do away with, crime" [Red Emma Speaks, p. 57]
Eric Fromm, decades latter, makes the same point:
"It would seem that the amount of destructiveness to be found in individuals
is proportionate to the amount to which expansiveness of life is curtailed.
By this we do not refer to individual frustrations of this or that instinctive
desire but to the thwarting of the whole of life, the blockage of spontaneity
of the growth and expression of man's sensuous, emotional, and intellectual
capacities. Life has an inner dynamism of its own; it tends to grow, to
be expressed, to be lived. . .the drive for life and the drive for
destruction are not mutually interdependent factors but are in a reversed
interdependence. The more the drive towards life is thwarted, the stronger
is the drive towards destruction; the more life is realised, the less
is the strength of destructiveness. Destructiveness is the outcome of
unlived life. Those individual and social conditions that make for
suppression of life produce the passion for destruction that forms, so to
speak, the reservoir from which particular hostile tendencies -- either
against others or against oneself -- are nourished" [The Fear of Freedom,
p. 158]
Therefore, by reorganising society so that it empowers everyone and
actively encourages the use of all our intellectual, emotional and
sensuous abilities, crime would soon cease to be the huge problem that it
is now. As for the anti-social behavior or clashes between individuals
that might still exist in such a society, it would be dealt with in a
system based on respect for the individual and a recognition of the
social roots of the problem. Restraint would be kept to a minimum.
Anarchists think that public opinion and social pressure would be the
main means of preventing anti-social acts in an anarchist society, with
such actions as boycotting and ostracising used as powerful sanctions to
convince those attempting them of the errors of their way. Extensive
non-cooperation by neighbours, friends and workmates would be the best
means of stopping acts which harmed others.
An anarchist system of justice, we should note, would have alot to learn
from aboriginal societies simply because they are examples of social order
without the state. Indeed many of the ideas we consider as essential to
justice today can be found in such societies. As Kropotkin argued, "when
we imagine that we have made great advances in introducing, for instance,
the jury, all we have done is to return to the institutions of the
so-called 'barbarians' after having changed it to the advantage of the
ruling classes" [The State - It's Historic Role, p. 18]
Like aboriginal justice (as documented by Rupert Ross in Returning to the
Teachings: Exploring Aborginal Justice) anarchists contend that offenders
should not be punished but justice achieved by the teaching and healing of
all involved. Public condemnation of the wrong doing would be a key
aspect of this process, but the wrong doer would remain part of the
community and so the effects of their actions on others in terms of
grief and pain caused. It would be likely that wrong doers would be
expected to try to make amends for their act by community service or
helping victims and their families.
So, from a practical viewpoint, almost all anarchists oppose prisons
on both practical grounds (they do not work) and ethical grounds ("We
know what prisons mean - they mean broken down body and spirit, degradation,
consumption, insanity" Voltairine de Cleyre, quoted by Paul Avrich in
An American Anarchist, p. 146]). The Makhnovists took the usual anarchist
position on prisons:
"Prisons are the symbol of the servitude of the people, they are always
built only to subjugate the people, the workers and peasants. . . Free
people have no use for prisons. Wherever prisons exist, the people are not
free. . . In keeping with this attitude, they [the Makhnovists] demolished
prisons wherever they went." [Peter Arshinov, The History of the Makhnovist
Movement, p. 153]
With the exception of Benjamin Tucker, no major anarchist writer supported
the institution. Few anarchists think that private prisons (like private
policemen) are compatible with their notions of freedom. All anarchists
are against the current "justice" system which seems to them to be
organised around revenge and punishing effects and not fixing causes.
However, there are psychopaths and other people in any society who are
too dangerous to be allowed to walk freely. Restraint in this case would
be the only option and such people may have to be isolated from others
for their own, and others, safety. Perhaps mental hospitals would be
used, or an area quarantined for their use created (perhaps an
island, for example). However, such cases (we hope) would be rare.
So instead of prisons and a legal code based on the concept of
punishment and revenge, anarchists support the use of pubic opinion
and pressure to stop anti-social acts and the need to therapeutically
rehabilite those who commit anti-social acts. As Kropotkin argued,
"liberty, equality, and practical human sympathy are the most effective
barriers we can oppose to the anti-social instinct of certain among us"
and not a parasitic legal system. [The Anarchist Reader, p. 117]
Many express the idea that all forms of socialism would endanger
freedom of speech, press, and so forth. The usual formulation of this
argument is in relation to state socialism and goes as follows: if the
state (or "society") owned all the means of communication, then only the
views which the government supported would get access to the media.
This is an important point and it needs to be addressed. However, before
doing so, we should point out that under capitalism the major media are
effectively controlled by the wealthy. As we argued in section D.3, the
media are not the independent defenders of freedom that they like to
portray themselves as. This is hardly surprising, since newspapers,
television companies, and so forth are capitalist enterprises owned by the
wealthy and with managing directors and editors who are also wealthy
individuals with a vested interest in the status quo. Hence there are
institutional factors which ensure that the "free press" reflects the
interests of capitalist elites.
However, in democratic capitalist states there is little overt censorship.
Radical and independent publishers can still print their papers and books
without state intervention (although market forces ensure that this
activity can be difficult and financially unrewarding). Under socialism,
it is argued, because "society" owns the means of communication and
production, this liberty will not exist. Instead, as can be seen from
all examples of "actually existing socialism," such liberty is crushed in
favour of the government's point of view.
As anarchism rejects the state, we can say that this danger does not
exist under libertarian socialism. However, since social anarchists argue
for the communalisation of production, could not restrictions on free
speech still exist? We argue no, for two reasons. Firstly, publishing
houses, radio stations, and so on will be run by their workers, directly.
They will be supplied by other cooperatives, with whom they will make
agreements, and not by "central planning" officials, who would not
exist. In other words, there is no bureaucracy of officials allocating
(and so controlling) resources (and so the means of communication). Hence,
anarcho-syndicalist self-management will ensure that there is a wide
range of opinions in different magazines and papers. There would be
community papers, radio stations, etc., and obviously they would play an
increased role in a free society. But they would not be the only media.
Associations, political parties, syndicates, and so on would have their
own media and/or would have access to the resources of communication
workers' syndicates, so ensuring that a wide range of opinions can be
expressed.
Secondly, the "ultimate" power in a free society will be the individuals
of which it is composed. This power will be expressed in communal and
workplace assemblies that can recall delegates and revoke their
decisions. It is doubtful that these assemblies would tolerate a set of
would-be bureaucrats determining what they can or cannot read, see, or
hear. In addition, individuals in a free society would be interesting in
hearing different viewpoints and discussing them. This is the natural
side-effect of critical thought (which self-management would encourage),
and so they would have a vested interest in defending the widest possible
access to different forms of media for different views. Having no vested
interests to defend, a free society would hardly encourage or tolerate
the censorship associated with the capitalist media ("I listen to criticism
because I am greedy. I listen to criticism because I am selfish. I
would not deny myself another's insights." [The Right to be Greedy]
Therefore, anarchism will increase freedom of speech in many important
ways, particularly in the workplace (where it is currently denied under
capitalism). This will be a natural result of a society based on maximising
freedom and the desire to enjoy life.
We would also like to point out that during both the Spanish and Russian
revolutions, freedom of speach was protected within anarchist areas.
For example, the Makhnovists in the Urkaine "fully applied the revolutionary
principles of freedom of speech, of thought, of the Press, and of political
association. In all the cities and towns occupied . . . [c]omplete freedom
of speach, Press, assembly, and association of any kind and for everyone
was immediately proclaimed." [Peter Arshinov, The History of the Makhnovist
Movement, p. 153] This is confirmed by Micheal Malet, who notes that "[o]ne
of the most remarkable achievements of the Makhnovists was to perserve a
freedom of speach more extensive than any of their opponents." [Nestor
Makhno in the Russian Civil War, p. 175]
In revolutionary Spain republicians, liberals, communists, trotskyites and
many different anarchist groups all had freedom to express their views.
Emma Goldman writes that "[o]n my first visit to Spain in September 1936,
nothing surprised me so much as the amount of political freedom I found
everywhere. True, it did not extend to Fascists . . . [but] everyone of
the anti-Fascist front enjoyed political freedom which hardly existed
in any of the so-called European democracies." [Vision on Fire, David
Porter (ed), p.147] This is confirmed in a host of other eye-witnesses,
including George Orwell in Homage to Catalonia (in fact, it was
the rise of the pro-capitalist republicans and communists that introduced
censorship).
Both movements were fighting a life-and-death struggle against fascist and
pro-capitalist armies and so this defense of freedom of expression, given
the circumstances, is particularly noteworthy.
Therefore, based upon both theory and practice we can say that anarchism
will not endanger freedom of expression.
I.5.1 What are participatory communities and why are they needed?
I.5.2 Why are confederations of participatory communities needed?
I.5.3 What will be the scales and levels of confederation?
I.5.4 How will anything ever be decided by all those confederal conferences?
I.5.5 Aren't participatory communities and confederations just new states?
I.5.6 Won't there be a danger of a "tyranny of the majority" under libertarian socialism?
I.5.7 What if I don't want to join a commune?
I saw a sign that said private property
But on the other side it didn't say nothing
This land was made for you and me"
I.5.8 What about crime?
I.5.9 What about Freedom of Speech under Anarchism?