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Title: On anarchism and violence
Author: Antti Rautiainen
Date: 3 December 2013
Language: en
Topics: violence, propaganda of the deed
Source: Retrieved on 3rd November 2021 from https://avtonom.org/en/pages/anarchism-and-violence

Antti Rautiainen

On anarchism and violence

Some claim, that anarchism opposes violence, as for anarchists means and

ends meet. But only second statement is correct, wherease first is not.

This because in anarchism violence is not only means, but in a certain

sense a goal in itself.

With this, I do not mean childish boasting about hanging last bourgeois

to guts of last priest or anything like that. Destruction of class

enemies as individuals is not a revolutionary goal. As Kropotkin wrote,

one may hardly avoid some excesses from side of most angered people, but

obviously it is goal of anarchists to minimise them.

In the present society, people are first of all victims of their own

roles. However, this does not mean that there is no individual

responsability.

In the foundation of any values is the idea, that one must pay for evil

deeds. Obviously, this is not an anarchist invention, but an universal

principle which is shared by all humanity. There are huge differences of

opinions on what dieeds are right and what is wrong and how evil should

be punished, but the basic principle is agreed by anyone.

Forgiveness is noble, but only if it is voluntary. The last thing one

has right to do is to forgive for someone else! If someone got defamed,

beaten up, betrayed or raped, it is his own business should he forgive

or demand punishments, no-one elses. I am sure that even Jesus would

agree on this.

There are million practical arguments one may present against revenge.

Sometimes revenge may lead to an endless cycle of violence, sometimes

revenge may hinder wrongdoer to understand his mistakes and to correct

his behavior, sometimes revenge may lead to problems, not only for actor

but also for people close to him and even comrades, which are completely

out of proportion. Sometimes these arguments are a reason enough to

avoid revenge. But still, revenge is base of all justice. This because

revenge may exist without forgiving, but forgiving may not exist without

revenge. If you do not have the option of revenge, your forgiveness is

worth of nothing.

Government and norms it creates forbid revenge, and thus deny us the

right to be moral subjects. For compensation, system has donated us

action movies and endless amount of other entertainement, where issue is

revenge has always the central place. We are given the right of revenge

only in our fantasies. Only in our dreams we are allowed to be human

beings.

Revenge is the basis of all justice on earth. If this is something

society may not comprehend, fuck that society.

Let us take the murder of US president William McKinley as an example,

committed by anarchist Leon Czolgosz in year 1901. Assasination was

followed by a huge wage of repression against anarchists and any

socialists. Legislation which was formed those years, among other things

banned anarchists from entering United States, and is still in force

(luckily this legislation is nowadays seldom executed).

Most of the contemporary anarchists (for example Johann Most) denounced

Czolgosz, and even those few who defended him (such as Emma Goldman)

rather spoke out for a comrade than for his act. Czolgosz had no close

associates inside anarchist movement. He was obviously a looser, perhaps

deranged as well. Many researchers believe he never had a girlfriend.

His act did not lead to any positive transformations in the society, he

was not even allowed to explain his motivations. He was sentenced

hastily, and executed a mere month after the assasination.

But besides everything said afore, president McKinley deserved to die.

In 1989 USS Maine exploded in front of the city of Havanna, for reasons

still unclear. Back then, Cuba was still Spanish colony, which had often

revolted for independence. After explosion of USS Maine, USA declared a

war on Spain. As a consequence of the war, Cuba got its independence and

Puerto Rico and Philippines became colonies of the United States.

However, inhabitants of Philippines did not appreciate their new masters

any more than previous ones, and they launched an all-out rebellion for

full independence.

President McKinley crushed the rebellion with the same brutality, with

which rebellions are crushed always and everywhere. Tens of thousands

were executed, raped and robbed, hundreds of thousands died as a result

of hunger and illnesses that followed military action and establishment

of concentration camps. Nobody knows the exact death toll, but during

these years overall population of the islands declined with

approximately one million.

Murder of McKinley did not halted the war, it went on for one more year

after the assasination. It is possible, that war and atrocities

committed by US army in Philippines were not even the main reason for

Czolgosz to murder the president.

But who would not rejoice for the fact, that at least one scumbag got

what he deserved?

For anarchist, an opportunity of revenge always exists

Government is the monopoly of violence, which takes over all moral

issues. Ideal citizen does not intervene to business of the juridicial

system, but trusts it to experts. As we give up our right to revenge,

state relieves us from the necessity of violence in exchange, and

promises to take care about it for us. I must admit, that often state

fulfills its promise accordingly. Richer the country, more likely that

juridicial system punishes those who have done you wrong more

effectively, than you would be able to do yourself.

However, in anarchism every individual is an integral part of the

governance, all three branches of it – legislative, executive and

judicial. Obviously, this intermingling increases risk of lynching and

mob stupidity, but even primitive societes and such medieval anarchistic

societies as Iceland took steps to create separation of powers at least

to some extent. One possible solution is to require everyone to take up

responsability in each of the branches for a limited period, so that

no-one is delegated to more than one branch simultaneously. Actually,

anarchistic Iceland had a rather complicated legal system. I do not

believe that in conditions of a modern society, anarchist legal system

would be more simple.

Many confuse violence, power and authority, but all of these are

different things and anarchists only oppose the third. Authority is a

privilege that is institutionalised, formal, traditional or charismatic.

Anarchist does not deny power of experts, as long as it has reasonable

limits. Any powers that are based on expert positions should be

continuously re-evaluated, and an attempt to fully abolish them should

be made with time. That is, anarchism does not attempt to abolish right

to use violence, but to distribute this right equally to everyone.

In this respect, it makes no fundamental difference if anarchism has

more or less crime than our current society. Anarchistic Iceland was a

culture of violent machos, in which any insults were responded with

swords. But Icelandic scenario is not the only possibility for

anarchism. It is just as possible, that in anarchism people will live

like in pictures of Watchtower-journal, in which lions lie in Savannah

amongst people and eat fruits. But even if no-one was killed in

anarchist society (indeed there have been primitive societies in which

murder is an unknown concept), in anarchy everyone has a potential

possibility to give a sentence and to punish. And that, by definition,

is violence. Thus anarchism is for violence.