Bitcoin Forum

Other => Off-topic => Topic started by: madmadmax on December 19, 2013, 05:31:12 PM



Title: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 19, 2013, 05:31:12 PM
I wonder how many members are actually anarchists since we have been expanding quite a lot.

http://www.politicalcompass.org/test

http://www.politicalcompass.org/facebook/pcgraphpng.php?ec=5.75&soc=-2.15


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: xkeyscore89 on December 19, 2013, 06:33:23 PM
I haven't taken the test, and I will when I have time since it asks some pretty interesting questions.  There are very few true anarchists in the U.S., let alone on this board.  The only group that comes to mind that qualifies as such would be some of the more radical members of the "Sovereign Citizens Movement".  These are the people who get pulled over for a busted tail-light and are uncooperative with the officer. By uncooperative, I mean immediately stepping out of the car after being pulled over.  Some people do this to verbally argue with a cop, but these people don't step out to argue.  They step out of their car with a modified automatic AR-15 equipped with a 100-round drum and deliver a 25-35 round burst into the police cruiser.  There are no words spoken and no bullet-proof vests utilized by any police force in the nation that can save him (with the exception of Dragonskin, which is military only).  Death is almost instantaneous, there's no pain for the officer at least, only shock for a period of 5 seconds or less.  A shot that shreds the aorta has a higher kill rate than a head shot because it's not protected like the brain is and it contains the most blood of any artery.  The blood loss caused by a single direct bullet impact is always fatal and consciousness is lost in 3 seconds at the most.  A 35-round impact, with say, 10 contacting the aorta directly? Well, you do the math.

They do this not because they have warrants.  They do it because they believe that they belong to a group that is not subject to the laws of any government.  Being pulled over by police infringes this "sovereignty" and is treated by the most radical members as an act of war.  This is the closest thing to a real anarchist there is and real anarchists evolve into domestic terrorists with a goal of not only bringing down the current system but establishing their own.

No anarchist with the power to bring down a government would stop at that point.  Human nature and greed change the focus into establishing a system designed to generate wealth and power at the expense of others.  I think any real anarchist gradually evolves into a domestic terrorist.

Timothy McVeigh is another example of this.  His anarchist views led him to become a domestic terrorist, though he was not a true anarchist.  His mental predisposition, his belief system (I'm not saying he was insane) combined with reading "The Turner Diaries" was the beginning of the end for him.  He wasn't a true anarchist, he just wanted to make a statement that the status quo had to change.


It's safe to say that all parties mentioned above are part of the approximately 50% of citizens who don't pay taxes, the "IRS anarchists"  ;)



Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 19, 2013, 06:44:44 PM
I haven't taken the test, and I will when I have time since it asks some pretty interesting questions.  There are very few true anarchists in the U.S., let alone on this board.  The only group that comes to mind that qualifies as such would be some of the more radical members of the "Sovereign Citizens Movement".  These are the people who get pulled over for a busted tail-light and are uncooperative with the officer. By uncooperative, I mean immediately stepping out of the car after being pulled over.  Some people do this to verbally argue with a cop, but these people don't step out to argue.  They step out of their car with a modified automatic AR-15 equipped with a 100-round drum and deliver a 25-35 round burst into the police cruiser.  There are no words spoken and no bullet-proof vests utilized by any police force in the nation that will save them.  Death is almost instantaneous, there's no pain for the officer at least, only shock.

They do this not because they have warrants.  They do it because they believe that they belong to a group that is not subject to the laws of any government.  Being pulled over by police infringes this "sovereignty" and is treated by the most radical members as an act of war.  This is the closest thing to a real anarchist there is and real anarchists evolve into domestic terrorists with a goal of not only bringing down the current system but establishing their own.

No anarchist with the power to bring down a government would stop at that point.  Human nature and greed change the focus into establishing a system designed to generate wealth and power at the expense of others.  I think any real anarchist gradually evolves into a domestic terrorist.

Timothy McVeigh is another example of this.  His anarchist views led him to become a domestic terrorist, though he was not a true anarchist.  His mental predisposition, his belief system (I'm not saying he was insane) combined with reading "The Turner Diaries" was the beginning of the end for him.  He wasn't a true anarchist, he just wanted to make a statement that the status quo had to change.


It's safe to say that all parties mentioned above are part of the approximately 50% of citizens who don't pay taxes.   ;)



I think it is rather important to remain reasonable and be exposed to other ideologies regardless of how absurd they may sound at first, I have read Mein Kampf, I have read communist propaganda straight from the communists as well as authoritarian propaganda straight from authoritarians, no system which is as logical and as fair as anarchy exists.

The vast majority of the stupid masses choose their political views based on what hey are fed on the TV and other obviously biased news sources (since any news source is biased really) so the average person doesn't even understand what anarchy means, most people believe the word to mean a state of chaos rather than a state of harmony.

Paying taxes serves a higher purpose ultimately, since then you can be free to spread your world views and potentially affect the world rather than being behind closed bars. If you are shooting at a police officer that has stopped you how are you better than a tyrannical government?


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: xkeyscore89 on December 19, 2013, 07:17:10 PM
I haven't taken the test, and I will when I have time since it asks some pretty interesting questions.  There are very few true anarchists in the U.S., let alone on this board.  The only group that comes to mind that qualifies as such would be some of the more radical members of the "Sovereign Citizens Movement".  These are the people who get pulled over for a busted tail-light and are uncooperative with the officer. By uncooperative, I mean immediately stepping out of the car after being pulled over.  Some people do this to verbally argue with a cop, but these people don't step out to argue.  They step out of their car with a modified automatic AR-15 equipped with a 100-round drum and deliver a 25-35 round burst into the police cruiser.  There are no words spoken and no bullet-proof vests utilized by any police force in the nation that will save them.  Death is almost instantaneous, there's no pain for the officer at least, only shock.

They do this not because they have warrants.  They do it because they believe that they belong to a group that is not subject to the laws of any government.  Being pulled over by police infringes this "sovereignty" and is treated by the most radical members as an act of war.  This is the closest thing to a real anarchist there is and real anarchists evolve into domestic terrorists with a goal of not only bringing down the current system but establishing their own.

No anarchist with the power to bring down a government would stop at that point.  Human nature and greed change the focus into establishing a system designed to generate wealth and power at the expense of others.  I think any real anarchist gradually evolves into a domestic terrorist.

Timothy McVeigh is another example of this.  His anarchist views led him to become a domestic terrorist, though he was not a true anarchist.  His mental predisposition, his belief system (I'm not saying he was insane) combined with reading "The Turner Diaries" was the beginning of the end for him.  He wasn't a true anarchist, he just wanted to make a statement that the status quo had to change.


It's safe to say that all parties mentioned above are part of the approximately 50% of citizens who don't pay taxes.   ;)



I think it is rather important to remain reasonable and be exposed to other ideologies regardless of how absurd they may sound at first, I have read Mein Kampf, I have read communist propaganda straight from the communists as well as authoritarian propaganda straight from authoritarians, no system which is as logical and as fair as anarchy exists.

The vast majority of the stupid masses choose their political views based on what hey are fed on the TV and other obviously biased news sources (since any news source is biased really) so the average person doesn't even understand what anarchy means, most people believe the word to mean a state of chaos rather than a state of harmony.

Paying taxes serves a higher purpose ultimately, since then you can be free to spread your world views and potentially affect the world rather than being behind closed bars. If you are shooting at a police officer that has stopped you how are you better than a tyrannical government?

I think you may have taken my statements out of context.  I've skimmed through Mein Kampf, (I wasn't impressed by what I read by the way. It was more a collection anti-semitic ramblings and scattered political thoughts than a manifesto.)  I have read The Communist Manifesto, which I enjoyed very much.

In regards to what I bolded in your quote.  In a perfect world, you'd be correct, anarchism would work in a practical sense.  Similarly, in a perfect world, Communism would work.  However, I think you're focusing on the applications of anarchy in a perfect world.  You're losing sight of the fact that you will live and die in a world which is far from perfect and resists change.  I consider myself to a Deist and believe that the human race is inherently flawed and corrupted by one thing above all others, greed.  Because of this, anarchism will always remain theory and could never be successfully implemented.  In a utopian existence, this would not apply.

It's not so much that I think anarchy is completely without merit in a theoretical since.  It's an interesting topic to discuss and debate in a philosophical forum where it may be possible to extract a practical application for some of its tenets. But why waste time making it into a movement when it's fatally flawed by the constraints of the world in which we live?  Not to mention that, if your movement somehow grew large enough, it would be quickly dismantled by government entities before you even realized it.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 19, 2013, 07:42:29 PM
I think you may have taken my statements out of context.  I've skimmed through Mein Kampf, (I wasn't impressed by what I read by the way. It was more a collection anti-semitic ramblings and scattered political thoughts than a manifesto.)  I have read The Communist Manifesto, which I enjoyed very much.

In regards to what I bolded in your quote.  In a perfect world, you'd be correct, anarchism would work in a practical sense.  Similarly, in a perfect world, Communism would work.  However, I think you're focusing on the applications of anarchy in a perfect world.  You're losing sight of the fact that you will live and die in a world which is far from perfect and resists change.  I consider myself to a Deist and believe that the human race is inherently flawed and corrupted by one thing above all others, greed.  Because of this, anarchism will always remain theory and could never be successfully implemented.  In a utopian existence, this would not apply.

It's not so much that I think anarchy is completely without merit in a theoretical since.  It's an interesting topic to discuss and debate in a philosophical forum where it may be possible to extract a practical application for some of its tenets. But why waste time making it into a movement when it's fatally flawed by the constraints of the world in which we live?  Not to mention that, if your movement somehow grew large enough, it would be quickly dismantled by government entities before you even realized it.

To be clear, what is it exactly that you claim will fail in anarchism due to us being inherently flawed (which I agree with completely) or is implementing it the only struggle?

I see other political movements relying far more on flawed people than anarchism, democrats assume that most people out there know what is best for them which is a pretty wild assumption, communists assume that people would be noble enough to self reflect and determine whether what they have is according to their need and how they work is according to their ability, an even wilder assumption. Authoritarians believe that if you give the 1% total control of the 99% they won't abuse that power because every single human being is completely just and logical, there is only one truth to which all within the 1% will remain loyal, which is complete crazy-talk.

So among all the systems, anarchism relying on flawed humans the least.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: guybrushthreepwood on December 19, 2013, 07:50:20 PM
I wonder how many members are actually anarchists since we have been expanding quite a lot.

http://www.politicalcompass.org/test

http://www.politicalcompass.org/facebook/pcgraphpng.php?ec=5.75&soc=-2.15

On the test I got Libertarian:

Economic Left/Right: -2.75
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -7.28


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: xkeyscore89 on December 19, 2013, 08:07:38 PM
I think you may have taken my statements out of context.  I've skimmed through Mein Kampf, (I wasn't impressed by what I read by the way. It was more a collection anti-semitic ramblings and scattered political thoughts than a manifesto.)  I have read The Communist Manifesto, which I enjoyed very much.

In regards to what I bolded in your quote.  In a perfect world, you'd be correct, anarchism would work in a practical sense.  Similarly, in a perfect world, Communism would work.  However, I think you're focusing on the applications of anarchy in a perfect world.  You're losing sight of the fact that you will live and die in a world which is far from perfect and resists change.  I consider myself to a Deist and believe that the human race is inherently flawed and corrupted by one thing above all others, greed.  Because of this, anarchism will always remain theory and could never be successfully implemented.  In a utopian existence, this would not apply.

It's not so much that I think anarchy is completely without merit in a theoretical since.  It's an interesting topic to discuss and debate in a philosophical forum where it may be possible to extract a practical application for some of its tenets. But why waste time making it into a movement when it's fatally flawed by the constraints of the world in which we live?  Not to mention that, if your movement somehow grew large enough, it would be quickly dismantled by government entities before you even realized it.

To be clear, what is it exactly that you claim will fail in anarchism due to us being inherently flawed (which I agree with completely) or is implementing it the only struggle?

I see other political movements relying far more on flawed people than anarchism, democrats assume that most people out there know what is best for them which is a pretty wild assumption, communists assume that people would be noble enough to self reflect and determine whether what they have is according to their need and how they work is according to their ability, an even wilder assumption. Authoritarians believe that if you give the 1% total control of the 99% they won't abuse that power because every single human being is completely just and logical, there is only one truth to which all within the 1% will remain loyal, which is complete crazy-talk.

So among all the systems, anarchism relying on flawed humans the least.

The implementation will be a challenge, but not the most pressing one, imo.  If implementation was successful, problems and ideas fed by greed will become harder to detect and prevent before they are able to cause harm to the society in the form of criminal and predatory acts.

Are individuals in an anarchistic society also supposed to function as law enforcement?  If so, the results would be disastrous.  Therefore, an entity has to be created with the mandate to protect the populace.  How can they be trusted to protect and serve when there's no one to challenge their authority?

Does the mere fact that there would exist a group dedicated to peace and order mean that the system no longer qualifies as an anarchy?


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: hilariousandco on December 19, 2013, 08:23:12 PM
I consider myself a Libertarian Socialist, but I don't need to take that test to confirm that.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 19, 2013, 09:01:20 PM
The implementation will be a challenge, but not the most pressing one, imo.  If implementation was successful, problems and ideas fed by greed will become harder to detect and prevent before they are able to cause harm to the society in the form of criminal and predatory acts.

Are individuals in an anarchistic society also supposed to function as law enforcement?  If so, the results would be disastrous.  Therefore, an entity has to be created with the mandate to protect the populace.  How can they be trusted to protect and serve when there's no one to challenge their authority?

Does the mere fact that there would exist a group dedicated to peace and order mean that the system no longer qualifies as an anarchy?


The same way you pay a monthly fee for the very internet you used to post that message you could pay to a privately owned company that would take the role of "police" in guarding you and ensuring your well being. There would be dozens of companies offering "police" services and their success would be dependent upon their performance and contribution to humanity, given the free market media would become a lot more transparent so if people were to notice the company that they are subscribed to being brutal they would move onto another company.

Not to mention that such companies would be inclined to help people in distress for free as means of PR.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: RebelWorm on December 19, 2013, 09:19:38 PM
I became libertarian:
Economic Left/Right: -7.38
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -6.97


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: Mike Christ on December 19, 2013, 09:24:52 PM
The following is a list of reasons, in no specific order, why Anarchism will fail--or so I've been told or something...

1. "It's in our nature to participate in coercive hierarchies."
2. "Who would build the X?" [Roads, hospitals, tanks]
3. "Warlords!"
4. "It's every man for himself; who will protect the elderly and the orphans?"
5. "Who would fix/stop the X?" [Climate, animal abuse, wars]
6. "Who would print the money?"
7. "Nobody wants to live like cavemen."
8. "Who would regulate the market failures?"
9. "Who would give me X?" [Welfare, SS, "free stuff"]

And, of course:

10. "There would be no law/order.  There would be chaos."


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: Mike Christ on December 19, 2013, 09:28:20 PM
I became libertarian:
Economic Left/Right: -7.38
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -6.97

Most people are libertarian, they just don't realize it; it's not something generally taught in schools, for apparent reasons.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: RebelWorm on December 19, 2013, 09:33:21 PM
I became libertarian:
Economic Left/Right: -7.38
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -6.97

Most people are libertarian, they just don't realize it; it's not something generally taught in schools, for apparent reasons.
Yeah, I was quite sure I would be classed as a libertarian before I even took the test. I know where I am standing politically already.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 19, 2013, 09:33:35 PM
To sum up the actual questions (3 actually promotes anarchism since there would be no warlords):

2. "Who would build the X?" [Roads, hospitals, tanks]
4. "It's every man for himself; who will protect the elderly and the orphans?"
5. "Who would fix/stop the X?" [Climate, animal abuse, wars]
8. "Who would regulate the market failures?"
9. "Who would give me X?" [Welfare, SS, "free stuff"]

2. You, the taxpayer, the same way you currently build them.
4. Already answered in my previous post, first of all it isn't in our nature to harm the elderly and the orphans, second of all they would be tempted to use services to defend themselves, third is that people would be motivated to give to charity.
5. Given the free market there wouldn't be 6 corporations controlling all of the media in the U.S. like there currently is so naturally you would hear about the companies that abuse animals, the only real issue is foreign tyrannical governments invading you to give you "democracy" or some other bs reason.
8. The free market has never failed, nature has perfected it during the millions of years it existed.
9. LOL, who would take from you and give you back less you mean? Well you could pay for life insurance, health insurance etc in the company that most appeals to you.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: cryptasm on December 19, 2013, 09:35:11 PM
https://i.imgur.com/Ngk5wNe.png


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: Mike Christ on December 19, 2013, 09:39:49 PM
5. ???

5 is important to statists, it would seem; all the ones I've met seem to care deeply about the environment and animal rights and ending poverty etc. etc., and seem to believe that the state is the only way to get this done.  I'm guessing this relates to the whole "Every man for himself" thing that tags along with the stereotypical anarchist society, aside from "chaos, destruction, bodies everywhere!"


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: RebelWorm on December 19, 2013, 09:40:07 PM
Oh my... A bit radical? (nothing wrong with that) :D


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: cryptasm on December 19, 2013, 09:51:31 PM
Oh my... A bit radical? (nothing wrong with that) :D
lol nearly off the chart. left of Ghandi, I can live with that  ;D


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 19, 2013, 09:51:54 PM
5. ???

5 is important to statists, it would seem; all the ones I've met seem to care deeply about the environment and animal rights and ending poverty etc. etc., and seem to believe that the state is the only way to get this done.  I'm guessing this relates to the whole "Every man for himself" thing that tags along with the stereotypical anarchist society, aside from "chaos, destruction, bodies everywhere!"

Silverback gorillas have no government and they seem to handle poverty, animal rights and environmental issues pretty well in comparison to humans.

The government is the reason why we see that phenomena to begin with, the government is behind most rapists and most murderers, not in a sense that they support them but in a sense that they have let them down as children and completely forgot about them in their artificially forget system that they have the arrogance to claim is superior to millions of years of evolution.

If there were no governments there would be no tax breaks and other benefits to corporations so monopolies would be destroyed, when they do information will flaw freely.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: xkeyscore89 on December 19, 2013, 10:11:00 PM
The implementation will be a challenge, but not the most pressing one, imo.  If implementation was successful, problems and ideas fed by greed will become harder to detect and prevent before they are able to cause harm to the society in the form of criminal and predatory acts.

Are individuals in an anarchistic society also supposed to function as law enforcement?  If so, the results would be disastrous.  Therefore, an entity has to be created with the mandate to protect the populace.  How can they be trusted to protect and serve when there's no one to challenge their authority?

Does the mere fact that there would exist a group dedicated to peace and order mean that the system no longer qualifies as an anarchy?


The same way you pay a monthly fee for the very internet you used to post that message you could pay to a privately owned company that would take the role of "police" in guarding you and ensuring your well being. There would be dozens of companies offering "police" services and their success would be dependent upon their performance and contribution to humanity, given the free market media would become a lot more transparent so if people were to notice the company that they are subscribed to being brutal they would move onto another company.

Well-stated, I hadn't even considered that.  The only correction I have is that I don't pay for internet. I cracked my neighbor's WPA2 key via a WPS vulnerability quite a while ago so he's the only one paying monthly fees for the internetz.  ;)  

When I'm downloading a 3.3gb file at 2.2mb/s wirelessly, sometimes I wonder if he thinks the 56k-like speeds he experiences as a result during that time are a form of Comcast "maintenance".  The guy is a total asshole and a complete dumbass so I don't feel the least bit bad about it.  Fuck him.  




Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 19, 2013, 10:25:05 PM
The implementation will be a challenge, but not the most pressing one, imo.  If implementation was successful, problems and ideas fed by greed will become harder to detect and prevent before they are able to cause harm to the society in the form of criminal and predatory acts.

Are individuals in an anarchistic society also supposed to function as law enforcement?  If so, the results would be disastrous.  Therefore, an entity has to be created with the mandate to protect the populace.  How can they be trusted to protect and serve when there's no one to challenge their authority?

Does the mere fact that there would exist a group dedicated to peace and order mean that the system no longer qualifies as an anarchy?


The same way you pay a monthly fee for the very internet you used to post that message you could pay to a privately owned company that would take the role of "police" in guarding you and ensuring your well being. There would be dozens of companies offering "police" services and their success would be dependent upon their performance and contribution to humanity, given the free market media would become a lot more transparent so if people were to notice the company that they are subscribed to being brutal they would move onto another company.

Well-stated, I hadn't even considered that.  The only correction I have is that I don't pay for internet. I cracked my neighbor's WPA2 key via a WPS vulnerability quite a while ago so he's the only one paying monthly fees for the internetz.  ;)  

When I'm downloading a 3.3gb file at 2.2mb/s wirelessly, sometimes I wonder if he thinks the 56k-like speeds he experiences as a result during that time are a form of Comcast "maintenance".  The guy is a total asshole and a complete dumbass so I don't feel the least bit bad about it.  Fuck him.  




LOLOLOLOL


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: xkeyscore89 on December 19, 2013, 10:34:51 PM
The implementation will be a challenge, but not the most pressing one, imo.  If implementation was successful, problems and ideas fed by greed will become harder to detect and prevent before they are able to cause harm to the society in the form of criminal and predatory acts.

Are individuals in an anarchistic society also supposed to function as law enforcement?  If so, the results would be disastrous.  Therefore, an entity has to be created with the mandate to protect the populace.  How can they be trusted to protect and serve when there's no one to challenge their authority?

Does the mere fact that there would exist a group dedicated to peace and order mean that the system no longer qualifies as an anarchy?


The same way you pay a monthly fee for the very internet you used to post that message you could pay to a privately owned company that would take the role of "police" in guarding you and ensuring your well being. There would be dozens of companies offering "police" services and their success would be dependent upon their performance and contribution to humanity, given the free market media would become a lot more transparent so if people were to notice the company that they are subscribed to being brutal they would move onto another company.

Well-stated, I hadn't even considered that.  The only correction I have is that I don't pay for internet. I cracked my neighbor's WPA2 key via a WPS vulnerability quite a while ago so he's the only one paying monthly fees for the internetz.  ;)  

When I'm downloading a 3.3gb file at 2.2mb/s wirelessly, sometimes I wonder if he thinks the 56k-like speeds he experiences as a result during that time are a form of Comcast "maintenance".  The guy is a total asshole and a complete dumbass so I don't feel the least bit bad about it.  Fuck him.  




LOLOLOLOL

I'm glad you liked my post.  :)

If anyone's interested, I could provide a tutorial so that you, too, can be a thorn in the side of monopolistic internet service providers and get free wireless internet from a neighbor with 0 risk of being caught for it.  All of this for a one-time nominal fee, of course.  WPA2 takes anywhere from 1-8 hours to crack.  WEP can be cracked in under 10 minutes.  If you're lucky enough to find a router still using it, you should consider it an early Christmas present and learn how to crack it.



Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: empoweoqwj on December 20, 2013, 01:44:26 AM
The implementation will be a challenge, but not the most pressing one, imo.  If implementation was successful, problems and ideas fed by greed will become harder to detect and prevent before they are able to cause harm to the society in the form of criminal and predatory acts.

Are individuals in an anarchistic society also supposed to function as law enforcement?  If so, the results would be disastrous.  Therefore, an entity has to be created with the mandate to protect the populace.  How can they be trusted to protect and serve when there's no one to challenge their authority?

Does the mere fact that there would exist a group dedicated to peace and order mean that the system no longer qualifies as an anarchy?


The same way you pay a monthly fee for the very internet you used to post that message you could pay to a privately owned company that would take the role of "police" in guarding you and ensuring your well being. There would be dozens of companies offering "police" services and their success would be dependent upon their performance and contribution to humanity, given the free market media would become a lot more transparent so if people were to notice the company that they are subscribed to being brutal they would move onto another company.

Well-stated, I hadn't even considered that.  The only correction I have is that I don't pay for internet. I cracked my neighbor's WPA2 key via a WPS vulnerability quite a while ago so he's the only one paying monthly fees for the internetz.  ;)  

When I'm downloading a 3.3gb file at 2.2mb/s wirelessly, sometimes I wonder if he thinks the 56k-like speeds he experiences as a result during that time are a form of Comcast "maintenance".  The guy is a total asshole and a complete dumbass so I don't feel the least bit bad about it.  Fuck him.  




I don't think qualifies you as an "anarchist" but a nice tale nonetheless.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: xkeyscore89 on December 20, 2013, 02:16:05 AM
The implementation will be a challenge, but not the most pressing one, imo.  If implementation was successful, problems and ideas fed by greed will become harder to detect and prevent before they are able to cause harm to the society in the form of criminal and predatory acts.

Are individuals in an anarchistic society also supposed to function as law enforcement?  If so, the results would be disastrous.  Therefore, an entity has to be created with the mandate to protect the populace.  How can they be trusted to protect and serve when there's no one to challenge their authority?

Does the mere fact that there would exist a group dedicated to peace and order mean that the system no longer qualifies as an anarchy?


The same way you pay a monthly fee for the very internet you used to post that message you could pay to a privately owned company that would take the role of "police" in guarding you and ensuring your well being. There would be dozens of companies offering "police" services and their success would be dependent upon their performance and contribution to humanity, given the free market media would become a lot more transparent so if people were to notice the company that they are subscribed to being brutal they would move onto another company.

Well-stated, I hadn't even considered that.  The only correction I have is that I don't pay for internet. I cracked my neighbor's WPA2 key via a WPS vulnerability quite a while ago so he's the only one paying monthly fees for the internetz.  ;)  

When I'm downloading a 3.3gb file at 2.2mb/s wirelessly, sometimes I wonder if he thinks the 56k-like speeds he experiences as a result during that time are a form of Comcast "maintenance".  The guy is a total asshole and a complete dumbass so I don't feel the least bit bad about it.  Fuck him.  




I don't think qualifies you as an "anarchist" but a nice tale nonetheless.


You're right, it doesn't. If you read the posts I made earlier in this thread you'd know I don't consider myself an anarchist at all.  I'm just a pirate. ;)


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: beetcoin on December 20, 2013, 02:29:37 AM
there are a lot of anarchists here.. what's the difference between an anarchist and a libertarian anyways? they seem to go hand in hand.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: Mike Christ on December 20, 2013, 02:44:35 AM
there are a lot of anarchists here.. what's the difference between an anarchist and a libertarian anyways? they seem to go hand in hand.

You have libertarianism, which is a collection of political ideologies where individual freedom is the ultimate goal, and then you have "The Libertarians", which often refers to the right-winged political party which is centered around having a minimal state whose purpose is, variably, limited to protecting property rights, sometimes extending to public works and roads, military, etc.; in other words, minarchism. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minarchism)

The major difference is the anarchist views the state as involuntary, and therefore not in favor of freedom; the minarchist views the state as necessary, and without it, your freedoms would be intruded on.  Libertarianism can refer to both; anyway, they're both against giving central government too much power, which separates them from the modern day American liberal (I've seen liberal used in the place of libertarian outside of the states), and of course Republicans and Democrats, who believe a growing state is a boon to society.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: dank on December 20, 2013, 02:56:46 AM
Anarchy is equality.
Equality is freedom.
Equality is peace.

Global anarchy would quickly lead to world peace.  World peace would lead to the biggest advancement of mankind, ever.

It will happen, it's part of evolution, there's not a single thing anyone can do to stop the maturing of man's mind.

It is nature correcting itself.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: EvilPanda on December 20, 2013, 03:43:58 AM
Ok here's where I stand.
Economic Left/Right: -4.12
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -5.59
http://www.politicalcompass.org/printablegraph?ec=-4.12&soc=-5.59 (http://www.politicalcompass.org/printablegraph?ec=-4.12&soc=-5.59)


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: xkeyscore89 on December 20, 2013, 04:32:34 AM
I took the test and here are my results:

Economic Left/Right: -0.75
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -3.08

http://www.politicalcompass.org/facebook/pcgraphpng.php?ec=-0.75&soc=-3.08


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: Mike Christ on December 20, 2013, 04:51:42 AM
I took the test and here are my results:

Economic Left/Right: -0.75
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -3.08

http://www.politicalcompass.org/facebook/pcgraphpng.php?ec=-0.75&soc=-3.08

You're the closest I've ever seen someone go into the authoritarian side :P  I still want to find the guy who is the next Hitler.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 20, 2013, 11:05:53 AM

You're the closest I've ever seen someone go into the authoritarian side :P  I still want to find the guy who is the next Hitler.

When someone posts it as image it gets screwed up, here is his real position: http://www.politicalcompass.org/facebook/pcgraphpng.php?ec=-0.75&soc=-3.08&fnr


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: Lethn on December 20, 2013, 11:29:04 AM
Quote
You're the closest I've ever seen someone go into the authoritarian side Tongue  I still want to find the guy who is the next Hitler.

Just look at any of the government loyalists either here or in the actual U.S government and you'll have your answer regarding that and gauge their reactions to things most of us consider to be quite normal human reactions to injustice in the world.

http://www.politicalcompass.org/crowdchart.php?showform=&Mitt+Romney=7.0%2C6.5&Barack+Obama=6.0%2C6.0&Virgil+Goode=9.0%2C9.0&Gary+Johnson=9.5%2C0.0&Rocky+Anderson=4.5%2C-2.0&Jill+Stein=-3.0%2C-3.0&Stewart+Alexander=-5.0%2C-2.0&You=2.62,-7.49

Here's mine, it's pretty damn accurate actually :D since I am pretty much a mixture of Anarchism/Libertarianism but I tend to veer towards Anarchism because I'm just not a very diplomatic person when it comes to morality and I don't see why people should compromise on that sort of thing if the other person is advocating violence.

Edit: There we go, that link seems to work but not a link to the picture, how weird.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: hilariousandco on December 20, 2013, 11:30:26 AM
there are a lot of anarchists here.. what's the difference between an anarchist and a libertarian anyways? they seem to go hand in hand.

Oh Beetcoin, you have a lot to learn. I mentioned some of the differences in one of the other Socialist threads.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: bryant.coleman on December 20, 2013, 11:42:40 AM
I am more of a Libertarian than an anarchist. But I have to admit that I do support anarchists on certain occasions.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: beetcoin on December 20, 2013, 11:49:31 AM
I am more of a Libertarian than an anarchist. But I have to admit that I do support anarchists on certain occasions.

this is where i sit as well. i like to piss and moan about unnecessary government involvement in our daily lives; i just think that adopting an anarchistic society just opens up a whole new can of worms that does not solve many issues.. instead it would just shift the issues.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 20, 2013, 12:45:19 PM
I am more of a Libertarian than an anarchist. But I have to admit that I do support anarchists on certain occasions.

this is where i sit as well. i like to piss and moan about unnecessary government involvement in our daily lives; i just think that adopting an anarchistic society just opens up a whole new can of worms that does not solve many issues.. instead it would just shift the issues.

What about minarchism then? Since when you pay taxes you actually pay the government in exchange for a service most would find it logical to let every person decide for himself what laws would he like to subscribe to, if you aren't subscribed to the law then you don't enjoy it's benefits.

So say you have a gov website with many categories and every category has a subcategory and so on, so for example if you don't support your country waging wars abroad (or defending your country abroad, depends on your POV) you can unsubscribe from that service and pay less taxes.

Then the natural harmony would be partially restored, fools will be taxed for their foolishness, the 51% wouldn't rob the 49% of their liberty and I would barely pay taxes. Plus it's a cheap implementation.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 20, 2013, 01:43:12 PM

I don't see the point of all these stereotypes.
Why do people like politic so much ?

Have any politic discussion ever lead to anything ? I mean seriously.


Lead to the creation of BTC probably, you first need to create something in your head before you transfer it to the physical world.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: beetcoin on December 20, 2013, 01:50:05 PM
I am more of a Libertarian than an anarchist. But I have to admit that I do support anarchists on certain occasions.

this is where i sit as well. i like to piss and moan about unnecessary government involvement in our daily lives; i just think that adopting an anarchistic society just opens up a whole new can of worms that does not solve many issues.. instead it would just shift the issues.

What about minarchism then? Since when you pay taxes you actually pay the government in exchange for a service most would find it logical to let every person decide for himself what laws would he like to subscribe to, if you aren't subscribed to the law then you don't enjoy it's benefits.

So say you have a gov website with many categories and every category has a subcategory and so on, so for example if you don't support your country waging wars abroad (or defending your country abroad, depends on your POV) you can unsubscribe from that service and pay less taxes.

Then the natural harmony would be partially restored, fools will be taxed for their foolishness, the 51% wouldn't rob the 49% of their liberty and I would barely pay taxes. Plus it's a cheap implementation.

yeah, well that's not going to happen. the state will ensure that it forces you to pay into the pot that wages wars. they do it through coercion.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: madmadmax on December 20, 2013, 02:22:43 PM
yeah, well that's not going to happen. the state will ensure that it forces you to pay into the pot that wages wars. they do it through coercion.

Well that's a whole different issue, the state has no choice but to allow it once enough people work together. The question is whether it will be effective, what are the downsides etc. I can imagine some military men planning false flag terrorist attacks to increase their budget etc.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: bryant.coleman on December 20, 2013, 02:46:21 PM
What about minarchism then? Since when you pay taxes you actually pay the government in exchange for a service most would find it logical to let every person decide for himself what laws would he like to subscribe to, if you aren't subscribed to the law then you don't enjoy it's benefits.

So say you have a gov website with many categories and every category has a subcategory and so on, so for example if you don't support your country waging wars abroad (or defending your country abroad, depends on your POV) you can unsubscribe from that service and pay less taxes.

Then the natural harmony would be partially restored, fools will be taxed for their foolishness, the 51% wouldn't rob the 49% of their liberty and I would barely pay taxes. Plus it's a cheap implementation.

That is an excellent idea. I have no problem in paying tax for our basic amenities such as drinking water, roads.etc. But for unnecessary expenses, such as buying new aircraft carriers, I don't want to contribute my hard earned money.


Title: Re: How many anarchists?
Post by: EvilPanda on December 20, 2013, 03:11:06 PM
yeah, well that's not going to happen. the state will ensure that it forces you to pay into the pot that wages wars. they do it through coercion.

Well that's a whole different issue, the state has no choice but to allow it once enough people work together. The question is whether it will be effective, what are the downsides etc. I can imagine some military men planning false flag terrorist attacks to increase their budget etc.
I agree with that - the people are the ultimate power, that is why governments do what they can to stupify them and shape in the way thay want. Without manipulating the population they would've been long gone.
Unfortunately, different things work for different people, some will fear for their money, some for their job, some are just happy with their lives. It's hard to change something these days. In my country there is a libertarian party but it never got more than 3% votes. Somehow people agree with being stepped on and sucked dry.