Showing posts with label Bakunin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bakunin. Show all posts

Sunday, December 31, 2006


QUOTATIONS FROM THE ANARCHISTS:
PART III: MICHAEL BAKUNIN:
  1. "Freedom, morality and the human dignity of the individual consists precisely in this; that he does good not because he is forced to do so, but because he freely conceives it, wants it, and loves it".
  2. "People go to church for the same reason they go to a tavern:to stupefy themselves, to forget their misery, to imagine themselves, for a few minutes anyway, free and happy".
  3. "The liberty of man consists solely in this:that he obeys natural laws because he has himself recognized them as such, and not because they have been externally imposed upon him by any extrinsic will whatever, divine or human, collective or individual".
  4. "The passion for destruction is also a creative passion".
  5. "To revolt is a natural tendency of life. Even a worm turns against the foot that crushes it. In general, the vitality and relative dignity of an animal can be measured by the intensity of its instincts to revolt".
  6. "The freedom of all is essential to my freedom".
  7. "The first revolt is against the supreme tyranny of theology, of the phantom of God. As long as we have a master in heaven, we will be slaves on earth".
  8. "From each according to his faculties;to each according to his needs".
  9. "Does it follow that I reject all authority ? Perish the thought. In the matter of boots, I defer to the authority of the boot-maker".
  10. "I am truly free only when all human beings, men and women, are equally free. The freedom of other men, far from negating or limiting my freedom, is, on the contrary, its necessary premise and confirmation".
  11. "Anyone who makes plans for after the revolution is a reactionary".
  12. "If there is a state, then there is domination, and in turn there is slavery".
  13. "A boss in Heaven is the best excuse for a boss on earth, therefore if God did exist he would have to be abolished".
  14. "Where the state begins, individual liberty ceases, and vise versa".
  15. "He who desires to worship God must harbour no childish illusions about the matter but bravely renounce his liberty and humanity".
  16. "Idealism is the despot of thought, just as politics is the despot of will".
  17. "If there is a human being who is freer than I, then I shall necessarily become his slave. If I am freer than any other, then he will become my slave. Therefore equality is an absolutely necessary condition of freedom".
  18. "Powerful states can maintain themselves only by crime, little states are virtuous only by weakness".
  19. "From the naturalistic point of view, all men are equal. There are only two exceptions to this rule of naturalistic equality:geniuses and idiots".
  20. "Throw a theory into the fire. It only spoils life".

21. "Everything will pass, and the world will perish but the Ninth Symphony will remain".

That's it for now. Just a little Molly Note. I've added the WikiQuote and Think Exist sites to the 'Other Interesting Links' section of this blog. Looking to see who said what. Go there as well as to the Quote Garden.


THE BEST OF THE BLOGS:
EUGENE PLAWIUK ON MICHAEL BAKUNIN:
Yesterday, Dec. 30th, was the 130th anniversary of the death of Michael Bakunin(1814-1876), one of the contributing thinkers in the origin of anarchism as a distinct political philosophy. Eugene Plawiuk has written a piece on his blog entitled 'Revolution is Progress: Micheal Bakunin' that goes into the intellectual influences on Bakunin's thought, some publications on Mikey and Bakunin's rivalry with Marx. It also contains numerous links to matters Bakunin, biographic and bibliographic. Plawiuk concludes his blog by republishing chapter 2 of Bakunin's 'God and the State'.
Plawiuk's Blog is a goldmine of opinion and fact on matters anarchist, labour and Marxist. Have a look at his other writings. Links to Michael Bakunin's other writings can also be found at the Anarchist Archives and the Bakunin Archive. Both these references are listed in our 'Online Anarchist Libraries' section. Both the complete text of 'God and the State' and 'The Immorality of the State' are available on our 'Texts' section.

Friday, October 06, 2006

More local stuff:
Just got through the pile of newspapers. Found that one Graeme Voyer had written a review of Mark Leier's 'Bakunin:The Creative Passion' in the Oct. 1st 'Books' section of the Winnipeg Free Press. It's actually quite a fair review.
Also, there's a new post on the Winnipeg Indymedia site that says more about our beloved and bold supreme leader, Mayor Sam Katz. The title is 'Katz Cons City'.

Monday, September 25, 2006

Today (Sept 25) in History:
1868: Michael Bakunin and friends establish the 'International Alliance of Social Democracy' as a splinter group at the meeting of the 'League for Peace and Freedom' in Berne Switzerland.
1870: The Marseilles Commune announces the abolition of the state and all debt.
1919: Anarchists, in cooperation with Left Socialist Revolutionaries, bomb the Moscow headquarters of the Communist Party in response to continued repression and murder of members of both the anarchists and the Left SRs on the part of the Bolsheviks. A job done poorly as the Communists later go on to slaughter 25 million ordinary Russians once the supply of political opponents runs out.
1960: Fourth Conference of the Situationalist International. Besides adopting the "Statement on Madness' they spend their everyday life in electing a central committee.
1962" US backed coup in the Dominican Republic overthrows mildly leftist president Juan Bosch.
1977:Anti-apartheid organizer Steven Biko is buried in South Africa after being murdered by the police during detention. A little quote from Steve,
"The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed."
1999: The 'Friends of the Modern School', a collection of alumni and others meet at Rutger's University. The Modern School movement was founded in many countries after the judicial murder of Francisco Ferrer (Jan 10, 1859-Oct. 12, 1909) by the authorities in Barcelona. He was falsely accused of being part of a "plot" during the 'Semana Tragica' in Catalonia that year. The events of the 'Tragic Week' led to the creation of the Spanish CGT. For more on Ferrer see http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/bright/ferrer/ferrer.html . For more on the American Modern School Movement see 'A History of the Stelton Modern School' at http://www.talkinghistory.org/stelton/stelton.html and 'The Modern School Collection' at http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/rul/libs/scua/modern_school/modern.shtml .
As a little aside on a past visit to Barcelona I discovered the monument to Ferrer on the way up to Montjuis. It's a little bit damaged but still standing after decades of Francoism. It has an appropriate anti-clerical quote on its base. Modern Barcelona; where public transportation hubs have been named after anarchist Juan Peiro and there is an 'Avenida Durruti'. The Catalans have named their Olympic Stadium after Companys, but they aren't above adding anarchist names in their nose thumbing at the government in Madrid.
2006:Nothing at all happened today. Time to go to sleep already.
Molly

Saturday, September 09, 2006

Steven Pinker
Steven Pinker is the author of 'The Blank Slate' and numerous other works, professional and popular. he is a professor of psychology at MIT, and the essential gist of his work is the application of evolutionary psychology to visual cognition and language.
The Blank Slate is subtitled "The Modern Denial of Human Nature", and this really says it all. Evolutionary psychology is a thriving scientific field, but, shades of the 'two cultures of Snow', most non-scientific intellectuals deny that there is anything like "human nature". This denial is hardly echoed in "folk wisdom" where it is simple common sense that there are both commonalities and differences amongst people that are 'inherited'. The denial spans the political spectrum, and it is in the self interest of both the left and the right-for different reasons of course- to deny human nature. Even amongst anarchists who venerate, sometimes excessively, a man named Peter Kropotkin who could best be described as the "great grandfather of socio-biology" this prejudice continues.
Anyways, I'm not reading 'The Blank Slate' now, but it's in the stack of things I read while on the can. I knew beforehand that Pinker is nowhere near the demon made out in leftist mythology, just like almost all the researchers in this field are remote from the descriptions that dogmatic leftists assign to them. But imagine my surprise on coming upon the following jem on page 331 of the book,
"As a young teenager in proudly peaceable Canada during the romantic 1960s, I was a true believer in Bakunin's anarchism. I laughed off my parents' argument that if the government ever laid down its arms all hell would break loose. Our competing predictions were put to the test at 8:00 AM on October 17, 1969, when the Montreal police went on strike...
The author goes on to list the various aspects of the crime wave that broke out and continues...
"...By the end of the day, six banks had been robbed, a hundred shops had been looted, twelve fires had been set, forty carloads of storefront glass had been broken, and three million dollars in property damage had been inflicted, before city authorities had to call in the army and, of course, the Mounties to restore order. This decisive empirical test left my politics in tatters (and offered a foretaste of life as a scientist)."
The author refers to the habit (definition pretty well) of science as being the method of making predictions from a theory that can be proven right or wrong. The success of the predictions is evidence for or against the theory.
What Pinker relates is, of course, more than slight evidence against "the anarchism of Bakunin". Bakunin had a lot of dark shadows in his life, and he spouted a lot of foolishness. He had the good luck to 1)make a very few incisive observations that can be "cut out" from the rest of his words and deeds, 2)be opposed to somebody-Marx- who made him look like a saint by comparison and whose ideas have been falsified to the tune of almost 100,000,000 victims and 3) gather followers who were much more intelligent than he was and who corrected his errors without- unfortunately - ever acknowledging the magnitude of same.
Anyone who reads what Bakunin wrote and what he did in his life will, if they can set aside his contest with Marx while looking at it- a contest that was really a contest of national movements rather than one of personalities, and which was at least 5!!! pointed (Marx's followers, English trade unionists, the followers of Lasalle, the Proudhonists and the people gathered around Bakunin and his leftenants) rather than two pointed- will see that Bakunin wrote far too many things that are simply despicable. His actions remind one of a hyperactive true believer rather than an intelligent revolutionary.
Bakunin's anarchism can indeed appeal to a "teenager" where hormones and an urge to action can easily blind anyone to obvious deficiencies in one's "heroes". To my mind it is sad that too many otherwise rational people in the anarchist movement try to cover up the glaring deficiencies of someone who deserves far less than Proudhon to be seen as a "founder". As to the romantic trend of pseudo-anarchism popular in some quarters today where minor riots are seen as a substitute for real movement building and where sympathy is extended to pretty well anyone with criminal intent providing they can mouth PC rhetoric above the level achievable by any three year old- well, once more, of course.
As to what happened in Montreal i can just imagine the sort of results that would happen here in Winnipeg with a well publicized police strike. The differences would be instructive. Six banks ??? That would be what happened in the FIRST six hours once robbers realized the strike was for real. Arsons? Twelve ? It's hard to say. Here in Winnipeg that may be a very bad day with the police. But the local street gangs have gone on to new initiation fads so there may easily be less. Broken glass and looting of shops ? Not likely. maybe Winnipeg thugs are just too lazy and disorganized to form a mob. Maybe a bit in some neighbourhoods, but less than in Montreal. Killings ? Make it 6 or 10 not one. Pinker didn't mention simple assaults or robberies, but Winnipeg would probably have at least twice as many as Montreal experienced in that time. Etc. Appreciate that Winnipeg circa 2006 is NOT Montreal circa 1969. It's not even Montreal today. With a population of about 1/5th that of Montreal Winnipeg would far exceed what happened then in many ways and have far less crime in others.
Nobody except those who expend tremendous effort in justifying criminals while looking down their snotty noses at ordinary people can imagine that a simple immediate release from the state would result in-at best- something like what happened in Montreal in Pinker's adolescence. But...I am still an anarchist. Why ?
Unlike Pinker I grew up in a small town in Saskatchewan where there was a grand total of one time that the police came to down- to take a man into custody who had murdered his wife and who had come down to the general store to confess and wait for the Mounties. Seems like Pinker and I have seen different experiments run and have drawn different conclusions from them. I have drawn the conclusion that, given slow gradual change towards a less statist society, that different living arrangements can reduce and perhaps even eliminate the need for police. It actually worked and I had 13 years of observation to generalize from. Pinker had 24 hours.
The bottom line is that the "anarchism" that Pinker found so much in contradiction to reality is not all of modern anarchism. It may indeed be the anarchism of Bakunin. In Bakunin's time the police in the majority of European countries represented little more than tax collectors preying on peasant communities who upheld their own "law and order", just like the people in my home town did. It may indeed also be the "anarchism" of far too many people who mistake a violent outlook for commitment to just social change. These people exist today. They have always existed. It's the old con of gathering followers by beating your chest harder and yelling louder.
The "anarchism" that Pinker found to be false is a false anarchism. Period. end of discussion.