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Re: is Debian an anarchist organization/project?



On Wed, Oct 30, 2002 at 08:41:14AM +0100, Russell Coker wrote:
 RC> We are not anarchistic in that sense because we are too sane.  ;)
 RC> We have some anarchistic tendencies though.

I think that is what we should discuss: instead of holy wars about pros
and cons of anarchism per se, why not take a look at what in Debian is
anarchistic, and what isn't, and how do we feel about *that*?

 JW>> We hold these truths to be self evident: that all humans have the
 JW>> inalienable right to life, liberty, and the full product of their
 JW>> own labor.
 JW>>
 JW>> That this right to life presupposes that everyone has an equal
 JW>> right to benefit from and make use of humanities common
 JW>> inheritance, to wit, the land, air, and water of this earth, and
 JW>> all that they contain.
 JW>>
 JW>> That the right to liberty presupposes that coercion of one man by
 JW>> another is an indescribable evil. But liberty does not include one
 JW>> man taking what rightly belongs to all of humanity for his
 JW>> exclusive use, misuse, and non-use.
 RC> 
 RC> I think that those beliefs are common in Debian, but socialism can
 RC> meet them too...

Anarchism *is* socialism. Marxism also is, but it does not meet the
belief in individual freedom, that's why it always ends up in
totalitarian state.

Returning to the topic, I think that GPL's intention to give all
freedoms at the price of only the freedom to take away others' freedoms
hits right at the core of anarchism. It replaces property with
possession: you can have something, but you can't deny others access to
it (it works perfectly with information, wish it could be so easy in the
real world). It protects cooperation from competition. It gives liberty
to do anything you want with free software, and encourages to share with
others. And so on.

-- 
Dmitry Borodaenko



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