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Title: Class Struggle Anarchism Author: Kent Worcester Date: January 14, 2019 Language: en Topics: class struggle, class struggle anarchism, interview Source: Retrieved on 2020-05-25 from https://anarchiststudies.noblogs.org/article-class-struggle-anarchism-an-interview-with-wayne-price/
Wayne Price is a longtime anti-authoritarian political activist. He was
drawn toward pacifism and anarchism as a teenager in the 1950s, and he
participated in the anti-Vietnam War movement during the 1960s and early
1970s. At the end of the sixties he became a teacher in the New York
City public school system, and he remained active in teacher union
politics from the seventies through his retirement. In recent years he
has helped educate some members of a new generation of radicals through
his articles, lectures, and books. He is currently a member of Bronx
Climate Justice North, a grassroots climate justice group based in the
north Bronx, and the Metropolitan Anarchist Coordinating Council in New
York City.
Although Wayne Price never abandoned the decentralist and
libertarian-socialist ideals he held as a teenager, for more than two
decades he participated in a succession of socialist organizations that
drew inspiration from the Marxist tradition. In the mid-1960s Price
joined the New York City branch of the Independent Socialist Clubs
(ISC), which renamed itself the International Socialists (IS) in 1969.
He subsequently took part in a factional dispute within the IS that led
to the formation of the Revolutionary Socialist League (RSL) in 1973.
While the RSL initially described itself as a radical Trotskyist
grouping, albeit with a state-capitalist analysis of Soviet-style
systems, by the early 1980s the organization started moving in an
anarchist direction. The League dissolved in 1988 and fused with other
anarchists to form the Love and Rage Anarchist Federation. When Love and
Rage disbanded in 1998, Price ended up joining the North Eastern
Federation of Anarchist Communists.
Wayne Price is the author of three books: The Abolition of the State:
Anarchist and Marxist Perspectives (AuthorHouse, 2007); Anarchism and
Socialism: Reformism or Revolution? (Thoughtcrime Ink, 2010); and The
Value of Radical Theory: An Anarchist Introduction to Marx’s Critique of
Political Economy (AK Press, 2013). He regularly contributes to a number
of websites, including
;
;
; and
. A selection of his articles may be found on Anarkismo, at
.
This interview is based on two conversations that I conducted with Wayne
Price in October and November 2018. The conversations were lightly
edited by the participants. I would like to express my gratitude to
Wayne Price as well as to the editors of AnarchistStudies.Blog.
– Kent Worcester
Kent Worcester: Why don’t you say something about your childhood?
Wayne Price: I had a normal upbringing in the suburbs. I was born in
1946, right after the war, which means that I am a Baby Boomer. My
parents moved to the suburbs – Valley Stream on Long Island – just as
the area was being built. When I was a kid you could see houses going up
almost every day. It was not far from the city. My father was a school
teacher. At first my mother was a stay-at-home mom, but she then went to
college and first became a guidance counsellor and after that a
psychologist.
KW: Were they pro-union?
WP: Oh yes, my father was very active in the teachers’ union, and they
were both friends with former Communists.
KW: Were they sympathetic to the Civil Rights Movement?
WP: Very much so. They were favorable to the left in general. That
doesn’t mean they were politically active – they were very busy with
their lives. Later on, they became extremely angry about the Vietnam
War. They subscribed to I.F. Stone’s Weekly, but they did not take part
in demonstrations. It was nevertheless clear where they stood on things
like civil rights and Vietnam.
KW: Any siblings?
WP: One. I have a brother who is two years younger than me. He never
became a radical – he was a musician and he then became a lawyer.
KW: Were you politically active in high school?
WP: Oh yes – there was a small group of us who launched a magazine that
we somewhat pompously called Thought. I drew a picture of Rodin’s The
Thinker that we put on the cover, and our slogan – falsely attributed to
Voltaire – was “I may disagree with everything that you say but I will
defend to the death your right to say it.” We circulated the magazine as
best we could, and at one point it was banned by the school
administration, but even after that we continued to circulate it. I
remember the reaction of many of our fellow students, which was “Why
must you always write about controversy?” From their point of view there
was everyday life, and then there was a special zone called controversy,
which is how many people felt back then.
But we saw ourselves as radicals. My best friend Jeff and I were
influenced by the various radical authors that we read – Dwight
Macdonald, Paul Goodman, and Eric Fromm, among others. We were excited
to attend meetings in Manhattan that were held at the War Resisters
League, and that were attended by people like Dave McReynolds and other
radical pacifists. At one point we put out a leaflet that we distributed
at demonstrations in which we set forth our reasons for opposing the
Vietnam War. This was at a time when very few people had even heard of
Vietnam. The leaflet included a quotation from Mike Mansfield, who was
the only U.S. Senator to oppose the war from the outset, about how the
U.S. should never get involved in a war in Asia. I was very proud of
that leaflet.
KW: Was your high school group organized around a specific ideology?
WP: Not really – everybody had their own point of view. Most of the
people involved were left-liberals, while Jeff and I were more or less
anarchist-pacifists.
KW: How did writers like Macdonald and Fromm come to your attention?
WP: One summer I attended to a camp for teens that was run by the YMHA,
and one day we went on a trip to a local university. While browsing at
the campus bookstore I came across a book by Dwight Macdonald that was
titled Memoirs of a Revolutionist (1957). He borrowed the title from
Kropotkin. Macdonald’s book was later reissued under a different title,
Politics Past. It was a collection of his writings, and I was very
impressed. The same summer I ran across a copy of Commentary magazine
that included an article by Paul Goodman on utopian thinking. Macdonald
had mentioned Goodman’s name, so I read that. That summer I also read a
collection of essays by Albert Einstein that included a number of pieces
about socialism. I was very much impressed by the idea of a
decentralized, cooperative, socialism.
When I returned from the camp, I saw that my mother had a copy of Eric
Fromm’s The Sane Society (1955), which was also written from a
humanistic-socialist perspective. All of these books left a big
impression on me, and my friend Jeff was also interested in reading
books by these kinds of authors. We got hold of copies of Goodman’s
Growing Up Absurd (1962) and the book he wrote with his architect
brother Percival, Communitas (1960). Their book helped convince me that
it was technologically possible to organize a decentralized, human-scale
society. Communitas has important things to say about urban planning,
technology, education, and so on. Authors like Goodman and Macdonald
also pointed me in the direction of Lewis Mumford, who was an earlier
writer in this decentralist-humanist tradition.
KW: Each of the writers you’ve mentioned have very distinct voices, and
they don’t follow any particular party line. Macdonald is famously
quirky and also very enjoyable to read.
WP: Yes, a very interesting character. Intelligent but quirky indeed. At
the time I found his writings absolutely inspiring. Goodman was a
terrible writer, but he very much had his own voice, and I was heavily
influenced by his ideas when I first started reading him. And I once
went to a forum in Manhattan where Macdonald and Goodman spoke. This was
the only time I got to see them in real life. It was an inspiring
evening.
KW: Neither the Communist Party nor the Soviet Union figures in the
story you’re telling.
WP: I was always hostile to any variety of Stalinism. Even when I ran
into a Trotskyist who talked me out of anarchist-pacifism I couldn’t
accept his take on the Soviet Union, which was that the USSR was a
workers’ state despite the fact that the workers had no power
whatsoever. From the orthodox Trotskyist perspective, the Russian
Revolution had decayed, but since the state had nationalized property
that meant that it was still a workers’ state. Countries in Eastern
Europe, where there was never a workers’ revolution, were controlled by
the U.S.S.R., were regarded as deformed workers’ states. This struck me
as absolutely absurd. The orthodox Trotskyist position never held any
attraction for me.
KW: Were there particular magazines, such as Liberation, that you read
as a teenager?
WP: Yes, I read Liberation, as well as other anarchist and pacifist
publications, but I was never sympathetic to the pro-Castro and pro-Ho
Chi Min articles that appeared in Liberation. But it was through reading
Liberation that I became a big fan of A.J. Muste. I also stumbled across
an early issue of New Politics, which had a major impact on me. This was
just before the 1964 presidential election, and I was still too young to
vote. It was probably my last year in high school.
I was particularly impressed by the debate that New Politics featured on
the question of whether or not to support Lyndon Johnson and the
Democratic Party. Two of the writers who favored voting for the
Democrats were Dave McReynolds, who was reluctant about supporting
Democrats, and Michael Harrington, who was much more enthusiastic. At
the time I was persuaded by their arguments, and of course Barry
Goldwater was terrible – he was a real fright. Afterwards, when Johnson
expanded the war in Vietnam, I decided that I had been mistaken, and
that it was the anti-Johnson radicals who had the better argument. That
affected my political development.
KW: The editors of New Politics, Phyllis and Julius Jacobson, are some
of the only radicals I’ve ever met who used the word “pluralism” in a
positive fashion. In any event, was politics at the center of your
thinking when you were deciding where to go to college?
WP: Not really. I started going to Queens College in fall 1964, partly
because it was cheaper than the alternatives. Also, it was convenient. A
whole bunch of my friends went there for the same reason. I majored in
Psychology and minored in Education, and my plan was to become a
psychologist. It was not an especially political campus when I arrived
there, and there was only one radical on the faculty that I was aware
of. He was a sociologist who wrote about workers control. I still
remember his pointing out that in the field of social psychology,
virtually every study showed that if you gave workers more control over
their work the result was higher productivity, less turnover, and so on
– all positive. And he was quite right. Most of the time in a field like
Psychology it is impossible to get the same results from different
studies.
KW: The atmosphere at Queens College must have changed dramatically
during the four years that you were there.
WP: It certainly did. I was involved in SDS [Students for a Democratic
Society]. I didn’t do very much, but I was part of the local chapter. I
wasn’t active at the national level. We organized meetings and other
events. The most important development for me personally was that I ran
into a guy named Jeff Mackler who was active in the Young Socialist
Alliance (YSA), which was affiliated with the Socialist Workers Party
(SWP). He’s now the leader of the Socialist Action group. He talked me
out of anarchist-pacifism. He argued me out of pacifism on the grounds
that there are some conflicts that have to be fought out. Compromise is
sometimes possible, but no dominant social class is simply going to give
up its power. In terms of anarchism he lent me books on the Spanish
Civil War by Felix Morrow [Revolution and Counter Revolution in Spain,
1938], and a book by Shane Mage on Hungary [The Hungarian Revolution:
Documents, 1960].
These books made the case that what Lenin meant by a socialist state was
a state that is controlled by the workers. I had already read State and
Revolution and was not at all convinced by Lenin’s argument that
socialists should seize state power, and that the state would then
somehow wither away. He also seemed to be saying that anyone who
disagreed with his conception of socialism and Marxism was a traitor,
renegade, and so on.
The books by Morrow and Mage said that what Lenin meant by the
“dictatorship of the proletariat” was that workers should form workers
councils, that peasants should form peasant councils, and that soldiers
should form their own councils, and that all of these different councils
should form a larger association of councils that would represent an
alternative form of power to the capitalist state, even in its liberal
form. I thought, “Hey! I believe in that.” It seemed to fit with my
anarchoid beliefs. In fact, I still believe in this form of political
organization, although I wouldn’t call it a “state.” Mackler helped push
me in the direction of becoming some sort of Trotskyist. Of course, now
I know more about what Lenin actually did during the early years of the
Revolution. It was much later that I would start to read the critics of
Lenin, such as Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman. Not that Lenin was
Stalin. I don’t think he intended to create a totalitarian system.
Hal Draper wrote an interesting book about the concept of the
dictatorship of the proletariat [The Dictatorship of the Proletariat
from Marx to Lenin, 1987]. He makes it clear that Marx and Engels were
referring to the rule of the working class, while later Marxists, with
the one exception of Rosa Luxemburg, had something more authoritarian in
mind. Plekhanov, Lenin…they all had an authoritarian conception of a
proletarian dictatorship. One of my criticisms of Draper is that it is
all very well to view Marx and Engels as radical democrats, but how come
almost every one of their followers were authoritarians? There must have
been a deeper problem that Draper was unwilling to see.
KW: Why treat these kinds of writers as unimpeachable sources of
instruction rather than as interesting thinkers?
WP: Well, the basic system hasn’t changed all that much since Marx’s
day. The basic analysis still holds. We don’t need to reinvent the
wheel. On the other hand, most Marxists don’t know how badly Marx
treated his comrades in the First International. He and his followers
would pack meetings and so on. They really played hardball. Marx thought
that he knew all of the answers, and that attitude filtered down into
Marxism. So, when Marxists came to power, they thought they could step
on anybody who got in their way, because they had access to the absolute
truth. The greater good and all that.
KW: Let’s return to your experiences at Queens College.
WP: Our SDS chapter grew during my time at Queens, but I wanted to be
involved in something that was a little less vague in its approach. We
went to various demonstrations and so on, but it wasn’t very cohesive.
There was also the problem at the national level in that many of the
people in SDS were moving in a Maoist direction. I stayed in SDS through
college, but at some point, I also decided to join the Independent
Socialist Clubs (ISC), which was both anti-authoritarian and
revolutionary in its outlook.
KW: I assume that the ISC meetings were held in Manhattan.
WP: Yes. And it was at one of those meetings that I met Sy Landy.
KW: The ISC chapter in the Bay Area was mostly made up of students and
recent graduates – with the obvious exception of Hal and Anne Draper –
whereas the New York City chapter presumably included a number of folks
who had been active in the 1940s and 1950s.
WP: That’s right. A number of the people who were involved knew a lot
about the history of the radical movement, whereas I still had a lot to
learn. But they treated me well. I became especially friendly with Sy. I
put aside my beliefs in decentralism, and my only disagreement was that
I never accepted the idea that the Soviet Union was bureaucratic
collectivist, which was the group’s official position. I thought of the
Soviet Union as state capitalist, although I never figured out the
difference between Raya Dunayevskaya’s version of state capitalism and
Tony Cliff’s position.
KW: Did you find the idea of building a party enjoyable? Did you like
the idea of selling a newspaper and recruiting new members?
WP: I don’t know that I thought of it as fun, but it seemed obvious to
me at the time that if you have a political perspective you need an
organization of some kind. This still seems obvious to me. That’s why,
when I became an anarchist, I gravitated to the “platformists.” Of
course, the organization should be democratic and so on, but you need
some sort of group to get your message out there.
KW: How come Jeff Mackler wasn’t able to recruit you to the YSA/SWP?
WP: As I said, the orthodox Trotskyist perspective – that countries like
the Soviet Union were workers states of some type – seemed utterly
idiotic, not to mention morally heinous. In particular, they gave
uncritical support to the Castro dictatorship.
KW: What about the counter-cultural aspects of the sixties?
WP: I was pretty much what we would now call straight-edge. Didn’t drink
or do drugs, didn’t go to rock concerts. I was just a guy going to
college. And I remember in college reading a guy named Robert Linder, a
Sociologist, who said that being gay was an illness. And at the time I
accepted that. I knew that Paul Goodman had been bisexual, but it didn’t
make much of an impression. By the 1970s of course I knew a lot of
people who were gay and lesbian.
Later on, young people would sometimes ask me, “Was Wayne a hippie?” And
I would always say, “no.” There was a big distinction between the
“politicals” and the hippies, and I was always in the political camp.
KW: Were you put off by some of the frenzied rhetoric of the period?
Some people seemed to imagine that the revolution was around the corner.
WP: I was never attracted to the overheated rhetoric and imagery of
violence that was popular in that time. I thought that groups like the
Weather Underground were pretty terrible. Remember that for a while I
was a pacifist, and I continued to abhor violence. My activities at the
time were mostly focused on the antiwar movement – I attended most of
the large demonstrations, as well as the national antiwar conferences. I
fought for our politics, which were revolutionary, but I was never in
favor of blowing things up. I remember the US-SWP leader Peter Camejo
once saying that the IS was the “least crazy” of the ultra-left. And
aside from that I was involved in the teachers union, at the local and
national level.
I certainly never thought that the revolution was around the corner. I
remember having an argument with my girlfriend at the time – she
expected that the revolution would happen during her lifetime, and I did
not. The most I expected to see was a continued upswing in the left,
growing militancy and so on. Now more than ever my hope is to see the
growth of a left, and a radical wing of the left.
KW: Did you attend the famous SDS convention in 1969, which more or less
destroyed the organization?
WP: No, but I attended the founding convention of the International
Socialists in the same year, which was formed out of the ISC. It was an
exciting convention, in part because the group had recruited a group of
SDSers who were based in Chicago. A member of the group was Ron Tabor,
who I later worked with in the Revolutionary Socialist League. There
were some interesting arguments, including over the question of whether
and how to support the National Liberation Front (NLF) in Vietnam. There
was also some discussion about the ISC’s involvement in the Peace and
Freedom Party’s 1968 presidential campaign, which was a complete
disaster.
KW: Did your parents have any misgivings about your political activism?
WP: Not really. Had I dropped out of college to become a full-time
revolutionary that would have upset them. As long as I was attending
college, they were fine. We had political discussions, of course. They
were left-liberals and I favored some sort of unorthodox Trotskyism. But
our underlying values were similar.
KW: At some point after its formation the IS embraced a strategy of
industrialization. What was your attitude toward the idea of sending
former college students into factories?
WP: I agreed with the policy, but on the other hand I wasn’t going to go
into industry. Instead, I became a school teacher, and joined the AFT
[American Federation of Teachers]. That’s where I met Steve Zeluck, who
had been active in the SWP for many years and who then joined the IS. He
was very knowledgeable, and he was very political in how he dealt with
people. A serious person. He was close to a man named Carl Feingold, who
had also been in the SWP. We managed to build a small caucus within the
AFT, but there were people in the IS who thought that teachers were not
all that interesting compared to, say, steel workers.
KW: Did anyone ever browbeat you into leaving the classroom for the shop
floor?
WP: Not really. I knew I’d never last in a factory. But in general, the
fact that the IS undertook this work was to their credit. There was a
labor upsurge in the early 1970s that the IS was able to relate to, and
which has been largely overlooked by historians. It was in this period
that there was a massive post office wildcat, as well as the
unionization of a large section of the public sector workforce. Indeed,
today it’s public sector employees who are largely responsible for
keeping the union movement going.
KW: Did you think of your work as a special education teacher in
political terms or simply as a job that allowed you to pay the bills?
WP: Well, both. The job itself was political in the very basic sense of
doing good to help kids. And in the first year that I became a teacher
there was the controversial NYC teachers strike of 1968, which pitted
the black community in the Ocean Hill-Brownsville area of Brooklyn, who
wanted more African-American teachers, and a greater emphasis on black
history, and the teachers union. I was sympathetic to the community, and
against the strike. It was ironic that in my very first year as a
teacher I crossed a picket line, but the strike itself was basically
racist. Neither side was perfect, but I thought that it was important to
support the community.
KW: When did you make the shift to becoming a school psychologist?
WP: After about ten years or so.
KW: Let’s say that a student came to you with a reading problem. Was
your approach to help them see things in terms of political and social
issues?
WP: No. First of all, I was basically there to do assessments, and I
didn’t believe in indoctrinating anybody. On the other hand, I had a big
picture of Malcolm X hanging in my office. I still remember a little
girl who looked at the picture and said, “But he didn’t like white
people!” And I said to her, “No, he didn’t like bad white people. I’m a
good white person.” This was terribly oversimplified, of course, but not
completely off the mark.
To some extent, as a teacher I tried to help the students gain a wider
perspective on things. I was the only teacher at my school who didn’t
salute the flag at school assemblies, for example. And I made a point of
covering the history of slavery. There was one time that I was asked to
organize a school assembly, and my wife, who is a folk singer, sang
songs with the kids about abolitionism, runaway slaves, John Brown, and
Harriet Tubman. The name of the school is the Harriet Tubman School, so
it was considered more or less appropriate by the authorities. But did I
discuss Marxism with the students? No. I was there to help them think
for themselves.
After I had worked in the assessment unit for a few years I became a
liaison between the assessment unit and the teachers union. That allowed
me to ramp up my union activity. I was also active in a leftwing caucus
within the union that included people from IS and some other groups.
KW: Were there specific people in the IS whom you gravitated toward?
WP: I was close to Sy Landy for a long time. He was an interesting guy,
and there were a number of people who admired him and listened to him.
Highly neurotic in many ways. He was a member of the missing generation
between the radicals of the 1930s and 1940s, and the radicals of the
1960s. He was very much a New York Jew, and a real raconteur. I remember
that at one point he decided to lose some weight, so he ate baked
chicken every day. He did not find it easy to write, and he sometimes
got in a funk. He and Ron Tabor never became friends, but I liked him a
lot.
KW: What you think of Hal Draper?
WP: I met him a few times but did not get to know him. The person from
Draper’s generation that most impressed me was Stan Weir. He was a
lovely human being. He was such a nice guy. A charming and exceptional
person. I wish I had got to know him better.
KW: I have the impression that you were going to a lot of meetings
during this period.
WP: So many meetings! If there was an important union meeting we would
first meet among ourselves, then we’d go to the meeting, and then we
would meet afterwards to discuss the meeting. It was ridiculous. There
was hardly time for anything else. And I hated meetings! Political
discussions I liked, but not meetings.
When the fight that led to the formation of the Revolutionary Socialist
League broke out there was a step by step process. At first, we
attempted to reorient the IS, to prod it in a revolutionary direction. I
had been attracted to the ISC/IS in the first place because of its
emphasis on what Draper referred to as “socialism from below.” But I
remember attending a national meeting of the IS and thinking, “these
people couldn’t bring home cows in the evening, let alone organize a
revolution.” It was too disorganized, too wishy-washy, too much of a
mush-bag.
When Ron Tabor, Sy Landy and others decided to organize a faction, and
push for a revolutionary perspective, I joined them. At the time we
thought that the answer was to return to a properly Trotskyist approach
– with the exception of the Soviet question, since none of us accepted
Trotsky’s view that the Soviet Union was a degenerated workers state. I
was pleased to see the faction emerge, although I didn’t enjoy the fact
that it cut me off from folks that I had been close to such as Carl
Feingold and Steve Zeluck. I liked both of them very much and was
disappointed that they opposed our faction.
At first, we made a sincere effort to change the IS. But it soon became
apparent that we were not going to be able to reorient the group and
instead it splintered. For one thing, we were concerned that the IS was
unwilling to criticize reform-minded union leaders like Arnold Miller of
the miners union. People like Kim Moody were more much inclined to
support progressive union leaders against the corrupt old guard than we
were. We also thought that the IS had not done enough to purge itself of
its Shachtmanite baggage.
KW: Let’s talk about what your group meant by developing a
“revolutionary Trotskyist perspective.” Did that mean that you placed a
heavy emphasis on what Trotsky referred to as “the coming economic
crisis”?
WP: Yes. Trotsky and Lenin both assumed that after World War I
capitalism would enter a period of long-term decline and that the period
would be characterized by increasingly deep economic crises. This led us
to believe that the prosperity of the post-WWII period would be short
lived, and that it was giving way to a new era of extended crisis. We
argued that the postwar boom was based on the political defeat of the
international working class as well as the massive destruction wrought
by the two world wars, particularly the Second World War. We did not
think that these developments would in any way undermine the fundamental
tendency of the falling rate of profit. We also took note of the fact
that the prolonged period of crisis would wreak havoc on the natural
environment. We certainly disagreed with those who insisted that
capitalism had found a way – through state spending or whatever other
means – to stave off its inherent tendency toward crisis.
While we were broadly correct about the nature of the period we were
living in – about the end of the postwar boom, and the growing
ecological crisis – we overstated the degree to which the crisis of the
mid-1970s would preclude further periods of economic expansion. We
underestimated the degree to which there would still be cycles of boom
and bust. On the other hand, we were absolutely right when we emphasized
the calamitous impact that capitalism was having and would continue to
have on the environment.
This was a period when the far left in the United States continued to be
attracted to Stalinist regimes, since these were the governments that
seemed to be fighting U.S. imperialism. Ho Chi Min, Chairman Mao, and
Fidel Castro were attractive figures for many of the people who became
politicized during the 1960s and 1970s. For the most part the orthodox
Trotskyists remained on the margins, and their theoretical analysis of
the Soviet Union and other Stalinist regimes was terrible.
KW: When the RSL referred to itself as Trotskyist did that mean that the
group emphasized the importance of transitional demands, as Trotsky
himself argued for in the late 1930s?
WP: Yes, exactly. We were in favor of bringing the transitional program
into the workers movement as a way of educating workers about the nature
of capitalism. We were also impressed by Trotsky’s ideas about the
importance of the United Front, about the permanent revolution, and so
on. We tried to apply these ideas in our day-to-day work, but not always
with much success. We didn’t necessarily believe that we would be able
to necessarily appeal to the entire working class, but we hoped that we
could reach what we referred to as the “advanced layer.” The notion was
that there were “advanced” individuals and groupings of workers, and
youth, and that if we could attract them then we could begin to build
what could become the nucleus of a true revolutionary party. We did not
think that our program alone would allow us to win over the working
class, but we did hope to win over a layer of militants that would allow
us to build a much larger organization.
KW: Were the folks who stayed in the IS more “experimental” in their
approach, less programmatically oriented? I can’t imagine that someone
like Kim Moody was necessarily against transitional demands, or against
having a well-run organization. In some ways I still find it difficult
to understand what was at stake in the 1973 split.
WP: A small part of it had to do with the fact that we had come to the
conclusion that the group around Max Shachtman was wrong to split from
the US Socialist Workers Party in 1940, whereas the IS was still
fundamentally Shachtmanite in its approach. But that is a little
abstract. The main issue was that our aim was to organize
self-identified revolutionaries around a specific political program,
whereas the goal of the IS was to work alongside rank-and-filers inside
the labor movement. Draper said that the main thing was to get the
working class moving. And this is why the IS majority was much less
critical of groups like Miners for Democracy, or Teamsters for
Democracy, than we were. And this meant that they were much more
comfortable working in coalition with people whose orientation was
non-revolutionary.
KW: From what I can tell about a hundred people left the International
Socialists in 1973 with your faction, many of whom went on to join the
Revolutionary Socialist League. Where were most of these people based?
WP: Well, several of the leaders lived in Detroit, and there were
sizable branches in New York City and Los Angeles.
KW: Did the RSL ever experience a period of growth?
WP: At first it did, and for a few years we were excited about where
things were going. The problem was that we were overly optimistic about
the period. We expected that there would be further waves of
radicalization, but instead it soon became apparent that things were
moving in a conservative direction. The Vietnam War was no longer an
issue, and even the civil rights movement was winding down. Not that
black people were liberated, or U.S. imperialism ended. But as a result
of these external developments some of the people who had taken part in
the faction fight, and had then either joined the RSL, or who had been
close to our group, drifted away from politics.
KW: So, by the early 1980s the group was smaller than it had been.
WP: Yes, it got smaller, even though we continued to put out our paper –
Torch – and held educational meetings that were open to the public. But
at some point, we got tired of being the tenth smallest group on the
Trotskyist left. There didn’t seem to be much of a point.
KW: And, presumably, people who had been in their teens and twenties
during the 1960s were now a bit older and were starting families and so
on.
WP: Of course, our initial expectation had been that we would be able to
attract a new, younger layer of members, but we were not able to do so
to the extent that we needed to. And that was true across the left.
In the same period, we were also beginning to rethink our basic
positions vis-Ă -vis Trotskyism and Leninism. We had always faced the
question of, well, if Trotsky is so good then why did Trotsky continue
to believe that the Soviet Union was some kind of workers state?
KW: And if orthodox Trotskyism wasn’t your organizing principle then
what was?
WP: Exactly. So then we started to reexamine the writings of Lenin, and
we discovered that there were problems with Lenin’s approach as well as
Trotsky’s. Why did Lenin establish a one-party police state? We now know
that even before the civil war of 1919–1921 broke out that the
Bolsheviks engaged in things like gerrymandering, censorship, using the
state apparatus to imprison and kill political opponents without
anything resembling due process, and so on.
And this took us back to Marxism – what was there about Marx’s own
approach that helped make sense of subsequent events? After all, the
first wave of Marxists ended up in the camp of pro-imperialist social
democracy, and the second wave ended up with Stalinist totalitarianism.
If, as Engels used to say, the proof of the pudding is in the eating,
then what was the evidence telling us? Clearly there was a problem. You
can point to certain objective forces, which is undoubtedly important,
but there has to be more at stake than simply the “backwardness” of the
Russian economy and so on. As a result of these conversations we became
interested in what anarchism had to offer.
KW: Was there an individual who raised the sharpest questions about this
issue of political traditions?
WP: Yes – Ron Tabor. Sy Landy had already formed his own group, the
League for a Revolutionary Party, in 1976. He and the people around him
were determined to stick to the original formula – a fairly orthodox
Trotskyism with a state-capitalist analysis of Soviet-style regimes. The
group around Landy also disagreed with the fact that we were calling for
a labor party in the United States. Looking back, I think they were
quite right about that.
KW: Did this affect your relationship with Sy Landy, who had been a
friend of yours for at least a decade?
WP: Yes, sadly, it did. Even though I was closer to Sy I sided with the
majority, which was led by Ron Tabor. Once Sy left Ron was the key
figure. As I mentioned earlier, he had brought a group of SDSers into
the IS and he continued to have a group around him during the
1970s-1980s. Ron was very sharp and very dedicated. I always respected
and admired him.
KW: The RSL’s shift toward anarchism is interesting, especially given
that the leadership of the group played such a major role. There must be
tremendous pressure, I would imagine, for the leadership of a small
leftwing group to stick to the original formula. It’s the group’s
“brand,” after all. To tell your membership that you’re willing to
reopen fundamental political questions seems like a risky strategy from
the perspective of brand management. If anything, the more typical
trajectory is for the leadership to become frozen in their thinking.
WP: You’re right – it was unusual. I remember a comrade saying to me,
“We are the damnedest sort of Trotskyists,” because we kept on
reevaluating our perspective. We didn’t just reexamine our tactics and
our strategy, but the broad background. But I found the process
exciting, in part because I had started out as an anarchist-pacifist and
was already familiar with non-Marxist varieties of radicalism. My values
had never really changed, even though I allowed myself to imagine that
there was a democratic form of Leninism that emphasized workers
councils, assemblies, and so forth.
It was in this period that Ron started writing major articles on
Trotskyism, Leninism, Marxism, and anarchism. I also contributed to
these discussions, which we featured in our newspaper. But at the same
time the group was getting smaller and smaller, and once we no longer
saw ourselves as Trotskyists, we decided to orient ourselves toward the
anarchists.
By the time we dissolved the RSL and had decided to fuse with other
anarchists to form Love and Rage, we had lost a good majority of the
membership. A minority of us continued onto Love and Rage, merging with
other people, including the group around Chris Gunderson, which was
based in Minneapolis – the Revolutionary Anarchist Bowling League, or
RABL. At one point they threw a bowling ball through a plate glass
window, which inspired their name. Most of the anarchists we worked with
were younger than we were, which was part of the appeal. We had been
attending various anarchist meetings throughout the 1980s, and we were
on the lookout for the people who were interested in building some sort
of organization, as well as putting out a newspaper. We still wanted to
get the word out, even though we were no longer operating from a
Leninist perspective. Only a minority of the anarchists we met were
interested in working within any sort of organization.
KW: Were there anarchists who thought it was suspicious that a group of
former Trotskyists were turning up at their meetings?
WP: Oh yes. We were viciously attacked. There was a widespread sense
that the RSL was engaged in some sort of entryism inside the anarchist
milieu in order to win them over to Leninism. The funny thing was that,
later on, when Love and Rage came apart, it was precisely the ex-RSLers
who were most committed to anarchist ideals, whereas the folks from the
other side, who had started out as anarchists, were in the process of
giving up on anarchism and taking up Maoism. It turns out that we were
going in different directions but for a short period our paths crossed.
We all thought we were headed in the same direction, but this proved not
to be the case. This happens more than people realize, in life as well
as in politics.
KW: Once Love and Rage got off the ground, what did the group do? Did
you put up posters? Organize concerts? In the 1980s at least, anarchists
seemed deeply involved in the punk movement, around bands like Fugazi.
WP: We participated in those sorts of events, but mostly we put out a
newspaper, and we tried to build local groups around the country, and
indeed across North America. We took part in the various demonstrations
that were held in Washington, D.C., and helped build anarchist and
anticapitalist contingents at those kinds of events. We tried to do some
community organizing, and we were also interested in supporting
anti-fascist campaigns.
KW: Was the anarchist milieu of the 1980s more relaxed, and friendlier,
than the Marxist milieu of the 1970s? Were the folks who were around
anarchist politics nicer than the Marxists, or were they the same sorts
of people but with different political views?
WP: It was a mixed bag. On the one hand, there was the shared sense in
both instances that we wanted to change the world, and if we don’t
change the world then we are all doomed. Both movements attracted a
variety of social types, including people with serious emotional issues.
In the case of the anarchist movement, a good number of people, perhaps
the majority, can be described as “lifestyle anarchists,” which places a
heavy emphasis on living your own life and doing your own thing, and
that in and of itself will change the world. Those people had the
advantage of being politically nonsectarian, although they were
sometimes very snooty about it. On the other hand, there were the
explicitly revolutionary anarchists, who sometimes turned out to be
rather authoritarian in their approach. There are definitely people in
the world of anarchism who believe that they know all the answers. I
have the sense, for example, that Paul Goodman, whom I learned a lot
from, held the view that if you didn’t agree with him then you just
didn’t understand what he was saying.
KW: In other words, you don’t need a Leninist vocabulary, or Leninist
theory, to behave in ways that are deeply sectarian and even cultish.
WP: Exactly. It was said of Dorothy Day, the founder of the Catholic
Worker movement, that she loved anarchism as long as she could be the
anarch. And of course, she probably built the largest group of
anarchists that this country has ever seen, with the single most widely
read anarchist paper in the country. We don’t always think of the
Catholic Worker as an anarchist paper, but it’s true.
But what else can we expect? These are human beings created by
capitalism.
KW: Did your background in psychology help you avoid some of these
issues?
WP: Not avoid, but perhaps understand. It’s useful to be able to listen
and not just talk. And of course, the anarchist tradition is very good
on this question, with its emphasis on consensus, using facilitators
rather than chairs, and so on. There’s an attempt at least to encourage
everyone to participate on an equal basis. That’s the ideal, at any
rate.
KW: Presumably many anarchists have problems with a class-centered
approach to politics. There’s an entire current that builds on the
extreme individualism of Max Stirner, for example.
WP: Absolutely. My articles are often reprinted on a website called
Anarchist News, and they have a coterie around them of self-described
individualists, egoists, post-leftists, Stirnerites, and so on and they
always object to any kind of reference to the working class.
KW: Do you think of those sorts of anarchists as closer to you in
political terms than, say, a Marxist who identifies with writers like
C.L.R. James and Martin Glaberman, because of the shared anarchist
label?
WP: No. Not really. I’ve always felt close to the libertarian socialist
tradition, as well as people who regard themselves as Marxist-humanists.
I’ve also learned a lot from the council communists – people like Paul
Mattick. I’ve also learned from the unorthodox wing of Trotskyism,
including someone like Hal Draper.
KW: When Draper’s right he’s more right than anyone.
WP: That’s a nice way of putting it. He was rather prejudiced against
anarchists, but he had a very sharp mind. I have a friend who calls
himself an anarcho-Marxist. I don’t know if I would use that term but
it’s not a million miles away from my own position.
KW: Are there anarchists who regard you as a pretend-anarchist?
WP: There are definitely people who contribute to the Anarchist News
website who do not accept that I am part of the anarchist movement. The
fact that I regard aspects of Marxist theory as useful for anarchists is
highly problematic from their perspective.
KW: How do you handle this question of defining yourself as an
anarchist?
WP: As it happens, I wrote an article on precisely this question of
whether I regard myself as an anarchist. And my answer was, “Yes-ish.”
Whether I’m an orthodox anarchist is something I don’t give a damn
about. I don’t know what orthodoxy would even mean in this context. I’m
not particularly interested in trying to prove that I’m an anarchist.
Obviously I’m influenced by Marx, but I also think that we can learn a
lot from people like John Dewey and others in the pragmatic tradition,
as well as Freud, Darwin, and so on. One of the advantages of the
anarchist tradition is that it is open in a way that Marxism is not.
Anarchism does not claim to know everything and is willing to learn from
other theoretical traditions. There are anarchists on the web who insist
that it is impossible to be an anarchist and a socialist, and yet almost
all of the classical anarchists called themselves socialists. Proudhon
called himself a socialist, for example; so did Benjamin Tucker, and of
course Emma Goldman.
KW: From the outside it seems as if some number of younger anarchists
are close to an anarcho-capitalist position.
WP: I don’t know if those people call themselves anarchists or not. The
right-wing libertarians who toy with anarcho-capitalist ideas basically
want what we have right now but without the police or the welfare state.
And if you think about it that is an awful idea. But most anarchists
would draw the line at anarcho-capitalists, not to mention so-called
“national anarchists,” who are close to a fascist position.
KW: It’s not as if Marxism hasn’t had some of these problems.
WP: The varieties of Marxism are infinite.
KW: Do you feel like you’ve come full circle, and that you’ve returned
to the politics that you identified with when you were twenty?
WP: Yes and no. In the sense that my values are fundamentally the same,
then the answer is yes. I now identify with decentralism, which I put
aside when I joined the unorthodox Trotskyists. But on the other hand, I
no longer identify with pacifism. At twenty I did not place much value
on the idea of a working-class revolution, which is now at the heart of
my politics. Some anarchists would be sympathetic to my emphasis on
class politics, and class conflict, but others would not. Of course,
this question divides Marxists as well – for example, writers like Tony
Negri and John Holloway call themselves Marxists but reject the idea of
a class-based revolutionary struggle.
-END-
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Interviewer’s bio: Kent Worcester is the author, editor, and coeditor of
numerous books on political theory, labor history, and the politics of
popular culture, including C.L.R. James: A Political Biography (1996), A
Comics Studies Reader (2008), and The Superhero Reader (2013). His most
recent book is Silent Agitators: Cartoon Art from the Pages of New
Politics (2016).