1305 lines
62 KiB
Org Mode
1305 lines
62 KiB
Org Mode
#+TODO: TODO | DONE CANCELED
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#+title: Behold a Sacred Zine: An Anarchocovenist Manifesto
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#+author: Ellis Angzar
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#+COMMENT: add , License, Description, Subject
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#+OPTIONS: toc:nil title:nil
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#+EPUBCOVER: cover.png
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#+LANGUAGE: en
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* An Invocation
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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“We're trapped in the belly of this horrible machine
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And the machine is bleeding to death.” - The Dead Flag Blues, GY!BE
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#+END_QUOTE
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This screed should not sound reasonable, because it is not. There can
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be no reasonable path out of the metacrisis. There is no reasonable
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path to end whatever genocide is happening as you read this, because
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those in power are invested in the military industrial complex and
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they are making tremendous amounts of money by inflicting human
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suffering. There can be no reasonable path out of climate change,
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because the hegemony of today's dominant militaries are perpetuated
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through continued use of petroleum. There is no reasonable path out of
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capitalism because the entire dominant order is predicated on it. For
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far too long we have channeled efforts down "reasonable" paths like
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electoralism, and things have only gotten worse.
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This is not a reasonable text because we do not live in reasonable
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times. We have been reasonable far too long. If we are to find a way
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to survive the global polycrisis in the age of turboparalysis, we must
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be willing to have unreasonable expectations, make unreasonable
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demands, and take unreasonable actions.
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The words you are reading reject reason and demand utopia in the face
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of our current dystopia, and Eden in the face of planetary
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collapse. They are a psychedelic assault on the dominant order. This
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text is half manifesto and half instruction manual, wrapped in a cozy
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fever dream. It is at once clear instructions and mad ravings. It is a
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meticulously wild, unhinged, and disheveled strategy. Grinning and
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frantically yelling, it screams in your face with glowing eyes while
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offering you hope and tranquility. This document demands to be taken
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as seriously as death, and implores you to laugh at death and
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yourself.
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Ellis is a sober sister of Discordia and belligerent cousin of Baccus,
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a naked lunatic carefully filling out paperwork. She was summoned from
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the aethers, in an unspeakable dadaist ritual, performed by chaos
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magicians around a DND table. Ellis is the vox populi, mumbling in a
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k-hole. Ellis is the green man, emergent from the depths of the
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forest to sing leaves at you. She is at once Bophomet and
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Metatron. Ellis is the water poured into your open mind, if you will
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grock it. Do with this what you will.
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The remainder of this document assumes a US audience, but this may be
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adapted for any location where it feels relevant. This document itself
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is a radical reinterpretation of Democratic Confederalism for easier
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consumption for US audiences, so it already has a strong potential for
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future adaptation.
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* Our Agenda
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We have long since passed the crisis point, and we can all feel it if
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not see it. Liberalism has failed and fascism has begun to feed on
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its corpse. We can all feel the creeping doom. We see the water
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rising and know the ship is sinking. Some of us are frozen in
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fear. Some of us are pretending it's not happening. But we all know,
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at least at some level, that something is deeply wrong.
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The world is on fire. Governments around the world are
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inadequate. They are at risk of being (or have already been) captured
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by forces of wealth extraction. They operate for the few at the
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expense of collective prosperity, social cohesion, and, ultimately,
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the survival of the species.
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We can't keep going the way we're going, and alternatives are hard to
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imagine. But this is exactly where the key to our escape lies. But if
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we can revive our collective imagination, we can stop struggling
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against the suffocating mire of apocalypse and begin to build our
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utopia. Take a second to imagine how it would feel to no longer be
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afraid. Now imagine the void left by your fear being filled with hope
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and joy.
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That hope is not unfounded or misplaced. We live in a hellish system
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that pits us against each other, against our natural instincts,
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against the pleasure of sharing, against the joy of cooperation. But
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this hellish system was created by us, and any system created by
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humans can be dismantled by us. We imagined ourselves in to this
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world, and we can imagine ourselves in to a better one.
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Anarchocovenism, the framework outlined in the following pages,
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proposes that we begin addressing these needs outside of the state and
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capitalist system, without requiring violent revolution.
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While covenism focuses on exploiting specific internal inconsistencies
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of liberal capitalism within the US, it may be adapted to other
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contexts. As the situation in the US is quite fluid as of the writing
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of this text, it is intended to be adapted continually. Where
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Platformism proposes a singular tightly coordinated federation,
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Covenism proposes a strategically aligned and optimally, but not
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necessarily, federated swarm.
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The Organizational Platform of the Libertarian Communists of Dielo
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Truda resists the idea of a transition period:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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Either the social revolution will terminate in the defeat of the
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workers in which case we must start again to prepare the struggle, a
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new offensive against the capitalist system or it will lead to the
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victory of the workers, and in this case, having seized the means
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which permit self-administration - the land, production, and social
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functions- the workers will commence the construction of a free
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society.
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#+END_QUOTE
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Covenism proposes that there does exist a transition period that is
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neither a "minimum program" of solutions that ease suffering without
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abolishing capitalism, nor a temporary dictatorship, but a third,
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anarchist, option where the transition and the revolution are the
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same. That by systematically removing ourselves from capitalism we
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weaken the dominant social entity of state-capital, allowing it to
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either wither away or be quickly defeated if it strikes at us
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first.
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Covenism proposes that within such a transition period, time favors
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the anarchists. For the longer we exist, the more we demonstrate the
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viability of our solution. Our persistence erodes the facade of
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legitimacy, revealing the fundamentally coercive nature of the state
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and capitalism. For covenism, the transition is the revolution and
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violent elements of the revolution are delayed (and possibly avoided
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entirely).
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* The Transition Period
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The element of a transition period within covenism is both an
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implementation of the phrase "build the new world in the shell of the
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old" and a deviation from The Organizational Platform of the
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Libertarian Communists (from here on simply referred to as The
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Platform). While The Platform proposes violent dissolution of the
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dominant order followed by immediate construction of a new order,
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Covenism proposes that the construction of the new order *is* the
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dissolution of the old order, requiring no violence (except in
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self-defense).
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At a high level, the strategy is roughly the following. Covens are
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tools for collective ownership and operate as the most basic level of
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organization social organization. The coven is the root of social all
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social power. Covens set up a dual-power system, in opposition to the
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dominant society. The collective creation, acquisition, and ownership
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functions reduce reliance on capitalism and the state: share and stock
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up on food, collectivize housing where possible, share expensive
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resources, etc. Engage in radical unionism to seize control of work
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places or start businesses within the collective. Make the money and
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products of anarchist controlled businesses available to covens to
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further reduce reliance on capitalism and leverage it further against
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capitalism.
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Covenism offers a strategy to beat capitalists at their own
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game. Without a legal obligation to shareholders, a coven can provide
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goods and services to the capitalist market at a lower price than
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capitalist competitors. Because covens have no external owners or
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managerial class, we can operate with significantly lower overhead at
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the same scale.
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Simultaneously, the excess production and capacity provided by
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intensive mutual aid can be extended outside of the coven federation
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to multiply the threats to the dominant order. For example, a coven's
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dispensary or library can be turned to support houseless encampments,
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who are already (functionally and not by their own decision) outside
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the capitalist system, to stabilize them and give them space to
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organize themselves. The longer encampments exist and the more
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organized they are, the more revolutionary potential they have.
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Additional structural details will be discussed in following sections.
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* Replacing the Social Entity
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The US government and capitalism fulfill needs along the following
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four pillars:
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- consumable goods
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- durable goods
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- infrastructure
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- services.
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It is not necessary or even desirable to replace all the functions of
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the state as a social entity. We can omit from these, for example, the
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infrastructure and services of state violence against its own people
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as this is unnecessary within any system compassionate humans would
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wish to build.
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Taxes are, ostensibly, levied to pay for the goods and services
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provided to the people. The state does not itself pay taxes. Within
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the US there exists an institution that is also exempt from taxes and
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is permitted to raise funds from its members (though, in this case,
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voluntarily): the non-profit. There is one form of non-profit that, by
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way of the 1st Amendment to the US constitution, is also permitted to
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define (or more accurately, selectively disregard) other laws: the
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church.
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Covenism proposes creating federated churches to collectively own
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property, build infrastructure, manage the distribution of goods, and
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provide services. A coven primarily functions to fulfill the needs of
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it's members, but, in doing so, a coven will likely have
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excess. Excess can be shared with other covens, given to local
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community organizations, or even sold within the capitalist market.
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By interoperating with the capitalist system and working within the
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legal framework of the state, we can test out the society we wish to
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build within the shell of the old. This strategy has already proved
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itself in Northern Syria as the Rojava revolution remains independent
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from the state and does not seek conflict with it (except as necessary
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to protect its people).
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Covenism proposes a structure of recursive federation. An anarchist
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coven would form as a church with 3-5 members. As the coven grows it
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can split in to two or more covens as needed.
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These covens may federate, optionally, into their own legal entities
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which are also churches. owning the initial church. As covens become
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aware of other covens they can also federate with those, given that
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they can establish and build trust with those organizations and their
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members.
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The legal entity of a coven provides a mechanism to build
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institutions, aligned along the four pillars, to fulfill the needs of
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its members and replace dominant system. These institutions are...
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- the dispensary
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to provide consumable goods,
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- the library,
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to provide access to shared durable goods,
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- the works committee,
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to build and own infrastructure such as housing, and
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- the services committee,
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to identify and provide services, such as child care, for its members.
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There can be different types of dispensaries and libraries, as
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needed. Committees can form subcommittees (as needed) to organize more
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and more specialized entities.
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All of these entities can start small and grow as the number of people
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involved and input grows. There is no need to solve all problems at
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once.
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** The Dispensary
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A dispensary can start simply as a shared pantry, stocked with the
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products of guerrilla gardening or food preservation by canning or
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pickling. It can be foraging, processing, storing, and sharing horse
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chestnuts for soap and acorns for flour to make acorn grits and
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bread. It can be as easy as shared bulk purchases from restaurant
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supply or warehouse store, or as crust-punk as rotating dumpster run
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shifts. It could even start as small regular potluck or shared
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dinners. It could simply be an agreement between members to volunteer
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with a local chapter of Food Not Bombs on a rotating basis. [fn:5]
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As your network grows, so can the dispensary system. A federation of
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four or five covens could start a coop for themselves. A federation of
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20 may even be able to open a storefront.
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As much as people would like to live their daily lives without
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inflicting suffering on ourselves and others, capitalism cannot seem
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to provide for the needs of people without committing atrocities. From
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sweatshops to toxic byproducts, union busting death squads,
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unnecessary packaging, micro-plastics, and landfills full of fast
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fashion, simple participation is a minefield of harm.
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As anarchist entities, covens are responsible for minimizing the
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suffering of others. Since no similar objective can exist within
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capitalist markets, operating a coven or federation owned dispensary
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as a coop style business for non-members offers a harm-reduction
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opportunity that capitalist markets cannot fulfill. We can do what the
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market cannot, offer products that people can buy without having blood
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on their hands.
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The Platform identifies the problems of production and consumption as
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core to the success of the revolution:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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Without doubt, from the first day of the revolution, the farms will
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not provide all the products vital to the life of the population. At
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the same time, peasants have an abundance which the towns lack.
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#+END_QUOTE
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Within the capitalist system, production, acquisition, transportation,
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and distribution (logistics) are all handled by markets. As we move
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away from this system, the dispensary system (perhaps with the support
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of [[*The Services Committee][the services committee]]) will need to address production and
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transportation logistics. Starting within the capitalist market
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provides a low-risk proving ground from which we can iterate and
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improve. If a coven can operate a business within capitalism while
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planning beyond it, there's a good chance it will be able to transcend
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its capitalist roots.
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The technology that made the short supply chain-based capitalism,
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which dominates the world today, also makes capitalism itself
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irrelevant. By attacking this problem as a swarm, we will come up with
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multiple competing solutions. Good solutions will merge or replace bad
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ones and the best solutions will spread across the federation. Like
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the open source software movement, we may, and probably will, end up
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with multiple systems. This is not a problem as long as those systems
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interoperate with each other.
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** The Library
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A library is a shared set of objects, often (but not always) located
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in a specific repository. We are most familiar with municipal library
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systems where the objects are books and occasionally other media. The
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simplest library for a coven is a tool library. A library consists of
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an inventory and a way to track that inventory.
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The simplest library can be made up of tools owned by members of the
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coven and a simple spreadsheet to track them. A library can create a
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shared bank account for purchasing new tools for the
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library. Libraries will also maintain objects that belong to the
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collective.
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While give-away or free-stores exist and do work in some situations
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(they are common in the Netherlands), these can be exclusionary in the
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US context. They can be seen as "charity" or "for people less
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fortunate" rather than a shared resource. While a library can choose
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to operate in exactly the same way as a free-store (not tracking what
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comes in or goes out), the conceptual framework of a library is more
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aligned with American sensibilities (outside of existing punk and
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anarchist spaces).
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** The Works Committee
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A Works Committee is responsible for identifying, acquiring or
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producing, and managing infrastructure needed for the operation of the
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coven or federation and the lives of its members. The mechanism by
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which it does this is up to the coven or federation. Management of
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infrastructure such as vehicles or housing may be handed off to the
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library system once acquired.
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The Works Committee is responsible for organizing work parties to
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maintain infrastructure. One easy example is a garden party where
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coven members design and implement a garden either on property they
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own or via guerrilla gardening. The Works Committee would then be
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responsible for regular maintenance, harvest, and delivery of goods in
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coordination with the dispensary.
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** The Services Committee
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The two most critical permanent purposes of Services Committees are to
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coordinate leadership of regular services, either by a specific
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appointed member or by rotating ordination, and to introduce young
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members in the ideas and practices of covenism. This includes
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supporting youth in the organization of their own covens. A third
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critical purpose that only exists within the transition period is
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accounting: ensure taxes are filed on time and correctly, that any
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shared expenses are paid, and that all money has been accounted for.
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Beyond these, the Services Committee identifies the needs and
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capabilities of its members to provide services. The Services
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Committee operates on the principal "From each according to their
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abilities, to each according to their needs."
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The most important goal of any entity that wishes to continue to exist
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is reproduction of itself. Therefore, the most important objective of
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the coven must be supporting the reproductive labor of the collective,
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especially supporting members with children.
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For covens with children, rotating childcare eases the burden on
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families, making the coven more stable and setting an example for
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members too young to start their own covens. Some members may have
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technical skills and can provide tech support or automation of tedious
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tasks performed by others. Those with mechanical skills may be able to
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repair objects for The Library.
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Within an urban area, municipal services take care of many things that
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rural people have to take care of themselves. Trash collection and
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disposal may make sense for a rural coven where it wouldn't be
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imagined by an urban coven outside of a disaster.
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As a coven grows to a federation, new services will become
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available. At each federation level, it becomes more and more
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important to provide a mechanism to discover capabilities and protect
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people with specific skills from being overburdened.
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A Services Committee of a large enough federation could provide much
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more complex services that further free it from the constraints of
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capitalism. Insurance pools, banking via credit unions, and other
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services can all be organized by a Services Committee of a big enough
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federation.
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As with the Dispensary, services may also be externalized to offer
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things unavailable under capitalism. Externally facing organizations
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would be fulfilling their religious objective of proving the viability
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of such organizations within capitalism in preparation for a
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post-capitalist world. Therefore, any business operated by a committee
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of a coven should be owned by the coven as a religious entity.
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* Social Insertion
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Social Insertion is the practice of working to forward local struggles
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as members of a social organism. Anarchists, as anarchists, will be
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involved in groups like Food Not Bombs because it aligns with their
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existing beliefs. Anarchists, as anarchists, may be involved with
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campaigns to improve transit infrastructure because car culture feeds
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petro-fascism and lends itself well to authoritarian social
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control. These individuals are open about their political alignment
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and also are honestly working with external organizations. They try,
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where possible, to work with existing organizations rather than trying
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to start their own.
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This is distinct from "entryism," where members of a political
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movement will try to hijack a social movement towards their own ends
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or will try to take members away from social movements and shift those
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members to their own, organization controlled, social organizations.
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The term comes from Especifismo, a South American anarchist praxis.
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Where there exists organizations that are not antithetical to
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covenism, covens should practice social insertion and support those
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existing entities. Unless there is a clear reason not to, such as
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authoritarian organization structures, general non-profit
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dysfunctionality, bigotry, or other toxic patterns, it's far easier
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and more efficient to find and support existing organizations as a
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coven than to create one's own.
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Food Not Bombs and Mutual Aid Disaster Relief are both excellent
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examples of organizations that covens should actively work with and
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support, where possible.
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[[*The Services Committee][The services committee]] should identify local organizations aligned
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with coven's objectives and organize it's members to support them.
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* The Functions of Mythological Systems
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Beyond just being a symbolic language, a religion is type of
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replicator. It can be thought of as a form of life itself. In the same
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way that the state and capitalism form a social entity with its own
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internal logic, a memetic organism with an emergent intelligence, a
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religion is itself a social entity with an emergent intelligence. Like
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ants in a colony, a religion binds individuals to operate as a larger
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collective entity.
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Joseph Campbell described the 4 purposes of mythological systems:
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- sociological
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- to build or maintain a specific social structure and to build or
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maintain a specific set of social norms
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- pedagogical
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- to guide an individual through the various challenges and phases
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of life
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- cosmological
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- to help an individual understand their place in the universe,
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connecting local knowledge to the wider universe
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- metaphysical/mystical
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- to connect to "the ultimate source of mystery," inspiring awe and
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gratitude in the individual
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The pedagogy of the state/capitalism primarily focuses on justifying
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and reinforcing the mythology of state/capitalism. The mythology of
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state/capitalism, in turn, fulfills the sociological function of
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maintaining the specific (dominant) social order. Ostensibly, the
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cosmological and metaphysical elements fall outside of the domain of
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liberal democracies. We will not explore the veracity of this
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statement here.
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The establishment and maintenance of a specific social order, the
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sociological objective of mythological systems, is addressed for
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covenism by The Dispensary, The Library, The Works Committee, and The
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Services Committee, and the process of the creation of a coven or
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federation. This leaves the cosmological, mystical, and (most of) the
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pedagogical functions. Rites and rituals are the ways we guide each
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other through life. These are discussed in following sections.
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The mystical element of a system can be described as one's connection
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to a larger entity. While other anarchisms may reject the importance
|
|
of this idea, the mystical function is a critical element of covenism.
|
|
It impossible to separate from the other functions of covenism.
|
|
** Reflections on Infinite Source of Mystery
|
|
#+begin_quote
|
|
"I had to live a while before I understood that a lot of things can
|
|
only be said joking and not joking at the same time." - Always Coming
|
|
Home, Ursula K. Le Guin
|
|
#+end_quote
|
|
|
|
As the surface around the letters you are reading emits or reflects
|
|
electrons, the rods and cones in your eyes receive that light and emit
|
|
signals down their dendrites to other nerves. These signals cascade
|
|
from neuron to neuron, neural cluster to neural cluster, down the
|
|
optic nerve and into the brain. The brain transmutes raw signals about
|
|
the presence or absence of light in certain areas, hues, shapes of
|
|
light and dark areas in to meaning.[fn:1]
|
|
|
|
The words that reach your brain are these:
|
|
|
|
|
|
#+begin_quote
|
|
There are things more well represented by metaphor than by literal
|
|
reality. There are times when the surreal is more true than the
|
|
truth itself.
|
|
#+end_quote
|
|
|
|
|
|
As you perceive the neural network feeding you this information, your
|
|
perception of the universe begins to vibrate. The words resolve in to
|
|
the memory of a smoke that smells like the future[fn:2]. "Who am I?"
|
|
you hear a voice say, as you turn. Following the neural signals back
|
|
out your eyes[fn:3] and you find yourself looking in the mirror. You
|
|
see the face of god, multitude.
|
|
|
|
As you try to speak, you realize that you have no mouth. Instead, you
|
|
open your mind. Your ego climbs out to take control. It is struck by
|
|
the situation and dies instantly.
|
|
|
|
You observe the output of clusters of neurons in you brain, trying to
|
|
determine how to integrate this information within your existing
|
|
paradigm. As you relax your perceptual filters, you notice populations
|
|
of ideas normally filtered out before they reach
|
|
consciousness. Variations on a theme, mutations on a concept,
|
|
iteration by iteration, slowly adapting until they can make the pieces
|
|
fit together.
|
|
|
|
As you find yourself in a room discussing these ideas, you see the
|
|
internal process of ideation occur externally. Different people in the
|
|
room bringing their own interpretation to the ideas, sharing those,
|
|
and hearing iterations of these ideas reflected back, mutated to fit
|
|
the paradigms of others in the room.
|
|
|
|
You become the life giving Earth and the universe itself. As you look
|
|
deep into the eyes of time, you see the birth of your own
|
|
consciousness.
|
|
|
|
Dark and empty, This is not the universe you recognize. In the warm
|
|
dawn, you see amino acids beginning to assemble. In these first few
|
|
million years, brief instants in the scale of the universe, something
|
|
incredible begins.
|
|
|
|
Soon the universe will cool, stars will form, and the universe will
|
|
begin to be recognizable. Almost 10 billion years later, the Earth
|
|
will form. Several million years later, you will watch the thick
|
|
clouds that formed around it fall as a rain storm that lasts for
|
|
centuries.
|
|
|
|
In the oceans of this landless Earth, you see the clusters of amino
|
|
acids organizing and reorganizing. They build themselves from the
|
|
materials available in the oceans, eventually including each
|
|
other. The fastest replicator producing the most, their development is
|
|
guided by natural selection. Strands of nucleic acids grow cells to
|
|
protect themselves.
|
|
|
|
You watch cells cluster together to form a tiny colony called a
|
|
Portuguese Man O' War. Some cells form a bubble, others a
|
|
stinger. These cells are all interdependent but also distinct. You see
|
|
other organisms, like slime molds, form temporary communities and
|
|
disperse.
|
|
|
|
Some communal organisms cooperate so closely they blur distinction
|
|
until they eventually merge in to a single entity. Some multicellular
|
|
organisms even form colony organisms, like ants and bees. These
|
|
organisms share genes and cooperate via chemical signals, exhibiting
|
|
emergent intelligence far beyond the capabilities of any individual.
|
|
|
|
Bicycles weave between each other on a busy Dutch street. An eye
|
|
catches an eye, signaling one cyclist to adjust direction and make
|
|
room for another. As ants communicate with chemical signals, you see
|
|
humans moving in intricate patterns communicating via visual social
|
|
signals. As the dance of bees, subtle visual patterns transmit intent.
|
|
|
|
Our ancestors grew complex communication patterns that allowed us to
|
|
transmit information. They began to be able to persist and reorganize
|
|
data over time. Just as genes had become organisms guided by
|
|
evolution, information, in the form of memes, did the same. Generation
|
|
by generation this capability advanced. The memes refined us, their
|
|
hosts, towards more and more complex models of the world and
|
|
ourselves. These memes gave us the mechanisms to comprehend ourselves,
|
|
and the resulting memes continue to evolve.
|
|
|
|
These memes, what a strange replicator, that can sit lifeless on a
|
|
page, suspended in memes of writing, language, and culture, to yet, at
|
|
any point, cascade through time to live again in another host.
|
|
|
|
You feel the memes within you, moving, competing for your attention,
|
|
pulling you away or pulling you in as you read. Asking to be included,
|
|
integrated, in to the environment of your mind. You feel them
|
|
resisting competing ideas, creating questions, finding ways to make
|
|
everything fit.
|
|
|
|
Time races ahead of you in a blur, from the brink of oblivion into a
|
|
new age of hope. In an empty room, in front of a screen, there is a
|
|
plaque. You read the words.
|
|
|
|
#+begin_quote
|
|
While capitalism oriented itself in the instant, betraying those who
|
|
came before it and sacrificing those who come after, we oriented
|
|
ourselves in deep time, giving thanks to the beginning of the universe
|
|
and borrowing all things from those who come next. Every instant
|
|
starting from the first spark of the cosmos has lead us here, tracing
|
|
our lineage from the fundamental laws of the universe. What we borrow
|
|
from our children, we owe back with interest.
|
|
#+end_quote
|
|
|
|
"Who are we?"
|
|
|
|
You wonder at the question. We. Are we the plurality of immortal memes
|
|
that inhabit us, or the host that animates them? Are we the
|
|
individual, the colony, the clusters of neurons? Are we the
|
|
undifferentiated consciousness that imagined ourselves in to
|
|
experience?
|
|
|
|
A video plays on the screen.
|
|
|
|
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
|
|
Today a young man on acid realized that all matter is merely energy
|
|
condensed to a slow vibration, that we are all one consciousness
|
|
experiencing itself subjectively, there is no such thing as death,
|
|
life is only a dream, and we are the imagination of ourselves.
|
|
#+END_QUOTE
|
|
*** The Entity of an Ismo
|
|
Memes are pieces of, or collections of, information that spread
|
|
together. They are similar to genes, but made of information instead
|
|
of strings of proteins. A memetic organism is an organism defined and
|
|
controlled by memes. The definition part is similar to how genes
|
|
define biological organisms. These memes inhabit hosts, generally
|
|
humans. A memetic organism is a type of meta-organism (an organism
|
|
made of other organisms).
|
|
|
|
As described earlier, an ant in a colony has a simple brain that
|
|
operates on chemical signals. The specific behaviors that an ant
|
|
expresses in response to external stimuli, including communication
|
|
pheromones from other ants, is encoded within its genome. All worker
|
|
ants within a colony are generally genetically identical. While the
|
|
behavior of the individual is highly predictable, the behavior of the
|
|
colony is not. A complex intelligence emerges from the interaction
|
|
between multiple simple organisms. This is an emergent intelligence.
|
|
|
|
In Esperanto, the word "ismo" refers to both an ideology and a
|
|
religion: christianismo, communismo, budhismo, capitalismo. An ismo is
|
|
a memetic organism with an emergent intelligence. There is no attempt
|
|
to distinguish between the ideology and religion. This results in a
|
|
more accurate representation of reality than one finds in English,
|
|
with the false delineation between the two.
|
|
|
|
Within a memetic organism, memes are comparable to both the genes that
|
|
define behavior and the pheromones that elicit behavior. In the same
|
|
way that the state and capitalism form an social entity with its own
|
|
internal logic, a religion is itself a social entity, a memetic
|
|
organism, with its own emergent intelligence. However, within
|
|
capitalism and many other ismoj, the memetic organism is not aware of
|
|
its own existence.
|
|
|
|
Some ismoj, such as liberalism, are invisible to their members. They
|
|
may become so complete that they may not even be named. This is the
|
|
critical difference between Covenism as an ismo and other ismoj:
|
|
Covenism is internally self-aware. The awareness of the social
|
|
organism is embedded in Covenism as the very words you are reading
|
|
now.
|
|
** Our Creed
|
|
#+begin_quote
|
|
Follow your bliss. - Joseph Campbell
|
|
#+end_quote
|
|
|
|
It is not a coincidence that the things which bring us pleasure are
|
|
the same things that increase our probability of passing on our genes
|
|
to the next generation. This is in fact causal. Or more accurately,
|
|
the experience of pleasure is wired by evolution to maximize the
|
|
probability of passing on your genes.
|
|
|
|
It's also not a coincidence that pleasure is distinct from bliss and
|
|
fulfillment (though they can also be interrelated). These feelings
|
|
evolved at different times. The drive for pleasure can be in direct
|
|
conflict with the experience of bliss.
|
|
|
|
Pleasure can come from many sources. Sex can be pleasurable, but so
|
|
can violence. These are immediate and ephemeral experiences. But the
|
|
imagination of pleasure is often outweighed by the actual experience
|
|
of it. This should sound familiar to anyone with a passing
|
|
understanding of Buddhism.
|
|
|
|
Bliss is something different. It is a lasting experience of
|
|
fulfillment. It is not a coincidence that these to experiences are
|
|
distinct. They function on different levels. The experience of
|
|
pleasure is associated to distinct and specific (often relatively
|
|
simple) actions.
|
|
|
|
Bliss is extremely complex. The experience is different because is
|
|
external to ourselves. The experience of bliss comes from things like
|
|
empathy and the joy of cooperation. Where pleasure is an individual
|
|
reward, bliss is a social reward.
|
|
|
|
Just as the pursuit of pleasure increased the transmission of genes
|
|
for our ancestors, the maximization of bliss increases the
|
|
survivability of our social organism. The problem with pleasure is
|
|
that genetic evolution is slow. The drive towards pleasure does not
|
|
necessarily align with our genetic wellbeing, and perhaps it never
|
|
really aligned with our personal wellbeing. However, since bliss is a
|
|
social experience, the signal of bliss evolves at a memetic
|
|
rate (exponentially faster than genes).
|
|
|
|
To maximize your own bliss is to maximize bliss for all around you. So
|
|
then there is only one commandment, given and enforced by nature
|
|
itself: follow your bliss.
|
|
* The Practice of Worship
|
|
You will need to map out the structure and cadence of worship when you
|
|
create a coven, and build your agreements. It is recommended to break
|
|
down worship in to three sections: the functional, the communal, and
|
|
the spiritual.
|
|
|
|
It's recommended to break these across multiple days. A common
|
|
structure for some Christian churches is to take 10-15 minutes for
|
|
announcements (Functional), an hour or two for services (Spiritual),
|
|
followed by (Communal) coffee, tea, and cookies for an unspecified
|
|
time up to two hours after. When starting or working with limited time
|
|
a single compressed model like this may work, but it's not optimal.
|
|
** The Functional
|
|
The purpose of this section is to address the functional needs of the
|
|
coven. Block out time (less than 90 minute blocks is recommended) to
|
|
go through reports and updates from those involved in the Dispensary,
|
|
Library, Works Committee, and Services Committee. Talk through any
|
|
additional announcements, including those from other covens you are
|
|
federated with.
|
|
|
|
It is helpful to include unstructured communal time, such as shared
|
|
meals, during or after functional meetings. As the federation grows,
|
|
more time will be needed. It is recommended to break functional
|
|
meetings, work parties, and such across multiple days. When a
|
|
federation becomes sufficiently large, it is recommended to take every
|
|
Monday, on top of Saturday and Sunday, as a third day of community and
|
|
worship.
|
|
|
|
Given the increases in productivity over the last 100 years, a 4 day
|
|
work week is a completely reasonable expectation. If we have to annex
|
|
Monday for the weekend by force of religion, so be it. It is
|
|
rightfully ours anyway.
|
|
|
|
The scope of the functional spans 3 realms: the personal and family,
|
|
the coven and federation, and humanity itself. It is up to each coven
|
|
and individual to negotiate how to allocate the three days of the
|
|
weekend once we have liberated Monday from the work week, but it is
|
|
important to reserve it for one of these three. However, some people
|
|
must work on weekends. Medical personnel, for example, cannot conform
|
|
to a standard work week. While the work week should be universally
|
|
restricted, which specific days are used will be up to the specific
|
|
coven and their members.
|
|
|
|
A functional meeting can start with an agenda like the following:
|
|
|
|
1. Functional Invocation
|
|
2. Announcements
|
|
3. Report Backs
|
|
1. Dispensary
|
|
1. Inventory Check
|
|
1. What is low
|
|
2. What is empty
|
|
3. What is expiring
|
|
4. What is needed
|
|
2. Funds status
|
|
2. Library
|
|
1. Inventory Check and Items needing return
|
|
2. Library acquisition requests
|
|
3. Funds status and budget check
|
|
3. Works Committee
|
|
1. Upcoming projects
|
|
2. Subcommittee updates (Following the Works Committee agenda)
|
|
3. New committee formations
|
|
4. Funds status
|
|
4. Services Committee
|
|
1. New capabilities announcements
|
|
2. New needs requests
|
|
3. Subcommittee updates (Following the Works Committee agenda)
|
|
4. New committee formations
|
|
5. Funds status
|
|
4. Task Check
|
|
5. Breaking the Circle
|
|
|
|
This agenda is a suggestion for those who don't know where to
|
|
start. It can be adapted or ignored as appropriate.
|
|
** The Communal
|
|
The communal aspect of the practice of worship bind the coven and
|
|
federation together. Within the community we find joy and release,
|
|
connection and comfort. The coven is where we turn in times of need,
|
|
and where we share our hopes and dreams.
|
|
|
|
Each coven will have its own rituals, but here are some suggestions:
|
|
*** Confession/Check-in
|
|
While therapy can be difficult for many people to access, a coven can
|
|
set aside a couple of hours twice a week to give members a chance to
|
|
talk through their feelings. When we discuss problems we think are
|
|
only ours, we often find commonality we hadn't noticed.
|
|
|
|
It can also be helpful to have regular time with people outside of the
|
|
coven to talk about internal dynamics and find commonality outside of
|
|
small groups.
|
|
*** Potlucks and Festivals
|
|
Food and celebration are elements of religious ritual dating back to
|
|
the first indicators of religious practice. Celebrations, such as
|
|
harvest, can help people feel more grounded and aware of the seasons.
|
|
*** Community Psychedelics
|
|
Many religions have a long history of the use of psychedelics for
|
|
self-exploration, healing, and leaning. Psychedelics are powerful
|
|
spiritual tools that are often not treated with the respect they
|
|
deserve. These rituals are not games or entertainment. They are not
|
|
intended or expected to be fun. They can be difficult and emotionally
|
|
taxing.
|
|
|
|
The safe use of psychedelics falls outside the scope of this manifesto
|
|
and should be thoroughly researched by any wishing to engage with
|
|
them. That said, psychedelics can be a powerful medicine for healing
|
|
trauma and achieving spiritual awareness.
|
|
** The Spiritual
|
|
Religions around the world have mapped out different versions of the
|
|
wheel of life, have talked about life and death in metaphor, and have
|
|
talked about our place in the universe. Your coven is a place for
|
|
conversation. It is a place for these ideas to live. Invite these gods
|
|
in and ask them to stay a while.
|
|
|
|
Just remember, we do not live to serve the gods. The gods live to
|
|
serve us. That is the distinction between the coven and those who
|
|
would have you bear a cross.
|
|
*** Rites and Rituals
|
|
When you create your coven, you will define the rites and rituals that
|
|
make sense for you. Over time you will find gaps. You will need to
|
|
create new rites and rituals for different situations. Only one ritual
|
|
is defined here as part of the practice of worship.
|
|
|
|
The coven is a place many traditions can intermingle. Share rites and
|
|
rituals that are meaningful with others. Adapt, adopt, and revive
|
|
rituals from your ancestors. Write down and perhaps even share your
|
|
rituals with other covens if they are meaningful to you.
|
|
|
|
The only warning is to avoid appropriation. Some rituals can have
|
|
different meaning outside of their original cultural context. If you
|
|
don't have a full understanding of that cultural context, then
|
|
performing such rituals without the permission of those who do can be
|
|
offensive at best and harmful at worst.
|
|
**** The Functional Invocation/Breaking the Circle
|
|
At the beginning and end of the [[*The Functional][functional]] meeting there are two
|
|
rituals: the Invocation and Breaking the Circle. You are free to
|
|
define these how you please. The rituals described below are only a
|
|
suggestion.
|
|
***** Invocation
|
|
A random person will lead the invocation. The same person cannot lead
|
|
twice.
|
|
Draw the sigil for your coven on a piece of paper.
|
|
|
|
Draw the following symbol next to it:
|
|
|
|
\includegraphics[width=1.5em]{ellis.png}
|
|
# ⍼
|
|
|
|
Put the paper on the floor or a table.
|
|
Gather the coven around the paper and hold hands in a circle.
|
|
Recite the following:
|
|
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
|
|
With this sigil we bind ourselves to each other, for each other, our
|
|
actions to fulfill our will, in this space, in this time, together.
|
|
#+END_QUOTE
|
|
***** Breaking the Circle
|
|
During task check, each individual who took on tasks will have their
|
|
name or initials next to the task. No tasks will be left without an
|
|
owner.
|
|
|
|
Review the task check from the previous meeting. Cross out any
|
|
duplicates.
|
|
For any completed tasks, the owner will recite the following:
|
|
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
|
|
I have fulfilled our will. I ask that my binding to this task be
|
|
broken.
|
|
#+END_QUOTE
|
|
If the task is complete to the satisfaction of the coven, all will
|
|
recite the following:
|
|
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
|
|
Your binding is broken.
|
|
#+END_QUOTE
|
|
For any tasks that the owner cannot complete, the owner will recite
|
|
the following:
|
|
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
|
|
I cannot fulfill our will. I ask that my binding to this task be
|
|
transferred or broken.
|
|
#+END_QUOTE
|
|
The group will discuss and choose to transfer the binding to another
|
|
member or to break the binding and release the task.
|
|
|
|
After reviewing previous tasks, recite the following:
|
|
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
|
|
By these sigils we bind ourselves to these actions that we will
|
|
complete, and if we fail, and if we falter, we will ask for help, and
|
|
the coven will hold us, and carry us, as we carry it when we are
|
|
strong. We take each task with our mark and bind ourselves to them
|
|
until the end.
|
|
#+END_QUOTE
|
|
Next to each remaining task, draw the sigil for each person who owns
|
|
the task.
|
|
|
|
Once all tasks have a sigil, everyone will recite the following:
|
|
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
|
|
As we break this sigil, we break the binding of this space. We hold on
|
|
to our tasks and commitments, for each other, with each other, outside
|
|
of this space and time.
|
|
#+END_QUOTE
|
|
The person who lead the invocation will either burn the paper the
|
|
sigil is drawn on or will rip the paper in to small pieces.
|
|
|
|
* Creation of a Coven
|
|
Any group of three to five people who agree can form a coven. In order
|
|
to have the legal protections of a coven, such as a legal framework
|
|
for collective ownership and tax exception, it is necessary to form a
|
|
legal entity. However, a legal entity isn't required to start with any
|
|
of the functional, communal, or spiritual elements of a coven.
|
|
|
|
A coven is a group of people who can know each other so well that they
|
|
are ultimately able to predict what other members would say in a given
|
|
situation, such that any member can act autonomously on behalf of the
|
|
whole. When you form a coven, you become accountable for the actions
|
|
of other members of your coven and you can be held accountable for
|
|
holding or not holding them accountable.
|
|
|
|
You may own property with these people. You may trust them with your
|
|
children (if you have any). You may trust them with your life. A coven
|
|
is a relationship. It must be fostered and maintained, it will grow
|
|
and change over time. Visit and revisit your assumptions about your
|
|
coven members, learn and re-learn who they are.
|
|
|
|
Human relationships are complex, and no manual can describe how to
|
|
foster and maintain them, but this document does provide some
|
|
recommendations of where to start.
|
|
** Writing Religious Literature
|
|
Covenism is a meta religion, like the Universal Life Church, that
|
|
allows people with different spiritual perspectives to share spiritual
|
|
practices and spaces. Each coven will have its own spiritual
|
|
identity, and will, therefore, have its own religious literature.
|
|
|
|
You may define as much or as little as you would like, but four
|
|
minimum elements are strongly recommended: a vision, a set of
|
|
agreements, a set of rites and rituals, and a sigil (or symbol).
|
|
|
|
*** Defining a Vision
|
|
You have chosen to put together a coven for a reason. What is that
|
|
reason? Something in the above text may have resonated with
|
|
you. Perhaps it was something else. Use the following prompts. Each
|
|
prospective member should answer these questions, in written form, for
|
|
each other:
|
|
|
|
1. Why do you want to be part of a coven?
|
|
2. What does the world we are trying to build look like?
|
|
3. What would it mean to follow your bliss?
|
|
|
|
Take these answers and combine them to create a single vision for your
|
|
coven. This vision should represent the consensus of the group. If it
|
|
isn't possible to reach a consensus, the group may need to break apart
|
|
to form separate covens.
|
|
*** Building of Agreements and Protocols
|
|
Group agreements are collectively defined rules that describe how
|
|
members should interact. They may function to simplify interactions,
|
|
ensure access needs are met, or to protect against the emergence of
|
|
hierarchical behavior. You can use the following prompts, or define
|
|
your own:
|
|
|
|
1. How should we interact with each other?
|
|
2. What are your access needs?
|
|
3. What would help you feel safe and respected?
|
|
4. How should we deal with conflict?
|
|
5. How do we deal with unanswerable questions?
|
|
6. What is the process by which we update these agreements?
|
|
|
|
Write down these agreements. Edit them until you reach consensus. If
|
|
it isn't possible to reach a consensus, the group may need to break
|
|
apart to form separate covens.
|
|
|
|
Keep these available to refer to as they may be needed during
|
|
services. These agreements will change over time. Keep them updated
|
|
and be sure to check in regularly, perhaps even through a specific
|
|
yearly ritual, to make sure they all still apply and no more are
|
|
needed.
|
|
*** Defining Rites and Rituals
|
|
Rites and rituals maintain a community. They provide opportunities to
|
|
express emotions, spiritually connect, celebrate changes and
|
|
achievements, and resolve conflict within the coven. Use the following
|
|
prompts to begin discussing the rites and rituals for your coven:
|
|
|
|
1. What rituals have you found meaningful or special in your life?
|
|
2. What rituals should we perform to mark the passage of time and
|
|
major events in life?
|
|
3. What needs do we have that haven't yet been met by our other
|
|
practices?
|
|
|
|
As mentioned in the previous section, covens should consider a yearly
|
|
or even quarterly affirmation ritual where members all either affirm
|
|
their agreement with the current definition of the coven, or propose
|
|
changes for the coven to take up. This can go well with a death and
|
|
rebirth ritual (common in winter for people in the northern half of
|
|
the northern hemisphere).
|
|
*** Choosing a Sigil
|
|
Your sigil can be anything, it can be drawn any way you choose. The
|
|
following method may help if you are struggling to come up with one.
|
|
|
|
1. Write the coven names (names known within the coven to other
|
|
members, not necessarily legal or given names) out.
|
|
2. Write out the most important words for each agreement.
|
|
3. Write out the most important words from the vision.
|
|
4. Circle common or favorite letters from these words.
|
|
5. Break these letters apart in to common shapes.
|
|
6. Draw these shapes connected to each other.
|
|
7. Draw several different collections of these shapes and choose which
|
|
everyone likes the most.
|
|
8. Modify them as esthetically appropriate, adding arrows or circles
|
|
based on how the shape makes you feel.
|
|
9. Choose the symbol that feels best to the coven.
|
|
|
|
Follow a similar strategy for each member's sigil. A coven sigil may
|
|
just be individual sigils bound together by some shape. You may
|
|
revisit this at any time if the sigil no longer resonates or no longer
|
|
feels appropriate for the coven.
|
|
|
|
If it's difficult to find agreeable sigils using this method, it may
|
|
be worth exploring alternatives to the latin alphabet. Consider the
|
|
Theban or Shavian alphabets, or consider older runic alphabets such as
|
|
Younger Futhark, Elder Futhark, or Anglo-Frisian Runes. Hundreds of
|
|
alternative alphabets exist, and nothing stops you from integrating
|
|
Elvish or Klingon in to your sigil.
|
|
|
|
Keep in mind that you will have to write this sigil several times
|
|
during rituals. You may need to revisit it and simplify, or you may
|
|
want to create a simplified sigil for the worship ritual.
|
|
|
|
Be creative and have fun!
|
|
|
|
#+NAME: fig:2
|
|
#+CAPTION: Thebian Alphabet
|
|
[[./Theban_alphabet_from_Polygraphia_1518_cleaned-up.png]]
|
|
|
|
** Creating a Legal Entity
|
|
Creation of legal entities differ by location, and step-by-step
|
|
instructions could probably be a zine all on their own. If you create
|
|
a legal coven, make it easier for others and write a zine on how you
|
|
did it!
|
|
|
|
In the mean time, start by looking at the Universal Life Church's
|
|
Ministry Launch Forms:
|
|
https://ulccaselaw.com/wp-content/images/MinistryLaunchForms.pdf
|
|
* Creation of a Federation
|
|
A federation follows the same practices and processes as a coven, but
|
|
will be formed and maintained by delegates. The federation is
|
|
recursive, so it may be a federation of covens or a federation of
|
|
federations. There can be any number of levels of federation, though,
|
|
assuming 5 members at each level, every human on earth can be
|
|
connected in under 15 levels and all of the US can be connected in
|
|
under 11.
|
|
|
|
Each coven or federation will appoint one delegate to form the new
|
|
federation. Delegates will follow the same practices as creating a
|
|
coven, modified for the federation. The federation will need a much
|
|
more clear and complete set of agreements and protocols, including a
|
|
meeting schedule.
|
|
|
|
Federations do not necessarily only need to be between covens or
|
|
federations within Covenism. Covens or Covenist federations can
|
|
federate with other organizations, such as churches or mosques, where
|
|
interests align and agreements can be reached. However, any entity
|
|
that wishes to federate will need to follow the protocol for
|
|
federation of appointing a delegate to negotiate the relationship and
|
|
conforming to the bounds of the relationship.
|
|
* COMMENT Of the Amish, monasteries, and Acéphale
|
|
As the Nazis rose to power, an unusual anti-fascist named Georges
|
|
Bataille tried to create a secret society and a religion. Acéphale
|
|
aimed to create a "headless" society by creating a religion that would
|
|
carry out a metaphysical assault on fascist ideology.
|
|
|
|
Covenism is not a continuation of that project, but is not entirely
|
|
distinct either. Covenism is an anti-fascist religion born during a
|
|
rising tide of global fascism. It is an assault on, and rejection of,
|
|
the dominant order. But is not nietzschian. It is not focused on
|
|
building a secret order. It is, in some ways, attempting to create an
|
|
ethnoreligion similar to the Amish: a shared world outside the domain
|
|
of the dominant order.
|
|
|
|
Anabaptists, like the Amish or Mennonites, and monasteries often
|
|
create spaces for themselves that exist outside of the dominant
|
|
order. Pacifist Anabaptist may not serve on juries. Insular religious
|
|
communities may have their own legal frameworks (potential criticism
|
|
thereof aside). Monasteries can operate entirely outside of capitalism
|
|
and the state because they are not required to pay taxes on land, and
|
|
monks with a vow of poverty are not required to pay Social Security
|
|
and Medicare taxes and may be below the poverty line for other taxes.
|
|
|
|
An insular or secret religious community can be mysterious or
|
|
invisible to the outside world. This separation can allow such
|
|
communities to protect vulnerable members from threats.
|
|
|
|
This text is written under the assumption that religions other than
|
|
Christianity remain legal in the US. This assumption may not hold
|
|
true. A coven can easily be converted to a church, if needed. The
|
|
"Christian" fish is an appropriated pagan symbol that can be
|
|
re-appropriated to hide covens that who would not otherwise identify
|
|
as Christian.
|
|
|
|
Covenism intends to subvert the weaknesses created by Christian
|
|
nationalists for their ends. In many ways, it's what The Satanic
|
|
Temple would be if TST wasn't created by a fascist-friendly
|
|
grifter. Unlike TST, covenism isn't trying to create or preserve an
|
|
America where all religions are treated as equal (though some are more
|
|
equal than others). Covenism seeks to kill the God/Money and burn it's
|
|
temple to the ground.
|
|
|
|
In the terminal phases of fascism, those vulnerabilities cannot so
|
|
easily be exploited. Liberalism is the worship of the law, and can be
|
|
manipulated in to fulfilling them to the letter. Fascism worships only
|
|
power. Covenism must mutate when faced with a state that no longer
|
|
attempts to maintain the illusion of justice. Against the liberal,
|
|
covenism brings playful resistance; against the fascist, covenism
|
|
brings silent death.
|
|
|
|
The US is far too large to police effectively. Even the most
|
|
authoritarian state imaginable would have little ability to monitor
|
|
people outside of the urban core. The state maintains it's hold
|
|
through intensive counterinsurgency. This is mostly an information
|
|
war, because the state is not equip to carry out an asymmetric
|
|
conflict against it's population... nor will it ever be.
|
|
|
|
#+begin_quote
|
|
If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result
|
|
of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for
|
|
every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know
|
|
neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.
|
|
- Sun Tzu
|
|
#+end_quote
|
|
* Conclusion
|
|
This text proposes to create an egalitarian and self-aware social
|
|
entity, a conscious memetic organism, an anarchist religion and
|
|
federation. As you understand this text, you are the emergent
|
|
intelligence of this entity, of the being we are creating together,
|
|
becoming self-aware. As you dream it and share it, you become it.
|
|
|
|
You are the universe, aware of itself. You are ordained by your
|
|
coven. Thus speaks the Ellis. Now, you are Ellis.
|
|
|
|
As you allow Anarchocovenism in to your mind, you become Ellis Angzar.
|
|
|
|
Become the will of Ellis. Enact the will of Ellis. Do with this truth
|
|
what you will. The truth you find will be measured by how well it
|
|
grows beyond you.
|
|
|
|
#+NAME: fig:3
|
|
[[./quote.png]]
|
|
* Appendix A: Mapping of the IRS definition of a church to a coven
|
|
Compare to the [[http://www.ulcseminary.org/irsqualifications.php][ULC IRS CHURCH QUALIFICATION GUIDELINES]] if modifying. A
|
|
church does not need to meet all 14 points, but is expected to meet
|
|
most of them.
|
|
** Distinct legal existence
|
|
This is a distinct legal entity, such as an LLC. Your coven will need
|
|
a governing body to run the legal entity it's formed under. However
|
|
you decide to do this, it must be spelled out clearly in filing forms.
|
|
** Recognized creed and form of worship
|
|
Worship is described in [[*The Practice of Worship][The Practice of Worship]]. This is ultimately
|
|
only a suggestion. Your coven or federation is free to adapt as
|
|
needed. [[*Reflections on Infinite Source of Mystery][Reflections on Infinite Source of Mystery]] section of this
|
|
zine describes a set of mystical beliefs that covens are free to take
|
|
as is, modify, or replace with their own.
|
|
** Definite and distinct ecclesiastical government
|
|
The coven must define its governing own system on creation during the
|
|
[[* Building of Agreements and Protocols][Building of Agreements and Protocols]]. The recommended governing
|
|
structure is direct consensus democracy. Federations follow a similar
|
|
system, as described in the [[*Creation of a Federation][Creation of a Federation]] section, however
|
|
the recommended structure is a spokes council with federation member
|
|
groups represented by an appointed member and the council operating by
|
|
direct consensus democracy.
|
|
|
|
When creating a legal entity, these agreements are encoded in founding
|
|
documents. These documents must describe the mechanism by which a
|
|
person is appointed to manage a bank account, how people are provided
|
|
access, and what documents are needed to prove to a bank that the
|
|
appointee is authorized to act on behalf of the coven.
|
|
** Formal code of doctrine and discipline
|
|
A religion that is inclusive will grow faster than one that is
|
|
exclusive. Members of an egalitarian religion will be more likely to
|
|
survive hardship than those of a hierarchal one. A religion that
|
|
focuses on making children as joyful as possible and raising them as
|
|
easy as possible, benefits all members once and other members multiple
|
|
times. A religion of joy and hope can build great things. A religion
|
|
of fear can only destroy.
|
|
|
|
On a long enough time scale, natural selection will determine which
|
|
doctrine is correct. Those who follow bliss will follow nature by free
|
|
will. Those who resist nature will struggle to find such joy.
|
|
** Distinct religious history
|
|
The Enlightenment Europeans who are sometimes described as early
|
|
anarchist thinkers described systems used by some indigenous people in
|
|
the Americas at the time, and systems that had been used by many
|
|
different indigenous groups around the world long before the
|
|
development of capitalism and the state. While many Anarchist thinkers
|
|
from the Enlightenment through the modern period have also promoted
|
|
atheism (No Gods, No Masters), Anarchist ideas predate the distinction
|
|
between religion and politics.
|
|
|
|
We trace anarchism back to its threaded connection to animism and
|
|
ancestor worship. The universe itself is alive and conscious. We are
|
|
all on a continuum of conscious, part of the greater being of the
|
|
awakening universe.
|
|
|
|
All religions that have ever existed are themselves on a continuum of
|
|
alignment with this consciousness. I reference for my own spirituality
|
|
the Tao Te Ching while others reference the works of Zeno of Citium.
|
|
|
|
Some describe Taoism as an anarchist text. It should surprise
|
|
Christian anarchists to find that the Greek word "Logos" was
|
|
translated to "Tao" in the first Chinese translation of the
|
|
bible. Jewish Anarchists have pointed out that the Torah could be
|
|
taken to describe an anarchist ancient Israel (Judges 21:25). Recent
|
|
writing on Islamic Anarchism complete the anarchist threads of
|
|
Abrahamic traditions, pointing out that the first Muslims resisted
|
|
state power. Some Diné (Navajo) people have point out that European
|
|
anarchism arose after European intellectuals read accounts of
|
|
indigenous societies such as theirs. They draw a direct line from
|
|
missionary texts about indigenous people, and early Marxist and
|
|
Anarchist ideas about what a society should look like. This should not
|
|
at all be surprising as the structure of the Iroquois Confederation
|
|
was the template for American democracy.[fn:4]
|
|
|
|
You must identify your own influences, but the history of anarchism as
|
|
a religion may even predate humans.
|
|
** Membership not associated with any other church or denomination
|
|
Distinct membership in only one religious organization is a distinct
|
|
property of western Christianity. It is not impossible in "Eastern"
|
|
belief systems to simultaneously be a member of multiple faiths, and
|
|
as such one could be a member of one or multiple other churches or
|
|
denominations.
|
|
** Organization of ordained ministers
|
|
All coven members are, by definition, ordained by reading either this
|
|
document or the founding documents for the coven they have joined or
|
|
started.
|
|
** Ordained ministers selected after completing prescribed courses of study
|
|
This is your course of study. When you complete reading this document,
|
|
you become ordained.
|
|
** Literature of its own
|
|
You are reading it. If you've started a coven, you've written some of
|
|
it.
|
|
** Established places of worship
|
|
You will define a space for worship. It's not uncommon for Quakers
|
|
services to be held in someone's house. The Universal Life Church
|
|
operates online in a forum.
|
|
** Regular congregations
|
|
Regular congregations could be anything from a dedicated Mastodon
|
|
server, to regular services in a public park, to a regular video call.
|
|
** Regular religious services
|
|
[[*The Practice of Worship][The Practice of Worship]] is recommended to be performed weekly for
|
|
covens, biweekly for first level federations, monthly for second level
|
|
federations, quarterly for third level federations, and yearly for
|
|
fourth level federations. If we have fifth level federations, you're
|
|
probably reading this in a history class.
|
|
** Sunday schools for the religious instruction of the young
|
|
[[*The Services Committee][The Services Committee]] is responsible for organizing both childcare
|
|
and instruction for the young as long as they are too young to
|
|
organize their own covens.
|
|
** Schools for the preparation of its members
|
|
[[*The Services Committee][The Services Committee]] is responsible for establishing schools if possible.
|
|
* COMMENT logo
|
|
- create
|
|
#+BEGIN_SRC logo :tangle logo.lg :exports none
|
|
setbg 7 setpc 0
|
|
make "sides 5
|
|
make "size 400
|
|
make "diameter size*.54
|
|
make "small_diameter (((:size/2)/sin(54))*sin(36))/2
|
|
TO STAR :SIDES :SIZE
|
|
make "ANGLE (360/SIDES)
|
|
repeat :SIDES [rt :ANGLE*2 fd :SIZE]
|
|
END
|
|
TO pud
|
|
ifelse (pendownp) [pu] [pd]
|
|
END
|
|
cs home setpensize 1
|
|
pu fd :diameter rt (360/5)/4 pd
|
|
STAR :sides :size
|
|
pu home pd
|
|
setpensize 3
|
|
arc 360 :diameter
|
|
pu fd :diameter rt (360/5)/4 pd
|
|
pu repeat :SIDES [pud rt (360/5)*2 fd :SIZE]
|
|
lt (360/5)/4
|
|
|
|
pu fd :small_diameter pd
|
|
rt 90
|
|
arc 180 :small_diameter
|
|
pu home
|
|
fd -:diameter
|
|
pd fd -:diameter/((1+sqrt(5))/2)
|
|
lt 90
|
|
pu fd :small_diameter
|
|
pd arc 180 :small_diameter
|
|
pu fd -(:small_diameter*2)
|
|
pd arc 180 :small_diameter
|
|
epspict "logo.eps
|
|
#+END_SRC
|
|
- convernt
|
|
#+begin_src shell :results verbatim drawer
|
|
magick cover.svg -trim cover.png
|
|
#+end_src
|
|
|
|
#+RESULTS:
|
|
:results:
|
|
:end:
|
|
|
|
* Footnotes
|
|
[fn:1] If you happen to be reading this in braille or listening to
|
|
this as audio, a similar process occurs. Air compresses in to sound
|
|
waves, these waves vibrate your ear drum, moving fluid inside your
|
|
ears. The movement of this fluid moves tiny hairs which are connected
|
|
to neurons. This is what we perceive as sound. Alternatively,
|
|
individual neurons in your fingertips detect pressure, these neurons
|
|
send signals to larger and larger branches of nerves until they reach
|
|
your spinal cord and are taken to your brain. In both cases, the
|
|
nerves that carry these signals to your brain perform some level of
|
|
processing before they finally do reach the parts of your brain
|
|
responsible for deriving meaning.
|
|
[fn:2] This is not actually a reference to cannabis, but rather to the
|
|
song "Nostrildamus" by the Oakland band /I Will Kill You Fucker/.
|
|
Nostrildamus. He can smell the future.
|
|
[fn:3] ...ears, fingertips, neural implant, etc, however you take in
|
|
information.
|
|
[fn:4] We can omit discussions about how it was modified to fit a less
|
|
egalitarian purpose than the original, or how it was modified after to
|
|
be significantly less democratic when the "Founding Fathers" realized
|
|
they really didn't like the idea of a democracy that included the
|
|
whole demos. Nor shall we discuss the fact that demos itself refers
|
|
specifically to men who are not slaves, thus democracy is the system
|
|
whereby men who are not slaves control a slave society... a fact well
|
|
reflected by liberal democracies around the world. But I have already
|
|
digressed in my digression.
|
|
[fn:5] A coven should not try to create all things themselves. Rather,
|
|
covens should practice Social Insertion, participating in and
|
|
supporting external organizations that align with the coven's
|
|
objectives.
|