It's strange how most criticisms of anarchism are predicated on an unspoken assumption that having a group of unaccountable people in charge of everything i needed to sprinkle the magical fairy dust that unfreezes dormant laborers and machinery into harmonious action
A lot of what people are grasping at is just the collective action problem, but then they ignore all real and hypothetical ways of addressing it because they've bought into this cartoon fairy tale of human organization
But the truth is that, when they ask "how will anarchists do [x]?" and say that "the people who know how to do it will figure it out" is a handwave, their own position of "people in charge will take care of it" is just as much a handwave, if not moreso,
because the division of labor in a hierarchy relies on the cleavage of practical knowledge from political power