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{{Ideology|title1 = [[File: Anpacf.png]] | {{Stub}} | ||
{{Ideology | |||
| themecolor = #141414 | |||
| textcolor = #FFFFFF | |||
|title1 = [[File: Anpacf.png]] Anarcho-Pacifism | |||
|image1 = Blank.png | |||
|aliases = AnPac | |||
|quadrant(s)= [[File: Libleft.png]] [[:Category:Libertarian Left|Libertarian Left]] | |||
|family= | |family= | ||
[[File: Awaj.png]] [[Anarchism]] (Mother)<br> | [[File: Awaj.png]] [[Anarchism]] (Mother)<br> | ||
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[[File: Anprim.png]] [[Anarcho-Primitivism]] (Sibling) <br> | [[File: Anprim.png]] [[Anarcho-Primitivism]] (Sibling) <br> | ||
[[File: AnSynd.png]] [[Anarcho-Syndicalism]] (Sibling) <br> | [[File: AnSynd.png]] [[Anarcho-Syndicalism]] (Sibling) <br> | ||
[[File: Antr.png]] [[Anarcho-Transhumanism]] (Sibling) <br> | [[File: Antr.png]] [[Anarcho-Transhumanism]] (Sibling) <br> | ||
[[File: Egoism.png]] [[Egoism]] (Sibling) <br> | [[File: Egoism.png]] [[Egoism]] (Sibling) <br> | ||
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[[File: Natan.png]] [[National Anarchism]] (Sibling) <br> | [[File: Natan.png]] [[National Anarchism]] (Sibling) <br> | ||
[[File: Anrel.png]] [[Religious Anarchism]] (Sibling) <br> | [[File: Anrel.png]] [[Religious Anarchism]] (Sibling) <br> | ||
[[File: | [[File: Cdem.png]] [[Christian Democracy]] (Sibling) <br> | ||
[[File: | [[File: Cfash.png]] [[Clerical Fascism]] (Sibling) <br> | ||
[[File: Muslim 2.png]] [[Islamic Theocracy]] ( | [[File: Muslim 2.png]] [[Islamic Theocracy]] (Sibling) <br> | ||
[[File: | | greatest_achievement = | ||
| gangs = [[File: Awaj.png]] [[:Category:Anarchists|Sons of Anarchy]] | |||
| | | likes = | ||
| | | dislikes = | ||
| | | definition = An anarchist ideology that advocates for the use of non-violent action, rather than armed revolt, to achieve its goals. | ||
| song = | |||
| book = [https://www.ibiblio.org/ebooks/Thoreau/Civil%20Disobedience.pdf On The Duty of Civil Disobedience] by [[wp:Henry David Thoreau|Henry David Thoreau]] | |||
| year = | |||
| country = No specific country | |||
| founder = No specific founder | |||
}} | |||
'''Anarcho-Pacifism''', referred to by the abbreviation '''AnPac''', is an economically socialist or communist, culturally ambivalent and anarchist ideology that advocates for the use of non-violent action to facilitate the abolition of the state and capitalism. Anarcho-pacifists believe that the use of violent force stands contrary to the anti-hierarchial principle of anarchism, as a group using force to topple a hierarchy has not eliminated it, but established itself at the head of it. | |||
Anarcho-pacifist thought is predominantly based in the writings of [[wp:Henry David Thoreau|Henry David Thoreau]], [[wp:Leo Tolstoy|Leo Tolstoy]], and [[wp:Mahatma Gandhi|Mahatma Gandhi]], and serves as a core tenet in most variants of [[File: Anrel.png]] [[Religious Anarchism|religious anarchism]]<ref>Christoyannopoulos, Alexandre. (March 2010). [https://web.archive.org/web/20110812071723/http://www.psa.ac.uk/journals/pdf/5/2010/1338_1226.pdf "A Christian Anarchist Critique of Violence: From Turning the Other Cheek to a Rejection of the State"]. Political Studies Association. Archived on 2011-08-12.</ref>. Despite significant anarcho-pacifist thinkers citing Thoreau as an influence, Thoreau himself did not subscribe to pacifism<ref>Meyer, Michael. (1980). [https://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/30228175?uid=3739832&uid=2129&uid=2&uid=70&uid=4&uid=3739256&sid=21104259840033 "Thoreau's Rescue of John Brown from History" Studies in the American Renaissance], pp. 301–316</ref>. | |||
== | ==Personality and Behavior== | ||
Anarcho-Pacifism appears in comics as a timid, conflict-averse individual who is often seen haplessly trying to defuse conflicts between its ideological relatives. Other common depictions feature it as an everyman or neutral character with a professional demeanor, in a similar manner to [[File:Apolit.png]] [[Apoliticism]] and [[File:Moder.png]] [[Moderatism]]. | |||
===Comic appearances=== | |||
A female Anarcho-Pacifism is one of two main characters in Reddit user [https://www.reddit.com/user/hydratedbirb hydratedbirb]'s [https://www.reddit.com/user/hydratedbirb/comments/i924ez/anpacancap_series_links/ AnPac x AnCap] comic series, which explores the budding romantic relationship between the two seemingly-incompatible anarchist ideologies. | |||
== | ==How To Draw== | ||
# Draw a ball with eyes. | |||
# Draw a black (#141414) diagonal line from the lower left to the upper right of the ball. | |||
# Color the upper half of the ball white (#FFFFFF) and the lower half black. | |||
=== Friends === | {{Flag-color|color1-hex = #FFFFFF|color1-name = White|color2-name = Black|color2-hex = #141414|color1-rgb = 255,255,255|color1-cmyk = 0,0,0,0|color2-rgb = 20,20,20|color2-cmyk = 0,0,0,92}} | ||
==Relationships== | |||
===Friends=== | |||
* [[File: Anrel.png]] [[Religious Anarchism]] - Anpac gets along very well with Religious Anarchism, since Christian Anarchism is Anarcho-Pacifism. | * [[File: Anrel.png]] [[Religious Anarchism]] - Anpac gets along very well with Religious Anarchism, since Christian Anarchism is Anarcho-Pacifism. | ||
* [[File: Farm.png]] [[Agrarianism]] - If he wasn't friends with Anarcho-Primitivism, Anpac would be closer with him. However, industrialism is pretty violent, and agrarianism is more peaceful. | * [[File: Farm.png]] [[Agrarianism]] - If he wasn't friends with Anarcho-Primitivism, Anpac would be closer with him. However, industrialism is pretty violent, and agrarianism is more peaceful. | ||
===Frenemies=== | |||
===Enemies=== | |||
==References== | |||
<references> | |||
[[Category:Characters]] | |||
[[Category:Canon ideologies]] | |||
[[Category:Libertarian Left]] | [[Category:Libertarian Left]] | ||
[[Category:Culturally Left]] | |||
[[Category:Anarchists]] | |||
[[Category:Democratic]] | |||
[[Category:Religious]] | [[Category:Religious]] | ||
[[Category:Socialists]] | [[Category:Socialists]] | ||
Revision as of 16:15, 18 August 2020
Stub Article "Help" - Still-Being-Drawnism This page is a stub. You can help FreePCB by expanding it. |
Anarcho-Pacifism, referred to by the abbreviation AnPac, is an economically socialist or communist, culturally ambivalent and anarchist ideology that advocates for the use of non-violent action to facilitate the abolition of the state and capitalism. Anarcho-pacifists believe that the use of violent force stands contrary to the anti-hierarchial principle of anarchism, as a group using force to topple a hierarchy has not eliminated it, but established itself at the head of it.
Anarcho-pacifist thought is predominantly based in the writings of Henry David Thoreau, Leo Tolstoy, and Mahatma Gandhi, and serves as a core tenet in most variants of religious anarchism[1]. Despite significant anarcho-pacifist thinkers citing Thoreau as an influence, Thoreau himself did not subscribe to pacifism[2].
Personality and Behavior
Anarcho-Pacifism appears in comics as a timid, conflict-averse individual who is often seen haplessly trying to defuse conflicts between its ideological relatives. Other common depictions feature it as an everyman or neutral character with a professional demeanor, in a similar manner to Apoliticism and Moderatism.
Comic appearances
A female Anarcho-Pacifism is one of two main characters in Reddit user hydratedbirb's AnPac x AnCap comic series, which explores the budding romantic relationship between the two seemingly-incompatible anarchist ideologies.
How To Draw
- Draw a ball with eyes.
- Draw a black (#141414) diagonal line from the lower left to the upper right of the ball.
- Color the upper half of the ball white (#FFFFFF) and the lower half black.
Relationships
Friends
- Religious Anarchism - Anpac gets along very well with Religious Anarchism, since Christian Anarchism is Anarcho-Pacifism.
- Agrarianism - If he wasn't friends with Anarcho-Primitivism, Anpac would be closer with him. However, industrialism is pretty violent, and agrarianism is more peaceful.
Frenemies
Enemies
References
<references>
- ↑ Christoyannopoulos, Alexandre. (March 2010). "A Christian Anarchist Critique of Violence: From Turning the Other Cheek to a Rejection of the State". Political Studies Association. Archived on 2011-08-12.
- ↑ Meyer, Michael. (1980). "Thoreau's Rescue of John Brown from History" Studies in the American Renaissance, pp. 301–316