• FoundTheVegan
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    468 months ago

    Most people have a very flaws understanding of anarchism. It absolutely is NOT a society without rules, that’s chaos and where the most physically powerful will rule, which is objectively a terrible thing and a big step backwards.

    Anarchism is not really a system of government, but the philosophical belief that there should not be a heiarchy in societal laws. It can be applied in many different forms of goverment, most commonly with democracy but there are plenty of anarcho-communist out there. The gist is that systems that promote one group being shown favor, especially at the expense of another, should be dismantled. And what replaces it should be set up to serve and protect all people evenly.

    This usually means police abolition and refocusing that energy on the underlining reasons people break “the law”. Like providing a minimum level of housing, income and food to all.

    I can’t summerize the books succiently, but if you are interested The Dispossed and The Conquest of Bread deals with more examples.

    • @[email protected]
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      118 months ago

      Just echoing Ursula K Le Guin’s The Dispossessed is an fantastic read. It does a great job of contrasting anarchism with hierarchical societies without really playing favorites.

      • FoundTheVegan
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        48 months ago

        Her entire body of work is just fantastic, honestly my favorite author. I just finished The Lathe of Heaven the other day and really appreciate her sociological approach to sci-fi.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 months ago

          She was also Alfred Kroeber’s daughter, who, if you don’t know, was one of the principal reasons why UC Berkeley has one of the world’s premiere anthropology departments. In light of that, the environment in which she was raised, her body of work makes a lot of sense.

    • @[email protected]
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      58 months ago

      This usually means police abolition and refocusing that energy on the underlining reasons people break “the law”. Like providing a minimum level of housing, income and food to all.

      Do these people really believe only homeless and poor people are hurting other people?

      • Chetzemoka
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        258 months ago

        Of course no one believes that, don’t make hyperbolic strawmen. But you can’t deny that poverty definitely drives a nontrivial percentage of crimes, and we have plenty enough resources to end poverty. Let’s do that, and the remaining actual sociopaths can stay in prison for life. (But also let’s make prison no longer a place where we torture and enslave people.)

        • fkn
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          38 months ago

          Many conversations I’ve had with leftist here on lemmy have resulted in them claiming that all crime is either a crime of greed or poverty. No hyperbole. It’s infuriating trying to talk with some of them on these topics because they simply will not accept that there are other forms of crime or violence… No crimes of passion, etc.

          • @[email protected]
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            68 months ago

            That’s only for economic crime, think theft. There can only be theft out of greed or necessity. The handful of cleptomaniacs that steal for personal satisfaction are such a small percentage that it’s not worth discussing.

            Anything like a crime of passion is probably murder or something along those lines. Less directly related to money.

            No honest leftist I’ve ever talked to has denied that, but they’re largely not relevant to the ideas around the restructure of society. Any system is gonna have an angry spouse making horrible choices.

          • @[email protected]
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            58 months ago

            Crimes of greed and poverty make up the vast majority of crimes though. And hierarchical systems do a shitty job of preventing those crimes anyway (since they focus on individual punishment rather than communal restoration of justice).

        • @[email protected]
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          8 months ago

          Who will put them into prison though and run the prison if there’s no police?

          Who will pay for the prison?