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Armed_Philosopher
13th May 2006, 19:59
Im new here. Is there anybody else here who is in interested in Libertarian foms of socialism? Anarcho-Syndacalism, Autonomist Marxism, and Council Communism? Other philosophies along those lines?

wet blanket
13th May 2006, 22:27
I am, but 'politics' is not the right forum for this kind of stuff.

OneBrickOneVoice
13th May 2006, 22:29
I'm interested in Autonomist Marxism. But this should be moved to the theory forum.

Armed_Philosopher
13th May 2006, 22:45
Sure. We could even delete this one since it was brought up in another thread.

Orange Juche
15th May 2006, 01:33
Originally posted by [email protected] 13 2006, 03:27 PM
Im new here. Is there anybody else here who is in interested in Libertarian foms of socialism? Anarcho-Syndacalism, Autonomist Marxism, and Council Communism? Other philosophies along those lines?
I consider myself a council-communist.

barista.marxista
15th May 2006, 03:01
Anyone interested in Autonomist Marxism and/or Libertarian Socialism should check out this ill interview with Harry Cleaver (http://www.phillyraan.net/cleaverinterview.html). We RAANistas publish it as "Autonomist Marxism: Communism Against the State".

Word.

Jesus Christ!
15th May 2006, 03:18
I find myself to fall the closest to these schools of thought.

Cult of Reason
15th May 2006, 16:06
Libertarian Socialist, within that: Anarchist Communist, within that: Anarchist Technocrat.

Nachie
15th May 2006, 16:14
RAANista :ph34r:

LoneRed
15th May 2006, 17:19
isnt the ist"a" the feminine of RAANist??, eh there Nachie

Nachie
15th May 2006, 17:30
isnt the ist"a" the feminine of RAANist??, eh there Nachie
Well for all you know I don't identify as either of the prefabricated gender categories or sexual orientations and neither do many others in RAAN.

That said, "RAANist" would be an adjective whereas "RAANista" is a proper noun. In addition, it is neither a female nor male gender and can be used interchangably with "RAANite", which perhaps is more to your liking.

In languages such as Spanish where there actually are genders for words, terms that end in "ista" (comunista, anarquista, Marxista) are hardly seen as being exclusively "female". The terms companero/companera are an example of something that is, but this false duality can be overcome by the gender-neutral camarada, (comrade) which to you probably also sounds feminine.