The Party and Fractions
I read with interest the texts on Party and Fraction by F Damen and the CWO intro but ive included my comments in this forum as the article appeared some time ago now. The Damen text clarifies for me a good bit of the development of discussion on organisation and I can see more about where the decision about creating an Italian party in 1943 comes from. Following the discussions on Germany in 1918 and the obvious lack of influence the evolutionary political organisations had in Germany, I can understand far more the basis for the criticisms of what he calls ‘the wait and see’ approach to the creation of the party as opposed to the ‘build the party now or as soon as possible’ approach that he advocates.. However it do think that both labels are simplistic and rather derogatory. What was being argued then and indeed now is not that simple ( I don’t see that applies to the ICC today either), and it doesn’t really explain to me in a way that would form the basis of how the CWO/ICT functions today
The text certainly certainly explains well the role of a fraction and makes very good arguments for flexibility in the judgement on calling the Party into existence. As Damen says conditions must be right but the active engagement of the Party to build its influence in the class is a factor that must be taken into account rather than waiting until the revolutionary situation arrives.
I note however a (perhaps inevitable) weakness in the discussions in the 30s, in that the ‘build the party as soon as poss’ was based on the assumption that another world war would lead to another revolutionary phase ie a relatively close prospect. This would clearly have made the language in favour of build the party soon’ because the timescale would have been seen as very short anyway.
Again inevitably there were weaknesses in the understanding of both sides of this view of the party which as the articles says disrupted the work on Bilan in the late 30s. I would suggest it was more the period that didn’t allow a clear conclusion to the discussion.
The next element that remains unclear to me relates more to the situation today. I agree with the intro’s questioning on the ICC seeing its role as ‘a sort of fraction’. I still don’t understand what they are saying in this regard. I didn’t disagree with them though when they argued for their role as a ‘pole of regroupment’, This makes sense to me in the context of a period where revolution is not yet on the cards. There again though I take the meaning of ‘build the party’ which tends to end CWO articles to mean much the same as the ICCs term, pole of regroupment. CWO members have stated consistently that they are not the party now, so I understand it to mean that you are aiming to build today is a militant organisation.
So the CWO too has the view that the Party would be inappropriate in this current period (70 years after the end of the war discussed in Damens text) and even during the wave of struggles in late 60s and 70s, there was no call to create the Party. I don’t disagree with this, as I say, but I don’t understand the theory behind this unless you regard the whole of this period since WW2 as a continuation of the counter-revolution.
Periodisation
Behind the issues raised in Damens text and the issues I have raised lies what is an interesting problem for me, ie the differences in how CWO and ICC periodise recent history and indeed contemporary society.
I am now less concerned about whether we talk about obsolence or decadence. Its fundamentally the same thing as can be seen from the following quote from Damen. Its just that different orgs adhere to and highlight their own language!!
'The great strength of the bourgeoisie has always consisted in making the masses believe that it is impossible to break the economic and political structures of capitalism by force. They elevate their mode of production to a unique and universally valid system, with the aim of making the revolutionary solution appear impractical, as well as utopian as a political perspective. Marxism has shown us scientifically how capitalism is a transitory productive form born of the impossibility of the feudal economy to develop productive forces and destined to disappear when, once its historical task has been exhausted, it becomes an obstacle to the further development of those productive forces which it had helped to establish'
Bilan and Damen shows clear effort to periodise so as to understand objectives for militant organisation within this period of obsolence of capitalism. ICC theory of decadence and historic course also tried to do this but the ongoing development of capitalism in last question of 20thc and first part of 21stthrow doubt on aspects of this understanding. Revisions have been clearly necessary due to actual events. CWO also periodise as is shown in not creating a party and by maintaining an approach to developing the organisation and rejecting the fraction label in the current period. However in the texts I find both the implication that we are still in a period of counter revolution, but also that we are setting out on a new road!! Seems contradictory.
I am not in any way criticising the current practice of the CWO here but I would like to understand better the theory behind it. You clearly see that there has been a change from the pre war (and war) period. I see a distinct period of reconstruction after the war and a period where economic and political crises are hitting capitalism. This obviously comes from my sympathies for the basis idea of a historic course. I cannot see how the CWO differentiates its approach to economic and political changes in this past 70 years since WW2.
Link
Link
There is much that we can agree on (and I think you are wise to put the decadence issue to one side here). It seems that we have substantial agreement on the fact that the fraction arises at a particular period when an organisation which was considered proletarian begins to abandon its role. At that point the first task of revolutionaries is to fight to halt that process with the prospect that if the struggle fails then they will have at least clarified the reactionary nature of the old organisation to the widest possible sectors of the class (starting with the rank and file of the old party). Thus we had the Communist Abstentionist fraction inside the old Italian Socialist Party (which was a lot more devious than other Second International parties) and after the Comintern began to become an arm of Russian foreign policy we saw it with the Third International when it adopted the united front policy. The refusal of the Italian Communist Party to accept this led to the Comintern imposing a new leadership on the Party (despite the fact the Left still retained the support of the majority). In the conditions where Fascism was also imprisoning communists the elements of the Left formed their own fraction in exile (but which some of those in Fascist gaols kept contact with). They took the position that as long as the Comintern had not definitively betrayed the class then the Fraction had a purpose. The problem arose (and this is where we might diverge) when (in 1935) it was recognised that the Comintern was not reformable. The Italian Fraction it appears was divided (and not just about whether to declare a new party formed - think only of Spain). This division made the position of those who wanted to declare for a new party there and then rather weak. After all if the Vercesis and Jacobs would not rally to it what hope of addressing a wider movement. This is partially a problem of fractions. They are held together by opposition to another organisation and not by the praxis necessary to prepare for real work together once the old party is deemed incurably reactionary. The Fraction spent so much of its time addressing problems within the communist movement it had a very weak analysis of the actual issues going on in front of them. Not only Spain but also the nature of the USSR, the danger of war, the nature of the unions and even an analysis of capitalist crisis.
Today we don't live in the shadow of any old organisation. We are the remnants of the defeat of the proletariat in 1921, in 1945 and in the 1970s. We have never gone away (I read yesterday an ignorant anarchist on Facebook claiming that the communist left was now defunct - he must have been reading World Revolution!) but we are not deus ex machina. We are part of the class and our relative size is an expression of the level of consciousness of the class. Given that the class has been in retreat since the 1970s it is no surprise that we are no bigger than we are.
However the 1970s did represent a response to the reappearance of the capitalist crisis - the end of the post-war boom brought an attack on workers across the globe. Inflation, unemployment hammered working class living conditions and destroyed the old concentration of workers in the advanced capitalist world. Globalisation, financialisation and employming more modern constant capital in places where variable capital came cheap helped to allow the system to carry on (with continually declining growth rates). This is where we cannot understand why anyone would maintain that after 1968 there was a historic course which would lead to proletarian victory. It was the ICC who proclaimed the end of the counter revolution. We said nothing because we did not really believe it but we also reject the notion of the "historic course" as unmarxist. It is more like Hegelian teleology where there is only one goal - the truth exists if only humanity could find it. Marx never posed any such teleological goal. From the Communist Manifesto on he always talked about each specific period having its own class struggle which ended either in the revolutionary reconstitution of society or the common ruin of the contending classes. Socialism or barbarism, war or revolution. These are the continual binaries of the class war in history and there is no historic course. This is why we always criticised the ICC as "idealist"
Which brings us to the final point. If we are for the party and assert the proletariat has a permanent need for a political organisation which encapsulates its historic memory, the acquisitions of its own struggles contained in a programme why do we have an organisation which does not simply proclaim one. As we have argues many times with those who urged this upon us this would not only be voluntarist but also a mistake since the shape of the future class struggle is not clear. What is clear though is that capitalism's failure to devalue capital for 40 years, its increasing reliance on speculative financial activity (which allows 26 people to hold as much wealth as half the world's population) is upping the ante. We are moving into a period in which further economic chaos will ensue and devaluation through destruction in war becomes more likely. In the face of this we can throw up our arms in despair given the current situation of the working class and its relatively quiet response so far to the crisis. We can say all is chaos and decomposition and nothing can be done. OR we can recognise that the dialectic of history is moving on and at a certain point more and more will take up the struggle against a system which without exaggeration is on course to make this planet uninhabitable. Since the meltdown of 2008 we have already seen a shift - previously only "nutters" like us talked of capitalism and its crisis - now we are finding out there is one group after another arising studying Marx. Moreover the younger generation is beginning to find us and this is what makes us encourage the formation of nuclei of communists everywhere in order to build from the ground upwards a real international and internationalist organisation. At the moment it is small beer and lacks a wider influence in the working class but we are determined to play our part in helping to form the very political instrument the working class needs for the fight in the class wide organisations which will have to emerge as the harbingers of a new society. If you find a contradiction in that perspective it is because we face an unpredictable and contradictory situation which could yet have more surprising twists and turns....
'Unmarxist'?
'Unmarxist'?
The comrade from the CWO rejects the whole concept of the ‘historic course’ as ‘unmarxist’.
But what do we mean by the ‘historic course’, other than analysing the balance of class forces in any given period in order to assess the opportunities for revolution and identify the necessary tactics for the proletariat?
It was Marx’s own conclusion that the 1848 revolutions had been defeated that led him, despite the accusations of betrayal from some of his supporters, to dissolve the Communist League and use the ensuing period of capitalist expansion to concentrate on understanding the deeper workings of capital, precisely in order to recognise when revolutionary possibilities would once again present themselves. And it was this same concern for the analysis of the balance of class forces that led him to actively participate in the formation of the new ‘party’, the IWMA, and enthusiastically greet the new upsurge of class struggle.
Of course our analysis of the balance of class forces can be wrong; as Link points out, surviving revolutionaries, including the comrades of the PCInt in Italy, expected to see a revolutionary upsurge at the end of WW2. With hindsight we can see they failed to fully understand the depth of the counter-revolution imposed on the proletariat. But this only underlines the importance for Marxists of correctly analysing the situation in any given period.
The CWO comrade denies that the upsurge of class struggle after May ’68 represented the end of the counter-revolution (this was of course the view of the PCInt at the time). And yet he also claims that the 1970s represented “a response to the reappearance of the capitalist crisis - the end of the post-war boom”. So did the counter-revolution end or not? And if it didn’t, what exactly is the meaning of ‘counter-revolution’ being used here?
Did the period after May ’68 – compared, say, to the period 1933-1945, represent a significant shift in the balance of class forces or not? To put it simply, was there more potential for the proletariat to develop its struggles in a revolutionary direction in 1968, or in 1933, or 1945?
Despite rejecting the whole notion of the ‘historic course’ the comrade then sets out … an analysis of the current balance of class forces, based on the assumption that “We are moving into a period in which further economic chaos will ensue and devaluation through destruction in war becomes more likely”. Despite its “relatively quiet response so far to the crisis”, he affirms, the proletariat remains undefeated; in fact its response is apparently inevitable: “the dialectic of history is moving on and at a certain point more and more will take up the struggle”, and he points to a development of interest in the ideas of revolutionary minorities as signs of a ‘shift’ in proletarian consciousness.
So despite the comrade’s rather non-committal conclusion that “we face an unpredictable and contradictory situation which could yet have more surprising twists and turns....”, he is, whether he likes it or not, taking a position, based on what he sees as the available evidence, of the balance of class forces and the possibilities for proletarian revolution, ie. the ‘historic course’…
The fundamental question today is: 50 years after May ’68 and the struggles of the 70s, and faced with the survival of a system which now threatens the extinction of humanity, what is the perspective for communism? The role and tasks of revolutionaries should flow from our answer to this question.
The problem with discussing
The problem with discussing with the ICC and their sympathisers is that they have such a closed minded view of the world that they cannot ever see an alternative point of view. Markyhaze ignores our point that the idea of one goal in history has never been a Marxist position but has more to do with Hegel. Right from the start Marx posed the alternative of the revolutionary reconstitution of society or the common ruin of the contending classes (later put in terms of our own epoch by Engels as "socialism or barbarism". When Marx dissolved the Communist League he did not do so on the basis of "the course of history" (an invention by the founder of the ICC Marc Chirik who managed to get it wrong every time) but because at that moment he did not see the possibility of a real class movement breaking out. He did not turn to Engels and say "Jeez Fred capitalism is still in its period of ascendance so there is no point trying to build an organisation now". Within a few years he was looking (but not always finding) the opportunity to get an organisation going and he only had to wait 14 years before the First International was founded. The ICC was founded on the basis that proletarian revolution was just around the corner, that the working class is always latently revolutionary and the only task of revolutionaries was to "demystify" it of certain ideas and the revolution would be victorious. This "course of history" led to an almost fanatical religious belief that made the ICC a caricature of the communist left. Unfortunately this tarnished not only them but also the entire communist left and made many would be revolutionaries turn away from revolutionary politics altogether (and their are many more ex-ICC members now than there are ICC members.
We are not interested in the silly game as to when the counter-revolution ended. We will only know that it has ended when the working class themselves create a real international political force as it comes to the consciousness of what it has to do to end its condition and (without sounding too dramatic) save humanity from the destructive appetites of a degenerate capitalist order. What we do know is that capitalism is in an impasse and that it is continuing to make the working class pay for its failings. On the basis of that we are working to stimulate any class stirrings against the system as a whole, to bring back to the class the lessons of its own struggles and to create nuclei around the world of what might become a new international proletarian movement against capitalism. BUT we do not know the outcome. We only know that we can do nothing else whether we win or lose. What we do know is that this struggle is vital for humanity. And we note that at the end of his piece Markyhaze poses questions about where the working class is going but avoids giving any answers. That's the decomposition of theory for you!
Thanks both the responses. I
Thanks both the responses. I wrote this before seeing C’s last contribution so hope you don’t mind if I post it now anyway and try to say something useful shortly. I keep being surprised that even when CWO and ICC viewpoints differ, I find them both more convincing than anything else I read. I do not argue for the 2 organisations to regroup, that is not appropriate, but I do think this is an example where closer relationship, ie more discussion, would be constructive. Both organisations are Marxist and I do not accept that differences of opinion reflect a lack of Marxism,
I agree with M when he says that the historic course is simply an analysis of the balance of class forces in any given period in order to identify the positions of the bourgeoisie and the working class and importantly to identify tactics for the organisations of the working class. It is or rather was quite simple and elegant explanation for how capitalism had developed up to the 70/80s. It made sense at that point in time and I don’t think it meant just one outcome as C suggest but rather reflected an analysis that suggests the most likely outcome in any given period.
Trouble is this period of extended crisis and downturn in struggle since then rather complicates the issue. Is it a defeat or a downturn? It seems to me that the current period is more like the period prior to WW1 so I tend to agree with Cs analysis that both war and revolution appear possible.
Further I understand that the ICC (sorry M, don’t know if you agree with this or not) now says that the historic course is on separate path to the class struggle ie there is a stalemate in the trends to war or revolution but the bourgeois is on top in the class struggle . As a way of respond to the changing conditions I don’t find this an appropriate explanation.
The core of my question about the CWO’s view of periodisation is to clarify how you distinguish between the various differing periods during the last century. This is also the point made by M. I would crudely identify these periods as follows - the thirties, the war period, the reconstruction period, period of struggles in late 60s and 70s, the period since then and I note you identify the period since 2008 as distinct too. Whilst I fully accept your interpretation of todays period and its tasks, I do not understand the implication that the period since the 30s is one single period of counter-revolution (again a point made by M). The explanation of the role of a fraction clearly relates to the period of the 30s (and the war itself) but not to the period after the war. I would have thought that you would agree there are differences in the balance of class forces and in the role of militant in each of the following periods ive listed. Could the answer be simply that although the CWO draws this balance of class forces and the likely consequences, it also will not rule out completely the possibility of either war or revolution in any period?
One further question of making this analysis is what is the basis for the creation of the Party. - It’s a question ive never really asked of anyone . Damen’s text suggested one side of the argument wanted to create a party as soon as the betrayal of the USSR was definitive. The ICT/CWO has not done this so must have some other understanding of the conditions for its creation. I find Cs explanation clear as to todays situation but given the criticisms being made of the ICC viewpoint ie that it puts off the creation of the party in a wait and see approach, what was the basis of the CWOs decision not to call for the formation of a Party in the period of the late 60s and early 70s?
It seems to me that the CWO and the ICC make the same argument about the Party being a response to the creation of the living link to the class. This feels vague but perhaps Ive forgotten what a period of class struggle is like. Lenin and Luxembourg never had this problem either so perhaps we are just being precious about the word Party after the experience of USSR?
Im not sure what C means
Im not sure what C means about not discussing the end of the counter revolution? Lets ignore the term ‘Historic Course’, because I still presume you agree to the idea of analysing the balance of class forces (I asked in my previous contribution how you see that balance in the various periods since WW2) – mainly because I see you doing that in what you say and im in agreement.
So is the issue then in the use of the term ‘counter revolution’ and what it implies as an analysis? Damen clearly identified the twenties and thirties as a period of defeat for the class. WW2 ended that period and made significant changes to how capitalism would consequently function. Do you count the whole of the following period (or, ive just realised, even the whole period since the 1920s?)as a period of counter revolution because the Bourgeois remains dominant? I wouldn’t argue with that definition - but I do see changes in the balance of class forces within that overall period and I find it constructive to understand them. Nevertheless I agreee the wc hasn’t brought its struggle up to the level of making a real challenge to the authority of the Bourgeoisie (even in the 60s/70s)
I am also wondering if this issue may go back to the obsolescence/decadence discussion in that I think the CWO emphasises a cyclical nature of capitalism and its crises in this period whereas the concept of decadence has led to an idea of continuous decline and has in fact had to be walked back somewhat as the idea of saturated market doesn’t seem to fit the situation anymore.
I think the issue comes down
I think the issue comes down to the attempt to impose neat, absolute labels on a dialectical reality marked by contradictory forces. The historic course. Unfolding reality, does exist but only is it set and unalterable in the past. Even then it is subject to different interpretation; though the facts cannot be changed, only misrepresented. As for the future, it has to be created, we have the task of changing the world. The solution for communists is to apply their efforts to winning over the working class to their perspectives and to create the means to do so. All this in the face of a capitalist class with diametrically opposing interests. The class struggle never absolutely favours one contending side or the other. Even at its lowest ebb, the forces of the working class remain to some extent. Take the UK miners strike of 84-85. Yes, a defeat. But a defeat which taught lessons, a defeat which ultimately in some measure, will contribute to the eventual victory should the historic course prove to result in proletarian success.
I think there is a danger of seeing these differences through a telescope or a microscope. In the grand scheme of things, are they game changing? I would still think that all who have as their aim the sole power of the workers councils belong in a unitary organisation despite the divisions between them. This may be anathema to some, but if we are to go beyond the current miniscule organisations to something which has a decisive impact on the world, I think it to be the case. Take any two aspiring revolutionaries and there will be differences. That too is part of the dialectical perspective.
“I will here attempt to sketch the substance of the problem in a very concise form. The Aristotelian logic of the simple syllogism starts from the proposition that 'A' is equal to 'A'. This postulate is accepted as an axiom for a multitude of practical human actions and elementary generalisations. But in reality 'A' is not equal to 'A'. This is easy to prove if we observe these two letters under a lens - they are quite different from each other. But, one can object, the question is not of the size or the form of the letters, since they are only symbols for equal quantities, for instance, a pound of sugar. The objection is beside the point; in reality a pound of sugar is never equal to a pound of sugar - a more delicate scale always discloses a difference. Again one can object: but a pound of sugar is equal to itself. Neither is this true - all bodies change uninterruptedly in size, weight, colour, etc. They are never equal to themselves.'” Trotsky
The perspective for communism
The perspective for communism?
The answers given by both the ICC and the CWO today don’t seem very different to me. For the CWO comrade, if I can paraphrase, with the defeat of the struggles of the 1970s, the current situation is unpredictable and contradictory; capitalism now threatens the extinction of the planet but there is still the possibility of a response from the currently quiescent working class.
For the ICC, “The situation looks very grave indeed ... The historic course has never been fixed in perpetuity and the possibility of massive class confrontations is not a pre-arranged staging post in the journey into the future. Nevertheless, we continue to think that the proletariat has not spoken the last word…” (Report on Class Struggle, International Review 156).
So both groups re-affirm that there is still (just!) a perspective for communism. I agree with this (although it prompts the question - how will we know when the proletariat is definitively defeated?).
In the light of the extremely difficult situation faced by the proletariat today, however, the real question is whether existing revolutionary organisations can provide convincing answers to the difficult questions posed by capital’s unexpected survival, in order to develop the programmatic basis for the future class party that we all believe will be necessary. This applies as much to the ICC as the CWO.
So, a question for the CWO to add to those already raised by Link:
According to your schema, capital can only avert its final breakdown by periodically ‘devalorising’ sufficient capital through wars.
After 40 years of open crisis, such a massive, indeed unprecedented, level of destruction is now surely long overdue. #
So why, if we have been in a counter-revolution since 1921 (?), has the bourgeoisie so far been unable to mobilise the proletariat to fight this war, in the way it was able to do in the thirties?
# Which is not to ignore the massive destruction wreaked by proliferating local wars but this is surely not enough given the depth of capital's crisis...
Stevein, i agree with all you
Stevein, i agree with all you say. I was particularly interested in the quote from Trotsky on A=A and looked it up. Its a good explanation but it emerges that it was written in 1939 in support of the argument that the USSR was a degenerating workers state!!
Perhaps a lesson in that for all of us!
Time flies and I did not
Time flies and I did not realise it was more than a week since Link's last post. I think there is some wishful thinking in some of the responses but agree with Stevein that those who indulge in schematism are always likely to come unstuck. The difference between the ICT and ICC today is that the ICT maintains the same position that it always has because we always argued even in the long retreat from 1977-9 on that however bad the situation it was still the task of revolutionaries inside the class to fight for a class perspective. It was also what Damen argued in the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. And we have posed the formation of the party throughout that period even if it depends (and here Link is spot on) on the actual class struggle itself. We can now see that 1943-5 and 1968-74 were two "turning points" in class history where history forgot to turn! Or rather that it excited rational expectations among revolutionaries (like the more massive 1848) that social change was in the offing only for us to be disappointed. But on we go - we can do no other. And by "do" we don't mean just aim our intervention at other revolutionaries (the principal task of the fraction) but at the wider class itself to develop the praxis that any embryo of the future party needs. We have to "think to the party" at all times. Since the financial collapse of 2007-8 we have discovered that many young people have developed an interest in the politics of the communist left (remember before then we were all regarded as faintly barmy evey time we mentioned "capitalism" - today it is mainstream vocabulary) and in the last two years in particular we have had further encouragement not only from new people coming to us but also a revival (without getting too excited) in wildcat strikes in some areas and in the last few months the extraordinary strikes in Iran and elsewhere. The dialect of history never stands still and formal logic is not enough to interpret it.
M mentions the fact that our analysis is that the post-war boom ended in 1971-3 at a point where the organic composition of global capital had become so high that the rate of profit acted as a barrier to further expansion. We expected a massive devaluation of capital and even world war as a consequence. He rightly asks why this has not happened and it is a question we have discussed many times (occasionally publishing our views on it). In short we have to recognise that this cycle of accumulation is different than previous ones in that the state has been in charge of managing it ina way that was not the case in 1914 or 1939. This has led to certain controlled devaluations (like the writing off of existing investment in what are now the rust belts of the world) whilst capital then transferred to low wage cost areas (but with more productive investment in new technology). The problem though has never gone away (even if they raised the rate of profit for a while) and thus as in all previous cycles they resorted more and more to speculation. This did not come about overnight - the Big Bang in the 1980s was followed by the abandonment of the Glass-Steagall act (and others like it) in the 1990s until we arrived at the huge ballooning of debts which now dominates the world economu and which the various states only just managed to prevent from bringing the whole system down. Today the bubble is getting bigger, indebtedness is growing on all fronts (except the current balance sheets of state budgets which are being cut and the working class suffering as a consequence) so the question of what happens next is posed. Capitalism has already shown an enormous capacity for hanging on but at this point we cannot see them a) pulling off another economic stunt to get out of this one or b) an increasingly impoverished class putting up with this for ever. At some point the worm will turn as it as repeatedly throughout capitalist history.
The problem for the ICC is that they defined the course of history initially as towards just "revolution" back in 1975 (this was modified, in the face of Battaglia Comunista's crticisms, in the International Conferences to "decisive class confrontations") and today they have now decided that this was wrong which has induced them to a defeatist mentality and the revival of the notion of a "fraction". They have several times told us that this is not the time to be working for the party and have shown little interest in anything else beyond a repeat of old texts and propagandist work aimed at the "milieu".
An answer?
An answer?
Hopefully Link will rejoin the discussion soon. In the meantime, I asked a question:
“So why, if we have been in a counter-revolution since 1921 (?), has the bourgeoisie so far been unable to mobilise the proletariat to fight this war [to devalorise capital], in the way it was able to do in the thirties?”
The answer of the CWO comrade, if I can summarise, is that it is due to the role of the state in managing the crisis.
I don’t think we disagree on the role of state capitalism in enabling the phenomenon of the ‘post-war boom’ and in managing the ensuing economic crisis.
In fact the comrade makes a very important point. As he says, “Capitalism has already shown an enormous capacity for hanging on”. I think it’s fair to say none of us believed it could hang on for quite so long and one hard lesson for revolutionaries over the last 40 years or so has been not to underestimate capitalism’s ability to survive.
But this still doesn’t quite answer my question.
The fact is, state capitalism was the response of the bourgeoisie to the crisis of the ‘30s par excellence: Nazi Germany, Stalinist Russia, the New Deal, the De Man plan, etc. And the solution of state capitalism to this crisis was … to mobilise the working class for a world war.
So why, if the crisis is so much deeper today, and the need to devalorise capital even greater, doesn’t state capitalism adopt the same solution?
I can only assume from the comrade’s response that he believes “the reason the bourgeoisie so far been unable to mobilise the proletariat to fight this war” has nothing fundamentally to do with the balance of forces between the classes.
But then why also argue that the counter-revolution after 1917-21 did not end? What is a "counter-revolution" if not a description of the balance of class forces?
It seems to me if you stick with your position that the counter-revolution did not end you have to explain why there appear to be such crucial differences in the response of state capitalism to the crisis between the ‘thirties and the ‘seventies.
Or you need to abandon this position (which I don't think you've always defended - there's no mention of it in the first two international conferences for example) and explain these differences purely in terms of the policies adopted by capital to manage the crisis.
To summarise very briefly, the bourgeoisie was able to mobilise the proletariat for war in the 1930s because it had already been decisively defeated. Despite massive combativity (eg Spain 1936) it was no longer possible for the proletariat to block the road towards war.
But with the end of the post-war boom and the return of the crisis the balance of class forces shifted. There was a new generation of proletarians who had not experienced defeat and the upsurge of workers’ struggles in the late 60s and early 70s showed that this generation was not prepared to be mobilised to fight a new world war.
In fact, with hindsight, we can see that this upsurge was the best shot the proletariat has had at overthrowing capitalism since 1917. The fact that it failed proves not that we are still in the counter-revolution but that the balance of class forces has changed.
Capitalism has not been able to mobilise the proletariat for war, as it needs to, but neither has the proletariat been able to pose its own historic alternative. In the absence of either ‘solution’ capitalism becomes a slow-motion train wreck, inexorably destroying the conditions for communism and possibly even for life on the planet. If the proletariat is not able to finally intervene, the outcome will indeed be the ‘common ruin of the contending classes’ referred to by Marx and the comrade.
Of course we can disagree on our analyses of the relationship of class forces, but to ignore the whole question of the relationship between the classes at a given point in history is surely not a credible position for Marxists? Or do you see this purely as proof of ‘idealism’?
After all, Marx managed to write the whole of the Eighteenth Brumaire without once referring to the tendency for the rate of profit to fall...;-)
Hi all. Just to say i havent
Hi all. Just to say i havent left the discussion - I'm absorbing.
It may not have occurred to
It may not have occurred to you but I regarded your manner of posing the question as undialectical. We have pointed out many times to the ICC that it is actually the passivity of the class over the last 4 decades which gives the capitalist class the space to avoid war. Unlike the ICC the bourgeoisie can learn from history and they know the consequences of a wider gloabl war rather than the accumulation of proxy wars we see today. IF the bourgeoisie in each country could see a way to devalue the capital of the "other" rival power without any great social consequences for themselves they would do it. BUT given the consequences of previous wars they know it is a desperate step. If the working class was hammering at the door the luxury of making that decision would be taken out of their hands (as with GB and Russia in 1914 - the great unrest in both countries was critical to their decision to go to war - see the memoirs of Lloyd George). As it is the fact that the devalorisation of capital has taken place only piecemeal (like the write off of so much of the existing investment in constant capital in the 1980s in order to reinvest in the Far East etc with new technology and low labour costs) despite all the manipulations the fundamentals remain the same. The over-accumulation of capital has not been addressed and the bursting of the speculative bubble (which appears to us as the last gasp of all the manipulations) means that they have little room left today. Another bubble bursting when the state has already loaded itself with the debt from the last bubble is hardly likely to have the same results. And that then would pose some difficult questions for both this system and humanity.
Why do you think we have ignored the question of the relationship between the classes (we have just ignored daft ways of posing it)? We have constantly commented on this, constantly analysed the changing class composition over the decades and we are still fighting to redress the balance which we have seen as one of retreat for 40 years. What have the ICC done in that time. Accused us of having no faith in the working class. Accused us of not having a method and a perspective ("rudderless" was the favourite jibe) for the class struggle. And all the time they were telling us that the "historic course" was towards revolution (or later modified to "greater class confrontations"). And where is the ICC today? A demoralised and defeated remnant of a once larger organisation built on the illusion that revolution was just around the corner. Today it consoles itself with talk of chaos and decomposition (which is true but is a result of the deepening capitalist crisis and not some paralysis in the class war as the ICC maintain). When the ICC maintains that today they are just a "fraction" (and then openly lies by saying it has always only been a fraction!) what they are sayinn is that there is nothing to be done but write silly polemics to other organisations (but then that has been ICC methodology since 1975). The desperation and feebleness of your polemic is only underlined by your reference to the Eighteenth Brumaire (which was long before Marx's more profound analysis of capitalism).
I found this interesting, but
I found this interesting, but nothing new.
It does not seem to me that capitalism is destroying the conditions for communism. It is still innovative, this internet communication is amazing, it is still increasing production, processing more materials etc. I can see how this is negative from an environmental perspective, but from the perspective of the possibility of communism? The system seems to be expanding, uprooting the relics of national and local peculiarity, more and more of us live in the urban setting etc. All of this would seem to favour the communist perspective.
Climate change and nuclear weapons (maybe a few other horror weapons too) make the possibility of destuction a real threat, but aside from these, I dont really see the capitalist process as undermining potential communism, rather it is simply becoming ever more difficult to maintain the ideological blinkers and conduct the great surplus value swindle.
Let’s get one thing clear.
Let’s get one thing clear.
I’m not a member of the ICC, I don’t speak for them and I’m not answerable for everything they ever said.
If I’ve ignored your rants against the ICC on this thread (which must bewilder any casual reader) it is because I think they are a sectarian waste of time and a diversion from the real issues.
As I said above, in case you missed it:
“In the light of the extremely difficult situation faced by the proletariat today … the real question is whether existing revolutionary organisations can provide convincing answers to the difficult questions posed by capital’s unexpected survival, in order to develop the programmatic basis for the future class party that we all believe will be necessary. This applies as much to the ICC as the CWO.”
I know you are not a member
I know you are not a member of the ICC but like so many non-members of the ICC you are less than honest about what you are saying. The first paragraph I wrote was a response to your question. The second to the implications behind such sentences as "Capitalism has not been able to mobilise the proletariat for war, as it needs to, but neither has the proletariat been able to pose its own historic alternative." This is taken straight from the ICC handbook of justification for the the collapse of the perspective that "the course of history" was towards revolution. You keep on arguing that we do not take into account the balance of class forces but the answer to that is in the article. For us though the balance of class forces can alter abruptly (currently as the article says we are destined for war but that does not mean that the continual contradictions of the system will not throw up a new movement. Since 2008 we have seen the growth of communist ideas amongst younger people (not just "nutters" like us who banged on about capitalism). With no solution to the crisis in sight (and state capitalism it seems to us has exhausted all the tricks you can use in a cycle of accumulation - Capital Volume 3 is very good on this, including fictituous capital) there is every possibility that this can spread to a wider class movement but that means we have to play our part. We are about to publish another article on this in response to yet other ex-ICCers and hopefully that will finally make it clear where we stand.
Can I say that one of the reason I started this thread was that I have never understood the CWO approach to periodisation within capitalism. I have been able to see both viewpoints addressing the same issues but never quite able to understand the differences. As an ex ICCer I can fully understand the questions M is raising On this thread and where they come from but didnt quite see why C was not agreeing cos such similar points being made
However I may have found the key point to understand the difference. C says
“… it is actually the passivity of the class over the last 4 decades which gives the capitalist class the space to avoid war. Unlike the ICC the bourgeoisie can learn from history and they know the consequences of a wider gloabl war rather than the accumulation of proxy wars we see today. IF the bourgeoisie in each country could see a way to devalue the capital of the "other" rival power without any great social consequences for themselves they would do it. BUT given the consequences of previous wars they know it is a desperate step. If the working class was hammering at the door the luxury of making that decision would be taken out of their hands (as with GB and Russia in 1914 …”
This is brand new to me – sorry, I really had not understood this from previous articles – and I suspect from what M has written that he did not recognise this either.
The ICC framework for the historic course is basically that depending on the balance of class forces the tendency in society is towards war or revolution. The rather fancy term historic course is no more than a assessment that one or other goal is on the cards in any given period. A nice simple analysis but it is predicated on the idea that if the balance of class forces is towards the Bourgeoisie then they must be moving towards war as its solution of the crisis. It looks to me like that is Ms view too. It is a theory that does no does not allow for the idea that the B has the option not to move towards a war if it so chooses! I hadn’t recognised this before and it does seem to me now to be an explanation for the current period where the B is clearly on top in the class struggle, yet world war does not appear on the cards either. As was pointed out to me recently in fact in decadence and particularly in this period since WW2, war has been present at all time albeit constrained in regions of the world so maybe this also mitigates the need for world war.
The CWO clearly sees war or revolution, socialism or barbarism as the ultimate options available just like the ICC but the latter does not recognise stages, changes or circuitous routes on the way!
One point I made earlier which I find really problematic and which nobody picked up on, is that the ICC, as expressed by Alf at a recent ICC meeting, now sees the historic course and the class struggle as distinct processes at work. He clearly suggested that because the historic course was in their view at a standstill did not mean that the Bourgeoisie was not winning the class struggle. For me this was also new and it appears to how the ICCs analysis is adapting to explain the current reality but I have a real problem with this analysis. I cannot see the class struggle as anything other than the sole driver to social development within capitalism
Look forward to both Ms and Cs responses to my suggestions re the ICC and the CWOs analyses.
One problem here is that
One problem here is that there is no neutral ground. We may recognise that the outcomes are binary and we may accept that at a given moment in time the process favours the opposition, but we do not have the luxury of accepting any outcome other than victory.
When the alternative is life or death, we can only select life. This is where I think we are going beyond science, we are engaging in struggle. We cannot say, yes, we are communists, but we are likely going to lose, more than likely it is a lost cause, all the factors are stacked against us, we have no chance really. Let's write some really long articles about how we can see the exact process leading to the end of humanity, they can be beautiful academic works, worthy of accolade, something that would be admired by future generations if only there were any coming.
So we have to apply what I think goes beyond scientific objectivism, "de l'audace, encore de l'audace, et toujours de l'audace" French quotation from *George-Jacques Danto*n.
I do not need to know any more when the alternative is totally unacceptable.
Really?
Really?
“I know you are not a member of the ICC but like so many non-members of the ICC you are less than honest about what you are saying.”
Ok, well, first of all let’s reflect on just how insulting that is, not only to me but also to all those other non-members of the ICC out there! Or was that meant to be tongue in cheek? Humour is such a tricky thing on the internet...
Moving on...
Having read Link's latest post I want to backtrack on what seem to be the main areas of agreement and disagreement so far:
We seem to agree that the 1970s saw the end of the post-war boom and a working class response to the reappearance of the capitalist crisis.
For the ICC, this signified that the “course of history” was towards revolution. Later it was forced to recognise this was wrong and changed it to “a course towards class confrontations”.
For the CWO this did not signify the end of the counter-revolution, which only really ends when the proletariat has formed its class party. As an analysis of the balance of class forces I find this almost meaningless, but anyway...
On the question raised by Link about why capitalism has not gone to war as the ‘solution’ to its historic crisis...
For the ICC (and for me) this is mainly due to the inability of the bourgeoisie, by the 1980s, to mobilise the working class to fight a world war, as it had in the ‘thirties. And the main reason for this is that, despite the failure of the working class to develop its struggles towards revolution, it still effectively blocked the bourgeoisie’s attempts to impose its own solution. (I know the CWO disagrees with this. A lot…)
For the CWO, the comrade first described the main reason as the ability of the bourgeoisie to manage the crisis. I can agree with this. Partly based on the lessons it has learned from history, the bourgeoisie has been able to effectively phase in the crisis and, just as importantly, to derail, divert and mystify any dangerous working class response. This is also broadly the view of the ICC (from its 21st Congress reports).
Challenged on the role of the relationship between the classes the CWO comrade then set out the position, highlighted by Link, that:
“It is actually the passivity of the class over the last 4 decades which gives the capitalist class the space to avoid war.”
This brings us back to the question of the balance of class forces – which does now reappear as a key factor in the situation, even if in a negative sense that the working class is currently ‘passive’ so the bourgeoisie doesn’t need to move towards war…
In support of this position Cleish points to 1914 as evidence that if it was faced with massive class struggle the bourgeoisie would be forced to try to go to war, and I think there is truth in that historical example; the outbreak of WW1 cut short the whole internationaL wave of mass struggles described by Rosa Luxemburg in the Mass Strike.
On the other hand, I could then point to 1939 as evidence that in the absence of massive resistance from the working class the bourgeoisie was free to impose its own solution. We could also argue that in 1914 the change in historic period from ascendance to decadence wasn’t yet clear to either class. Decadence obviously has its own history and in that sense this current period is historically completely unprecedented.
So at the very least it is difficult to generalise from historical specificities.
The comrade also argues that “the bourgeoisie can learn from history and they know the consequences of a wider global war.”
I think we’d all agree the bourgeoisie can learn from history but this raises a whole new question about the ‘rationality’ of the bourgeoisie. In a period in which we see more and more evidence of the irrationality of the bourgeoisie – above all in the worsening ecological crisis that capitalism is precipitating, apparently without any serious effort or even ability to prevent its worst effects - I think it is debatable to say the least to talk about bourgeois rationality as a factor, especially in the current period - but that's another discussion.
Mark
Mark
I was not joking. We have had ICC sympathisers posting on our site without declaring where they were coming from but just making negative remarks about our positions. This is very useful as a technique since it always puts the other (in this case, us) on the defensive. You are far from the worst but you cannot deny that you earlier posed ICC perspectives without saying that they were theirs.
Another thing that ICC texts have done over the years is to always rephrase other people’s arguments in a slightly different form in order to keep the discussion on the agenda that interests them. This leads to a lot of tedious repetition in the discussion whilst we have to correct the misrepresentations. You do it slightly and probably as a genuine misunderstanding here too. When you summarise that;
“For the CWO this did not signify the end of the counter-revolution, which only really ends when the proletariat has formed its class party.”
I don’t think we have ever said that. It ends when a new revolutionary wave comes along and we hope that an international (and not just any old class party in one capitalist state) is already in existence as part of the process of the build-up to the revolutionary wave. That is why we are working so hard for it now and not theorising that “this is not the time for the class party” as Alf said in one of our meetings (and I hope I have not misrepresented him!).
On the question of whether the working class passivity is actually giving the bourgeoisie a free hand over the war issue I was maintaining that either case could be valid and that I agree that “So at the very least it is difficult to generalise from historical specificities”. But who has done the generalising here? The same people who assert that the working class is holding back war (as if the one premise always promoted the other when in fact the converse can be the case). The further historical factor is that in the past mass armies were required to fight wars so the question of mobilising the working class was critical whereas today in the era of hi-tech war and professional murderers the question is more in the hands of the ruling class (although in the event of a longer war the question of mobilisation of support will still be significant).
As to your final point about the irrationality of the bourgeoisie this is different from the irrationality or distorted rationality of capitalism. What we would say is the current evidence shows that as the crisis has gone on they have exhausted all the avenues left open to them. Now we are in cloud cuckoo land with Brexit/Trump’s America and the divisions in the bourgeoisie but there is also the dangerous “rationality” of the nationalist demagogues like Salvini (I am typing this in a house on the Aventine Hill in Rome), Orbans, Kuzcynski, Duterte etc etc spreading across a capitalist system in stagnation.
Link I think has now understood the differences between us and the ICC and, in his usual generous way, is trying to get all communists to bury their differences and work together. However the ICC have now admitted that their previous perspectives were wrong (but not the method behind that error). Today we have had 40 years of class retreat but in political terms there are signs of a resurgence of interest in genuine revolutionary politics. We do not know what the future will bring precisely but as Stevein said the alternative to proletarian revolution is too awful to contemplate so whatever happens we revolutionaries have to do all we can to help to build a class alternative to what capitalism has in store for us. This was Onorato Damen’s position in the 1950s and 1960s and it is ours today.
I can only agree we have to
I can only agree we have to “help to build a class alternative to what capitalism has in store for us”.
But we also have to try to overcome sectarianism and clarify differences as part of this.
You now claim that the counter-revolution did not end with the upsurge of struggles in ’68 and will only end “when a new revolutionary wave comes along”.
Afaics this was not your view at the time: “Since the end of the 1960s capitalism’s post war period of expansion has been drawing to a close and the objective conditions for revolution began to develop.” (CWO text for the First International Conference in 1977)
The CWO and the ICC, both products of this upsurge, were absolutely right to stress the change in period with the end of the post-war boom and the upsurge in struggles, and the PCInt was surely wrong not to recognise this (or rather, it saw the crisis, but not the significance of the upsurge of struggles, only a student revolt!).
But the ICC was also wrong to conclude that this upsurge meant there was now a ‘course towards revolution’.
True, the Italian Left Fraction in the 30s had concluded that the victory of fascism in Germany meant the course of history was towards war; this is one of the most important acquisitions of the Italian Left which, despite its confusions, enabled it to oppose the opportunism of the Trotskyists and avoid betrayal in Spain.
So we can’t simply dismiss the whole concept of a ‘historic course’ as ‘un-Marxist’.
But the ICC wrongly concluded that after ’68 this situation had simply been ‘reversed’. It was forced to correct this error but continued to talk about a ‘course towards class confrontations’.
Personally I now think this was confused. It was a compromise that failed to fully recognise that there were two opposing tendencies at work. So you are right to emphasise that the “continual binaries of the class war” are socialism or barbarism, war or revolution.
The point is firstly that, despite the existence of a definite tendency towards war, the balance of class forces was more favourable to the proletariat than at any time since 1917 and there were real reasons to believe that the conditions for revolution would continue to mature.
Secondly, the more the proletariat pushed forward its own struggles, the more the ability of the bourgeoisie to impose its own ‘solution’ was pushed back, ie. the class struggle itself was an active factor in shifting the balance of class forces and determining the outcome.
In the end we know the post-68 upsurge did not lead to revolution. The proletariat has suffered a political but not a definitive defeat.
But neither has the bourgeoisie been able to impose the war it so desperately needs in your schema to ‘revalorise capital’ (although of course we cannot be complacent). Instead we are at an impasse.
Unless the proletariat is finally able to impose its own solution – “the revolutionary transformation of society” - we face the alternative you have already referred to: the “common ruin of the contending classes”.
So the situation today may superficially appear to prove your contention that the counter-revolution never ended. But in reality it entirely misses the major shift in the balance of forces between the classes which occurred in the 1980s. In this sense it simply proves the adage about a stopped clock…
It also surely underlines the unrealistic expectation that a new revolutionary wave, complete “hopefully” with an international party can somehow appear out of a ‘counter-revolution’. Isn’t it far more likely we will see massive, confused movements, social eruptions etc, in response to the convulsions of the crisis, long before we (“hopefully”) reach this point? Luxemburg talks somewhere about 'the long agony of the proletariat'...
M
PS not sure what's happened to Link?
M
M
As we are getting ready for tomorrow's meeting on "The Future International" in London I'll defer a reply to your interesting post until after that but I am told that Link will be in the meeting where no doubt some issues similar to those raised here will be discussed. Hope you can make it.
M. Thats a very intriguing
M. Thats a very intriguing point you end up with there and one that does keep puzzling me too and i dont really have an answer im afraid.
As C says i will be at the meeting tomorrow and do hope you are coming. The recent meetings on Russia , Germany and the Comintern have all developed the issues of lessons for the party so it should be interesting to see how all that comes together.
Re your point about a period of counter revolution, i do think that there is simply an issue of defintions at root here. As you suggest the CWO appear to see the counter revolution as ongoing because of that fact that there has been no period of revolution during this period. They do nevertheless see that during this period the balance of class forces changes - as you say - a binary situation.
Again as you suggest the idea of 'the historic course' was meant to be exactly the same thing - an assessment of the balance of class forces so i dont see it as a problem per say. However the ICCs determination to fix a definitive perspective has just been too inflexible and caused problems regarding the ongoing lack of a perceived outcome. It has ended up with the idea of a stalemate in the historic course yet class forces favour the bourgeois and justified this in terms that it can happen in a chess game. I dont see class struggle as a chess game however and think that the CWOs approach recognising that ongoing changes in class forces is a better way to analyse the period. In this context comes the interesting suggestion that the bourgeois does not want to move to an all out global war at this point in time
More than once the assertion
More than once the assertion is made that the class party (perhaps more than one organisation) will only arise in a revolutionary period. I am not convinced this is definitely the case. It could be, but an alternative is that a small part, though considerably more than now, of the class (which is all a revolutionary organisation will be, not a mass organisation) does reach revolutionary consciousness and does organise a party somewhat ahead of decisive events rather than in their midst. If we accept that we have at best two, less than three, decades to prevent catastrophe, the issue of the premature party formation seems to be rather secondary. It has to be sometime fairly soon and I doubt there is a precise way to say how it comes about that communist groups form and unite.
I hope the discussion is a
I hope the discussion is a fruitful one tomorrow. I cannot attend unfortunately but you can certainly use my post as an attempt to contribute on what I think are some of the key issues. I'll wait to come back on the points made by Link and Stevein.
How are you defining party
How are you defining party then and how is this different to a revolutionary organisation?
I am not sure they are
I am not sure they are different, I would say a revolutionary party is a revolutionary organisation. However, a revolutionarty party/organisation which is up to the tasks of revolutionary period, the elimination of class society, is not the same as the organisation which exists in the depths of class society.
In my mind a revolutionary party ( a Revolutionary International to introduce yet another term) has to be a compromise. It has to have the size and hence reach which a tight theoretically more homogenous revolutionary unitary organisation does not necessarily have.
As a consequence, the conditions for membership of a revolutionary Party (i.e. the organisation suitable for the actual revolutionary crossing of the bridge to the classless society) have to be the minimum required for the task. I would not for example say, one has to recognise Marxism as a (proletarian) science to be a member of such a revolutionary party, as a random example merely to illustrate the point. This may well be an interesting point of debate but it is not a red line.
This would likely mean that a revolutionary party is a battlefield within which various factions jockey for influence, but held together by the perspective that without the necessary level of tolerance and unity, the multiple elements involved would lack the power to carry out the required global tasks. So there is a dialectical tension there, a struggle between the component parts but the unity of common purpose.
I anticipate this will be contested, and I only have a limited concept of what is to come.
Link, re your last point I
Link, re your last point I have to say I’ve changed my view of the ‘historic course’ since the start of this thread!
We all agree the analysis of the balance of class forces is an absolutely vital task for revolutionaries today, as it was for Marx, but the ICC’s ‘concept of the historic course’ is not simply another way of talking about this. Rather it generalises from the situation in the ‘30s when Bilan quite rightly argued that the road was open to war and wrongly concludes that the opposite is also true, ie. that the proletariat ‘bars the road to war’, which imo underestimates the tendency towards war in the capitalist system.
On the other hand, I think the CWO/PCInt has fallen into a symmetrical error which is to reject what appears to me to be a basic Marxist position that, in specific historic conditions, the proletarian struggle can push back this tendency towards war, even though there is plenty of evidence for this in the post-68 period, eg. the mass strike in Poland, which was undoubtedly a factor in the collapse of the eastern bloc. No doubt the CWO will come back on this…
And I don’t disagree with the ICC’s conclusion that we are now in a ‘social stalemate’, chess game or no chess game. Rather it is a recognition of the scenario identified by Marx that we are potentially facing ‘the common ruin of the contending classes’. In fact I think the CWO’s views on the current period are not dissimilar to the ICC's, but I don’t know if this came up at the recent meeting at all.
As for the CWO’s “interesting suggestion” that the bourgeoisie does not want to move to an all out global war at this point in time, I think the problem is firstly that it’s just that; a suggestion, without, it seems to me, a coherent theoretical framework to back it up, and secondly, as I have pointed out before here, it is an attempt to generalise from specific historical conditions, which in a sense is precisely the error the ICC has fallen into with its ‘concept of the historic course’. Cleish has pointed here to 1914 in support of his argument – and I have pointed to 1939 to disprove it. Today we are in a historically unprecedented situation and I think the greater error is to underestimate the danger of war breaking out almost by accident due to the escalation of military tensions and general breakdown of bourgeois society, 'every man for himself' etc.
M
M
I don't really think you "get" either our method or our argument. I suppose given your previous membersship of the ICC and your identification with their method this is not surprising. Over the years we have accused the ICC of misleading people about what we say and we always thought this was deliberate but in fact the problem lay in the way we saw the world did not fit into ICC schemas and in trying to make our views fit them they simply distorted them. You do the same here when you say that my argument about the fact that the class struggle is weak is a factor holding back war. This turns what I argued on its head. What I argued was that those who saw war being held back by the class struggle would find it difficult to make a case for the working class holding back war today BUT we don't really think this is the way to apporach the issue on way. As our numerous document make clear the imperative towards a more generalised war exists based on imperialist competition. We are equally concerned that this could tip over into a general conflagration due to miscalculations based on pushing imperialist interests too far (see our article "A decade after .."). Lenin frequently quoted Goethe's Faust to the effect that "theory is grey my my friend but green is the everlasting tree of life". A good quote but not one that fits the idea of the "historic course" since in that the grey areas of theory are ignored to put all the eggs in the black or white basket of "we are on course for war" or "we are on course for revolution". In fact we have long argued (since the IBRP was formed in 1984 at least) that no matter what the circumstances our tasks remain the same - to fight for communist consciousness and organisation inthe wider working class. And today we have no illusions. As the summary of the CWO London meeting said you will get shorter odds on war than you will on revolution given the absolutely inadequate response of the global working class to the attacks made upon it. In the face of this you can throw up your hands in despair, extol the value of "fraction" work and not even try to reach the wider working class (and I am not sure what the ICC actually are saying on this so opaque have been their arguments). We prefer to act according to our theory. Humanity is faced with an enormous disaster from which only the world working class can save it and we have to do all we can to point out what the various (and too rare) episodes of struggle tell us about the real goal of the struggle. The ones who are up for that are the ones we want to have a dialogue with.
I found the series of
I found the series of meetings interesting and brought out for me a range of fresh points. The Russia meeting was more about events and lessons rather than the party. But the meeting on Germany, the Comintern and the Future Int drew out quite a bit more about organisation.
Both CWO and ICC appeared to understand that it is the international that is the party. Somehow i had not questioned the idea that the international, would be initiated , as in Russia, by the ‘first’ revolution and would be maybe an organisational tool for spreading the revolution ie linking it into the council network rather than the political organisation. The international as party though gives a good perspective for the preparations by the political organisastions around the globe for a coming or revolution wave.
We read about the Russian revolution with hindsight, and in context of an awareness that it came to a successful conclusion and see all the steps in the evolution of events as clever and maybe even obvious. For me my preparations for the discussion on the German revolution and the discussion itself made it clear that cannot be the case. No group in Germany even when they were calling for a revolution against the state, was clear about what that meant and what they should do when it happened. The ‘mass strike’ period in Germany went on for a long time but the CP when it came into existence was already late and was being negatively influenced by the comintern ie encouraging working with SPD and in unions. The lesson this experience emphasises for me the necessity of the creation of revolutionary organisations on a global scale in advance of a revolution itself. The international as the clear political revolutionary vanguard of the class, the party, ready to influence and inform the struggles of the class, would be able to spread one determined programme across the globe and not get caught up in local national issues which could distort the message as happened to the 3rd Int due to the status of the Bolsheviks in it.
One ICCer suggested that the creation of the party in Germany was at the same time too late and too soon. I think the latter point came down to a view of an incomplete break with the 2nd Int but I think this still comes back to the need for clarity and distinct organisation at an earlier stage.
This is course still leave the open issue of creating the International when conditions of working class struggle demand such a thing. Both organisation say this but have differing ways of analysing periods which leads to disagreements. Nevertheless when it comes to the crunch, I think I would fully expect both organisations to make similar conclusions in practice on this issue – unless one or other changes its politics significantly. It does however hightlight the issues of how to analyse conjunctural conditions.
Ive just read through the thread again and still feel there is a tendency to misunderstand statements coming from a differing position. Everybody starts from an attempt to understand the balance of class forces however and I don’t see it a problem that differing analyses result probably even healthy to keep on discussing. (and C I would certainly agree that the ICCs statements should not be taken as deliberately misleading - in fact, I’d say it’s a topic where once you get into a specific framework its just hard to work out alternative points of view). Having said that I become more convinced that the ICCs position on the historic course has been too rigidly applied. The decades since the 80s have raised questions for me about the ICC application of decadence and crisis as well as the historic course and over this period it has become clear that holding strictly to the idea that course is to revolution has led to problematic analyses in the new conditions. They may still be right ultimately but given there are only 2 possible outcomes in general terms there is probably a 50% of being right whatever the theory. Somewhere or other I have read a comment about history being a film rather than a photograph and if I haven’t misunderstood, I think this applies here. The CWOs approach does not aim to produce fixed determinations for what is period is or what can happen in it but draw more short term conclusions and prepares for changing conditions. A more flexible ( and cinematic) approach.
MH sorry but I have ended being a bit confused as to which parts of ICC approach you agree and disagree with. For example I would agree with you that the ‘greater error is to underestimate the danger of war’ but I thought you were arguing beforehand for a course to revolution. If I could take up points from your last contribution on the thread. So, whilst agreeing that the wc can clearly push back the threat of war, you are relying on events that ended almost 40 years ago as evidence of that ‘push back’. In the meantime the Bourgeoisie has itself been campaigning successfully to push back the wc significantly from its confrontational struggles of the 60s to 80s. The strengthening of nationalism, increases in wc debt and the reorganisation of industrial systems through the replacement of outdated means of production by hi-tech electronic and computerised systems have had a major impact on the balance of class forces. (I’d also include world population and GDP increases here too as reflective of global change by the B)
You disagreed with the ‘suggestion’ that the B hasn’t wanted war in the past decades. Im not saying it’s a full argument but the factors mentioned above would seem to operate in support of that idea don’t you think? May I be somewhat heretical here though and revisit the idea that the working class is undefeated since the end of WW2. It is not something I have really asked myself before, but what is the justification for this argument and why is it more than a ‘suggestion’. The wc was defeated and mobilised for war during the 30s and 40s certainly. What changed after the war and, indeed ever since, that we can say the wc is now undefeated and global war is not possible, the answer surely cannot simply be that there hasn’t been a war – there have been local and regional wars continuously.
Link,
Link,
Firstly I think you’re right to identify areas where there is basic agreement between the CWO and the ICC. This all too easily gets lost.
And I agree with much of what you say about the need to understand the balance of class forces.
On the ‘historic course’, if you remember the ICC changed its position to ‘course towards class confrontations’, although this doesn’t get rid of the problem which for me is the idea that the proletariat ‘bars the road to war' - I think this is a schema that underestimates the inherent tendency of the system towards war, especially today.
Which is not to say the class struggle is not an active and even decisive factor in the situation, in specific historical conditions. The objective conditions for revolution were definitely opened up by the post-’68 upsurge (the CWO said much the same thing at the time) and up until the 1980s the direction of the class struggle was still towards decisive class confrontations.
But as you say, we then come to the last 40 years. I don’t think it’s ‘heretical’ to question whether the working class has suffered a defeat since WW2, if I have understood your point correctly. There has clearly been a defeat, not a physical one like in 30s, but a serious political defeat. Exactly how serious is not yet clear. We will only know if and when the proletariat shows signs of a response. But the danger of war is certainly greater today given the proliferation of local wars, military tensions, etc., partly because the bourgeoisie itself is losing its ability to control events due to the depth of the crisis.
Link: It was Bordiga who came
Link: It was Bordiga who came up with the very good image that reality should be viewed as a moving picture and not a still photograph (I think it is one of the best demystifications of the idea of the dialectic that I know). Marky: just for the sake of historical accuracy the CWO only agreed with the notion that we were on the upward curve towards revolution from 1975 to 1976. It was at this point (when we had collectively given out tens of thousands of leaflets at shipyards, steelworks, engineering works etc etc) that we realised that the working class was up for what our Livepool comrades called "money militancy" but a long way from a socialist understanding. It actually led to the demoralisation of the Liverpool section and to the loss of three quarters of our members by June 1977. The remaining comrades rebuilt the organisation on the basis of the perspective that we were in for a very long haul. I think that we told people that joining in the revolutionary movement meant signing up for life was not a great selling point! Today there is a sense that humanity is fast approaching a major turning point and the new generation coming to us are a product of that. We don't know the outcome but we do know that the working class has enormous obstacles to overcome if it is to re-assert itself. Its our task in our modest way to participate in that fight even if (as was said in the conclusion of the London meeting) the smart money is on barbarism before socialism.
Cleishbotham wrote:
Cleishbotham wrote:
“just for the sake of historical accuracy the CWO only agreed with the notion that we were on the upward curve towards revolution from 1975 to 1976 ... It was at this point (…) that we realised that the working class was up for what our Liverpool comrades called "money militancy" but a long way from a socialist understanding.”
Yes and you said as much at the time (2nd Int Conference). But with hindsight are you saying you still defend this view? Isn’t it a bit ‘Anglo-centric’ for a start? Without going into a whole list of struggles, surely we saw further developments including the Iranian oil workers’ strikes 1978, Brazilian steelworkers’ strike 1979, etc...?
And what about the mass strike in Poland, which at the time you described as “The biggest class battles of the last ten years” (CWO/BC leaflet)? This was surely the high point of the post-68 upsurge and can hardly be dismissed as “money militancy”?
With "hindsight" what is
With "hindsight" what is there to change? These were massive class battles but each isolated from the other. We not only saw the importance of Poland in 1980 (I remember getting near frostbite leafletting steelworks at -10C when the Jaruselski coup took place!) but also said in the miners' strike (dismissed by the ICC at the time as a mere "corporate struggle") that this was the working class at a crossroads calling on the rest of the class to ignore the "coal not dole" slogan and see it as a defence of the entire class. The ICC talked of the 1980s as being the "years of truth" and the evidence for this was in the "waves of struggle" (Belgian dockworkers etc) that took place them. We always acknowledged these waves but always pointed out in meetings that these were on "a receding tide". As to our anglo-centrism we did base ourselves on what we actually experienced and not on what somebody told us was happening. This was not without its weaknesses (and our relations with BC helped us to a wider perspective). However both BC and we viewed with dismay what was going on but never stopped trying to fight against the current (that's not an intentional pun!). We were still selling Workers Voice at factory gates at 5.30 a.m right up until 1993-4 when sales were so low we realised this was no longer the best way to get our message across. However our overall perspective did prepare us better for the consequences of restructuring brought about by the crisis (which in the UK amounted largely to deindustrialisation) than those who were stuck with a schema that said the working class are undefeated therefore they must be on the offensive. We have seen the tragic consequences of this for the ICC with all the self-inflicted wounds they have suffered especially since the death of the founder. The tragedy for the CL is that most of those who have left have abandoned all political activity altogether.
So where does that leave us? Will the globally restructured working class be unable to find its political voice and resist the road to armageddon and barbarism, or is today's inadequate response to increased exploitation the new normal. To go back to Link's metaphor if we stick with the still photo we are doomed but then history is a movie and one with often sharp changes in the plot. We don't yet know where this process is taking us but we do know that for proletarian internationalists there is only one course of action and that is to take the lessons of the proletariat's own past battles into the widest sectors of the class we can.
“To go back to Link's
“To go back to Link's metaphor if we stick with the still photo we are doomed but then history is a movie and one with often sharp changes in the plot.”
Yes I thought this was a nice description of the Marxist method, as far as it goes. At least it made me go away and read Bordiga’s article on libcom.
And extending the analogy I think we need to keep in mind that signs of the working out of contradictions set in motion in the ‘first frame’ of the ‘movie’ may not be visible in each and every subsequent frame, only being fully revealed in the ‘final scene’.
In other words, historical materialism does not restrict itself to what is visible in each and every ‘frame’ of reality. As Bordiga says, sometimes in the absence of data we need to deduce what is happening based on longer term trends, only later being able to confirm it with new observations.
Applying this to the analysis of the class struggle, developments in class consciousness may not be visible at each and every point in time but only reveal themselves, possibly in spectacular fashion, following a long and all but invisible process of maturation.
We all know that for Marx the proletarian revolution was the ‘old mole’ working away in the soil of history, only to break out when least expected. Far from being ‘idealist’, Bordiga provides a more rigorous proof of this poetic vision.
I agree it is extremely difficult today to discern what the long term trends are; as far as the class struggle is concerned we are in a historically unprecedented situation. But the Marxist method gives us all grounds for optimism…