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Originally posted by SaturnFX
Originally posted by tothetenthpower
Small localized government and extremely small if even non-existant federal government.
All well and good until you want someone to fix the highway....
aint my responsibility...
Originally posted by endisnighe
reply to post by Phlynx
What you describe here is not an anarchist form of governance. It is actually more a non centralized republic with smaller forms of local governance.
Something like what the US is supposed to have.
A true anarchist state of governance would have absolutely no centralized governance with only small feudal or community organization. Even just a family or individual being the largest form of governance.
Originally posted by EnlightenUp
reply to post by Phlynx
The only authority I agree is the authority who has equal power and rights of the people. Someone like a blacksmith, or a parent. A lead engineer. They gain there authority they aren't given more rights than anyone else.
So then actually you are more of a meritocrat where authority is granted by demonstrated competence.
This is not for some lazy ass bums, expecting. to be taking care of.
This equality and freedom would be achieved through the abolition of authoritarian institutions that own and control productive means as private property,[6] so that direct control of these means of production and resources will be shared by society as a whole. Libertarian socialism also constitutes a tendency of thought that informs the identification, criticism and practical dismantling of illegitimate authority in all aspects of social life. Accordingly libertarian socialists believe that "the exercise of power in any institutionalized form– whether economic, political, religious, or sexual– brutalizes both the wielder of power and the one over whom it is exercised."[7]
Libertarian socialists place their hopes in trade unions, workers' councils, municipalities, citizens' assemblies, and other non-bureaucratic, decentralized means of direct democracy.[8] Many libertarian socialists advocate doing away with the state altogether, seeing it as a bulwark of capitalist class rule, while others propose that a minimal, non-hierarchical version is unobjectionable.[