I disagree with this because I think you have failed to understand the meaning of the word "mutually exclusive". Many political theories have mutual aims, and indeed, your graph even shows this since you have listed Authoritarianism as both a point on the graph, and half the graph itself! The same goes for Individualism, Voluntaryism, and Collectivism.
As an anarcho-capitalist, I laugh at your placement of "anarchism" in the most "ruralist" section of the graph. Nothing in anarchism advocates a need for living a rural life; anarchism is the ideology that embraces the complete removal of the government from a country. Individual types of anarchism may advocate things like ruralism, but some types (like anarcho-capitalism) advocate nothing of the sort.
I don't think there are any "perfect" ways to sum up all political ideologies in graph form; I think there are many different ways that are all good in some areas but bad in others. If you want a simple graph which covers the main political ideologies, and which most people can fit themselves onto, I would suggest the Nolan Chart: http://www.nolanchart.com
Otherwise, I would suggest reading this paper, which contains main charts depending on what you want to compare: http://www.civismundi.net/index.php?p=06...ical+Chart
As an anarcho-capitalist, I laugh at your placement of "anarchism" in the most "ruralist" section of the graph. Nothing in anarchism advocates a need for living a rural life; anarchism is the ideology that embraces the complete removal of the government from a country. Individual types of anarchism may advocate things like ruralism, but some types (like anarcho-capitalism) advocate nothing of the sort.
I don't think there are any "perfect" ways to sum up all political ideologies in graph form; I think there are many different ways that are all good in some areas but bad in others. If you want a simple graph which covers the main political ideologies, and which most people can fit themselves onto, I would suggest the Nolan Chart: http://www.nolanchart.com
Otherwise, I would suggest reading this paper, which contains main charts depending on what you want to compare: http://www.civismundi.net/index.php?p=06...ical+Chart