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  1. Hace 1 día · Libertarian socialism, sometimes called left-libertarianism, social anarchism and socialist libertarianism, is a political philosophy within the socialist movement that reject the view of socialism as state ownership or command of the means of production within a more general criticism of the state form itself as well as of wage ...

  2. Hace 2 días · Because anarchism is usually described alongside libertarian Marxism as the libertarian wing of the socialist movement and as having a historical association with anti-capitalism and socialism, anarchists believe that capitalism is incompatible with social and economic equality and therefore do not recognize anarcho-capitalism as an ...

  3. Hace 1 día · Proponents of early market socialism include the Ricardian socialist economists, the classical liberal philosopher John Stuart Mill and the anarchist philosopher Pierre-Joseph Proudhon. These models of socialism entailed perfecting or improving the market mechanism and free price system by removing distortions caused by exploitation ...

  4. Anarcho socialists by definition do not support either taxation or property. If you mean me(not anarchist, maybe socialist) then I think they should have whatever they were not paying seized, if they use violence to resist, that would be a separate crime.

  5. A socialist republic is a state that is explicitly ruled by a Communist party. Since the source of real power lies with the leader of the Communist party, the exact division of powers between different levels of government does not really matter all that much. Socialist republics can be federal republics (USSR, Yugoslavia) or not (Poland, Hungary).

  6. Hace 5 días · With some justification he adopts a chronological approach, looking at Marxism and the Social Democratic Federation, the Fabians and finally what he broadly terms ‘ethical socialists’, including anarchists and others.

  7. Hace 5 días · Anarchy in the Haitian Revolution. Following many years of hidden and small-scale resistance, African slaves in the French colony of Saint Domingue (or San Domingo) rose up in 1791 against their colonizers and slave masters. By 1804, they abolished slavery, expelled the French colonizers, and established the independent republic of Haiti.