American Dream wrote:Sweejak wrote:I've come to believe that there isn't a political ideology that will save us...
What happened to all the self identified anarchists on RI? Last time I took that Libertarian vs Authoritarian political quiz I ended up pretty centrist compared to the others.
As much as I endorsed two "anarchist" theorists upthread, I am also deeply ambivalent about American Anarchism. Too much of it is not very strategic, not very thoughtful. So yes- I think we should move beyond just finding some banner, any banner to march behind, but I do think Anarcho/Left voices offer an important counterpoint to Right-wing Libertarianism.
Yeah I'm very deeply ambivalent about a lot of American versions of thought. I don't think most know how different things like western religion can be in Europe as opposed to the US.
A couple of things are standing out for me with a quick reading. No comments, just things I would highlight for further thinking:
"... at what point organization stops empowering people and starts squelching individual freedom..."
"Freedom only exists in the moment of revolution."
"... prefigurative politics (i.e. modes of organization that consciously resemble the world you want to create."
"... the idea of consensus itself was borrowed from the Quakers, who again, claim to have been inspired by the Six Nations and other Native American practices."
The Indians, according to some scholars had a whole lot to do with the US Constitution. Most assume it was all about French and English thinkers but I don't think so. John Judge has a section on his site about it.
Here is one that still works from my files. FYI because I can't remember it.
Lessons on Peacemaking from the Iroquois Confederacy
The Warriors Who Turned to Peace
http://www.counterpunch.org/mohawk05192008.html
And this is also worth reading, it's about the Acadians.
A unique hybrid people, the Acadians offered a wiser, kinder vision of settling the continent. Instead, they became the victims of North America's first ethnic cleansing campaign.
http://dir.salon.com/story/books/int/20 ... index.html