Anarchy 85/Conversations about anarchism
about anarchism
CW: I consider myself to be an anarchist-
NW: I think that if I had to label myself very quickly I would say I was an anarchist-
BC: I would describe myself as an anarcho-
JR: I don’t call myself an anarcho-
PT: First of all I’m an anarchist because I don’t believe in governments, and also I think that syndicalism is the anarchist application to organising industry.
DR: I describe myself as a Stirnerite, a conscious egoist.
JR: We even have a strange aberration known as Catholic anarchists, hich seems to be a contradiction in terms, but nevertheless they seem to get along with it.
RB: There are so many sorts of anarchist that one sometimes wonders whether such a thing as a plain and simple anarchist even exists, but the differences are mainly differences of emphasis. Anarchists are agreed onCW: For me anarchism is a social philosophy based on the absence of authority. Anarchism can be an individual outlook or a social one. I’m concerned with anarchism as a social point of view—
DR: The anarchist thinks that society is there for the benefit of the individual. The individual doesn’t owe anything to society at all. Society is the creation of individuals, it is there for their benefit. And from that the rest of it follows. Eventually, as the ultimate aim of anarchism, which may or may not be achieved, the idea is to have a society of sovereign individuals.
RB: But how do you set about achieving an anarchist society? Well, there are two traditional anarchist methods, propaganda of the deed—
RB: What sort of subjects are discussed in anarchy?
CW: There do seem to be recurring themes, principally because they are what people will write about. They are topics like education, like this question of a technology in which people would have a certain degree of personal freedom and personal choice in work, instead of none at all, as the vast majority of people have today. anarchy discusses topics like housing, anarchy tries to take the problems which face people in our society, the society we’re living in, and to see if there are anarchist solutions.
RB: anarchy is a monthly. freedom, on the other hand, as a weekly paper, is more concerned with commenting on day-
JR: The whole of freedom is produced with voluntary labour. I myself have a slight grant of £3 a week, and thus we exploit labour. Lilian Wolfe, who is working with us, is now 91 years of age, which I think is a record in the exploitation of old people’s labour, but nevertheless she still comes in cheerfully three days a week. There is a carpenter, a print-
RB: Propaganda of the deed nowadays mostly means what anarchists call Direct Action, that is to say, doing something yourself about your own problems rather than waiting for someone else to come along and do it for you. Sometimes this may take the form of illegal action.
CW: It does seem to me amazing that in the last few years, for instance, there hasn’t been mass squatting in office blocks, when you get the situation of local authorities having huge housing waiting lists while you can see dozens of new speculative office blocks with TO LET plastered all over them. The very interesting instance in the last few years, of course, was the King Hill Hostel affair. King Hill Hostel was a reception centre for homeless families in Kent where all sorts of restrictions were placed on the homeless, the most striking of which, of course, was the separation of husbands from wives. People were treated in a punitivbe way as though their homelessness were somehow the result of their own moral turpitude. A handful of people adopted Direct Action methods to embarrass the authorities, and they embarrassed them so much that they achieved much more for improving the conditions of reception centres for the homeless than had ever been done by legislative action for years. Direct Action is an anarchist method because it is a method which expands. People are pushed on by success. They are given more confidence in their own ability to shape their own destiny by being successful in some small way. The person who takes Direct Action is a different kind of person from the person who just lets things happen to him.