Laughing with a mouth of blood

~ Wednesday, January 16 ~
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c4ss:


For every copy of Charles Johnson’s “State Capitalism and the Many Monopolies“ that you purchase through the Distro, C4SS will receive a percentage.


In this essay, the individualist Anarchist writer Charles Johnson offers an analysis of the concrete mechanisms of capitalism, and of how the revolutionary potential of free economic relationships is diverted and deformed when markets are constrained to labor under bosses, monopoly and government. Johnson revisits, and updates, Benjamin Tucker’s classic “Four Monopolies” analysis of state capitalism, arguing that the case for Tucker’s free-market anticapitalism is stronger than ever, as we take into account not only the growth and retrenchment of the Land Monopoly, Money Monopoly, Patent Monopoly, and Protectionist Monopoly, but also the metastatic spread of state-capitalist monopolies into Agribusiness, Infrastructure, Utilities, Health Care, and Regulatory Protectionism.
For most of the twentieth century, American libertarians saw themselves, and were seen as, defenders of “capitalism.” Until nearly the end of the 20th century, anticapitalist anarchism was sidelined in political debate, and most simply ceased to be treat it as a live option; mean­while, most American libertarians, and nearly all of their opponents, seemed to agree that opposing state control of the economy meant defending business against the attacks of “big government.” The purpose and effect of laissez faire was simply to unleash existing forms of commerce from political restraints, and to produce something which would look, more or less, like business as usual, only more so: bigger, faster, stronger, and no longer held back by government from pushing the corporate business model to the hilt.
This was almost a complete reversal from the attitude of traditional libertarians like Benjamin Tucker, an attitude which we might call ‘free-market anti-capitalism.’ Tucker was one of the best-known defenders of free markets in nineteenth-century America. . . Yet he repeatedly described his views as a form of “Anarchistic Socialism.” . . . What could “social­ism” mean for a radical, free-market individualist like Tucker? Certainly not govern­ment control of industry. Rather, what Tucker was pointing out was his opposition to actually-existing capitalist business practices, and his support for workers’ control over the conditions of their own labor – the control denied by the Four Monopolies and the artificial inequalities of wealth and bargaining power they fostered. For Tucker, then, a libertarian politics meant an attack on economic privilege – by removing the political privileges that propped it up, and dismantling monopolies by exposing them to competition from below. . . .

c4ss:

For every copy of Charles Johnson’s “State Capitalism and the Many Monopolies“ that you purchase through the Distro, C4SS will receive a percentage.

In this essay, the individualist Anarchist writer Charles Johnson offers an analysis of the concrete mechanisms of capitalism, and of how the revolutionary potential of free economic relationships is diverted and deformed when markets are constrained to labor under bosses, monopoly and government. Johnson revisits, and updates, Benjamin Tucker’s classic “Four Monopolies” analysis of state capitalism, arguing that the case for Tucker’s free-market anticapitalism is stronger than ever, as we take into account not only the growth and retrenchment of the Land Monopoly, Money Monopoly, Patent Monopoly, and Protectionist Monopoly, but also the metastatic spread of state-capitalist monopolies into Agribusiness, Infrastructure, Utilities, Health Care, and Regulatory Protectionism.

For most of the twentieth century, American libertarians saw themselves, and were seen as, defenders of “capitalism.” Until nearly the end of the 20th century, anticapitalist anarchism was sidelined in political debate, and most simply ceased to be treat it as a live option; mean­while, most American libertarians, and nearly all of their opponents, seemed to agree that opposing state control of the economy meant defending business against the attacks of “big government.” The purpose and effect of laissez faire was simply to unleash existing forms of commerce from political restraints, and to produce something which would look, more or less, like business as usual, only more so: bigger, faster, stronger, and no longer held back by government from pushing the corporate business model to the hilt.

This was almost a complete reversal from the attitude of traditional libertarians like Benjamin Tucker, an attitude which we might call ‘free-market anti-capitalism.’ Tucker was one of the best-known defenders of free markets in nineteenth-century America. . . Yet he repeatedly described his views as a form of “Anarchistic Socialism.” . . . What could “social­ism” mean for a radical, free-market individualist like Tucker? Certainly not govern­ment control of industry. Rather, what Tucker was pointing out was his opposition to actually-existing capitalist business practices, and his support for workers’ control over the conditions of their own labor – the control denied by the Four Monopolies and the artificial inequalities of wealth and bargaining power they fostered. For Tucker, then, a libertarian politics meant an attack on economic privilege – by removing the political privileges that propped it up, and dismantling monopolies by exposing them to competition from below. . . .

Tags: Charles Johnson C4SS Anarchy
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~ Tuesday, January 15 ~
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We have cried, and the gods are silent,
We have trusted, and been betrayed,
We have loved, and the fruit was ashes,
We have given, the gift was weighed.

Voltairine de Cleyre: The Toast Of Despair

Read the entire poem..

Tags: Voltairine de Cleyre Anarchy Poetry Read it
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~ Monday, January 14 ~
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But the evil of pinning faith to indirect action is far greater than any such minor results. The main evil is that it destroys initiative, quenches the individual rebellious spirit, teaches people to rely on someone else to do for them what they should do for themselves; finally renders organic the anomalous idea that by massing supineness together until a majority is acquired, then through the peculiar magic of that majority, this supineness is to be transformed into energy. That is, people who have lost the habit of striking for themselves as individuals, who have submitted to every injustice while waiting for the majority to grow, are going to become metamorphosed into human high-explosives by a mere process of packing!
— Voltairine de Cleyre, Direct Action
Tags: Voltairine de Cleyre Direct Action Anarchy Anarchism Decentralize
2 notes
~ Tuesday, January 8 ~
Permalink Tags: Alexander Berkman Anarchism Anarchy
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c4ss:

For every copy of Benjamin Tucker’s “Market Anarchy Vs. Corporate Power“ that you purchase through the Distro, C4SS will receive a percentage.

The classic Market Anarchist take on corporate power and the political privileges that prop it up — Benjamin Tucker’s talk at the Conference on Trusts by the Chicago Civic Federation in September 1899.

The trusts, instead of growing out of competition, as is so generally supposed, have been made possible only by the absence of competition, only by the difficulty of competition, only by the obstacles placed in the way of competition … by those arbitrary limitations of competition which we find in those law­created privileges and monopolies … . The trusts owe their power to vast accumulation and concentration of wealth … But for interest, rent, and monopolistic profit … trusts would be impossible. Now, what causes interest, rent, and monopolistic profit? For all there is but one cause, – the denial of liberty, the suppression or restriction of competition, the legal creation of monopolies… .
Free access to the world of matter, abolishing land monopoly; free access to the world of mind, abolishing idea monopoly; free access to an untaxed and unprivileged market, abolishing tariff monopoly and money monopoly, – secure these, and all the rest shall be added unto you. For liberty is the remedy of every social evil, and to Anarchy the world must look at last for any enduring guarantee of social order.

c4ss:

For every copy of Benjamin Tucker’s “Market Anarchy Vs. Corporate Power“ that you purchase through the Distro, C4SS will receive a percentage.

The classic Market Anarchist take on corporate power and the political privileges that prop it up — Benjamin Tucker’s talk at the Conference on Trusts by the Chicago Civic Federation in September 1899.

The trusts, instead of growing out of competition, as is so generally supposed, have been made possible only by the absence of competition, only by the difficulty of competition, only by the obstacles placed in the way of competition … by those arbitrary limitations of competition which we find in those law­created privileges and monopolies … . The trusts owe their power to vast accumulation and concentration of wealth … But for interest, rent, and monopolistic profit … trusts would be impossible. Now, what causes interest, rent, and monopolistic profit? For all there is but one cause, – the denial of liberty, the suppression or restriction of competition, the legal creation of monopolies… .

Free access to the world of matter, abolishing land monopoly; free access to the world of mind, abolishing idea monopoly; free access to an untaxed and unprivileged market, abolishing tariff monopoly and money monopoly, – secure these, and all the rest shall be added unto you. For liberty is the remedy of every social evil, and to Anarchy the world must look at last for any enduring guarantee of social order.

Tags: Benjamin Tucker C4SS Market Anarchy Anarchy Anarchism Libertarian
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reblogged via c4ss
~ Monday, November 26 ~
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mutualist-vanguard:

Scott Crow on anarchism, activism, and his book black flags and windmills…an amazing story about the new orleans community after hurricane katrina…ahhhh i just loved this so much

Tags: Scott Crow Anarchy Direct Action
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reblogged via pizzavanguard
~ Monday, November 19 ~
Permalink Tags: Anarcho-Capitalism Anarchy Capitalism C4SS Anna Morgenstern
5 notes
~ Thursday, October 18 ~
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moralanarchism:

Jeff interviews Gary Chartier on how he became an anarchist and a range of other topics.


Tags: Gary Chartier Anarchy
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reblogged via moralanarchism
~ Thursday, October 11 ~
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Charles Johnson: Watch it

Tags: Anarchy Charles Johnson Libertarian Left-Libertarian
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~ Wednesday, October 10 ~
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unalienableanarchy:

Alan Moore comments on anarchy

Tags: Anarchy Alan Moore
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reblogged via unalienableanarchy
~ Tuesday, October 9 ~
Permalink Tags: Voltairine de Cleyre Direct Action Anarchy Anarchism
5 notes
~ Thursday, October 4 ~
Permalink Tags: Truth Anarchy Anarchism
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reblogged via disobey
~ Wednesday, October 3 ~
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Charles Johnson’s speech at the 2010 Free State Project Liberty Forum. Part 1 of 6

Tags: Left-Libertarian Anarchy Rights Government Control Anarchism Society Charles Johnson
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~ Friday, September 28 ~
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Market Anarchism FAQ

“We can no longer blind ourselves to the fact that concentrated economic power has become as reckless and ruthless and coercive as concentrated political power.

We can no longer attack subsidies for the poor while supporting even greater subsidies for the rich.

We can no longer speak of protecting freedom in the world by turning the world into protective hamlets. We can no longer oppose tyranny by emulating it.

We cannot speak of individual freedom and free communities, self-reliance and self-responsibility, while honoring the assembly line, promoting urban demolition, and making fetish of commodities. We cannot speak of honest work while honest working people are alienated from the work and treated as mere extensions of their machines.

We cannot attack the abuses of arrogant and bureaucratic labor leaders without attacking the abuses of arrogant and bureaucratic industrial and business leaders.

We cannot speak of a land of liberty and a national-security state in the same breath – we must defend freedom at home if we are ever to have freedom in the world.

We cannot speak of a sweet land of liberty when the very land is soured by greed of those who turn the landscape into real estate, who turn the rivers into open sewers, who see in every living thing nothing but a dollar in the process.” –Karl Hess, Dear America, 1975.

Below is a list of common questions we receive, and our attempts to provide brief but informative answers. Send questions to: faq@c4ss.org

  1. What is market anarchism?
  2. What is a government or state?
  3. What will a stateless society look like?
  4. Is market anarchism utopian?
  5. Are market anarchists for or against capitalism?
  6. How do market anarchists regard other tendencies within anarchism?
  7. Don’t market anarchists support wage labor, which is completely unanarchistic?
  8. Is market anarchism derived from classical liberalism or socialism?
  9. Since market anarchists support free trade, are they pro-globalization?
  10. Which theory of value do market anarchists subscribe to?
  11. Do market anarchists buy into the “bourgeois nursery tale” of primitive accumulation?
  12. But what about the roads?
  13. Privatization is for neoliberals, right?
  14. How does market anarchism interact with feminist theory?
  15. What do you mean by “vulgar libertarianism?” What is “conflationism?”
  16. How will we get to a stateless society?
  17. What’s with the socially conservative strain of anarcho-capitalism coming out of the Mises Institute and Hans-Hermann Hoppe?
  18. How does market anarchism address the need for social safety nets?
Tags: C4SS Market Anarchy Economics Anarchy Mutualism Rights
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Charles Johnson Q&A

Watch it

Tags: Charles Johnson Anarchy Society Community
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reblogged via emobedwetter-deactivated2013032