Yesterday, on Fernando Pessoa’s 148th birthday, I finished reading the Danish translation of The Anarchist Banker. It is a remarkably short book that nevertheless manages to raise a surprisingly large question: what if the most consistent anarchist is not the revolutionary, but the banker? Pessoa’s protagonist argues precisely that. If the goal of anarchism is maximum individual freedom, then the logical path is not collective struggle or social engineering, but the relentless pursuit of one’s own freedom through economic independence. Profit maximization becomes a form of anarchist practice. The argument is elegant, provocative, and intentionally unsettling. What fascinated me most was not whether the banker is right, but the premise he exposes. Much political thinking assumes that dismantling institutions automatically creates freedom. Pessoa’s banker forces us to ask a more uncomfortable question: freedom for whom? People are not equally equipped to make use of freedom. They differ in resources, abilities, knowledge, circumstances, and luck. That is where the argument begins to reveal its blind spot. A society built entirely on autonomy and voluntary exchange risks becoming strangely unsocial. Freedom without the capacity to exercise it quickly becomes asymmetrical. The banker insists that helping others can itself become a form of domination. Yet one is left wondering whether respect for freedom also requires some concern for whether freedom is genuinely accessible. The book is perhaps too neat, too simplified, and too eager to win its own argument. But precisely because of that simplification it works so well as a thought experiment. It forces the reader to examine assumptions that usually remain hidden. There is also something amusing about how our attention gravitates toward whatever we happen to be thinking about. Having spent the morning with Pessoa and his anarchist banker, I arrived in Paris only to discover posters for not one but two Pessoa-related events at the Théâtre de la Ville: Robert Wilson’s Pessoa – Since I’ve Been Me and an entire Journée Pessoa dedicated to the Portuguese writer. Unfortunately, both were in French, and I was flying home later the same day. Sometimes the world appears to be sending a message. More often, perhaps, it is simply reminding us what already occupies our minds.

06/14/2026 14:37:01


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