Neither Jinx nor Silco are anarchists...
In fact I would argue that Silco is closer to a libertarian separatist than an anarchist.
His central goal is not the abolition of hierarchy or the creation of a stateless society, but Zaunite self-determination and independence from Piltover's rule. He believes Zaun should govern itself, control its own resources, and answer to no distant elite.
And yet funnily enough Silco is entirely comfortable with power structures, provided they serve Zaun. He builds networks of loyalty, commands armed enforcers, manages intelligence operations, and consolidates authority in his own hands.
In that sense, he is less interested in maximizing individual freedom than in securing sovereignty for his people. An anarchist seeks to dismantle systems of rule; Silco seeks to replace one ruling system with another, one that answers to Zaun rather than Piltover.
He is, ultimately, a nation-builder rather than a revolutionary opposed to authority itself.
Jinx, by contrast, is not especially ideological. While she shares Silco's hatred of Piltover and its institutions, her actions are driven far more by personal trauma, abandonment, and identity than by any coherent political philosophy.
She rejects authority, mocks social order, and delights in chaos, which gives her a fun zany anarchic aesthetic, but she shows little interest in questions of governance or what should replace the systems she destroys.
Silco dreams of a free Zaun; Jinx dreams of freedom from the expectations, loyalties, and wounds that define her.
Where Silco is a political actor, Jinx is a deeply personal one, turning her pain outward until it becomes impossible to separate stylistic rebellion from absolute self-destruction.
It's also why, in no AU or spinoff, would Jinx as Silco's political successor make sense, because that is simply not a language she groks.

















