D. WHAT IS MUTUALIST PRACTICE (HOW DO WE GET THERE)?
A number of terms, taken from different movements or theorists, are useful to mutualist practice. Dual power, counter-power,
alternative social infrastructure, etc.
Evolution vs. revolution, etc.
IS MUTUALISM AN IDEOLOGY?
Only in one sense--in the fact that it is an organized body of thought and that its proponents encourage others to get
involved with mutualism. But it is not something thought up by some "great thinker" that should be imposed upon the masses.
Mutualism is practical, grows out of, and is part of, real life experience. The creation of a mutualist society does not entail
subscribing to a narrow doctrine or sect but merely generalizing what already exists. Mutualism is essentially pre-ideological.
It has to be so for the very good reason that mutualism, as a practice, predated mutualism as an ideology by several decades.
The working class had been forming friendly societies, unions and other institutions for mutual aid and solidarity for more
than a generation, before Owen and Proudhon came on the scene to explain to them what they had been doing.
HOW DOES MUTUALISM RELATE TO POLITICS AND POLITICAL PARTIES?
Individual members of mutualist societies are free to belong to any political party or subscribe to any ideology they
wish. Mutualist organizations, however, do not support parties not ideologies, for to do so would create division in the membership.
Mutualism unites as broad a spectrum of the population as possible around the stated goals of the mutual aid society.
WHAT ABOUT RELIGION?
As with politics, individual members are free to belong to any church or belief system. The mutual aid society, unless
one of a specifically religious nature, does not take a position on religion, once again attempting to unite as many people
as possible around the organization's goals.
Many movements with a strong affinity for mutualist values are avowedly religious. These include Christian anarchist groups
like the Tolstoyans, as well as Christian groups like the Catholic Worker movement and the Distributists (although not all
distributists are religious). Gandhian economics resembles mutualism in many particulars.
ARE MUTUALISTS PACIFISTS?
Many mutualists are pacifists, but not all are. Generally speaking, mutualist movements are not ideologically pacifist.
However, mutualism is non-violent in word and deed. By attempting to unite as many people as possible around common goals,
by not espousing any violent revolutionary doctrines, mutualists avoid creating the climate of fear which gives rise to, and
rationalizes the need for, violence.
In practice, it is unwise to initiate violent confrontation with the state. Much better to focus on education, building
alternative forms of social org, defer question of rev. until exhausting possibilities for change within existing society.
Quote Ed S. statement in The Match!. Need for overwhleming public support. Terror and guerrillaism are generally ineffective
anyway unless the majority of the population is already united against a perceived common enemy (e.g., Intifada, Algerian
Civil War). And the greater the level of public support obtained through education, the less violence will be involved in
final revolutionary transition.
Bart de Ligt, The Conquest of Violence: "The greater the violence, the weaker the revolution, even where violence
has deliberately been put at the service of the revolution."