this post was submitted on 21 May 2026
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What existing collective doesn't fit this definition? Because by this definition, the anarchist controlled areas of republican spain then, were deeply authoritarian.
In what way did republican spain monopolize power? Monopoly means that only a small amount of agents get access to it.
That was precisely the case. Durruti's column especially found that any "decentralized" command structure breaks down quickly into interminable squabbles, and like any revolutionary army, had to institute a strict hierarchy and centralized control. Most but not all anarchist groups accepted this centralized control as a necessity.
I suggest reading the tyranny of structurelessness on why "anti-authoritarian" groupings always end up either destroying themselves, or in cults of personality due to their individualist rejection of rules, organization, and structures of authority.
EDIT: Ah, I found that he was indeed at least open to the idea to centralize the militias.
It looks like he still wanted to hash some things out, but as far as I can tell, that meeting with Val never occurred due to his death the next day.
End of edit.
Could you share your source which details that Durruti created specifically a top-down centralized militia? From the sources I've read, he created a bottom-up militia with the ability to recall poorly performing elected leaders. As an example, from Chapter 7 of Paz Abel's 'Durruti in The Spanish Revolution':
https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1872/10/authority.htm
Monopolize does not mean that the group is small, but that the access is exclusive. The group that monopolizes can be large, and extremely exclusionary towards other groups. Anarchists in Spain monopolized authority, ran labor camps, and built up hierarchical structures over time to suit the realities of the Spanish Civil War.