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Tuesday, September 3, 2024

What History Teaches…

The years of reaction (1907–10). Tsarism was victorious. All the revolutionary and opposition parties were smashed. Depression, demoralisation, splits, discord, defection, and pornography took the place of politics. There was an ever greater drift towards philosophical idealism; mysticism became the garb of counter-revolutionary sentiments. At the same time, however, it was this great defeat that taught the revolutionary parties and the revolutionary class a real and very useful lesson, a lesson in historical dialectics, a lesson in an understanding of the political struggle, and in the art and science of waging that struggle. It is at moments of need that one learns who one’s friends are. Defeated armies learn their lesson. V I Lenin, “Left-wing” Communism, an Infantile Disorder


What does history tell us about where we are today, well into the first half of the twenty-first century? 


It surely tells us that capitalism remains the greatest obstacle to solving the manifold injustices, irrationalities, and existential threats that face humanity. History also teaches us that the false answers of nationalism, racialism, and social exclusion remain leading obstacles to overcoming capitalism and the class divide at the center of capitalist social relations. Division-- the separation of potential allies in the struggle against capitalism-- remains a deep infection immobilizing those seeking social justice for all, a lesson the advocates of both casually chosen and deeply personal identities seem to have missed. 


We are even further removed from defeating capitalism when we construct unlimited identity barriers to unity, when who we are as an individual comes before who we are as a class. 


History’s lessons are easily lost to hasty generalizations and wishful thinking. The “victory” of the US over the Soviet Union in 1991 was thought to usher in the end of history and, in the mind of celebrated intellectual, Francis Fukuyama, the global ascension of US values and US rule over the global order. Within a decade, this conclusion met determined resistance on many fronts, as the US attempted to enforce its dominance, only to be challenged on all counts by independent rising powers, insurgencies, and defiant forces in Asia, the Middle East, and South America. The two-decade long war in Afghanistan is but one dramatic example of that stubborn resistance to US power.


Unfortunately, popular resistance in the capitalist powers of Europe and North America took a different turn after 1991. A “third way” center left, buoyed by the setback to Communism, abandoned class politics for “a rising tide lifts all boats” economic policy, as well as cultural politics, the chosen field of battle favored by the political right. This “respectable” left-- respectable to power and wealth-- paid an electoral price over the following decades with the erosion of working-class votes. Today, the Euroamerican center left, along with its center-right counterpart, struggle weakly to dominate politics, as they have since World War II.


The multifaceted crises of capitalism-- unemployment, slack economic growth, inflation, recession, political illegitimacy, inequality, eviscerated social services, rotting infrastructure, and environmental degradation-- have all struck at one time or another since capitalism’s “triumph” in 1991. The lowering of mass expectations and the rising of mass deprivation have presented the radical left with the objective opportunity for change only imagined in earlier generations. 


But the radical left was not ready for the challenge, convinced after 1991 that socialism, as we came to know it, was either impossible or too far off in the distant future to be our project. The self-annihilation and mutation of Europe’s two largest Communist Parties only added to the pessimism. It was a time not unlike the years after the failed 1905 Russian revolution, as described by Lenin: 


Tsarism [capitalism] was victorious. All the revolutionary and opposition parties were smashed. Depression, demoralisation, splits, discord, defection, and pornography took the place of politics. There was an ever greater drift towards philosophical idealism; mysticism became the garb of counter-revolutionary sentiments. At the same time, however, it was this great defeat that taught the revolutionary parties and the revolutionary class a real and very useful lesson, a lesson in historical dialectics, a lesson in an understanding of the political struggle, and in the art and science of waging that struggle.


Except the radical left largely drew no useful lessons from the 1991 setback, beyond the abandonment of the socialist project. When jobs migrated in huge numbers to low wage countries, the left blamed “globalization” -- a process commonly and frequently encountered in the capitalist accumulation process. It is far easier, but far less effective to fight a phase --- a phase soon to be transcended by a resurgent economic nationalism-- for society’s ills than to attack its parent: capitalism. It is as though people believed that they could actually turn back the clock to some imagined, more benign era of capitalism.


Others in the diluted socialist movement designated the enemy as another phase of capitalism: “neoliberalism” -- a set of ruling class policies designed to escape the 1970s collapse of the post-war Keynes/demand-side paradigm. 


During that lost decade, Stagflation and aggressive foreign competition brought the class-collaboration model into disrepute, with the monopoly corporations turning viciously on their counterpart, the class-collaborationist labor leadership; decades of capitalist offensive followed, with a rout of working people’s liberal and “progressive” former allies; many past gains were reversed. 


After 1991 and with far too many having abandoned the socialist project, the broad left chose not to attack the cancer of capitalism, instead, choosing to try to dull the painful symptom of neoliberalism. 


The drift to “philosophical idealism” described by Lenin was everywhere in the wake of the fall of the Soviet Union. Academics diminished Lenin’s theory of imperialism, with wild fantasies of the decline of the nation-state (a fantasy embarrassed by the aggressive global reach of the US empire-- the preeminent, most powerful nation-state of all time). Other thinkers saw transnational capitalist corporations overshadowing and superseding the nation-state, as though the nation-state was not intimately fused with monopoly capital. This drift from Lenin’s historical-materialist analysis reached its ludicrous peak with the infamous tract of Hardt and Negri, Empire, positing that history was now grounded in a mysterious, totalizing force that they called “Empire,” an obscure, ineffable entity rivaling Hegel’s Absolute. 


Some on the international left saw a possible socialist revival in the righteous rejection of US domination by social movements in Latin America, the so-called “pink” revolution. Elections brought to power several promising charismatic leaders who openly and strongly defied the long-imposed dictates of US imperialism. Most notably, Hugo Chavez mocked and scorned US government arrogance, establishing an independent foreign policy and embarking upon a generous and humane welfare state based on Venezuela's then-ample resource revenue. 


Other leaders in Central and South America were inspired to join this anti-US imperialist, social democratic front, with the goal of Bolivarian independence from neo-colonialism (a sovereignty project) their most common feature. Because of “socialist” rhetoric, many on the left elevated these multi-class, reformist movements to the status of “twenty-first-century socialism”. In fairness, some leaders truly aspired and envisioned socialism, though they lacked a program, a revolutionary party, and the necessary understanding. 


Twenty-first-century socialism, without an existential confrontation with capitalism, has proven to be an elusive goal, especially with a US-supported domestic bourgeoisie still holding vast economic power. The social democratic dream of taming, while partnering with capitalism has nowhere sustained the support of the working classes. With a hostile behemoth on its doorstep, it is not succeeding in Latin America, either.


The latest notion distracting the left from socialism is the doctrine that global multipolarity --removing the unipolar US from the pinnacle of the imperialist heap-- will somehow produce a more just world and even move us closer to socialism. While capitalists in many countries would welcome leveling the economic playing field and freeing markets for others to exploit, a multipolar world offers no obvious benefit to working people. Without question, the iron grip that US capitalists have had on international economic institutions and the promiscuous use of US sanctions and tariffs has incensed US rivals and weakened US hegemony. But their success in blunting US power holds little consequence for exploited workers in Asia, Central and South America or Africa, who continue to be exploited. 


Like the period after the 1905 Russian revolution described by Lenin, the period after the exit of the Soviet Union has been difficult for the international left. After dalliances with bizarre, “novel,” and foolish answers to what many perceive as the failure of socialism, the left has offered a beleaguered working class few victories. In the last thirty-three years, theorists have contrived new enemies: neoliberal capitalism, disaster capitalism, racial capitalism, crony capitalism, hyper-capitalism, coronavirus capitalism, unipolar capitalism and a host of other hyphenated capitalisms. What all of these theories share is a fatal hesitation to call out the capitalist system itself. They all share a faith in a reformed, managed capitalism that --shorn of its deviations-- will somehow serve all classes. 


After thirty-three years, this experiment in rescuing capitalism from itself should be discarded. It is time for the left to draw “a real and very useful lesson, a lesson in historical dialectics, a lesson in an understanding of the political struggle, and in the art and science of waging that struggle,” in Lenin’s words. If defeating capitalism is our goal, it requires tried and tested forms of political organization: a revolutionary political organization. It requires a bold, independent party embodying both democracy and centrism-- a Leninist party-- with a clear program based on enlisting working people to the greatest project of the twenty-first century: winning and constructing socialism. That is what history teaches.


Greg Godels

zzsblogml@gmail.com


7 comments:

Charles said...

You nail multipolarity: "While capitalists in many countries would welcome leveling the economic playing field and freeing markets for others to exploit, a multipolar world ... blunting US power holds little consequence for exploited workers in Asia, Central and South America or Africa, who continue to be exploited." However, it is not accurate to say, "When jobs migrated in huge numbers to low wage countries, the left blamed 'globalization'." Capitalist removal of factories and jobs from the U.S. to China, Bangladesh, etc. was something new, and the crime of the U.S. left is that after one big protest in Seattle in 1999, socialists and social democrats largely ignored globalization. The nativist, nationalist right filled the vacuum.

Anonymous said...

Sadness

Anonymous said...

Brilliant

Karyn said...

I agree with Charles. You nailed the failures of people considered left. Identity politics, racism, and the classless North versus South destroy any advances for communism. A communist party is essential to overcome these problems; I hope people choose the Progressive Labor Party (see plp.org). Nonetheless, more young people are asking about socialism while rebelling against US imperialism's role in genocides around the world.

Karyn Pomerantz said...

You nailed the failures of the so-called left: identity politics, racism, and a classless division of North and South countries. It is essential to organize a communist party; check out the Progressive Labor Party at https://plp.org and keep reading this blog.

Anonymous said...

The crisis of Capitalism is clearly visible not just here in U.S. but around the world and the sanction of Russia and China clearly show that does work and other countries aswell, we can see on Palestinian movements that make good improvements to advance the left movement ofcourse we have the opportunity here in U.S. but majority of the so call left got swallowed up by capitalist agenda or and many on left has turn right ect. But continued by peoples movement by massive protest all over the U.S. We all have to go back in our history particularly the U.S. left we have a headway like occupy wall street, May 1st movement, Black movements (BLM)then Palestinian anti U.S. Movements and exposing the greediness of U.S. Capitalism example many central and south American countries has turn left for example and is lead by China and Russia Federations ect.

greg said...

Charles is right, of course, that the capitalists always will export jobs to lower wage areas like Mexico, India, and the PRC. What was unique about the so-called "globalization" era was the revolution in transportation-- low cost containerization and shipping and the necessary technologies-- that allowed distant China to participate in a big way. The earlier "invasion" of cars from Europe and Japan (1960s and 70s), for example, was resisted by US monopolies, though they lost market share. With China, US corporations foresaw participation, so they welcomed the wholesale export of jobs. In the end, it was corporations-- capitalism-- that was responsible for the lost jobs. Something that the globalization movement refused to see.