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Superdog wrote:It seems curious to me that he was the first person to self describe as an anarchist, and yet proposed an income tax and at times participated in the parliament. His contribution is un-deniable but he seems to get more complex the more you read about him. Very nuanced perhaps.
I actually have another question for you, since you seem to be very knowledgeable about Proudhon. Here's another passage from Fascism and Big Business:shawnpwilbur wrote:Superdog wrote:It seems curious to me that he was the first person to self describe as an anarchist, and yet proposed an income tax and at times participated in the parliament. His contribution is un-deniable but he seems to get more complex the more you read about him. Very nuanced perhaps.
Well, Proudhon is certainly complex, and moreso as you dig in. But it's also the case that lots of things we take for granted as anarchist positions, such as as abstention from political participation prior to the establishment of an anarchist society, are not in any way necessary to the anarchist position. Proudhon was, of course, a powerful and early proponent of abstention from voting, but his position was based on an analysis of the conditions of his time, rather than on any anarchist "line" on the subject. His tax proposals were, of course, transitional projects involving modifications of existing tax structures. The infamous income tax proposals was fairly complex, and involved substantial tax cuts as well as some increases. And Proudhon was very clear that he didn't consider the various measures he proposed to solve particular problems as anything more than rough approximations of his principles. Also, Proudhon's thinking on all matters evolved, and his Theory of Taxation is much more consistent than his early parliamentary projects. Finally, I think that participation in the provisional government formed after the Revolution of 1848 is hardly the same thing as, say, running for office in the present-day US. Proudhon's own accounts of the disintegration of the revolutionary project are instructive.
But the plebians* would not admit they were beaten. They had not given up the idea of imposing themselves and their authority on the industrialists and landowners. After 1925, their daring increased; they dreamed of including in their fief not only the economic forces, employing and labor alike, but the state itself. They demanded the replacement of the political state by the wholly corporative state and a "self government of the producers," in the style of Proudhon.
He was a figure who covered a lot of political and philosophical ground, and he appropriated elements of Proudhon, Bergson, syndicalism, etc., in ways which have been a bit embarrassing for those figures and traditions.
RoyceChristian wrote:He was a figure who covered a lot of political and philosophical ground, and he appropriated elements of Proudhon, Bergson, syndicalism, etc., in ways which have been a bit embarrassing for those figures and traditions.
I'm curious, could you elaborate a bit more on this -- if there is anything more to add, that is.
As I read more about it, it seems more and more to be our current political economy in the US taken to it's "logical" conclusion.shawnpwilbur wrote:Fascism is frequently treated as an ideology that nobody could embrace without being some kind of comic book villain, but that was pretty obviously not the case.
I totally would, if I could figure out a way to get paid to read. As it is, I have a reading list I built for myself, starting with all the books I already own and then going from there. Areas of study I would love to get into are the Civil War and the history and development of Fascism. Too many books and not enough hours in the day.shawnpwilbur wrote:If these are interesting questions for you, then you need to really look at some of these figures who seem at once radical and reactionary.
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