• ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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    4 hours ago

    Of those two? Christian Democrats, I guess. But there are ideologies far to the right of anarchocapitalists (eg. neomonarchists) and far to the left of libertarian socialists (eg. communists), and anyway political ideologies don’t map well to a single- or even dual-axis graph. You need axes for economic model, rights vs. authority, and stability vs. innovation at a minimum.

  • AmidFuror@fedia.io
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    5 hours ago

    I’ve read enough political posts on Lemmy to know that the correct term for the people in the middle is “Nazi sympathizers.”

    Does that tell you where the strongest voices on Lemmy fall?

    The other answer is “the left / right spectrum is false.” The actual spectrum is “right / wrong,” and the writer’s beliefs are always on the former side.

  • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    8 hours ago

    “genuine” anarcho capitalists (who arent grifting or trying or are otherwise not just interested in new political concepts like anarchism) dont know what they believe in and no one really helps them out because its easier to make fun of them (valid, but making fun of something isnt how you fix things). They are in a transitionary phase between liberalism, fascism, and socialism. They started from one of those places, are becoming dissillusioned to it, and are opening up to ideas of the other two.

    Now you know how to talk to an anarcho capitalist and sway them to your side. Find out where they are coming from, and appeal to whichever side you want them to go to (or back if you want them to see the err in their ways). This also works in favor of fascism btw so if you dont help the anarcho capitalists, they will, and they are.

    • AfterNova@lemmy.worldOP
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      5 hours ago

      Would the capitalism we currently have be the same in anarcho-capitalism? Corporations wouldn’t exist without government. Legal tender laws would not exist.

      • anake@piefed.zip
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        4 hours ago

        Capitalism is inherently incompatible with statelessness. You need some kind of police or military force to enforce private property and contracts. In anarcho-capitalism, that force doesn’t disappear. Those with more money would be able to buy more protection, better courts, and stronger enforcement, they would increasingly turn wealth directly into power.

        What we understand as a corporation today wouldn’t vanish without the state; it would reappear as large, hierarchical firms held together by contracts, private security, and internal command structures. In practice, these would look less like free associations and more like dictatorial private governments, exercising control over workers and communities without even minimal public accountability.

        Removing legal tender laws or corporate charters doesn’t eliminate capitalism’s core dynamics: private ownership of productive resources, wage labor, and profit extraction. Anarcho-capitalism keeps those intact while stripping away any collective checks on them. From an anarchist anti-capitalist perspective, that’s not anarchism, thats straight up the replacement of public authority with unaccountable private power.

        • AfterNova@lemmy.worldOP
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          4 hours ago

          How do enforce a lack of private property without a state? How do you prevent a capitalist system from sprouting up in socialism without a state?

          • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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            3 hours ago

            Same way animals do. You don’t need to enforce something that doesn’t exist in the first place.

            If there’s no state to stop me from building a garden on some billionaire’s ranch, private property no longer exists.

      • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 hours ago

        depends on which anarcho capitalist you are talking to. I know many former ancaps were free marketeers before going more socialist routes like market anarchism and mutualism. Think like Kevin Carson, a former bleeding heart libertarian, now probably a mutualist. These kinds of ancaps would see todays capitalism as a farce of the free market—they dont believe at all that capitalism is a market free of state sponsored racism, oppression, or violence etc. They believe a market free of state sponsored violence (they call current capitalism crony capitalism but whatever) would look more egalitarian.

        • AfterNova@lemmy.worldOP
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          4 hours ago

          Capitalism would be completely different under anarcho-capitalism. I think ancaps are for using dispute resolution organizations to resolve conflicts and for a polycentric law system. Legit cryptocurrencies and legit DeFi could work well in an anarchistic society as a decentralized currency system.

          • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 hours ago

            There are no real core ancap theories. Unlike leftists which you can 9 times out of 10 just start with the observations of marx and go from there without necessarily supporting his solutions, ancaps don’t have a core theory they can revolve around which is why often they just stick with the libertarian “non aggression principle” and go from there.

  • Aequitas@feddit.org
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    11 hours ago

    Left and right are misleading terms that originate from the seating arrangement in the French National Assembly. Roughly speaking, left and right can be distinguished by the fact that those on the right approve of social hierarchies and want to maintain them, while those on the left want to abolish them. A supposed middle position would be “only some hierarchies are good.” But that is also just a right-wing position.

    That is why there is no “middle ground” in anarchism. Either you want a system in which everyone benefits equally, or one with a clear capitalist hierarchy. Either everyone has one vote, or the weight of the vote depends on wealth. Either we consider the freedom of all to be important, or only that of those who have enough capital. Either no one is dominated, or only those who have to sell their labor.

    There is only either/or here. Those who do not consider all people to be of equal value consider some to be more valuable. This is not a spectrum; rather, the difference lies in very fundamental normative decisions.

      • Aequitas@feddit.org
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        4 hours ago

        Some groups are hierarchical and others are not. My group of friends, for example, is not hierarchical. My partnership is not hierarchical either. So human social groups cannot be described as inherently hierarchical. Perhaps it is necessary to entrust people with tasks. But temporary, democratic delegation of responsibility is something different from social hierarchy. For example in cooperatives there is usually an elected chairperson. Nevertheless, most cooperatives are not hierarchical.

        This applies to economic hierarchies such as those between the working class and the owner class, but also to social hierarchies, for example through patriarchy, racism, and other forms of discrimination. If you believe that hierarchy between people is natural and therefore worth stabilizing, for example, that men should call the shots in relationships and in society, or that it is right for the majority of society to work, while a small minority does not work but becomes rich from the labor of the majority, you are advocating a right-wing view of society.

        • AfterNova@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 hour ago

          What mammal doesn’t try to establish a hierarchy? We have over 300,000 years of neural programming to seek social status because it increases the odds of reproducing. I am questioning if completely eliminating all hierarchies is even possible.

      • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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        5 hours ago

        There’s a natural tendency towards heirarchies, but “natural” doesn’t mean “necessary” and it definitely doesn’t mean “desirable”. To create and maintain a better world takes work, and part of that is dismantling “natural”, but harmful, heirarchies (eg. the physically strong dominating the physically weak).

        • AfterNova@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 hour ago

          If humans are hardwired to create hierarchies and seek status would a complete lack of hierarchy be possible on a large scale?

          • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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            3 hours ago

            Some heirarchies (my personal opinion now) are both natural and desirable: parent and child, teacher and student.

            Many are harmful, and should be removed, no matter how “natural”.

            I wouldn’t say “hardwired to create heirarchies” so much as there’s a tendency, in any case.

            • AfterNova@lemmy.worldOP
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              2 hours ago

              Wouldn’t we just create another hierarchy in it’s place? Have fun playing wack a mole.

              • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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                2 hours ago

                It won’t be fun. It will be work. I was saying that from the beginning. It’s a task without end, but still worthwhile.

          • Aequitas@feddit.org
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            4 hours ago

            This is surely how they argued in the Middle Ages when it came to justifying the different estates.

            I don’t believe that hierarchies are something inherently human. You don’t seek out hierarchies in your normal environment. Very few people do. And those who do are usually not very popular. You don’t want to subordinate yourself or dominate others. We are all only human, after all. It’s just that we live in a society that is hierarchical, and therefore it seems normal to us. In fact, however, this order can and is only maintained through violence. That cannot be natural.

  • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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    13 hours ago

    There’s no such thing as the middle. It’s not a spectrum.

    Sometimes things are actually just distinct beliefs.

    You can’t be in between Christianity and Hindu for example. They aren’t attached to each other, they are distinct.

      • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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        2 hours ago

        Because you can’t really have parts of both.

        Either you have wealth redistribution, or you don’t. A lower amount is still wealth redistribution.

        You can have a government, or you don’t. A smaller government is still a government.

        So if someone wants some wealth redistribution, and some government. They are just arguing how much of a Libertarian Socialist they are, not how much of a anarcho-capitalist they are.

        I personally am a Social Democrat. Capitalism is good most of the time, just make sure you’re holding the reigns tight so it goes in the right direction. Skip capitalism altogether for specific industries where it just doesn’t do very well and have the government run those ones directly.

        I’m neither a libertarian socialist, nor an anarcho-capitalist. Not even close to either of them, because again, it isn’t a spectrum.

      • Fedizen@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        What would it be a spectrum of? Either you think society needs to be ruled by elites (right wing) or you think society should run itself based on universal rights (left wing).

  • matte@feddit.nu
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    12 hours ago

    Ideologies such as social liberalism and democratic socialism are often regarded as in between extreme left and extreme right positions. There are many other positions of course such as centre-right and various “green” and religiously motivated positions. They could also often fit somewhere in between on a conventional right-left spectrum. This of course varies a lot between countries and political systems.