INTRODUCTION
                            
                                Mutualism, as a variety of anarchism,
                           goes back to P.J. Proudhon in France and Josiah Warren in the U.S.  It favors, to the extent possible, an
                           evolutionary approach to creating a new society.  It emphasizes the importance of peaceful activity in building alternative
                           social institutions within the existing society, and strengthening those institutions until they finally replace the existing
                           statist system.  As Paul Goodman put it, "A free society cannot be the substitution of a 'new order' for the old
                           order; it is the extension of spheres of free action until they make up most of the social life."
                            
                                Other anarchist subgroups, and the libertarian left
                           generally, share these ideas to some extent.  Whether known as "dual power" or "social counterpower," or "counter-economics,"
                           alternative social institutions are part of our common vision.  But they are especially central to mutualists' evolutionary
                           understanding.
                            
                                Mutualists belong to a non-collectivist segment
                           of anarchists.  Although we favor democratic control when collective action is required by the nature of production and
                           other cooperative endeavors, we do not favor collectivism as an ideal in itself.  We are not opposed to money or exchange. 
                           We believe in private property, so long as it is based on personal occupancy and use.  We favor a society in which all
                           relationships and transactions are non-coercive, and based on voluntary cooperation, free exchange, or mutual aid.  The
                           "market," in the sense of exchanges of labor between producers, is a profoundly humanizing and liberating concept.  What
                           we oppose is the conventional understanding of markets, as the idea has been coopted and corrupted by state capitalism.
                            
                                Our ultimate vision is of a society in which the
                           economy is organized around free market exchange between producers, and production is carried out mainly by self-employed
                           artisans and farmers, small producers' cooperatives, worker-controlled large enterprises, and consumers' cooperatives. 
                           To the extent that wage labor still exists (which is likely, if we do not coercively suppress it), the removal of statist
                           privileges will result in the worker's natural wage, as Benjamin Tucker put it, being his full product.
                            
                                Because of our fondness for free markets, mutualists
                           sometimes fall afoul of those who have an aesthetic affinity for collectivism, or those for whom "petty bourgeois" is
                           a swear word.  But it is our petty bourgeois tendencies that put us in the mainstream of the American populist/radical
                           tradition, and make us relevant to the needs of average working Americans.  Most people distrust the bureaucratic organizations
                           that control their communities and working lives, and want more control over the decisions that affect them.  They are
                           open to the possibility of decentralist, bottom-up alternatives to the present system.  But they do not want an America
                           remade in the image of orthodox, CNT-style syndicalism.
                            
                                Mutualism is not "reformist," as that term
                           is used pejoratively by more militant anarchists.  Nor is it necessarily pacifistic,
                           although many mutualists are indeed pacifists.  The proper definition of reformism should hinge, not on the means we
                           use to build a new society or on the speed with which we move, but on the nature of our final goal.  A person who is
                           satisfied with a kinder, gentler version of capitalism or statism, that is still recognizable as state capitalism, is a reformist. 
                           A person who seeks to eliminate state capitalism and replace it with something entirely different, no matter how gradually,
                           is not a reformist.  
                            
                                "Peaceful action" simply means not deliberately provoking
                           the state to repression, but rather doing whatever is possible (in the words of the Wobbly slogan) to "build the structure
                           of the new society within the shell of the old" before we try to break the shell.  There is nothing wrong with resisting
                           the state if it tries, through repression, to reverse our progress in building the institutions of the new society. 
                           But revolutionary action should meet two criteria:  1) it should have strong popular support; and 2) it should not take
                           place until we have reached the point where peaceful construction of the new society has reached its limits within existing
                           society.