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From: pauls@css.itd.umich.edu (Paul Southworth)
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Subject: Non Serviam, Issue #1
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Message-ID: <1jp5mfINNbnd@stimpy.css.itd.umich.edu>
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Date: 22 Jan 1993 16:00:15 GMT
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Organization: University of Michigan ITD Consulting and Support Services
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Lines: 499
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At last, the first issue of "non serviam". For issue #0, and for
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a copy of Max Stirner's book "Der Einzige und sein Eigentum" (an
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English translation available in Macintosh MS-Word format, compressed
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and BinHexed) visit the ftp site "red.css.itd.umich.edu" (141.211.182.91)
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and look in /poli/Non.Serviam.
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I am not associated with the Non Serviam project. Please direct your
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queries to solan@math.uio.no.
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Paul Southworth
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Archivist
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red.css.itd.umich.edu
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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non serviam #1
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**************
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Contents: Editor's Word
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John Beverley Robinson: "Egoism"
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Ken Knudson: A Critique of Communism and
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The Individualist Alternative (serial)
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***********************************************************************
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Editor's Word
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_____________
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This is the first "real" issue of non serviam, and the present theme,
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as will also be the theme of the next issue, #2, is as presented in #0:
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By asserting oneself - by insurrection - one is an egoist,
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one who puts himself first. For the next issue of "non serviam",
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#1, I would therefore appreciate articles about "what egoism
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means" in general. Both questions of the type "is hedonism the
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real egoism", and articles pondering the status of egoism in
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ethics are appreciated. Psychological angles of attack are also
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appreciated.
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Dissenting from this theme, I have a long and well-written article from
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Ken Knudson which I intend to publish in full. Given the length of it,
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it will be sent as a serial. It will also be available on the ftp site
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in not too long a time. I have, on the version here, left the page
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numberings for easier access to footnotes.
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I asked about "what egoism means". I should perhaps also have asked what
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egoism does not mean. For there are a lot of misconceptions about what
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egoism is. Religious literature incessantly warns us not to think about
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our own best interest, but the interest of the heavenly, of Man, and of
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just about everything else. But seldom is there found any advise to
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follow exactly this own interest. Why then these warnings against self
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interest, on and on, again and again? Surely not to counter any opposing
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system of ideas. For there have been close to none. What then is left
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to counter but - the individual himself!
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But to counter the individual is not a position that looks very good, so
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it has to be disguised, disguised as an attack on some "Deep Evil"
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lurking in self interest - in egoism. So the common view of egoism is
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far from formed by observation of actual egoists, but by propaganda in
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its disfavor. I will now list what I consider the types most typically
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mistaken for egoists, both by critics of egoism and by "egoists":
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THE PSYCHOPATH: The psychopath is characterized by a tendency of always
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being in the right and of manipulating others. He typically takes little
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heed of the interests of people he confronts. The reasoning displayed by
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those who identify psychopaths with egoists are usually of the type
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"He does not care for others - THUS he must care only for himself ...",
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which sets up a dichotomy without any basis in reality. Identifying an
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individual pursuing his own interests with a psychopath is a powerful
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means of keeping individuals "in line".
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THE EGO-BOOSTER: Somewhat related to the psychopath, in that he tries to
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make himself "big" in the eyes of others often at the expense of some
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third person. But the Ego-Booster cares a lot about the judgement of
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others. In fact - he depends on it. Getting approval from other people
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dominates his way of life. His focus is not on himself, but on something
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else - his self IMAGE.
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THE MATERIALIST: The glutton, the carelessly promiscuous and the one who
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spends all his time gathering possessions is often seen as the egoist
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by people who have seen through the traps above. A friend of mine wrote
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in his thesis on Stirner that these were "vulgar egoists". They sure
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enough care for their own interests. But they only care for PART of
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their own interest, giving in to some urge to dominate them. They either
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care only for the taste in their mouths right-here-right-now, or for
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the feelings in other parts. They do not satisfy the whole chap, as
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Stirner wrote.
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THE IDEALIST: Not too typical, but still - important. Can range from
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the proponent of Fichte+s Absolute or Transcendental Ego, to the person
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who has as his sole goal in this life to spread his own ideas. The first
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of these is not a proper egoist in that the "I" he is talking about is
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not the personal, individual "I" but - an abstraction, the mere IDEA of
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an ego. The latter is just the materialist mentality let loose in the
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realm of ideas.
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THE FORMAL EGOIST: The formal egoist is perhaps the most elusively like
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to the proper egoist. For the formal egoist knows that an egoist looks
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to the satisfaction of the whole chap. Actually the formal egoist can
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know more about egoism than the egoist himself. For the formal egoist
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really wants to be an egoist - and he follows the recipe he has found
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to the last little detail, and sets out to find even new nuances. There
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is only one thing missing, and that is his realization that there is no
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recipe. So though a behaviorist would just the Formal Egoist to be equal
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to a proper egoist, he is truly far off, in that his real drive is Duty.
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Egoism is not a religious or ideological system to be followed by duty,
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but simply the being and awareness of oneself.
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It is important to see that the different conceptions of egoism depend
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strongly on what is put into the concept of an "ego". Which ego is then
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"the true one"? Is it the Bodily Ego, the Empirical Ego, the Self Image,
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the Creative Ego, the Teleological Ego, the Will ... ? I will return to
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this in the next issue of non serviam, #2.
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Svein Olav
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____________________________________________________________________
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Egoism
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by John Beverley Robinson
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_________________________
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There is no word more generally misinterpreted than the word
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egoism, in its modern sense. In the first place, it is supposed
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to mean devotion to self interest, without regard to the
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interest of others. It is thus opposed to altruism - devotion
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to others and sacrifice of self. This interpretation is due to
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the use of the word thus antithetically by Herbert Spencer.
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Again, it is identified with hedonism or eudaimonism, or
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epicureanism, philosophies that teach that the attainment of
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pleasure or happiness or advantage, whichever you may choose to
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phrase it, is the rule of life.
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Modern egoism, as propounded by Stirner and Nietzsche, and
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expounded by Ibsen, Shaw and others, is all these; but it is
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more. It is the realization by the individual that he is an
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individual; that, as far as he is concerned, he is the only
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individual.
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For each one of us stands alone in the midst of a universe. He
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is surrounded by sights and sounds which he interprets as
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exterior to himself, although all he knows of them are the
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impressions on his retina and ear drums and other organs of
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sense. The universe for him is measured by these sensations;
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they are, for him, the universe. Some of them he interprets as
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denoting other individuals, whom he conceives as more or less
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like himself. But none of these is himself. He stands apart.
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His consciousness, and the desires and gratifications that
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enter into it, is a thing unique; no other can enter into it.
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However near and dear to you may be your wife, children,
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friends, they are not you; they are outside of you. You are
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forever alone. Your thoughts and emotions are yours alone.
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There is no other who experiences your thoughts or your
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feelings.
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No doubt it gives you pleasure when others think as you do, and
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Inform you of it through language; or when others enjoy the
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same things that you do. Moreover, quite apart from their
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enjoying the same things that you enjoy, it gives you pleasure
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to see them enjoy themselves in any way. Such gratification to
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the individual is the pleasure of sympathy, one of the most
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acute pleasures possible for most people.
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According to your sympathy, you will take pleasure in your own
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happiness or in the happiness of other people; but it is always
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your own happiness you seek. The most profound egoist may be
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the most complete altruist; but he knows that his altruism is,
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at the bottom, nothing but self-indulgence.
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But egoism is more than this. It is the realization by the
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individual that he is above all institutions and all formulas;
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that they exist only so far as he chooses to make them his own
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by accepting them.
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When you see clearly that you are the measure of the universe,
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that everything that exists exists for you only so far as it is
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reflected in your own consciousness, you become a new man; you
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see everything by a new light: you stand on a height and feel
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the fresh air blowing on your face; and find new strength and
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glory in it.
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Whatever gods you worship, you realize that they are your gods,
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the product of your own mind, terrible or amiable, as you may
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choose to depict them. You hold them in your hand, and play
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with them, as a child with its paper dolls; for you have
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learned not to fear them, that they are but the "imaginations
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of your heart."
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All the ideals which men generally think are realities, you
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have learned to see through; you have learned that they are
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your ideals. Whether you have originated them, which is
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unlikely, or have accepted somebody else's ideals, makes no
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difference. They are your ideals just so far as you accept
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them. The priest is reverend only so far as you reverence him.
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If you cease to reverence him, he is no longer reverend for
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you. You have power to make and unmake priests as easily as you
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can make and unmake gods. You are the one of whom the poet
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tells, who stands unmoved, though the universe fall in
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fragments about you.
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And all the other ideals by which men are moved, to which men
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are enslaved, for which men afflict themselves, have no power
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over you; you are no longer afraid of them, for you know them
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to be your own ideals, made in your own mind, for your own
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pleasure, to be changed or ignored, just as you choose to
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change or ignore them. They are your own little pets, to be
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played with, not to be feared.
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"The State" or "The Government" is idealized by the many as a
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thing above them, to be reverenced and feared. They call it "My
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Country," and if you utter the magic words, they will rush to
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kill their friends, whom they would not injure by so much as a
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pin scratch, if they were not intoxicated and blinded by their
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ideal. Most men are deprived of their reason under the
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influence of their ideals. Moved by the ideal of "religion" or
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"patriotism" or "morality," they fly at each others' throats -
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they, who are otherwise often the gentlest of men! But their
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ideals are for them like the "fixed ideas" of lunatics. They
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become irrational and irresponsible under the influence of
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their ideals. They will not only destroy others, but they will
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quite sink their own interests, and rush madly to destroy
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themselves as a sacrifice to the all-devouring ideal. Curious,
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is it not, to one who looks on with a philosophical mind?
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But the egoist has no ideals, for the knowledge that his ideals
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are only his ideals, frees him from their domination. He acts
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for his own interest, not for the interest of ideals. He will
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neither hang a man nor whip a child in the interest of
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"morality," if it is disagreeable to him to do so.
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He has no reverence for "The State." He knows that "The
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Government" is but a set of men, mostly as big fools as he is
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himself, many of them bigger. If the State does things that
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benefit him, he will support it; if it attacks him and
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encroaches on his liberty, he will evade it by any means in his
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power, if he is not strong enough to withstand it. He is a man
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without a country.
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"The Flag," that most men adore, as men always adore symbols,
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worshipping the symbol more than the principle it is supposed
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to set forth, is for the egoist but a rather inharmonious piece
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of patch-work; and anybody may walk on it or spit on it if they
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will, without exciting his emotion any more than if it were a
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tarpaulin that they walked upon or .spat upon. The principles
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that it symbolizes, he will maintain as far as it seems to his
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advantage to maintain them; but if the principles require him
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to kill people or be killed himself, you will have to
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demonstrate to him just what benefit he will gain by killing or
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being killed, before you can persuade him to uphold them.
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When the judge enters court in his toggery, (judges and
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ministers and professors know the value of toggery in
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impressing the populace) the egoist is unterrified. He has not
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even any respect for "The Law." If the law happens to be to his
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advantage, he will avail himself of it; if it invades his
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liberty he will transgress it as far as he thinks it wise to do
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so. But he has no regard for it as a thing supernal. It is to
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him the clumsy creation of them who still "sit in darkness."
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Nor does he bow the knee to Morality - Sacred Morality! Some of
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its precepts he may accept, if he chooses to do so; but you
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cannot scare him off by telling him it is not "right." He
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usually prefers not to kill or steal; but if he must kill or
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steal to save himself, he will do it with a good heart, and
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without any qualms of "conscience." And "morality" will never
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persuade him to injure others when it is of no advantage to
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himself. He will not be found among a band of "white caps,"
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flogging and burning poor devils, because their actions do not
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conform to the dictates of "morality," though they have injured
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none by such actions; nor will he have any hand in persecuting
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helpless girls, and throwing them out into the street, when he
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has received no ill at their hands.
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To his friends - to those who deserve the truth from him, - he
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will tell the truth; but you cannot force the truth from him
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because he is "afraid to tell a lie." He has no fear, not even
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of perjury, for he knows that oaths are but devices to enslave
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the mind by an appeal to supernatural fears.
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And for all the other small, tenuous ideals, with which we have
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fettered our minds and to which we have shrunk our petty lives;
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they are for the egoist as though they were not.
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"Filial love and respect" he will give to his parents if they
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have earned it by deserving it. If they have beaten him in
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infancy, and scorned him in childhood, and domineered over him
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in maturity, he may possibly love them in spite of
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maltreatment; but if they have alienated his affection, they
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will not reawaken it by an appeal to "duty."
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In brief, egoism in its modern interpretation, is the
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antithesis, not of altruism, but of idealism. The ordinary man
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- the idealist - subordinates his interests to the interests of
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his ideals, and usually suffers for it. The egoist is fooled by
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no ideals: he discards them or uses them, as may suit his own
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interest. If he likes to be altruistic, he will sacrifice
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himself for others; but only because he likes to do so; he
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demands no gratitude nor glory in return.
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____________________________________________________________________
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Ken Knudson:
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A Critique of Communism
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and
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The Individualist Alternative
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- 1 -
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A NOTE TO READERS
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I address myself in these pages primarily to those
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readers of "Anarchy" who call themselves "communist-
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anarchists." It is my purpose in this article to show that
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this label is a contradiction in terms and that anyone
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accepting it must do so by a lack of clear understanding of
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what the words "anarchist" and "communist" really mean. It
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is my hope that in driving a wedge between these two words,
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the communist side will suffer at the expense of the
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anarchist.
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I make no claims to originality in these pages. Most of
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what I have to say has been said before and much better. The
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economics is taken primarily from the writings of Pierre-
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Joseph Proudhon, William B. Greene, and Benjamin R. Tucker.
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The philosophy from Max Stirner, Tucker again, and, to a
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lesser extent, James L. Walker.
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I hope you won't be put off by my clumsy prose. I'm a
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scientist by trade, not a professional writer. I implore
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you, therefore, not to mistake style for content. If you
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want both the content and good style may I suggest Tucker's
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"Instead of a Book". Unfortunately, this volume has been out
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of print since 1897, but the better libraries - especially
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those in the United States - should have it. If you can
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read French, I recommend the economic writings of Proudhon.
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"General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century"
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is particularly good and has been translated into English by
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the American individualist, John Beverley Robinson. (Freedom
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Press, 1923). Also in English is Tucker's translation of one
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of Proudhon's earliest works, the well-known "What is
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Property?". This book is not as good as the "General Idea"
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book, but it has the advantage of being currently available
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in paperback in both languages. A word of warning: unless
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you are thoroughly familiar with Proudhon, I would not
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recommend the popular Macmillan "Papermac" edition of
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"Selected Writings of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon"; they seem to
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have been selected with irrelevance as their only criterion.
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Like so many other great writers, Proudhon suffers
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tremendously when quoted out of context and this particular
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edition gives, on average, less than a page per selection.
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Better to read his worst book completely than to be misled
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by disconnected excerpts like these. Finally the
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individualist philosophy, egoism, is best found in Max
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Stirner's "The Ego and His Own". This book suffers somewhat
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from a very difficult style (which wasn't aided by Stirner's
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wariness of the Prussian censor), but if you can get through
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his obscure references and biblical quotes, I think you will
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find the task worth the effort.
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- 2 -
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H. L. Mencken once observed that just because a rose
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smells better than a cabbage doesn't mean to say it makes a
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better soup. I feel the same way about individualist
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anarchism. At first whiff, the altruist rose may smell
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better than the individualist cabbage, but the former sure
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makes a lousy soup. In the following pages I hope to show
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that the latter makes a better one.
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Ken Knudson
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Geneva, Switzerland
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March, 1971
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- 3 -
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COMMUNISM: FOR THE COMMON GOOD
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"Communism is a 9 letter word used by inferior magicians
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with the wrong alchemical formula for transforming earth
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into gold."
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- Allen Ginsberg
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"Wichita Vortex Sutra"
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By way of prelude to the individualist critique of
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communism, I should like to look briefly at the communist-
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anarchists' critique of their Marxist brothers. Anarchists
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and Marxists have traditionally been at odds with one
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another: Bakunin and Marx split the First International over
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their differences a century ago; Emma Goldman virtually made
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her living in the 1920's from writing books and magazine
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articles about her "disillusionment in Russia"; in May,
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1937, the communists and anarchists took time off from their
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war against Franco to butcher each other in the streets of
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Barcelona; and the May days of '68 saw French anarchists
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directing more abuse against the communist CGT than against
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the Gaullist government.
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What is the nature of these differences? Perhaps the
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most concise answer to this question came in 1906 from a
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veritable expert on the subject: Joseph Stalin. He wrote in
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"Anarchism or Socialism?" that there were essentially three
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main accusations which (communist) anarchists leveled
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against Marxism:
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1) that the Marxists aren't really communists because
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they would "preserve the two institutions which constitute
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the foundation of [the capitalist] system: representative
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government and wage labour"; [1]
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2) that the Marxists "are not revolutionaries",
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"repudiate violent revolution", and "want to establish
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Socialism only by means of ballot papers"; [2]
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3) that the Marxists "actually want to establish not
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the dictatorship of the proletariat, but their own
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dictatorship over the proletariat." [3]
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Stalin goes on to quote Marx and Engels to "prove" that
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"everything the anarchists say on this subject is either the
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result of stupidity, or despicable slander." [4] Today the
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anarchists have the advantage of history on their side to
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show just who was slandering whom. I won't insult the
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reader's intelligence by pointing out how all three
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objections to Marxism were sustained by Uncle Joe himself a
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few decades later.
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But let us look at these three accusations from another
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point of view. Aren't the communist-anarchists simply saying
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in their holier-than-thou attitude, "I'm more communist than
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you, I'm more revolutionary than you, I'm more consistent
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- 4 -
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than you?" What's wrong with Marxism, they say, is NOT that
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it is for communism, violent revolution and dictatorship,
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but that it goes about attaining its goals by half-measures,
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compromises, and pussyfooting around. Individualist-
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anarchists have a different criticism. We reject communism
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per se, violent revolution per se, and dictatorship per se.
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My purpose here is to try to explain why.
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* * * * *
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____________________________________________________________________
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***********************************************************************
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* "Whoever is a complete person does not need - to be an authority!" *
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* From +The False Principle of Our Education+ *
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***********************************************************************
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Svein Olav
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