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910 lines
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910 lines
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Plaintext
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Again delayed...
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This time partly on purpose. Finally we've gotten a listserver to
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take care of mailing out Breakaway, and I wanted to wait until it was all
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set up, so that I didn't have to mail out hundreds of issues manually
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again...
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Vidar Hokstad <vidarh@powertech.no>
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Editor
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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BEGIN BREAKAWAY.003
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B R E A K A W A Y
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Debates on modern marxism
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-+*+-
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Issue no. 3, volume no. 1
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August/September 1994
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=======================================================================
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CONTENTS
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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(00) EDITORIAL
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(01) column: WHAT'S UP?
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Some informal notes on issues we want to tell you about
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(02) STATE CAPITALISM AND STALINISM
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An attempt at a reply to Jack Hills letter in issue #2
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(04) column: A SEARCHLIGHT ON INTERNET
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Revolutionary resources on the information highway
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(05) column: ANNOUNCEMENTS
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Red Orange ?!? What's that?
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(06) series: FOR A NEW BEGINNING (2 of 2)
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a critique of secterianism
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(07) GENERAL INFORMATION
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How and what to submit, how to contact us, etc.
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=======================================================================
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(00) EDITORIAL
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Thank you!
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The last two months my mailbox have been overflowing. Allthough
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the number of submissions still is low, the amount of subscription
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requests, interesting info, and positive feedback mailed to me have
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been overwealming.
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It is certainly enough socialists out on the net to justify this
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publication.
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The beauty of the net, is the lack of distribution-problems due to
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geographical issues. For a truly international movement, the net is a
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blessing of similar importance today, as the railroad was when Marx and
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Engels wrote their famous _Manifesto_[1]. What before took years, can
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today be done in weeks - the human factor being the last barrier...
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We are as users of the net witnessing capitalism create the
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ultimate tool for the working class to use. The final weapon to turn
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against them. An anarchic structure where the number of voices crying
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out their opinions into cyberspace is finally more important than the
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money of the bourgeoisie.
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Watch the drama unfold, as capitalist companies struggle to make
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net access available to us all at low cost, so that we can turn it
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against them even more easily, or wither away as loosers in an ever
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hardening competition.
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Look around you, and see virtual worlds, empires, of information,
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be created, live and die, in an accelerating cycle of "living
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knowledge" - the net is a medium in which a creation will never be
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finished, never will be finite, but always lies open for new
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exploration and new enhancements.
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Enter the age of the virtual commune...
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Vidar Hokstad
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Editor
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----
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[1] "And that union, to attain which the burghers of the Middle Ages,
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with their miserable highways, required centuries, the modern
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proletarian, thanks to railways, achieve in a few years."
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=======================================================================
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(01) column: WHAT'S UP?
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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- After a few series of adverts on a series of USENET conferences
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and mailing-lists the numbers of subscribers practically went
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through the roof. On 1th of July, shortly after my first round of
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advertising for issue #2, 15 subscription requests arrived
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during my less than an hour online that day (and several more had
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arrived before I logged on), and that was only the beginning...
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Breakaway is now distributed to subscribers in (sorted after
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numbers of subscribers) USA, UK, Canada, France, Norway, Germany,
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Ireland, Australia, South-Africa, Spain, Finland, New Zealand,
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Sweden and South-Korea!
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Most of our subscribers (approx. 60%) comes from the US. Breakaway
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has also been uploaded to a few local BBS's around the world.
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I would especially like to welcome our first subscriber in
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South-Korea, who, in spite of the political oppression, still
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takes the chance involved with subscribing to Breakaway. The
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South-Korean government have, as naby of you will know, a
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reputation for imprisoning revolutionaries, and I doubt they'd
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like Breakaway very much...
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- Breakaway is now archived in the ftp archive at
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etext.archive.umich.edu in the directory /pub/Zines/Breakaway.
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Another archive is expected soon...
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- Red Forum have recently gotten it's own gopher archive at the
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EDIN gopher. In addition to general information about Red Forum,
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the archive also contains material from Breakaway, and a pointer
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to the archive mentioned above. Try gopher to garnet.berkeley.edu,
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port 1520, 1521 or 1522, and select "13. Political Movements and
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Theory/", then "2. Socialist Political Groups/", and finally
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"3. Non-US Socialist Organizations/" to find us.
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- I've adjusted the size of Breakaway up to approx. 40kb from this
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issue.
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- The Red Forum meeting will be in late September or early October
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instead of August.
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- Two mailing-lists have been set up. One for Breakaway, and another
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one as a discussion list for Breakaway subscribers and RFIC
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members.
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The address is "majordomo@powertech.no". Send a message with
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"help" in the body to retrieve informations about the commands
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at your disposal, or use "lists" to get a list of all the lists
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administrated by Powertech (our service provider).
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The discussion list may possibly not be set up correctly when you
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read this. I'll post a short notice to the Breakaway mailing list
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as soon as it is working. You will *NOT* be automatically
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subscribed to this list even if you subscribe to Breakaway.
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- Breakaway is now also available on WWW. Select the URL
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"http://www.ifi.uio.no/~vidarh/" (my homepage) from Mosaic or Lynx,
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or go directly to the Breakaway archive by adding "Breakaway/" to
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the above URL. Starting with issue #4, most material will be
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available on the web before it is being mailed out, since it
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will be written in a custom SGML format, and converted to HTML
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(for WWW), ASCII, and AmigaGuide.
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For more info about World Wide Web, send mail to info@cern.ch
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(automatic mailer)
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The WWW editions will be _updated_ with current addresses, more
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links etc. However, no new entries will be added.
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=======================================================================
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(02) STATE CAPITALISM AND STALINISM
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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An attempt at a reply to Jack Hills letter in issue #2, and more... [1]
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I agree that naming all regimes "Stalinist" without a closer
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examination, is to simple. But let me try to explain this
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simplification.
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Jack stated, in my opinion correctly, that the Chinese revolution
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originated as a popular revolution despite the degeneration that
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followed it, and the party that led it. This is an assertion that
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seems to provide us with a major difference between the development in
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China and Russia, as there are differences between Stalinism, defined
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strictly as _Stalins theory and practice_, contrary to using Stalinism
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in a broad sense for denoting any state capitalist regime using
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communist symbolism, and Maoism.
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And yes, Maoism is revisionistic where stalinism is reactionary.
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While Stalinism were in effect, with it's bureaucratic system, trying to
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reverse the process of building capitalism, Maoism was, at the time,
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a force of liberation.
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Even the Russian revolution was a popular revolution, allthough the
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_October revolution_ did not have the support of the majority. In the
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same way as the great French revolution of 1789 didn't consist of just
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one attack on the establishment, but a series of struggles, the Russian
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revolution was a process that at least must be said to include the
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overthrowing of the Czar regime in February 1917, and later the October
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Revolution, but which could be extended in both directions: Towards
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the uprisings in 1905, and throughout the end of of Lenins life.
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Or even further...
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Some would even claim that the Russian revolution didn't finish it's
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task before the State-Capitalist regime was overthrown, and Russia
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finally got to experience the curse of developed capitalism in a
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"free market" environment.
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My opinion is that this is going too far. As always, history has
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shown us some of it's innumerable variations, by providing us with a
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series of "socialist" revolutions which all degenerated into state
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capitalism. State capitalism has earned a position as an independent
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stage in the development of our world at a place where we before only
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knew the direct transition from feudalism to capitalism, as it had
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happened in the developed countries.
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State capitalism has earned a position as an intermediate step on
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the underdeveloped countries way to capitalism, as socialism[2] by most
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communists are seen as an intermediate step on our way towards
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communism.
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Again roughly simplified, Maoism played the role equivalent to the
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role of Leninism in Russia. In the same way as Leninism, Maoism was an
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adaption of Marxism to a severly underdeveloped, perhaps even non-existent
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capitalism. It meant the inclusion of the poor peasants into the proletariat,
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even though we have been able to witness how large parts of these peasants
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didn't share the interests of the proletariat.
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There's a lot to criticize about both Lenin and Mao, but there's little
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doubt about their intent.
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I don't feel I can say the same about Stalin. And it would be highly
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unfair to call Mao China's Stalin.
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True, good intent is no excuse for oppression, but there _is_ a
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difference between unwillingly causing death by starvation, and organized,
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well planned, executions. There _is_ a difference between causing the
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creation of an oppressive regime by not foreseeing the consequences of
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what you do, and actually intentionally strenghtening oppression.
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Still the errors of Mao _and_ Lenin must be openly discussed, and
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the crimes they _did_ commit condemned, as the actions of any revolutionary
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must be constantly under attack by ourselves - we can't expect to win a war
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against capitalism, if we don't dare to fight minor battles with our
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comrades of fear that we might be wrong.
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But we must also we very aware about what we are doing, and be careful
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not to throw away the experiences, and ideas, that actually are worth using,
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and developing.
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What about state capitalism, then?
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Certainly there must be valuable experiences to be extracted from the
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state capitalist regimes, and conclusions to be made?
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In opposition to some trends, I do not see state capitalism as a
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highly developed capitalism, ready for the socialist revolution, but
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as a backward regime created out of combining the political inheritance
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from a feudalist past with the awakening capitalist economic structures.
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As such, the development in China, towards a market economy controlled
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by a highly totalitarian government is no surprise. Similar tendencies
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could be seen in Europe during the early years of capitalist economy.
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We just hadn't a good word for it until recently[3]
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History always repeats itself, but it has a bad memory. It never
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replicates the exact same patters over and over again. Like the
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Mandelbrot set of fractals: the further you move from your point of
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origin, the larger the differences, but changes never appear suddenly -
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the patterns seems to go through a slow metamorphosis.
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The revolutions of China and Russia have many differences. But
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these are minor, cosmetic, differences. The main tendencies, the
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radicalisation, and then degenerisation, of a bourgeoisie revolution,
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are the same.
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This tendency we find in every bourgeoisie revolution, but only
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in the underdeveloped countries the bourgeoisie is weak enough to let
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this radicalisation continue to a point where it causes the seizure
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of state power by a vanguardist minority _strong enough to keep it_.
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We remember from the French Revolution of 1789 a phase of
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radicalisation. But this phase was ended by reactionary forces,
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creating another dictature, and thus it isn't suitable for the
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capitalists when they look for ways to fight communism.
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They find their weapons in the "socialist" revolutions - the
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revolutions where the bourgeoisie finds regimes that looks like
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their visions of communism. For can their reign be ended without
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replacing it with _another_ oppressive force? And won't this force
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be the _state_? This is the nightmare the capitalists envision.
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Their reign _will_ be replaced by new oppression. Not the state,
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or rather not the state as in bourgeoisie terminology. It will by
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neccessity be the dictatorship of the majority, of the proletariat.
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But it will also be the democracy of the many instead of the few.
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Here lies the problems of the "socialist revolutions". Until
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now, they have been seizure of power by an elite - a minority - that
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haven't understood that the time had not yet come for socialism.
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To build socialism in countries that lack most fundamental goods,
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that can't fulfill the basic needs of their populations, will
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inevitably end in oppression:
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The vanguardist parties will always be haunted by people in search
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of power, by people that want more than their share. In a country
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where poverty rules, how can you escape poverty? By seizing power
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for yourself, by becoming emperor...
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In a country with ONE party, or at least only one party with
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power, which party do you turn to if power is what you want?
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Vidar Hokstad <vidarh@powertech.no>
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----
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[1] Please note that the inclusion of Jack's letter in issue #2 was an
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error on my behalf - the letter was not meant to be published. However
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I've chosen still to comment on the issues he mentioned, because I find
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the problems he rises interesting. I would like to hear more opinions
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on these questions. Submissions are especially welcome, but write even
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if you don't want to submit (just make sure you state that clearly,
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so I don't mess up again...).
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[2] That is, the political system, not the ideology or ideologies.
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[3] It should also be noted that while early western capitalism
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certainly showed remarkable resemblances to state capitalism as the
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term is used here, there were also distinct differences - again the
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natural variations of history? Or are the differences more fundamental?
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I won't go into that now. Any comments?
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=======================================================================
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(04) column: A SEARCHLIGHT ON INTERNET
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* CPUSA
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E-MAIL: communistpty@igc.apc.com,
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pww@igc.apc.com (Peoples Weekly World)
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timwheeler@igc.apc.com (PWW editor Tim Wheeler)
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Communist Party of USA. Publishes Peoples Weekly World, and the
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theoretical journal Political Affairs. Their youth organization is
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YCL - Young Communist League.
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* Marxism (mailing-list)
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E-MAIL: marxism-request@world.std.com (majordomo)
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marxism-approval@world.std.com (the list moderator)
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The Marxism list have had a steady stream of messages, and have
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established itself as one of the more high-volume leftist lists.
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It's highly focused on academic questions, but should still provide
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interesting reading for others - at least you'd probably have no
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problems getting enough suggestions for what to read ;)
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* Marxist Leninist Bookstore
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E-MAIL: <mlbooks@mcs.com>
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Jack Hill writes:
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" Actually, this is just an e-mail address that
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the Chicago Workers' Voice (a small Marxist-Leninist political group
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in Chicago, formerly the Chicago branch of the Marxist-Leninist Party
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(USA) ) uses to exchange views and information on political issues.
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We publish two periodicals: an agitational newsletter _The Chicago
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Workers' Voice_/_Voz Obrera_ in English and Spanish, and _The Chicago
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Workers' Voice Theoretical Journal_. I would certainly be willing to
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send anyone who requests it the text of our agitational articles. I
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can also inform anyone who asks what are the contents of our
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theoretical journal. Each issue runs about 240-250K so it would be hard
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to sent out the whole journal by e-mail, but I might be able to send
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individual articles if someone is really interested. Of course, if I
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start getting hundreds of requests, I may have to reconsider this offer.
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M-L Books is an actual bookstore located in a storefront in the
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Mexican community of Chicago. We have been in this community for 15
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years. We have a wide variety of titles of Marx, Engels, and Lenin in
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English and Spanish. Our prices are generally low, since much of our
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stock was acquired years ago at low prices. I don't have a complete
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listing of our current stock with current prices, but if there is a
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title you want, let me know. We can probably help you.
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Keep up the struggle.
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Jack Hill <mlbooks@mcs.com>"
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* Committees of Correspondence
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GOPHER: See the EDIN gopher below.
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LIST: cocdiscuss@garnet.berkeley.edu (The CocDiscuss list)
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newman@garnet.berkeley.edu (the list moderator)
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* EDIN gopher
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|
||
|
GOPHER: garnet.berkeley.edu (ports 1520/1521/1522)
|
||
|
E-MAIL: newman@garnet.berkeley.edu (Nathan Newman)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The EDIN gopher is one of the main resources for revolutionary and
|
||
|
other progressive groups on the Net. Apart from pointers to a wide range
|
||
|
of leftist organization on the Internet, it contains massive information
|
||
|
about human rights organizations, economics etc., and pointers to tons
|
||
|
of other info. An absolute _must_. Red Forum can also be found here.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The maintainer, Nathan Newman, is highly active on Usenet, and also
|
||
|
moderates the Committees of Correspondence discussion list - CocDiscuss.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
* Partei des Demokratischen Sozialismus
|
||
|
|
||
|
GOPHER:
|
||
|
USENET: cl.gruppen.pds
|
||
|
E-MAIL: PDS-BLV@IPN-B.comlink.de (PDS Landesvorstand Berlin)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Notice that this entry is by no means complete. The PDS have an
|
||
|
extensive list of e-mail addresses to a long range of local sections and
|
||
|
members of their party. The few addresses mentioned here have been taken
|
||
|
from the newsgroup "cl.gruppen.pds".
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
* Archiv fuer marxistische Theorie
|
||
|
|
||
|
EMAIL: CHRONIK@LINK-S.cl.sub.de
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
=======================================================================
|
||
|
(05) ANNOUNCEMENTS
|
||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
RED ORANGE
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Marxist Triquarterly of Theory, Politics, and the Everyday
|
||
|
|
||
|
Robert A. Nowlan, Chief Editor
|
||
|
Robert J. Cymbala, Managing Editor
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The inaugural issue of Red Orange will be published in the spring
|
||
|
of 1995. Red Orange will contribute to the positive development of
|
||
|
revolutionary Marxist knowledges of contemporary capitalist economics,
|
||
|
politics, society, and culture. Red Orange will include critical,
|
||
|
theoretical, and pedagogical articles of sustained length, as well as a
|
||
|
dossier of briefer writings which deal with developments in popular
|
||
|
consciousness and mass culture. Red Orange will produce work that is
|
||
|
engaged in systematic investigation and explanation, and which is
|
||
|
concerned with extending and developing revolutionary Marxist critical
|
||
|
theory of capitalist society and culture. Red Orange will argue for the
|
||
|
necessary theoretical and political priority of such concepts as class,
|
||
|
class conflict and struggle, class consciousness, history, materiality,
|
||
|
mode of production, forces and relations of production, labor,
|
||
|
proletariat, revolution, socialism, communism, dialectics, ideology,
|
||
|
theory, and critique.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The first issue of Red Orange will begin to investigate the broad
|
||
|
topic of "Late Capitalism at the Fin-de-Siecle." This focus will
|
||
|
continue throughout the first year as the second and third issues of Red
|
||
|
Orange will (tentatively) focus upon the specific topics of market and
|
||
|
commodity culture (issue two) and globality, globalism, and global
|
||
|
post-ality (issue three) in fin-de-siecle late capitalism. We invite
|
||
|
submissions for this first and for the subsequent second and third
|
||
|
issues of Red Orange that focus on the development of revolutionary
|
||
|
Marxist critical theory of, and intellectual-pedagogical intervention
|
||
|
within, various institutions, discourses, practices, and social
|
||
|
relations of fin-de-siecle late capitalism. We invite submissions from
|
||
|
across the full range of traditional academic-intellectual
|
||
|
"disciplines." We are also particularly interested in articles which
|
||
|
will address the related question -- in the course of their
|
||
|
investigation of fin-de-siecle late capitalist economics, politics,
|
||
|
society, and culture -- of How and Why, on the Advent of the
|
||
|
Twenty-First Century, the Revolutionary Socialist Transformation of
|
||
|
Capitalism into Communism is -- Still -- Possible and -- Still --
|
||
|
Necessary.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Texts and inquiries should be addressed to Red Orange, Post Office
|
||
|
Box 1055, Tempe, AZ, 85280-1055, U.S.A.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
=======================================================================
|
||
|
(06) FOR A NEW BEGINNING (2 of 2)
|
||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Written by Dave Hollis <ln_dho@pki-nbg.philips.de>
|
||
|
Co-authored by Maggie McQuillan
|
||
|
Please contact the author before republishing the article.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
... continued from Breakaway #2
|
||
|
|
||
|
Democratic Centralism
|
||
|
|
||
|
Democratic centralism is usually justified by saying that it originates
|
||
|
out of the organisation the workers give themselves in struggle.
|
||
|
Leaving aside for a moment that its historical roots were completely
|
||
|
different, let me try and examine the concept as such.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instinctively, the idea of democratically deciding and then acting
|
||
|
together is very appealing - at least in the cases when one is fighting
|
||
|
the class enemy. For a revolutionary organisation, however, democratic
|
||
|
centralism has meant and means something else.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Democratic centralism is usually defined as being "freedom of
|
||
|
discussion and unity of action". This definition, taken from Lenin
|
||
|
himself, doesn't tell the whole story. A democratic centralist
|
||
|
organisation is based on a separation of the task of leadership from
|
||
|
the task of carrying out the decisions. This separation takes the
|
||
|
form, in the best case, of a yearly election of a central or national
|
||
|
committee.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Whatever name this committee may have, I think that no one will
|
||
|
contradict me in saying that it has the right to lead the organisation
|
||
|
and take decisions in its name which are then binding on the members.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Before going into the ramifications of such powers, it is very
|
||
|
important to note that such a division of labour is nothing more than a
|
||
|
reproduction of the capitalist model of parliamentary democracy in a
|
||
|
workers' organisation. Instead of the majority leading the
|
||
|
organisation we have the majority drawing up the leaders. As is the
|
||
|
case with parliamentary elections when electing MPs, the rank and file
|
||
|
does not lead an organisation and the people do not lead parliament
|
||
|
because the leaders are elected at regular intervals.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The effects of the separation described above are not at first glance
|
||
|
apparent. To understand them it is necessary to not only investigate
|
||
|
the practical consequences of democratic centralism on the workings of
|
||
|
a political organisation, but also to look into what effects it has on
|
||
|
the minds of the members.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As experienced in the previous two sects, democratic centralism
|
||
|
required of the members that they put forward its programme and
|
||
|
policies when working within the movement. This makes it very
|
||
|
difficult for the members to question and develop differing ideas to
|
||
|
those internally agreed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One could of course counter by saying that one can discuss anything
|
||
|
with anyone. However it should be obvious that members will feel
|
||
|
"obliged" to put forward the "line" in public and not develop ones
|
||
|
ideas in a dialogue with the workers. A tendency can and will develop
|
||
|
that engenders conformity, something very unhealthy for a revolutionary
|
||
|
organisation. Furthermore, it is very easy for a feeling to develop of
|
||
|
"us" and "them" - something we have already had more than enough
|
||
|
experience of in the past. The underlying processes at work here are
|
||
|
by no means easy to depict. Attitudes are shaped by an organisation
|
||
|
but an organisation is also shaped by attitudes. Cause and effect will
|
||
|
change places more than once
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ideas when taken up by people become a material force in their own
|
||
|
right. Separating the overwhelming majority of the members from the
|
||
|
decision making process has consequences that go a lot further than
|
||
|
depicted up to now.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A tendency will develop, as is the case in almost any workers'
|
||
|
organisation, of loyalty and acceptance of the leaders. Those who
|
||
|
decide will also be those who appear to be competent in the eyes of the
|
||
|
members. If the organisation grows, i.e. it is successful, the
|
||
|
position of the leadership will be strengthened, a bureaucracy can then
|
||
|
develop. If the organisation declines, it is by no means said that the
|
||
|
leadership will be weakened [1]. How often in the history of the labour
|
||
|
movement have leaderships survived bad decisions because of the loyalty
|
||
|
of the members? Leaderships of Stalinist organisations, for example,
|
||
|
have often committed great crimes against their members and still
|
||
|
survived to tell the story!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Looking through the documents of the factional struggle within
|
||
|
Militant, it immediately becomes apparent that the force of ideas were
|
||
|
by no means sufficient to break the loyalty built up in the leadership.
|
||
|
Loyalty to a leadership - be it blind or conscious - is poison for a
|
||
|
revolutionary organisation. This point has to be seen in context of
|
||
|
what I wrote above on sectarianism and the psychological background of
|
||
|
loyalty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The development of loyalties, the inability to question ideas, to
|
||
|
understand differing ideas shows that democratic checks, as important
|
||
|
as they undoubtedly are, are in now way sufficient to prevent an
|
||
|
organisation from degenerating. To put it another way, there is always
|
||
|
a need for democratic checks when the organisation in question has un-
|
||
|
democratic traits in it right from the word go!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bureaucratic centralism, or bureaucratism in general, begins with the
|
||
|
separation of the leaders from the rest, i.e. those who carry out the
|
||
|
decisions. As soon as no active control takes place - be it due to the
|
||
|
structure of the organisation or because the members do not want to -
|
||
|
bureaucratism will be the result. It must be the result.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Up till now, I have looked into the effects of democratic centralism in
|
||
|
the organisation itself. I would like to now portray how democratic
|
||
|
centralism affects the political work in the movement. In passing, it
|
||
|
should be obvious that the criticisms of democratic centralism are, in
|
||
|
a slightly modified form, just as applicable and relevant to the
|
||
|
organisations of the labour movement, i.e. the trade unions and the
|
||
|
Labour Party.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The discussion on the merits or otherwise of democratic centralism are
|
||
|
by no means new. Both Rosa Luxemburg and Leon Trotsky criticized in
|
||
|
detail, and independently of each other, Lenin's organisation concept.
|
||
|
Rosa Luxemburg's contribution appeared in English under the title
|
||
|
Organizational Question of Russian Social Democracy. Although the
|
||
|
translation is terrible, the translator managed to get the meaning more
|
||
|
or less across - the article is well worth a read. Trotsky's pamphlet,
|
||
|
Our Political Tasks, was published in 1904 in Russian and also
|
||
|
translated in 1970 into German.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of Trotsky's criticisms of Lenin's organisation concept concerned
|
||
|
the question of self-activity, i.e. the ability of the working class
|
||
|
to act by itself. In Lenin's concept this self-activity was given
|
||
|
narrow bounds.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In contrast, Trotsky saw the main task of the Social Democracy as being
|
||
|
one of stimulating and fostering this self-activity. Trotsky saw in
|
||
|
Lenin's plans an obstacle for the development of political
|
||
|
consciousness of the proletariat. Moreover he saw the danger that the
|
||
|
party, due to its not legitimated claim to hegemony with regard to the
|
||
|
working class and the resulting strict separation from the proletariat,
|
||
|
taking up such a sectarian position that the proletariat could turn its
|
||
|
back on the party at the decisive moment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lenin's formal centralism would not lead to its declared aim, the
|
||
|
strengthening of the party, but, instead, to the danger of the
|
||
|
separation of the working class from the party. Trotsky saw the
|
||
|
guarantee for the party's stability "in an active and self-active
|
||
|
participating proletariat and not in its organisational head".
|
||
|
|
||
|
Trotsky counterposed to democratic centralism the concept of
|
||
|
democratic centralisation, i.e. a centralisation from below. In his
|
||
|
view, this centralisation can only be the majority will of the rank
|
||
|
and file organisations, which exercise a continuous control over their
|
||
|
delegates. To give a flavor and the direction of Trotsky's
|
||
|
criticisms, here are a few passages from his pamphlet:
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The system of political substitution is, as is the system of
|
||
|
'economistic' simplification, derived consciously or
|
||
|
unconsciously from a 'sophistic' understanding of the
|
||
|
relationship of the objective interests of the proletariat to its
|
||
|
consciousness. Marxism teaches that the interests of the
|
||
|
proletariat are determined by its objective conditions of
|
||
|
existence. These interests are so imperious that they in the end
|
||
|
cause the proletariat to transfer them into the area of its
|
||
|
consciousness, i.e. to reach its objective interests by its
|
||
|
subjective needs. Between both these factors - the objective
|
||
|
factor of its class interests and its subjective consciousness -
|
||
|
lies, in reality unavoidable, road of knocks and blows, mistakes
|
||
|
and disappointments, vicissitudes and defeats. For the tactical
|
||
|
wisdom of the party of the proletariat, the whole task lies
|
||
|
between these two planes, it consists in shortening and
|
||
|
facilitating the road from the one to another."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"... If the Economists do not lead in this way the proletariat
|
||
|
because it trots behind them, the 'politicians' also do not lead
|
||
|
the proletariat because they are themselves looking to perform
|
||
|
their duties. If the Economists shirk their colossal tasks by
|
||
|
devoting themselves to a modest role, to march at the tail of
|
||
|
history, the 'politicians' solve the question by making history
|
||
|
to its own tail..."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We revolutionize the masses badly or well (mostly badly) by
|
||
|
waking in them their elementary political instincts. However, as
|
||
|
long as it is the question of the complex tasks of transforming
|
||
|
these instincts into the conscious efforts of a political working
|
||
|
class determined by the class itself, we resort to the short and
|
||
|
simplified methods of the thoughts of standing in for others and
|
||
|
substitution.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the internal politics of the party, these methods lead, as we
|
||
|
will see, to the party organisation replacing the party itself,
|
||
|
the CC replacing the party's organisation and finally a dictator
|
||
|
replacing the CC; furthermore, these methods lead to the
|
||
|
committees creating and abolishing the 'lines', while 'the people
|
||
|
remain silent'. In the external politics, these methods appear
|
||
|
in the attempts to exert pressure on other social organisations,
|
||
|
not by the real power of the proletarian conscious of its own
|
||
|
interests but by the abstract power of the class interests of the
|
||
|
proletariat."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We are speaking of the absolute necessity of the creation of
|
||
|
party members, of conscious social democrats, not, however, of
|
||
|
simple skilled 'detail workers'- and one answers us: 'That goes
|
||
|
without saying'. What does that mean? For whom does 'that' go
|
||
|
without saying? Does 'that' go without saying in the context of
|
||
|
our party work, i.e. does the creation of political thinking
|
||
|
party comrades an absolute, integral part of it?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Every thought that promotes the technical principle of the
|
||
|
division of labour to the principle of social democratic
|
||
|
organisation, consciously or unconsciously acquires the final
|
||
|
unavoidable consequence: the separation of consciousness and
|
||
|
implementation, the separation of social democratic thought from
|
||
|
technical functions by means of which these thoughts must
|
||
|
necessarily be realised. The 'organisation of professional
|
||
|
revolutionaries', more precisely its head, appears as the centre
|
||
|
of social democratic consciousness and underneath this centre,
|
||
|
the disciplined executors of technical functions are to be
|
||
|
found."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Originally, I planned at this point to look into the historical
|
||
|
background of democratic centralism in some detail. Due to lack of
|
||
|
time, I can only skirt over the subject. If enough interest is
|
||
|
present, I can into this subject in some detail.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If one reads 'What is to be Done', Lenin states clearly that his
|
||
|
organisational model stems from a terrorist organisation, 'Land and
|
||
|
Freedom'. Moreover, his ideas were based on an amalgamation of the
|
||
|
Marxism of the 2. International (in particular the German Marxism of
|
||
|
Kautsky) with the traditions of the Russian revolutionary
|
||
|
intelligentsia.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The idea taken directly from Kautsky that the proletariat is only
|
||
|
capable of developing a trade union consciousness and therefore the
|
||
|
bourgeois intelligentsia, collected in the Social Democracy, is
|
||
|
required to 'bring in' a socialist consciousness into the working
|
||
|
class, determined Lenin's organisational concept.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Despite the fact that Lenin modified his views on this subject under
|
||
|
pressure from without, the organisational principles derived from this
|
||
|
false understanding of the question of socialist consciousness
|
||
|
remained. The idea that the ideas of socialism are not to be explained
|
||
|
by the material conditions but instead are to viewed as a question of
|
||
|
science, higher morals and a successful propaganda activity, have since
|
||
|
this time bedevilled the labour movement.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ideas of separating out the tasks of leadership, i.e. the
|
||
|
separation detailed above, also have their roots in this false
|
||
|
understanding of the question of socialist consciousness. Instead of
|
||
|
it being a question of the working class being able to free itself from
|
||
|
the chains of capitalism, this mentality leads to this question being
|
||
|
reduced to a technical problem that can only be solved by technicians.
|
||
|
Slowly, surely and unavoidably, the whole concept of socialism is
|
||
|
robbed of its human content: "We have the solution and you have to put
|
||
|
it into practice". Having experienced this way of thinking more than
|
||
|
once and over a long period of time, I think I can say that this way of
|
||
|
thinking was prevalent in the sects.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instead of a conclusion
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is easy to criticize, it is easy to know better. I was tempted -
|
||
|
despite the shortness of time available to me - to pick up on a number
|
||
|
of points made in the documents for your national meeting. What struck
|
||
|
me on reading them however, is that it is very unclear as to what you
|
||
|
consider to be your tasks.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The road to hell is paved with good intentions. What sort of
|
||
|
organisation is required and for what purpose? It is stated in the
|
||
|
document Establishing a new Tradition that there is a tremendous
|
||
|
political vacuum existing in the current world situation.
|
||
|
Unfortunately, it is much more than a vacuum. The ideas of socialism,
|
||
|
i.e. that the workers can take charge of society, have been
|
||
|
discredited and most probably for a whole historical period. The
|
||
|
rediscovery of these ideas can only take place over a long period of
|
||
|
time. As we have already said in Germany, it is not even clear whether
|
||
|
these new ideas will acquire the name "Socialism".
|
||
|
|
||
|
What alternatives are there going to be, how they are going to look,
|
||
|
etc. will only result from a long period of discussion in and with the
|
||
|
labour movement and also by learning from experiences. One very
|
||
|
important part of these discussions will undoubtedly be a reappraisal
|
||
|
of the history of the labour movement and its ideas. This reappraisal
|
||
|
will require socialists having to leave no stone unturned and really
|
||
|
questioning things we have always taken for granted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From what I have said in the article as a whole, revolutionaries will
|
||
|
have to take more account of a number of things that it has never
|
||
|
really done to any great degree in the past. Life has changed a lot
|
||
|
since the "great teachers". Either one has to learn to come to terms
|
||
|
with this fact and draw the necessary conclusions otherwise how things
|
||
|
will end up will be clear right from the word go - sect No. 3!
|
||
|
|
||
|
To hold comrades together just on the basis of ideas is not going to be
|
||
|
a simple task. Once the pressure is off, those comrades who have
|
||
|
missed out on life up to know will want to catch up. Some, or perhaps
|
||
|
many, will leave politics altogether.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Life is no longer going to be rosy or easy. There are no simple
|
||
|
solutions and to call for the nationalization of the top 200 monopolies
|
||
|
at every appropriate and inappropriate occasion is not going to help
|
||
|
either. Only by understanding what went wrong in the past and why it
|
||
|
went wrong, is it possible to build for the future. The form and
|
||
|
content this will take are still very unclear - if we recognize this
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fact, there is a chance that we can do it better. But only if we do
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so!
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Dave Hollis, 15.4.94
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P.S. This document was written in a hurry and under pressure from an
|
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|
ongoing struggle against redundancies. It would have been impossible
|
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|
to have written it without the help and critical comments of Maggie
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|
McQuillan, who agrees with the main lines of argument and conclusions.
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|
In this sense, the document should be considered to have been co-
|
||
|
authored by her. All grammatical mistakes, mis-spellings, etc. are,
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|
of course my responsibility.
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||
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||
|
----
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|
[1] In fact, often the leadership have been _strengthened_, since it
|
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|
generally is the opposition that leaves the organisation first, leaving
|
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|
the sinking ship in an even worse condition than before. Editors remark
|
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||
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|
=======================================================================
|
||
|
(07) GENERAL INFORMATION
|
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|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
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|
Breakaway will be published as often as we have enough material.
|
||
|
"Enough" is at present about 40kb of text, but this might increase
|
||
|
if we get enough submissions. Under any circumstances we'll try to
|
||
|
limit ourselves to 40kb until we reach one issue every two weeks.
|
||
|
(Probably won't happen in your lifetime ;-)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The format is, as you can see, pure 7-bit ASCII.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Do you:
|
||
|
|
||
|
- want to subscribe?
|
||
|
- have an idea?
|
||
|
- have a question?
|
||
|
- want to submit, and want to know how?
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just send us a message, preferably by e-mail, and we'll send you
|
||
|
appropriate information as soon as possible. To ensure that we can
|
||
|
reply, please include your e-mail address in the body of the message.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
SOME BRIEF NOTES ON SUBMISSIONS
|
||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
* BREAKAWAY will accept articles from people belonging to all trends
|
||
|
or ideologies related to marxism, or from people who are simply
|
||
|
interested in marxist theory or practice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* You should limit yourself to articles between 100 and 300 lines if
|
||
|
possible (shorter pieces will naturally also be accepted). If you
|
||
|
find that difficult, try to divide your article into shorter
|
||
|
sections suitable for publishing over two to four issues.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* We will publish most articles or news reports we receive concerning
|
||
|
marxist ideology, the actions of marxist organisations, or
|
||
|
information of importance to the average revolutionary. Also
|
||
|
fiction might be accepted (contact us for more info)
|
||
|
|
||
|
* We accept anonymous submissions. However, if you choose to do so,
|
||
|
we would prefer if you give us a pseudonym to use as your
|
||
|
signature.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
How to contact Red Forum / Internationalists Committee:
|
||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Editor : Vidar Hokstad
|
||
|
E-mail : <vidarh@powertech.no>
|
||
|
Snailmail : Boks 30, N-2001 Lillestroem, NORWAY
|
||
|
Tel. : +47 638 170 35 (5pm to 9pm GMT)
|
||
|
|
||
|
=======================================================================
|
||
|
Proletarians of all countries, unite!
|
||
|
=======================================================================
|
||
|
|
||
|
END BREAKAWAY.003
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