from thefreeonline last update July 20242024 by George Monbiot, at Monbiot.com/ –..- (on Telegram: t.me/thefreeonline)
There is no natural law stating that bullies have to dominate our lives.

Kropotkin was Right: Cooperation beats Competition-. New studies are proving false whole libraries that claim humans are innately selfish and cruel.
Starting with a false view of Darwin’s theory of Evolution right wing leaders of opinion have built a tower of lies to justify their crimes against humanity, as argued from the beginning by the anarchist Peter Kropotkin.

Kropotkin was no pacifist, he was jailed and escaped as a terrorist. But his writings show us how our aggression can be harnessed through love and respect for our fellows and our dying planet. ‘Humans are innately cooperative and empathetic, and this gives us the basis for a new kind of non-capitalist system’.
The researchers claim to be surprised by their findings, but is it really so remarkable?
A large and impressive study of children’s progress into adulthood found that those who display bullying and aggressive behaviour at school are more likely to prosper at work.
They land better jobs and earn more. The association of senior positions with bullying and dominance behaviour will doubtless come as a shock to many.
This is not to suggest that all people with good jobs or who run organisations are bullies.
Far from it.
It’s not hard to think of good people in powerful positions. What this tells us is that we don’t need aggressive people to organise our lives for us. Neither good leadership, nor organisational success, nor innovation, insight or foresight, require a dominance mindset. In fact, all can be inhibited by someone throwing their weight around.
Whether in game theory or the study of other species, you quickly discover how the dominance behaviour of a few can harm society as a whole.
For example, a study of cichlid fish found that dominant males have “lower signal-to-noise ratios” (sound and fury, signifying nothing) and counter-productive impacts on group performance.
Anything sound familiar?

A win for bullies is a loss for everyone else: their success is a zero-sum game.
Or negative-sum: the first study I mentioned also found that school bullies are more likely to abuse alcohol, smoke, break the law and suffer mental health problems in later life.
But the bullies’ triumph is also an outcome of the dominant narrative of our times: for the past 45 years, neoliberalism has characterised human life as a struggle that some must win and others must lose.
Only through competition, in this quasi-Calvinist religion, can we discern who the worthy and unworthy might be.
The competition, of course, is always rigged. The point of neoliberalism is to provide justifications for an unequal and coercive society, a society where bullies rule.
see also… Mutual Aid is Essential to Our Survival…and its anti-capitalist!
It’s a perfect circle: neoliberalism generates inequality; and inequality, as another paper shows, is strongly associated with bullying at school. With greater disparities in income and status, stress rises, competition sharpens, and the urge to dominate intensifies. The pathology feeds itself.
Continue reading “It Doesn’t Have to Be Like This- Kropotkin was Right!”







