First of all, my experience editing in this forum is limited, so bear with me as i try to get the quote thing right.
foolish_yeti wrote:
Nowhere did I say there would be no defense system. Conflict is a natural occurance and thus needs to be dealt with. Same goes for the issues that police deal with. They will not disappear, and I have never stated they will.
Taken from an earlier post
foolish_yeti wrote:As for police- police enforce laws, which would theoretically be non-existent since they are a function of the state.
Well obviously you can't support a military machine this way. As for defense, well that's tricky... part of the reason capitalism has spread to basically ever corner of the globe is that since it has no thought whatsoever to being sustainable, it is very powerful. However, power does not equal survival.
foolish_yeti wrote:Alright, first thing to address is this whole utopia rhetoric you're using. Nobody is suggesting that problems will cease to exist and everyone will hold hands and get along. So you can drop that.
I'm afraid the idea of an anarchistic society actually working is so ludicrous that "dropping it" is out of the question.
foolish_yeti wrote:As for education- you can still have a system in place without a government. There will be still be teachers and there will still be students. An idea for education would be open classrooms- based on self directed learning. If you're into educational theory at all you'll soon realize that our current system isn't doing that hot a job at educating our students anyways.
As communities get smaller, and society as we know it crumbles, the education system would change to fit the needs of the people. Gone would be the things we take for granted today , and in their place would be what is needed for that particular society (or microcosmic society). As the communications networks ceased to be (do you really think there would still be multinational communications companies in this society you talk of ?), so would the passing of information, and the education system as we now know it would disappear.
foolish_yeti wrote:Okay, I've already addressed the fact that you would need defenses from outside attack- so I'll drop that here.
Yes, i already pointed that one out, no need to labour the point.
foolish_yeti wrote:As for the sick and elderly being the first to go and the whole health care debate. As I stated before it is true that more westerners will die (developping countries are another story- they are often dying because of westerners actions). Capitalism has works on increasing complexity and that obviously will not be able to continue. There will still be a health care system, but it will not be as effective as the current (unsustainable) one.
So the death of the sick and disabled, the weak and the old has no bearing on your acceptance of this fabled society?? nice to know.
foolish_yeti wrote:What people don't mention when they use this argument is that there is going to be a lot of deaths in the near future anyways (ignoring the massive amounts of deaths going on in non or under-develloped countries already under capitalism). We are living way beyond our means and eventually this will catch up to this. If you're familiar with carrying capacity, two things either happen when a population hits capacity for an ecosystem- it wavers around that number, or it surpasses it, peaks and crashes- massive population loss. I would argue that we're heading for the second case. Plus, in trying to paint anarchism as an inhumane choice, you're ignoring the inhumanity of the current system.
I'm sure the sick and the disabled will be happy to hear that.
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