• Dasus@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Yeah, it really is.

    Let’s use your link, if that’s the level of discussion you’re on.

    Anarchism is a political philosophy and movement that is against all forms of authority and seeks to abolish the institutions

    Literally the first sentence.

    These people demonstrate a community so large that pooling the resources will surely be written down. That or it won’t work like in the comic. Thus they’ll end up making the very same institutions they claim to abolish.

    These are a minimally governed commune. Minarchy, synarchy, but not anarchy.

    Quite embarrassing indeed.

    • DriftinGrifter@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      6 months ago

      that depends on which definition you go off of tho idk about their link but in the begginnings of the industrial age anarchism was redefined for propaganda use and didnt actually mean the complete eradication of government but instead the creation of syndicates and communes

      • Dasus@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        The actual prescriptive definition, not some vague colloquial use that goes against the prescriptive meaning of the word.

        Oh syndicates you say? Huh. That word has the same beginning as the word “synarchy”, doesn’t it? Followed by “-archy”, denoting “rule of”. Huh. I wonder why I chose the word “synarchy”. It’s a mystery, it seems.

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            “Anarchy” is pretty directly from Greek through Latin.

            Yes English has a lot of loanwords and they don’t always use the prescriptive meaning, and sometimes evolve. Like “English”. The language of the people of Angle-Land. Englaland (old English for England), if you will.

            I think this is still fairly known despite having few to none practical applications.

            That is still a proper noun though.

            We’re talking about Greek and Latin words we use precisely because of their prescriptive meaning.

            “Democracy” is still the rule of the people, despite “Democrat” being a party alignment in the US, and thus obviously having more meanings than the basic prescriptive meaning, but I think we can still agree that the word indeed means “the [common] people’s rule”.

            So do other words we picked up exactly because of their prescriptive meaning keep their meanings as well.

            Like synarchy, minarchy and anarchy.

            Colloquially anarchists have switched to supporting minarchy, because it’s very evident to anyone that even a small society will need governing in some form, to function. So it wouldn’t be wrong to say that modern anarchism isn’t actually anarchy, but minarchic synarchism, just like I described.

              • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                bro homophobia isnt fear or aversion

                It’s literally exactly that.

                If you had written just “fear”, I would have to agree. But the added “or aversion” makes it so I can’t. It is quite literally, aversion. It is also used to describe acts of discrimination or hatred which stem from fear or aversion.

                “irrational fear, horror, or aversion; fear of an imaginary evil or undue fear of a real one,”

                https://www.etymonline.com/word/phobia

                https://www.etymonline.com/word/homophobic

                • DriftinGrifter@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                  6 months ago

                  let me correct my statement homophobia isn’t just that homophia is a word like any other that goes beyond its wikipedia definition because of the context its used in

                  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                    6 months ago

                    You can use pretty much any word in any context, and the context you previously used “homophobia” in was you saying: “homophobia isnt fear or aversion just because it ends on phobia”.

                    That’s exactly the reason that homophobia does mean “fear or aversion”. It is used in other contexts as well, and mostly when it’s used it’s used to describe prejudice that is implied to stem from fear or aversion to homosexuality.

                    I get your point that colloquial use isn’t always the same as the strict prescriptive meaning of the word, but do you get that just because someone doesn’t know the prescriptive meaning of the word doesn’t mean the meaning doesn’t exist?

                    It’s the same as the use of the word “literally.” Colloquially, you can use “literally” as emphasis, but there is an actual prescriptive meaning, and that meaning is the reason that the word is used in that context to begin with. It was always used as emphasis, but the “correct” way to use it as emphasis is in a context which “literally” can actually be applied to without it sounding weird.

                    And the use of “literally” as unconnected emphasis is accepted by major linguistic institutions, so it’s not wrong per se, but…