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How would one go about spreading the philosophy of anarchy non-violently?

–1 vote
I live on a college Campus of about 3,000 students. How would I promote the spread of anarchist philosophy without violence, and preferably legally? Trying to begin a sizable non-voilent local group :)
asked 1 year ago by anonymous
This is posted twice. Is it possible to remove one of them?
1 year ago by Katherine DiFiore (2,200 points)
Baubo: it should be possible.
1 year ago by enkidu (5,680 points)
Then someone, who has the authority or know-how, should do that.
The only thing worse than a stupid question, is a stupid question posted twice. ^_^
1 year ago by Katherine DiFiore (2,200 points) edited 1 year ago by Katherine DiFiore

4 Answers

–1 vote
There are many popular methods: handing out literature, tabling, posting something on a bulletin board. I prefer to talk to people face to face about whatever issues they are most interested in from anti-authoritarian perspectives (my own, and my representations of others'). There was a pretty good thread about that topic a while back: http://anarchy101.org/683/anarchists-communicate-people-without-seeming-evangelistic
answered 1 year ago by enkidu (5,680 points)
Thank you very much... and apologies for posting twice.
1 year ago by felgreywolf (110 points)
+2 votes
please don't start. The last thing anarchism needs are more pacified, passive, philosophic college campus groups.

The desire to spread your ideas is understandable, but please don't shoot yourself in the foot before you even begin.
answered 1 year ago by bellum (1,010 points)
+2 votes
In addition to what enkidu has already written, there
are lots of direct actions that could be both non-violent and maybe legal - these could be in the form of collecting and sharing food or other items (ala Food Not Bombs or Really, Really Free Market models), copwatch programs, prisoner support campaigns, etc.

However, what needs to be said is that concern about the violent/nonviolent dichotomy, or about keeping anarchist actions legal, is a bit of a red herring. I think the question becomes, why do you want the group to be non-violent and "preferably legal?"

It can, strategically, make sense to begin taking action with others, especially strangers, in relatively safe ways. This allows a person to gauge potential comrades for future actions, and to find those with whom we feel affinity. From there, that group can proceed to take actions, some of them might be legal, some of them might not be, if those people are not just using "anarchist" as a marketing ploy, that distinction will lessen over time.

As to actions that are non-violent - I suspect that as time goes on, the need to distinguish between violence and non-violence as an either/or category will start to fade from black and white to shades of gray, unless the ultimate goal is to build a broad-based movement whose ultimate goal is not the a non-hierarchical, egalitarian world [I know, redundant!], but instead a movement which is broad while lacking depth. These groups tend to fizzle, constantly lose members who are not willing to remain shackled by pacifism, or become non-anarchist cadre organizations. Which is to say not really effective or anarchist.

There are anarchists, and movements within anrchism that have maintained a strong pacifist or non-violent perspective. I am not trying to negate or ignore that, but I do think it is important to point out that once a group branches beyond merely symbolic (and ultimately non-threatening to capital) acts, they will face repression. I will need to leave it up to others to explain why remaining non-violent in the face of this is a universally defensible choice - I don't think it is impossible to have such, but I don't, and would welcome hearing about them.

If I have misconstrued what you are asking, I apologize, and I realize I opened further worm buckets, but it seemes like there are some points about why the structure you desire is such that need clarification.
answered 1 year ago by ingrate (3,270 points)
+3 votes
At a college in Olympia (about 4,000 people), the anarchist attempt to hi-jack the "orientation week" every year.  We run a parallel "dis-orientation week" full of event to talk to new students about the a lot of different things, like the different radical groups in town, or the history of resistance in town.

We also print a "Dis-orientation Manual" that we pass out.

One thing that has been very successful is taking over events.  When the administration has a mandatory event that freshman have to go to, we go to the event, walk up on stage, take the mic, and talk to people directly.  This is a great way to propagate your ideas.

Our propaganda tactics are not violent, but our beliefs are violent.  Spend some time thinking about your beliefs: what the obstacles are, and what you are going to do about it?  Non-violence as a long term strategy never accomplished anything.
answered 1 year ago by Taigarun (2,820 points)

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