Auntie Oedipus (@[email protected]):
One of the most toxic elements of democracy brain is viewing 51% as victory and 49% as defeat.
Auntie Oedipus (@[email protected]):
One of the most toxic elements of democracy brain is viewing 51% as victory and 49% as defeat.
While rules can exist in anarchism, they function as shared, agreed-upon guidelines aimed at maintaining mutual respect and cooperation, rather than as laws enforced through authority.
In other words, your distant cousins are here. And by your rules, we get a vote in the rules.
Perhaps you should read up.
I guess you didn’t spot the “/s” in my comment.
What do you mean “distant cousins”? What’s your deal, wtf are you attacking me? Why are you so arrogant?
The core of the cognitive disconnect you are demonstrating lies in your attempt to impose your own interpretative “rules” on the discussion, using sarcasm as a way to frame anarchism in a narrow, dismissive sense. By doing this, you overlook the very principle I was explaining: in an anarchist framework, any guidelines or “rules” emerge from a collective, consensual process, not from one individual’s authority or interpretation.
In short, the disconnect is you fail to see your attempt to control the tone and meaning of the discussion runs counter to the very idea of consensus-driven participation in anarchism.
Now, here’s where you’re wrong: I didn’t impose any rules on anyone. I simply didn’t feel like explaining the basics of anarchism when posting in an anarchist community.
Do you not understand my perspective here at all?