Recognizing the systems that exist make them my "pet system"?
That makes no sense.
I'm sure over time, assuming the survival of the human species, we will have many different systems, just like we have in the past. Hopefully, as time goes on, these systems will become better, more perfected, granting greater comfort, rights and opportunities to everyone.
Wanting to destroy a system without having a plan on what you're going to replace it with, how you're going to replace it, and without getting the consent of the people who would be affected by the changes is, in my opinion, colossally stupid and selfish.
In keeping an open mind, I would very much like to have you (or someone else) explain what they see in anarchism that makes it seem good to them and not stupid and selfish as it seems to me. Towards this end I often try to engage you (and others) in dialog, often asking questions to better understand your view. Like many other anarchists, you have been extraordinarily reluctant to participate in any way that shows your ideals in a positive way.
The very idea that not liking your ideas means I'm attached to the status quo is unfounded, but typical of the fallacious reasoning common among anarchists. So common that I sometimes wonder if anarchists are fallacious on purpose, if they've been trained to think fallaciously, or even if they're deliberately trying not to be understood.
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