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http://www.spunk.org/texts/writers/proudhon/sp001863.html


Proudhon and Anarchism

Proudhon's Libertarian Thought and the Anarchist Movement

by L. Gambone, Red Lion Press - 1996



INTRODUCTION

It took me twenty years to get around to reading the works of Pierre
Joseph Proudhon. Bakunin, Kropotkin, Malatesta and Goldman were all
familiar to me, so why was I reticent about the "Father of Anarchism"?
Some of this may be attributed to the general influence of Marx's writings
on public opinion. Marx did a hatchet job on Proudhon and Marxists such
as Hal Draper took quotes out of context or dug up embarrassing
statements that made Proudhon look authoritarian or proto-fascist. There
are also anarchists who claim he is "inconsistent" or "not quiet an
anarchist".[1] Among English speaking libertarians, P.J. is renown for his
statement "property is theft" and his condemnation of government and
little else.

When I finally read his works, far from appearing "inconsistent" or "not
quite an anarchist", the "Sage of Besancon" had created a practical and
anti-utopian anarchism - An anarchism based upon a potential within
actually existing society and not a doctrine or ideology to be imposed from
outside. Since Proudhon's conception of anarchism was the original, and
the others were derived from it, if the later varieties differed significantly
from the original, perhaps there was a necessity to question whether
these differences were of a positive or "progressive" nature. The history of
anarchism is usually treated as a linear progression from the formative
period of Proudhon to Bakunin's collectivism, then on to anarchist
communism and syndicalism. But not everything which occurs at a later
time in history is necessarily better or an improvement over what went
before.

For the popular mind anarchism is an irrational doctrine of fanatics and
terrorists. Yet, Proudhon's anarchism was rational, non-violent and anti-
utopian. However, the "propaganda of the deed" period did provide
grounds for the negative conception. Anarchism, as it was originally
conceived, had been turned into its opposite. This is not unusual in
history, think only of the original Christians and the Inquisition and of
Nietzsche and the "Nietzscheans".

That anarchism changed into something very different from the original
conception is not just of academic interest. We face greatest challenges
in our history from the Leviathan State and the New World Order. Only a
mass popular movement can save us. A people divided will never succeed in
this endeavor. Proudhon's philosophy provides a foundation on which to
build such a movement. He is one of those rare thinkers who provides a
bridge between populism and libertarianism and between "left" and "right"
libertarianism.

A NOTE TO NORTH AMERICAN READERS

Most people in North America are unaware of Proudhon, but he did have
an influence here. The newspaper editors Charles Dana and Horace Greely
were sympathetic to his ideas and he influenced the American
individualists, most especially Benjamin Tucker, who translated and
published some of his most important writings. Proudhon's criticisms of the
credit and monetary systems were an influence upon the Greenback
Party. His concept of mutual associations and the People's Bank were
forerunners of the credit union and cooperative movements.

WHAT DID PROUDHON MEAN BY ANARCHY?

The public thinks anarchy means chaos or terrorism. But many people who
claim to be anarchists are also confused as to its meaning. Some think
anarchism is a doctrine espousing the right to do what ever you want.
Others dream that one day a pure anarchist utopia, a kind of earthly
Paradise of peace and freedom will come to be. Neither of these
conceptions were Proudhon's. "Anarchy" did not mean a pure or absolute
state of freedom, for pure anarchism was an ideal or myth.

[Anarchy] ... the ideal of human government... centuries will pass before
that ideal is attained, but our law is to go in that direction, to grow
unceasingly nearer to that end, and thus I would uphold the principle of
federation.[2]
...it is unlikely that all traces of government or authority will disappear...[3]

Proudhon wanted people to minimalize the role of authority, as part of a
process, that may or may not lead to anarchy. The end was not so
important as the process itself.

By the word [anarchy] I wanted to indicate the extreme limit of political
progress. Anarchy is... a form of government or constitution in which
public and private consciousness, formed through the development of
science and law, is alone sufficient to maintain order and guarantee all
liberties... The institutions of the police, preventative and repressive
methods officialdom, taxation etc., are reduced to a minimum... monarchy
and intensive centralization disappear, to be replaced by federal
institutions and a pattern of life based upon the commune.[4] NB.
"Commune" means municipality.

In the real world, all actual political constitutions, agreements and forms
of government are a result of compromise and balance. Neither of the two
terms, Authority and Liberty can be abolished, the goal of anarchy is
merely to limit authority to the maximum.

Since the two principles, Authority and Liberty, which underlie all forms
organized society, are on the one hand contrary to each other, in a
perpetual state of conflict, and on the other can neither eliminate each
other nor be resolved, some kind of compromise between the two is
necessary. Whatever the system favored, whether it be monarchical,
democratic, communist or anarchist, its length of life will depend to the
extent to which it has taken the contrary principle into account.[5]

...that monarchy and democracy, communism and anarchy, all of them
unable to realize themselves in the purity of their concepts, are obliged to
complement one another by mutual borrowings. There is surely something
here to dampen the intolerance of fanatics who cannot listen to a
contrary opinion... They should learn, then, poor wretches, that they are
themselves necessarily disloyal to their principles, that their political
creeds are tissues of inconsistencies... contradiction lies at the root of all
programs.[6]

In rejecting absolute anarchy and favoring an open-ended process,
Proudhon criticized all forms of absolutism and utopianism. He saw that
utopianism is dangerous, and was a product of absolutism - the sort of
thought which fails to distinguish between concrete reality and the
abstract products of the mind. Anarchist theory should be open-ended, or
"loose". No hard-edged determinism or "necessary stages of history" for
Proudhon.

...writers have mistakenly introduced a political assumption as false as it is
dangerous, in failing to distinguish practice from theory, the real, from the
ideal... every real government is necessarily mixed...[7]

...few people defend the present state of affairs, but the distaste for
utopias is no less widespread.[8]

Not only was utopia a dangerous myth, the working people were too
practical and too intelligent to bother with such pipe dreams.

The people indeed are not at all utopian... they have no faith in the
absolute and they reject every apriori system...[9]

There was no easy way out - no Terrestrial Paradise, things might improve,
but we still have to work. Such was his hard-headed realism in contrast to
all the fancy dreaming and system- mongering of the intellectuals. Poverty,
by which he meant lack of luxury, not destitution, was the foundation of
the good life.

In rejecting absolutism, Proudhon never waffled on the question of
freedom. As opposed to the modern left which pits equality against liberty,
and demands the restriction of the latter for the sake of the former,
Proudhon was a resolute libertarian:

Lois Blanc has gone so far as to reverse the republican motto. He no
longer says Liberty, Equality, Fraternity, he says, Equality, Fraternity,
Liberty!... Equality! I had thought that it was the natural fruit of Liberty,
which has no need of theory nor constraint.[10] ...the abolition of taxes,
of central authority, with great increase of local power. There lies the
way of escape from Jacobinism and Communism.[11]

PROUDHON'S REVOLUTION

How would Proudhon introduce the anarchist society? Not through
utopian schemes or a wipe-the-slate-clean revolution but,

to dissolve, submerge, and cause to disappear the political or
governmental system in the economic system, by reducing, simplifying,
decentralizing and suppressing, one after another, all the wheels of this
giant machine... the State.[12]

We should not put forward revolutionary action as a means of social reform
because that pretended means would simply be an appeal to force, or
arbitrariness, in brief a contradiction. I myself put the problem this way; to
bring about the return to society by an economic combination, of the
wealth drawn from society...[13]

We desire a peaceful revolution... you should make use of the very
institutions which we charge you to abolish... in such a way that the new
society may appear as the spontaneous, natural and necessary
development of the old and that the revolution, while abrogating the old
order, should nevertheless be derived from it...[14]

Proudhon was a revolutionary, but his revolution did not mean violent
upheaval or civil war, but rather the transformation of society. This
transformation was essentially moral in nature and demanded the highest
ethics from those who sought change. Nor did his desire for revolution
make him sneer at reforms:

There are no such things as minor reforms, or minor economies or minor
wrongs. The life of man is a battle, that of society a perpetual reformation;
let us therefore reform and go on reforming unceasingly.[15]

His self-image was that of a moderate. he saw no need to engage in holier-
than-thou, more millitant-that-thee attitudes.

I am one of the greatest artifers of order, one of the most moderate
progressionists, one of the least Utopian and one of the most practical
reformers that exist.[16]

FEDERALISM

The way to achieve self-government or anarchism on a large scale was
through federation. Proudhon wished to dissolve authority and the State
with the aid of the federal system. Note in the following quotations how
the State is still assumed to exist, yet is being set on the path of abolition.

The contract of federation, whose essence is always to reserve more
powers for the citizen than the state, and for municipal and provincial
authorities than for the central power, is the only thing that can set us of
the right path.[17] ...the citizen who enters the association must 1. have
as much to gain from the state as he sacrifices to it. 2. retain all his
liberty... except that he must abandon in order to attain the special
object for which the contract is made... the political contract is called
federation.[18] Free association... the only true form of society.[19] The
system of contracts, substituted for the system of laws, would constitute
the true government, true sovereignty of the people, the REPUBLIC.[20]

NO BLACK AND WHITE

Since all systems of government, including anarchy, are of mixed nature,
Proudhon was able to visualize the types of government along a continuum.
Not all governments were necessarily as authoritarian as others.

...the constitutional monarchy is preferable to the qualified monarchy: in
the same way that representative democracy is preferable to
[monarchical] constitutionalism.[21]

Nonetheless, he did divide governments into two types, the Regime of
Liberty and the Regime of Authority. Note that anarchy and democracy
are placed under the same libertarian roof. No doubt he had the USA and
Switzerland in mind. It would be unlikely that present-day elite democracy
would still deserve to be placed there.

Regime of Authority
1. Government of all by one - monarchy
2. Government of all by all - communism
Regime of Liberty
1. Government of all by each - democracy
2. Government of each by each - anarchy or self-government.[22]

PROUDHON'S ECONOMICS

Proudhon's interests were not limited to the political organization of
society. In his earliest works, such as What is Property? he analyzed the
nature and problems of the capitalist economy. While deeply critical of
capitalism, he also objected to contemporary socialists who idolized
association. There were some things better left independent or private.
There was also the important question of what kind of association one
should organize. He was suspicious of all systems, whether Fourierist
colonies or communist utopias. Note how he pins the socialists to the wall
as believers in a secular religion.

Association is a dogma... a utopia... a SYSTEM... with their fixed idea they
were bound to end... by reconstructing society upon an imaginary plan...
Socialism under such interpreters, becomes a religion...[23]

Association is a bond which is naturally opposed to liberty, and which
nobody consents to submit, unless it furnishes sufficient indemnification...
Let us make a distinction between the principle of association, and the
infinitely variable methods, of which a society makes us...[24] ...association
applicable only under special conditions...[25]

Association formed without any outside economic consideration, or any
leading interest, association for its own sake is... without real value, a
myth.[26]

MUTUALISM

Proudhon proposed mutualism as an alternative both to capitalism and
socialism. Mutualism was not a scheme, but was based upon his observation
of existing mutual aid societies and co-operatives as formed by the workers
of Lyon. But the co-operative association in industry was applicable only
under certain conditions - large scale production.

...mutualism intends men to associate only insofar as this is required by the
demands of production, the cheapness of goods, the needs of
consumption and security of the producers themselves, i.e., in those cases
where it is not possible for the public to rely upon private industry... Thus
no systematized outlook... party spirit or vain sentimentality unites the
persons concerned.[27]

In cases in which production requires great division of labour, it is
necessary to form an ASSOCIATION among the workers... because without
that they would remain isolated as subordinates and superiors, and there
would ensue two industrial castes of masters and wage workers, which is
repugnant in a free and democratic society. But where the product can
be obtained by the action of an individual or a family... there is no
opportunity for association.[28]

Proudhon was in favor of private ownership of small-scale property. He
opposed individual ownership of large industries because workers would
lose their rights and ownership. Property was essential to building a strong
democracy and the only way to do this on the large-scale was through co-
operative associations.

Where shall we find a power capable of counter-balancing the... State?
There is none other than property... The absolute right of the State is in
conflict with the absolute right of the property owner. Property is the
greatest revolutionary force which exists.[29]

...the more ground the principles of democracy have gained, the more I
have seen the working classes interpret these principles favorably to
individual ownership.[30]

[Mutualism] ...will make capital and the State subordinate to labor.[31]

Alienation and exploitation in large-scale industry was to be overcome by
the introduction of workers' co-operative associations. These associations
were to be run on a democratic basis, otherwise workers would find
themselves subordinated just as with capitalist industry. A pragmatist,
Proudhon thought all positions should be filled according to suitability and
pay was to be graduated according to talent and responsibility.

That every individual in the association... has an undivided share in the
company... a right to fill any position according to suitability... all positions
are elective, and the by-laws subject to approval of the members. That pay
is to be proportional to the nature of the position, the importance of the
talents, and the extent of responsibility.[32]

Proudhon was an enemy of state capitalism and state socialism. At the very
most, government could institute or aid the development of a new
enterprise, but never own or control it.

In a free society, the role of the government is essentially that of
legislating, instituting, creating, beginning, establishing, as little as possible
should it be executive... The state is not an entrepreneur... Once a
beginning has been made, the machinery established, the state withdraws,
leaving the execution of the task to local authorities and citizens.[33]

[Coinage] ...it is an industry left to the towns. That there should be an
inspector to supervise its manufacture I admit, but the role of the state
extends no farther than that.[34]

The following quote is a good summary of Proudhon's economic and
political ideas:

All my economic ideas, developed over the last 25 years, can be defined in
three words, agro-industrial federation; all my political views... political
federation or decentralization, all my hopes for the present and future...
progressive federation.[35]

PROUDHON THE PATRIOT

Unlike the anarchists and socialists who espoused an abstract
Internationalism, (workers have no country) Proudhon was a patrot. People
share a common geography, history, culture and language. Normally, they
have positive feelings for these aspects of their lives and with to preserve
them. This is something the abstract internationalists did not understand.

My only faith, love, and hope lie in Liberty and my country. I am
systematically opposed to anything that is hostile to Liberty... to this
sacred land of Gaul.[36]

But France was not an abstract entity or nation state as nationalists
believed. France was the land, the people and their language, history and
culture. Proudhon dispised nationalism, well aware his country was
composed of many different regions and cultures. Only  decentralization of
political power and a federal union would allow these different groups and
localities to thrive. Later generations of anarcho-syndicalist workers would
share these sentiments which combined liberty and patrie. For the
syndicalists the patrie was represented by the working people and not the
ruling elite whom they regarded as parasites and traitors.

WHY DID ANARCHISM CHANGE?

Even though Proudhon wrote about "anarchy", he did not lead an anarchist
movement. Libertarians saw themselves as socialists or even social
democrats. (The individualist, Benjamin Tucker even went so far as to call
himself a "scientific socialist") The term "socialist" had a much different
meaning then - at that time it meant co-operative production. Socialism as
collectivism or statism was a later development, largely a result of the
hegemony of the German Social Democratic Party. The name "anarchist"
was not adopted until 1876, some eleven years after Proudhon's death.
This new anti- authoritarianism was quite different from its predecessor by
espousing violence, conspiracy and communism. There are identifiable
stages in the process by which Proudhon's anarchism changed. The first of
these was the rejection of mutualism in favor of collectivism.

Proudhonists were instrumental in forming the International Working Men's
Association (First International) which was not collectivist. However, the
rising working class militance in 1868- 9 radicalized many members. During
the Brussels Congress of the International in 1868, a resolution endorsing
collectivism (including that of land) was passed. The Proudhonists objected
and many left the International. Bakunin, soon to be the major leader of
the "anti- authoritarians", favored the resolution. Collectivism was not
communism, but it was a step along the way - a mid point between
mutualism and the communist utopia. Proudhon, had he been alive, may
well have considered collectivism and anarchist-communism as a reversion
to what he had condemned as a "cult of association."

Mutualism and collectivism have little in common. Mutualism seeks to
maintain individual ownership of farm land and small scale production.
Large scale industry is composed of voluntary organizations (workers' co-
ops). Collectivism seeks to collectivise all property and industry, and for
revolutionary collectivists this is done by force.

The dividing line which separates Proudhon from later forms of anarchism
was the Paris Commune. Prior to 1871, relations between the classes,
which had been so brutal at the beginning of the century, had become
almost gentlemanly. Support for labor and even "socialism" was found
among the upper classes. The British Prime Minister, Disraell, expressed
sympathy for the workers, Lincoln corresponded with the International
and the editor and publisher of the world's largest newspaper, the New
York Tribune, Charles Dana and Horace Greely, were followers of
Proudhon and Charles Fourier. The spectre of the armed seizure of power
and the execution of hostages by the Parisian workers undermined this
sentiment.

While Proudhonism was the dominant form of French working class
radicalism in the decade prior to the Paris Commune, the failure of the
Commune weakened faith in Proudhonist gradualism and peaceful change.
The aftermath of the Commune was the major cause of this decline.
Reprisals - 30,000 executed and an equal number sent to prison or
deported to New Caledonia - gave rise, as one might expect, to a
"profound mistrust at any co-operation with the bourgeoisie... [and] a
premium was placed on the expression of extreme revolutionary and even
revengeful sentiments... [this]... rhetoric would become the indispensable
tool of the socialist militant."[37]

Even though the Commune had failed, it was considered the example to
follow. for both Bakunin and Marx, the armed seizure of power and a
revolutionary communal government seemed the way to liberate the
working classes. Bakuninists attempted new "Paris Communes" in Lyon and
Barcelona, both of which failed miserably. Yet the idea of the
revolutionary Commune persisted.

The failure of the Commune was a disaster for the International, which was
wrongly blamed for the event. In an attempt to save the organization and
to offset the growing influence of Bakunin (whom Marx thought was
conspiring to take over the Int.) the marxist faction sought greater powers
for the London-based General Council. Many were opposed to this
operation, but hostility toward the Council had little to do with anarchism
per se. This was more of a fight to maintain the autonomy of the national
federations against what was seen as a power-grab by Marx and his
supporters. The "St. Imier International" of oppositionists organized by the
Jura Federation included Bakuninists, Proudhonists and many non-
anarchists. It was from this core group, (the St. Imierists) that anarchist
communism was to evolve.

With the failure of the communes of Paris, Lyon and Barcelona and Europe-
wide repression of the International, prospects for revolution seemed truly
hopeless. For Bakunin and his supporters, the only hope was to keep the
idea alive through the actions of a "conscious elite". Thus was born the
"propaganda of the deed" as "the very hopelessness of the European
situation demanded exaggerated deeds."[38] Outside events were also
influential. The Narodnik assassinations in Russia were an important factor
in making the new anarchists sympathetic to violence.

The economic crisis in the watch making industry of 1874 had an impact as
well. The Jura Federation was composed of moderate collectivists and
proto-syndicalists such as James Guillaume. Its decline meant increasing
influence of the militant Italian Internationalists who supported
insurrectionism and propaganda of the deed. The Swiss movement finally
dissolved in the 1880's. As a result, the emphasis of the movement shifted
from the most advanced sector of continental Europe, (France and
Switzerland) to the most backward areas, Italy and Russia. These changes
could not help but influence the development of anarchist doctrine, most
particularly in the direction of violence and conspiracy.

The democratic countries were, in spite of the massacre of the commune,
fundamentally liberal. There existed a concept of citizenship and law and
thus the possibility for relatively peaceful social change. In the backward
countries, the lower classes were regarded as human cattle and few, if
any, civil liberties existed. Conspiracy and violence were, with some
justification, considered necessary. The problem arose when such ideas
were transposed to countries like France, Britain, and the USA.

A shift in leadership from self-educated artisans to aristocrats and
bourgeois also occurred. In many instances this led anarchism away from
the concrete and practical to the abstract and utopian. It is the nature of
the upper class radicals, so distant from the realities of working class life,
to look at the world through abstractions and self-created ideologies. This
is also the very group which tends to glorify and romanticise violence.

Along with the cult of violence came the change in economics.
Collectivism was replaced with communism. In opposition to this new
development, James Gullaume stated that "it is up to the community to
determine the method... for the sharing of the product of labor."[39] and
did not lay down a hard line on mutualism, collectivism, or communism. By
1876 the Italian anarchists had abandoned collectivism in favor of
communism, believing it the only way to prevent an accumulation of wealth
and therefore inequality. For Cafiero, "One cannot be... anarchist without
being communist... For the least idea of limitation contains already... the
germs of authoritarianism."[40] The Anarchist Declaration of 1883 stated,
"We demand for every human being the right and means to do whatever
pleases him."[41]

So Anarchism was absolutized into a pure utopia - a far cry from
Proudhon's realistic conception. Less than 15 years after his death, solid,
practical mutualism had been replaced by communist utopianism, non-
violence with a cult of violence, a horror of absolutist thinking with a new
absolutism and moderation with intolerant rhetoric.

Given the brutal repression of the Commune, was Proudhon ultimately
naive? Did his theory deserve supercession by Bakuninism and anarchist-
communism? No one should blame Bakunin's followers for becoming violent
in the aftermath of the Commune. Such brutal repression is traumatizing
and the undermining of Proudhon's influence is understandable. That an
event is understandable, is one thing, but the long-term judgement of
history is another. Society did not become more brutal in the developed
democratic nations. The repression of the Commune was so far (in the
democracies) the first and last event of its type. During the following
century, greater freedoms were won and people saw their incomes
increase thirty-fold, the work-week cut by half and life-expectancy
double. (Even though the tendency seems to be the reverse, of late) For
the Revolutionary anarchist-communists (no less for the Marxists) there
was a major problem - there was no revolution.

Marx attacked Proudhon as a "petty bourgeois anarchist", yet France was
to remain fundamentally a country of petite bourgeois well into the 1940's.
Success for any movement meant incorporating this group. To ignore or
condemn the petty bourgeoisie would only drive them into the hands of
the monarchists or fascists. Proudhon's anarchism appealed to the
peasant, artisan and professional as well as the industrial worker. And as
workers incomes increased, they too began to purchase property. Having
once done so, they were most unwilling to relinquish their hard-earned
gains to the sticky hands of the Socialist State. Proudhon the peasant had
a much better grasp on reality than the bourgeois Marxists with all their
abstract thoughts and dreams.

The Bakuninists and anarcho-communists could not forsee this, nor should
we expect them to have done so. Thus, 120 years later, by the great gift
of hindsight, we realize society evolved in a direction more suitable to
Proudhonism, than the doctrines of violence and communism.[42] One
should also not ignore the fact that Proudhonism existed throughout this
time period and is still around today. Mutualist and federalist movements
thrive and have an influence upon French society.[43]

Anarchism took more than twenty years to get back on its feet after the
disasterous "propaganda of the deed" period. (some might say it never
never fully recovered.) Recovery consisted in going back to Proudhon and
moderate collectivists like Guillaume. A more moderate and realistic
anarchism arose - known as anarcho-syndicalism. With syndicalism,
anarchism became a popular movement for the first, and so far, the last
time. The concept spread around the world and by the mid 1920's millions
of workers were members of syndicalist unions. That syndicalism was
destroyed by communism and fascism in the 1930's should not cause one to
ignore its earlier successes. For three decades a mass libertarian
movement of peasants and workers existed. Considering the
overwhelmingly totalitarian direction of the Twentieth Century, this is not
something to scoff at.

FOOTNOTES

1. The charge of inconsistency is a common fallacious means of attacking
someone. What is ignored is the development of a persons thought. Who
doesn't see things differently at age 50 compared to their youth? Hence,
everyone is guilty of being "contradictory." Furthermore, life itself is
complex and full of contradictions. If one wishes to mirror reality rather
than invent an ideology, one's thought will at times appear contradictory.
Consistency may be aesthetically appealing, but life isn't as simple.

2. Woodcock, George. P.J. Proudhon, p. 249

3. Selected Writings p. 105

4. Ibid 92

5. Ibid 103

6. The Federal Principle, p. 21

7. Ibid 21

8. op cit 56

9. General Idea of Revolution in the 19th Century, Freedom, 1927, p. 76

10. Ibid 95

11. Ritter, Alan, Political Thought of P.J. Proudhon, p 280

12. General Idea 173

13. George Woodcock, Anarchist Reader, p. 139

14. General Idea... 174

15. Ritter 280

16. DeLubac, Henri, The Unmarxian Socialist, p. 31

17. Federal Principle... 45

18. Ibid 38

19. P.J. Proudhon... 71

20. General Idea... 206

21. Ibid 135

22. Federal Principle... 9

23. op cit 80

24. Ibid 83

25. Ibid 85

26. Ibid 87

27. Selected Writings... 62

28. op cit 216

29. Theory of Property in Lubac p. 177

30. General Idea... 210

31. Selected Writings... 57

32. op cit 222

33. Federal Principle... p. 45

34. Ibid 46

35. Ibid 74

36. Selected Writings... 195

37. Stafford, David, From Anarchism To Reformism p. 20

38. Ibid 39

39. Cahm, Caroline, Kropotkin and the Rise of Revolutionary Anarchism, p.
39

40. Ibid 57

41. Ibid 63

42. Proudhonism, while more successful than Bakuninism, did not triumph
either. The reasons for this are beyond the scope of this paper, but have
much to do with the dominance of statism during the 20th Century. No
libertarian of populist movement was able to overcome this power.

43. More than 20 million French belong to mutual aid societies, mainly in
health care. Mutuals are important in many other countries.
Forwarded for your information.  The text and intent of the article
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always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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