RatRace123 said:
Anarchy is basically chaos as I understand it. No government, no rules, the only people who make it out alive are those who kill before they're killed.
Given that I would probably not survive through such a situation, can't say I'm a fan of it.
The common misconception of "Anarchy" is that involves a situation in which "do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law." Anarchy derives from the Greek, "anarchos" meaning "without rulers" - Archon was a title for the chief magistrate in Ancient Athens.
To quote V for Vendetta - the book, not the film - "Anarchy means without leaders, Evie, not without organisation. This is not Anarchy, this is the Land of Do As You Please. This is Chaos."
To quote Immanuel Kant:
"A Law And Freedom without Violence (Anarchy)
B Law And Violence without Freedom (Despotism)
C Violence without Freedom And Law (Barbarism)
D Violence with Freedom And Law (Republic)"
Anarchy posits that the state is unnecessary and that human nature should give rise to a situation of "natural law" wherein all those living in a community can agree on simple rules and ethics in order to live free of the impositions of the state. This include concepts such as a lack of political structure (no ministers, chiefs, presidents, kings, whatever), equality of all, freedom from ownership - i.e all things exist as a communal resource and that no one individual or small group has greater authority or power than any individual.
What it does not mean is that there are no laws, that you are free to do anything you want up to and including freely murdering, stealing and raping other people.
In principle its an enlightened and excellent form of government wherein everyone is treated equally, resources are shared amongst all and people are free to exist regardless of their race, colour or creed. It should come as no surprise, really, that Anarchism formally develops as a political philosophy in 18th Century Europe, amidst a backdrop of revolution, ethnic groups within the crumbling Austro-Hungarian Empire seeking self-rule and self-determination, peasant unrest and a growing philosophical opinion that religious intolerance, the feudal class system and inherited rank and privilege were wrong.
It's also no surprise that Anarchism falls down from pretty much its opening base tenet - that human nature would lead to everyone agreeing about things. I think we can see where the Anarchists were going wrong there.