anarchy

Toward a Cultural Ecology of Anarchy

John Moore: From an antipolitical perspective, the implications are clear. On the one hand, anarchy must be rejuvenated and become conscious and vigilant. Liberation from all forms of coercion and hierarchy, including its formulation in the cuneal paradigm, can be achieved only through an attentive and sagacious anarchy. On the other hand, techniques must be developed whereby the controlled can experience the psychosocial biodegradation process, with its liberating cathartic effects, and hence regain their forfeited heritage as uncontrollables—the real paradise lost.

Seizing the Media

"IMMEDIAST projects are against all forms of coercive communication, cultural monologue and media control. We acknowledge non-violent public insurgence as a legitimate response to sustained violations by media and state. We recognize the air as public property, and the signals that travel through it to be the domain of the public."

The Suppressed Ideas of Kropotkin on Evolution

In his book, Bully for Brontosaurus, scientific historian Stephen Jay Gould devotes a chapter to presenting Peter Kropotkin's views on biological evolution. Kropotkin is best known as a Russian revolutionary anarchist who believed in cooperative, rather than hierarchical and competitive, human relationships, and in devolving the power of the central state to local communities. It is less well known that his political views were based on a sophisticated view of evolution.

Basis for a Cooperative Economy in Russia
By Ronald Logan

The Plan

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In the beginning, there was a plan,
And then came the assumptions,
And the assumptions were without form,
And the plan was without substance.....

The People's Kitchen

In late 1997, I teamed up with several other people and toured the west coast, serving good, lovin' food to thousands of homeless and houseless people, from Eugene, Oregon down to the San Francisco Bay area, and ultimately to Tucson, Arizona. Living, loving, and cooking out of a thirty or so foot Winnebago was, perhaps, the most educating experience of my life, at least until that time. It was here that I learned what practical anarchy was - you know, the kind of anarchy that exists outside an academic vacuum - the kind of anarchy pleasantly devoid of anarchisms.

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