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To Change Everything

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    Humanity is locked in an asymmetric conflict with the institutions of authority.
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    The more powerful they get, the less capable we are.
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    The more glory accrues to them, the more impoverished we become.
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    The more riveting their spectacles, the more paltry our realities;
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    the more stable their structures, the less stable our lives.
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    The problem is not the people in authority, but the institutions themselves.
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    No matter who holds the reins, they produce the same petty indignities and power imbalances.
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    It’s not that they are broken; this is just what they do.
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    No piecemeal reform could fix them:
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    we have to rethink everything according to a different logic.
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    To change anything, start everywhere.
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    When a war goes on long enough, it becomes invisible.
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    We no longer see how militarized our society has become:
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    the borders, the security checkpoints, the ranking systems and disciplinary measures.
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    Instead of power over our lives, we have the rule of authority.
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    What’s the difference between power and authority?
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    The workers who perform the labor have power;
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    the bosses who tell them what to do have authority.
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    The tenants who maintain the building have power;
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    the landlord whose name is on the deed has authority.
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    Armies have power; generals have authority.
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    A river has power; a permit to build a dam grants authority.
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    There’s nothing oppressive about power itself.
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    Many kinds of power can be liberating:
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    the power to care for those you love, to defend yourself and resolve disputes,
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    to perform acupuncture and steer a sailboat and swing on a trapeze.
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    There are ways to develop your abilities that increase others’ freedom as well.
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    Every person who acts to achieve her full potential offers a gift to all.
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    Authority over others, on the other hand, usurps their power.
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    And what you can take from them, others will take from you.
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    Authority is always derived from above:
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    The soldier obeys the general, who answers to the president,
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    who derives his authority from the Constitution—
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    The priest answers to the bishop, the bishop to the pope,
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    the pope to scripture, which derives its authority from God—
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    The police officer answers to his superiors, just as the judge derives authority from the law,
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    and corporations derive theirs from the dollar—
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    Manhood, whiteness, property: at the tops of all these pyramids,
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    we don’t even find tyrants, just social constructs:
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    ghosts hypnotizing humanity.
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    We will never have power on our own terms so long as we seek it through authority.
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    In hierarchies, we only obtain power in return for obedience;
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    power and authority become so interlinked that we can barely distinguish them.
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    Yet without freedom, power is worthless.
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    Without authority, people have an incentive to work out conflicts—
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    to earn each other’s trust.
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    Trust centers power in the hands of those who confer it, not those who receive it;
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    relationships built on trust are more likely to be mutually beneficial.
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    A person who has earned trust doesn’t need authority.
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    If someone doesn’t deserve trust, why should he be invested with authority?
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    And yet whom do we trust less than politicians, CEOs, police?
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    There are many different mechanisms for imposing authority.
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    Some require a centralized apparatus, like the court system.
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    Others can function more informally, like gender.
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    Some of these mechanisms have been completely discredited.
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    Who still believes in the divine right of kings?
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    Others, like property rights, remain so deeply ingrained that we cannot imagine life without them
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    And yet all of them only exist on account of our collective belief:
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    they are real, but not inevitable.
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    The existence of slumlords and executives is no more natural, necessary,
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    or beneficial than the existence of emperors.
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    It’s not a question of fairness; as long as these mechanisms concentrate power,
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    most of us will wind up on the losing end.
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    All the revolutions of the 20th century only secured the right to be bossed around by someone of your own color, class, and creed.
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    The challenge is to create spaces in which no one can accumulate power over others.
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    How could we regain control of our lives?
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    Governments promise us rights, but they can only take liberties;
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    anything they’re powerful enough to guarantee, they’re powerful enough to take away.
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    Markets just reward us for fleecing our fellows, and others for fleecing us.
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    The only sure way to secure the things we care about would be to build leaderless mutual aid networks capable of self-defense.
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    Doing without the state wouldn’t mean ceasing to provide for those in need;
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    it would mean helping each other directly instead of feeding a bureaucracy.
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    Doing without property law wouldn’t mean you would lose your possessions;
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    it would mean that no sheriff or stock market crash could take away the things you need.
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    If it weren’t for state-imposed property rights, our relationships to things would be determined by our relationships with each other.
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    Today, it is the other way around: our relationships with each other are determined by our relationships to things.
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    We want to abolish domination altogether—not to manage its details more judiciously,
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    not to swap out who inflicts and who endures, not to stabilize the system by reforming it.
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    Rather than calling for more legitimate rules or rulers, let’s find our own strength and learn to use it together.
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    Even those who simply wish to exert leverage on the authorities must admit that the most effective way to do this is to develop the power to act autonomously.
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    But it would be better still to set our own agenda, on our own terms.
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    Our wager is that in standing up for ourselves we will find others who do the same,
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    and our struggles will unlock new possibilities for our lives.
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    Win or lose, this path offers the richest experiences and relationships that are possible today.
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    In a world ruled by petty despots, it produces heroes; in a time of predictable routines, it inspires adventures;
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    in the face of the humiliations of modern life, it offers us our dignity.
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    To change everything, start anywhere.
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    If any of this resonates with you, you may be an anarchist.
Title:
To Change Everything
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
07:33

English subtitles

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