

Yeah, the concept of a state should make sense to any leftist as a formal mechanism for organizing society towards equal and collective participation in said society. The difference, as you say, is whether or not you think it’s possible to execute on that, or if a state will always trend towards ensuring its own existence, and therefore inevitably run into the iron law of institutions and end up corrupted.
I think a state-like mechanism could and probably does need to exist, but it would have to be truly dedicated to facilitating its own dissolution from the start. Whether that would work is dependent on a lot of things, but a big problem with institutions in general is that they almost always come with the fundamental assumption that the institution should persist. If, however, the primary mission of the institution is to obviate the need for the institution to exist, then I think it could be stable. There may never be a moment where there is no state, but I could see society approaching the dissolution of the state asymptotically, which on a long enough timeline would be indistinguishable from complete dissolution.
The alternative, no matter how well-intentioned, is likely vulnerable to the nonsense you describe. I do think that the reason to be optimistic about that is that such a thing hasn’t really been tried, or at least not on a long enough timeline, while the status quo systems are clearly unstable long-term.
The real Nothing Ever Happens gang is in the (lack of) comments.