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Trying to Untangle Anarchist Attacks On Scientists

bricko writes with an analysis at New Scientist of recent violence by self-described anarchists against scientists or scientific establishments, including the non-fatal shooting in Genoa in May of the head of a nuclear energy company. That attack "was the latest in a series of alleged anarchist attacks on scientists and engineers, including the attempted bombing of nanotechnology labs in Switzerland and Mexico. This wave of politically motivated violence has raised the question: why do anarchists hate science? Beyond the unsubtle threat of brute force, there are deeper issues that merit attention." The "hate science" line is just a line; the author is under no illusion that there is a single conspiracy, or that all who claim the "anarchist" mantle have identical (or even similar) views of science. "Despite the recent attacks and propaganda, anarchists actually have a complex relationship with science and technology. Some leading figures from anarchist history were scientists, notably Russian biologist Peter Kropotkin. Many hacktivists are anarchists who embrace technology; fiction authors sometimes look toward a future 'technotopia' based on anarchist ideals."

333 comments

  1. Anonymous is against scientists now? by Rtrtr · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Sorry, but that crosses the line for me. Sony rootkit and all that was fine, but attacking scientists? No support from me.

    1. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by linuxgeek64 · · Score: 2

      anarchists != Anonymous.
      Where in TFA does it mention anonymous?

    2. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Rtrtr · · Score: 0

      Well if anyone can be Anonymous, then Anonymous can attack scientists...

    3. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Baloroth · · Score: 1

      Anonymous are anarchists, thats kinda the whole point. However, you are correct that not all anarchists are "Anonymous."

      --
      "None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
    4. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      anarchists != Anonymous.

      Where in TFA does it mention anonymous?

      They're not even real anarchists, anarchists want to deconstruct government, not science. These are actually bat-sh!t loonies.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    5. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dumb ass

    6. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Anarchist is a worthless term except to attract attention on fliers. Ancap, ancom, ansoc, syndacilists, mutalists, illegalists, they all have claims to be anarchists. Historically ansocs and ancaps have the best claim to the term with ansocs foaming at the mouth and calling ancaps heretics whenever they call themselves anarchists without adjectives. It's all rather hilarious. Though, I will weigh in and say that ancaps seem to be the less zany and ancoms are completely disconnected from reality.

    7. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by oodaloop · · Score: 2

      All hot chicks are crazy, but not all crazy chicks are hot.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    8. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Anonymous is attacking those speaking out against them! We must stop this MENACE! lol

    9. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Yes, the total disconnect from reality comes from the failure of the ancoms to recognize a person's right to own property. It grates on common sense to such an extent that no sane person can realistically believe in and subscribe to it. They are basically just thieves trying to justify their thievery.

    10. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Informative

      The ancom line against property is hardly even really radical, historically. They have basically the same view that Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin had: that personal possessions are natural property in a sense, but beyond that, e.g. when we're talking about owning hundreds of acres of land as an absentee landlord, "property" is a social construct that can only exist through the power of the state, and should be judged by its effects.

      Here's Benjamin Franklin, one of the more prominent early American scientists, with the view that you allege "grates on common sense to such an extent that no sane person can realistically believe in and subscribe to it":

      All the property that is necessay to a man for the conservation of the individual and the propagation of the species is his natural right, which none can justly deprive him of; but all property superfluous to such purposes is the property of the public, who by their laws have created it, and who may therefore by other laws dispose of it whenever the welfare of the public shall demand such a disposition.

      It's interesting that this was already evident to people who thought carefully about the matter in the late 18th century, before Proudhon and the more in-depth anarchist critique of property even came on the scene.

      The main differences between Franklin and anarchists are on policy grounds, not philosophical grounds. Franklin was basically a moderate liberal, who thought that, although property is a state-created fiction, it's a useful fiction to a certain extent, so long as we ensure that it's instituted for the benefit of the general public. Whereas, anarchists think it's a harmful fiction.

    11. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by dargaud · · Score: 1

      Like they say, stop paying your taxes and see how much time it takes you to figure out that _your_ property has actually been the state's property all along, just loaned to you.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    12. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      I take it you have never had a group of ancoms come onto your property and steal food from your storehouse, then.

      Ancoms aren't so limited as you think in their disrespect for property rights.

      If Ben Franklin really said that, then fuck him. That does not fit with the America that was created, and indeed is a recipe total destruction of a state. Property is absolutely NOT a state created fiction. Try going into someone's home at night and see the natural result. Try stealing someone's land in a stateless society and see the natural result. Property is REAL. Land can be owned by mixing it with one's labor and improving it, and once it is owned it can be sold. Though it can be abandoned, this is not the same as continued ownership by an absentee landlord. He might be a logger, who comes by once every twenty years to clear his land and sell the wood. If he found that someone else had cleared the land and was grazing cattle on it, he would be justifiably upset, and violence would be the result in the absence of an arbitration authority (which both sides can agree to in a state of anarchy).

    13. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Trepidity · · Score: 2

      Your post doesn't really seem to be responding to Franklin's views. He supports possessions, which he (elsewhere) defines as basically what you can actually, in fact, possess around you: your house, its contents, your work tools, your personal effects, etc. What he considers state-created is property that rises to such sizes that it can only be maintained via a central state registry. For example, if your uncle dies and you inherit 10,000 acres in Texas, and you've never visited that land, there is no real sense in which you possess that land. If you indeed "own" that land, it's solely by virtue of a state property register that has that land marked out as being owned by some faraway person who has never seen it. In a stateless society, if you "stole" land from someone who had never in his life been within 1,000 miles of the land, nothing would happen, because the person isn't there, or anywhere close!

      It's in this sense that ownership is a matter of social consensus: you own that parcel in Texas because society has agreed that we should recognize you as doing so, via a set of rules (property registers, title, etc.) that are intended to produce smooth functioning of society, improvement of the economy, etc. Franklin is just pointing out that we should ensure the rules actually do have that effect: they aren't god-given rules, but man-made ones, and should be changed to different ones if they turn out to be suboptimal.

      Thomas Jefferson had similar views, incidentally, that property above a certain size, especially absentee property, could not preexist society. There is some evidence that these views among the Founders are why the Declaration of Independence says "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness", and not "life, liberty, and property", which was the more common formulation at the time. Jefferson and Franklin did think that the state maintaining a system of property ownership was a good idea, but on consequentialist grounds; they didn't think it was a natural right or could preexist the state.

    14. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correction: all hot chicks willing to have sex with you are crazy.

    15. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Thomas Jefferson had similar views, incidentally, that property above a certain size, especially absentee property, could not preexist society.

      Given that many libertarians are extremely fond of Jefferson, I find this very interesting. Can you give any specific references to his works, or works of others where he is thus quoted? I personally subscribe to the same views regarding property as you've described - that personal property is natural, but private property is a societal construct but I thought that those have originated from the anarcho-socialist camp (even if I don't share their conclusion that private property ought to be abolished). Now that you point out that there were others preceding them that have explored that angle, and whose conclusions are far more in line with mine, I want to explore that further.

    16. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      lol, so now you are going to start going on about how much you love the founding fathers? Give me a break.

    17. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      I would examine this phenomenon within its historical context. Remember that they were dealing with people who had been given land by a King they no longer recognized. From that point of view, there is no conflict with the concept of the homestead and subsequent transfer of property.

      If someone stole my uncle's land that belonged to me, you can bet there would be repercussions. You are just making an assumption, and a convenient one that allows you to enrich yourself at the cost of someone else. You know, like an anarcho-communist.

    18. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I don't care a single bit about the whole "Founding Fathers" fetish. I'm not an American, anyway; why would I idolize long-dead politicians of a foreign country?

      However, Jefferson in particular wrote a lot of interesting stuff, even if some of it I definitely disagree with. If he also wrote some stuff that I would find myself agreeing with, that makes it even more interesting.

    19. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by lennier · · Score: 2

      In a stateless society, if you "stole" land from someone who had never in his life been within 1,000 miles of the land, nothing would happen, because the person isn't there, or anywhere close!

      Not necessarily true. Yes, you have to have some kind of indirect, multi-personal mechanism for asserting and projecting force to maintain "ownership" of land, but that mechanism doesn't have to be anything resembling a modern political "state". It could just as easily be a multinational corporation like GlaxoSmithKline or Monsanto. It could be a private security coporation like Group 4, Xe or the Pinkertons. It could be an organised crime syndicate or gang like the Mafia, Zetas or Crips/Bloods. It could be a religious/business hybrid like Scientology. It could be a decentralised insurgency like Al Qaeda. It could be a non-state, non-profit, non-religious NGO like Wikileaks. It could be a complex mixture of all of the above, interacting in hard to predict ways.

      Arguably we already live in such a world and have for many hundreds of years, at least since the rise of the Dutch and British East India Companies in the 1600s with their combination of state, religion, and private capitalist militias. But if you read history, even the ancient empires used hired mercenaries and were federations of many actors which evolved through complex power shifts over time- there never has been a single unified "state", ever.

      The problem I see is that if you don't realise that a "state" is just one of many possible and overlapping forms of human group power-maintainance behaviour, then you might misdirect your energies at toppling Da Gummint while allowing something worse to grow in its place. This is what I think anarchists are most misguided about. It's fine to oppose the human tendency to centralise power. But learn to recognise power abuse in all of its forms, large and small, because small systems of abuse grow into large ones if they achieve dominance.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    20. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      There might be repercussions if you're a lawless ruffian, who attempts to use force to defend "his" land as some kind of god-given right of inheritance, sure. I don't see why society needs to accede to your thuggery, though, as natural law does not sanction it.

    21. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      That's precisely what anarchists do think, though! That's one of the main things that distinguishes anarchists from libertarians: libertarians are only worried about state power, while anarchists are worried about both state and corporate power. In general, anarchist theory opposes hierarchical power relations, of which the state is just one variety, and capitalist power relations are another.

    22. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It is a moot question whether the origin of any kind of property is derived from nature at all... It is agreed by those who have seriously considered the subject that no individual has, of natural right, a separate property in an acre of land, for instance. By an universal law, indeed, whatever, whether fixed or movable, belongs to all men equally and in common is the property for the moment of him who occupies it; but when he relinquishes the occupation, the property goes with it. Stable ownership is the gift of social law, and is given late in the progress of society." --Thomas Jefferson to Isaac McPherson, 1813. ME 13:333

      "A right of property in moveable things is admitted before the establishment of government. A separate property in lands, not till after that establishment. The right to moveables is acknowledged by all the hordes of Indians surrounding us. Yet by no one of them has a separate property in lands been yielded to individuals. He who plants a field keeps possession till he has gathered the produce, after which one has as good a right as another to occupy it. Government must be established and laws provided, before lands can be separately appropriated, and their owner protected in his possession. Till then, the property is in the body of the nation, and they, or their chief as trustee, must grant them to individuals, and determine the conditions of the grant." --Thomas Jefferson: Batture at New Orleans, 1812. ME 18:45

      "The laws of civil society, indeed, for the encouragement of industry, give the property of the parent to his family on his death, and in most civilized countries permit him even to give it, by testament, to whom he pleases." --Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Earle, 1823. ME 15:470

    23. Re:Anonymous is against scientists now? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Thank you!

  2. Just a label. by MrQuacker · · Score: 1, Troll

    "Anarchist" is just a catch all label for a whole range of people. Lets not forget all the Christians, Jews, and Muslims that don't agree with some kind of tech/science and protest/legislate against it.

    1. Re:Just a label. by Hentes · · Score: 1

      Anarchist is a label for people who refuse to be constrained by society's limits. And one of those limits is not to kill.

    2. Re:Just a label. by k(wi)r(kipedia) · · Score: 5, Insightful


      Anarchist = left-wing Libertarian
      LIbertarian = right-wing Anrachist

    3. Re:Just a label. by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      There is a rather big difference between protesting and legislating against something with which one disagrees, and shooting people with whom one disagrees. You seem to be suggesting that anyone who disapproves of technology (read, disagrees with you) is evil.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    4. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lolwut?

    5. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Anarchist is a label for people who refuse to be constrained by society's limits. And one of those limits is not to kill.

      Wrong, Anarchism in it's truest form is closer to socialism than chaos. Anarchism and lawlessness aren't the same. Anarchists don't want to abolish government so that they can go push old ladies down the stairs, that's a rebllious teenager's point of view. Anarchists just want everybody to be equal no person above or below any other in terms of power or pull. An anarchistic society would still have rules, but they would be decided by the community, there would be no police because the people of the community are responsible for it, every man, woman, and child. Please don't comment on things you know nothing about.

    6. Re:Just a label. by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      The difference could be between the one that understand a bit what science is and talks loudy against it and the violent bonehead that hears him, believes everything that always say, and acts.

    7. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, everyone sits down and decides stealing from weaker people is bad. I choose to disagree, and as no-one is above me, decide I have every right to do so. If you stop me, you are deciding *your* rules are more important than mine, and you have therefore set yourself above me, in a hierarchy that you claim does not exist. Anarchists really do not understand what they are talking about, other than fluffy clouds and unicorns.

    8. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no...a community is deciding that they're communal rules are more important than yours

    9. Re:Just a label. by ZankerH · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Libertarianism is anarchism for rich people.

    10. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, which goes against the concept of "opposing authority and hierarchical organization in the conduct of human relations". You can weasel-word it how you like, but if the community over-rules the individual, you just have a different form of hierarchy.

    11. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why is this modded Funny? Because it's true?

      If you look at people who march at anti-war rallies and claim a label of "anarchist", they are almost always allied with communists. Libertarians are usually holding down good jobs and looking for alternatives to the GOP as opposed to the Democrats, and you'll find a lot of claimants to the Libertarian label on radical right-wing sites.

    12. Re:Just a label. by Hentes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While classical anarchists were considered close to socialism, that was in a time when everyone who didn't want monarchy was called leftwing. In fact, they were kicked out of the First International fairly quickly. In practice, anarchists are basically very radical liberals. True, that is a rebellious teenager's ideology, but most anarchists are teenage punks so I don't see a contradiction.

    13. Re:Just a label. by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In other words you view of Anarchism is the same for everyone? You use that as a Label to explain your vision of a Utopia...

      There is a fruit tree, I climb the tree and get the last piece of fruit. I now have a piece of fruit and you don't have a piece. I am hungry so I plan to eat the fruit. You are hungry too. We are no longer equal.
      I currently have more power over you.
      Now the choice you have?
      1. Ask for the fruit from me. You are now in a position where you conceded power or pull and asking for mercy from me.
      2. Steal the fruit from me. To accomplish this you will need to assert more power then I have to take the fruit... I may fight back and assert additional power too. So we end up fighting.
      3. Bargain for the fruit. Now you will need to convince me that you have something that I will value more then the fruit. This may be something else of scarcity, that gives you additional power. Or you choose to be subservient for some period of time (hence relinquishment of your power to me)
      4. Go Hungry.

      For me I have more power. I have something you want.
      1. I can choose to share.
      2. I can give it to you.
      3. I can fight you
      4. I can choose to accept or reject your bargains.
      5. I can just leave you to go hungry.

      Say I choose options where I still maintain the power of having the fruit. I have eaten it and it has gave me more energy. This extra energy may be used to help me find more fruit, and give myself the means to have more power over other people.

      Now we have a community to determine what we should do?
      If they say I must share. (A Tax) Then we need to take into account that I was the one who did the work and got the Apple.
      If they say I must give it away. Then I have expended energy in a fruitless endeavor (Pun indented) and the community has pulled power away from me.
      If they say that you must steal it from me, and I have to fight to keep it. We are both using extra energy and we both loose.
      If they say I must accept particular bargains, if these are not fair then I will go underground (Black market) or hoard fruit.
      If they say I can do whatever I want. Then I have more power then you.

      Now if I decide to break the community rules. People who are physically stronger then me, or in some other ways who have collective more power then me will need to find a way to stop me. Being that these people over time will be good at stopping people who break the rules, they will be compensated for doing such actions as it causes them from doing other things they may need to do.

      But right now we live in a world of rules. People who feel these existing rule, and the people who follow them, are unfair, will try to exert more power to get what they want. Anarchist who live in a world that is different then from their ideals, is under a lot of stress and would like to change it. Murder is often effective.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    14. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're both wrong. Anarchist is a label to try to instil fear and give some false sense of an organized group of people with the same motives. It's just people pissed off for one reason or another that don't really have any sort of common ideology other than a rejection of "something".

      The article is stupid in trying to group all "self labelled anarchists" together into one group, as if they have conventions, vote on what "the anarchists should do next", or are organized. All these people have in common is a label, and possibly an attitude. That's pretty damn flimsy connections to be worth considering. The news media wants to sell eyeballs, an "anarchists" always make good press because you can basically make up the story as you go along since the whole this is illusory to begin with.

    15. Re:Just a label. by crispylinetta · · Score: 2

      Anarchist is a label for people who refuse to be constrained by society's limits. And one of those limits is not to kill.

      Wrong, Anarchism in it's truest form is closer to socialism than chaos. Anarchism and lawlessness aren't the same. Anarchists don't want to abolish government so that they can go push old ladies down the stairs, that's a rebllious teenager's point of view. Anarchists just want everybody to be equal no person above or below any other in terms of power or pull. An anarchistic society would still have rules, but they would be decided by the community, there would be no police because the people of the community are responsible for it, every man, woman, and child. Please don't comment on things you know nothing about.

      Correct. People seem to be confusing anarchy with nihilism; they are not the same.

    16. Re:Just a label. by tomhath · · Score: 1

      Anarchism in it's truest form is closer to socialism than chaos

      I don't see how it can be anything close to socialism without and government or laws. But regardless, pure Anarchism is an unachievable utopia in which everyone is happy happy, there are infinite resources to be shared, and everyone is totally altruistic. Personally I prefer that as a society we decide what the rules are and how to enforce them; it's called Democracy

    17. Re:Just a label. by genus_001 · · Score: 1

      If i could give you points, I would give you all of them.

    18. Re:Just a label. by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      It depends on the particular flavor of anarchism. Some are fine with the rule of the majority, everyone is equal and if over 50% of the people can agree on a law then it is just (this not technically different from democracy). But other definitively do not believe that the majority have any right to force their will on the minority or even one single person. Which makes laws very hard to make, because you need 100% agreement (and the laws that are created are not really laws, since if someone murdered someone else all they would have to do is change their murder law vote to against to make it legal again), and a criminal court system very very limited if not impossible (because the majority does not have any given right to judge anyone).

      So anarchism can mean no laws. Taken to extremes it requires a very different civilization, taken less extremely you could call our current democracy (more or less) an anarchistic country,

      But then there is a difference between not believing you have a right to do something and having the power and will to do it.

      And I do not think I agree that it is necessarily socialist, the notion that everyone is equal is not a socialist idea, even the USA has that. In some ways it is inherently capitalist, It does not really lend itself to either.

      So an anarchistic country could really take any shape or form and only requires the humanist view of equality (more or less, kind-of, maybe, I am not an expert).

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    19. Re:Just a label. by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Anarchists just want everybody to be equal no person above or below any other in terms of power or pull. An anarchistic society would still have rules, but they would be decided by the community,

      Ah, so a government!

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    20. Re:Just a label. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Why do we worship soldiers, then?

      You have things pretty backwards there, young man.

    21. Re:Just a label. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      You are free to do so, but you will be considered an outlaw, and will not be welcome among those who recognize natural law. If you try to force your way in, you will likely be shot. If someone who does recognize the law decides to murder you in the wastes, you will go un-noted and likely unavenged. That is the life of those who choose not to recognize property rights and by so doing become animals. Very smart, very dangerous animals, but animals none the less.

    22. Re:Just a label. by tmosley · · Score: 1, Informative

      Your one dimensional thinking has you tied up in knots.

      Anarchist is to libertarian as Communist is to socialist. Libertarians want less government in both realms of society (personal and economic), where anarchists want ZERO government. Intelligent anarchists realize that even in the absence of government, society remains ordered. It is just that the order is now emergent and non-violent. Those who produce rise to the top, those who fail fall to the bottom. Those on top can not oppress those on bottom because their only power is voluntary exchange. People fear such a system for some reason. Probably because all they have even known is the somewhat hidden violence and oppression by the state.

    23. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For anarchy to work there has to be enough 'fruit' that it has no value. The anarchist would go pick a fruit of his own (or fish or whatever).

      There also has to be no need or want to accumulate 'wealth' or supplies.

      It is tricky and near impossible today, but if 99.999% of the world got wiped out in a pandemic, the survivors had better adopt it.

    24. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Libertarianism is anarchism: (for rich people.)

      Libertarianism is an excuse to dismantle anything that stands in the way of private ownership. It doesn't level the playing field, it razes it.

      However libertarians do what basic governmental services:

      A strong national defense (and it's supportive industrial base in order to keep out the riff-raff), police, fire, courts and prisons, a completely subservient legislature (bought with the finest corporate profits adverising can buy), an independent Federal Reserve System (who better than the enlightened, self-interested banker to create the most efficient currencies that international markets will stand for, seems to work for the Chinese) no EPA (ecology is overrated & pollution is just another way of saying how much we love freedom), no FDA (who could possibly justify requiring such costly market constraints on the creativity of pharmaceutical or medical device corporate deciders), no Dept of Interior (every square inch of land should be privately owned and mined for its highest and best use, now), no SEC (to be replaced with the Loyal Association of World Yesmen Economic Realist Scholars - LAWYERS) , no CFTC (FINRA works so well...), no FDIC (you're on your own if your bank fails, regardless of who ends up owning your mortgage), no Social Security, no Medicare, no Medicaid (All these 'entitlements' would be provided through charity or not at all. Hey it worked for the Romans.), no FCC (If you can't afford the network, your communication can't possible worth anything.), no FTC (the WTO will tell you exactly how trade regulations, patents will work: copyright will be extended in perpetuity in order to facilitate the new ownership society)...

      I'm sure I've left out some areas that could be paired back in order to return us to the days of fiscal responsibility in which the founding fathers found themselves after the Revolution was successfully fought.

      All that having been said, yes Anarchy is just a label, like any other. Its meaning is changed over time, and it's subject in interpretation in light of who uses it and to what end, rational or otherwise.
       

    25. Re:Just a label. by pitchpipe · · Score: 2

      Please don't comment on things you know nothing about.

      Yeah, because that would lead to anarchy!

      I'll be here all week.

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    26. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, libertarians are pro-war? What a poorly thought out way to attempt to make a point.

    27. Re:Just a label. by Rakarra · · Score: 3, Insightful

      no...a community is deciding that they're communal rules are more important than yours

      Sounds like government to me!

    28. Re:Just a label. by arth1 · · Score: 1

      Personally I prefer that as a society we decide what the rules are and how to enforce them; it's called Democracy

      The problem with democracy is whether "we" has much concern for "them". Two wolves and a sheep deciding what's for dinner.

      As I understand it, Anarchy tries to limit the power anyone can have, including the majority.

    29. Re:Just a label. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Personally, I don't like that very much. I am ok with democracy but, unlimited democracy is tyranny just as bad, if not worst, than with traditional tyrants.

      The community should only be voting and making rules about the things that it must, the things that, without regulation, will cause seriously dangerous lack of social order.

      For example, prohibitions on all manner of wanton violence (not that its actually a common problem) violence for profit (a bigger problem), these make sense.

      However, I see no reason why "democracy" makes sense within my home. The community should no more be taking votes about the color of my bedroom wall than about who I can live with, what I can do with them as consenting adults, what we grow, or wish to provide to other consenting adults.... or what ideas we can express... a number of things.

      The point is democracy is fine, until people start voting on civil rights.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    30. Re:Just a label. by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      I would say that one of the fundamental differences is that when a government tells people to do something, most people just do what the government says without giving much thought to whether the government's demands are good for society, or even moral for that matter. The anarchist will not obey a person or group of people just because that have a badge or a paper that says they have some sort of authority. In the absence of government the anarchist goes on about his life mostly the same as before. If the anarchist sees a blind man starving to death in his alley, knowing there is no government to care for the blind man, the anarchist sees it as his obligation alone to ensure the blind man doesn't die a slow painful and needless death. Maybe his anarchist neighbor doesn't care that the blind man might die, and when asked for help simply refuses. When this same neighbor has a car that won't start and asks the first anarchist for a ride, the first might remind the neighbor of his lack of concern for others and refuse to assist in this minor issue with the intent of teaching the neighbor how to function properly in anarchist society. Anarchists can use the tools of peer pressure and reciprocity to achieve goals of "society" without a need for formal structure, voting, elected officials, bosses or dictators. There may not be any rulers, but leaders would naturally emerge - but by leaders, lets think of heroes who do great things and inspire others to also do great things, not organizational managers. While in anarchist society there would be plenty who would choose to serve only their own needs, the majority would see the value in helping others and cooperating for mutual aid - all achievable without hierarchy. In time, most of the reclusive self-serving hold-outs would see the value in coming together as the benefit of receiving just one day of help during a crisis will often far outweigh the cost of helping others for a few days.

      Now, suppose an anarchist sees a child being raped behind his neighbors house. The anarchist may violate his own personal ethic of never trespassing to serve the higher objective of saving the child from harm. The anarchist may find himself fighting or even killing the assailant in order to rescue the child. Over time with enough concerned anarchists in a local community doing the right thing on their own without waiting for government to solve the problem, the community would grow into a safer and more prosperous place to live. A posse could spontaneously form to deal with a threat, and then disband once the threat has been neutralized. All this is technically feasible without the need for an appointed leader to call the shots.

      The fundamental nature of anarchy is that it is a heavily localized and the society that emerges will only reflect the values of those who form it. You may very well end up with one community that is composed of members who don't hesitate to use violence to get what they want and are apathetic to the needs of others. Another community might function more like one large extended family with a lot of sharing, giving, and cooperating. The lure of becoming a boss, manager, or ruler or the convenience and safety of following a leader, joining a gang, or voting in a democracy will be a constant threat to the stability of any anarchist society. But if a critical mass of members believe in the value of anarchy they will refuse to participate in and some will proactively disrupt any attempt to enforce a hierarchical government over the people.

      All said though, getting anarchy to work in a practical sense would never by easy. There is so much history of humans working through a hierarchical structure that people might not give anarchy a chance, especially with the mental images of rioting mobs and random acts of destruction. Obedience can be much more easily obtained by exploiting the laziness, fear, and greed of others. But if it could be established, anarchy would lead people to pursue the objectives of the super-majority. Strong minoriti

    31. Re:Just a label. by Coeurderoy · · Score: 1

      Most anarchist see an totally free society as a probably unattainable ideal, but also think that the fact that it cannot be attained does not mean that you should not try to find ways to come as close as possible.
      So they typically combine a "small government" with a "big social net", which is not popular because most modern government strive to be "big government" (with much gravy to share among the leaders) and "the smallest possible social net" (because it's not useful to waste money on the plebs when you can give it to some friends).

      So anarchists might be strongly against the use of nuclear energy, mostly because it implies a level of protection of the radioactive component which is very far from "small government" it does not mean that they dislike physics research.
      (nb: some anarchist even prefer nuclear energy to coal, fraking, etc... although they are probably a minority).

      Anarchists are also somewhat wary of Democracy because in many case the majority does not want freedom for anybody who does not fit.
      For instance: Democracy means that Gay people in most case cannot marry because the majority finds this scary for some reason.
      It is particularly visible in most emerging countries.
      Anarchist feel that marriage is mostly a dubious tax organisation scheme of dubious value to the individual, but if it exist there is really no reason to prohibit homosexuals to do it, unless of course you are a prominent right wing politician and are afraid to loose the excuse you gave to you secret friend...

      Nb: the Occupy movement is most probably not Anarchist at all: compare:
      "We are the 99%"(Occupy) to "There is not one in 100, but they do exist, the anarchists" (Léo Ferré).

    32. Re:Just a label. by Coeurderoy · · Score: 1

      The anarchist do not really care if everybody is equal or not, but they want to do as they please unless there is a very good reason not to.

      Basically the key tenet is that everybody should have all freedoms who do not block somebody else to have an equivalent freedom.
      So I cannot kill somebody whom I do not like, because I would "rob all his (or her) freedoms" in one quick round.

      And laws should not so much be the expression of the will of the majority, but tools to maximize everybody's opportunities.

    33. Re:Just a label. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      While classical anarchists were considered close to socialism, that was in a time when everyone who didn't want monarchy was called leftwing.

      Whereas today, anyone who doesn't want corporate oligarchy, and even many who do, are called left-wing.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    34. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are close.

      libertarian (lowercase el) is a left wing socialist-anarchist tradition. This is the common definition everywhere in the world.

      Libertarian (uppercase el) is a right wing movement, within the US, which promotes an agenda mostly antithetical to what lower case el libertarians believe.

      Anarchism, libertarianism, (hell, almost everything), is misunderstood by the predominately extremely ignorant population in the US. This is not meant as inflammatory, just stating a sad fact that is confirmed by the majority of the comments posted here on anarchy. Although, I was very pleased to see someone mention Proudhon in a comment, but one out of (at this point) 190 comments is still pretty depressing.

    35. Re:Just a label. by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm definitively an animal. You can be a fungus or something if you want.

    36. Re:Just a label. by gerddie · · Score: 1

      Anarchism in it's truest form is closer to socialism than chaos

      I don't see how it can be anything close to socialism without and government or laws.

      This is, because your view on socialism is somewhat limited to what has been seen in the state socialist countries. You may want to widen your view by reading, e.g. wikipedia.

    37. Re:Just a label. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Libertartians can be anarchists wrapped up in a flag as camoflage, they could be outright royalists wrapped up in a flag as camoflage, or anything in between. It's a wide range and it's pretty hard to see who is hiding under the label until you ask them enough questions to see what they think on various issues. For instance, some Libertarians are diametricly opposed to some of the things Koch is pushing, yet he is a leading Libertarian.
      So while you might not be an anarchist there are certainly enough Libertarians that are for the reputation to stick.
      I'm amazed that we've got so far into the comments about anarchists before the Libertarian ones came up. It appears that you guys in the USA think "anarchist" is just another meaningless insult or something. The anarchists in Europe before the first world war resemble contempory politics a lot more than you guys think. I'm no expert, but you can get an entertaining and very unflattering view inspired by experts in Joseph Conrad's "The Secret Agent", a spy novel that leaves Tom Clancy for dead.

    38. Re:Just a label. by spongman · · Score: 1

      An anarchistic society would still have rules

      that doesn't sound like anarchy at all...

      but they would be decided by the community

      sounds exactly like a democracy to me.

      Please don't comment on things you know nothing about.

      i am kettle, what color am i?

    39. Re:Just a label. by chrb · · Score: 1

      It's just people pissed off for one reason or another that don't really have any sort of common ideology other than a rejection of "something".

      Perhaps this is how anarchism is in the U.S., but venture outside and you will find that anarchists do have a common ideology that is based primarily on the rejection of fascism, abuse and violence. I've found that the countries where anarchism is the strongest are the ones that have suffered most from fascist government and dictatorship in recent history. In contrast, the countries that have a long history of democracy are those that have the weakest support for anarchism.

      It is hardly surprising, that when a government abuses the population for long enough, some of them will come to see formal government and power held by a minority as an evil in itself, and instead choose self-governance. In my experience, anarchists do not reject the concept of governance, instead their goal is more subtle - collective self-governance, rather than governance imposed by an individual or small group.

    40. Re:Just a label. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It is like a government in that it uses violence to enforce its rules, but unlike the government it's not organized. I.e. it's a pitchforks and torches mob rather than a court of law and a paid executioner.

      If you haven't read Le Guin's "The Disposssessed" yet, it's well worth a read for anyone interested in the topic (and I dare say that it should be a required reading for anyone who had already read "Atlas Shrugged" - and vice versa). It's a very interesting book, and an anarcho-socialist (anarcho-syndicalist, to be specific) society is in the center of it. And she does a pretty good job of showcasing both the fairness inherent in the system, but also the oppression of individualism and collective injustice that occurs in it; as well as how such a system, once it starts stratifying, grows closer and closer to a "real government".

    41. Re:Just a label. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Anarchy is basically saying that if you remove the government, people will limit their own power to such an extent that it won't be abused (or at least less than it is otherwise). Anything other than self-limitation, whether on behalf of the individual or the community, would not be anarchy by definition - since any such external actor that enforces the limit is effectively a government.

    42. Re:Just a label. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Thing is, if sufficiently many people have a really strong shared opinion on some issue - let's take your civil rights example - then, in the absence of voting, they will simply take arms and institute their will by force. It doesn't matter if the law prohibits it - without the consent of the people it governs, any law and any constitution is just some ink on the paper; the people who rise will simply write their own law.

      Hence why most democracies actually implement some kind of escape hatch - like U.S., where you can have a vote on even the most basic things like civil rights, but it requires a very strong majority to actually change things. Presumably, should it come to the point where enough people would be willing to take arms over something, they would already have a sufficient majority to just amend the constitution (which is always preferable to the same exact change ultimately achieved after a lot of blood has been spilled).

    43. Re:Just a label. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I don't see how it can be anything close to socialism without and government or laws.

      Very easy. Imagine an anarchical society where no-one believes in private property. Just like that - you can go around saying that such and such is yours, but unless you actually possess it at any given moment, everyone else will consider it to be free to use for themselves.

      Note that this doesn't require everyone to be happy or to have infinite resources (though how long such an arrangement will actually persist for in less than perfect circumstances is a good question).

    44. Re:Just a label. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      What happens with your society when those who "fall to the bottom" become violent?

    45. Re:Just a label. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      libertarian (lowercase el) is a left wing socialist-anarchist tradition. This is the common definition everywhere in the world.

      It is certainly not common in all English speaking countries, and it is also not common in at least one other country I lived in.

    46. Re:Just a label. by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly_on_violence

      A monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force (sometimes referred to as the state's monopoly on violence) is the conception of the state expounded by Max Weber in Politics as a Vocation. According to Weber, the state is that entity which "upholds the claim to the monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force in the enforcement of its order."

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    47. Re:Just a label. by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      More often left-wing protestors are labeled "anarchist" by third parties more interested in discrediting the protest than in accurately describing the protestors. Left-wing protestors aren't anarchists. They want a government, but they want it to act differently than it does, on their principles rather than the rightist principles and policies they are protesting.

      But there are often anarchists present at any kind of protest (left or right). Since there are very few actual anarchists they have few opportunities to get noticed at all unless they either tag along with bigger movements or commit crimes meriting media attention.

    48. Re:Just a label. by arth1 · · Score: 1

      Anarchy is basically saying that if you remove the government, people will limit their own power to such an extent that it won't be abused (or at least less than it is otherwise). Anything other than self-limitation, whether on behalf of the individual or the community, would not be anarchy by definition - since any such external actor that enforces the limit is effectively a government.

      That's a narrow understanding of anarchy - in Europe, it generally doesn't mean "no government", but that the government answers to the individuals, and not the other way around. A government that doesn't follow the people will be ignored, and another will take its place. Since the first government has no power in itself, it can't resist it.

      There are some more or less successful anarchies in the world. The most famous are perhaps "Christiania" in Copenhagen, and some Israeli kibbutzes. They do have their own mini-governments, so to speak, but they are servants, not masters. The less successful FAI, which fought against Franco in the Spanish Civil War, and still exist today are also pretty famous - and definitely not against government.

      Yes, there are anarchists that are against all forms of government, but they are the exception, not the rule.

    49. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Intelligent anarchists realize that even in the absence of government, society remains ordered.

      These intelligent anarchists have apparently never visited Somalia. An anarchist paradise would soon become a feudal dystopia (or a feudal utopia if you're on the winning side). If some has a greater ability to project force than you do, no amount of emergent non-violence will prevent a non-voluntary exchange from taking place.

    50. Re:Just a label. by elucido · · Score: 1

      Anarchist is a label for people who refuse to be constrained by society's limits. And one of those limits is not to kill.

      Wrong, Anarchism in it's truest form is closer to socialism than chaos. Anarchism and lawlessness aren't the same. Anarchists don't want to abolish government so that they can go push old ladies down the stairs, that's a rebllious teenager's point of view. Anarchists just want everybody to be equal no person above or below any other in terms of power or pull. An anarchistic society would still have rules, but they would be decided by the community, there would be no police because the people of the community are responsible for it, every man, woman, and child. Please don't comment on things you know nothing about.

      Explain why anarchists want to cut government spending including healthcare for grandma?

    51. Re:Just a label. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Well thats not exactly true. I mean, I get it, but, the idea that the escape hatch REQUIRES a strong majority is not exactly true.

      Like the seals on a real hatch, with repeated stress they crack. Look at drug laws, 100 years ago the first ones were tax acts, alcohol prohibition required a constitutional ammendment....

      fast forward to today, and the hatch has blown wide open. We no longr just have tax acts, we have paramilitary forces busting down doors. No constitutional ammendments involved, the hatch was just eroded away, and not even by majorities of clamoring croweds, by a few elite interests with their own agendas.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    52. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people who call themselves "Jedis" are basement dwelling overweight neckbeards. This doesn't change the nature of Jedi's.

      In the same manner, a bunch of teenagers self-labeling themselves with a term they don't understand doesn't change the meaning of that term.

    53. Re:Just a label. by KingBenny · · Score: 1

      i think you are referring to terrorists , anarchy at its purest is having no need for government. It is in fact the ultimate form of democracy. These people are just terrorists, nothing more, nothing less

      --
      Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
    54. Re:Just a label. by lennier · · Score: 1

      there would be no police because the people of the community are responsible for it, every man, woman, and child.

      Good idea! But wait, the children aren't going to make particularly effective community-rule-enforcers, are they? Lacking in muscle mass, for one thing. And pregnant women probably aren't going to want to get into violent struggles. So pretty soon the community is going to have a meeting, and cooperatively decide to split the functions of making the rules and and enforcing them. The meeting will meet regularly and decide the rules, and a dedicated group of enforcers will do any fighting that's needed.

      Voila - you've just created a "congress" and a "military". And now you have a government.

      Go on long enough - say more than a week - and you'll also want to create a standing small committee to do the day-to-day organising, appointed by the wider group congress. Now you have a "cabinet" or "executive". You'll probably want to appoint a media spokesman at some point - now you have an ambassador and a diplomatic service. Try to balance the chores list so everyone's happy and productive and soon you'll have either a command-control economy or some kind of currency. And so it goes.

      Anarchism is an interesting exercise in rebuilding societal structures from scratch - like coding a Unix kernal from assembler, it's a worthwhile exercise for budding society-hackers to do once in every generation just so you see the rationale for the structures we've built. And yes, there are many fixes that can be made to this big body of sprawling legacy code that is our law and politics. But everything arose for a reason, as patches upon patches, and often those patches fix real bugs.

      But sometimes you just want to use a society, you know? Not recreate thousands of years of social evolution in a weekend, and deal with thousands of fault requests.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    55. Re:Just a label. by lennier · · Score: 2

      The fundamental nature of anarchy is that it is a heavily localized and the society that emerges will only reflect the values of those who form it.

      That's trivially true, and in fact is a null statement - every form of society reflects the values of those who build it.

      So we're already anarchists, everywhere in the world! And you can't say we aren't, because who are you to tell us what to think? You can't even tell us not to follow centrally-planned state orders, because we've obviously chosen to do that, and your opinion has no moral right over our choice.

      This is why anarchism needs more thought. It claims ideological purity, but in its pure form it means absolutely nothing.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    56. Re:Just a label. by lennier · · Score: 1

      That is the life of those who choose not to recognize property rights and by so doing become animals. .

      I don't think you understand how much animal life revolves around property rights. That's what all the fighting over territories is about. "Rowrl! I own this patch - get off!" "You present an excellent case, Mr Fluffles - but I believe I can establish prior claim. Care to take this to the tribunal, or shall we settle this like gentlecats, here in the streets?" "Yelp! Yelp!"

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    57. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A libertarian is an anarchist who wants the police to protect him from his slaves.

    58. Re:Just a label. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that you have failed to explain even one of your points right? You basically said "no, I'm right" without any further argumentation.

      While classical anarchists were considered close to socialism, that was in a time when everyone who didn't want monarchy was called leftwing. In fact, they were kicked out of the First International fairly quickly.

      Anarchism is socialist, getting kicked out of the First International doesn't mean you're not a socialist, it just means they didn't like you. And what was "that was in a time when everyone who didn't want monarchy was called leftwing"? What sort of point was this supposed to make?

      In practice, anarchists are basically very radical liberals.

      Well, you said it, it's a fact, there is absolutely no need to explain at all.

      True, that is a rebellious teenager's ideology, but most anarchists are teenage punks so I don't see a contradiction.

      Your thorough understanding of anarchism is probably the result of you knowing so many anarchists!

  3. Maybe it's not science they hate by JohnFen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Perhaps the thing they hate isn't science, but corporatism. That would seem more in character than some general "hate science" rationale.The Genoa shooting was of the head of an energy company, not a scientist. Even nonprofit research labs are often funded and influenced by powerful corporations. Corporate control of science gives corporations a great deal more power, both directly and indirectly, than many other areas of interest.

    1. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This would make more sense. It's still just a bunch of morons giving a bad name to anarchism. Proclaiming belief in anarchism and killing people just proves everyone's point that anarchy won't work. The peaceful anarchists, who are subversive through means of civil disobedience and the like, are the ones that actually act out what they preach in a realistic fashion. Most of these "anarchists" or more just obsessed with chaos, which is self-defeating anarchism and ridiculous.

      I would consider myself an anarchist by theoretical leaning, honestly. But instigating chaos doesn't help the point. You have to be voluntarily submissive when the rules are right and take peaceful subversion when they're not to really show the good side of anarchy. Fight against chaos with voluntary peace to implement anarchy, not instigate chaos to enforce anarchy.

    2. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by timholman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Perhaps the thing they hate isn't science, but corporatism.

      I'd say it's even simpler than that. People hate things they fear or don't understand, and science is definitely one of them. A corporation engaged in scientific research just provides a convenient aggregated target. The difference is that an anarchist is more likely to act on his or her fear and ignorance than your typical man on the street.

    3. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the thing they hate isn't science, but corporatism. That would seem more in character than some general "hate science" rationale.The Genoa shooting was of the head of an energy company, not a scientist. Even nonprofit research labs are often funded and influenced by powerful corporations. Corporate control of science gives corporations a great deal more power, both directly and indirectly, than many other areas of interest.

      This.

      They don't hate/fear science itself, but rather the way that said science will be implemented by the fascists who run the world.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    4. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 2

      And let's not forget government control of science. If a "scientist" isn't employed by a corporation, they are probably funded by the government either directly or indirectly. Even private colleges tend to run on government research grants and subsidies. There are very few Rube Goldbergs out there anymore; doing independent research and then selling the result.

      Cheers,
      Dave

      --
      They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
      Ben
    5. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by arth1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd say it's even simpler than that. People hate things they fear or don't understand, and science is definitely one of them. A corporation engaged in scientific research just provides a convenient aggregated target. The difference is that an anarchist is more likely to act on his or her fear and ignorance than your typical man on the street.

      I'd say it's even simpler than that. It's not a fear of all science they don't understand, but a fear of nuclear research and operations.

    6. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by tlhIngan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Perhaps the thing they hate isn't science, but corporatism

      Exactly. Think GMO foods - and most of the anger towards it goes towards basically one company - Montsanto. Especially when it affects something that's basically a necessity, people get really emotional about it. Montsanto basically hasn't helped their case either with their onerous licensing terms that you don't have to sign to be affected by.

      It's not anti-science, it's anti-corporation, and science just happens to be in the way because corporations stir up feelings of doing it purely to make a profit off people. And it stirs up such strong emotions because the corporations are seen as uncaring profit machines (rightly or wrongly, that's a different debate) hell-bent on turning people into slaves dependent on everything from food to luxuries.

      Enough so it's impossible to have a truly honest debate about such topics like GMO food, climate change, oil, etc. People are cynical - the future promised by science and technology has instead become a dystopia - they're working harder and longer for less pay which seems to be caused by all the scientific and technological progress.

    7. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      If these people are going out and killing people... There isn't much of a "Rationale". They got to an age where they found life isn't as nice as it should be, so they want to kill the people who they think are making life less nice. Not realizing they are doing more to make their lives and others much less nice in the process.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    8. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by fermion · · Score: 1
      I think it is a little more complex than this. When things are going on that we do not like, there are many ways to deal with the conflict. In the US, for instance, we have a process to deal with problems using non-violent means. We can get laws passed, we can appeal to the courts, we can have people arrested who break the laws. Of course no everyone believes in this process, and the only mean of change for them is violence, terrorism, intimidation. For instance, many religious folks do not seem to have a lot of faith in the process of democracy, so the resort to violence, shooting doctors, intimidating people who disagree with them, calling such people names and ridiculing beliefs that do not agree with their own. They live in fear of those of think differently.

      So this is where I think we are with the anarchists. Obviously these are people who do not base their actions on the process of law and order. If an anarchist does not like the implications of nanotechnology, and I agree some of those implications are frightening, they cannot just go and work within a framework of government diplomacy. They, presumably, cannot even take confort of some blowhard at the pulpit or on a rooftop condemning everyone who does not follow a dictatorial path. So what is the option? Violence, killing, intimidation. As was said, it is not science per se. But it is not corporations either. It is simply egotistical people who cannot imagine that they are so unimportant that everyone would not automatically agree with all of their beliefs.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    9. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Darn it, stop making sense and rally against those pesky religious zealots!

      Sarcasm aside, I agree with what you state. It's not just Monsanto either, it's also Pharma. Look at the massive rash of children in Cambodia and India now incapacitated and dieing from of all things.. Vaccines! Those are just the ones you can hear about if you go looking. Actually, I have to give a thumbs up to ABC that actually mentioned the problem in Cambodia this morning.

      To take your statement a bit further, it's anti-corrupt-corporation. The corrupt are very corrupt, and it's causing tremendous amounts of human lives.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    10. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by s.petry · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I agree with you. The anarchy is needed in my opinion to wake people up to the problems. Ghandi would never have been noticed if people were not already looking at the anarchy. Anarchy in this case is not simply chaos, it's an anti-establishment message.

      To many of these people, they see 2 choices. Die trying to make things better or die doing nothing. The US is not far behind them either, don't be fooled by the lack of "News". Revolution has become a very popular word in the last few years and as more people wake up that will continue. Things will get much worse before they get better.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    11. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      |but a fear of nuclear research and operations.

      and is that really so irrational? To trust in nuclear power, you also have to trust the over arching systems that would safeguard the public from nuke tech gone bad. Who in their right mind trusts corporations and governments with this much responsibility in today's world?

    12. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Fear? Do you bother to read anything that's going on? GMOs are killing people and making them sick, vaccines are killing people and making them sick, Monsanto is suing people that grow seeds that are not purchased from Monsanto, and if a seed happens to bloom a 2nd time they are suing them as well. This is causing food shortages and hardships for people that just want to eat dinner! Poland found that Monsanto corn KILLED bee populations in addition to only growing 1 time. Do you know the hardship and money this cost people just trying to grow food?

      Look, if you were talking about teaching them to irrigate versus using a rain stick I could understand you claiming it is "fear of science". This is not quite so primitive or simply brushed off.

      Remember something here: A lot of food and medicine that is rejected for use in the US ends up going overseas to "help" these poorer nations. Those rejects are not given away but are sold to keep profits high, and people end up suffering.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    13. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would consider myself an anarchist by theoretical leaning, honestly.

      Based off the rest of your post (and assuming you are a US citizen), you should start considering yourself a Patriot rather than an anarchist.

    14. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not anti-science, it's anti-corporation

      Those aren't mutually exclusive options. Looking at the non-corporate GMOs that are opposed, like Golden Rice, the Rainbow papaya, the wheat at Rothamsted, or even ones developed by small businesses like the Arctic Apple, I'd say it is a lot of both anti-science and anti-corporatism (though to be fair to anarchists I don't recall any specifically anarchist complaints about those, but they seem to be aligned with the anti-GMO side of thises and there have been a lot fo complaints there about these lines of research).

    15. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by richlv · · Score: 1

      monsanto. one t can make a difference :)

      --
      Rich
    16. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the thing they hate isn't science, but corporatism

      Exactly. Think GMO foods - and most of the anger towards it goes towards basically one company - Montsanto.

      Even though there are multiple companies involved in the same game. The rhetoric from the EU decreased once their seed companies started developing and marketing similar products.

    17. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by gerddie · · Score: 1

      Anarchy in this case is not simply chaos,

      Anarchy is never about chaos, the circled A used as one symbol for anarchism actually stands for Anarchy is the mother of Order.

    18. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by dbIII · · Score: 1

      You've fallen into the trap yourself, there's no point in immature ranting of "Pharma" when once again it is specific corporations in that industry.
      BTW, as a professional engineer that knows a few architects I find your sig spreading your bullshit workplace title a bit offensive. Keep it in your little pond.

    19. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anarchy, in my book, is (just like government) only in everyone's head. If everyone were to decide, that tommorow there is no system anymore; it's gone.

      However, the system (thus we all; we are the elite) has created, not a mutual benifit, but a man in the middle attack; money. Because we can make money with trading money. That's the problem. Also, our culture is one based on greed and self. We should first learn that mutual benifit ("ubuntu") is the way to go.

      The only way to destroy the system, is by making it redundant for people; open and free software and hardware and communitiy formation, while making it redundant to even have police. Then stop spending money wherever one can, trough mutual service sharing. Then vote: power to companies.

      If we stop giving non-community companies money and there is no police; THEN nwe have anarchy. But it's up to yourself to first help develop the independance factor and help sustainable education.

    20. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Truth to that, brother.
      captcha: consent

    21. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anarchy is incompatible with farming and any technology more advanced than farming- thus as civilization is the enemy and innovation the base of civilization, science, technology, and culture are their enemies. And they, ours.

    22. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by elucido · · Score: 1

      If these people are going out and killing people... There isn't much of a "Rationale". They got to an age where they found life isn't as nice as it should be, so they want to kill the people who they think are making life less nice. Not realizing they are doing more to make their lives and others much less nice in the process.

      It's really stupid to kill scientists. Scientists make shit. Their fears are understandable but their tactics are really stupid. All that will happen is the scientists will run into the arms of the very evil that they hate so much.

    23. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      fear of nuclear research and operations.

      I was wondering how long that would take to come up.

      Is is actually nothing to do with science and everything to do with idiots getting caught up in a cause. In the same way people can be induced to kill themselves or others in the grip of religious fever, extreme anarchist and other fringe groups can too.

      Unfortunately these people then ruin it for the rest of us. It is impossible to have a debate about environmental issues with one side assuming you are an "ecomentalist" who wants to return to an agrarian society and who hates all science and progress. If you don't support nuclear it is because you have an irrational fear of it and are just one of the dumb sheeple who's argument isn't worth listening to. If you care about animal welfare you get lumped with the criminals who attack people working in the animal testing industry.

      None of these people have much to do with the thing they are supposedly in favour of, they are just idiots and extremists.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    24. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Trap? Care to explain? You believe it's only 1 company responsible for the bad pharmaceuticals? Sorry, but there is just to much information regarding practices of numerous pharmaceutical companies, not just one. That does not count distribution chains either, that often purchase batches of bad things and resell them knowing they are bad.

      And your argument against my logic is my signature? Ha ha, sorry dude that's funny. Next you will say I'm wrong because of my name or something. If you want to debate topics, stay on topic instead of resorting to Ad hominem attacks.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    25. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by dbIII · · Score: 1

      You believe it's only 1 company responsible for the bad pharmaceuticals

      There are a very large number of pharmaceutical companies, which would mean that even a dozen is a small percentage.

      And your argument against my logic is my signature

      No. It was in a different paragraph for a start, which should have been a clue that it was about a different topic, and I also do not think you used any "logic" to come up with your immature paranoid rant you've parrotted from somewhere anyway.
      Your sig about how wonderful your bullshit misleading "guru" title is along with a penis reference is a bit much, but has nothing to do with the "pharma is evil" crap.

    26. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by s.petry · · Score: 1

      A general statement does not mean "all", nor should it be taken to imply all. I was very intentional in the generalization. There is more than one company involved, and more than two. I was also very intentional not to state "all" or "every" pharmaceutical company since, as you correctly point out, that would have been an incorrect statement. The list is longer than one or two, and trying to manage a list of them is not something I wish to entertain. Since you seem to have knowledge on the subject you probably know that there are several current court cases in addition to guilty convictions already ruled for various companies. I'm not going to attempt to follow the cases nor update the list when a general statement of "more than a few" suffices quite well. If you inject "all", "every", or even "most" into the statement on your own then the problem is not with my argument but your ability to read and/or comprehend what was written.

      Was my opinion incorrect regarding pharmaceutical companies being responsible for illness, death, or groups of people being angry with several companies that bear responsibility? If I was not correct, what does my signature have to do with the correctness, or incorrectness, of my statements? You know very well that it has absolutely nothing to do with the discussion. It is still an Ad hominem attack, though technically you could also name other fallacies that apply to that same tactic. Creating a new paragraph does not magically make fallacy not exist. The tactic in fact is rather old and well documented. Perhaps you should seek some remedial or introductory courses in Rhetoric and Logic.

      If we were discussing systems architecture and I made a grave error it would then be sensible to bring my signature in to the arguments and question my qualifications. As it stands that never happened, so there is no need for me to present any qualifications or defend any of the titles I have held during my career.

      Unlike you, I won't pretend to know your personal or professional situation. My opinions, as presented, have as much to do with my user name as they do with what is in my signature. The relevance of my signature is that when it comes to technical discussions (Slashdot is a technical site which often discusses technical issues) the signature has meaning. Notice that I do not place a company name in my signature. That is intentionally done to show that while I have qualifications to discuss systems architecture, systems engineering, systems analysis, etc... my opinions on Slashdot represent my thoughts and not those of the compan(y/ies) that I work for.

      In closing I wish to point out that I am not claiming to be perfect or infallible. Quite the contrary, I'm not ashamed to admit that I make mistakes. If you catch me doing so I hope you have enough knowledge to point them out so that I can better my arguments or even change my opinion when it's wrong. Twice now you have shown that you lack such knowledge and resort to the most simple and easily detected fallacies. Prove that you are smarter than that in the future.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    27. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by dbIII · · Score: 1

      A general statement does not mean "all"

      Indeed, however it was a very specific statement instead of a general one - here it is, quoted for a second time:

      You believe it's only 1 company responsible for the bad pharmaceuticals

      Sorry to be a real person instead of a very convenient strawman you were arguing with at length, but that's how it goes.


      As for the other, very trivial sig matter: I'm sorry, but your sig still reads to me as "I'm a big man in a small pond with a pretend qualification outside my pond saying that I won't talk to people with little dicks/boobs/whatever the fuck the 'teeny tiny ones' are supposed to mean". It would still be offensive even if you were a professional engineer or a professional architect of the built environment, instead of a MSCE or whatever. That's just my opinion but it's why I can't take you seriously - it just screams immaturity and arrogance in big capital letters to me. Feel free to ignore it since it's really just telling you where I'm coming from.

    28. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by s.petry · · Score: 1

      The second item you quoted was a question. It was sincere and had a point, in that you seemed to desire quantification for my statement. Quantification in this matter is extremely difficult for numerous reasons (which I believe I spelled out in my previous post), while obviously not impossible. I still suspect that you did not take as much issue with the statement as you did with a lack of quantity or a specific name. If you believed for example that the only pharmaceutical company with legal problems was Merck I would have pointed out at least two other examples (or perhaps asked you to Google for current litigation against Pharmaceutical companies). Since I don't have all of the facts available, I would have been forced back to a generalization. My last statement in my first post I believe had the best suggestion for the quantity in the generalization "anti-corrupt-corporation", which opts out the majority of companies which are not under scrutiny.

      I agree that generalizations are a delicate, though sometimes unavoidable. The best approach is to ask for clarification or quantification when generalizations are used since assumptions can easily be wrong and drastically change the perception of the argument or statement.

      To your last point..

      Titles are specific to the markets one works in. A Chemical Engineer is not a Mechanical Engineer (obviously) though both are Engineers. IT does have different methods of gaining qualifications for "Engineer" and "Architect" titles. Just like with college degrees, some are very good and others very poor. Given that knowledge I never judge a person by their titles but rather by their thoughts, their opinions, and their ability to express both. I have probably met as many people with MBAs that in my opinion were ignorant and/or unpleasant as I have people MSCE titles.

      As a side note I do hold both College degrees and Professional Certifications (none of which are MSCE certificates) but again will state that "Systems" does not relate to "Pharmaceutical" at least with the subject matter being discusses, so there is no relevance in questioning what my credentials are except for an Ad hominem purpose.

      I recently added the second half of the statement you point out "AC Warning, I try to ignore people with teeny tiny ones" and I will contemplate removing or changing that statement. It has nothing to do with Systems mind you. It really relates to the following:

      AC = Anonymous Coward (the label given to names when people post anonymously on Slashdot)

      If people post anonymously to my comments, I try to ignore the post. It takes a certain amount of bravado to post with your name and your information in many situations.

      When it comes to people posting as AC, replying is often not worth the effort since you have no idea whether there is dialogue or a string of different people posting anonymously. Often people post anonymously and get angry that you won't respond, or that you don't recognize that there is dialogue because of a series of people posting anonymously.

      In my opinion, if you want to express an opinion or debate someone else' opinion one should have enough bravado to do so with their own account for numerous reasons. The slang terms "Grow a pair" or "Get a pair", while not politically correct, describe my thought process. In the US (I have no idea where you are from) the terms are well known as would be the term "They have a pair of tiny ones".

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    29. Re:Maybe it's not science they hate by dbIII · · Score: 1

      See - without the insult it just comes across as a title instead of bragging about a big title and a big penis.
      Sorry about all the fuss over a "by the way comment". I'm just a cranky old professional engineer that has seen 20 year old high school dropouts with 1 year of wordpress web page writing calling themselves "senior engineer" so I'm probably far too sensitive on the subject.

  4. Stockholm Syndrome: by Hartree · · Score: 1, Troll

    TFA talks about establishing: "anarchist science" to make science conform more to what the anarchists can identify with.

    This sounds like having the scientific community embrace "creation science" in order to conform more to what the creationists can identify with.

    1. Re:Stockholm Syndrome: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anarchists in this case are talking about the social dynamic in which science is conducted, not have a separate body of facts as the creationists desire.

    2. Re:Stockholm Syndrome: by Hartree · · Score: 1

      I think the creationists would say the same thing. They claim they want an equal footing for their ideas with respect to evolution. They feel that in any "fair" environment, their ideas will obviously win out. In truth, they want a preferred status.

      In this case, we have the added problem that "anarchist" can mean a whole wide array of things (both denotative and connotative) depending on who you talk to.

      But, I would guess that the "anarchists" we're talking about in this case (the ones shooting people) would be just as hostile to science that didn't find results that agreed well with their philosophical positions.

      Militants tend to be that way regardless of the source of their ideas. And, they usually can find a way to justify whatever means they find absolutely convenient.

  5. Anarchists by benjfowler · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Could be that 'anarchist' is just one label that stupid, uneducated, violent people who are nonetheless bright enough to want to label themselves as being something better than 'garden variety scumbag'?

    I've lived in some rough inner city areas in my time, and if I had a dollar for every "bohemian", "artist", or "anarchist", I'd be a rich man.

    I've never met an "anarchist" who hasn't been a drug-fucked high school dropout.

    1. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I used to know an "anarchist" at school. No rules, no laws, etc. When I asked him what he was going to do when someone bigger and more violent took all his stuff, and as there were no rules, there would be no-one to stop it but him, he changed his mind.

    2. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This theory would seem to run parallel to ideal military and militia recruiting practices during wartime. Less intelligent people seem more willing to not question orders to commit inhuman acts of violence and barbarity.

      One can parallel this by comparing violent crimes commited by people effected by high dosages of chemicals like amphetamines that negatively impact rational judgement and coherent thought processes.

      IE one would wait significantly longer for a "jib-head" to complete long division than one would wait for a "jib-head" to attack you with a lead pipe and steal your potato chips.

      It seems safe to say that anarchists in their most commonly encountered form are rather low IQ.

      I believe a university educated Anarchist is actually called a terrorist or possibly a "suupa villian" .

    3. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I've never met an "anarchist" who hasn't been a drug-fucked high school dropout.

      Than you've never met an Anarchist.

    4. Re:Anarchists by Sperbels · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Could be that 'anarchist' is just one label that stupid, uneducated, violent people who are nonetheless bright enough to want to label themselves as being something better than 'garden variety scumbag'?

      It could be that stupid, uneducated, and educated people label political radicals they don't like as anarchists.

    5. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anarchists are not defined by violence. The amount of bad mouthing the government gets on here could be viewed as anarchistic to certain people. Further pot smokers and occupy could be viewed as anarchists by a certain group. The people described in the tfa are probably not anarchists since the hate is not towards the government. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchism

    6. Re:Anarchists by Hatta · · Score: 1

      And what exactly has government done about the richest .1% of the population taking the wealth of the rest of the country?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    7. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I see where you're coming from, but you've not met many anarchists. We're doctors, lawyers, teachers, parents, and every other group you can think of. We count among our number great thinkers and speakers and writers. You may have heard of Henry David Thoreau, Gandhi, Leo Tolstoy, Noam Chomsky. All are anarchists of one stripe or another, although Thoreau never used the term for himself -- it was quite a while before Pierre Joseph Proudhon took the insult "anarchist" and began wearing it as a badge of honor, in the same way that civil rights pioneers claimed the term "black," which had been treated like a slur for many years prior.

        The worst thing about anarchism is that through various avenues, it has acquired an aura of glamor and danger that attracts young people who don't know anything about it, but think it sounds cool. They spend a few years calling themselves "anarchists" before discarding their half-baked notions of what anarchy is, and then I inevitably get stuck talking to their smug, brainless adult counterparts who casually dismiss me and the centuries of thought behind my philosophy with a sneering "I used to be an anarchist, too. Then I grew up!" (They outgrow the anarchy, but not the attachment to unformed opinions and a vague feeling that they ought to be right about things without having to think them through or discuss them with anyone.)

        These folks also color the general public's perception of anarchism, and hide us (the actual anarchists) behind a smokescreen of dumb kids who put the circle-A on their denim jacket because they think it'll get them that girl they're interested in, and our ideas get shut out without a fair hearing.

    8. Re:Anarchists by ppentz123 · · Score: 1

      I agree... I've seen much of the 'Free Keene' folk who are supposedly anarchists, and they all seem to be society drop-outs, who expect to be allowed to do as they please. And yes, drugs seem to be a big part of their movement.

    9. Re:Anarchists by LDAPMAN · · Score: 2

      "wealth" is not a zero sum game. It can be created. There are many ways wealth can be created or accumulated that are both ethical and legal. The government does attempt to stop theft, fraud, extortion, and other methods that are illegal. What legal means of acquiring wealth would you like them to stop?

    10. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like he was one of the kids I described in the latter part of this post.

        Had he known what he was talking about he would have spoken about solidarity, the non-aggression principle*, and ended by saying "then I'd call on the local militia/private defense force/what-have-you"** and the aggressor would either surrender the stolen goods or get his ass killed. Thieves and bullies don't prosper under anarchy, they die. Quickly.

      * The non-aggression principle is a fundamental tenet of nearly every strain of anarchism. It states simply that one must never initiate aggression against others. (This includes threatening and coercing.) As a corollary, you have the right and duty to defend yourself and others against aggressors.

      ** The exact mechanism for dealing with violent and dangerous people varies from one kind of anarchist setup to another. It's all down to preference. An anarcho-socialist system might have a milita drawn by lot from the populace to avoid the kind of institutional corruption of individuals that leads to abuse of power, while a market anarchist would probably have private defense firms paid by your insurance agency to protect your area, in basically the same way police operate now, except they'd get fired in the blink of an eye if they shot someone or beat them up without a really good reason. Other systems work along other lines, and most of these are interchangeable and can work right alongside one another.

    11. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's a No True Scotsman fallacy.

    12. Re:Anarchists by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      And what exactly has government done about the richest .1% of the population taking the wealth of the rest of the country?

      Concentrated the wealth to create more power for themselves and the oligarchs (reciprocally), exactly as Hamilton had designed it to do.

      Marking 'works as intended' (faerie tales they tell children about it, notwithstanding).

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    13. Re:Anarchists by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 0

      What legal means of acquiring wealth would you like them to stop?

      Shucks, we can't even get them to stop printing fiat currency, which the Constitution prohibits. They always give it to their politically-connected friends first, before the price increases caused by the monetary inflation take effect.

      Heck, low-interest loans from the Fed account for 77% of JP Morgan's profit last year. Can I get some of that? Of course not, that wouldn't be 'ethical'.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    14. Re:Anarchists by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      > Can I get some of that?

      Buy some JPM stock if you want a piece of the action.

    15. Re:Anarchists by Sperbels · · Score: 0

      I used to know an "anarchist" at school. No rules, no laws, etc. When I asked him what he was going to do when someone bigger and more violent took all his stuff, and as there were no rules, there would be no-one to stop it but him, he changed his mind.

      The US government as it is right now, is basically what you're describing. It's a system that permits a small number of people to take the lunch money of a large number of people.

    16. Re:Anarchists by Sperbels · · Score: 1

      The government does attempt to stop theft, fraud, extortion, and other methods that are illegal.

      Only when it gets caught.

    17. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blah blah blah. Why are these "means", especially those employed by banks etc, not illegal? You go on like ordinary people had any say whatsoever in what's legal or not.

      Just flush yourself down the toilet, you corporatist piece of shit.

    18. Re:Anarchists by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think it counts as a "No True Scotsman" fallacy to suggest that some anarchists might not be "drug-fucked high school dropouts."

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    19. Re:Anarchists by Hatta · · Score: 1

      The government does attempt to stop theft, fraud, extortion, and other methods that are illegal

      When can I expect indictments against Lloyd Blankfein, John Corzine, Jamie Dimon, Angelo Mozilo, etc?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    20. Re:Anarchists by ozborn · · Score: 1

      You obviously need to meet some more anarchists - none of the anarchists I know fall into that category although I'm sure there is plenty out there that do. Try reading http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchism to get a better picture.

    21. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shucks, we can't even get them to stop printing fiat currency, which the Constitution prohibits.

      Oh, you want them to back it with your precious gold again? You do realize that gold basically has very little intrinsic value, right? It's not edible. You can't drink it. It won't keep you warm. It's a poor building material. It can't even be used for making weapons. It only has a few (non-essential) industrial uses.

      At best, it's "pretty" and serves as a status symbol... what if society in general rejected gold as a status symbol? It's value would fall to near zero overnight. Then what use is your gold backed currency then?

    22. Re:Anarchists by tmosley · · Score: 1

      They made themselves the top 0.1%.

    23. Re:Anarchists by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      How so? The earnings seem to go exclusively to executive's bonus. Stockholders get barely enough to justify financing them in good times, and lose eerything in bad times.

    24. Re:Anarchists by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Look up the properties of good money, you'll learn something. Being able to eat your currency is a terrible idea.

      The past 7,000 years of history has something to say about your objection. Even if it were somehow wrong, the rules are the rules until they're changed. If a government doesn't follow its own rules, it's just lawlessness with fancy buildings.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    25. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could be that 'anarchist' is just one label that stupid, uneducated, violent people who are nonetheless bright enough to want to label themselves as being something better than 'garden variety scumbag'?

      It could be that stupid, uneducated, and educated people label political radicals WILLING TO COMMIT ACTS OF VIOLENCE AND MURDER as anarchists.

      There. I fixed it for you.

    26. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps if he said "No true anarchist is a drug-fucked high school dropout", you might have a case. But as usual it's just some idiot on slashdot that doesn't know what they're talking about.

    27. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I've never met an "anarchist" who hasn't been a drug-fucked high school dropout.

      Then I guess you haven't met Noam Chomsky, who, whether you agree with him or not, is one of the world's leading intellectuals and most cited living individuals.

      (And you haven't met me either.)

    28. Re:Anarchists by Sperbels · · Score: 1

      Committing acts of violence and murder for a political cause does not make you an anarchist.

    29. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It does when you discount the possibility that there might be a drug-fucked highschool dropout anarchist, or a lot of them.

    30. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But actually read the reasons why all the different economies went off the gold standard. The Ron Paul-tards think that the gold standard will solve lots of economic problems, but the reality is that it will introduce more.

    31. Re:Anarchists by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      But the suggestion was that the people the OP had met couldn't be real anarchists because they were "drug-fucked high school dropouts."

    32. Re:Anarchists by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      How does that make it a 'True Scottsman' fallacy?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    33. Re:Anarchists by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      As soon as you define who is and who isn't in your category, you have avoided the "No True Scotsman" fallacy. He may have committed some other fallacy (or more likely, used a really weird definition of a word), but that doesn't make it a Scott.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    34. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of my pals is an Anarchist with a Masters Degree in politics who teaches at college level. So go figure.

    35. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what it is. Stating essentially that "Well, no true anarchist would be a drug fucked high school dropout, so 'you haven't met an anarchist'" is a perfect framing of the "No True Scotsman" fallacy. How much clearer can we make it?!

    36. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That IS essentially what he DID say.

    37. Re:Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell, it might even be some political party on the opposite end of the spectrum running false flag attacks to garner support.

    38. Re:Anarchists by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      It could be that stupid, uneducated, and educated people label political radicals they don't like as anarchists.

      It could also be that people have no idea that those scarily labelled anarchists are often troublemakers and/or police opposed to what they claim to be supporting.

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    39. Re:Anarchists by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      As the AC below points out, it's a drop-in example, it couldn't be any clearer. We might as well call it the "No true Anarchist Fallacy".

      "I haven't met a Scotsman who likes Haggis"
      "Well you haven't met a Scotsman then"

      "I haven't met an Anarchist who wasn't fucked up by drugs"
      "Well you haven't met an Anarchist then.

    40. Re:Anarchists by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      As long as you have a definition of your category, then you've avoided the "No true scottsman" fallacy. Did you even think about what this was before you posted? It's not about following sentence patterns, which is what your argument suggests you believe.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    41. Re:Anarchists by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      The sentence was contrived to illustrate the analogy. You asked for help understanding the concept and I thought the sentences might help. It doesn't necessitate sentence patterns, but it's still fairly straightforward.
      All you're doing is questioning my understanding combine with empty denial. Instead, why don't you get to the point and say why you think that the above situation was not a "No true Scotsman" fallacy, maybe you can enlighten us.

    42. Re:Anarchists by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      "As long as you have a definition of your category, then you've avoided the 'No true scottsman' fallacy." l2r

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    43. Re:Anarchists by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      You clearly think you're being clever with such hollow and ambiguous tripe, but you need to elaborate your whole argument, not expect readers to interpret meaning from wayward conditional sentences.

    44. Re:Anarchists by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      You clearly think you're being clever with such hollow and ambiguous tripe, but you need to elaborate your whole argument, not expect readers to interpret meaning from wayward conditional sentences

      No, I am amused by your inability to understand simple concepts. If you look up the definition of the No True Scottsman fallacy anywhere, you will see why clearly defining your category avoids the fallacy.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    45. Re:Anarchists by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      You're committing another form of fallacy: Proof by intimidation.
      Looking up definitions of the "No true Scotsman" will neither explain your argument or weaken mine in any way. Your behaviour and attitude are starting to work against you. Maybe you should try living up to the advice from the honorable man you quote in your signature.

    46. Re:Anarchists by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Nay, I am most certainly not committing proof by intimidation. If I'd said, "you fail to understand simple concepts, therefore you are wrong," that would certainly be a logical error. However, I said, "You fail to understand simple concepts, AND you are wrong." That is not a fallacy, that is abuse.

      And you deserved to be abused, for your mistakes. Strongly suggest reading this book. In any case, the NTS fallacy involves the failure to clearly define your category. Uh, I could explain more but your tiny intellect seems incapable of understanding so I'll stop.

      Hope you can improve your intellect.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  6. Least stable by magarity · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anarchy is the least stable form of government. As soon as one person says "Hey, let's...(x,y.z)" and some others say "OK", it's broken; there is now a leader and followers.

    1. Re:Least stable by timholman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Anarchy is the least stable form of government. As soon as one person says "Hey, let's...(x,y.z)" and some others say "OK", it's broken; there is now a leader and followers.

      Not to mention the fact that our own evolution has programmed us to be followers. We are behaviorally predisposed to follow a charismatic leader, because doing so provided enormous survival advantages for the tribe (if not necessarily for individual members) in human pre-history.

      Anarchists have always struck me as a bunch of frustrated closet leaders who are all operating under the implicit assumption that things will be run their way one day. The only thing that unites them is their desire to tear down the existing power structure. If they ever succeeded, they would immediately turn on each other.

    2. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anarchy immediately* degrades into warlords. If you get lucky, the warlords set up a useful government. Usually they just rape and steal.

      *immediately in this case means 'as soon as two people talk to each other'

    3. Re:Least stable by fmaresca · · Score: 1

      Anarchy is the least stable form of government. As soon as one person says "Hey, let's...(x,y.z)" and some others say "OK", it's broken; there is now a leader and followers.

      Anarchy by definition is NOT a form of government. Or, if you prefer, is the self government of each individual over himself.
      Paraphrasing J. L. Borges, "perhaps one day we deserve no government". That's anarchy.
      And mind you, not any form of organization is a government one.

    4. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The moment the third ape started walking upright a conspiracy was hatched against one of them.

    5. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's basically like the Sith in star wars, back in the old republic days. A bunch of arrogant power-hungry assholes who all want to be the one who is in charge. Then when a chance arises for someone to be in charge, they all kill each other to be the one.

    6. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Not to mention the fact that our own evolution has programmed us to be followers. We are behaviorally predisposed to follow a charismatic leader, because doing so provided enormous survival advantages for the tribe (if not necessarily for individual members) in human pre-history."

      Not saying you're wrong necessarily, but citations please.

    7. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the least stable form of argument. As soon as someone points out that "no central government" doesn't imply "no organization of any form anywhere" it's broken.

      Leading "some others" to some specific purpose is not quite the same as seizing control of the state.

    8. Re:Least stable by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      It's a government as soon as the organization asserts control over others.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    9. Re:Least stable by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Anarchy is the least stable form of government. As soon as one person says "Hey, let's...(x,y.z)" and some others say "OK", it's broken; there is now a leader and followers.

      It's not a government until some others are forced to participate. People work together better when there is consensus instead of coercion. Anarchism is simply this observation writ large. Nothing about this prohibits organization or leadership.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    10. Re:Least stable by Sperbels · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not to mention the fact that our own evolution has programmed us to be followers. We are behaviorally predisposed to follow a charismatic leader, because doing so provided enormous survival advantages for the tribe (if not necessarily for individual members) in human pre-history.

      Evolution has also permitted us to pummel our charismatic leader to death when he abuses his position or leads us to ruin. Now, when power is abused, you can do nothing. You are no longer following a charismatic leader. You're following a master. You're an unwilling servant...a slave.

    11. Re:Least stable by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

      Anarchists have always struck me as a bunch of frustrated closet leaders who are all operating under the implicit assumption that things will be run their way one day. The only thing that unites them is their desire to tear down the existing power structure. If they ever succeeded, they would immediately turn on each other.

      You're making the logical error that all Anarchists have the same political philosophy.

      What you write may well be true of Bakunanites, but wouldn't hold up for Rothbardians. Understanding the difference is the price of admission.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    12. Re:Least stable by ChristopherBurg · · Score: 3, Informative

      I don't know where people come up with these kinds of claims. Anarchy isn't an opposition to organization (in fact anarcho-communists are all about organization). Depending on the form of anarchism it's about the opposition of violence and coercion or hierarchy all together.

      Those in the former group oppose the state (what is commonly referred to as the government) because it is necessarily violent. Everything it does is backed by the threat or actuality of violence. For example, failing to pay your taxes will result in your kidnapping and being tossed into a cage or your property stolen. If you resist any of these actions by the state they will use physical force against you and, if you resist sufficiently, even go so far as to kill you.

      Anarchists in the latter category oppose any single individuals having power over another. In the case of the state they oppose the fact that state agents have power over non-state agents. Members of this group also oppose capitalism and the idea of landlords because they believe the capitalist has power over the workers because without the wages paid by the capitalist the employees would be unable to acquire the basic needs of survival (food, water, clothing, shelter). They also oppose landlords for the same reason, the landlord can toss out renters leaving said renters without shelter.

      The former group generally has no issue with hierarchy so long as it's voluntary. They have no problem with somebody working for an employer, renting living space, or being a member of any organization that has created a set of rules for members of follow (Slashdot, for example, has rules that must be agreed to and those who disobey said rules can be kicked out).

      While the latter group opposes hierarchy they don't oppose organization. In general they believe decisions should be made by the applicable communities. Workers at a factory would vote on policies regarding the factory, members of a community would vote on the rules of that community, and so on. Because each person is viewed as having an equal voice no single person has power over another.

      It would do you well to research the philosophies of anarchism before making erroneous claims regarding them.

    13. Re:Least stable by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Similar to libertarians, I think they all imagine that if not for the awful government holding them back they'd each become billionaires and live like dystopian sci-fi villains (minus the end where they are defeated).

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    14. Re:Least stable by RCGodward · · Score: 1

      Star Wars is OK, but what about a car analogy?

    15. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's more like this: Libertarians believe that they're in a Saturday morning cartoon. They live in a black and white world with them being the heroes and the government being the bad guys. Nothing else matters but defeating big old evil government.

      They're like Optimus Prime as parodied in Robot Chicken

      "Autobots, Megatron and the Decepticons were defeated today with only 50 humans dying in the cross fire... a new record!"

    16. Re:Least stable by nukenerd · · Score: 1

      Sorry, no citations from pre-history seem to be available.

    17. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's more like this.

      Libertarians recognize the importance and necessity of the government. Someone has to build the roads, protect the borders, and stop thieves and murderers. They think the current government goes way beyond its necessary function, has impeded too much on personal liberty, and taxes and spends too much.

    18. Re:Least stable by nukenerd · · Score: 1

      People work together better when there is consensus instead of coercion. Anarchism is simply this observation writ large. Nothing about this prohibits organization or leadership.

      So what do you do when someone does not join that consensus? Shoot them?

      I sometimes wonder what I would do if the "rules" were taken away, like if stranded with 50 others on Pacific Island (shipwreck, aircraft crash landing), like in "Lord of the Flies". I am an engineer and have some survival training from the Navy, and I would know how to make fresh water, rafts etc. However I also know from experiences with 'anarchic' kids' gangs when young that I am not the sort of person others listen to - most people listen to the ones with loudest voices and most charm (recognise today's political leaders?). That is what happens with "consensus". At least with governments there is a structure below the political prima-donnas' charade which has evolved over the centuries as a buffer against them.

      So on that Pacific Island I think I would go off on my own, taking a weapon with me if possible, and they would thereby lose a capable potential team member . Then the others would probably hunt me down out of suspicion, but I would rather take my chance that way than be tied to a bunch of no-hopers doing "consensus".

      And that is what I would do in your anarchic society too.

    19. Re:Least stable by jthill · · Score: 1

      Dammit, that line gets no hits on Google and I just spent my last mod point.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    20. Re:Least stable by StripedCow · · Score: 1

      Now, when power is abused, you can do nothing.

      That's where google comes in. In the future we'll be choosing our leaders using PageRank (tm).

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    21. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That still happens all the time, go ask Gaddafi how he's doing these days.

      If you're implying that Obama or Bush or any other recent American president was deserving of such treatment... grow up and get some fucking perspective.

    22. Re:Least stable by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      . You're following a master. You're an unwilling servant...a slave.

      Uh, you make it sound like you believe this is actually a reality now, not a hypothetical situation. Who exactly, is the master?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    23. Re:Least stable by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      A bunch of arrogant power-hungry cars who all want to be the one who is in charge. Then when a chance arises for somecar to be in charge, they all ram each other off the road and into the canyon to be the one.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    24. Re:Least stable by elucido · · Score: 1

      Anarchy is the least stable form of government. As soon as one person says "Hey, let's...(x,y.z)" and some others say "OK", it's broken; there is now a leader and followers.

      Not to mention the fact that our own evolution has programmed us to be followers. We are behaviorally predisposed to follow a charismatic leader, because doing so provided enormous survival advantages for the tribe (if not necessarily for individual members) in human pre-history.

      Anarchists have always struck me as a bunch of frustrated closet leaders who are all operating under the implicit assumption that things will be run their way one day. The only thing that unites them is their desire to tear down the existing power structure. If they ever succeeded, they would immediately turn on each other.

      A follower is another name for a slave. If you think you're a slave that is fine, be a slave. But don't force others who don't want to be a slave to live like you decided to live. For this research we should have communities run by anarchists. Some people would rather die early than live as a slave.

    25. Re:Least stable by elucido · · Score: 1

      . You're following a master. You're an unwilling servant...a slave.

      Uh, you make it sound like you believe this is actually a reality now, not a hypothetical situation. Who exactly, is the master?

      It is reality now. The technology is the master and the corporations that own the technology own the people.

      While I don't endorse the suicide pact that these anarchists have taken by going about it that way, I do understand that people want to be free and don't want to be enslaved by technology.

    26. Re:Least stable by elucido · · Score: 1

      Similar to libertarians, I think they all imagine that if not for the awful government holding them back they'd each become billionaires and live like dystopian sci-fi villains (minus the end where they are defeated).

      The problem is most right-libertarians are witting slaves. While those others are unwitting slaves.
      When you're a witting slave you whore yourself out to the highest bidding corporation because that is the rational thing to do.

      Ultimately everyone is being enslaved by the technology whether you're a right or left libertarian. The only difference is in how aware you are of it happening.

    27. Re:Least stable by elucido · · Score: 1

      I think it's more like this: Libertarians believe that they're in a Saturday morning cartoon. They live in a black and white world with them being the heroes and the government being the bad guys. Nothing else matters but defeating big old evil government.

      They're like Optimus Prime as parodied in Robot Chicken

      "Autobots, Megatron and the Decepticons were defeated today with only 50 humans dying in the cross fire... a new record!"

      What kind of people actually work for government? The brainwashed minority. The people who are the least free in their thinking. This is why libertarians don't particularly like the government.

      Unfortunately corporations aren't much better but at least corporations don't all make you take drug,blood, hair,dna and other ridiculous tests just to be a janitor.

    28. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Not to mention the fact that our own evolution has programmed us to be followers."

      Yeah, just look at science: all scientists are following their great wise leader. No?

    29. Re:Least stable by fmaresca · · Score: 1

      It's a government as soon as the organization asserts control over others.

      No, it's not if the organization has no means of enforcement (i.e. police).

      Obvioulsly this depends a lot on what interpretation of the word "government" one chooses. For the sake of this discussion I would say that if the organization has no means of enforcement and no way to coaction, it could not be a government. Then people abid voluntarily to the "rules". This is basically a no-goverment form of society, because no one, including the organization itself, has any degree of power over any individual.

      Of course, if you choose another definition for "government" then YMMV.

    30. Re:Least stable by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I am the master of my technological devices, they obey me. Calling "using technology" slavery is an insult to everyone who actually was a slave, including people are actually are slaves now.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    31. Re:Least stable by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      That's why I used the phrase "assert control". You can tell people what to do, but until you have the means to make them do it you are not a government.

      In other words, I think we agree :)

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    32. Re:Least stable by lennier · · Score: 1

      Anarchy by definition is NOT a form of government. Or, if you prefer, is the self government of each individual over himself.

      And when you get two individuals who each want conflicting things?

      Anarchism in its pure form is like a theory of particle physics which requires that there be no fields. ("Because each particle must voluntarily choose its own trajectory!")

      Good luck making it approximate reality.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    33. Re:Least stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How exactly is it true for "Bakunanites"?

      And secondly, "Rothbardians" aren't anarchists, anarchists are against all rulers, that includes bosses. Hell even Rothbard agrees: "We must therefore conclude that we are not anarchists" www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard167.html

  7. Battle against Skynet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have to save the future from Skynet!

  8. Not Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because they're Luddites, not anarchists. They call themselves anarchists because it sounds cooler and they probably don't know what a Luddite is.

    1. Re:Not Anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll kind of second that. Luddites quite often have anarchist tendencies. Not easy to tell them apart. Here's a quote from Ted Kaczynski. "The anarchist too seeks power, but he seeks it on an individual or small-group basis; he wants individuals and small groups to be able to control the circumstances of their own lives. He opposes technology because it makes small groups dependent on large organizations."

    2. Re:Not Anarchists by Pf0tzenpfritz · · Score: 1

      Do you really know who the Luddites actually were and what they wanted? According to the fact that almost everyone here seems to believe that "anarchists hate science" I have my doubts...

      Hint: the answer is not just "they hated machines"....

      --
      Oh, the beautiful gloss of greality!
    3. Re:Not Anarchists by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Exactly and there's nothing political about their actions either. From their point of view it's as practical as destroying an enemy weapons designer.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  9. Anarchy is a conspiracy... by dingo_kinznerhook · · Score: 4, Funny

    In "The Man Who Was Thursday" by G.K. Chesterton, a detective infiltrates an anarchist meeting and finds out that he is a more persuasive anarchist than the anarchist leaders, and gets elected leader. He goes on to find out that most of the other anarchist leaders are also undercover cops, trying to infiltrate the organization.

    So... since fiction is always true, I contend that anarchy is probably just a bunch of people who are trying to infiltrate anarchy.

    --
    "God does not play Minecraft with the world." - Albert Einstein
    1. Re:Anarchy is a conspiracy... by Pope · · Score: 1

      Man, I loved Deus Ex.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    2. Re:Anarchy is a conspiracy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like these guys?

      admitted to be police by their own union.

    3. Re:Anarchy is a conspiracy... by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It's possible that various secret police activities in Russia that played out that way inspired it. The same sort of thing happened after the book (and revolution) with Russian intelligence running a counter-revolutionary group as a "honeypot".

    4. Re:Anarchy is a conspiracy... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/dec/04/jonhenley

      A 76-year-old retired Dutch maths teacher described yesterday how for more than 25 years he was feted by communist leaders around the world as the inspired head of a radical Marxist-Leninist party that never, in fact, existed.
      As Chris Petersen, head of the supposedly 600-member Marxist-Leninist party of the Netherlands, Pieter Boevé travelled to Beijing more than two dozen times and met Mao Zedong. He was also welcomed with open arms in Albania by Enver Hoxha, and in the eastern bloc capitals of Europe.

      "In fact we had at most a dozen members, none of whom had the faintest idea of the truth," Mr Boevé said yesterday from his home in the seaside resort of Zandvoort. "The whole thing was a hoax, set up by the secret services to learn all they could about what was going on in Marxist Peking."

      The Mao regime was so impressed by the revolutionary zeal of Mr Petersen/Boevé and his MLPN that it gave him regular briefings on the chairman's latest thinking at the Chinese mission in The Hague. Beijing even funded the non-existent party's newspaper, De Kommunist, which was written entirely by Dutch secret service (BVD) agents.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    5. Re:Anarchy is a conspiracy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This used to, maybe still does, happen in the McCarthy Era, agents infiltrated campus communist groups, and ended up running them, they stood out due to their rigid adherence to Marxist / Leninist dogma since they'd been rigidly 'schooled' for what they were "supposed" to believe. Most regular leftists have their own opinions formed more from their own experiences rather than strict Marxist / Leninism, because, frankly what percentage of self-professed leftists actually read all those books?

    6. Re:Anarchy is a conspiracy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I were a CIA operative and wanted to murder someone, I would make it look like anarchists did it...

  10. Complex Subject by BiophysicalLOVE · · Score: 1

    This subject was covered most exhaustively earlier in the year by nature: http://www.nature.com/news/anarchists-attack-science-1.10729. I think that both articles miss a point. Although these attacks may seemed linked, or claimed to be linked, I doubt it. This violence may be carried out by as few as two people - a motorcyclist and a gunman, yet both articles paint this as a huge sideswipe by an organised Anarchist (paradox alert) movement. For all we know these attacks may be carried out by a handful disgruntled ex-employees claiming an antiscientist rhetoric to intimidate their former employer, or, in a fit of self-delusion, jump on the anarchist bandwagon to give some sort of paper-thin reasoning for their violence tendencies. "The Olga Cell", "sorcerer of the atom" "LONG LIVE THE CONSPIRACY OF CELLS OF FIRE"? Surely anyone who has a few Anarchist cliches and stereotypes to call upon could write this stuff?

  11. If I had to guess... by GT66 · · Score: 1

    If I had to guess why anarchists hate science, I'd say it is likely because science is increasingly being used by governments and corporations against the people. Ultimately, government and corporations are what anarchists really hate and who's got all that expensive and massively patented science on their side anymore? Certainly not regular folks.

  12. Anarchists don't hate science by Sean · · Score: 1

    These illiterate fools just don't know what anarchist means.

  13. Science brings order into chaos by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

    Anarchists thrive on chaos. Therefore, they don't like science. Apart from chemistry of explosives, of course, but this is an example of science that is designed to bring forth chaos anyway.

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
    1. Re:Science brings order into chaos by Hatta · · Score: 2

      Anarchists like order just as much as anyone. We only recognize that order enforced by violence is no order at all.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    2. Re:Science brings order into chaos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How non-violent order prevents violent agents from disturbing the order? How it prevents otherwise non-violent but unjust usurpers of order from locking society down?

  14. Jacques Ellul - La technique (1960) by ftfsis · · Score: 2

    He got it. He just missed the other ingredient: capital. Welcome to the era of techno-economical enslavement. Another thing: the man who got shot in Italy is a manager for a company (Ansaldo) tied to Finmeccanica (weapons). He's not a scientist despite his technical background. Again: people who shot the guy claimed themselves anarchists. Is it true? Or there's a message between the lines, considering the importance of the soon-to-be privatized companies?

    1. Re:Jacques Ellul - La technique (1960) by Pf0tzenpfritz · · Score: 1

      There's another message between the lines: The need for a pan-european police state to bring down the "Euro-Anarchist" terrorist threat that mostly Italian law-and-order-feaks keep hallucinating about...

      --
      Oh, the beautiful gloss of greality!
    2. Re:Jacques Ellul - La technique (1960) by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the era of techno-economical enslavement.

      Working for a paycheck and having technology everywhere is not the same as being enslaved.

      It's a meme to say "X is slavery", but that really diminishes the plight of real slaves, especially the ones who actually are slaves today.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  15. Too funny by kiriath · · Score: 1, Funny

    I find it most amusing that the Anarchists have an organization... In point of fact it is tough to really wrap my brain around Anarchists becoming united against anything.

    1. Re:Too funny by NEW22 · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing that is because your definition of Anarchism is different than the definition held by the people you are talking about. Under your definition (apparently the "Everybody does what they want! No rules!, No Hierarchy! Yay Chaos!" definition), their act of organizing would be absurd and un-anarchist. Under their definition, it is likely an ideology (or group of ideologies, libertarian socialism, anarcho-syndicalism, etc.) you can see some points to here and there, but just generally disagree with.

    2. Re:Too funny by kiriath · · Score: 1

      Well of course there is probably a real explanation, but you've got to admit the thought of a group of anti-establishment persons, creating an establishment of any sort is chuckle-worthy =D

    3. Re:Too funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      their act of organizing would be absurd and un-anarchist.

      Organizing wouldn't necessarily be absurd. But to organize someone must take the initiative to bring about change and convince others to do as he suggests, which goes against your definition of anarchy.

    4. Re:Too funny by lennier · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing that is because your definition of Anarchism is different than the definition held by the people you are talking about.

      That just means he's a really good anarchist and is doing it right!

      Your "definitions" of "words" are, like, thought control, man.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
  16. "The "hate science" line is just a line..." by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    And yet he uses it, adding the myth that all anarchists hate science to the myth that all anarchists advocate violence.

    "Why are are journalists jerks?" Don't be offended: I am under no illusion that all journalists are jerks. It's just a line.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  17. anarchists just dont blindly follow science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they support science that makes peoples lives better, they dont support science that makes corporations more exploitative.

  18. Its just a cover claim... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    for governments killing off scientist who are solving real world problems, so governments can continue fabricating their own dictatorships technology is undermining.
    Or that's one facet of application of the abstract word/term anarchist. For others see MSM

  19. Key phrase "self described" by ka9dgx · · Score: 1

    These people don't know what Anarchy really means, and they're just using it as cover for their own ends.

    If they would just describe themselves as Republican, they'd be a lot more accurate.

    Think of all the grief we hackers have taken over the past 30 years because of self-described "hackers"

  20. Scientists are anarchists by PiMuNu · · Score: 1

    I always thought scientists *are* anarchists. I mean, science is set up with small groups or individuals coming together to do stuff and then breaking up and doing other interesting things. Occasionally they come together to do big cool stuff (LHC), occasionally they lurk around doing wacky research into nonsense (philosophy (joke)), occasionally they do wacky research into nonsense that turns out to be useful (lasers)...

    1. Re:Scientists are anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always thought scientists *are* anarchists. I mean, science is set up with small groups or individuals coming together to do stuff and then breaking up and doing other interesting things. Occasionally they come together to do big cool stuff (LHC), occasionally they lurk around doing wacky research into nonsense (philosophy (joke)), occasionally they do wacky research into nonsense that turns out to be useful (lasers)...

      You nail it.

      Check out Paul Feyerabend's "Against method", I think you would enjoy it.

    2. Re:Scientists are anarchists by tomhath · · Score: 1

      Except that science depends on a very structured and hierarchical bureaucracy, be it university, government, or corporate. Scientists don't just hang around doing science with no goal, resources, or self-interest.

    3. Re:Scientists are anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Self-interest is rarely a motivator for scientists. If it were, we'd apply our big brains to getting rich. We don't need government for goals, either.

      Resources? Well, a government is a fine way of distributing those. Let's just not have an oppressive state structure, thanks.

    4. Re:Scientists are anarchists by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      Non sequitur. First sentence and second one, what's the link?

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
  21. Shooting in Genoa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "non-fatal shooting in Genoa in May of the head of a nuclear energy company" had nothing to do with science! I believe that it might be related to trade unions, to the business of Ansaldo. Ansaldo Energia is up for sale. It's certainly not an attack against science.

  22. First the anarchists by Ukab+the+Great · · Score: 2

    Came for the nanotechnologists,
    And I did not speak out because I was not a nanotechnologist.
    Then the anarchists came for the computer scientists,
    And I did not speak out because I was not a computer scientist.
    Then the anarchists came for the machinists,
    And I did not speak out because I was not a machinist.
    Then the anarchists came for the blacksmiths,
    And I did not speak out because I was not a blacksmith.
    Then the anarchists came for the farmers,
    And I did not speak out because I was not a farmer.
    Then the anarchists came for the people who whittled pointy sticks,
    And I did not speak out because I did not whittle pointy sticks.
    Then the anarchists came for the people who used rocks,
    And I did not speak out because I did not use rocks.
    Then they came for me,
    Which was okay because my cold dark cave was getting kind of boring anyway.

    1. Re:First the anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about when they came for anarchists?

      Because, frankly, that's a little more likely, don't you think?

  23. Further reading by Reasonable+Facsimile · · Score: 1

    Some good info here (especially the Green anarchism and Anarcho-naturism sections):
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchist_schools_of_thought

  24. Just say no to ocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A Technocracy just as bad as a Theocracy (if not worse) as the control structure that would be exerted could be absolute.

  25. the last time anarchism was on an uptick by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Interesting

    was the late 1800s. this was a period of workers demanding rights, as the gilded age saw the plutocrats consume all of the productivity of society

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_anarchism#The_First_International_and_Collectivist_Anarchism

    so now we see another uptick in anarchism, in a new gilded age, as worker's rights sink lower and lower and the predatory make off with vast sums of money

    it's a pendulum in history, swinging back and forth

    the next step, if we see historical parallels, is the rise of communism again

    of course, social darwinistic capitalism, and communism, are both absurd brutal ideologies, on either end of a spectrum. the intelligent ideology is the middle road: socialism with capitalist engines attached, or capitalism with social safety net. but the communist see any sort of capitalism as a vile evil, and the free market fundamentalists see any sort of common sense social policies: healthcare, education, etc., as a vile evil, and so the middle road does not prevail, depending upon the politics of the day. either one or the other extreme leads to suffering, and the pendulum experiences pressure to swing back the other way

    so, if the historical parallels play out, anarchism is really just the initial indicator of a change in direction of the pendulum, a sort of groping for some sense, what is the point of civilization? the point according to the predatory corporatists: enrichment of a moneyed class, is obviously not a valid meaning of existence. anarchists don't have the right answer, but they do have the right sense to know what is happening now as plutocrats gobble up everything is not right, the plutocrats enabled by this ridiculous quasireligious faith of free market fundamentalist fools who are blinded to the simple fact that markets without rules leads to dominance by a monopoly/ oligopoly, and society and the common man suffers

    the ideal would be a society that locks in some simple rules: social darwinistic capitalism, and communism, are two extremes that both destroy society. therefore, economic and social policies must always hew to a middle road. but we will never get this common sense, as long as the fools who fervently believe in the extremes of capitalism (on the upswing now, in the past dormant) or communism (dormant now, on the upswing in the past, and perhaps the future) are allowed to exert influence. until the fools on either end of the pendulum are clamped down on with governmental rules about the kinds of economic and social policies that can be passed, we will constantly suffer this historical pendulum swing back and forth, back and forth, creating nothing but pain for us all

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by khipu · · Score: 0

      so now we see another uptick in anarchism, in a new gilded age, as worker's rights sink lower and lower and the predatory make off with vast sums of money. it's a pendulum in history, swinging back and forth

      Yes, those poor American workers are richer than at any time in history, but the pendulum just keeps swinging back and forth... in your imagination.

    2. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      the last time anarchism was on an uptick [in Anarchism] was the late 1800s

      Wow, did you miss the 60s? You might want to reassess your theory there, because it seems to be based on facts that aren't quite true.....there have been other times as well.

      We aren't going to see another rise in communism unless you can find a way to do it without taking away people's liberty. And you can't do that.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    3. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      well, you can take away people's liberty by putting them in grinding poverty so the moneyed class can make even more $. that's where our current political climate is headed

      in a society where there is no route to get ahead, because somebody with lots of cash wants to make more, the sting and sourness and unfairness of that is going to lead people to believe in ideologies with communist principles. might i note, communism is just as bad as rapacious capitalism, and just as essentially stupid. the point is to find the happy middle road

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    4. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Wealth distribution is worse now than in the first gilded age. But don't worry, everything's OK...in your imagination.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    5. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wealth distribution isn't the issue. If the vast majority of citizens are comfortable and well fed it means the society has accumulated a great deal of wealth. The 99th percentile might control a large portion of it, but if there's still enough to go around the problem is mostly in your imagination.

      The GP claims there's an "uptick" in anarchism. I don't see it; a small number of activists is making noise (which is easy in the internet age). But the actual number of people who support the movement is negligible.

    6. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by tomhath · · Score: 1

      Grinding poverty? Where?

    7. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Wealth distribution isn't the issue.

      Wow, that made my jaw drop.

      The 99th percentile might control a large portion of it, but if there's still enough to go around the problem is mostly in your imagination.

      Now it's hit the floor. Most people (even in the 1st world) are living paycheck to paycheck, and those in the US are in a constant game of financial Russian roulette thanks to their health care system. Call me a selfish hedon but "not literally living like a hobo" (aka "comfortable and well fed") isn't good enough to make me not see a problem with a tiny number of people hoarding most of mankind's wealth and productivity to themselves.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    8. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by khipu · · Score: 1

      Wealth distribution is worse now than in the first gilded age. But don't worry, everything's OK...in your imagination.

      Ah, yes, because it's so much better if everybody is dirt poor, but at least they are equal!

    9. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by khipu · · Score: 0

      Most people (even in the 1st world) are living paycheck to paycheck

      Do you actually believe this bullshit, or do you get paid to spread it?

    10. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Well I don't have to ask whether you look things up before you accuse others of lying or just fly off the handle immediately:

      US:
      http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/411333-donald-ingram/98306-nearly-8-in-10-americans-now-living-paycheck-to-paycheck

      Canada:
      http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/economy/six-in-10-live-pay-to-pay/article1705096/Can't

      Can't find any numbers for Europe but I'm sure they're much better off.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    11. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only gilded cage is that holding out poor immigrants from the first world.

    12. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I think you might be envisioning a more negative future than is warranted by evidence. I mean, for comparison and contrast, do you really think it will be worse than the Great Depression?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    13. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by khipu · · Score: 1

      First, your numbers are bogus. Self-reported subjective impressions from biased samples do not constitute facts about the state of the economy.

      Second, unless you are at the very bottom of the income distribution, living paycheck-to-paycheck depends on your choice of spending and savings patterns, not on your income. With much less (equivalent) income, people in Germany, France, Spain, or Switzerland have savings rates of 10-15%. You have the option of adopting the spending patterns of people in the decile below you and saving 10% of your income, or the spending patterns of Europeans in the same decile as you and saving two to three times that.

      And your idea that "a tiny number of people hoarding most of mankind's wealth" is true, but not in the way you present it. If you are American or European, you are part of the "tiny number of people" hoarding the wealth of this world, so spare the world your self-righteous indignation about the fact that there are some people even richer than you. Furthermore, the people who are wealthy within the US keep changing over the years; being in the top 1% has about a half-life of 10 years in the US.

    14. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      First, your numbers are bogus. Self-reported subjective impressions from biased samples do not constitute facts about the state of the economy.

      So instead of relying on numbers which could be more scientifically rigorous, we're going to go with...your hunch?

      The rest of your post indicates that you are simply happy to be an exploited serf. I guess we'll have to agree to disagree on that.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    15. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the next step, if we see historical parallels, is the rise of communism again"

      More optimistically, we see a rise of a (new) labor movement such as the one that achieved so much primarily in western Europe and the US.
      Here's hoping it does not get co-opted by the plutocrats as it did back then in Russia and China.

      "communism ... brutal ideology"

      "communism" got smeared just as anarchism, hippies, socialism, liberal, occupy - by the those who stand to loose so much when the labor movement wins.

      Have a look at the political science definition (as opposed to the popular meaning) of communism (see the Communist Manifesto) and tell me what's brutal about it. Unrealistic maybe, but the ideology is 'brutal' only to the plutocrats. The brutal dictatorship that it became is not the ideology nor is it inevitable - except insofar hat these movements tend to be subverted and co-opted by those who oppose the interests of the common man. But if that should stop us, then we might as well not even try.

    16. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by khipu · · Score: 1

      So instead of relying on numbers which could be more scientifically rigorous, we're going to go with...your hunch?

      Your basic premise is wrong; it doesn't matter what numbers we use. "Living from paycheck to paycheck" is just not a sign of economic privation. Donald Trump was "living from paycheck to paycheck" for a while, but that paycheck just happened to be $300000/month.

      The rest of your post indicates that you are simply happy to be an exploited serf. I guess we'll have to agree to disagree on that.

      If you don't want to save, fine, then don't. I really don't care how you choose to wreck your own life, it's a free country. But if you want to tax me because you live a financially irresponsible life, that's where I draw the line.

      And don't pretend that you represent the exploited peoples of this world. If you live in the first world, you are the exploiter, not the exploited, no matter what your income is.

    17. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Actually I don't live in the first world. I could be worse off, but that's always true. For every person but one, there is someone to point to and say "he is worse off." I just don't use that fact to excuse all exploitation.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    18. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by khipu · · Score: 1

      I just don't use that fact to excuse all exploitation.

      I'm not excusing "all" exploitation, I just think moral judgments like that are pointless. I do not believe that Bill Gates, Donald Trump, or your average wall street type "deserve" their riches as human beings. I don't believe that I "deserve" to make so much more money than someone in a third world country. I just think that all attempts to redistribute the wealth differently by fiat or force leads to even more injustice than already exists, and that both your and my best choice of improving our situation is to take responsibility for our own lives instead about complaining about inequality and exploitation.

    19. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by eriqk · · Score: 1

      Wow, did you miss the 60s?

      The 60s were all about Marxism.

    20. Re:the last time anarchism was on an uptick by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Do some research next time before posting, dude.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  26. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why do anarchists hate science? (Score:-1)
    Because they are idiots. My proof? They wouldn't be Anarchists if they weren't mentally challenged.

    Parent troll is not entirely wrong. There is a stream of anarchist philosophy about the benefits of living without a government. That philosophy is completely ignored by the vast majority of people who call themselves "anarchists".

    Anarchists in fact, as opposed to theory, are violent braindead hooligans who are only interested in destroying whatever mainstream society finds beneficial, either as a protest against the very notion of trade or just to show how tough they are. "Anarchy" has become a tribal identity of war against the people for no specific cause, with the claimed cause fluidly changing to whatever is trendy at the moment. "Anarchists" happily wave Communist flags, endorse Islamic fascist movements like the Palestinians and the Iranian government, promote foreign state-controlled media as "alternative", and shout totalitarian slogans without any sense of cognitive dissonance. "Anarchists" protest the social influence of megacorporations by smashing the windows of locally owned coffee shops and Chinese restaurants. "Anarchists" oppose it when the police lawfully and peacefully arrest people who commit crimes, because their "FUCK DA POLICE" attitude requires them to oppose anything the police do whether it is good or bad. "Anarchists" oppose the notion of copyright but get angry if anybody republishes information from Wikileaks or takes GPLed code closed-source. "Anarchists" support the "occupation" and destruction of Berkeley's research into sustainable, organic, non-GMO farming, and if you ask why the hell did they do that, they'll say they destroyed the organic farm to promote sustainable, organic, non-GMO farming.

    Ever seen an anarchist protest? Ever read an anarchist website? It is all agitprop rhetoric and questionable or easily disprovable facts. They're idiots.

  27. Who says they're anarchists? by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    Who says they're anarchists? The dude in Genoa could easily have been shot by his wifes secret boyfriend. The only way to get ALL the money is if he's killed... but they needed to make it look like some crazy people killed him... oh, I know... anarchists!

  28. Please define your terms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many of these comments seem to indicate a similar problem: not really knowing what an "Anarchist" is. Obviously it's a catch-all term for a wide variety of different ideas all loosely described as anti-establishment. Under this we could fit nihilism, armed revolt, and chaos, but we could also probably fit being anti-social, rock and roll, Ghandi's early years, and whenever a soldier refuses to follow orders.

    I don't think the term is meaningless, but it's similar to how "hacker" in the popular press applies to a very broad spectrum: some could be best friend and some you should avoid like a disease.

  29. Let's call terrorists 'Hackers'! by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Why not, it would make as much sense (except it doesn't serve a current political agenda).

    If you want to read what actual anarchists think, try here.

    Personally, I think it's a stupid term, but there are some who cling to it.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  30. why not read the source? by khipu · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Bakunin pretty much lays it out for you:

    Science in the true sense of that word, real science, is at this time within reach of only an insignificant minority. For example, among us in Russia, how many accomplished savants are there in a population of eighty million? Probably a thousand are engaged in science, but hardly more than a few hundred could be considered first-rate, serious scientists. If science were to dictate the laws, the overwhelming majority, many millions of men, would be ruled by one or two hundred experts. Actually it would be even fewer than that, because not all of science is concerned with the administration of society. This would be the task of sociology – the science of sciences – which presupposes in the case of a well-trained sociologist that he have an adequate knowledge of all the other sciences. How many such people are there in Russia – in all Europe? Twenty or thirty – and these twenty or thirty would rule the world? Can anyone imagine a more absurd and abject despotism?

    It is almost certain that these twenty or thirty experts would quarrel among themselves, and if they did agree on common policies, it would be at the expense of mankind. The principal vice of the average specialist is his inclination to exaggerate his own knowledge and deprecate everyone else’s. Give him control and he will become an insufferable tyrant. To be the slave of pedants – what a destiny for humanity! Give them full power and they will begin by performing on human beings the same experiments that the scientists are now performing on rabbits and dogs.

    We must respect the scientists for their merits and achievements, but in order to prevent them from corrupting their own high moral and intellectual standards, they should be granted no special privileges and no rights other than those possessed by everyone – for example, the liberty to express their convictions, thought, and knowledge. Neither they nor any other special group should be given power over others. He who is given power will inevitably become an oppressor and exploiter of society.

    (NB: I'm not endorsing Bakunin, just relating what one of the first anarchists had to say about it. Keep in mind that he was reacting to communism, a political system that claims to use scientific principles as the basis of government.)

    1. Re:why not read the source? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I'm not endorsing Bakunin

      Thank God, I was wondering what would happen if such a prestigious voice as khipu endorsed Bakunin.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:why not read the source? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Khipu's endorsement is pretty important. I believe he was a Pharaoh in the IV dynasty or thereabouts. Around the time of Khufu I'd say.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    3. Re:why not read the source? by khipu · · Score: 1

      Thank God, I was wondering what would happen if such a prestigious voice as khipu endorsed Bakunin.

      I see: you still can't read beyond elementary school level.

    4. Re:why not read the source? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I probably can't.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:why not read the source? by lennier · · Score: 1

      The principal vice of the average specialist is his inclination to exaggerate his own knowledge and deprecate everyone else’s. Give him control and he will become an insufferable tyrant.

      Hey, I didn't know Bakunin read Slashdot comments!

      We must respect the scientists for their merits and achievements, but in order to prevent them from corrupting their own high moral and intellectual standards, they should be granted no special privileges and no rights other than those possessed by everyone – for example, the liberty to express their convictions, thought, and knowledge. Neither they nor any other special group should be given power over others.

      I guess he would have made a pretty good Wikipedia editor too. How is Citizendium going, by the way?

      But seriously, he does seem to have been right on the mark there. The Bolsheviks stuffed a lot of things in the name of big science.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
  31. "hates science" is not a line, it's propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's a clue: X doesn't hate science. X hates CERTAIN [applied] sciences. So do you. You simply hate different [applied] sciences than X.

    Perhaps you hate the applied science of chemical warfare, but not enough to kill someone who just created breathable dick-scabs to drop on your hometown. Maybe you hate the applied science of high-speed stock trading, but not enough to write a virus to stop it. Maybe you hate the man who can use science to allow the government (or worse -- a false religion) to compel your neurons to obey them (one that doesn't exist yet, except for the paranoid), does that mean you hate SCIENCE? No -- it means you hate what some men are using science to do. Some eager beavers are willing to kill and die for that hatred. Likely, there are things you are willing to kill/die for, because you are human. These men honestly believe that nuclear power, nanotech, etc. are legitimate threats to mankind, and will stake their lives (and, unfortunately, the lives of others) on that belief.

    The minute someone says "X hates science", stop listening to them. They are attempting to manipulate you, and they are likely being manipulated.

  32. Selective anarchy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few weeks ago Obama made a trip to New York courting business executives for donations. There were no protests.

    A few days ago Romney was in Connecticut courting business executives for donations. Occupy and MoveOn organized protests. Any surprise that these "anarchist" organizations that are funded by George Soros only turn out at Republican gatherings?

    1. Re:Selective anarchy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple, these groups aren't anarchists.

  33. Moronic question by Pond823 · · Score: 1

    Here, let me fix that for you. Why do *some* anarchists hate *some* science. The original question was in a similar vein to : why do slashdotters hate sausages?

    1. Re:Moronic question by Pond823 · · Score: 1

      why do slashdotters hate sausages?

      Because they're bigger than their dicks.

      Well there is that :)

  34. A History by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone who has read the writings of Derrick Jensen or the Unibomber will understand the feelings these people have towards technology. Namely this feeling is a love for nature, the natural world, or the way things used to be. They fear that science will transform the world into something unrecognizable or worse, something irreversible.

    It may or may not be a coordinated movement, but it is a coordinated ideology. Look at oil drilling, fracking, nuclear power plants, and other scientific endeavors that have changed our landscape and have the potential to ruin many habitats. These are not simply "anarchists" but something different altogether. These are radical and militant environmentalists.

    They use technology as a means to an end, rather as an end in itself. They appear to "embrace" technology because it is more useful to use the tools of the master to dismantle the master's house, so to speak.

  35. "Anarchists Are Idiots?" Get The Popcorn, Sally... by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They're idiots.

    Of course they are. (Actually, anyone who uses the word "hacktivist" with a straight face pretty much is as well, but I digress...) But ever since Alan Moore made mass murder romantic with a comic book and iconic Halloween mask, geeks have had a soft spot for confused and cowardly killers who hide in crowds. So this discussion -- Anarchists Hate Science! -- promises to be an entertaining one.

    It'll be kind of like a discussion on "Religious Fundamentalists Found to Be Early Open Source Adopters!"

     

  36. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please, tell me those quotation marks are there to connote irony.

  37. The Attacks and Raymond Kurzweil by Brewster+Jennings · · Score: 1

    If 'Anarchist' attacks against scientists are on the rise, wouldn't this be further validation of Raymond Kurzweil's predictions? I seem to recall a newspaper article recently citing a lack of anti-technology violence as one piece of evidence questioning Kurzweil's accuracy.

  38. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by tmosley · · Score: 2, Insightful

    mises.org is an anarchist website. Find me someone stupid there.

  39. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The funniest thing in the world is that people think they know what's going on, while accepting intermediaries for versions of events, that have a vested stake in the narrative. When this is explained to them in any way, the situation is dismissed as "conspiracy theory" or "wingnuttery".

    Have you ever considered these "Science Hating Anarchists" to be targeted assassinations by corporate/state actors who choose to smear an "anti-state" movement - which almost doesn't actually exist? :-)

    Operation Gladio
    Operation Paperclip
    Operation Mockingbird

    Those are just a few of the "limited hangouts", admissions that hide greater sins. Get yourself at least a little true skepticism!

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  40. Wrong to you too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Anarchism is generally defined as the political philosophy which holds the state to be undesirable, unnecessary, and harmful,[1][2] or alternatively as opposing authority and hierarchical organization in the conduct of human relations.[3][4][5][6][7][8] Proponents of anarchism, known as "anarchists", advocate stateless societies based on non-hierarchical[3][9][10] voluntary associations."

    That is the definition of anarchism (see wiki). The one youn gave is the idealized one teenies have. The sad reality is that without hirarchy and governement we are indeed all equal in "rights" : we have all NONE. Which means that it then fall down on the law of the strongest, the one with the msot resource which can build an association and beat the shit out of anybody making an obstacle to him/her : indeed since there is no law no right nobody can oppose or punish without suffisent strength. that is the truth of anarchism not the ideal description you gave.


    Back on topic : I met a lot of green which attacked scientist, but rather than "damage" the reputation of their group describe themselves as anarchist. Although there are those which do not even bother to do that like the Terrorist group ALF.

  41. Read up, please. by seandiggity · · Score: 1

    There *might be* more than one scientist in the bunch.

    Yes, there are violent people who call themselves anarchists. There are anarchists who oppose a caricature of science (in my experience, they're much-confused about the history of science, especially the Enlightenment). Ask yourself these questions: How much violence has been done by self-proclaimed Christians and capitalists? How many Christians and capitalists have tried to attack or twist science?

    Although "anarchist" has become a byword for "bombthrower", it derives from anti-labor propaganda in the 19th Century and (apparently) continues up until today.

    And let's not forget that anarchism may be much closer to the heart of the free software/free culture movement than many would like to admit.

    --
    Geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won't leave you alone.-rms
  42. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by cgt · · Score: 1

    Damnit! I just spent my last mod point on modding something funny. Sorry buddy, no "insightful" for you this time. (not sarcastic, in case you were wondering)

  43. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    mises.org is an anarchist website. Find me someone stupid there.

    They nearly all are? They're stuck in completely obsolete, refuted and hopelessly debunked perspectives in economics. You'll arguably find the occasional insightful thought, mind you, but as a whole the discourse on that site is baseless hogwash. Say, 99% ideology.

    If you want to see more recent and up to date economics works, look into what the circuitists have been up to in the past 20 years or so -- in particular Steve Keen from the university of Sydney, whose YouTube channel I cannot recommend enough. His focus lies in approaching monetary flows as dynamic phenomenons using double-entry book keeping accounting methods, and it should make very good sense to any scientist worth his salt.

  44. He hates these cans!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Never ascribe to [insert conspiracy motivations here] what can be explained by incompetence.

    Or, put in another way:

    He hates these cans!"

  45. PROTIP: They are religious fundamentalists! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are only portrayed by (US) media as "anarchists", because they are full of those same types too.

    *Captain Obvious flies away*

  46. They're ecologists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously... Why call these guys anarchists? They ecologists. Or Eco terrorists, if you want to call them something with a negative connotation. Nuclear? Nanotechnology? It screams precaution principle.

  47. Wrong by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

    Nearly all apes are perfectly capable of conspiring against each other. Even the ones taht don't walk upright.

  48. Re:"Anarchists Are Idiots?" Get The Popcorn, Sally by Coeurderoy · · Score: 1

    There are anarchist who seek ways to make the society work without being more or less a tyranny of a more or less permeable oligarchy.
    Then there are useful idiots who went some frustration and give the authorities a tool to discredit their opponents.

    About Religious Fundamentalists as Open Source Adopters in many cases you'll see that the same blindness that makes them fundamentalist means that they prefer to use pirated copies of proprietary software. Free Software activist even when somewhat blind are far to vocal about irking things like freedom of expression, tolerance, etc... and not only are proprietary software vendor completely uninterested in any ethical issue, but pirating their software enables the fundies to feel righteous since they are "hitting the enemy for the cause...." (till they happen to be forced to pay...)

  49. Guilty by association is not usefull by Coeurderoy · · Score: 1

    The full name of the Nazi party was Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei.
    So if you imply that because a group claims to be an Anarchist cell attacks one specific person who is NOT a scientist should taint all people who present themselves as anarchist of with anarchist sympathies you can just as well hang the shoah on:
    - All nationalist (called patriots in the US)
    - All socialist (from "new labour" to "North Korea")
    - All German (even the one born 50 years after the period and whose parents where opponents of the regime)
    - All Workers (much better not to work anyway....)

    First item of interest: the victim most probably did have a scientific training and maybe did research at some point in his career, but currently he is the CEO of a component provider in the nuclear industry, nor doing nuclear physics research.
    So if somebody shoots a gun shop owner should the headline be "irate client hate physicians/mathematicians specialized in ballistics" ?

    So what is really remarkable is the lack of depth of the article.
    i think I'll go to night to pee on an official building, and will send tomorrow a letter saying "europe sucks, signed patriot", and hopefully the NewScientist will publish an "in depth" study asking "why does All US hates All Europe and want to dissolve it in urine"...

  50. News Always Lies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whenever any violent action takes place these days, you can bet it is nothing but an orchestration courtesy of the PTB and the secret services or wind-up madmen.

    NOBODY is trying to make a statement through any terror act which can be ascribed to any dogma at all.

    It's nothing but a means of injecting fear into society so that control measures can be clamped down.

  51. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Coeurderoy · · Score: 1

    Foo are Idiots, My proof? they would not be Foos if they weren't mentally challenged...
    - hum ambiguous
    Creative Geniuses are Idiots, My proof ? they would not be creative geniuses if they weren't mentally challenged...
    - yeah that makes sense, must be a real scientific proof!

  52. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by pxc · · Score: 1

    A few friends of mine who are philosophically-grounded, kind of hyperliterate anarchists have adopted alternative names for their positions because of those associations. 'Anti-statist' is a good one. A moderate friend of mine with strong anarchist sympathies calls himself a 'minarchist'.

    I actually have seen a handful of anarchist protests. Here in Arizona, they're pretty recognizable because they march together in all black clothing, a loose sort of uniform. Sometimes anarcho-communists and anarcho-syndicalists are included, but I don't think I've personally ever seen them with a communist flag. 'Round here they serve an especially nice function as (often armed) counter-protesters during Neo-Nazi rallies, to whom the police are sometimes, astonishingly sympathetic (although most of the time it's pretty clear that they're just trying to keep the peace and prevent the white supremacists from being injured by angry crowds).

  53. Exactly by br00tus · · Score: 1

    Exactly. I'm not sure why the new Slashdot heads are on an "anarchists hate science" kick. A similar story was posted a month ago.

    The scare headline in the blurb is "violence by self-described anarchists against scientists or scientific establishments". Then we read the story and see this happened not to a scientist, but to a business executive. "Scientific establishment" conjures up people in white lab coats studying the Higgs boson, the person shot was head of a military contractor. He was head of a company that made weapons that kill people. None of this is mentioned.

    I mean, this is straight propaganda. The guy is a business executive for Finmeccanica, which makes guns, tanks, nuclear stuff, and that sort of thing. He lives by the sword, and got a bullet in his leg - maybe a bullet made by his company. What does Slashdot say - "violence by self-described anarchists against scientists or scientific establishments".

    If people are so concerned about violence against nuclear establishments, the US and Israel unleashed Stuxnet against Iran's nuclear program. A program the U.S. has endorsed in the past. Nuclear scientists in Iran have not been shot in the leg but actually killed by foreign intelligence services, probably Israel. We see multiple outraged headlines on Slashdot when some nuclear executive for an Italian military contractor is shot in the leg, why don't we see outraged headlines about the Iranian nuclear scientists who are being assassinated?

  54. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by mapkinase · · Score: 1

    >endorse Islamic fascist movements

    Everytime you, whose name is Legion, are using an ideological slur against Islamic political movement by comparing it to an almost universally negatively perceived movement I immediately notice positive things about that movement.

    --
    I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
  55. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by tmosley · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Up to date" economists have brought us to the bring of the oblivion that those "baseless hogwash" policies lifted us from so long ago.

    Modern economists are the very incarnation of the term "baffle them with bullshit". It's all lies hidden in complex math that literally no-one understands. You can prove this empirically by asking a set of so called modern economists to predict the future of the economy given the current state of affairs. They will come up with dozens of proposals, and all of them will be wrong. Ask any number of Austrian economists to do the same and you will get a much more unified answer, and it will be right most of the time. Once the event they predicted has occured, you will be able to trace it back to the reasons they used to make the initial claim. This is why Ron Paul was able to talk about the housing bubble in 2002, and why all those "Peter Schiff was right" videos are so popular.

  56. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  57. Not a scientist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The head of a nuclear energy company is not a scientist. He is a ruthless capitalist reaping immediate finanical reward and leaving behind an unfunded liability and environmental destruction that will be a burden and risk to thousands of generations to follow, if they're unlucky enough to be born into the radioactive wasteland that the nuclear energy companies are generating.

    1. Re:Not a scientist by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      Clearly you're not a scientist, otherwise you'd know how stupid you sound.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
  58. mises is a ultra rich people's theology site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only one group of ultra rich people. With an organization, goals and operatives. A recruiting and an indoctrination process.

    Chuffed at not being the Anarchists in Charge.

    Complete with a dead messiah. An incomprehensible manifesto. And a bunch of priests willing to interpret it for you.

    Try arguing with them. Try getting even a response.

    Follow the links, Build a matrix of related and especially the loosely related sites that occur along with it. Follow the money. Figure out who they support in the upcoming presidential election.

    Every school of thought, every religion, ever political group is of, by and for the 0.01%

    "The Buddha's father was King Suddhodana, the leader of Shakya clan."

    "Karl's father, Herschel Marx, was middle-class and relatively wealthy: the family owned a number of Moselle vineyards;"

    LOL! A vineyard owner is only "Moderately Wealthy" according to wikipedia.

    I have yet to find one influential thinker or writer that did not come from the upper upper crust.

  59. Wrong question by DL117 · · Score: 1

    The real question is: Why do people who hate science call themselves anarchists? True anarchist philosophy is about the individuals right to do what they want without hurting others,and the groups obligation to support the individual, see anarcho/libertarian socialism. What is really happening here is the "earth first" and PETA type morons shouting anarchist to get attention. As someone who considers himself an anarcho-socialist, I find these guys infuriatingly dumb.

  60. it's primitivists, not anarchists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    FFS. A bunch of premitivists with a Zerzan induced concept of 'lets all magically move to stonage with 7B people' claim to be anarchist becouse the've no idea what it actually stands for (self organised *working class*). Just drop the anarchist part...

    1. Re:it's primitivists, not anarchists by risom · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Anarchism subsumes a pretty wide political spectrum [1]. For those inclined to read more: John Zerzan's assay Future Primitive appears to me as the most widely cited publication. Wikipedia also has a nice introduction in the article anarcho-primitivism.

      [1] = Still personally I would not include primitivism, simply because they archive the stateless society by abolishing society as a whole. With that reasoning killing the whole population is anarchist, too, because without population there is no society and therefore no state...

  61. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sorry, but what did that reply have to do with my request? Kudos on the points, I suppose, but for me it was less than helpful. Are you saying that the OP's use of quotes was to suggest that they weren't talking about card-carrying (so to speak) anarchists? That's what I was hoping for.

  62. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by composer777 · · Score: 1

    Can you say something less superficial, with even the slightest amount of substance? Specifically, what is your issue with it? You don't have to tell us all of your problems with it, just name maybe the top 3-5.

  63. Re:"Anarchists Are Idiots?" Get The Popcorn, Sally by icebraining · · Score: 2

    Alan Moore did nothing of the sort. The V from the comics is shown to have very personal motivations for his killings.

    The Wachowski brothers, on the other hand, achieved that by writing a completely twisted version as a screenplay, which loses all the context of the character and of country's situation.

    The central question is, is this guy right? Or is he mad? What do you, the reader, think about this? Which struck me as a properly anarchist solution. I didn't want to tell people what to think, I just wanted to tell people to think and consider some of these admittedly extreme little elements, which nevertheless do recur fairly regularly throughout human history. (...)

    [The movie] has been "turned into a Bush-era parable by people too timid to set a political satire in their own country.... It's a thwarted and frustrated and largely impotent American liberal fantasy of someone with American liberal values standing up against a state run by neoconservatives â" which is not what the comic V for Vendetta was about. It was about fascism, it was about anarchy, it was about England.

    -- Alan Moore

  64. The Answer is simple by Dorthy+Fischer · · Score: 1

    Like the war on drugs and like the war terrorism there is an unseen war and its against control networks. The people in the know that dont understand what the problem is are who this post is directed. "Anarchrists" in western canada sounds more like the Miyazaki, Yakuza. This entire thread was meant to bait me into posting this. Control networks promote homan research, eugenics and aid in a secret euthanasia industry that the pentagon keeps secure under wraps. Outside of canada these acts are simply imitations to show the support of the yakuza by the establishment. This is not a political and intellectual point and these things are real. Why would i deliver this message? I invented something so importland that no one in the government can sanction me. I was psychic from the original cerebral team (codename bobbi fischer). Dorthy Fischer greets to f00

  65. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by gerddie · · Score: 1

    Mises was not an anarchist hence it is very unlikely that mises.org is an anarchist web site.

  66. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1

    If I had mod points I'd mod you up. Steven Keen has some very interesting and troubling things to say about modern economic theory. No wonder we are in such a mess, and I bet they don't adopt his sensible strategy until it is way too late.

    --
    Bitter and proud of it.
  67. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by InspectorGadget1964 · · Score: 1

    Rather than idiots, I would say they never had the privilege of a proper education (Not schooling, but education in the Mark Twain way). The same applies to religious fanatics, specially creationists. A proper education focuses on reasoning instead of just memorizing a list of facts that lack relevance in the real world. If we want people to stop behaving in a violent way, teach them the consequences of both being violent and being civilized. I know is a long term solution, but educational systems (Feels like an oxymoron) have been decaying for decades, in the process producing automats rather than individuals.

  68. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Johann+Lau · · Score: 1

    They wouldn't be Anarchists if they weren't mentally challenged.

    Awwww! Isn't it cute how you're projecting :D

    Also See Noam Chomsky, or Gustav Landauer.

  69. This is why anarchists hate science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anarchists hate science because scientific discoveries lead to the creation of new businesses, and anarchists hate businesses and rich people.

  70. Why do intellectuals hate spine? by Johann+Lau · · Score: 1

    Riddle me this, you smug clowns.

  71. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, yes, fascists at least ran trains on time.

    Islamists, on the other hand? They don't have trains of their own, because train is a work of the infidels designed to confuse the mind of the believers. Besides, with all the fire and ash, it's clearly run by Shaitan. A believer would use a horse or a donkey - Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) himself was recorded using both on many occasions, so it's clearly not haraam.

  72. Maybe these attackers are LYING... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looking at the choice of targets -- nothing stands out to me as the usual polluting, destructive and evil technologies that one might want to attack. Nothing that creates a super computer, weapons, or toxic waste.

    So what if this is just corporate espionage taking out a competitor, and they find it convenient to blame "anarchist kids" so that the authorities aren't looking for a major company or country.

  73. @dingo_kinznerhook - Re:Anarchy is a conspiracy... by nukenerd · · Score: 1

    In "The Man Who Was Thursday" by G.K. Chesterton, a detective infiltrates an anarchist meeting and finds out that he is a more persuasive anarchist than the anarchist leaders, and gets elected leader.

    At the risk of Godwin's Law, I will remark that Hitler did a similar thing. He joined the early form of the Nazi party as a spy for the German Army. This was just after WWI and it was a revolutionary underground movement at the time. He was persuaded to its cause and ended up as its leader. The rest is history.

  74. "Transhumanists" terrorists too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Check this shit out: a bunch of trans-humanists who think artificial intelligence is the biggest threat ever, so they want to slow it down by working out plans in detail to sabotage Intel. You gotta keep in mind that nerds are nuts, and engineers are terrorists alot more than other people.

  75. Maybe it's the Tea Party elite by elucido · · Score: 1

    Anarchist is a worthless term except to attract attention on fliers. Ancap, ancom, ansoc, syndacilists, mutalists, illegalists, they all have claims to be anarchists. Historically ansocs and ancaps have the best claim to the term with ansocs foaming at the mouth and calling ancaps heretics whenever they call themselves anarchists without adjectives. It's all rather hilarious. Though, I will weigh in and say that ancaps seem to be the less zany and ancoms are completely disconnected from reality.

    There are members in the Tea Party who don't like science and who don't believe in evolution.

  76. And what of the Tea Party? by elucido · · Score: 1

    Are they not right wing anarchists? They hate the government too!

  77. They are TERRORISTS. by elucido · · Score: 1

    Why can't we just call them that?

  78. Why blame the scientists? by elucido · · Score: 1

    The scientists are just doing a job just like everyone else. They don't run Monsanto. They aren't the shareholders.

  79. Maybe it has to do with Iran and foreign intel by elucido · · Score: 1

    I think it is a little more complex than this. When things are going on that we do not like, there are many ways to deal with the conflict. In the US, for instance, we have a process to deal with problems using non-violent means. We can get laws passed, we can appeal to the courts, we can have people arrested who break the laws. Of course no everyone believes in this process, and the only mean of change for them is violence, terrorism, intimidation. For instance, many religious folks do not seem to have a lot of faith in the process of democracy, so the resort to violence, shooting doctors, intimidating people who disagree with them, calling such people names and ridiculing beliefs that do not agree with their own. They live in fear of those of think differently.

    So this is where I think we are with the anarchists. Obviously these are people who do not base their actions on the process of law and order. If an anarchist does not like the implications of nanotechnology, and I agree some of those implications are frightening, they cannot just go and work within a framework of government diplomacy. They, presumably, cannot even take confort of some blowhard at the pulpit or on a rooftop condemning everyone who does not follow a dictatorial path. So what is the option? Violence, killing, intimidation. As was said, it is not science per se. But it is not corporations either. It is simply egotistical people who cannot imagine that they are so unimportant that everyone would not automatically agree with all of their beliefs.

    Be realistic, that process takes a very long time and doesn't work if the elites in your hometown or your nation don't support what you want to do.

    To put it simply, the political process is broken. That still doesn't mean it's smart to go killing scientists but honestly this is probably happening because Israel or some other country with an intelligence agency was targeting Iranian scientists. So I'm not shocked that scientists around the world are being targeted now. US allied countries started killing scientists who were doing things the US government didn't like and I wouldn't be surprised if these anarchists aren't controlled by a foreign government.

  80. These anarchists could be Iranian agents afterall by elucido · · Score: 1

    Consider the fact that the US or Israel or US allies targeted Iranian scientists. Now scientists around the world are being targeted.

    Who opened pandora's box?

  81. Slavery is the most stable form of government. by elucido · · Score: 1

    Anarchy is the least stable form of government. As soon as one person says "Hey, let's...(x,y.z)" and some others say "OK", it's broken; there is now a leader and followers.

    So let's chip everyone and make them all into drones. The crime rate would drop to 0%. Everyone would be made to agree with the government or their heart plugs would be pulled.

  82. Exactly. It's slave mentality vs anarchists. by elucido · · Score: 1

    And anyone who is a libertarian of any sort hates most of all the slave mentality. Nothing causes more suffering than the slave mentality. It's completely counter-intuitive to want to be a slave and it's also completely irrational.

    Imagine how much better your life could be when you're in control of it vs not being in control.

  83. Who says they weren't killed by foreign agents by elucido · · Score: 1

    Scientists typically are the kind of people who would be targeted in a war scenario with Iran. Why aren't we considering that angle?

  84. Well, at least the wingnut conservatives have stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, at least the wingnut conservatives have stopped hating science.

    Or maybe they are trying to give anarchism a bad name, would not be the first time in history.

  85. "You blaspheme!" by Hartree · · Score: 1

    I must admit, I'm kind of amused about getting modded "troll" for this.

    Some anarchists have apparently discovered the concept of "blasphemy". Ah well. Religions beat you there by several thousand years. :)

  86. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by eriqk · · Score: 1

    mises.org is an anarchist website.

    Anarchism is anti-capitalist. Somehow I doubt the folks over at mises.org are anti-capitalist.

  87. Kropotkin? Damn You! by turgid · · Score: 1
  88. Re:Why do anarchists hate science? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What are you going on about? Anarchism is anti-capitalist.