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What do you think are the fastest ways to establish an anarchist society?
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[quote user="Stranger"] By not forming one. [/quote] LOL, you bastard, you made me bust out laughing in the friggin' library.
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[quote user="Laughing Man"] Ron Paul is no Anarchist or even leaning in that fashion. He aggranizes a tyrannical document (The Constitution) and believes that State level government should legislation morality.If you want to say he is creating a bigger Libertarian base then by all means do so but to state he is bring people towards Anarchism
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[quote user="jtucker"] Boetie [/quote] Great stuff, thanks!
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Here are some pot-induced (the high's nearing its end though) suggestions: 1. Someone basking in light (preferrably just a face) 2. Handcuffs Breaking with two bloodied fists 3. Someone holding up a book while being shot in the head. 4. A monster holding up a twin-pan balance with one hand, while the other's holding a bloodied weapon or heads
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I don't know bro. I've read a little of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, and that shit's as air-tight as you can find. However, just in case it doesn't hold up to some future super dupper argument, didn't Rothbard build Austrianism from a more empiricist/Aritotelian foundation?
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[quote user="Rubén"] Human nature is social, not so individual as Greek philosophers claimed within their historical context. Humans would perish as a species if left with no contact with thir fellows, as opposed for example to species of other animals that are able to live unattended since their very birth, [/quote] I agree that we're
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[quote user="Juan"]Government is not voluntary. Some people choose to use violence against other people. Government subjects don't choose order -- so called order is imposed on them.[/quote] I understand and completely agree that government's a parasitic entity that derives sustenance from the productive. However, many people, for
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[quote user="GilesStratton"]Nobody voluntarily surrended themselves to government, it was forced upon them.[/quote] I disagree, people often choose order before liberty, and people naturally gravitate towards those who they consider superior for whatever reason, and actually concede power to such person, persons, or institutions.
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Anyone find it strange that, considering how society and the market comes to be, and the importance of individualism in such processes, that we're so prone to voluntarily surrender ourselves to the collective?