they believe having property is theft
Yeah, and the "property is theft" part comes from Proudhon's "What is Property?" To believe that this was his bottom line either comes from only a cursory reading or no reading at all of Proudhon. He also wrote "property is liberty" and when he was discussing his ideas around the "property is theft" thing, if I remember correctly, he was specifically talking about usury.
What I find interesting about the anarcho-syndicalist/communists/socialists with respect to property is that they appear to fudge the truth by saying they don't believe in property, but I'll bet if some of them got together and established some kind of anarcho-communist work collective and then YOU or I walked up and started working the machinery, they'd all begin acting like it was their property, "HEY! YOU CAN'T DO THAT!"
The legitimate basis for "property," according to "extremists" like us, is production. Marx blithered about the worker having a right to what he produces, but then it appears his entire philosophy poops all over that concept. I believe that if I build a house, or carve a bowl, or scribble a picture, it is mine. By my creation, it is mine to dispose of as I wish, and no other person has a just claim to it without MY permission.
It would appear that the syndicalist/communists/socialists philosophy doesn't believe production is the basis for legitimate ownership (despite what the union morons say). It seems that they believe "need" is the basis of legitimate ownership. Again, they may claim not to believe in "property" at all, but since it seems that they believe "need" causes someone to have the right to use something, they believe it is their property. So far it sounds rather loving and compassionate. How sweet. We are communists because we care. We want the people who need to have stuff.
So, "I'm a compassionate communist because I give my stuff to the needy." BZZZZZ. Wrong answer. According to your own principles, it is not your stuff. "Well, I give them stuff so I'm a compassionate communist." BZZZZZ. Wrong answer again. Their "need" means it is already theirs. What exactly is compassionate about giving someone something that already belongs to them? It is not yours to give. The way I see it, only property via production allows the charitable giving of something to someone else.
TO me, it appears to be no coincidence that communists are often trying to justify violence by saying that a "need" makes theft not theft. Because "need" determines rightful ownership, some homeless person stealing food is merely taking what is rightfully his (by way of "need") from someone who has stolen it (i.e. produced and kept it, without "needing" it). Most people, even commies, would agree that using force to get what is rightfully yours is justified.
So from where I'm standing, the communist philosophy makes "charity" and "kind giving" impossible. If the "giving" makes something go to someone with a greater "need" for it, then it already belonged to that person, and therefore the act is not charity. If the giving makes something go to someone with a lesser "need," then it's evil blasphemy.
Since it seems that the whole warped belief system hinges on "need," I think the word needs to be defined. "Need" and "necessity" are not stand-alone concepts. For "need" to mean anything at all, it needs an "in order to" phrase (such as the part of this sentence that says "For need to mean anything at all..."). The usual understood "in order to" phrase (which is rarely stated) is "in order to live." "I need food" implies " . . .in order to live." But "I need health insurance" means nothing. The following statements actually have meaning: "I want health insurance," or "I need health insurance in order for me to not lose all my money if I get real sick." It's either a simple statement of want, or a worthless redundancy.
So now for the sake of the communist ideal, if the understood "in order to" is "in order to live," then the only things that are "needs" are a cardboard box, and some cabbage and rice (maybe a few extra rags for people living in colder areas). I haven't yet found a communist who will settle for this. So what else could the secret, invisible "in order to" phrase be?
After they admit it's not simple physical survival that they desire, they usually try to pretend it's a certain level of the "necessities." Health insurance has been deemed a "necessity" by many communists, along with air conditioning, indoor plumbing, refrigeration, a well-balanced diet, etc. Trouble is, if these are "necessities," how did people do without them for thousands of years before these things existed? If these are rights because of "need," doesn't that mean that Joe the commie back in 1900 had a right to air conditioning? I hope that even a communist can see a slight problem with that.
The only "in order to" phrase that appears to fit the philosophy is "in order to have things be equal." While they like to use the word "fair," they mean "equal." The only way it can be "fair" for a lazy bum and someone who is productive to end up with the same stuff is if "fair" is defined as "equal." Since they only claim "rights" to things after these things exist, meaning after other people have them, then everyone who "needs" it has a right to it. Therefore, their use of the word "need" is bogus too. So how about "equal"? Can they at least say they want things "equal" and still sound loving and caring? I dunno.
I have two widgets. My buddy Joe has no Widgets. Joe "needs" a Widget (which, as we now know, either means that Joe simply wants a Widget, or Joe has a right to one simply because I have one). So Joe blithers some Marxist garbage to justify evil, and then steals a Widget from me by force. Swell. Everything cool now? Nope. There are a billion Chinese with no Widgets at all. Therefore, by the communist philosophy, that Widget did not rightfully belong to Joe. It belonged collectively to Joe and a billion Chinese. Oops.
Heaven forbid there are more people who "need" (read "want") Widgets than there are Widgets. There is also that slight, little, insignificant problem that maybe, just maybe, six billion people won't agree on who "needs" what. Bummer. And since the value of an item depends on how much a person wants it, the value of an item is not equal to all people. Therefore, if my other buddy Bob really wants two Widgets as much as Joe wants one, there is equality . . .sort of.
Now let's pretend we've achieved the communist utopia, and examine the economic results. All the property is now equally distributed among everyone (or at least everyone except those who the commies killed for resisting their all-loving redistribution plans). Then buddy Joe thinks "I want to make a flute and play a song." Nice non-violent hippyish endeavor, right? But there's a problem. Under the communist philosophy (at least the way I understand it), he has to make a flute for everyone on the planet who wants one before he will have a rightful claim to one himself (as opposed to free market theory, in which he makes one and therefore owns one). Well, he's not feeling up to making a few million flutes today, so what else can he do? Have a fit and demand that he needs one more than his flute-possessing neighbor, ME. Once again, it would appear that communism favors violence and dissuades production and cooperation.
How about trade? Why would someone trade something they "need"? If the ownership comes from "need," then how could they trade it? And by definition, they wouldn't own anything they didn't "need" (even if they possessed it). Oops. So much for cooperation and trading. This utopia isn't looking very good.
Does a trade change who "needs" what? I can trade a Widget for your Flidget, and then say I still "need" the Widget, and therefore it is still mine. It always seems to boil down to that when a commie says "need," they really mean "want." Which in return means that what you want, by definition is yours. Sounds a lot like the animal kingdom . . .almost. So is the communist philosophy as bad as animal instinct? Nope. It's worse.
Animals make no moral judgments (not that this in itself is a good thing). They take what they want by force (and they don't whine about "need" either). Communists manage to be one step worse. Not only do they not judge theft as immoral, they judge a lack of theft as immoral. By the communist philosophy (at least the best that I can get from it), it is immoral not to take from the "rich" and give to the "poor." A lack of violence is intolerable to such people. So whenever there is inequality (which is always), violence is not only justified, but required. If "need" is the basis for rightful ownership, then not only is there no possibility for charity or compassion, but there is no room for non-violence. To allow the flute-maker to keep his flute is an act of violence, but to take it from him by force is just reclaiming what rightfully is someone else's.
So, "need" determines rightful ownership, and equality of possessions is, by definition, "fairness." This being the case, there is no room for cooperation or charity. There is no incentive for production, and every incentive for violence. Stealing becomes a virtue, and producing becomes a sin. Wanting becomes good, while creating becomes evil. Making something for yourself is evil, greedy theft. Stealing something from someone else is rightful "reclaiming."
That what I get from the communist-type philosophies, even if you put an "anarcho" prefix ahead of them and no matter how much tie-dye, flowers, and love-ins you try to bury it under.