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Title: Thoughts on Anarchy Author: Judy G. Date: August 9, 2018 Language: en Topics: anarchy, notes, The Utopian, United States of America Source: Retrieved on 11th August 2021 from http://utopianmag.com/archives/tag-The%20Utopian%20Vol.%2017.5%20-%202018/thoughts-on-anarchy/ Notes: Published in The Utopian Vol. 17.5.
(I have been working on a book for fifty years or more. That’s a long
time. Anyone who sticks with it will realize that i think we humans are
in a dire situation. Personal relationships are disappearing at the same
time that degradation of our Mother Earth is accelerating. In what
follows i present a brief summary of my vision for a way forward.)
As a life-long activist, the question that comes naturally to my mind
is, “What can be done?” Many solutions have been suggested:
convince us that solutions lie in the direction of governmental and
other social programs that more equitably distribute
resources—healthcare, income, justice, education, food and such.
Unfortunately, they have never been able to overcome the fact that all
such programs are designed to treat everyone as if they are the same and
are administered by individuals who are strangers to each other.[1]
The Republicans seem to believe that the cream has risen to the top and
that those who control the corporate system are naturally superior and,
given free rein, will make the right choices for the future. The
evidence seems to me to be conclusive that they are wrong. These are the
people who have and do promote an economic system that allows those who
own the resources, no matter how they have obtained them, to use and
abuse those resources so as to maximize power for themselves, no matter
the cost to others and to our Mother.
Others vying for political/electoral power in the U. S. are variations
on the theme: more or less ecologically destructive capitalism, more or
less libertarian capitalism, more or less equal distribution of the
fruits of the capitalist system. But it seems to me that no matter what
form it takes, capitalism is primarily part of the problem. It teaches
people to continually use more resources in order to make more products
in order to make more profit. It teaches people to rely on wage labor to
produce goods and services. As Marx correctly pointed out, wage labor
leads to conflict between the owners of the means of production, who
want to maximize their profits by minimizing what they pay “their”
workers, and workers, who want to maximize their wages in order to live
more comfortably. And everybody treats everybody else as a means to an
end.
Whether “progressive” or “conservative”, the above solutions assume the
viability of capitalism as the economic system in the U. S.
problems created or exacerbated by capitalism. The thing that is missing
in all of these putative solutions is that whether capitalist,
socialist, or communist, these governing systems are all based on
bureaucratic stranger relationships: that is, on relationships that are
partial, instrumental, based on explicit or implicit roles, and, as
history has repeatedly shown, tend toward the creation of an elite that
believes in its own ethical and intellectual superiority and, thus,
legitimacy.
In other words, all of the above systems depend on the existence of a
state, whether it is conservative or liberal and capitalist or socialist
or communist, each attempts to define the type of state it supports and
defends. The appeal of anarchy, to me is that it eschews the existence
of a state.
Now, i think it is self-evident that some people are more intelligent
than others: are quicker to learn, quicker to gain insights, and quicker
to develop consciousness of the nature of situations. Nonetheless, it
seems to me that when people have been given the right to rule over
others they have ultimately abused that power. So, the question arises:
is it simply in the nature of human beings that people take advantage of
others? Is that just what we do? The answer, i think, is, no. It’s not
in our nature if there are exceptions; and what i learned in the study
of social science is that there are exceptions. Those exceptions exist
in what anthropologists call “tribes”. I learned to define a tribe as “a
group of kinfolk descended from a group of kinfolk in an unbroken line
forever.” We humans have spent about 95% of our time on earth living in
tribes. The majority of societies on earth today are tribes. And i think
history shows people fighting like hell to remain in tribes.
To me the primary appeal of anarchy is that it envisions the possibility
of social organizations based on personal relationships. I see it as a
way to organize social relations on a personal basis. It’s a way to make
decisions based on discussions among the people, who trust that viable
directions/solutions will emerge from their personal interaction. I
understand it to be essentially non-hierarchical.
Years ago, i read a book by the anthropologist Dorothy Lee called
Freedom and Culture. It was a revelation because she described cultures
and meanings that i had never encountered in my white, middleclass
upbringing. One thing she talked about was the Native American notion
that “the chief stands with the people.” She said that many people
encountering native peoples think that the “chief rules the people.” Not
so, says Lee. The picture she paints is of the kin group talking over
their challenges until a consensus emerges and is articulated by someone
who has been listening careful to everyone and taking into account their
viewpoints and their needs.
Some have argued that in many African and Polynesian tribes the chef
does, indeed, rule the people. I have never seen evidence of this being
true and would be grateful to see it—as it is always good, in my
experience, to have one’s ignorance corrected.
Whether liberal democracies, fundamentalist theocracies, socialist or
communist bureaucracies, the thing all other governmental forms have in
common is that they are based on stranger relationships. If my social
science colleagues and our forbearers are right, personal relationships
are essentially different from stranger relationships and they produce
essentially different types of people and societies.
As i detail at some length in my book, personal relationships are based
on familiarity such that each one in the relationship knows the other
well, knows them as whole people, perceives them to be unique, and feels
them to be a part of one’s self. In contrast, stranger relationships
exist among individuals who have only partial, role-based relationships
with each other and the relationships themselves are instrumental. Even
when one is doing it “for his/her own good” one can manipulate
strangers.
Several things impressed me about what i read in the issue of Utopia
Magazine that Jon sent to me. One was that the writers of the articles
seemed to be fundamentally interested in what each other were saying—not
in scoring ideological or intellectual points. No one seemed to be
afraid of saying that they didn’t know something. And the writing was
personal and specific, not abstract and highfalutin’.
The mainstream media usually dismiss Anarchists as bomb-throwers who
have no substantial contribution to make to political discourse. This
should not be surprising, as the establishment owns the mainstream
media.
On the contrary, anarchists seem to me to be the people most open to
ideas that are compatible with my own thinking. Personal relationships
are the most meaningful aspect of human life. We are a culture
increasingly dependent on stranger relationships. For many of us,
material possessions have become the symbol of our worth and the
substitute for our personal relationships. We are drowning in our
stuff—our material possessions and our garbage. We spend so much time
looking at screens that we are forgetting how to hold conversations.
This is particularly dangerous for children who have not yet learned to
converse. Loneliness and depression are epidemic, and the suicide rate
is steadily rising. We have dumped so much minute plastic in the oceans
that it is killing sea life. Ice caps are melting and coastlines are
flooding. And the poor fool in the White House is so intent on proving
that he is important that he is willing to sacrifice our country, indeed
the future of us and our children on the bonfire of his vanity.
Whom do you trust? Until we have familiarity with each other, until we
know each other as whole people, until we become part of each other’s
identity we don’t know whom we can trust.
Politics is a strange business. It’s about power—about giving power to
people we don’t really know and can’t really trust. In this so-called
democracy, we are asked to trust politicians on the basis of media
propaganda, sound bites, and campaign speeches. I have had the
experience of working with people for years, face-to-face, before i
discovered they had been stabbing me in the back.
Anarchy is the only political approach i know that has the potential to
be based on person-to-person relationships and is, therefore, the only
one that appeals to me.
This brings me to the topic of strategy and tactics. My thoughts on
strategy are two-fold. Firstly, i would like to see us always working
toward creating communities, that is, networks of personal
relationships, that are capable of sustaining the people when this whole
house of cards collapses. Secondly, i think the less we cooperate with
and participate in the bureaucratic planning system the more we will
weaken it and strengthen ourselves. The one thing the system can’t abide
is non-participation. Who’s going to do the work? Can you picture any of
the 1% cleaning their own toilets?
This does raise the question of electoral politics. I am of two minds on
that. On the one hand, i agree that to vote is only to encourage them.
On the other, elections do have consequences; and, too often, it’s the
least privileged among us who pay the price when the least progressive
of the capitalist parties are successful at the ballot box. I agree with
Ron that people have to make up their own minds about that.
Tactically, i think there are many choices. I gravitate toward
education, consciousness raising and skill development.
taught in grammar school. Reading, writing, and arithmetic. Without
them, one is lost in the modern world. A young man sometimes works for
me in my garden who cannot do the arithmetic to determine if i am paying
him correctly or not. I do, but he must take it on faith. What does one
do in a modern urban setting if one cannot read a sign or fill out a job
application? Beyond the basics, it’s my belief/prejudice that the better
understanding one has of history, the better off one is. Our present
society did not emerge full-blown, from nowhere and from nothing. It
developed from particular social situations, from particular people and
particular cultural meanings. If, for example, one knows nothing about
the history of so-called “race” in America, one could be led to believe
that African Americans are just bellyachin’--when nothing could be
further from the truth. Without understanding the history of the
European conquest of North America, one might think that the right to
decide who can live here, on this stolen land, is legitimately in the
hands of those who control the present political boundaries.
ability to perceive relationships between and among social phenomena.
For example, to be conscious of white skin privilege is to be aware of
the ways in which one’s well-being is due to the exploitation or
subjugation of another. Other examples: one could be said to be
conscious of the interrelationship between wage stagnation and extreme
wealth inequality, or among gerrymandered voting districts, corporate
control of elections, and Republican control of state legislatures. In
light of this perspective, i think that it behooves us to continually be
about the task of raising consciousness, our own, each other’s, and that
of the people with whom we engage in political/social/cultural
discussion and analysis. As we realize relationships it’s a good thing
to share those realizations and to check their validity with others.
learning and teaching practical skills that help people to survive when,
for one reason or another, they do not have others to call on. Growing
food, cooking, maintaining clothing, basic first aid, helping those who
cannot help themselves (particularly the young, the old, and the
infirm), are all practical skills that must be mastered within any
community that is going to thrive. By learning them and teaching them we
nurture self-confidence and encourage ourselves and each other to take
on and meet other challenges. Feelings of powerlessness are dangerous to
our self-esteem.
The Enemy
It has taken me too long, to realize that we are really in a zero-sum
game. My Christian upbringing leads me to want to love my neighbors and
those who would despitefully use me. But, unfortunately, this isn’t
about my actual neighbors. This is about people who would never dream of
living in my neighborhood. To them it would be a nightmare. This is
about people who will stop at nothing, nothing, to maintain their power
and social position. This is about the Koch Brothers, the DeVoses, that
poor fool in the White House, and others too numerous to mention, many
whose names we don’t even know.
It’s about people who oppose U. N. resolutions recommending
breast-feeding over corporate-produced formulas. It’s about people who
refuse to permanently prevent Asian carp from entering the Great Lakes
(the thirsty world’s largest single supply of fresh water). It’s about
people who deny healthcare, healthful food, clean air and education to
others just because those others are poor. It’s about people who feel
they have the right to choose whether other women should have abortions,
whether voting rights can be denied to others, whether soldiers should
be sent into battle to protect oil supplies, and whether climate change
should be taken seriously. These are people who will stop at nothing;
they are merciless.
Maybe i am self-deluded. Undoubtedly i am self-deluded. (The problem
with self-delusion being that one cannot see one’s own.) But i still
think that both strategically and tactically the wise course is
non-violence. To be the change we want to see in the world. I have said
for years that i think it is revolutionary in America to be non-violent.
And that the system will bring itself down. Our job is to find ways to
get as many of our people out of it as possible before it collapses. By
“our people” i mean those who are capable of empathy.
We humans are complicated creatures. Each of us is imprinted by our own
experience. The world doesn’t mean exactly the same thing to any two of
us. And none of us is completely evil just as none of us is completely
good. I think we need to find ways to build communities that enable us,
as the old song says, to “accentuate the positive.” I don’t believe we
can ever eliminate the negative, but we can identify it, shine a
spotlight on it, and minimize it. I know that’s possible because i am a
Detroiter and i spend my life among numbers of people who do all they
can to eliminate racism) That’s not an easy thing to do in America, and
we Detroiters don’t get enough credit for the degree to which we
accomplish that.
The urban agriculture community, of which i am a part, is as fine a
group of people as i have known in my seventy-four years. People meet
each other as persons, each of whom is unique and important in his or
her own right. It’s a safe place to be where people freely help each
other, share resources, and truly love to spend time together—working or
playing. In fact, there are lots of times when we can truly be said to
be doing both.
I regularly eat in a restaurant that is located in the most racist city
i have ever known—Dearborn, Michigan. Yet even parts of Dearborn are
turning around, and the M & M Café is a good example of what can happen
as it does. The owners are a Polish and Lebanese couple who have been
welcoming customers of all ethnicities and feeding them healthful,[2]
delicious food for thirty-five years. They have provided the nucleus
around which a multi-racial, multi-cultural clientele has formed. I
don’t know of another eating establishment anywhere as comfortable or
diverse.
A couple of days a week i go to Fitness Works. It’s gym in Detroit that
is predominantly African-American, is run by African-Americans and could
not be more welcoming to my lily-white self. Again, i am treated as a
person, not a thing. It really has become a happy place for me. It’s
true there are a few there who treat me as white, but very few.
Being an aging, overweight, diabetic female, i have my share of health
issues, which i take to the Henry Ford Health System. My primary care
physician is an African-American Christian. I assume my ophthalmologist
is a Jew. (I’m going by his last name; the subject has never come up.)
My psychiatrist is from Pakistan and my Physical Therapist,
Endocrinologist, and Ob/Gyn are all from India. (I don’t know who’s
Muslim and who’s Hindu or whatever.) And the vast majority of nurses,
nurse practitioners, and other support staff are African-American.
Although it is a large, bureaucratic organization there are people in it
who are capable of treating their patients as persons, not as numbers. I
can’t imagine getting better healthcare anywhere.
The point here is that diversity is possible and desirable. We can just
get along—as Rodney King wanted. Humans are capable of it; but, again,
it’s a matter of accentuating the positive and meeting people where they
are. We live in a culture that increasingly emphasizes and is dependent
upon stranger relationships. Persons[3] are disappearing as
individuals[4] become more numerous.
There is a tendency in American culture, exemplified best by the
Republican Party that encourages us to hate and fear and to be
suspicious of one another. It teaches us to take advantage of one
another and to embrace ideology and ignore science. As long as we are
kept apart and ignorant of each other’s humanity, those who control the
show will remain in charge and will continue to sell us down the river
until there is nothing left to sell, and the river is so polluted that
the fish can’t even live in it.
I think our response to climate change must wash away capitalism,
materialism, and bureaucracy. We can no longer afford to use resources
that are not badly needed by the people. We can no longer afford to
allow material acquisition to be a substitute for personal
relationships. And we can no longer afford rule by bureaucrats looking
for advantages for themselves.
It is, indeed, a life or death struggle for our species. It makes me
very sad to think our amazing species may cause its own extinction.
[1] I remember being astonished when my academic mentor, Merrill
Jackson, told me that in some judicial systems the goal was to find
potential judges who knew best the parties to the legal action. Unlike
in the U. S. system, where judges are expected/required to recuse
themselves if they know the parties.
[2] Well, maybe the carrot cake isn’t so healthful, but it certainly is
delicious.
[3] Those whose identities have been formed in personal relationships.
[4] Those whose identities have been formed in stranger relationships.