The US got rid of slavery over a hundred years ago, you know that right? The US is far from an evil empire. North Korea is the closest example to an evil government we have today. And they're going to collapse sooner rather than later. All of the evil empires of history haven't lasted for very long. 200 years is not a long time for a civilization/government. And you'd be hard pressed to find one that was evil for its time lasting longer than that.
Also, you presume I didn't read the articles? No, I didn't. Mostly because I'm already familiar with the concepts and arguments presented in them. I read similar articles, taken philosophy, etc. etc. Your argument is a classic deflection, putting the onus on me instead of yourself. If you bothered to read my post, I was specifically addressing things presented in those articles. I laid out the logical progression of a system-less society, ending up with what is effectively a monarchy, and pointed out that all of those supposedly anarchic societies actually have some form of government.
"but what about the roads?" Seriously? You seriously think that people, all these people, are going to voluntarily just build and maintain infrastructure? "oh, but it'll all be local" wat. That's the argument? That's a ridiculous argument. Society succeed and moves forwards by connecting with other societies, sharing knowledge and technology. It improves the quality of life and...why am I even arguing this point? Not worth my time. It's patently absurd to think that infrastructure can exist in a meaningful way in an anarchic society. Who builds it? Who maintains it? No one would, that's who. It's a pipe dream for libertarian philosophers, but it can never happen.
The violence argument conveniently ignores the fact that the time we are currently living in is the most peaceful period in history, ever. Not per capita or any other statistical trick, just ever. And signs point to a bigger government leading to a more peaceful time. With more freedom as the governments get better at governing. Not only that, the argument "there's bad things in government therefore government is bad" is really really bad. "not everything is perfect therefore get rid of all of it". That's the argument. It's a terrible argument.
I feel this is the place where I say I do not respect any of those philosophers you're linking and stuff. I really don't. The biggest evidence, and only evidence I really need, that anarchy cannot work in a successful major way is that the world is not in an anarchic system. The vast majority of major governments today are republics or democracies, and that number is growing as we go. I prefer a republic like the US because I don't trust people to be in direct control, but I do want more people in direct control than the US's current system. I absolutely do not want anarchy. It's just a terrible idea that only works in theoretical philosophical scenarios that make insane assumptions that make no sense for real life situations.