A true anarchist is not a knee-jerk reactionary against social convention for it's own sake. Not the one who screams 'no rules!', while trying to make everyone else follow theirs.

An anarchist has a code, a set of rules they hold themselves to, not anyone else. An anarchist is one who asks; 'who made this rule, and what purpose does it serve?' before deciding whether or not to follow it.

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#anarchists #anarchy

An anarchist does not drive on the opposite side of the road just because what side to drive on has a rule. But they might treat a red light as a stop sign when there's little or no traffic.

Like models, rules are never universally right, but some are useful. Good rules are guidelines, that help keep us safe. Not policies to be policed, regardless of the likely outcome.

Following rules because they're rules is recorded in history as "just following orders". We know where that leads.

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A couple of days ago I posted about what being an anarchist means to me. Obviously given the way I defined it, I can't determine what it means for anyone else. A contradiction, yes. But one that holds space for flexible ways of understanding that can better respond to our constantly shifting situations.

One thing my freedoms-based definition didn't address though, was how I apply it to political economy. For example, do I believe that all legitimate anarchist politics is anticapitalist?

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So one thing I want to clarify is that although I see "anarcho-capitalism" as just fascism with better branding (Peter Thiel being an archetypal example of where it leads), I do accept that a person can be right-leaning economically, and still be an anarchist.

But there are limits, beyond which this becomes a contradiction in ways that are universalizing, and inflexible (again think of the neoreactionaries defending the freedom to deny others freedom).

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When people claim that property is an inalienable right - like freedoms of expression or association are - then "property is theft", as Proudhon famously put it. But as long as they accept that property is a social agreement, subject to negotiation and consensus, then "property is freedom" (a lesser known quote from Proudhon).

Having said that, being open to the idea of a place for markets in a free society does *not* make an anarchist right-leaning. It just makes them not a Stalinist.

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The reason I'm opposed to markets is I just can't figure out any way that 1) markets would not necessarily lead to authoritarian rule and 2) authoritarian rule would not necessarily be required for markets. So markets both cannot exist in a free society and a free society cannot persist with any sort of market in place. If you could manage it that markets didn't reward bullies and cheats and increase inequality until we're some warlord's bitch, I suppose it'd be fine. But how is that possible?

The best I heard we've managed is different tribes meeting for negotiation and trade. And some mediation strategies to try to handle grievances. But once everyone has to all agree (or be made to agree) on the value of a common currency, it's a downward spiral from there to slavery.

@cy
> So markets both cannot exist in a free society and a free society cannot persist with any sort of market in place

David Graeber covered this in Debt, better than I possibly could. If you haven't read that, I recommend you do. If you have, maybe time for a refresh?

But one argument against what you say here is that it's ahistorical. In his book Life Inc. Douglas Rushkoff pointed out that the importation of the tradition of the bazaar into Europe had a profoundly liberating effect.

Oh, you mean a "free" society. My bad.
@cy
What is the purpose of this snark? How does it help the conversation?
@strypey
Is there ever a purpose to snark? No reason to converse @[email protected] made it clear what they mean.
@cy @strypey What did they mean?
The freedom to do business without government interference.

CC: @[email protected]

@cy
> The freedom to do business without government interference.

This is some serious reading out of context. Did you even read the thread you're replying to? By what tortured logic did you extract that conclusion from references to Graeber and Rushkoff FFS?

@light

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@cy Ok, now I've calmed down a bit, let me flesh out my point and see if it clarifies anything for you.

This turns on how we're defining "business". Does a subsistence farmer selling surplus veges in a bazaar-inspired medieval market, or a baker selling bread there, count as "business"? In the broadest sense, sure, but not in the sense that I think concerns you here.

For this explanation, I'll use 'bazaar' instead of 'market' to avoid confusion with other uses of 'market'.

@light

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Were medieval bazaars free from central government interference (ie the King and the Crown)? Yes, as most governance functions in the Middle Ages were more localised. Nation-state scale government didn't become practical until the emergence of tech like national train networks and reliable postal system, which were originally inseparable from them.

Were bazaars unregulated? certainly not. For a start they existed by the grace of the local landlord and church authorities.

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Within that, a bazaar was a commons, run by and for the community that bought and sold in it. Like any sustainable commons, this required regulation, eg to avoid having stallholders selling poisonous food or faulty goods, or people stealing from stallholders, or anything else that would threaten the market's reputation.

The modern equivalent would be a supermarket run as a multi-stakeholder co-op, where workers, producers and customers all have a stake in ownership and decision-making.

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Is a bazaar or a co-op supermarket the ideal model for food exchange in a community too large to do it by trading veges over the back fence? The question makes no sense to me. There are no 'ideal' models, only what makes the most sense as a response to a given situation.

Gaining this understanding this is one thing that makes slogging through the dense prose of situationist writing worthwhile. Revolutionary Self-Theory isn't too hard a read, and is a good intro;

https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/larry-law-revolutionary-self-theory

Revolutionary Self-Theory

Larry Law Revolutionary Self-Theory 1975 First published as “Self-Theory: the pleasure of thinking for yourself”, by The Spectacle, USA 1975. This version —...

The Anarchist Library

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Are Farmer's Markets (also inspired by the medieval bazaar) and co-op supermarkets an improvement on corporate supermarkets and their highly centralised, too-big-to-fail supply chains? I think so. Keep in mind that union-driven projects like this were used to build worker self-management in the lead up to the Spanish revolution.

Could there be a place for them in a society run mostly on anarchist principles? On what basis could we suppress them without becoming Stalinists or Red Guards?

@strypey

while i agree with the goals here and am in favour of street markets and bazaars and farmwrs markets and mutual aid networks and worker co-ops and so on...
...i would step back and wonder what are prerequsites for those?

certainly all of the above have in common that they use money owned by the capitalists and billionaires, who would love all the above and then print money for themselves to buy the most popular ppl and products who are happy to receive lots of money we all work for

@strypey

... that IS the centralizing/consolidating/bullying effect @cy mentioned, but imho misleadingly associated it with any kind of market in general, ...its in the money we use.

@serapath
What about Thomas Greco's "credit clearing" institutions or perhaps a decentralised equivalent?
h/t @KevinCarson1
@strypey @cy

@light @KevinCarson1 @strypey @cy imho that has been tried by a project called "Ripple" and it didnt scale so that turned into XRP.

The best or closest system to that today is imho bitcoin lightning and its amazing.

Maybe theres a way to scale the original idea, but it requires imho open supply chain and a massive amount of people keen to try hard to work with this and even then its unclear. if it works we can still switch to it, but bitcoin lightning with open supply chains could get us there

@serapath @light @strypey @cy My problem with bitcoin in general is it's based on the myth of monetary scarcity -- that money has to be "backed" by something (i.e. mining/"proof of work").

@KevinCarson1 @light @strypey @cy

i think that is a misunderstanding

1. bitcoin is not backed by something and "proof of work" is just a mechanism to defend the network against attackers trying to rob everyone

2. money is never scarce. the wording is misleading - i agree. only goods and services can be scarce. a limited money supply does not make it scarce, it just standardizes it - is 1kg or 1m as a standard measurement unit scarce? ...would you want constant change in what 1m or 1kg means?

@serapath @light @strypey @cy So no work is required to generate or create bitcoin? "Backing" and value referent aren't the same function. People in medieval village open-tab units used Carolingian currency as an accounting unit just for tracking the value of goods and services people advanced to one another, but nobody actually possessed any currency.

@KevinCarson1 @light @strypey @cy
yeah, the problem is the poor and rich divide is growing because the strongest asshole in town with the biggest military captures the money printer and printa the money the rest of us is working for. fiat is backed by "proof of might" ...very expensive too.

bitcoin works more like an immunesystem that monitors and only fires up when under attack, which is now, to irradicate proof of might (e.g. military).
block rewards will stop so mining means loss afterwards

@serapath
> the strongest asshole in town with the biggest military captures the money printer

You mean the *currency supply*, and as @KevinCarson1, Graeber, Eisenstein and many others have pointed out, that's what a currency *is*, and has been since the invention of coinage. Long before the invention of notes that needed "printing".

@light @cy

Well, it's true that in precious metal backed currencies, big militaries have been very extremely remarkably interested in capturing precious metal mines.

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@cy @KevinCarson1 @light @strypey

it doesnt even matter. precious metals dont help, because its not for ppl - its too slow, too impractical and too easy to steal when average ppl have it - ...so in practice you end up with "paper gold" ...owning a certificate that represents gold ...which is again paper money, just like fiat and a bank run will show you immediately how things collapse

That's kind of why I wanted to make a decentralized currency system... thingy. Because bitcoin is slow and impractical. The entire blockchain takes forever to download, forever to process, and a significant amount of disk space. A single transaction takes an hour to add to the blockchain, an hour in which the value of whatever is being bought and sold may have changed! Your pizza will definitely be cold if you try to pay for it in bitcoin.

Which is why people started turning to the much more convenient "bitcoin exchanges," where you could own a certificate that represents bitcoin... and then everyone got ripped off and robbed repeatedly.

But money doesn't have to use a blockchain at all. I could (and did) digitally sign the first 100 numbers in the natural number set, along with a statement that any signatures of numbers higher than 100 didn't count. Assuming I then destroyed the private key, you could buy and sell those signed numbers just like any other commodity. So I wanted to make a system where everyone generates their 100 bucks, and whoevers is most reliable is the one everyone else uses.

But of course... you can never assume I destroyed the private key. So then we're back to money printing. But still no one can capture the money printing process that way, since everyone's doing it, and anyone inflating their currency will get dropped for others, so maybe it's a good idea...?

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@cy @KevinCarson1 @light

this seems wrong on so many levels.

1. bitcoin lightning is instant, not slow, so pizza is paid, no worries
2. among blockchains its relatively small and downloads faster than others
3. volatility exists, but value grows, all others dont
4. bitcoin certificates are fiat. dont do it. use lightning in self custody instead, that works
5. you cant sign numbers and share them ppl could "double spend" (copy the signed number)

Doesn't Lightning rely on "smart" contracts, that is to say programs that you enter a legally binding agreement to adhere to whatever the result of the program is, before running it? It sounds like speculation, tbh. "I'll bet 20 lightnings that my bitcoin transaction will go through in 10min. Woah, I just created 20 lightnings! Time to go spend them, even if I'm wrong."

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Lightning Network - Wikipedia

The Lightning Network (LN) operates through bidirectional payment channels between two nodes, forming smart contracts that facilitate off-chain transactions.
CC: @[email protected] @[email protected]

@cy @KevinCarson1 @light

yes, but you dont create new tokens.
you essentially sign tokens over to other peers and they can redeem onchain, but at any time only one peer can control the coins.