anarcho-ist, liker of fediverse
This is my lemmy profile, follow me @dantescanline@autonomous.zone for microblogging
the simple or flavorful use of ‘authority’ usually just means someone is well respected on a topic “She’s an authority on electrical motors” or that they posses some leadership qualities and are well liked.
the second and more dictionary definition of authority is authorization to rule. literally to dominate others because they are seen as legitimate.
your example of a club is a good test ground for these differences. it’s up to you to run your club, make agreements with other members and share responsibilities even if people are happy to let you decide things or do most of the work. but your club doesn’t have any claim to legitimacy, to true authority, because it doesn’t seek to control ALL activities of that type. in the case of government, it very much does claim authority over the entire nation, to determine who can move where, who can work where and how, who must fight and who must be put to death.
there’s no competition allowed with a structure like government. either obey or resist and face consequences. i’d much prefer a world of overlapping autonomous ‘clubs’ whose members decide for themselves than a world divided up by the greediest and most violent mafias.
From my perspective “necessary authority” is a meaningless phrase. Authority is always justified to those who support it, and unjustified to those suffering under it. For example, the authority of a particular country to enforce it’s borders is “justified” in order to preserve those borders. The authority of a catholic priest is “necessary” to uphold the values of the church against sin and pollution of the faith. But if you don’t believe in those institutions then the justification is very silly! Anarchists just take this one step further and realize there is no single true authorized power structure.
Anarchists can do away with authority and just act directly. If some of us agreed to live a certain way it’s us deciding that we want to do that. We don’t need to hit others over the head with a magic scroll or manifesto to prove we are justified, and we don’t need to ask their permission first. Likewise, if someone wants to push us around we don’t give them the benefit of the doubt through authority. They’re just another person trying to push us around, whether they’re a government agent or a highway bandit.
How you approach others is what makes your world the way it is. If you want to treat others as equals, directly, and engage with them without an intermediary we could say you’re an anarchist. If you think you need government (an authority, legitimate justified power) to push others around, i’d say you’re not.
i also wonder this! my fortresses never survived more than a few seasons in classic because i didn’t understand what was going on, though i loved it just the same. now the steam version has opened up a ton for me i’m excited to see what adventure mode could be like.
we really need a ‘multireddit’ feature that can bind all of these together!
basically torrent quality tends to be higher and also people will actually be seeding stuff so you can download it. this is enforced by having each user’s seeding tracked and you get kicked off the system if you don’t keep a good ratio.
Novatore has that hype writing style, love him
on my private tracker you get points for just always seeding, you can turn those points in for ratios boosts at a pretty good rate.
i noticed this post had a ton of downvotes at first, is it just ML bias from the main lemmy instance?
Yeah it’s the issue with this ‘middle ground’ of federation. some ideal world would be fully p2p, identities fundamentally would rest with the user’s device or backed up somewhere public and encrypted, then servers just become meeting hubs or caches of content. there’s some protocols that already do this at a technical level, secure scuttlebutt and nostr are two. there’s other issues that crop up, for one moderation and content discovery starts to be a lot more complicated.
so, not a solved problem by any means, but federation at least gives us a bit more freedom than a singular centralized service.
Pretty amazing results
Sorry I should have explained more. It’s definitely on the philosophical side but he’s been living in a self constructed and worked on boat for decades, a true DIY-er in that sense. Maybe it’s actually a little too far out as it’s not a singular project so feel free to remove if you want.
It’s very ‘we have a plan’ kind of thinking. The economic reality is far more complex and interwoven in real societies without government. I think people like david graeber are worth reading to kind of jump out of this intro-anarchist way of seeing the world.