💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › freedom-press-london-socialismo-o-monopolismo.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 10:21:01. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: Socialismo O Monopolismo
Author: Freedom Press, Anonymous
Date: February, 1887
Language: en
Topics: Freedom Press, Freedom: A Journal of Anarchist Socialism
Source: Freedom: A Journal of Anarchist Socialism, Vol. 1, No. 5, online source http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=3132, retrieved on May 2, 2020.
Notes: Freedom Press, London

Freedom Press, Anonymous

Socialismo O Monopolismo

We would call the attention of those among our readers who know Italian,

to the above work, just published by our comrade S. Merlino. It is a

most useful text-book of Anarchist Socialism, and we hope it may shortly

make its appearance in English dress.

The author begins by pointing out that our present economic system, in

spite of so-called free competition, and other delusive appearances of

freedom, is founded upon monopoly. By monopoly he understands the

individual appropriation of the wealth of the community by persons who

make use of this property to obtain for themselves the fruits of other

people's labor. The first part of the book describes the growth of this

monopoly ; the second consists of an examination of the doctrines of the

economist, and exposes current fallacies in relation to the private

appropriation of wealth.

The third portion devoted to the evolution of Anarchist Communism. Our

comrade exhibits this form of Socialism as the logical outcome of the

progressive elements already at work within our existing society, and

the only practical satisfaction for our present needs. He then deals

with the stock objections of the admirers of things as they are ; e.g.,

the absence of any stimulus to exertion in a communistic society, the

want of individuality which some folks imagine to be ell engendered by

economic equality, etc. He contrasts with such futile objections the

impracticability and uselessness of so-called practical reforms in

economics and politics, considered as a means of bringing about a

radical change in the basis of society ; and ends by affirming Anarchy

as the scientific social ideal of our times.

B. Tucker, of Boston, Mass., is issuing in monthly parts a complete

English edition of Proudhon's Works.