None of those methods works. There was never equality under social democrat rule. That's why the socialist states fail, one after another--the ideology does not work. And anarchy--please; show me a working example of anarchy, anywhere.
There is no working example of anarchy because no one has tried it on anything larger than a communal scale. Doesn't mean it won't work. My thought is that we're evolving into an anarchist society, but the masses aren't quite ready to give up this idea that government can fix everything. Based on recent polls regarding Bush and the bailout, however, I'd say they're leaning more towards libertarianism--or "anarchy light," if you prefer. What pisses me off is that, even with mass disapproval, Congress and Obama will probably go ahead with the Big Three bailout as well as creating hundreds of thousands of gov't jobs by upping the tax rate. This in a time of economic crisis. Ask any decent economist and s/he'll tell you that FDR's New Deal didn't curtail the economic depression; it *extended* it by creating jobs at the expense of taxpayers and business people, curtailing their abilities to make purchases, hire more workers and innovate. It's possible we could have had stereo records and TV five years earlier than we did if not for the New Deal. If not for War Two, the Depression might have lasted even longer. (At least FDR had the sense to end Prohibition and resume taxing alcohol consumption.) And now Obama's New New Deal threatens to sabotage economic turnaround before it can get properly started. Townsend was right: Meet the new boss--same as the old boss.
Personally I doubt we'll ever move to an anarchist society. The reason why there isn't a larger-scale anarchism anywhere is because I simply think it would be asking too much from people. Remember, the lack of a working government does not equal anarchism, as Hadron seems to think.
Merry Christmas (albeit a tad early...)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchy_in_Somalia
I disagree, and so do others:
Economist Alex Tabarrok has claimed that Somalia in its stateless period provided a "unique test of the theory of anarchy" as espoused by anarcho-capitalists David D. Friedman and Murray Rothbard, although this is strongly disputed by anti-capitalist anarchists who contend it is not anarchy, but merely chaos.
This is from the article you referenced. It is interesting to note that the ones to dispute that Somalia is an anarchy are anti-capitalist anarchists who, in my mind, would be the ones closest to the views you sometimes appear to uphold,
New Labour.
Again, the lack of a government in itself does not equal anarchy. Mostly it only equals chaos.