Tuesday 19 April 2016

Sadiq Gill: Making Sense of Anarchy

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Anarchists believe in individuality. Everyone and anyone, no matter of what gender, skin color, or race you are, you are still a person. You can believe in whatever religion you want to believe, wear what you want to wear, and live how you want to live. You're a person just like everybody else! Why should you have people tell you how to live your life? Why do "We, The People" need a bunch of rich, old men with their own agendas to tell us how to spend our money, tell us what is right, what is wrong, when to sleep, what to eat and drink? Don't most people know inherently what is right and wrong, good from bad?

Ask yourself, if there were no more laws tomorrow, would you become a murderer and thief? No? Well, no one else would either. People who murder and steal do these things regardless of laws. Let's get rid of the reasons that people do these things instead. People are intelligent enough to make their own decisions. They know what's right and they know what's wrong and I'm sure they can learn from their mistakes when they are made. So, even though there are no laws and nobody officially running anarchy such as a president, dictator or King, people can control themselves. We're not sheep wondering mindlessly along fields, are we?

But the whole idea of anarchy has been around for centuries. Ancient Greek philosophy of Stoicism (a system having the same ideas of anarchy at the time of ancient Greece) was founded by Zeno of Citium said that wise men could and should evolve away from civil courts, government and rulers, acting eventually only by the universal law of reason and in accord with the universal brotherhood among human beings. The first modern western thinker to greatly develop and publish an anarchist philosophy was Englishman William Godwin, who supported the cause of an evolutionary anarchism reminiscent of Zeno's Stoicism. Benjamin Tucker, the great American individualist, got his anarchism ideas from Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and Josiah Warren, both of whom opposed Capitalism and The State, and both of whom embraced individualism. All three men focused on the ideas of a free and individualized economy. The most famous anarchist is Emma Goldman, whose anarchy-communism was based on the philosophy of Russian aristocrat, Prince Peter Kropotkin. His anarchist philosophy was collectivist, communist and non-violent, though he doesn't seem to have rejected violence and revolution.

Unfortunately, getting people to follow anarchism wasn't easy. Emma Goldman enforced many things against the government like stealing and woman's rights (which back in the early 1900's woman didn't have to many rights). Well, it ended her up in jail for about 4 years through 1893 and 1918. But others like William Godwin, never went to jail and had good views that inspired many people. He believed that all monarchies were "unavoidably corrupt". He felt that no one should power over another one. He believed that reason could and should rule over our lives. Between Emma, William, and many others, anarchy has come a long way.

Anarchy. The only system of government in which there are no ruler and no laws. Anarchist believe that The People can do for themselves realize what is right from wrong and resolve their own conflicts. Through centuries people like Zeno, Emma Goldman, and William Godwin have introduced this idea to many people. Now it's pretty clear why all we've been hearing about is anarchy, anarchy, anarchy.

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