Anarchism

Seek both freedom and equality
We all live here together in this natural world. We are all just human beings limited to various configurations of language, experience, and desire. No one has any inherent authority over anyone else. No one has any inherent claim to more natural resources than anyone else. No one has any inherent claim to the labor of any one else. We should each have equal freedom from interference and equal freedom to use natural resources consistent with the basics of life for all. No one should dominate, force, coerce, oppress, or exploit another. No one should rule. This is the literal meaning of anarchy, a society without rulers.

Replace property
Property is an artificial bundle of use and income rights. It is a holder of value independent of the labor of the owners. Owners can derive income in return for letting others use their property. They can use the labor of others to improve their property in return for wages and then derive income from the improvements. They can speculate on property values and derive income from transfers. This income can be used to accumulate even more property. Property thus allows owners to covertly appropriate a portion of the surplus of social cooperation over and above any labor they contribute. Secure tenure to natural resources that we are actively using and possessions which act as a store of our past labor can be legitimate. But property as it is currently defined is just organized theft. It should be replaced with equivalent use rights for all.

Replace the state
We will always likely need various forms of protection, mutual aid and cooperation. The state is a problem because, while it may provide some of this, it is fundamentally a tool of force in the hands of the the rich and the privileged. The useful functions of the state could possibly be decentralized until they become de facto consumer cooperatives. But ultimately the state is not likely to reform itself to this extent, so it should be replaced with voluntary associations and federations of such associations.

Build the new within the old
We need ways to transition from our current system without undermining what we have created together. Radical changes without new structures to replace the old just result in the old structures under new management. Some practical means might include cooperatives, land trusts, credit unions, labor unions, communes, collectives, voluntary exchanges, local currencies, barter, self employment, small business, decentralization, direct democracy, consensus, consultation, community supported agriculture, conscious consumption, do-it-yourself, free software, the creative commons, education, research, supporting allied social movements, use of abandoned resources, revoking the personhood of corporations, transfers from the rich, splitting up large real estate holdings, and replacing property titles with use tenure.