My reasoning is more about how fascism and similar forms of authoritarianism form, because overwhelmingly they usurp existing mechanisms of power, which lets them achieve the appearance of popularity with a much smaller proportion of the population than trying to build an authoritarian movement from scratch.TGLS wrote: ↑Thu Sep 15, 2022 1:51 pm
If they haven't existed in an appreciable scale of time or size, I think you're assuming things if you think they're more capable of resisting authoritarianism. Besides that, I think they still haven't resolved the contradiction of needing something resembling a government to handle the handing out of resources (according to need/labour/etc), and the total rejection of anything resembling a government.
But I will also freely grant that one form of existing mechanism a fascist can usurp is provisional governments formed in the wake of revolutionary movements (see also Stalin), so it's not like there's some sort of Grand Path to Utopia here. Rather, I think of Anarchy as a theoretical ideal state, and crafting society to more closely resemble that state is the only proper goal we can have whether or not the end state is actually achievable.
(Your other statement is based on an assumption that isn't really falsifiable, that the hoarding of resources and urge toward hierarchy as insolvable aspects of human nature. We could as easily suppose that these things are maladapted remnants of being raised in artificial scarcity and within fierce immovable hierarchies in the first place. But like, you can't *test* either so we'd just be sitting here throwing assumptions and what ifs at one another)