Democratic Confederalism is a left-libertarian, culturally progressive ideology and political system coined by Kurdish politician Abdullah Öcalan that currently exists in Rojava, a de facto autonomous region in northern Syria. Democratic Confederalism believes in a system of administrative councils elected by the people that allow local communities to exercise autonomous control over their assets while linking to other communities via a network of confederal councils. Private property is abolished, in favour of "property of use" which lets individuals use infrastructure and land, but restricts them from turning it into a private enterprise. Feminism, direct democracy, and ecology are also important to her, and the military is replaced by voluntary militias.
She is the child of Bookchin Communalism and shares many opinions with her father. Her mother is Libertarian Socialism, who she is also very similar to.
How to draw
Here's how to draw Democratic Confederalism:
- Draw a ball
- Give it three horizontal stripes, from top to bottom: yellow (#FEF300), red (#F1121F) and green (#008642), The colours on the Rojava flag.
- Draw a 5-pointed yellow star (same shade) in the middle of the red stripe.
- Draw the eyes
and y you're done!
Relationships
Friends:
- Eco-Anarchism - While we have small debates about how anarchism should save the environment, we are actually pretty chill.
- Minarcho-Socialism - He is very similar to my ideology.
- Libertarian Socialism - We are literally the same, mom.
- Almost every other ideology in the Libleft quadrant
Frenemies
- Ba'athism - Filthy authoritarian and I still hate him, but saved me from Neo-Ottomanism
Enemies
- Neoconservatism - He stopped supporting me, and instead started supporting Turkey.
- Islamic Theocracy (Neo-Ottomanism) - Invaded me for ethnic cleansing, and is basically the new ISIS.
Further reading
Social ecology by Murray Bookchin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdullah_%C3%96calan#Democratic_confederalism
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rojava
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murray_Bookchin#Social_ecology