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  1. Benjamin Ricketson Tucker (/ ˈ t ʌ k ər /; April 17, 1854 – June 22, 1939) was an American individualist anarchist and self-identified socialist. [4] [5] [6] Tucker was the editor and publisher of the American individualist anarchist periodical Liberty (1881–1908).

  2. Apr 24, 2017 · Tucker enrolled in MIT, but after a fateful encounter with three prominent individualist anarchists (Ezra Heywood, William Greene, and Josiah Warren), at a New England Labor Reform League convention in Boston in 1872, Tucker would go on to become an anarchist activist, journalist, and essayist.

  3. Mar 22, 2018 · Often claimed by modern socialist anarchists, Benjamin Tucker fits better in the libertarian tradition. There existed, for a time, an alignment between labor reform and socialism on the one hand and individualism and free-market libertarianism on the other.

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  5. An early advocate of womens suffrage, religious tolerance, and fair labour legislation, Tucker combined Warren’s ideas on labour egalitarianism with elements of Proudhon’s and Bakunin’s antistatism. The result was the most sophisticated exposition to date of anarchist ideas in the United States.

  6. In broad terms, the achievements of Benjamin R. Tucker’s journal Liberty were: its influence upon people, its role in the creation and sustenance of an autonomous movement; and the preservation of a tradition without which modern libertarianism could not exist.

  7. Jul 5, 2019 · Benjamin Ricketson Tucker (April 17, 1854 – June 22, 1939) was a prominent American individualist anarchist. He edited and published The Radical Review and Liberty, and was editor of The Word during Ezra Heywood’s imprisonment.

  8. Jun 29, 2023 · Benjamin Tuckers April 1, 1882 issue of Liberty had a few things to say about our day’s concerns, such as prisons, Silicon Valley Bank, and immigrants’ impacts on wages.

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