Both ideals have never been implemented on a larger scale. That is, communist have tried to achieve communism via totalitarian socialism, but it never has been pure communism. And even if a totalitarian system that truly sucks to it's core, the socialist workers paradise worked somehow. Life in East Germany or the Soviet Union wasn't that bad (had the chance to visit both places when they were up and going).This debate is simple. Which government (or lack there of) would function better out of the two: Anarchy or communism? — Franklin
Even quantitative features — Moliere
But there was communist anarchy. — TheMadFool
I think you are confusing liberty with individual liberty -- as if this were the only thing under consideration. It's important to anarcho-communism, or libertarian communism, but not the whole story. — Moliere
Kropotkin is a pretty typical thinker when it comes to understanding anarcho-communism. — Moliere
With Anarchy as an aim and as a means, Communism becomes possible. Without it, it necessarily becomes slavery and cannot exist.
You have the authoritarian-liberal scale and the collective-individualism scale on there.
What other scale of liberty are you referring to? You are either totally free or you are free in a community-form. — Christoffer
But he is essentially describing anarchy. I think there are lots of people who miss that anarchy isn't "Mad Max", it's just a society in which everyone exists as a collective without authority given to anyone specific. — Christoffer
And if people want freedom on such an individual level that no state exists, you end up down in objectivism and Ayn Rand — Christoffer
In the communist economic model the market mechanism is replaced with central planning. Central planning is anything but anarchism.The two aren't opposed.
Anarchy is against hierarchy of any kind. Communism is an economic model where ownership over land, capital, and labor is somehow collective rather than individual. — Moliere
I disagree with you here. Without a state, even a minimal state, to back up private property claims you do not have private property. You may have warlords or gangsters, but you don't have a court system to enforce contracts over private property. — Moliere
Libertarian communism is in my view an odd oxymoron. Now it's true that Leftist libertarianism has been overshadowed by right-wing libertarianism (and all the Ayn Randians).ibertarian communism has a rich history of its own. It's its own separate political line of thinking. — Moliere
True, but in anarchy, you are free to claim anything for yourself, but if you don't support the community you will be left alone and if you force yourself onto the community, they will bond together to get rid of you. — Christoffer
Communism requires a state and authority, — Christoffer
Perhaps you might say that a criticism against anarcho-communism is that communism requires a state, and so the anarcho-communist is committed to a practical, if not theoretical, contradiction. I think much the same thing about anarcho-capitalists. — Moliere
That depends on what you believe people will be like without a state. — Moliere
Yes, anarcho-communism is a contradiction for me, it feels like communism is slapped onto anarchy in order to not frame it as pure anarchy, but it makes little sense — Christoffer
I am too nihilistic to believe that a pure anarchy society can function in any way. It will most likely become an Ayn Rand nightmare. But it also has its roots in the sociological and psychological observations that groups of 12 are the maximum in which people can behave as a functional anarchy system, beyond that people start grouping together, form tribalism and if there is no over-arching authority someone will start calling the shots, demanding things from the other groups etc.
I think that sub-definitions of political forms doesn't really change the over-arching map. A scale of authority to liberal, collectivism to individualism is the most basic map we can define by and within it, we get those corners which makes sense according to the first scales. Central economy and capitalism forms naturally under them and slapping together different parts trying to create some combination are usually why they never work and become failed sub-category political movements. It's the "eat the cake and have it too" of politics. The only way to do that is to embrace Objectivism and take the cake, eat it and by gunpoint demand that the one who owned it makes more. — Christoffer
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