The
Ruling Class
The
words “ruling class” conjure a group of older, rich, typically
white, men sitting in overstuffed chairs in their private club
discussing and deciding the future of US domestic and foreign
policies. Better yet, images of an annual gathering in a private
wooded area spring to mind, with the same wealthy codgers prancing
around bonfires and indulging their fantasies before retiring to
cigars and cognac and deliberation. To augment these representations,
film directors like Jean Renoir (The Rules of the Game), Luis
Bunuel (The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie), and Peter
Medak (The Ruling Class) have sought to provide vivid, often
comical narrative flesh to the manners and fashions of those who are
said to decide our fate---the ruling class.
But
this is not what Marxists mean by “ruling class.” They do not
deny that wealth and power come together from time to time, both
socially and to do business, but Marxists would be hard pressed to
name all the names and locate the seats of power.
For
Marxists, the idea of the ruling class is the answer to an enigma:
How does a relatively small segment of the population impose its will
over everyone else? How could a tiny minority advance its interests
ahead of the interests of the majority? And how could that minority
do it not once, not occasionally, but systematically?
By
asking these questions, we open the door to envisioning an
alternative arrangement, an arrangement that would place the will and
interests of the majority first. But first we must provide an answer.
Behind
the words “ruling class,” Marxists find the secret of elite rule
in a complex system of social relations and processes that compel,
control, confuse, or secure consent, while frustrating any attempt to
rebel. Ingenious mechanisms-- electoral pageantry, entertainments,
competitions, contrived identities, insatiable consumption, and a
host of other distractions-- deflect the majority from the question
of who should rule. And should some get the bold idea of rejecting
this machinery of consent, there are instruments of repression: the
police and the judiciary.
These
systems of contrived consent and coercion are posed as elements and
guardians of “civil society,” when, in fact, they protect the
interests of a minority of the super rich and protect them, their
minions, and servants from any challenges from the many. Money and
its influence fuel these mechanisms; from elections to movies, from
lifestyles to consumption, the hand of an unseen class shapes the
direction.
Like
an electron, the ruling class is studied from its traces. While we
cannot see or touch electrons, we know they exist from their
relationship and influence upon other particles and processes. That
is, their footprint is evidence for their existence. Similarly, the
ruling class footprint is all over the social, political, and
economic world.
History
teaches that nothing beneficial to the great majority comes without a
struggle. Why would this be? Who stands in the way of the majority
will?
The
answer should be apparent: the class that rules by virtue of its
accumulated wealth and the power that it buys.
Bourgeois
Democracy
“Bourgeois
democracy” and “capitalist democracy” are terms that pose the
fundamental question of “democracy for whom?” The terms remind us
that the belief that there is some kind of pure democracy, a
democracy that affords everyone an equal voice in decisions is only
attainable when all the advantages of wealth and power are removed
from decision-making processes.
Thus,
in capitalist society-- what Marx meant by “bourgeois society”--
the wealthy are able to multiply the influence of their sole votes in
the democratic process by “buying” elections. They use their
ownership of the media, their influence over legislation, their
command over political parties, and their vetting of candidates to
ensure democracy for the few. The mechanisms for capturing electoral
power are, of course, money and ownership.
Despite
boastful claims of delivering democracy, the electoral systems of
Europe and the US present outcomes that consistently favor the
wealthy and their wealth-producing corporations. And when something
resembling the popular will arises, it is quickly smothered with an
outpouring of media demagoguery and the enticement to compromise. The
rare electoral ascent of popular rule invariably faces naked,
unabashed repression by the wealthy through their organs of coercion.
One only has to review the fascist takeovers and military coups of
the twentieth century to understand the limits of bourgeois
democracy.
The
deception of bourgeois democracy is not that the rules are not fair;
in principle, anyone could be elected to an office. Rather, the
deception is that everyone has the same possibility of winning
an election. Trusted candidates supported by great corporations have
an infinitely greater chance of winning against a candidate armed
only with integrity and a commitment to social justice.
And
throughout the capitalist world, corporations support only candidates
who are loyal to the bourgeois system. Today, the labor
movement alone could marshal resources that even remotely challenge a
corporate-sponsored campaign; sadly, most of the labor leadership is
content to cast those resources before the corporate candidate who is
less offensive to working people. And corporate candidates have the
incentive to only marginally appear closer to representing the
working class.
It
is irresponsibly cynical to believe that nothing good can be
accomplished within a regime of bourgeois democracy; and it is
delusional to believe that fundamental change can be accomplished
with bourgeois democracy intact. Reforms-- important reforms-- are
possible with a bourgeois democratic government. But fundamental
change in the balance of forces between the rich and the rest of us
is impossible without fighting to replace it with working class
democracy.
Moreover, the transitional period between bourgeois
democracy and proletarian or working class democracy is inherently
unstable. Only one class can rule until classes are finally
abolished.
Idealists
and utopians constantly imagine a smooth exchange of the reins of
rule through the bourgeois democratic electoral process. They see the
wealthy and powerful recognize defeat and pass the keys of governance
on to the representatives of working people. History knows of no such
event.
That
doesn't mean that working class democracy can't be approached through
the bourgeois democratic process. It only means that working people
must be prepared to meet every challenge, every reaction mounted to
workers' power. Invariably the foes of change will react-- that's why
they're called “reactionaries.”
Games
of chance, like the institutions of bourgeois democracy--
representative elections, formal legal systems, decentralization of
power, etc-- are not inherently unfair. In theory, they give everyone
a reasonable opportunity for success. That is their appeal. But in
practice, the poker player with far greater stakes will inevitably
win. Similarly, bourgeois democracy guarantees that those with the
great bankrolls will dominate the game of politics unless they are
forced to play a different game.
State-Monopoly
Capitalism
“State-monopoly
capitalism” is one of the least-well understood ideas of Marxism;
yet it is one of the most important.
Marxists
understand that for most of the last century capitalism has become
more and more monopolized with a shrinking number of enterprises in
all of the key industries. This process has resulted in fewer and
fewer giant enterprises absorbing or dissolving smaller, less
competitive rivals-- the process of merger and acquisition. Old
industries like mining, steel, auto, and other manufacturing have
grown more concentrated, as have newer technology-based industries
like telecommunications and computers.
Some
have mistakenly asserted that the Marxist theory of monopoly capital
implies that only one or a few enterprises will dominate every
industry in time. It does not.
It
does predict that the process of greater and greater
concentration of capital in the leading enterprises located within an
industry will continually be a feature of capitalism. It also implies
that the cost of entry-- the amount of capital needed to start up an
enterprise-- will grow greater and more prohibitive over time in
those industries that have achieved maturity. Thus, it is the process
of concentration that is revealed by the theory and not the status of
individual enterprises in the capitalist hierarchy. Marx's colleague
Frederick Engels put this point well when he exposed the logic behind
this process: “Competition is based on self-interest, and
self-interest in turn breeds monopoly. In short, competition passes
over into monopoly.” Engels affirms that competition will continue,
further leading to even greater concentration.
But
along with the concentration of capital, another process is at work:
the continual merging of monopoly capital with the bourgeois state.
The state will play a larger and larger role in the destiny of
monopoly capital and, conversely, monopoly capital will obtain a
greater and greater role in the operation and direction of the state.
This
process-- the underlying expression of state-monopoly capitalism-- is
exemplified every day and in every way. The bail-out of financial
institutions while mortgagees are thrown under the bus illustrates
well the “ownership” of the state by big capital and the disdain
of the state for the people. The regulatory agencies of the state
grease the operations of monopoly capital while paying little head to
the people's interest. The coercive arms of the state function to
protect and expand the corporate horizon abroad and protect property
and bourgeois values at home. The state establishes secretive and
undemocratic trade agreements and global institutions that protect
and promote monopoly corporations from the restraints of regional and
national interests. The doors of big capital and government swing
both ways as their respective leaders change places.
The
political Right rails against big government, laying every social and
economic ill at government's doorstep. This is, of course, absurd,
but not because government is a benign or neutral arbiter of the
people’s interests, as liberals want to suggest. The idea that
government “bureaucrats” possess some deep-seated evil intent to
cause mischief on individuals, businesses, and the economy strains
the last thread of credibility. They have no common interest to
buttress such a conspiratorial view. The rightist anti-government
position is simply the disguise for shilling for monopoly capital.
On
the other hand, the liberal position that government stands as a
neutral arbiter and guardian of the rights of man is an equal
absurdity. Moreover, opinion polls of confidence in government
institutions-- notably Congress-- show that the US population knows
that it is absurd. The responses of “a great deal” and “quite a
lot” of confidence in Congress together barely reach double digits
in recent Gallup polls, a showing even below that of the banks.
Election
reform, term limits, and the other panaceas will fail to break the
solid weld of monopoly capital to the state; only the evisceration of
monopoly capital will break that connection.
The
Interplay of the Three Ideas
The
three Marxist ideas discussed above share many features and interact
profoundly with one another. Bourgeois democracy is an
instrument of class rule in the era of capitalism, an instrument of
the capitalist ruling class. In other eras, ruling classes
sustained their rule with other mechanisms.
State-monopoly
capitalism is the expression of the most recent, mature stage of
capitalist development, a stage that brings with it the most
corrupted, crisis-ridden expression of bourgeois democracy.
While
the ruling class maintains a stranglehold on governance in
this era, its democratic veneer is constantly eroded; more and more
of the governed recognize bourgeois democracy as thinly
disguised, but naked rule by the wealthy and powerful. At the same
time, state-monopoly capitalism exhausts its means to avoid or
moderate economic decline or stagnation.
The
maturation of these political and economic contradictions generates a
revolutionary crossroads, a moment when working people must choose
between veritable slavery or taking the reins of power.
Zoltan
Zigedy
zoltanzigedy@gmail.com
ZZ, re-posed your piece here:
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