Wildcat-Poster: Which way to the revolution, please??
This text was part of a poster inserted into Wildcat no.69,
Spring 2004. For a pdf of the German version see
here
Capitalism has been stagnating for thirty years. For the last twenty years, the social system and people’s working conditions have been under attack from above; and for almost ten years, there has been a worldwide movement denouncing the injustice of this system. Why do so many people still stay so quiet? Why doesn’t capitalism finally give up and die?
Nothing is automatic
With
the ‘Great Depression’ of 120 years ago, the end of capitalism appeared
to have already arrived. But the way it vaulted over this barrier
opened up a new era so impressively, that what first appeared in the
overcoming of that deep crisis is precisely what today we call
capitalism, i.e. the mass production of durable consumer goods such as
cars, fridges and central heating systems. This meant a huge leap
forward - including in the living standards of the people who produced
them.
But now, the connection between the technological and social
developments that capitalism seemed to guarantee has been broken before
our eyes. In the last three decades, the only place where strong
development is still taking place is in southern Asia.
When
capitalism pushes up against barriers, then the preconditions for a
radical change (Latin: ‘revolution’) of all this shit are produced; but
capitalism will not break down ‘automatically’.
Why do people still stay so quiet?
For
one thing, it’s because of fear over jobs, and the knowledge that other
people have it a lot worse. And secondly, there are social classes that
believe sinking wages and social cuts to be in their interests: not
only bosses but economic advisors, department managers, high-earning
television news reporters, and politicians and functionaries of every
kind, who bluntly and aggressively demand the sharpening of social
inequality. In Germany, the Schroeder government is determined to push
through tough reforms on behalf of this so-called ‘top third’(in
reality, they clearly make up less than a third of the population).
Meanwhile,
it is no longer only construction workers who are actually being set up
in competition with workers on Ukrainian wages. The German car industry
threatens workers with Czech and Spanish wages, and VW has managed to
use this threat to significantly undercut the in-house contract for the
first time, with its 5000 x 5000 model. Software departments are now
set up in competition with programmers in India. Many people live under
the threat of a worse life; but what is lacking in all the uproar -
aside from reforms that leave the whole structure intact - is
imagination about how things could be different. It is for this sole
reason that the ‘domination of the ideological sphere by economic
advisors’ exists.
What comes after the anti-globalisation movement?
Following
the autumn 1999 protests against the WTO meeting in Seattle, a global
movement entered the stage for the first time in history. In Seattle,
workers and members of youth movements, unionists and anarchists fought
side by side on the streets. It happened again during the World
Economic Forum in Genoa in summer 2001: refugees; people from squatted
social centres; workers: and the power of the state hit back - hard.
Since then the movement has lost its real momentum, but it still breaks
out again here and there: for example, when millions of people
worldwide marched against the Iraq war; or at the demo in Berlin on 1st
November 2003, against the government’s social policies. The movement
against neoliberalism has fulfilled its ideological aim, in that
neoliberal ideology has been discredited; but it has not reached its
political and social aims: Iraq was bombed and occupied; inequality is
on the increase; more and more people are dying of hunger around the
world. Market relations are becoming more prevalent and more intense in
everyday life, and the result is frustration and de-politicisation.
Many ‘star politicians’ are quite happy with the situation, because
their analysis and advice is reaching the ears of the powerful.
In
this context the revolutionary current, which was mostly just a splash
of colour at mass events such as the World and European Social Forums,
might have a chance. More and more people know that capitalism is never
going to turn into a vegetarian shark. But in order to seize this
chance, it is no longer enough to talk about ‘anti-capitalism’ and
‘social questions’, and aside from that to continue practising the same
politics as before. A revolutionary current has to relate to the fact
that society’s impasse, described above, has begun to be broken: in
Italy, France, Poland, Britain, etc., strikes and actions are underway
that are self-organised; that push things through by themselves,
outside of institutional mediations. Even in Germany, the wind has
changed in the last few months.
The motor of history is not ‘technical progress’ - but class struggle
Up
until now, capitalism has stood out precisely for its ability to
productively overcome ‘natural’ social and technical barriers. It seems
to embody an unstoppable development, conquering the whole world with
blood and iron, but also enabling a material improvement in the living
standards of generation after generation of the exploited. Up to now,
the destructive exploitation system has drawn its legitimacy from this:
it is the means by which those in power have been able to claim to have
a purpose in history, and they present themselves as the
representatives of that purpose. Thus, massacres are justified, since
otherwise ‘we’ wouldn’t be ‘where we are today’.
The labour movement
has so far failed to radically criticise this view of history,
postponing such a standpoint until some future time. Social democracy
said: You must make sacrifices and build up the economy, so that your
children and grandchildren will have better lives. Stalinism said: We
need to kill a few million kulaks so that, in fifty years’ time, we
will have built-up communism. Both of these had the development of
industry as preconditions; and both were big fans of assembly-line
production.
Capitalism and socialism
Although we talk
about ‘capitalism’ - in this poster, for example - it is perhaps a
misleading term, since what we are referring to is not some closed
system. For clarity’s sake, and since we are not talking about a thing,
but rather about a social relation, it would be more precise to talk
about ‘capital’.
The transition from feudalism to capitalism was not
a revolution, as bourgeois written history would have us believe: in
fact the rulers, following that transition, were the same as before,
with only a few of them a head shorter than they had been. Feudalism
had reached crisis point for both sides. The serfs fled to the cities,
and the landlords also fled: from direct dependency on their serfs into
more fluid exploitation of them, through waged work. They were now only
concerned with multiplying their riches, which increasingly took the
form of money. The rebelliousness of the former serfs and servants had
not led not to freedom, but only to a new class relation; to a new form
of subjugation.
Capital is a social relation over which there is a
constant struggle. Nevertheless, a great many things arise from this
relation that we can touch with our hands - above all, machinery. The
main characteristic of capitalism is the production of the forces of
production themselves. Up until now, capitalism has been first and
foremost the agrarian revolution: rural economic productivity has
increased enormously, which created a surplus of labour force in the
countryside. Throughout the entire history of capitalism, people have
fled from the villages to the towns, from the fields to the factories,
from the ‘south’ to the ‘north’. In the last 25 years, this migration
has far outweighed the valorisation possibilities for capitalism; the
migrants are besieging the world’s metropolises with huge rings of
shanty towns; and there is a worldwide crisis of the city.
The
capitalist development of agriculture is destructive: the use of
chemicals and profit-orientated gene manipulation; the theft and
reduction of cultivated plants and animal species by agricultural
corporations; the worldwide plundering of biological resources, and the
extinction of plant and animal species… The politics of agricultural
economics are criminal, with agricultural subsidies destroying food
production in other countries, and so on. Today, a small percentage of
humankind could produce enough food for everyone to live on, but
despite this people die of hunger. The insanity of this economic system
is obvious.
As soon as people can read and write, socialism is surpassed
All
ideas of socialism start from the premise that the factories should be
placed under workers’ control, and circulation organised through
(state) planning. All other matters are postponed until the ‘next
historical stage’. Even anarchist utopias remain ‘socialist’ at their
core, because they want to ‘fairly distribute the necessary work’ -
which immediately begs the question of which institution is to
administer this distribution. Alienated labour remains alienated
labour, even if it is ‘only’ for four hours a day! Socialist ideas have
always been bound up with the state, and the official labour movement
has always tried to fight its way into the state. Only anarchist and a
few left-communist currents have been anti-state, and they remain
peripheral phenomena.
In developing capitalist societies in which
farmers are no longer the majority, the communist parties are
disbanding and becoming social-democratic parties (in Italy, for
example, the PCI became the DS). Social democracy itself then jettisons
its poor utopianism and publicly declares its support for capitalism
(e.g. in Germany, the ‘Godesberger Program’ of the SPD).
All of the
‘revolutionary’ movements that came to power in the twentieth century
became development dictatorships, from the Soviet Union to the ‘young
nation states’. They had the objective precondition that development
seemed to be possible for everyone - an idea that capitalism’s
thirty-year crisis has put an end to. The precondition, from the point
of view of the people, was that they believed in the state (to direct
the development) – which the worldwide revolutionary movement from
1968 onwards put paid to; and which the events of 1989 confirmed. And
in this historical process, the people and their ideas also changed.
No-one believes, any longer, that the state will make our lives better;
or that nuclear power represents a safe energy source; and there are
struggles worldwide against large-scale projects whose effect is to
disenfranchise.
How are people to take their lives into their own
hands, and be able to overthrow everything? Where is the power to do
this supposed to come from? This is not a question of how we win the
power, but of how we can destroy it. But the question must be asked.
Workers can change a lot when they collectively decide not to do something: when they strike
Oppressed
and exploited people have always defended themselves. In this sense,
the Communist Manifesto was right: history is the history of class
struggle. But it is only in the capital relation that a class that can
overthrow everything emerges for the first time; not simply replacing
rulers and dividing up the work differently, but ending the domination
of people over people and abolishing work.
The working class is more
than a collection of people who are having a hard time. It is
collective and interdependent on a worldwide scale, and its very
collective nature is the precondition for capitalist productivity: it
produces the capital. This is in marked contrast to peasants and
slaves, who were also many, who were also exploited, who also fought
against it, and organised heroic uprisings; but they were isolated
producers, through whose work the rulers exploited the ‘riches of
nature’. Today, workers are in the majority worldwide, not farmers and
peasants. Fewer and fewer people work directly on the land – and even
those that do are mostly (rural) workers.
The working class embodies
the possibility of the abolition of all classes: of communism. And the
working class can only be understood in the context of this tension,
and only as a process - it cannot be defined sociologically (“who
belongs to it, and who doesn’t?”). Capitalism has always asserted that
it has overcome its class character - but as long as people have to do
waged work, there will be class antagonism. And these days - in which
someone who was a ‘housewife’ yesterday is ‘unemployed’ today and
perhaps, tomorrow, working in an office; and the day after that sitting
at a supermarket checkout, or standing at a factory assembly line -
people’s position in terms of class relations is far more telling than
their respective job. What was that about ‘professional pride’, again?
All
social institutions have arisen from class struggle, and all of them
have to be revolutionised: prisons, schools, factories and
universities; town and countryside. Gender roles and the division of
people into categories such as ‘healthy’ or ‘sick’ also arise out of
the valorisation of (wage) work. Political concepts that want to
abolish capitalism, but that ‘initially’ want to leave the factories,
cars and social relations, etc., just as they are, are not
revolutionary but exactly the opposite.
Having for many years
totally neglected the ‘terrain of proletarian struggle’, there is now
an increase in discussion, within the left in Germany, about ‘social
questions’ and the ‘working class’ again. As a rule, those who employ
the former kind of terminology tend to mistake the ‘working class’ for
their representatives (works council representatives and union
functionaries), and to maintain that their ‘civil society’ dreams of a
minimum income and minimum wages are revolutionary demands. Meanwhile,
those who prefer the latter term tend to go on about ideology and,
following years of deconstructing supposed identities, are now
celebrating the comeback of the cult of the proletariat and Leninist
‘workers’ politics’.
There are a number of things we might say in
opposition to this: that there is no ‘workers’ identity’; that the
working class is not a finished subject; and that its main need is to
stop being a working class. It does not have a historical mission, and
no far-off aim to reach - it is about the here and now. ‘Communism is
the real movement,’ wrote Marx and Engels in The German Ideology. We
don’t stand outside of this as strategists but are part of the class
composition, which is different today from what it was in Marx’s time,
or what it was at the beginning of the twentieth century. The question
of the revolution is also a different one now to that of the time of
the Paris Commune. Today, the question is one of a liberated society
without work. There is a massive surplus of productive know-how within
humanity, which capital no longer valorises.
Historically the
structural power of the working class has expanded throughout the rises
and falls of the class struggle. The world economic crisis of the 1930s
showed that workers could no longer simply be relegated to the position
of unorganised proletariat; and the world economic system after 1945
was an acknowledgement of this, i.e., the attempt to integrate the
working class into exploitation through the welfare state, unions and,
effectively, a minimum wage. The worldwide class struggles of 1968 and
beyond shattered this arrangement: in these struggles, everything was
questioned: wages, work, the rejection of wage divisions, gender roles
and careers, etc. At the centre of this economic, cultural and social
crisis of the reproduction of the working class was the crisis of work;
and the challenge was so radical that that crisis has lasted to this
day: it is structurally determined - evoked and characterised - by the
working class. Globalisation, where it has actually taken place, has
led in the last thirty years - faster than ever before in history - to
the working and living conditions of workers coming into line with each
other through struggle (while, at the same time, large sections of
humanity are excluded from all development, and the gap between rich
and poor gets wider). The largest migration flows in the history of
humanity have not crushed the demands of the workers, but have spread
them even wider.
The crisis in the relations of exploitation has
become sharper and taken many forms in the last decade, at every level
of capitalist domination, right up to the decline of hegemonic power
within the capitalist world system. The USA has failed to overcome its
permanent crisis through war - quite the opposite: it has even
intensified it (‘the crisis of war’). The same has happened within the
national arena: with the attempt to push through a tough
crisis-management programme, the states, the unions and the parties
have lost the last bit of credibility that remained to them.
In
these circumstances, those who sit at a table with representatives in
order to discuss the social question make stooges of themselves. Away
with historical costumes (‘the working class and its party’)! Where
struggles happen today, be it in Argentina or France, such concepts
have long since been superseded: people are organising themselves, and
no longer allow themselves to be treated like children. In Italy in
December 2003, the old ‘worker aristocracy’ and the young precarious
workers joined together to organise wildcat strikes: we have to look to
processes like these in Bolivia, Nigeria, China, Poland and in our
midst, learn from them, and join them.
[prol-position news #4, 12/2005]

