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# Why We Couldn't Act: Authority, Data, and Do-ocracy
{{essay}}


## I. INTRODUCTION: The Pattern of Paralysis
= Why We Couldn't Act: Authority, Data, and Do-ocracy =


**Opening premise:**
== I. INTRODUCTION: The Pattern of Paralysis ==
Multiple people recognized harm. Multiple people documented it. Multiple mediators attempted intervention. Yet no action occurred for an extended period. This wasn't a failure of evidence or will - it was a failure of organizational infrastructure.


**The question this document answers:**
In anarchist communities, we face a recurring pattern: multiple people recognize harm, document it, and attempt intervention through established processes -- yet action is repeatedly deferred.
"What structural/cultural elements were missing that prevented a do-ocratic consensus anarchy from protecting itself?"


## II. THE FOUR MISSING INFRASTRUCTURES
In these cases, the evidence is often intuitionally clear, whether whispered in private chats or argued stridently in public forums, but fails to overcome an invisible threshold for action. This failure arises from a misapplication of our specific anarchist principles and how that misapplication interacts with emergent power structures.


### A. Respect for Mediator Data
To wit: we are not a "consensus anarchy"; we are a "do-ocratic consensus anarchy."


**What was missing:**
As Jo Freeman documented in "The Tyranny of Structurelessness" (1970),<sup>[[#ref1|[1]]]</sup> '''the absence of formal structure doesn't eliminate power; it makes power invisible and therefore unaccountable.''' When communities claim to be "structureless" or "leaderless," power still accumulates in certain individuals. The lack of formal positions means that power accrues in informal channels that are harder to challenge.
- Recognition that failed mediation IS dispositive evidence
- Understanding that process abuse during mediation warrants immediate escalation
- Trust in mediator assessment as authoritative data


**What happened instead:**
In this pattern, '''an overcommitment to consensus without a balance in do-ocracy becomes the mechanism that prevents anarchist action.'''
- First mediator's failed mediation → Second person tries mediation
- Second mediator's failed mediation → more waiting
- Mediator testimony treated as "their experience" not "diagnostic data"


**Why this matters:**
<div style="background-color: #fffbf0; border-left: 4px solid #f4a261; padding: 15px; margin: 15px 0; font-style: italic;">
Mediators have the most detailed observation of behavioral patterns. When a mediator says "this person weaponized the process," that should be treated like a professional assessment, not opinion.
We confuse 'no hierarchy' with 'no one can act,' and 'consensus' with 'permission to act,' turning horizontal structure into a trap.
</div>


**The principle:**
Freeman argued that "to strive for a structureless group is as useful, and as deceptive, as to aim at an 'objective' news story."  
"Failed mediation due to process abuse is conclusive data for escalation, not a reason to try again with a different mediator."


### B. Understanding Do-ocracy vs. Consensus
Striving for "pure consensus" can become a smokescreen that allows informal hierarchies to operate unchallenged while preventing those with legitimate standing from acting. As a result, communities that espouse anarchist values become paralyzed by their own organizational culture.


**What was missing:**
'''The question this document addresses:'''
- Clear articulation that Noisebridge is do-ocratic consensus anarchy
- Understanding the order: Authority → Action → Consensus (validation)
- NOT: Consensus → Authority → Action


**What happened instead:**
What structural and cultural elements need to be in place for a do-ocratic consensus anarchy to actually protect itself when harm is occurring?
- People waited for consensus before acting
- Looked for "enough agreement" to justify individual action
- Confused "consensus process" (the check) with "consensus requirement" (for permission)


**The do-ocracy model:**
== II. THE FOUR PILLARS OF ANARCHIST CONFLICT RESOLUTION ==
```
Individual Authority → Act → Document → Community Validates/Challenges
        ↓                                          ↓
  "I see harm"                              "We agree/disagree"
```


**The misconception:**
=== A. Respect for Mediator Data ===
```
Gather Evidence → Build Consensus → Someone Acts
                        ↓
                "Waiting for permission that never comes"
```


**The principle:**
'''We choose mediators because we trust them.''' We ask people with experience, good judgment, and a track record of being fair to do difficult, emotionally exhausting work.
"Do-ocracy means: Act on your authority. Consensus means: The community can challenge your action. Not: Wait for consensus to grant authority."


### C. "We Are The Ones We've Been Waiting For"
This work cultivates in the mediator a particular lens developed after hours, possibly days, of emotional labor, not just in the engagement of people being mediated, but also in investigation of the people connected to the issue.


**What was missing:**
'''What's needed:'''
- Recognition that authority doesn't come from position or seniority
* Recognition that failed mediation IS [https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/dispositive_fact dispositive evidence]
- Understanding that "centrality" is performative, not structural
* Understanding that process abuse during mediation warrants immediate escalation
- Confidence to act without waiting for "someone more legitimate"
* Trust in the mediator's assessment as authoritative data


**What happened instead:**
'''What happens instead:'''
- Some community members deferred to perceived "steward consensus"
* First mediator's failed mediation → "Let's try a different mediator"
- Others waited for reactions to their proposals
* Second mediator's failed mediation → "Maybe we need more time?"
- Multiple people implicitly waited for someone perceived as "more central" to validate action
* Mediator testimony treated as "their subjective experience" rather than "diagnostic data from the expert we asked"
- When a more central-seeming person took over mediation, it delegitimized earlier assessments


**The centrality trap:**
Bakunin distinguished between hierarchies of expertise and hierarchies of power.<sup>[[#ref2|[2]]]</sup> Mediators develop expertise through the labor of attempting resolution. When they report that "mediation failed due to process abuse," that's expert observation, not opinion. Respecting this expertise doesn't create authority hierarchy - it recognizes epistemic justice: the mediator did the work to see the pattern, giving them standing to name it.
When people perceive someone as "central," that person's actions/inactions become bottlenecks. But in anarchist spaces, centrality is an illusion - anyone can act, anyone can be challenged.


**The principle:**
When we dismiss mediator assessments, we devalue the emotional and intellectual labor they performed, fail to recognize expertise gained through direct observation, and enable process weaponization by requiring multiple people to be harmed before acting.  
"If you see harm, document it, and can defend your action - you ARE authorized. Stop waiting for someone 'more important' to do it."


### D. There Is No True Center
<div style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border-left: 4px solid #0645ad; padding: 12px; margin: 10px 0;">
'''The principle:'''


**What was missing:**
Failed mediation ''can'' be considered conclusive data for escalation, not an invitation to try again with a different mediator.
- Active rejection of informal hierarchy
</div>
- Recognition that "perceived centrality" creates structural bottlenecks
- Understanding that treating someone as central makes them central


**What happened instead:**
=== B. Authority-First Culture ===
- One person treated as final arbiter even though they have no formal authority
- Their willingness to attempt mediation superseded previous failed attempts
- People assumed their assessment would be "more legitimate"


**Why this is toxic:**
Many people misunderstand what "do-ocratic consensus anarchy" actually means, and that confusion can paralyze us.
In anarchist spaces, informal hierarchy is MORE dangerous than formal hierarchy because:
1. It's invisible and therefore unaccountable
2. It concentrates decision-making without acknowledging it
3. It makes people doubt their own legitimate authority


**The principle:**
Noisebridge is do-ocratic first. You have authority to act when you see something that needs doing. Consensus comes in as the check - the community can challenge your action, discuss it, and potentially block it. But consensus doesn't grant permission to act in the first place.
"No one is 'central' enough that their inaction prevents your action. Act on your authority, defend your decision, accept challenge - but don't defer to phantoms."


## III. HOW THESE FAILURES COMPOUND
Building working consensus for action -- turning individual action into coordinated group action -- prevents downstream conflicts and addresses the reality that people have relationships and connections. But when the growing consensus fails to give way to necessary action, then the problem isn't a need for more consensus.  


**The cascade effect:**
The problem is the waiting for '''universal/unanimous''' consensus before acting.
1. **Mediator data not respected**
  → When a mediator's failed attempt doesn't trigger escalation
2. **Waiting for consensus**
  → Documentation efforts stop when validation doesn't materialize
3. **"Someone else will do it"**
  → People wait for validation from perceived "center"
4. **Perceived centrality bottleneck**
  → Subsequent attempts can delegitimize previous assessments
  → When multiple attempts fail, the system becomes stuck


**Typical result:**
'''What's needed:'''
Harm continues. People burn out. Community members leave. The person causing harm gains "missing stair" status.
* Cultural expectations that reinforce authority-first action
* Cultural clarity that says working consensus is valuable but universal agreement isn't required
* Practice of building coalitions while being willing to act if consensus-building stalls


## IV. WHAT BREAKS THE PATTERN
'''What happens instead:'''
* People wait for universal consensus before feeling authorized to act
* Look for approval from "central" people to justify action
* Confuse "building working consensus" (smart coalition work) with "requiring universal agreement" (paralysis)


**The intervention:**
<div style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border-left: 4px solid #0645ad; padding: 12px; margin: 10px 0;">
The pattern breaks when someone:
'''The principle:'''
- Treats mediator data as dispositive
- Acts on do-ocratic authority without seeking permission
- Doesn't wait for "the center" to validate
- Creates documentation as defense, not permission slip


**The mechanism:**
You have authority to act when you have standing. Building working consensus is smart. What you don't need: universal agreement or approval from "central" people. Don't let lack of perfect consensus prevent necessary action while harm continues.
1. **Respecting mediator data:** "Multiple mediators failed - that IS the evidence"
</div>
2. **Claiming authority:** Announcing action rather than asking permission
3. **Creating coordination infrastructure:** Making patterns legible to enable support
4. **Demonstrating there is no center:** Just acting, proving centrality is performative


**Why it works:**
=== C. "We Are The Ones We've Been Waiting For" ===
Not because of better evidence or more consensus, but because someone exercises the authority that was ALWAYS available to everyone in the community.


## V. PRINCIPLES FOR FUTURE ACTION
There is no "someone more legitimate" who's going to come save the day.


**When harm is occurring:**
In anarchist spaces, authority doesn't come from title, seniority, or longevity. It comes from doing the work. If you see harm, document it, and can defend your decision to the community, you are the authority. There are no "real adults in the room," just peers.


1. **Trust mediator assessment**
'''What's needed:'''
  - If mediation fails due to process abuse, escalate immediately
* Recognition that authority comes from action and accountability, not position
  - Don't retry with different mediators - that enables process weaponization
* Confidence to act without waiting for validation from "someone more important"
* Practice of distributed authority in real time


2. **Exercise do-ocratic authority**
'''What happens instead:'''
  - Act on what you see
* Some community members defer to perceived "steward consensus"
  - Document your reasoning
* Others wait for reactions to their proposals before moving forward
  - Be prepared to defend your decision
* Multiple people implicitly wait for someone perceived as "more central" to give the green light
  - Accept that community can challenge you
* When a more central-seeming person takes over mediation, earlier assessments seem less legitimate by comparison


3. **Don't wait for the center**
'''Prefigurative politics:'''
  - There is no one "more authorized" than you
  - If you see it, you have standing
  - Others' inaction doesn't invalidate your action


4. **Create coordination infrastructure**
Gustav Landauer argued that anarchism is about "being the change we want to see" - creating the future society through present action.<sup>[[#ref3|[3]]]</sup> If we want a society where authority is distributed, we must practice distributed authority. That means claiming it when we have standing, not waiting for someone to grant it.
  - Make patterns legible for others
  - But don't mistake "making it legible" for "asking permission"
  - Documentation enables others to support you, not to authorize you


**The anarchist responsibility:**
<div style="background-color: #fffbf0; border-left: 4px solid #f4a261; padding: 15px; margin: 15px 0; font-style: italic;">
In anarchist spaces, authority is distributed. This means:
When we wait for someone 'more legitimate' to act, we're not prefiguring autonomous action - we're actually prefiguring informal hierarchy.
- You HAVE authority to act
</div>
- You MUST accept accountability for your actions
- You CANNOT defer to hierarchy (formal or informal)
- The community validates/challenges AFTER, not before


## VI. THE TWO KINDS OF "NAMING"
<div style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border-left: 4px solid #0645ad; padding: 12px; margin: 10px 0;">
'''The principle:'''


**Why "I documented it" isn't always enough:**
If you see harm, document it, and can defend your action - you are authorized. Stop waiting for someone "more important" to do it.
</div>


There are two types of articulation:
=== D. Active Anti-Hierarchy Maintenance ===


**Phenomenological naming:**
Communities need ongoing practices to make informal hierarchy visible and resist it. Claiming "we're horizontal" doesn't prevent hierarchy - it just makes it invisible.
- "They misrepresent things"
 
- "They create confusion"
'''The "centering" antipattern:''' One person gets treated as the final arbiter despite having no formal authority. Their assessment seems "more legitimate" based on who they are. Everyone claims "there's no center" while simultaneously treating someone as central.
- "They attack when disagreed with"
 
- "They're manipulative"
Freeman's insight: In structureless groups, power accrues to those with more time, better connections, and perceived legitimacy. This creates "elites" who control the group "as surely as if they had been elected," giving them informal veto power and making their assessment "count more." The hierarchy exists only because people treat it as real.
 
Informal hierarchy is more dangerous than formal hierarchy because it's invisible and therefore unaccountable -- you can't challenge a structure nobody admits exists. Recent anarchist critique (Sitrin, Azzellini) argues that claiming to be "horizontal" while informal hierarchies operate is worse than acknowledged hierarchy.<sup>[[#ref4|[4]]]</sup>
 
Freeman's solution: Make power structures explicit so they can be held accountable. Name when informal hierarchy is forming, actively resist centrality dynamics, and remind each other that authority is distributed.
 
<div style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border-left: 4px solid #0645ad; padding: 12px; margin: 10px 0;">
'''The principle:'''
 
No one is "central" enough that their inaction should prevent your action. Act on your authority, defend your decision, accept challenge - but don't defer to phantoms.
</div>
 
== III. HOW THESE FAILURES COMPOUND ==
 
'''The cascade effect:'''
# '''Mediator data not respected (epistemic injustice)''' → First mediator's failed attempt doesn't trigger escalation
# '''Waiting for consensus (process fetishism)''' → Documentation efforts stop when validation doesn't materialize
# '''"Someone else will do it" (prefigurative failure)''' → People wait for validation from perceived "center"
# '''Perceived centrality bottleneck (informal hierarchy)''' → Second attempt delegitimizes previous assessments → When second attempt also fails, system is stuck
 
'''Process fetishism:'''
 
Post-Occupy critiques identified "meeting-ism" and process fetishism as major failure modes:<sup>[[#ref5|[5]]]</sup> when process becomes more important than addressing harm, the process has been weaponized. In this pattern:
* Multiple mediation attempts prioritize process correctness over harm reduction
* Waiting for "enough documentation" while harm continues
* Consensus requirements prevent action despite widespread recognition of problem
 
The process becomes a shield for the person causing harm and a trap for those trying to address it.
 
'''Result:'''
 
Harm continues. People burn out. Community members leave. The person causing harm gains "missing stair" status - everyone routes around them rather than addressing the problem directly.
 
== IV. WHAT CURES THE PARALYSIS ==
 
Paralysis breaks when someone acts on do-ocratic authority with "enough" consensus and doesn't wait for "the center" to validate, creating documentation as defense rather than permission slip.
 
'''The mechanism:'''
# '''Respecting mediator data:''' "Multiple mediators failed - that IS the evidence"
# '''Claiming authority:''' Announcing action rather than asking permission
# '''Creating coordination infrastructure:''' Making patterns legible to enable support
# '''Demonstrating there is no center:''' Just acting, proving centrality is performative
 
This works not because of better evidence or more consensus, but because someone exercises the authority that was always available to everyone in the community.
 
== V. PRINCIPLES FOR FUTURE ACTION ==
 
Kropotkin argued that anarchism is based on free association - voluntary cooperation among equals.<sup>[[#ref6|[6]]]</sup> But this includes the right to disassociate from those who make cooperation impossible. Some object that unilateral action is authoritarian. However, non-action allows individuals to exercise unchecked informal authority.
 
<div style="background-color: #fffbf0; border-left: 4px solid #f4a261; padding: 15px; margin: 15px 0; font-style: italic;">
When communities avoid direct confrontation, power does not disappear - it simply concentrates in those most willing to ignore social feedback.
</div>
 
'''When harm is occurring:'''
 
# '''Trust mediator assessment''' - if mediation fails due to process abuse, escalate immediately (retrying enables process weaponization)
# '''Exercise do-ocratic authority''' - act, document (if possible), defend your decision, accept community challenge
# '''Don't wait for the center''' - if you see harm, you have standing; others' inaction doesn't invalidate your action
# '''Create coordination infrastructure''' - make patterns legible to enable support, not to ask permission
 
In anarchist spaces, authority is distributed: you have it, you must accept accountability for it, you cannot defer to hierarchy, and the community validates after you act, not before.
 
== VI. THE TWO KINDS OF "NAMING" ==
 
There are two types of articulation: '''phenomenological''' and '''structural'''.
 
Phenomenological naming allows people to validate each others' experiences ("yes, I feel that too"). Structural naming lets people coordinate action ("here's what we're responding to").
 
'''Phenomenological naming:'''
* "They misrepresent things"
* "They create confusion"
* "They attack when disagreed with"
* "They're manipulative"
* "Something feels off about them"
* "They make everything about them"
* "You can't have a normal conversation with them"


This describes EXPERIENCE but doesn't create FRAMEWORK.
This describes EXPERIENCE but doesn't create FRAMEWORK.


**Structural naming:**
'''Structural naming:'''
- Maps specific behaviors to conflict escalation stages
* Maps specific behaviors to undesirable results
- Provides comparative frequency data
* Tests against "Would a Reasonable Person do this?"
- Names recognizable antipatterns
* Names recognizable patterns
- Offers diagnostic criteria
* Provides sufficient detail to enable others to evaluate the claim


**The difference:**
In technical spaces, coordination requires systematic frameworks. Not because feelings aren't valid, but because people need translatable patterns to defend decisions they make.  
Phenomenological naming lets people validate your experience ("yes, I feel that too").
Structural naming lets people coordinate action ("here's what we're responding to").


**Why this matters:**
The documentation doesn't replace feelings as authorization; the documentation serves as a communicable reference point.
In technical spaces, coordination requires systematic frameworks. Not because feelings aren't valid, but because people need translatable patterns to defend decisions they make.


The documentation doesn't replace feelings as authorization. It makes feelings coordinatable.
== VII. APPLICATION BEYOND ANY SPECIFIC CASE ==


## VII. APPLICATION BEYOND ANY SPECIFIC CASE
'''Anarchy Paralysis arises whenever:'''
* Someone causes diffuse harm that's hard to articulate
* Multiple people recognize it but feel unable to act
* Informal hierarchy creates bottlenecks
* "Consensus" is confused with "permission to act"


**This pattern repeats whenever:**
'''Recognizing the pattern:'''
- Someone causes diffuse harm that's hard to articulate
- Multiple people recognize it but feel unable to act
- Informal hierarchy creates bottlenecks
- "Consensus" is confused with "permission to act"


**The test:**
When everyone's waiting for someone else to "step up" -- or waiting for a person who is "more central," "more legitimate," to agree -- or because "everyone needs to agree first" or "we need more evidence" indicates this failure mode.
If you're waiting for someone else to act because:
- They're "more central"
- They're "more legitimate"
- "Everyone needs to agree first"
- "I need more evidence"


→ You're in this failure mode.
'''The authority test:'''


**The check:**
Three questions determine whether someone has standing to act:  
Ask yourself:
1. Can I articulate the harm? (yes/no)
2. Can I defend my action? (yes/no)
3. Am I prepared to be challenged? (yes/no)


If yes to all three: You have authority to act.
Can the harm be articulated? Can the action be defended? Is there a preparedness to be challenged?


## VIII. CONCLUSION
If yes to all three, authority exists to act.


**Anarchist authority is:**
== VIII. CONCLUSION ==
- **Distributed** (everyone has it)
- **Exercised through action** (not granted through consensus)
- **Validated through community response** (not pre-authorized)
- **Based on standing** (you did the work to see/document)


**What this pattern teaches us:**
Anarchist authority is '''distributed''' (everyone has it), '''exercised through action''' (not granted through consensus), and '''validated through community response''' (not pre-authorized).
The infrastructure we need isn't:
- More evidence
- More consensus
- More central authority


It is:
The needed social infrastructure for structural prevention of ongoing harm is '''respect for expertise''' (mediator data as dispositive), '''understanding of our own model''' (do-ocracy and consensus in balance), '''confidence in distributed authority''' ("we are the ones"), and '''rejection of informal hierarchy''' ("no center exists").
- Respect for expertise (mediator data as dispositive)
 
- Understanding of our own model (do-ocracy first, consensus second)
In other words:
- Confidence in distributed authority ("we are the ones")
- Rejection of informal hierarchy ("no center exists")


**Going forward:**
When you see harm, you don't need permission to act. You need courage to claim the authority you already have, and discipline to defend your decision to the community.
When you see harm, you don't need permission to act. You need courage to claim the authority you already have, and discipline to defend your decision to the community.


That's what anarchist responsibility looks like.
== References ==
 
# <span id="ref1"></span>Freeman, Jo. "The Tyranny of Structurelessness." 1970. Available at: https://www.jofreeman.com/joreen/tyranny.htm
# <span id="ref2"></span>Bakunin, Mikhail. "What is Authority?" 1871.
# <span id="ref3"></span>Landauer, Gustav. "Revolution and Other Writings." 1911.
# <span id="ref4"></span>Sitrin, Marina and Dario Azzellini. "They Can't Represent Us! Reinventing Democracy from Greece to Occupy." 2014.
# <span id="ref5"></span>Levine, Cathy. "The Tyranny of Tyranny." 1979. Montgomery, Nick and carla bergman. "Joyful Militancy: Building Thriving Resistance in Toxic Times." 2017.
# <span id="ref6"></span>Kropotkin, Peter. "Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution." 1902.

Latest revision as of 15:04, 19 January 2026

ESSAY: This is an essay by a Noisebridger expressing their ideas. | E

Why We Couldn't Act: Authority, Data, and Do-ocracy

[edit | edit source]

I. INTRODUCTION: The Pattern of Paralysis

[edit | edit source]

In anarchist communities, we face a recurring pattern: multiple people recognize harm, document it, and attempt intervention through established processes -- yet action is repeatedly deferred.

In these cases, the evidence is often intuitionally clear, whether whispered in private chats or argued stridently in public forums, but fails to overcome an invisible threshold for action. This failure arises from a misapplication of our specific anarchist principles and how that misapplication interacts with emergent power structures.

To wit: we are not a "consensus anarchy"; we are a "do-ocratic consensus anarchy."

As Jo Freeman documented in "The Tyranny of Structurelessness" (1970),[1] the absence of formal structure doesn't eliminate power; it makes power invisible and therefore unaccountable. When communities claim to be "structureless" or "leaderless," power still accumulates in certain individuals. The lack of formal positions means that power accrues in informal channels that are harder to challenge.

In this pattern, an overcommitment to consensus without a balance in do-ocracy becomes the mechanism that prevents anarchist action.

We confuse 'no hierarchy' with 'no one can act,' and 'consensus' with 'permission to act,' turning horizontal structure into a trap.

Freeman argued that "to strive for a structureless group is as useful, and as deceptive, as to aim at an 'objective' news story."

Striving for "pure consensus" can become a smokescreen that allows informal hierarchies to operate unchallenged while preventing those with legitimate standing from acting. As a result, communities that espouse anarchist values become paralyzed by their own organizational culture.

The question this document addresses:

What structural and cultural elements need to be in place for a do-ocratic consensus anarchy to actually protect itself when harm is occurring?

II. THE FOUR PILLARS OF ANARCHIST CONFLICT RESOLUTION

[edit | edit source]

A. Respect for Mediator Data

[edit | edit source]

We choose mediators because we trust them. We ask people with experience, good judgment, and a track record of being fair to do difficult, emotionally exhausting work.

This work cultivates in the mediator a particular lens developed after hours, possibly days, of emotional labor, not just in the engagement of people being mediated, but also in investigation of the people connected to the issue.

What's needed:

  • Recognition that failed mediation IS dispositive evidence
  • Understanding that process abuse during mediation warrants immediate escalation
  • Trust in the mediator's assessment as authoritative data

What happens instead:

  • First mediator's failed mediation → "Let's try a different mediator"
  • Second mediator's failed mediation → "Maybe we need more time?"
  • Mediator testimony treated as "their subjective experience" rather than "diagnostic data from the expert we asked"

Bakunin distinguished between hierarchies of expertise and hierarchies of power.[2] Mediators develop expertise through the labor of attempting resolution. When they report that "mediation failed due to process abuse," that's expert observation, not opinion. Respecting this expertise doesn't create authority hierarchy - it recognizes epistemic justice: the mediator did the work to see the pattern, giving them standing to name it.

When we dismiss mediator assessments, we devalue the emotional and intellectual labor they performed, fail to recognize expertise gained through direct observation, and enable process weaponization by requiring multiple people to be harmed before acting.

The principle:

Failed mediation can be considered conclusive data for escalation, not an invitation to try again with a different mediator.

B. Authority-First Culture

[edit | edit source]

Many people misunderstand what "do-ocratic consensus anarchy" actually means, and that confusion can paralyze us.

Noisebridge is do-ocratic first. You have authority to act when you see something that needs doing. Consensus comes in as the check - the community can challenge your action, discuss it, and potentially block it. But consensus doesn't grant permission to act in the first place.

Building working consensus for action -- turning individual action into coordinated group action -- prevents downstream conflicts and addresses the reality that people have relationships and connections. But when the growing consensus fails to give way to necessary action, then the problem isn't a need for more consensus.

The problem is the waiting for universal/unanimous consensus before acting.

What's needed:

  • Cultural expectations that reinforce authority-first action
  • Cultural clarity that says working consensus is valuable but universal agreement isn't required
  • Practice of building coalitions while being willing to act if consensus-building stalls

What happens instead:

  • People wait for universal consensus before feeling authorized to act
  • Look for approval from "central" people to justify action
  • Confuse "building working consensus" (smart coalition work) with "requiring universal agreement" (paralysis)

The principle:

You have authority to act when you have standing. Building working consensus is smart. What you don't need: universal agreement or approval from "central" people. Don't let lack of perfect consensus prevent necessary action while harm continues.

C. "We Are The Ones We've Been Waiting For"

[edit | edit source]

There is no "someone more legitimate" who's going to come save the day.

In anarchist spaces, authority doesn't come from title, seniority, or longevity. It comes from doing the work. If you see harm, document it, and can defend your decision to the community, you are the authority. There are no "real adults in the room," just peers.

What's needed:

  • Recognition that authority comes from action and accountability, not position
  • Confidence to act without waiting for validation from "someone more important"
  • Practice of distributed authority in real time

What happens instead:

  • Some community members defer to perceived "steward consensus"
  • Others wait for reactions to their proposals before moving forward
  • Multiple people implicitly wait for someone perceived as "more central" to give the green light
  • When a more central-seeming person takes over mediation, earlier assessments seem less legitimate by comparison

Prefigurative politics:

Gustav Landauer argued that anarchism is about "being the change we want to see" - creating the future society through present action.[3] If we want a society where authority is distributed, we must practice distributed authority. That means claiming it when we have standing, not waiting for someone to grant it.

When we wait for someone 'more legitimate' to act, we're not prefiguring autonomous action - we're actually prefiguring informal hierarchy.

The principle:

If you see harm, document it, and can defend your action - you are authorized. Stop waiting for someone "more important" to do it.

D. Active Anti-Hierarchy Maintenance

[edit | edit source]

Communities need ongoing practices to make informal hierarchy visible and resist it. Claiming "we're horizontal" doesn't prevent hierarchy - it just makes it invisible.

The "centering" antipattern: One person gets treated as the final arbiter despite having no formal authority. Their assessment seems "more legitimate" based on who they are. Everyone claims "there's no center" while simultaneously treating someone as central.

Freeman's insight: In structureless groups, power accrues to those with more time, better connections, and perceived legitimacy. This creates "elites" who control the group "as surely as if they had been elected," giving them informal veto power and making their assessment "count more." The hierarchy exists only because people treat it as real.

Informal hierarchy is more dangerous than formal hierarchy because it's invisible and therefore unaccountable -- you can't challenge a structure nobody admits exists. Recent anarchist critique (Sitrin, Azzellini) argues that claiming to be "horizontal" while informal hierarchies operate is worse than acknowledged hierarchy.[4]

Freeman's solution: Make power structures explicit so they can be held accountable. Name when informal hierarchy is forming, actively resist centrality dynamics, and remind each other that authority is distributed.

The principle:

No one is "central" enough that their inaction should prevent your action. Act on your authority, defend your decision, accept challenge - but don't defer to phantoms.

III. HOW THESE FAILURES COMPOUND

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The cascade effect:

  1. Mediator data not respected (epistemic injustice) → First mediator's failed attempt doesn't trigger escalation
  2. Waiting for consensus (process fetishism) → Documentation efforts stop when validation doesn't materialize
  3. "Someone else will do it" (prefigurative failure) → People wait for validation from perceived "center"
  4. Perceived centrality bottleneck (informal hierarchy) → Second attempt delegitimizes previous assessments → When second attempt also fails, system is stuck

Process fetishism:

Post-Occupy critiques identified "meeting-ism" and process fetishism as major failure modes:[5] when process becomes more important than addressing harm, the process has been weaponized. In this pattern:

  • Multiple mediation attempts prioritize process correctness over harm reduction
  • Waiting for "enough documentation" while harm continues
  • Consensus requirements prevent action despite widespread recognition of problem

The process becomes a shield for the person causing harm and a trap for those trying to address it.

Result:

Harm continues. People burn out. Community members leave. The person causing harm gains "missing stair" status - everyone routes around them rather than addressing the problem directly.

IV. WHAT CURES THE PARALYSIS

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Paralysis breaks when someone acts on do-ocratic authority with "enough" consensus and doesn't wait for "the center" to validate, creating documentation as defense rather than permission slip.

The mechanism:

  1. Respecting mediator data: "Multiple mediators failed - that IS the evidence"
  2. Claiming authority: Announcing action rather than asking permission
  3. Creating coordination infrastructure: Making patterns legible to enable support
  4. Demonstrating there is no center: Just acting, proving centrality is performative

This works not because of better evidence or more consensus, but because someone exercises the authority that was always available to everyone in the community.

V. PRINCIPLES FOR FUTURE ACTION

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Kropotkin argued that anarchism is based on free association - voluntary cooperation among equals.[6] But this includes the right to disassociate from those who make cooperation impossible. Some object that unilateral action is authoritarian. However, non-action allows individuals to exercise unchecked informal authority.

When communities avoid direct confrontation, power does not disappear - it simply concentrates in those most willing to ignore social feedback.

When harm is occurring:

  1. Trust mediator assessment - if mediation fails due to process abuse, escalate immediately (retrying enables process weaponization)
  2. Exercise do-ocratic authority - act, document (if possible), defend your decision, accept community challenge
  3. Don't wait for the center - if you see harm, you have standing; others' inaction doesn't invalidate your action
  4. Create coordination infrastructure - make patterns legible to enable support, not to ask permission

In anarchist spaces, authority is distributed: you have it, you must accept accountability for it, you cannot defer to hierarchy, and the community validates after you act, not before.

VI. THE TWO KINDS OF "NAMING"

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There are two types of articulation: phenomenological and structural.

Phenomenological naming allows people to validate each others' experiences ("yes, I feel that too"). Structural naming lets people coordinate action ("here's what we're responding to").

Phenomenological naming:

  • "They misrepresent things"
  • "They create confusion"
  • "They attack when disagreed with"
  • "They're manipulative"
  • "Something feels off about them"
  • "They make everything about them"
  • "You can't have a normal conversation with them"

This describes EXPERIENCE but doesn't create FRAMEWORK.

Structural naming:

  • Maps specific behaviors to undesirable results
  • Tests against "Would a Reasonable Person do this?"
  • Names recognizable patterns
  • Provides sufficient detail to enable others to evaluate the claim

In technical spaces, coordination requires systematic frameworks. Not because feelings aren't valid, but because people need translatable patterns to defend decisions they make.

The documentation doesn't replace feelings as authorization; the documentation serves as a communicable reference point.

VII. APPLICATION BEYOND ANY SPECIFIC CASE

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Anarchy Paralysis arises whenever:

  • Someone causes diffuse harm that's hard to articulate
  • Multiple people recognize it but feel unable to act
  • Informal hierarchy creates bottlenecks
  • "Consensus" is confused with "permission to act"

Recognizing the pattern:

When everyone's waiting for someone else to "step up" -- or waiting for a person who is "more central," "more legitimate," to agree -- or because "everyone needs to agree first" or "we need more evidence" indicates this failure mode.

The authority test:

Three questions determine whether someone has standing to act:

Can the harm be articulated? Can the action be defended? Is there a preparedness to be challenged?

If yes to all three, authority exists to act.

VIII. CONCLUSION

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Anarchist authority is distributed (everyone has it), exercised through action (not granted through consensus), and validated through community response (not pre-authorized).

The needed social infrastructure for structural prevention of ongoing harm is respect for expertise (mediator data as dispositive), understanding of our own model (do-ocracy and consensus in balance), confidence in distributed authority ("we are the ones"), and rejection of informal hierarchy ("no center exists").

In other words:

When you see harm, you don't need permission to act. You need courage to claim the authority you already have, and discipline to defend your decision to the community.

References

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  1. Freeman, Jo. "The Tyranny of Structurelessness." 1970. Available at: https://www.jofreeman.com/joreen/tyranny.htm
  2. Bakunin, Mikhail. "What is Authority?" 1871.
  3. Landauer, Gustav. "Revolution and Other Writings." 1911.
  4. Sitrin, Marina and Dario Azzellini. "They Can't Represent Us! Reinventing Democracy from Greece to Occupy." 2014.
  5. Levine, Cathy. "The Tyranny of Tyranny." 1979. Montgomery, Nick and carla bergman. "Joyful Militancy: Building Thriving Resistance in Toxic Times." 2017.
  6. Kropotkin, Peter. "Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution." 1902.