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Twitter and autonomy

My political philosophy (which most would describe as ā€œanarchismā€ ā€” Iā€™m good with that) really boils down to a simple notion:

The people who are the most affected by a decision should have the most say in it.

Thereā€™s space for disagreement and nuance (what do we mean by ā€œthe mostā€ and ā€œaffectedā€? what happens when similarly-affected people disagree?); no two cultures that abided by this rule would look alike. But itā€™s completely incompatible with capitalist relations of production, even under the stewardship of liberal democracy.

Since there seems to be a bit of an exodus from Twitter at the moment, many people have been confronted by the fact that a social media companyā€™s owner (like Elon Musk) or majority shareholder (like Mark Zuckerberg) can unilaterally make decisions that affect millions of people. Since I donā€™t think the world should work that way, I decided that I would no longer voluntarily enter relationships that do. I may have no choice about needing a job or being a citizen of a state, but I can sure as hell quit Facebook and Twitter. So I quit them (along with a growing list of second-stringers), and have been getting my social media fix on the Fediverse. Here, I do have a say in what sort of behavior is moderated and blockedĀ¹, and if I decide I donā€™t like my instanceā€™s policies, the system is designed to make it easy for me to find a different instance or even start my own.

But itā€™s not just social media, and for me this journey didnā€™t start there. Most political organizations, including the majority of leftist ones, use leadership and decision-making structures that donā€™t follow this principleĀ². Democracy, as weā€™re taught to understand it, can lead to situations where a slim majority dictates the actions of a slim minority, even when those actions have a minimal effect on the majority. Delegated decision-making (electing ā€œleadersā€) also creates such situations, especially when leadership terms are long. I spent most of the past five years in such an organization, fighting bitter fights about the orgā€™s projects and goals, and I eventually realized that the whole enterprise doesnā€™t align with my values.

There are some things we canā€™t walk away from; public health and climate change are obvious examples of things that truly affect everybody. If anything, the people who are affected the most by our (non)response to rising temperatures and pandemics also wield the least power. I donā€™t have an easy answer for those. However, I invite you to focus for a moment on all of the relationships that you can walk away from. What is the cost of doing so? What is the cost ā€” which youā€™re already paying, even if you havenā€™t considered it ā€” of ceding the autonomy you deserve to have?

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[1] The instance hosting my Mastodon account isnā€™t technically a co-op; most of the work and decision-making authority have been delegated to a mod team. But thereā€™s a great community consensus vibe there, and plenty of instances actually are cooperatives, with voting and everything.

[2] This principle is sometimes called ā€œsubsidiarityā€.

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