The promotion of anarchism within capitalist media, coupled with the suppression of Marxist thought, is damning evidence against anarchism as viable opposition to capitalist hegemony. In fact, the two happen to be perfectly compatible. Meanwhile, history demonstrates time and again that revolutions require centralized authority to dismantle oppressive systems. Capitalism tolerates anarchism precisely because it poses no systemic threat, while revolutionary movements succeed only by embracing disciplined, organized force.
Capitalist media platforms like Netflix and Amazon Prime glorify anarchist individualism with shows like Money Heist and The Umbrella Academy while demonizing Marxist collectivism. The narratives in the media fetishize lone rebels “fighting the system” through symbolic acts such as heists or sabotage that never threaten the core machinery of the system. By contrast, media vilifies Marxist movements as “authoritarian” as seen in The Hunger Games’ critique of collective resistance vs. glorification of individual heroism. Anarchism’s rejection of centralized power also neatly aligns with neoliberalism’s war on institutional solidarity. Capitalist elites amplify anarchism precisely because it atomizes dissent into spectacle, ensuring resistance remains fragmented and impotent. If anarchism actually threatened capital, it would be censored as fiercely as Marxism.
The reality of the situation is that every effective society of meaningful scale, be it capitalist or socialist, relies on centralized power. Capitalist states enforce property rights, monetary policy, and corporate monopolies through institutions like central banks, militaries, police, and courts. Amazon’'s logistics empire, the Federal Reserve’s control over currency, and NATO’s geopolitical dominance all depend on rigid hierarchies. On the other hand, anarchists refuse to acknowledge that dismantling capitalism requires confronting its centralized power structures with equal organizational force.
What anarchists fail to acknowledge is that revolutions are authoritarian by their very nature. To overthrow a ruling class, the oppressed must organize into a cohesive force capable of seizing and wielding power. The Bolsheviks built a vanguard party to crush counterrevolutionaries and nationalize industry in order to dismantle the Tsarist regime. Mao’s Red Army imposed discipline to expel bourgeoisie and landlords. Engels acknowledged this reality saying that a revolution is certainly the most authoritarian thing there is; it is the act whereby one part of the population imposes its will upon the other part by means of rifles, bayonets, and cannon.
Rejecting this authority ensures that a movement becomes irrelevant in the long run. The Spanish anarchists of 1936, despite initial successes, were crushed by fascists because they lacked centralized coordination. Modern “autonomous zones” such as CHAZ dissolve quickly, as they cannot defend against state violence or organize production.
Anarchism’s fatal flaw is its lack of a cohesive vision. It splinters into countless factions such as eco-anarchists, insurrectionists, anprims, mutualists, and so on. Each one prioritizes disparate goals of degrowth, anti-work, anti-civ, etc., that are often at odds with one another. Movements like Occupy with their “leaderless” structure are effortlessly dispersed by the state. By contrast, capitalist states execute power with singular purpose of ensuring profit accumulation in the hands of the oligarchs. Marxist movements, too, succeed through unified strategy as articulated by Lenin in What Is to Be Done? where he prioritized a centralized party precisely to avoid anarchist-style disarray. The capitalist ruling class understands perfectly well that it is easier to crush a hundred squabbling collectives than a single disciplined force. Hence why anarchism becomes a sanctioned form of dissent that never coalesces into material threat.
Meanwhile, revolutions demand the use of authority as a tool for the oppressed to defeat capitalism. Serious movements must embrace the discipline capitalists fear most. The kind of discipline that builds states, expropriates billionaires, and silences reactionaries.
I would gladly switch to anarchism if your revolution manages to win instead of being crushed by capitalists.
I would gladly switch to communism if you wouldn’t threaten fellow workers with death. That’s what anarchists would get in the past for fighting alongside the reds. Do you plan to keep that odious tradition? When the time comes, will you drive your red State over the bodies of former comrades? Because, yes, anarchists do in fact fight. I would fight. OP claims anarchism is about passivity, but that’s just ignorance. The difference between us is that you plan to stop fighting when the capitalists are gone. Anarchists will keep fighting until all States are gone.
How, through anarchist mandatory conscription? And with what tanks, missiles, aircraft, drones, and intelligence-gathering satellites are you going to fight every capitalist/imperialist state until they’re swept away? Are they going to be built through voluntary collectivism?
Tanks are easy to get! First you have to befriend a tank manufacturer…
Your belligerence comforts me, actually. It tells me you’re not that far from the reactionaries I’m used to fight against everyday. I know good communists, nice communists. You’re not. You’re just a warmonger.
So you have no answers for how anarchists would deal with the realities of siege socialism[1][2], should you ever actually win?
Didn’t you just say that you wanted to fight until all states were gone? But now I’m the warmonger? Make up your mind.
Michael Parenti, Blackshirts and Reds: Pure Socialism vs. Siege Socialism ↩︎
Understanding Siege Socialism w/ Gabriel Rockhill ↩︎
And to think that I always defend communists. And when one you comes around talking crap about anarchism, much like reactionaries lazily reduce all leftist movements to the same tired points, I’m supposed to stay put and not call you out for the history of your movement, right? No, I don’t have answers. I’m just a student. I just believe that capitalism is wrong and that States feed capitalism — I know because I’m a worker, and when you’re a worker you see that happening in real time. Anyway, I have realized I can’t talk to you on equal terms. I’m not smart, I don’t think fast enough and it takes me too much time to write in English. But I know bolsheviks killed innocent workers with artillery barrage in Kronstadt, and I keep thinking that one day something like that could happen to me, even as an anti-capitalist. If you’re really not a warmonger, would you kill partisans like that? Shell the crap out of them, never seeing their dying faces? Do you chose to perpetuate that legacy? You don’t need to answer, I’m not gonna read it. You’ve won, I’m leaving. There you go: dialectics.
The socialist state is a necessity to survive against capitalist onslaught, and wanting to dismantle it before capitalism is crushed is suicidal behaviour. How would anarchists deal with the Entente intervention or Nazi Germany or USA?
If history repeats itself, then I guess we’d have to survive being betrayed and executed by communists first, huh? Do you see what I’m trying to tell you? Sure, have it your way, build your shiny Soviet State. I will even support it (while you refrain from bashing proletariat heads in). And after the revolution triumphs and capitalism is over, do you swear your commissars and supreme leaders won’t find another boogeyman to rally their armies against? Marx himself wrote socialism is supposed to be temporary, a passage that would enable us to reach actual communism, a stateless society— or did I get that wrong too? ‘Cause if you think that can never happen, that all we can aspire to is the socialist state, then we’re wasting each other’s time and we cannot reconcile. I stand by what I said earlier: the difference between us seems to be that you will cease to fight when capitalism is over, and I won’t until power abuse goes on.
Yeah, communists don’t like it, when you attack socialist states, and will strike back.
And after capitalism is over - it will be time for getting rid of the state, and what will be needed for it, will be seen at the time. Maybe it will wither away voluntarily, maybe it will be smashed in an another revolution.