We Grant Authoritarians Power by Fearing Authorship
Authoring is an Anarchist practice, because it requires and is an exercise in self-governance.
The Rule of Law and its Built-in Marginalizing Features
The Rule of Law is not designed to be democratically improved upon, it’s designed to work according to the whims of those already in a position of power, and who have all the interest and resources to retain this power.
What does Justice mean in the case of the lynching of a Congolese man in Brazil?
Is the arrest of the men who tied another man down to beat him to death what Justice looks like?
Pool yourself together: Sufficiency and interdependence in the wake of a degrowth future
People are able to organize very complex distribution and exchange mechanisms in a very short time without the intervention of state institutions. […] People did not engage in a general war for survival, but gathered in smaller groups around small 'pools' of remaining resources.
We Are What We Always Were: A Response to “What Happened to Anarchism”
If the people we fight against had their way, then none of us would be safe for another day. That’s all the reason I need to stand against them.
Living with our (pre)histories
“(Pre)history, like any story, is empirically non-reducible to a singular causal chain of historical events, including the bogus idea of the agricultural revolution.”
Learning My Left From My Right
This is the lesson I learned after having my work co-opted by fascists: It’s not enough to articulate a critique of capitalism—as I did in my article about distributism. If we do not also clearly distinguish ourselves from the fascists, then we will end up losing the debate to both.
My Anarchist Life
“I began to see a connection between my anarchist mentality – which, for most of my life, was more of an instinct than a philosophy – and my pagan religion. Specifically, I began to understand a pagan and animist worldview as the spiritual core of a future free society capable of living on this planet without destroying all life here.”
Anarchism: An Everyday Philosophy
“If we switch our mental focus and ground our conception of anarchism in the here and now, then what would our anarchism look like?”
What Pirates Taught Me About Anarchism (Anarchism for Civilians series)
Civilized societies are not less violent than non-civilized societies–-though they may appear to be the more privileged citizens. One of the defining characteristics of civilization is the depersonalization of violence.
What Midwives Taught Me About Anarchism (Anarchism for Civilians series)
Though they’re often used synonymously, civilization is not the same thing as culture. Many of the things that are attributed to civilization, such as art and healing, existed before civilization and outside of states. And many of the lauded “improvements” brought by civilization were not really improvements, or else they were improvements which came at a terrible cost.
What Unitarians Taught Me About Anarchism (Anarchism for Civilians series)
We tend to reject hierarchy instinctually in some parts of our lives, while accepting it uncritically in others. Anarchists strive to eliminate all hierarchy, in every aspect of life.
Occult Features of Anarchism by Erica Lagalisse: A Review
“Much of the European revolutionary tradition traces itself back to the 18th century, including the first stirrings of anarchist philosophy as we now know it. Much of the neopagan and occult tradition as we now know it traces back to the same era, and not at all coincidentally as author Erica Lagalisse demonstrates...” A review of Occult Features of Anarchism: With Attention to the Conspiracy of Kings and the Conspiracy of the Peoples.