Makemore,
Thanks for the links on Roy Childs. The gist of Ronald Neff’s article seems to be that Childs’ doubts about anarchism were based on two factors: how to affect change in an orderly way, and the practicalities of anarchism.
I won’t go into the practicalities, but I think Childs’ concerns about change, how to get from here to there, are prescient. He seems to be saying that in order to affect orderly change, one needs to take part in the current political system, but the people who want to do so are the wrong sort of people for promoting anarchism, as they are those most likely to be subverted by the system.
No doubt this thought was prompted by some personal animosities, but there’s some truth in it from another angle. People who run for public office are assumed to have some loyalty to the existing system, and it’s also assumed that those who take office will sincerely defend and uphold that system. An anarchist, of course, cannot do this and remain true to his principles, so that avenue seems to be closed off as a way of affecting change. If violent revolution were rejected, the only other way of affecting orderly change would be through agitation and education, but unless you can also get your hands on the levers of power, agitation by itself can be pretty ineffective. To a lesser degree, the miniarchist faces the same challenge.
But there is also a more basic issue holding back libertarianism, both anarchist and miniarchist, and that is the claim that politics is, or should be, primarily a matter of interactions between individuals. I think this is a profound error. Politics as we know it, that is democracy, is the process of negotiation between groups in society. The very existence of libertarian parties is a tacit admission of this fact.
But in order to make headway in the political arena, groups have to engage in some form of collectivism. Individuals have to lay aside at least some of their differences and be subject to some form of discipline so that everyone is “singing from the same hymnbook”. Libertarians are understandably loathe to do this.
So that’s the dilemma: success in the existing political arena requires a degree of collectivism, but collectivism undermines the ethos of libertarianism. If that dilemma can be resolved, you can find a way of moving forward.
Brendan
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