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Conflict is not the answer.

Posted on December 5, 2025 - December 5, 2025 by rabbitrunriot

Build community. Go meet your neighbors. Find common ground — you have to build the bridges before you can walk across them and meet in the middle. But if we’re standing on opposite sides of the canyon, blaming each other and assigning responsibility for creating the canyon and building the bridge, the bridge is never going to be built, and we’ll eventually give up and go our separate ways.

It doesn’t matter which corner of the socio-political landscape you consider, you will find this problem. Because it’s not a socio-political problem, at all — that’s just the landscape it has most recently surfaced in, since politics became the dominant force guiding social relations in the modern world. The answer is more meta than that.

Our willingness to pursue (or even prefer) conflict over compromise is the heart of all our problems as a society. Our egos are individualized (and full of arrogant hubris to boot!) and concerned entirely with our subjective perception. When objective generalizations conflict with our subjective perceptions, our egos generally perceive two options: assimilate or abdicate, but there is in fact a third option: cooperation.

The issue with cooperation is that it demands a degree of humility that most individuals and social groups are unwilling to exercise. They have become too convinced of the objectivity of their subjective perceptions (and the subjectivity of objective reality), which shuts the door to cooperation in most cases. A preconceived notion or inherent disposition of the most minuscule proportions — regardless of where it comes from — is enough to impede compromise and stoke conflict.

Humility is critical in overcoming this problem at the most basic human level. If you find yourself making objective judgments of subjective situations, or assuming your subjective perception is shared by everyone (as an objective fact), then you have fallen for this ego trick. No matter how correct your objective perceptions are, and how valid your subjective assessments are, they are yours. We can share objective perceptions with others, but we will each have our own conceptions of the phenomena being perceived and our social (shared) subjective assessments within a group are based on a dialectic within our social group.

A society, collectively, can also have an “ego” of its own in this way; its own subjective perceptions of problems — a sort of group-thinking in which all members of a social group adopt the same subjective perception — and this society can also choose conflict over compromise — leading to large scale social conflicts.

The solution to these conflicts is to expand the dialectic and the social group. Find common ground with the other social group — no matter how different you think you are. This is how you prevent xenophobia — it’s literally an adverse or defensive response triggered by encountering something different while harboring the subjective opinion that different is equitable to dangerous. When we shift this perception — so that different becomes something interesting or unique, and something to be curious about — we open a door way to compromise, and the social groups’ dynamic becomes one of coalescence, not annihilation.

Do you understand? Can you read between the lines of your perceptions and experiences enough to see the realities of the situation? Or has your ego so hijacked and clouded your perception that you are incapable of the most basic human trait — finding a balance in yourself that encourages balance in the world around you? If you are, you are in good company. Capitalism and liberalism in their modern context (or, collectively, ‘neo-liberalism’), by weaponizing consumerism, have established a social dynamic that encourages isolationism and toxic individualism in people, and directly threatens social cohesion.

When people are individualized enough (in capitalism, the goal is to “win” — to make the most money — and this achieved, in theory, by being the “most special person” in a demographic where the root social value is competition) and isolation (not necessarily as individuals, by to a specific demographic group where collective thinking ensures a uniform collective conception of certain phenomena) becomes a tool to reinforce the ego with “echo chamber” methodology, we quickly build walls between ourselves and others based on fabricated “differences.”

The differences that these lines are usually drawn in accordance with are fabricated. Always. It doesn’t matter if it’s race, religion, resource scarcity, social class, … whatever they can politicize becomes a tool. We must acknowledge that the core issue here — the source of the differences that provide the subjective conflict in the individual that becomes xenophobia, and spreads to others with similar subjective perceptions — is politics. Politics has, since the days of ancient empires, been one of the primary tools for organizing and managing society; capitalism and religion are the others.

Politics is the problem. Or rather, the arena of politics as a forum for resolving social discrepancies is insufficient because — especially coupled with capitalism and the heavily-embedded consumerism that drives modern lifestyles — it encourages conflict and competition. This antagonistic dynamic results in two people or social groups (or whatever phenomena, really) trying to enforce their conceptions on the other without allowing the other to participate in the process of conception. When someone (or some group, or some phenomena of the world we live in) is compelled to participate in a system that they have no inherent influence on the operation of, this then becomes de facto oppression.

Stop participating in something that is designed to perpetuate isolationism and toxic individualism. Build community. Learn to cooperate, and deconstruct your own subjective perceptions and conceptions before you try to force other people to see them — in any instance. Even if you are objectively right, you owe it to other people — we are all equal, after all (unless you don’t actually believe that, in which case, there are bigger problems) — and capable of rationally understanding the world according to our perceptions. It is only fair to assume that others are similarly attuned to their situation, and to consider their subjective perception of the situation when it involves them.

It only takes a moment to review your motives and intentions — assuming you’re capable of being honest with yourself in some capacity — and you’ll find that conflict in your life more often gives way to compromise and cooperation. We can go a lot further together than we can, individually, and we are much more cooperative and compromising when we kill the cop that’s sleeping in our own hearts.

Build community. Stop arguing about theory and politics — that shit’s useless if you don’t apply it and let it evolve. Go meet your neighbors. Find common ground and ignore the political bullshit (might I suggest the arts, sports, or STEM hobbies?) — you have to build the bridges before you can walk across them and meet in the middle. But if we’re all standing on opposite sides of the canyon, telling the other person it’s their responsibility to build the bridge because the canyon is “their fault,” is kind of unfair. By the same token, when the canyon is your fault, you need to own it. Nobody’s going to want to come meet you in the middle when you build the bridge if they feel like you’re just going to fuck them again — you have to own and learn from your mistakes.

Posted in UncategorizedTagged anarchy, dialectic, philosophy, ramblings, subjective vs objective

Modus Mutuus

Posted on December 1, 2025 - December 1, 2025 by rabbitrunriot

Build community where you are. Politics needs to be forgotten in this process. It doesn’t matter if your neighbors know what anarchism is; what matters is whether they trust you enough to cooperate with you when the state apparatus collapses [1].

If we build community, anarchy will flow naturally when the state collapses — if we do this right. But if we keep squawking about politics and theory to people who don’t understand (or care about) any of it, we’re killing the movement and proving it’s own demise.

Save that for your activist group, collectives, the Internationale, etc., where it can bear real fruit in coordinated action, educational outreach, mutual aid and support… you get the idea.

But you still need to build community locally and more broadly than just among anarchists. Your neighbors need to trust you and you need to be able to trust them [2].

Along the way, you reach out to areas around you, and other communities of different scopes and structures, as either of your needs may dictate. If they need help, or want to cooperate and collaborate (as most will want to do), you build mutual networks of communities. And the word starts to spread…

“We don’t need anyone to do it for us. Look. We did it; so can you.”

It doesn’t cost any money. It just takes time and effort. And everyone benefits [3].

Now, we need this to spread far and wide. Everywhere. Not to the edges of the state; not to the limits of the nation; but across the whole world.

Whatever community you’re in, you can help other communities directly [4]. That’s the whole point of mutualism as a philosophical principle. Build those bridges… now.

If we are diligent, when the state apparatus that has driven society for the last few centuries crumbles under the weight of its own hubris, society itself may continue on, regardless [5].

These are not just possibilities anymore. We crossed that Rubicon about ten years ago, and society as it is will collapse sometime around 2040 [6].

But we can be prepared for what that means, and use it to our advantage. Build the world we want to live in so when infrastructure starts to crumble, it’s already established. In fact, large enough transitions towards mutualist communities in some areas may help expedite the collapse of capitalism and state infrastructure — if we’re lucky!

This is not anarchy as an objective end goal. This is anarchy as an active lifestyle, a way of being in and cooperating with the world, that facilitates social organization without hierarchy, law, and force.

And if anyone asks what your principle or philosophy is, you can tell them…

Via mea est modus mutuus: mine is the way of mutualism.

Footnotes

  1. An MIT study (you can read the actual study here), backed up by a 25-year review that confirms its accuracy, are fairly conclusive. Society will, in fact, collapse by around 2040, if a natural disaster or global insurrection doesn’t do so, first.
  2. This boils down to learning basic conflict resolution — which is a dialectic, and you’ll see that word a lot but I’m using it a bit differently — that, when unsuccessful, can simple result in a neutral agreement-to-disagree. This doesn’t come naturally to people anymore — we need to cultivate and nurture relationships because we’ve become hostile to each other, but for 112,000 years, we were pretty cooperative. It’s going to take effort, but we can absolutely recover that. And what’s anyone else got to lose, anyway? All you’re doing is agreeing to cooperate when you have shared stake in something, even if that’s just to show up and say you’re not interested in participating in this one.
  3. …to the extent that they’re willing and able to participate. Although most will probably find more beneficence than they expect, as people’s kindness tends to win out when they realize that scarcity is fabricated and desperation is no longer their modus vitus. motivating force — suddenly sports participation is at an all time high because competition is reduced to friendly sport as the only option in a post-war society)
  4. Don’t be content to just “get yours” — or to just stop when your community has reached its goals — at the very least, give others the respect of acknowledging your shared struggle even if you won’t be able or willing to help, but whenever you are able, help people and their communities. And at all costs, avoid judging others and their struggles, no matter what you think you know about them — because you don’t know them.
  5. Economic collapse does not have to mean anyone goes without food and medicine. State collapse doesn’t have to mean we are left unprotected or without utilities. And we don’t need to have leaders and bosses and bankers and billionaires to make it work. We do it every day — keeping the wheels of society turning — and literally all they do is use our efforts to manipulate the economy for their benefit — both economically and to reinforce the wage slavery and consumerism narratives — while we do what needs to be done, either way. The only thing we’re going to lose is the illusion of scarcity and the stress of corporate interest
  6. This is, again, a reference to the MIT Limits to Growth study (see footnote #1 above), but with the allowance of variance because even the science can’t be so exact.
Posted in Uncategorized

Anarchy is a dialectic.

Posted on November 27, 2025 - December 1, 2025 by rabbitrunriot

Hear me out.

TL ; DR –

[[Theory is broken]]. We need something else. Whatever takes the place of theory must be:

  • accessible to all and competitively advantageous to none
  • simple and straightforward; utilitarian
  • flexible, adaptable, extendable, disposed to evolve
  • dynamic, “living” and immediately actionable
  • capable of uniting people, regardless of differences in priorities and paradigms
  • acknowledges and upholds its own necessity pragmatically and practically (this is a fancy philosophical way to say the proof is in the pudding and the answer given must prove itself in practice)

We must also preserve those principles that make anarchism inherently, well, anarchism:

  • [[voluntaryism]] – that is, a person’s freedom to participate in society to the fullest extent (or not at all) that they are willing and able
  • [[liberation]] from any obligations to state or society and liberty to participate inasmuch (or as little) as one is so inclined
  • the disenfranchisement of the state apparatus – this is just [[statelessness with intentionally fucky wording]].
  • [[mutualism]] – this is not a revisitation of Proudhon’s ideas (the use of the term is honorary, if anything); this is a philosophy that, at the bare minimum, acknowledges a mutual respect among people to part in peace; some may pursue more market or collectivist oriented routes in their local communities as suits their needs, or in their pursuits of some degree of industrial civilization, but it must never be compulsory (lest it violate the principle of voluntaryism)
  • pluralism, democratic confederalism, various forms of collectivism and syndicalism,

This begs the question of what exactly it is that we are looking for. Theories and models are good, but what do we do when the theoretical expectations don’t hold up in practical application? Typically, this creates a division between people who think that theory needs to evolve, or individuals must be more willing to conform to a status quo. The issue is that it’s difficult to evolve a widely-implemented theory, like a political ideology, quickly enough to sustain this kind of social dynamic — look how long it takes legislation to result in measurable social improvement.

But what if change was baked into this solution — maybe even desirable? What if, instead of defining the result, we defined the means? In this way, anarchy ceases to be a theory and becomes a dialectic.

Despite my love for anarcho-syndicalism and the Internationale, I must admit that syndicalism is a rather specific ideology that may not suit everyone. However, the core principles of anarchism (as enumerated above) are no better expressed as the mechanisms of a dialectic (as opposed to being just elements of a theory) than in Proudhon’s original (if not slightly convoluted) Mutualism — to the honor of which the term “Mutualism Dialectic” has been coined.

We’re inclined to think we need something objective, like a theory, that establishes a collection of normative philosophies and paradigms around which society should be structured and against which it can be measured. But this idea that there is such an objective definition neglects a simple truth about our social condition:

Nothing about society is objective. Society is the subjective experience of individuals in a shared objective reality. When we acknowledge only the objective component, and disregard the diversity and variety of life that is our individual subjective experience, we are only addressing a portion of the whole, and the resulting solution will be similarly incomplete.

Every community and social unit will have it’s own version of “normative” (or none at all, as the case may be) that is the composite result of subjective perceptions and objective realities, percolated in the alembic of public forum and filtered through the spheres of community, neighborhood, household, and individual, before materializing as a unique subjective concept refracted back through each stage of the process.

As long as we are willing to cooperate, together — as has always been the nature of humanity — a dialectic in place of theory fills this gap and establishes an equal influential footing for both objective and subjective experience, hopefully leveling the playing field and preserving both personal liberties and collective best interest.

It is anarchic in the truest sense: it recognizes no authority whatsoever — not even that of a theory — to dictate or proscribe what is “right and good” in any situation; rather it aims to be a tool to discover what is right and good for each and every situation, in its full subjective context.

Posted in UncategorizedTagged anarchy, philosophy, revolution

What’s this all about

Posted on October 8, 2025 - November 9, 2025 by rabbitrunriot

Hey there. I’m Rabbit – welcome to my little corner of the internet.

I’m a philosopher, a musician, and an occultist, but above all else, I’m a revolutionary dreamer. The problem with that is, more often than not, dreamers never get to become doers. But I’m sure going to fucking try until I croak.

I’m actually really bad with introductions. I ramble a lot. And I have a lot of different thoughts swirling around in my head the entire time, all competing for expression. As such, I thought it would be much easier to just make the first post here a summary of the stuff I plan to put here… if any of it appeals to you, I hope you’ll bookmark and come back…

Music and Writing

I make no claims of being talented or wise, but I’ve been told that I need to share this stuff so that was the initial purpose of this site.

Most of my writing is, broadly speaking, philosophy and pragmatism in the topical realms of anarchism and occultism, but as a neurodivergent caffeine junkie with a terrible sleep schedule, it could be anything, at any time.

If you like folk… or punk… or folkpunk?… you can have a listen if you check out Mispy Haven on Bandcamp. I don’t get a lot of opportunity to play “scheduled shows” but I can often be found playing around town. Stop and sing with me if you see me!

The Collective and Community

This is my big dream: an intentional community built for self-sufficiency and sustainability. This is not your typical “anarchist commune” — it’s bigger. The primary goal is to establish a self-sufficient, sustainable collective, operating as an anarchist commune, on 50 – 100 acres (or more!) of land, with a few dozen (or more!) others who want to try building an anarchist utopia somewhere in the hills of Vermont or the haunted woods of Maine.

We need more people — people who are genuinely willing to commit to this. If you’d like to support or join us, let me know!

Web3 for Anarchists

Technology and cyberspace have become a critical theatre for social evolution. The “social elites” know this (of course!) and have capitalized on it by capitalizing and commercializing the internet. Google, Meta, Microsoft, and Apple have steadily been steadily establishing themselves as irrevocable cornerstones of modern life, ensuring they have a wide expanse of options to control and manipulate the masses. Web3 provides an escape from this, and that escape is the first step towards technological liberation (or digital anarchy)

Technological Liberation (Digital Anarchy)

Just like the collective and intentional community aims to establish a local, self-sustaining community in the real world, technological liberation is about the widespread liberation of individuals from oppressive technology. This process begins by adopting the decentralized and anonymized norms of Web3, but goes much further to create services to support the needs of anarchist communities — digital markets and currency, private arbitration services and alternatives to “law enforcement,” libre education and social services, mutualist networks, etc. — in a corner of the internet that exists outside the auspices and authority of technocratic elites and governments.

Practical Anarchy and Passive Revolution

In part, this builds on technological liberation, and extends the same principles in the rest of our daily lives. By deliberately choosing liberty over convenience and luxury in all domains of our day-to-day lives, we can liberate ourselves — even in the context of the state.

An Internal Paradigm Shift

Why do the fascists keep winning? I think I know. We spend all of our time as activists arguing and fighting with each other on the internet. The left cannot even collectively agree on whether or not Zohran Mamdani’s win in New York City was a good thing or not (hint: yes, it was – even if you think he’s a corrupt asshole who’s sacrificed his ideals, you cannot deny that his election represents a wider shift in public perspective towards a socialist-orientation). And a lot of the stuff we fight internally about, really, is completely inconsequential. But all the while, why we’re fighting amongst ourselves, the fascists are doing things to advance their position. Stop fighting. Check yourself. Deconstruct. Then take a deep breath and come back and stand together with us.

Posted in UncategorizedTagged ramblings

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