Iceland is a very tiny country. It has no standing military. It also occupies a highly strategic location. And yet is has not been invaded since the UK occupied Iceland in the 1940s (to prevent Nazi Germany from invading).
Iceland is able to to do this because it is a member of a wider alliance of states that are committed to cooperating in defense of Iceland against external aggression. These states have never actually gone to war to preserve Iceland’s independence. The mere existence of these guarantees has been sufficient deterrent for the last 80 years.
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HeavenlyPossum
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • • •When people ask “who would keep us safe from interpersonal harms in the absence of the state,” the best answer is: we will, alone or in voluntary cooperation with others.
And some people find this answer unsatisfying, because their conception of interpersonal harms and self-defense is shaped by our present experience of being at the mercy of very large, very powerful coercive institutions called “states.” It’s difficult for many people to even imagine being able to stand up to an aggressor.
The absence of a state makes the victory of bad people feel *inevitable*.
But consider Iceland, or Luxembourg, or Liechtenstein, or San Marino: tiny countries with few means of defending themselves against much larger, more powerful neighbors that nevertheless remain independent.
This is just an analogy, and no analogy is perfect. But consider that our neorealist conception of international relations or a philosophical belief in a Hobbesian war-of-all-against-all would render the existence of a country like Iceland impossible.
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Jamie
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • •HeavenlyPossum
in reply to Jamie • • •@jamie
Iceland possesses a critical geostrategic position that led the UK to occupy it in the 1940s to prevent a Nazi invasion and the US to offer defense guarantees to prevent a Soviet invasion.
If we take seriously the argument that the absence of some central, coercive authority creates a vacuum that is inevitably filled by predatory actors wishing to do harm to the weak, then Iceland should not exist as an independent state.
Jamie
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • •HeavenlyPossum
in reply to Jamie • • •@jamie
So my point is about anarchism, not about current geopolitics.
Jamie
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • •HeavenlyPossum
in reply to Jamie • • •@jamie
There is no feudalism without the feudal state. Anarchy is not a synonym for feudalism.
Jamie
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • •HeavenlyPossum
in reply to Jamie • • •@jamie
You’re mistaking anarchism for its opposite.
Jamie
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • •HeavenlyPossum
in reply to Jamie • • •@jamie
Anarchism can’t prevent the state which is why we need the state to prevent the state?
Silly nonsense. Feudalism was and could only ever be a system of state rule.
Jamie
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • •HeavenlyPossum
in reply to Jamie • • •@jamie
How do feudal forces take over in the absence of the state?
If “you” lack defense without the state, how does anyone else possess offense without the state? You’re question-begging.
Jamie
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • •HeavenlyPossum
in reply to Jamie • • •I am quite familiar with history, thanks.
If we start with the conditions of anarchy—the absence of rulers and rule—then no one enjoys any advantage over anyone else. There is no class of people who spontaneously enjoy some privileged access to violence that you would lack in your self-defense.
If you’re talking about the possibility of losing to a more powerful adversary, then you’re talking about a risk that is intrinsic to the human condition and not somehow limited to people living in anarchy.
Cy
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • • •It is really freeing to realize that "All non states on earth have been taken over by a state" is itself propaganda. Every time Britain or France planted a flag and said "This is ours now" the people who agree with that are statist. States have brought unspeakable violence on the people they've conquered, but those people are only conquered in that the state says they are. It's the old argument at the playground:
"I beat you that means you have to do what I say."
"No it doesn't!"
Conquered anarchists haven't bought in to the claim that they are conquered, or that anyone can be conquered, and then it's just a matter of having enough power to resist.
Jamie
in reply to Cy • •Cy
in reply to Jamie • • •Uh... Venezuela won independence from Spain in the early 1800's, and Cuba won independence from... Spain again, in the late 1800's. That's why they speak Spanish. USA wasn't involved.
Anyway, those are states, not people.
Jamie
in reply to Cy • •Cy
in reply to Jamie • • •Ehhh I don't have that much faith in the current commander in chief. Grabbing Maduro was pretty slimy and underhanded, and good people died trying to protect that slimeball, but the fact that they had to sneak around it says a lot about the USA's power these days.
That being said it is valid to say the people of Venezuela are feeling pretty colonized rn.
Jamie
in reply to Cy • •Cy
in reply to Jamie • • •Why are you defending the USA's claim to that stuff? You talk like it is undeniable reality, that their authority is absolute. They won, Venezuela lost, and Venezuelans have to do what the bully says now. You claim.
The USA only "own" who they are currently holding at gunpoint. Everything else isn't an agreement. We don't agree with what banks own. We don't recognize the USA's claim to Iraqi oil. We don't recognize Iraq's claim to Iraqi oil. It's just oil.
Jamie
in reply to Cy • •Cy likes this.
Cy
in reply to Jamie • • •The guy with the bigger gun always walks in and enslaves people. No matter how democratic, or how well thought out your system is, it will fall to a big enough disparity in wealth and power, and such disparities never stay small. You must make it so no one can have the bigger gun. Which is anarchy.
I don't think a hierarchical state exists that does not serve to give one guy a bigger gun than everyone else.
Jamie
in reply to Cy • •Jamie
in reply to HeavenlyPossum • •