Posted by usf_bulls on 6/4/2020 4:09:00 PM (view original):
Posted by tangplay on 6/4/2020 3:45:00 PM (view original):
Posted by gomiami1972 on 6/4/2020 3:36:00 PM (view original):
Posted by tangplay on 6/4/2020 3:27:00 PM (view original):
I deleted the insult because I felt bad. I don't think you are a moron. But saying that antifa is a authoritarian group is really laughable.
Thank you. You still have some decency left. We disagree on the definition of authoritarianism.
Does Antifa have any political objectives? Of course they do. Then, they are not anarchists. Anarchists don't have political objectives. Anarchists are not on the left nor the right of the political spectrum because they are off the spectrum completely.
Antifa wants to impose their own political beliefs on others through direct action, including violent direct action. That is a type of authoritarianism.
Antifa has no political objectives. There is no Antifa candidate. Antifa has no will to garner change through voting.
Instead, Antifa advocates for change through direct action, which is textbook anarchism. Authoritarianism, by definition, has to come through a state. Anarchists and authoritarians might achieve similar outcomes, but an Anarchist will never ask the state to do it for them.
Sigh. Direct action can be more than anarchism. The crowd took direct action on the Bastille on July 14, 1789 just like Germany took direct action in invading Poland on September 1, 1939. Authoritarianism does not have to be done by a state entity. It can be done by the group that wants to replace the current regime with one of their own choosing. It is my belief that once power has been acheived, it will be maintained through a coercive infrastructure, thus an authoritarian regime.
Now, if you are arguing that Antifa would remove the power structure of the USA and replace it with nothing, then fine. That makes me laugh (to poke fun at the OP.) That may be in the ideological literature but, in reality, is not what is going to happen.
Yeah, Antifa has no interest in taking down regimes that aren't fascist. They don't want to replace regimes, they want to prevent fascism from ever coming to power in America (although it can be argued that they already failed.)
Authoritarianism, by definition, has to be done through state action. The crowd storming the Bastille is different from Germany invading Poland because one was done by the people, while the other was done by the state.
Antifa doesn't want to take power. Like I said, there is no Antifa candidate, nor is their an Antifa party. They are only interested in preventing the spread of fascism through direct action of the people, not the state.
In order to classify Antifa as an authoritarian group, you would need to outline what a country ruled by Antifa would be like. This is incomprehensible because Antifa would never take over a country. They also wouldn't "replace the power structure." You can't have a country defined by only one principle: being against fascism.