Obscure Political Essays I: "Fabian Anarchism" by Alexander Horr

in #anarchism8 years ago (edited)

The wonders of Google. If you do enough digging on a search engine combining different theories, you can find an ideology for almost anything. Results for the search “Fabian Anarchism” came up with some examples such as how some consider Marx one because he has a program of a “dictatorship of the proletariat” with the end goal of anarchist communism. Horr’s essay was another such result.

This essay is short, and is mostly a praise of a model of anarchism and libertarian socialism in practice. Writing in 1911, Horr recounts the theories set forth thus far for an anarchist society: individualism, egoism, mutualism, communism, and a contemporary organization he formed known as “Freeland,” inspired by the views of anarchist economist Theodore Hertzka (who took influence from Silvio Gesell). Horr begins by praising well-known figure Benjamin Tucker, whose influence on the social and economic views espoused in this essay is obvious. He begins with a short manifesto of what “Fabian Anarchism” is, outlining a gradual model relying on “the penetrative forces resulting from the steady and regular blow delivered continuously at the weakest and most vulnerable point in the citadel of our foes.”

Horr takes issue with Marx’s views of political economy, despite claiming “We may take it for granted that there is a physical base underlying all social phenomena.”  From this basis, Horr indicates that economic, political, and social institutions coming into being have a reason for existing because of the impassioned and psychological nature of man, and not “the prevailing mode of economic production and exchange.”  From this, it can be deduced that he is posturing a position that is cautious of some revolutionary tactics espoused by orthodox Marxism and anarchism; hence the “Fabian” descriptor (probably derived from the “Fabian Society”).  However, there is no mention of action through parliamentary, congressional, or even local political means in this essay.  

On the surface, this is a promising exposition to a theoretical framework that has been somewhat forgotten on the modern left. However, perhaps he takes way too much influence from a school of thought assuming “inherent human selfishness” and a “human nature” of instant gratification. He says “their activities may operate within the limits of Stirner’s daring neo-ethical deduction, that “nothing is more important to me than myself.” What is problematic about this is that it operates on an assumption of human nature. He does not indicate what ways people are selfish, just that they are. There were a few social problems that he could have chosen from at his time, such as the increasing time away from home that workers had to spend in their workplaces for low wages, the increasing use of alcohol as a coping mechanism, and/or the fact that large private corporations were gaining increasing legal regulatory capture, preventing competition and the existence of some of the very organizations that he is advocating.

What to make of the model that Horr proposes? Well, he wanted to find a city (Los Angeles is one example) and turn it into a cooperative community where the community at large directly elects the workers and the workers are compensated in money while the loans made were made at or near 0%. If a member of the community did not want to participate in the main frame of the community’s economy, they still had the option of operating while paying a tax to the community for the value of the site they operated on (this is similar to Henry George’s and other enlightenment philosophers’ support for a ground rental/land value tax). I see this as a favorable alternative to capitalism that still maintains markets and simplifies local taxation. My only quarrel is that enterprises in the community elect their own workers, while the community at large should instead focus on electing their representatives and/or deciding on issues that directly affect them. It is obvious that Horr wanted a gradual transition to a stateless society. Nowadays, there are a number of other factors to consider though. Los Angeles’ demographic has drastically changed since the time he wrote this. Also, forming a cooperative on a large scale like this is considerably harder because of regulations to starting an enterprise of any type on the local, state, and federal level. Not to mention the laws that favor large, hierarchical corporations. Nevertheless, I feel this essay is an interesting missing piece of anarchist and socialist history.
A copy of the essay can be found here https://books.google.com/books/about/Fabian_Anarchism.html?id=kD2TPAAACAAJ

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Disclaimer: This flag displays a symbol for Freiwirtschaft. A similar symbol was used for the fascist Romanian Iron Guard. I do not condone nor do I endorse the Romanian Iron Guard, and do not wish to attract proponents as such!

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He dedicated the book to George Bernard Shaw, so it's a safe bet that he got "Fabian" from the Fabian Society. I'm reading it now.

Keep up the good work!

Btw, your formatting issue seems to not be fixed. You might want to check that out again.