I've always understood "radical" in the political sense as referring to advancing a complete reform of a political body. — thewonder
Just slating Anarchism against heirarchy is fine by me. I had thought that it was more of a problematic concept than it actually is as I had assumed that heirarchy implied that there was just one person at the top.I don't really think that President of the United States of America can be held to be responsible for all of the plights within the current geopolitical situation — thewonder
I am an Anarchist. I interpret Anarchism as advancing some form of maximal liberty and equality. — thewonder
Participatory democracy is that. — thewonder
I mean the concept of the State from a more or less Anarchist framework. Like, I'm not asking what to substitute the State with; I'm looking for an alternative to the Anarchist concept of the State. — thewonder
I don't know how to adequately define "the State" right now. It's like an almost purely negative assessment of a nation state. — thewonder
In recent years, social media have led to changes in the conduct of participatory democracy. In the 2016 United States elections social media spread news and many[quantify] politicians used social-media outlets like Twitter to attract voters. Social media has helped to organize movements to demand change. Mainly through hashtags, citizens join political conversations with differing view-points.[22] To promote public interest and involvement, local governments have started using social media to make decisions based on public feedback.[23]
In the Russian Federation, President Vladimir Putin's annual Direct Line television Q&A sessions, wherein he answers a selection of the hundreds of thousands of questions which Russians submit via telephones or social media, provides a degree of participation for ordinary citizens[25] - an updated, more interactive version of fireside chats.
I just don't have a working definition of "the State" right now. I think that you know what it is, however. — thewonder
I posted the link to the Wikipedia article so that I wouldn't have to explain what it was — thewonder
What I'm trying to explain is that I wasn't asking for alternatives for the State in the sense that "the State is bad and, so, what can effectively replace it?" I was asking for alternatives to the State in the sense that "the State may be an outdated concept, and, so, what are political axioms to be levelled against?" — thewonder
I don't think that Somalia has ever significantly attempted to engage in an Anarchist project. I think that you're equating "anarchism" as a pejorative with Anarchism itself. I haven't quite parcelled out enough of what I think that Anarchist society should be like to really explain that it's not like it would just be mayhem, but Anarchism really doesn't just advance mayhem. That's just the common cultural depiction of Anarchists. — thewonder
I think that liberty and equality aren't necessarily at odds. I think that there's a natural human preference for liberty but that equality necessarily follows from this. Unequal conditions almost invariably necessitate some form of coercion. In order for everyone to be truly free, it follows that they must also be equal. Egalitarianism complements liberty rather than hindering it, in my opinion. — thewonder
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