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Title: Objectivity and Right-Libertarian Scholarship
Author: Anarcho
Date: January 12, 2009
Language: en
Topics: Spanish Civil War, Spanish Revolution, anarcho-capitalism, anarcho-syndicalism, history, a reply
Source: Retrieved 9 July 2021 from: https://anarchism.pageabode.com/book/objectivity-and-right-libertarian-scholarship/
Notes: This is a reply to the essay https://econfaculty.gmu.edu/bcaplan/spain.htm][The Anarcho-Statists of Spain]] by Bryan Caplan. The bibliography of this piece is that of an Anarchist FAQ, available at: [[https://anarchism.pageabode.com/book/bibliography-for-faq/][anarchism.pageabode.com]] as well as [[http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/the-anarchist-faq-editorial-collective-an-anarchist-faq-16-17

Anarcho

Objectivity and Right-Libertarian Scholarship

1. Introduction

In his essay, Caplan decides to expose the alleged secret statist nature

of the Spanish Anarchist movement. He states that “many discussions of

the Spanish Civil War overlook, minimize, or apologize for the atrocious

behavior and tyrannical aspirations of perhaps the most powerful faction

of Spanish Republicans: the Anarchist movement.”

It is, of course, true that some anarchists in Spain did act in

atrocious ways and in non- (even anti-) anarchist ways. However, things

are quite different from what Caplan claims in many cases. This rebuttal

will indicate where Caplan’s biases lie and show how they undermine the

objectivity of the evidence he selects and presents. In so doing, I

shall indicate that Caplan’s “analysis” is lacking and that his thesis

is wrong in all its major conclusions.

I shall make points in line with his headings and will concentrate on

the parts with which I disagree and present evidence that disproves his

claims. This means that many of his statements are apparently “ignored,”

but only in the sense we do not wish to quote extensively just to state

“we agree with this.” Like all myths, Caplan’s “analysis” does contain

elements of truth. However, as will be proved, in the end his case falls

apart in light of all the facts.

In producing this critique of Caplan’s work, I was reminded of the

following words by Albert Meltzer:

“The fact is that Liberal-Democracy seldom voices any arguments against

Anarchism as such — other than relying on prejudice — because its

objections are purely authoritarian and unmask the innate Statism and

authoritarianism of liberalism. Nowadays conservatives like to

appropriate the name ‘libertarianism’ to describe themselves as if they

were more receptive to freedom than socialists. But their libertarianism

is confined to keeping the State out of interfering in their business

affairs. Once anarchism makes it plain that it is possible to have both

social justice and to dispense with the State they are shown in their

true colours. Their arguments against State socialism and Communism may

sound ‘libertarian’, but their arguments against Anarchism reveal that

they are essentially authoritarian. That is why they prefer to rely upon

innuendo, slanders, and false reporting, which is part of the

establishment anti-anarchism, faithfully supported by the media.”

[Anarchism: Arguments for and against, pp. 46–48]

Unfortunately, Caplan’s work proves his point. I hope to prove that

Caplan’s wrote is mostly false reporting, based upon selective

presentation of evidence in order to paint a radically false picture of

the Spanish Anarchist movement. In this I think that Caplan is more

motivated by ideology than by objectivity. For example, when discussing

the activities of Spanish Anarchists he constantly takes those

anarchists who act in non-libertarian ways as “typical” and so ignores

the vast majority who did stick to their principles – for example, he

seems to consider that the few anarchists who committed assassinations

after July 19^(th), 1936, as more typical of Spanish Anarchism than the

many others who did not commit murders. This in itself suggests that his

“case” is somewhat lacking, but I suppose its easier to concentrate on

the few who “make the headlines” than the majority who spent their time

creating collectives, at the front or spent their time educating others

about the need for freedom and co-operation and what anarchism is.

Also, before going on, I will state here that I oppose the CNTs decision

to collaborate with the government against the greater evil of fascism.

I agree with the vast majority of anarchist writers on this subject that

the first and greatest mistake of the Spanish anarchist movement was the

mistaken belief that they could work with one side of capitalism (the

democratic state) against another (fascism). As the history of the

compromise proves, the struggle against fascism is best achieved by also

fighting the system that created it (capitalism). The real alternative

facing the CNT-FAI was not “the war or the revolution” but

“revolutionary war or defeat”.

Finally, I dedicate this to all individuals who desire a free society

and who do not blind themselves with ideology when looking at the past

or at the present. Liberty requires a mind free from ideology and so

with the ability to think for itself.

2. History and the Spanish Anarchists

A. The Militants and Terror

Caplan starts with the following: “In July of 1936, officers throughout

Spain tried to orchestrate a coup detat against the Republican

government. In Catalonia, Aragon, and other areas, Anarchist militants

defeated the military uprisings. Finding themselves more powerful than

the regional governments and possibly the central government, the

Spanish Anarchists seized the moment to implement some radical changes

in those regions of Spain where they had a large following.

“One of these radical changes was to beginning large-scale murders of

people believed to be supporters of the Nationalists. In most cases,

these supporters had taken no specific action to assist the Nationalist

rebellion; they were singled out for their beliefs, or what people

guessed their beliefs were.”

Firstly, the statement that the anarchist militants “implemented” the

radical change of “large-scale murders” of Nationalists is somewhat

loaded (to say the least). This suggests that the CNT-FAI policy was

“implemented” at this time and nothing could be further from the truth.

It is commonly agreed by historians that the wave of assassinations that

occurred in the three months after the uprising was “at bottom a

spontaneous movement, corresponding to the necessities of a

revolutionary war, where the enemy within may be as dangerous as the

enemy outside.” [Gerald Brenan, The Spanish Labyrinth, p. 318] As we

note later, all the libertarian organisations officially opposed

assassinations and acted to stop them. Therefore to say that one of the

“radical changes” that “Anarchist militants” introduced was “large-scale

murder” is simply false. Yes, some anarchist militants took part in

assassinations, the vast majority did not. Notice how Caplan takes the

few as “typical”, not the majority.

It should also be pointed out here that the use of the words

“large-scale murders” does not present a fair picture of the level of

the killings. In Burnett Bolloten’s book, The Grand Camouflage, page 41,

Diego Abad de Santillan is quoted as saying:

“It is possible our victory resulted in the death by violence of four or

five thousand inhabitants of Catalonia who were listed as rightists and

were linked to political or ecclesiastical reaction.”

Given that the population of Catalonia was nearly 3 million in 1936, a

figure of 5,000 deaths hardly amounts to “large-scale” murder by any

means. Perhaps he meant that it was 5,000 too many, in which case I

would agree – the assassination of unarmed individuals is not a

libertarian act, even in the face of a fascist coup. However, Caplan’s

use of the expression does present a certain mental image to the reader,

as intended. However, to see whether this picture is true or not, it is

important understanding in what context and why these murders took place

otherwise a distinctly false image will be created. As we will prove,

these murders occurred mostly as acts of revenge by individuals and

small groups and as a result of the total breakdown of ‘law and order’.

Perhaps, to get a better picture of the context of the wave of

assassinations in Catalonia, we should contrast what occurred there with

the events in Zaragoza. Zaragoza, in Aragon, was a CNT stronghold. The

town had 20,000 CNT members. Unlike the CNT in Barcelona, the CNT

believed the words of the Popular Front government and did not arm

themselves by direct action. The solid general strike by the CNT failed

and the fascists used the city’s Bull rings to organise the murder of

3,000 anti-fascists, mostly CNT members. Franco’s regime was backed by

capitalists inside and outside Spain.

In other words, the forces supported by capitalists murdered almost as

many people in one town as the armed population did in the whole of

Catalonia. After Franco won the civil war, he murdered tens of thousands

more (probably hundreds of thousands) and produced a nation into which

capitalists happily invested. As capitalists have discovered across the

world, terror is an effective means of ensuring high profits and

employer power.

Caplan then quotes Oliver and De Santillan about these murders in which

they indicate that they were the result of arming an oppressed

population. He then states that “De Santillan’s comment typifies the

Spanish Anarchists’ attitude toward his movement’s act of murder of

several thousand people for their political views: it is a mere ‘natural

phenomenon,’ nothing to feel guilty over.” However, as noted, De

Santillan is pointing out the facts of what happened. Is he to “feel

guilty” for actions which members of his organisation committed and

which he had no power to stop? As one historian points out “Barcelona

was convulsed by a wave of random killings” by “execution gangs” some of

whom had links to political and union organisations. [Benjamin Martin,

The Agony of Modernization, p. 385] According to one eye-witness “The

libertarians controlled all the most important ‘secretariats’ — but in

reality power lay still in the streets.” [Blood of Spain, p. 143]

Another states that “There was a deep, very deep wave of popular fury as

a result of the military uprising which followed on so many years of

oppression and provocation.” [Op. Cit., p . 151]

In other words, after years of violent repression by the state and

capitalists, in the face of a military uprising, backed by these same

elements, which aimed to create a fascist state, many people, some of

whom were members of libertarian organisations, took the “law” into

their own hands. This accurately sums up the nature of the murders –

essentially revenge killings by small groups and individuals, some of

whom were members of the anarchist movement. Caplan, however, ignores

this fact and instead suggests that the CNT-FAI organised these deaths

(“his movement’s act of murder”) while in fact they occurred outside of

anyone’s control.

To quote a Basque Nationalist, a Republican and a Catholic on the nature

of the terror in Republican Spain:

“Blood, a great deal of innocent blood was shed on both sides... But the

most radical difference as far as the Republican zone was concerned —

which does not justify, but at least explains, the excesses — lies in

the very fact of the [military] insurrection. The army, almost the

entire secret police, the administration of justice, whatever police

forces there were, whose duty it was to maintain order, revolted,

leaving the legal government defenceless. The latter was compelled to

arm the people, the jails were opened to release friendly political

prisoners, and the common-law criminals who came out with them acted on

their own account. Furthermore, with the stirring up of the lower depths

of society, the malefactors that exist in every city, in every nation,

came to the surface, and found an easy field for their work...Is it

surprising that during the first days of the revolt these uncontrolled

elements dispensed justice in a rude and elementary fashion, the justice

of men who had suffered and had been moulded in an atmosphere of hatred?

All this does not justify the crimes committed in the Republican zone,

but it readily explains them.” [The Spanish Civil War, p. 53]

In other words, the anarchists can hardly be blamed for the fascist coup

and the social breakdown which occurred after it, nor for the actions

during that time of individual CNT and FAI members acting on their own

initiative.

Caplan goes on to claim that “Political belief was not the only kind of

heterodoxy which the Spanish Anarchists refused to tolerate.” This is a

strange statement, since members of the UGT, republicans, socialists and

communists were not singled out for repression. The shootings were often

motivated by revenge or were murders of supporters of the fascist coup

i.e. those who desired to create a totalitarian regime in Spain like

those in Italy and Germany. The Spanish Anarchists were well aware what

their fate would have been if the coup had succeeded. Given this obvious

fact, we can state that Caplan’s claim of lack of tolerance for

political opinions on the part of the Spanish Anarchist movement is

simply false. In other words, Caplan’s statement is hardly an accurate

account of the situation. Moreover, even when we look at repression

directed towards the right, capitalists and landlords we discover that

Caplan’s claims are simply false. Rather than being directed towards

everyone who did not agree with them, the repression was directed

towards those who had taken part in the fascist coup. According to

Gabriel Jackson “[i]n Catalonia and the Levant the anarchists arrested

many a landlord and monarchist on the assumption that he had probably

backed the rising, but most of these people were released when the

evidence, and the testimony of villagers who had known them for years,

indicated that they had had nothing to do with the rising.” He goes on,

“[i]n Andalusia the villagers often arrested such people immediately.

Most of them, far from being shot, were released by the invading army”

and in Aragon there are “many testimonials to the intervention of

Durruti personally to prevent the killing of landlords who had not aided

the rising.” [The Spanish Republic and the Civil War: 1931–1939, p. 532,

p. 292]

Thus Caplan’s claims that the Spanish anarchist have little tolerance

for other opinions have little, if any, basis in the evidence. The

assassinations that did occur seem to have been mostly related to the

role people played in the fascist rising and personal revenge (the role

of released criminals, fascists and of the police and army proving their

loyalty to the Republic in the wave of murders is obviously a difficult

one to empirically prove but one I am sure played an important role in

these days).

The main reason for the many revenge killings can be traced to the many

years of capitalist repression of the working class that had preceded

the revolution, a period during which bosses and factory owners had

routinely hired gunmen, pistoleros, to assassinate labour leaders and

break strikes by the most brutal methods (see below) and the police

regularly operated a “shot when trying to escape” policy against

anarchists and union members. It is hardly surprising that those who had

family members or close friends killed by the ruling class and their

hired thugs seized the opportunity to settle old scores. Reading Caplan,

one would have no inkling of this reason for the killings. This leads us

to suspect that Caplan’s purpose in this essay is to make the anarchists

look as bad as possible, hiding the facts where necessary.

And we must note that the CNT-FAI as organisations opposed the wave of

revenge killings and acted to stop them. According to Blood of Spain

[page 149] “leading CNT militants, like Joan Peiro, fulminated openly

against such actions” and “both the CNT and FAI issued statements

categorically condemning assassinations” The FAI stated: “we must put an

end to these excesses.” “Anyone proven to have infringed people’s rights

would be shot — a threat which was carried out when some

anarcho-syndicalist militants were executed.” Hugh Thomas notes that

from the 25^(th) of July, the CNT and FAI launched a series of protests

against illegal violence” and that in Jaen “the anarchists stopped the

indiscriminate killings and often the gangs concerned were people of no

real political beliefs.” [The Spanish Civil War, p. 277, p. 279]

Another example is the following statement issued by the FAI on July

30^(th):

“We declare coldly, with terrible calm and with full intention to act,

that if the irresponsible people who are spreading terror throughout

Barcelona do not stop, we will shoot every individual who is proven to

have acted against the rights of the people. Every individual so charged

by the CNT or FAI will be tried before a commission composed of elements

of the anti-fascist front. And Barcelona knows, and Spain and the entire

world know, that the men of the FAI never fail to carry out their

promises.” [Quoted in Gomez Casas’ Anarchist Organisation : The history

of the FAI, p. 190]

And let’s not forget that Fraser states that “it should be noted that in

Barcelona and elsewhere the FAI was automatically blamed for

assassinations and crimes” [p. 148] Seems like Caplan is following in

this tradition as well as ignoring the extensive evidence which refutes

his claims.

Caplan then goes on to blame the CNT and FAI for every act of repression

against the Church, ignoring the fact that attacks on the Church had

occurred during every previous popular revolt in Spain. In other words,

the Church was not a well-liked institution, because it took the side of

the ruling class, and people took advantage of every opportunity to

destroy it. This can be seen from the fact that “Protestant churches

were not attacked” [Hugh Thomas, The Spanish Civil War, p. 269f] and

suggest, rather than a result of anarchist anti-religious feeling, the

repression against the church was a popular wave of protest against the

reactionary nature of the Catholic church and its support for state and

capitalist oppression, exploitation and repression against the working

class (as Fraser notes, “From the preceding period of absolutism, the

church provided the ideological categories to justify the repression and

intolerance necessary to maintain the system” p. 525). Of course, some

anarchists did take part in church burning but to claim that anarchists

were responsible for the majority of such acts cannot be proved either

way (and, of course, many anarchists opposed the firing of churches and

the assassinations of priests).

After stating, without evidence, that “it is clear that Anarchist

militants were at the vanguard of the murder squads on the Republican

side” he continues and asks:

“In any case, whether the murders were centrally ordered, completely

decentralized, or (as is most likely) somewhere in between, what

difference does it make?”

In other words, are the CNT-FAI to be blamed for all the actions its

members did (even the ones which they had no power to stop)? Caplan

obviously thinks the answer is yes. Thus he states: “Does it matter if

the widespread Nazi attacks on Jews known as the Kristallnacht were

centrally organized or ‘spontaneous’? No; if an ideology categorizes

many people as sub-human, urging ever greater brutality, and

recommending restraint only when it is tactically convenient, it is

perfectly reasonable to castigate the entire movement centering around

that ideology, whether that movement be Nazism or Spanish anarchism.”

Did Spanish Anarchism categorise members of the ruling class as

“sub-human”? No, they were described as exploiters and oppressors, a

description that even a cursory examination of the history of Spanish

capitalism would reveal to be quite accurate. Caplan then states that

“[i]t is quite clear that the rhetoric of the Spanish anarchists focused

on crushing the enemies of the workers by any means necessary; making

sure that the rights of innocent people who happened to despise

everything Anarchism stood for was simply not on their agenda.” And he

quotes Fraser’s interview of Juan Moreno, a CNT day-labourer:

“We hated the bourgeoisie, they treated us like animals. They were our

worst enemies. When we looked at them we thought we were looking at the

devil himself. And they thought the same of us.”

Does the fact that the bourgeoisie treated workers “like animals” merit

comment by Caplan? No, it does not. Does he mention that part of

treating the workers “like animals” involved a twenty-year reign of

terror in which labour leaders were routinely beaten up and brutally

murdered? No, not a word. Does he criticise the capitalists for hating

the workers just as much as the workers hated them? No. Obviously,

capitalists categorising and treating workers as animals is okay, (as is

hating them) while workers’ returning that feeling toward capitalists is

evil and wrong. In Caplan’s view, the workers’ hatred toward their

masters was created solely by “Anarchist ideology.” Could it be,

however, that in reality it was the capitalist system, defended by

Caplan, which created a class of people whose authority resulted in

other people being “treated like animals,” and that these others,

strangely enough, resented their treatment and hated their oppressors?

Reading Caplan one gets the impression that such a result is perfectly

natural and so unworthy of comment.

And did the capitalists in Spain “make sure of the rights of innocent

people” who happened to be anarchists? Not at all. Anarchists were

rounded up by the fascists, undoubtedly identified with the help of

bosses. Again, one searches in vain for any mention of the years of

repression directed against the anarchist movement as an explanation for

the revenge killings. One wonders, for example, why Caplan does not

quote Ronald Fraser’s Blood of Spain, a work with which he is familiar:

“After the economic boom of the First World War and increasing

proletarian militancy, Catalan employers confronted lean times by

attempting to crush the anarcho-syndicalist movement in Barcelona. The

crushing took the form of creating ‘yellow’ unions and...the hiring of

gunmen to assassinate CNT leaders.” [p. 547]

Where was the concern for “individual rights” then? Perhaps the

assassinations after July 19^(th) were a case of reaping what had been

sown? If you treat people like animals, oppress them, hate them, it can

hardly be unsurprising that they settle the score when they get the

chance? Needless to say, Caplan ignores the extensive evidence of

anarchists protecting “class enemies,” particularly ones that treated

their workers fairly and as human beings and those who had not joined in

the fascist uprising.

Also, we must note, Caplan ignores the bloody and violent repression

directed against the miners revolt in north-west Spain in 1934, headed

by General Franco. This resulted in 1500–2000 dead, many of the deaths

occurring after the end of the fighting. And, indeed, the violent

repression directed against CNT organised insurrections and strikes all

through the 1930s and before.

So, quite possibly, being treated like an animal and seeing one’s fellow

CNT members assassinated by capitalists would have had a serious impact

on how one viewed the bourgeoisie. However, class hatred only seems to

matter when it’s members of the working class who do the hating.

Caplan sums up by stating that “In short, it is perfectly just to impugn

the Anarchist movement as a whole for the numerous atrocities of its

members, because these actions flowed logically from the central ideas

of the movement rather than their misinterpretation by extreme fringe

groups.” In other words, capitalist murder and repression does not

matter, it is the reaction to it by anarchists and workers that that

counts. Their violence shows that the blame really lies with “Anarchist

ideology,” which Caplan apparently believes should have conditioned

workers to accept their oppression with patient resignation. How very

“objective!”

Therefore, given the picture of the social context of the murders that

occurred in the Republican zone after July 19^(th), Caplan’s

“conclusion” can be seen to be totally wrong. It is not “perfectly just”

to impugn the anarchist movement for the reactions of some of its

members to years of oppression, beatings and assassinations by the

supporters of capitalism. In addition, as indicated, the CNT-FAI acted

to stop assassinations and murders. Caplan, in order to make his “case”

must distort history. Few, except die-hard anti-anarchists, could take

his case seriously.

B. The Leaders and Collaboration

Caplan next states that “public records concerning the Anarchist

leadership’s record of collaboration with the central and regional

governments throughout Spain provides ample documentation of a long

series of abuses and betrayals of what good principles the Anarchist

movement held dear.”

This is very true. However the reason for these abuses and betrayals is

not mentioned. This handily creates an impression that the CNT-FAI were

just “secret statists” all along. Unfortunately for Caplan, this is not

the case, as the overwhelming reason for the long series of abuses and

betrayals is the fact that a fascist coup had occurred and there was a

need to stop it. It is hardly surprising that many in the CNT and FAI

considered fascism to be a serious threat. Caplan’s failure to mention

this little fact suggests that the threat posed by fascism does not

weight very heavily in his mind. In this he follows those many

capitalists, both in and outside of Spain, who supported fascism.

He then presents the discredited claim that the FAI acted like a

dictatorship and controlled the CNT. This claim was started by the

dissident treintista CNT members when they were replaced by the more

radical anarchists in union elections (see Anarchist Organisation: The

History of the FAI). If the FAI members did “impose their decisions...”

against the wishes of the CNT membership, then why was the CNT a mass

organisation? And why did only 35,000 workers join the treintista union

split? The simple fact is that the more radical anarchists and

syndicalists convinced their fellow workers of their ideas and they

elected them to union positions.

He goes to say that “[w]hile the CNT and especially the FAI repeatedly

condemned political participation before the Civil War, it was

extraordinarily easy to induce CNT leaders to accept ministerial

positions in the central government.” Could the war against fascism and

the need for weapons and support for industry not have something to do

with it? It’s very true that power corrupts, even anarchists, and this

can be seen from the desire of many “anarchists” to join any government

after the initial compromises had been made.

Caplan correctly quotes Bolloten when the later notes that “Not only did

this decision [to join the government] represent a complete negation of

the basic tenets of Anarchism, shaking the whole structure of

libertarian theory to the core, but, in violation of democratic

principle, it had been taken without consulting the rank and file.”

Again, all the anarchists who have written on this subject have argued

the same point. The rank and file should have been fully consulted.

However, and this point is important, the fact that the rank and file

did not oppose the decision says that the decision was not at odds with

desires of the CNT membership. This is confirmed by the fact the rank

and file agreed to return to work and leave the streets during the May

Days when asked to by the CNT leadership and by the fact that a sizeable

minority of anarchists opposed collaboration and activity put its ideas

across to the rest of the CNT membership. For example, “Ruta, the

mouthpiece of the Libertarian Youth of Catalonia, had been opposed to

the CNT’s collaborationism since November 1936” [Agustin Guillamon, The

Friends of Durruti Group: 1937–1937, p. 43] and the Friends of Durruti

themselves held well attended public meetings during the Spring of 1937

in Barcelona. Neither, after the May Days, could the CNT leadership

expel the Friends of Durruti because they “never could get that measure

ratified by any assembly of unions” [op. cit., p. 61]. And, again, I

must add these other examples of the CNT decision making process during

the Civil War:

“At a conference of local unions in Barcelona, the leadership sought and

obtained the support of the unions to continue to collaborate with the

government of Catalonia after the May Days. However, the unions refused

to withhold financial support for the Libertarian Youth, who opposed the

policy of collaboration vigorously in their publications. And the unions

also refused to call upon the transit workers not to distribute these

opposition publications in the public transit system, or the milk

drivers to stop distributing the Libertarian Youth papers together with

the daily milk.

And then I saw a Libertarian Youth conference which was prepared to vote

almost unanimously to condemn without debate the policy of government

collaboration. However, the chairman insisted that supporters of

collaboration be given a chance to speak and be heard. I saw six young

men go to the platform and argue earnestly and eloquently for their

viewpoint. There were no interruptions, no booing. The vote remained

almost unanimous in favour of opposing collaboration.” [Abe Bluestein,

introduction to Anarchist Organisation : The History of the F.A.I.]

Therefore, Caplan is correct to state that the decision to join the

government was made without consulting the rank and file (particularly

at the front, where the majority of militant anarchists actually where)

but the decisions were reached at various local and national plenums,

plenums (as I noted above) which could not have forced unions to go

along with decisions they opposed. Therefore, to state that the rank and

file were not consulted is correct (they should have been) but the fact

is that if the majority of union members had not supported that decision

then the decision would not have been allowed to happen. Obviously the

majority of the CNT supported the policy of collaboration against the

greater evil of fascism, as can be seen from the support the CNT

leadership continued to have and the failure of the union assemblies to

expel the Friends of Durruti or withhold financial support to the

Libertarian Youth.

So, yes, Caplan is correct to state that the rank and file was not

consulted, but he is wrong to leave it at that. The various union,

collective, militia, etc. assemblies and plenums (distorted as they were

due to the circumstances of the war) provided a voice for the rank and

file, a rank and file who were subject to arguments against

collaboration by a significant minority of anarchists. Strangely enough,

the rank and file seemed to have viewed collaboration in the government

as a necessary evil in order to win the war and were not convinced by

the anarchist minority within their ranks who disagreed with that

policy. Perhaps Periats sums up the process best when he writes that

“[c]ertainly, circumstances required quick decisions from the

organisation, and it was necessary to take precautions to prevent

damaging leaks. These necessities tempted the committees to abandon the

federalist procedures of the organisation.” [Jose Periats, Anarchists in

the Spanish Revolution, p. 188] Periats criticism’s of the CNT (like

most anarchist writers) are far more critical than Caplan’s, and also

(unlike his) place these criticism’s in the context of the civil war.

Caplan continues: “Anarchists were even more eager to assume

governmental powers in Catalonia, where they were strong enough to

overshadow the regional Catalonia government, the Generalitat. Rather

than officially enter the Catalonian government, the Anarchists chose to

retain the Generalitat as a legal cover; but real power shifted into the

hands of the Anarchist-controlled Central Anti-Fascist Militia

Committee...It should be further noted that these Anarchist-run councils

and committees were not mild-mannered minimal states, maintaining order

while allowing the workers to organize themselves as they pleased. They

were modern states, concerning themselves with the economy, education,

propaganda, transportation, and virtually everything else.”

Unfortunately, this hypothesis fails to explain how the creation of the

collectives occurred outside the control of the Militia Committee. Thus,

the Committee did leave workers to organise themselves — that is,

education, transportation and so on were organised by the workers

involved. As for propaganda, the CNT and FAI had its own presses and

radio stations. In other words, while the Militia Committee did

“intervene” in the economy, the reorganisation of that economy was going

on beyond its control. It also seems strange to think that this body,

set up to organise resistance to the fascist coup, should not have taken

a “pro-active” stance. Perhaps Caplan thinks that market forces would

have organised, armed, and fed the militias after the total social

breakdown from July 19^(th)?

He then writes:

“The Anarchists’ position in both the central government and in

Catalonia slowly but surely declined after their entered into coalition

governments with the other anti-Franco factions.”

In other words, the CNT was powerless in the face of political parties

who considered defeating the revolution to be more important than

defeating fascism. And if the CNT was secretly totalitarian and as

powerful as Caplan implies, why did it join these coalitions as a

minority? It’s pretty clear that for a “totalitarian” organisation, the

CNT acted in a strange ways, joining with other political parties,

unions, and so on as a minority, and as a result, to see whatever

position it had decline.

Next, Caplan states the obvious: “While the members of the CNT who held

positions in the Catalonian government kept trying to reach an

understanding with their fellow ministers, the rank and file Anarchists

seem to have become increasingly alienated from their leaders.” He then

maintains that “A raid on the Anarchist-controlled telephone company

brought these feelings to the surface. (The non-Anarchists’ objected to

the Anarchists’ use of wiretaps to listen in on important

conversations.) The CNT ministers merely demanded the removal of the

main people responsible for the raid; but hundreds of the rank-and-file

Anarchists responded with rage, setting up barricades.”

Where to start? Firstly, the telephone company was run under workers’

control by a joint CNT-UGT committee. The non-Anarchists objected to

workers listening in on important conversations within the government.

Personally, I prefer the “open government” this implies. Or should the

governed not listen in on such conversations?

Caplan then notes, correctly, that “The Anarchist leadership was... out

of step with the rank-and-file; they urged the militants to stop the

fighting. Their requests were not heeded.” But he does not mention that

before “reinforcements from the central government arrived and firmly

placed power into the hands of the Generalitat,” the workers of the CNT

did leave the barricades and go back to work. The reinforcements arrived

after “the city was almost back to normal” [Fraser, p. 382]. Which

raises the question: why did the CNT workers follow their leaders? The

fact that they did seems to indicate some support for them, in spite of

the numerous compromises. Given the pressing need for unity against the

Fascists, we can understand why the rank and file of the CNT returned to

work – we may not agree with it, but we can understand it. Therefore, it

can be stated that support for the CNT and FAI was still strong within

the Catalan working class, inspite of the actions of the union’s

leadership.

After discussing the communist repression against the anarchists, Caplan

states that “Even though many Anarchists eventually realized that the

defeat of Franco would lead to the establishment of a Soviet satellite

state, they kept fighting. Clearly the Anarchists’ opposition to the

Nationalists dwarfed their distaste for Leninist totalitarianism.”

The “Nationalists,” it should be noted, were the fascists. Simply put,

if the fascists did win, what was left of the CNT militia would have

been disarmed (not to mention murdered, Franco’s regime killed hundreds

of thousands of anti-nationalists during and after the war). At least by

fighting on the Republican side, they would still have had arms at the

end. Obviously this consideration meant that their opposition to fascist

totalitarianism (which was what “the Nationalists” represented) dwarfed

their “distaste” for the Leninist form.

Caplan then discusses the negotiations between the “new clandestine

secretary general of the CNT, Jose Leiva, in Madrid, with the Falange,

stating that “This was the Anarchism of the CNT: an Anarchism which not

only allied with the Communist totalitarians, but attempted to strike a

deal with the Fascist totalitarians six years after the end of the civil

war.” As if the great majority of CNT militants who came back to Spain

to re-organise the CNT and try to assassinate Franco would have agreed

with this activity! Simply put, Caplan’s suggestion that this

negotiation reflects the anarchism of the CNT is utter nonsense,

unworthy of an objective historian (and typical, I may add, to his

continual tendency to take the actions of a minority of anarchists are

“typical” while remaining silence about the majority). However, as

indicated, Caplan is anything but objective. (Nor, may I add, does

Caplan denounce the many capitalists who supported Franco and invested

in Spain once his regime had slaughtered hundreds of thousands of trade

unionists, anarchists, socialists, etc. Obviously capitalists making

deals with fascism is perfectly acceptable, which indicates that real

capitalists are more than happy to support fascism if the returns are

high enough — “convinced of where its real interests lay, international

capital subscribed to the nationalist war effort in no uncertain manner”

Fraser, p. 279).

Of course, there are many examples of right-libertarians supporting the

Fascist totalitarians in Pinochet’s Chile, with which we could make

similar criticisms about the “anarchism” of “anarcho” capitalism.

However, there are plenty of other areas in “anarcho”-capitalist theory

and practice that show up its claim to be anarchistic to be utterly

false.

C. The Urban Collectives

Here Caplan discusses the CNT urban collectives, starting with the CNT

policy of closing down many small plants. “What is odd,” he writes, “is

that in the midst of massive unemployment the Anarchists closed down a

large percentage of the remaining firms.” Could the reason be, perhaps,

that much of the plant which was closed down was unhygienic or unsafe

and so on? Obviously, as a supporter of capitalism, Caplan does not

regard workers’ safety as an issue.

Moving on, Caplan states that “initially, the workers (rather than an

Anarchist nomenklatura) usually assumed control over their places of

employment.... Yet government control quickly followed. In October, the

government of Anarchist-dominated Catalonia passed the Collectivization

and Workers’ Control Decree, which legally recognized many of the de

facto collectivizations.” We should point out that this government was

not anarchist-dominated, and the collectivisation decree was a

compromise between the forces represented in that government. However,

as both Fraser and Bolloten point out, the decree was often ignored in

practice.

Caplan goes on to note anarchist opposition to this decree and to

discuss a “loophole” in it. The loophole was that “firms had to pay a

percentage of their profits. To eliminate the exaction, one merely need

eliminate the profits. With worker control, there is a simple way to do

this: keep raising wages until the “profits” disappear. Taxes on profits

– which is what the Decree amounted to – will raise revenue if the

workers and the owners are different people; but with worker control

such taxes are simple to evade. Witness after witness reports the

abolition of piece-work, better working conditions, lavish non-wage

compensation, and so on. This is initially surprising; if the workers

run the factory, don’t they pay the price of hampering production?”

Of course Caplan obviously puts all these improvements down to the

desire of workers not to pay taxes. The idea that better working

conditions, the abolition of piece work, etc. came about because the

workers did not desire to work in the bad, demeaning conditions imposed

by capitalists does not enter his head. Nor, of course, the massive

disruption of the Catalan economy by the war does not even factor into

Caplan’s “thesis” – all the evidence suggests that difficulties in

getting raw materials, access to markets, etc. played a key role in the

Catalan economy. However, to back his thesis with some evidence Caplan

must indicate that profits existed between July and September 1936 (i.e.

before the “profits tax” was introduced). However, there is no evidence

that states “we had profits until September then there wasn’t any.” In

other words, Caplan’s thesis has no basis in fact and the most obvious

thesis (namely workers’ desired to have decent working conditions and

the disruption of the economy caused by the war reducing profits) looks

far stronger.

Looking over the results of collectivisation, Caplan states that “[i]n

short, after being told that the workers now owned the means of

production, the workers often took the statement literally. What is the

point of owning the means of production if you can’t get rich using

them? But of course if some workers get rich, they are unlikely to

voluntarily donate their profits to the other members of their class.”

The unstated assumption, of course, is that getting rich is the only

motivation people have. Perhaps to a capitalist, this premise is

“self-evidently” true, but according to the accounts of Augustine

Souchy, Gaston Leval, Jose Peirats, and other eyewitnesses, there was a

remarkable spirit of co-operation in most of the collectives. It should

also be pointed out that if people are “unlikely to voluntarily donate

their profits,” then the standard “anarcho” capitalist claim that

charities will boom in their system does not hold water. But as

“anarcho” capitalism is based on telling people what they want to hear,

that’s hardly surprising.

Caplan goes on to state the following:

“Bolloten repeats a remark of CNT militia leader Ricardo Sanz:

“‘[T]hings are not going as well as they did in the early days of the

[revolutionary] movement… The workers no longer think of workings long

hours to help the front. They only think of working as little as

possible and getting the highest possible wages.’” Bolloten attributes

this decline in enthusiasm to Communist repression, but it is at least

as consistent with the simple observation that people often prefer

improving their own lot in life to nourishing revolution. “

Or could it be that they had seen the revolution destroyed and so did

not care how the war would end? Improving their own lot and nourishing

revolution need not be incompatible. As this quote is from after May

1937, it is likely that the communist repression did have an effect on

the spirit of the workers in Spain. And, as Caplan documents below, the

economy of Catalonia was under great strain because of the war. Hardly

surprising if people facing great economic difficulties start to

concentrate on their own survival regardless of wider issues.

Editorialising further, Caplan states that “[i]n short, practical

experience gradually revealed a basic truth of economics for which

theoretical reflection would have sufficed: if the workers take over a

factory, they will run it to benefit themselves. A worker-run firm is

essentially identical to a capitalist firm in which the workers also

happen to be the stockholders. Once they came to this realization,

however dimly, the Spanish Anarchists had to either embrace capitalism

as the corollary of worker control, or else denounce worker control as

the corollary of capitalism. For the most part, they chose the latter

course.”

This is false. There is no denying that workers will run a workplace for

their own benefit. This is obvious. However, this is not the whole

story. Could not workers also see the need for co-operation beyond the

workplace and support the end of capitalism in their own self-interest?

Of course, this was the CNT policy of “socialisation” (as opposed to

nationalisation) which Caplan refers to as “call[ing] absolute

dictatorship by a different name.” But if inter-workplace organisation

is “absolute dictatorship,” then many capitalist firms can also be

classed as such. Hence, if democratic union control is “absolute

dictatorship,” what does that make the anti-democratic capitalist

company? Caplan does not ask the question, strangely enough.

And, as should be obvious, a worker-run firm is not “essentially

identical” to a capitalist firm because in a worker-run firm workers

control their own activity themselves. In other words, there is no

hierarchical forms of authority within the workplace and so, unlike a

capitalist firm, is far more anarchistic. This explains the long

standing anarchist support for co-operatives. Of course, as Caplan

himself points out, capitalism is not the “corollary” of workers control

as he argues that wage labour and investors would appear – in other

words, capitalism will destroy workers control in favour of control of

workers by capitalists. A strange “corollary”!

And I think these words by Proudhon (from The General Idea of the

Revolution in the Nineteenth Century) indicate well that a worker-run

firm is not “essentially identical” to a capitalist one. Proudhon argues

that employees are “subordinated, exploited” and their “permanent

condition is one of obedience,” a “slave” within a capitalist firm [p.

216] Indeed, capitalist companies “plunder the bodies and souls of wage

workers” and they are “an outrage upon human dignity and personality.”

[p. 218] However, in a co-operative the situation changes and the worker

is an “associate” and “forms a part of the producing organisation ...

[and] forms a part of the sovereign power, of which he was before but

the subject.” [p. 216] Without co-operation and association, “the

workers ... would remain related as subordinates and superiors, and

there would ensue two industrial castes of masters and wage-workers,

which is repugnant to a free and democratic society.” [p. 216]

Therefore, Caplan’s claim that the issue of “dividends” is the key to

understanding the nature of co-operatives totally misses the point. It

seems strange that an self-proclaimed “anarchist” is more concerned

about who gets the dividend than about the authority relations within an

association. This indicates well that “anarcho”-capitalism is not

anarchist, its opposition to archy is so limited as to be non-existent.

As Proudhon, and those anarchists who followed him realised, is that the

issue of who runs the workplace is a key one in determining whether a

system is socialist or not (along with, I must note, whether there is

separate class of owners who get a slice of the workers profits – in

other words, whether capitalist exploitation exists). As the collectives

had workers control and provided no profits for a capitalist class, then

they were most definitely socialistic and not capitalistic.

He quotes Bolloten as follows: “In the opinion of the

anarcho-syndicalists, socialization would eliminate the dangers of

government control by placing production in the hands of the unions.

This was the libertarian conception of socialization, without state

intervention, that was to eliminate the wastes of competition and

duplication, render possible industrywide planning for both civilian and

military needs, and halt the growth of selfish actions among the workers

of the more prosperous collectives by using their profits to raise the

standard of living in the less favored enterprises.”

It should be noted that this policy of socialisation existed before the

revolution and was based on workers control. Therefore, as “evidence”

that the anarchists “denounced” workers control as the problems of

collectivisation became clear is hardly convincing. The socialised

industries were still organised by workplace assemblies and elected

management committees. In other words, socialisation was built and based

upon workers control and so Caplan’s statement is false.

Bolloten’s quote indicates that the long standing CNT policy of

socialisation called for co-operation between workplaces based on

democratic workers control. Caplan then states that “Of course, one

could refuse to call a union with such fearsome powers a ‘state,’ but it

would need all of the enforcement apparatus and authority of a state to

execute its objectives. The ‘more prosperous collectives,’ for example,

would be unlikely to submit voluntarily to industrywide planning funded

by their profits.”

If this was the case, then the same problem afflicts the capitalist

company (particularly one with multiple workplaces). Why should a

workplace submit to the funding of stockholders? Hence capitalism needs

an enforcement apparatus and authority of a state, particularly as the

workplace is not democratic. So, if socialisation is “absolute

dictatorship,” so is capitalism (and capitalist firms, unlike

collectives, are not democratic internally). We doubt that Caplan would

accept such a statement, however.

Caplan then states that the “Nationalists conquered Catalonia before the

government made any concerted, official effort to nationalize the

workers’ factories.” However, this is somewhat false as after the May

Days, the position of the collectives changed. According to Fraser in

Blood of Spain, “the PSUC, faced still with a militant CNT working

class, attempted rather to centralise the collectives under Generalitat

(or PSUC) control from June 1937... [they] modified many essential

aspects of the collectivisation decree [which the CNT ignored anyway –

IM] ... Such modifications could have paved the way for a later move

from centralisation to nationalisation.” [p. 578]

Fraser is clear, the Stalinists centralised power away from the

collectives into the states hands. Within the workplace, mass assemblies

and elected management committees no longer run the workplace nor had a

say in any industrial bodies that existed. In other words, Caplan gets

the facts wrong and implies a situation within the Catalan economy

radically different from the facts. In other words, the government had

made official efforts to start the process of nationalisation before the

fascists took Catalonia. A process, I may add, which had started well

before June 1937 but which the May Days ensured the outcome of.

After highlighting how the state used the lack of co-operation between

many collectives to undermine and control the collectives, Caplan states

that “The simplest way that the collectives could have avoided

dependence on the government would have been to issue debt; in short, to

borrow from the general public rather than the government. But

undoubtedly the fear of revealing surplus wealth to lend would make such

a scheme impossible. Even if their physical safety were not their

concern, investors could hardly expect to ever get their money back. The

insecurity of property rights thus made it very difficult to borrow from

the public, so the collectives mortgaged themselves piece by piece to

the government until finally the government rather than the workers

owned the means of production.”

It should be noted that Caplan acknowledges, implicitly anyway, that

capitalism needs a state to protect “property rights.” In other words,

for capitalism to exist, a state must have enough power to ensure that

workers do not take over and ignore the “rightful owners.” Caplan,

against his intentions, indicates that capitalism can never be

anarchistic. And I should note that in capitalist economies, industry

finds about 90% plus of its funds from its own resources (e.g. in the

USA, since 1952, internal funds covered 91% of capital expenditures, 96%

from 1990) – an option which the collectives, struggling to survive in

the difficult situation of the war time economy, had little chance to

pursue. The issuing of stock play a minor, almost non-existent, role in

generating income for companies. But what stock does do is allow a rich

minority to control a countries economy and to enrich themselves at the

expense of the many (in the words of Doug Henwood, author of Wall Street

and editor of Left Business Observer, “Stock markets.... [are] a way for

the very rich as a class to own an economy’s productive capital stock as

a whole, rather than being tied to the fate of a single firm... Stock

markets, in Joan Robinson’s phrase, are “a convenience for rentiers”).

So, far from protecting the collectives share issues would have seen the

workers (and society) become subject to the wishes of capitalists and

workers control would have disappeared.

Caplan also acknowledges the basic anarchist point that co-operation

between collectives would have ensured workers’ control — in other

words, that the “capitalistic” tendencies Caplan documents ended up in

destroying freedom in the economy. In fact, the “simplest way” for the

collectives to have survived would have been to socialise and work

together. In this way they would have been in a position to determine

their own fates instead of being slowly taken over by the state or a new

capitalist class.

He notes that “almost all sources indicate that profits were almost

non-existence; possibly, as I have indicated, because workers were smart

enough to realize that raising their wages and improving working

conditions was an easy route to avoid any profits tax.” Of course,

workers improving their working conditions and raising their wages may

have been due to the fact that the capitalists had paid them little for

working in bad conditions before the revolution. And it should be noted

that all the sources indicate that profits were almost non-existent

before the decree as well. In other words, Caplan’s thesis is based

purely on ideology and not on fact.

I should also point out here that Caplan ignores one of the most common

complaints within the collectivised economy during this time, namely

lack of raw materials and funding. It is hard to produce profits when

your workplace does not have enough raw materials to produce goods!

However, this fact is ignored by Caplan in favour of his own theory.

Caplan then does discuss the possibilities of socialisation between

collectives:

“Even if this could have prevented the collectives from becoming

dependent on the central government, the end result would have been to

make them dependent on a union so powerful that it would be a state in

everything but name.”

But investors having property rights do need a state powerful enough to

enforce their claims. In other words, even if we take Caplan’s claims at

face value, he has no option but to support the recreation of the state

in order to protect property rights. As for the “powerful” union, that

depends on what the workers decided to form. We doubt that co-operation

between collectives would have created a “powerful” body above the

collectives unless the collectives desired to create such a body (which

is unlikely).

Caplan finishes by quoting Albert Perez-Baro, a civil servant and a

former CNT member:

“This truly revolutionary measure [the 50 per cent profits tax] – though

rarely, if ever, applied – wasn’t well received by large numbers of

workers, proving, unfortunately, that their understanding of the scope

of collectivization was very limited. Only a minority understood that

collectivization meant the return to society of what, historically, had

been appropriated by the capitalists…”

Notice that Perez-Baro states that the profits tax was rarely, if ever

applied. This suggests that the collectivisation policy was not

enforced, meaning that workers saw that their “profits” would have been

save. However, such profits did not seem to exist even in the face of

non-collection! So, I would suggest, that Caplan’s “thesis” on the lack

of profits is false.

Caplan then states: “In other words, most workers assumed that worker

control meant that the workers would actually become the true owners of

their workplaces, with all the rights and privileges thereof. Only the

elite realized that worker control was merely a euphemism for “social

control” which in turn can only mean control by the state (or an

Anarchist ‘council,’ ‘committee,’ or ‘union,’ satisfying the standard

Weberian definition of the state).”

Funny how a minority of workers becomes “an elite” for Caplan. Could it

be that he expects all workers to agree with him? Could it not be that

many of the CNT membership who agreed to the policy of socialisation at

their previous congresses had their own ideas of what workers’ control

meant and tried to convince their fellow workers of it? Does having a

different viewpoint mean you are part of an elite? No, it does not, but

Caplan provides the right sort of “atmosphere” for twisting the quote.

So, how did this minority in favour of socialisation act? Did they

impose their wishes on the majority by state action? No. Socialisation

was not collectivisation and came about through discussion with the

unions and workplaces. For example, Fraser notes that the stores were

not socialised because the workers did not agree, whereas the

woodworkers union did agree to socialisation because the minority

originally in favour of it convinced the rest. Hardly examples of “an

elite” running the economy.

Of course few anarchists expect an anarchist society to appear

overnight. There will be a period in which left-overs from capitalism

co-exist with aspects of anarchism. This is to be expected. However,

Caplan by pointing out the obvious (namely that the collectives in Spain

were not instantly anarchist) just shows the standard “anarcho”

capitalist assumption that anarchists expect perfection instantly.

Strangely enough this is another aspect of their ideas they share with

Marxist-Leninists.

D. Militarization

Caplan starts by noting that “the Anarchist militias resisted it

[militarization] vigorously because they took their ideals seriously.”

However, he then claims that “[i]t did not take long for the Anarchist

leadership to decide that military success was more important than the

voluntaristic notions of the rank-and-file” and quotes Solidaridad

Obrera as being in “favor of the strictest discipline”: “‘To accept

discipline means that the decisions made by comrades assigned to any

particular task, whether administrative or military, should be executed

without any obstruction in the name of liberty, a liberty that in many

cases degenerates into wantonness.’”

Just to place this into context, I would wonder what Caplan would say if

the workforce in a capitalist workplace decided to ignore the need for

discipline, the need to co-ordinate join activity, because it was

created on a “voluntaristic” notion? Of course, in any joint activity

discipline is required and in the context of a militia force at the

front line, this is doubly true. Such support for discipline cannot be

identified with the hierarchical control of a capitalist workplace or

capitalist army, but instead is an attempt to ensure that when a militia

attacks that it gets the required support from its neighbours, that

weapons arrive on time and so on. George Orwell indicates in Homage to

Catalonia the democratic nature of the “discipline” Solidaridad Obrera

was recommending:

“At this time [late 1936] and until much later, the Catalan militias

were still on the same basis they had been at the beginning of the

war... until [June 1937]... the militia-system remained unchanged. The

essential point of the system was social equality... In theory at any

rate each militia was a democracy and not a hierarchy. It was understood

that orders had to obeyed, but it was also to be understood that when

you gave an order you gave it as comrade to comrade and not as superior

to inferior. There were officers and N.C.O.s, but there was no military

rank in the ordinary sense; no titles, no badges, no heel-clicking and

saluting. They had attempted to produce within the militias a sort of

temporary working model of the classless society. Of course there was

not perfect equality, but there was a nearer approach to it than I had

ever seen or than I would have thought conceivable in time of war.

“In practice the democratic ‘revolutionary’ type of discipline is more

reliable than might be expected. In a workers’ army discipline is

theoretically voluntary. It is based on class-loyalty, wheras the

discipline of a bourgeois conscript army is based ultimately on fear...

In the militias the bullying and abuse that go in an ordinary army would

never have been tolerated for a moment. The normal military punishments

existed, but they were only invoked for very serious offences. When a

man refused to obey an order you did not immediately get him punished;

you first appealed to him in the name of comradeship. Cynical people

with no experience of handling men will say instantly that this would

never ‘work,’ but as a matter of fact it does ‘work’ in the long run.

The discipline of even the worst drafts of militia visibly improved as

time went on... ‘Revolutionary’ discipline depends on political

consciousness — on an understanding of why orders must be obeyed; it

takes time to diffuse this, but it also takes time to drill a man into

an automaton on the barrack-square... And it is a tribute to the

strength of ‘revolutionary’ discipline that the militias stayed in the

field at all. For until about June 1937 there was nothing to keep them

there, except class loyalty... At the beginning the apparent chaos, the

general lack of training, the fact that you often had to argue for five

minutes before you could get an order obeyed, appalled and infuriated

me. I had British Army ideas, and certainly the Spanish militias were

very unlike the British Army. But considering the circumstances they

were better troops than one had any right to expect.” [Homage to

Catalonia, p. 26]

This indicates that Caplan’s attempt to raise the bogey-man of

“discipline” is somewhat flawed. Strangely enough, in war, discipline is

required. Its a question of whether it is imposed by hierarchy and fear

(as in capitalist companies) or by co-operation, argument and equality

(as in the anarchist militias and collectives).

Caplan then states that “[w]hile many of the rank-and-file resisted,

military discipline swiftly became common in the Anarchist militias.”

Which, given the context, implies that it was decision to militarise was

forced upon the anarchist militia by the anarchist leadership. However,

the simple fact is that the militias were agreed to militarise, after

intensive debate by the militias themselves, in order to get arms and

supplies. The capitalist state used its control of supplies to force the

militias to accept army organisation. As Agustin Guillamon puts it in

regards to the Iron Column ” Repudiation of militarization was debated

inside the Iron Column as it was in every other confederal column. In

the end, the Column’s assembly gave its approval to militarization,

since it would otherwise be denied weapons and provisions.” [ The

Friends of Durruti Group, p. 31] These facts are well known and that

Caplan ignores them says a lot about his objectivity (later he does note

that “[m]ost of the militia columns swiftly fell into line, although it

is unclear to what extent this was because they were following the

orders of the Anarchist leadership, or enticed by the central

government’s money and weapons..” while in fact it is clear that the

decision to militarise was the produce of central government blackmail,

not “enticement” (which, I must add, is a somewhat unusual way of

describing what is obviously blackmail – “you don’t militarise, you

don’t get arms” is not an “enticing” offer and again highlights Caplan’s

lack of objectivity).

After noting that the anarchist militias resisted the militarization

desired by the government, he notes that it “took scarcely two months

for the Anarchists to openly advocate conscription – enslaving young men

to kill or be killed – so long as the conscripts were forced to risk

their lives for the cause of the CNT.”

Or to translate into English, to risk their lives fighting fascism. In

this connection it’s interesting to note that David Friedman (a noted

“anarcho” capitalist guru) has presented arguments in favour of

conscription in the light of greater dangers to freedom. Thus the CNT

cannot be claimed to hold a monopoly of “anarchist” support on

conscription. Given the very likely possibility of a fascist victory,

many anarchists supported the “lesser” evil of conscription. Caplan,

being safe behind a desk, can bemoan “enslaving young men” to fight

fascism. Obviously if fascism won, then the greater evil offers less

problems — after all, fascism and capitalism can and do exist happily

together.

Now, as far as “the Anarchists” advocating conscription it is worthwhile

noting that “[d]uring those first months of the war enlistment was

voluntary only. The government made continual mobilizations by decree,

but there were on the whole ineffective.” [Periats, Anarchists in the

Spanish Revolution, p. 265] and indeed, even by early 1937 the Catalan

government was not enforcing the draft (those who were subject to

call-up were asked to go to join union based units and there is little

indication that this was based upon force – see Bolloton for details).

So, when the CNT was largely control of Catalonia, there was no

conscription and the militias were voluntary for over 6 months. Only

when the balance of power had started to move towards the newly

strengthening state was conscription enforced. And, to place some

important context to this issue, let us not forget that in those areas

under Franco thousands, probably tens of thousands, of people were being

murdered (according to the historian Gabriel Jackson, the fascists

murdered 200,000 people during the civil war, 200,000 afterwards – The

Spanish Republic and the Civil War: 1931–1939, p. 539). It is only in

this context, the desire to end a civil war and stop fascist

totalitarians murdering tens of thousands more, can “the Anarchists”

support for conscription be understood. It is significant that Caplan

does not provide this context – obviously the systematic murder of

hundreds of thousands of people is a lesser evil than conscription.

In discussing the Iron Column, Caplan states that “[l]est one praise

their idealism too highly, it should be noted that the Iron Column

apparently saw no contradiction between Anarchism and terrorism and

robbery.” Obviously he thinks that the militia should have quietly

starved to death at the front and not acted to confiscate food, money

and so forth. So, while the charge of “robbery” holds, “terrorism”

(given its usual meaning) can hardly be applicable in this case.

When the militias were militarised, the CNT tried to ensure that the CNT

workers stayed together in their own units. This would be very useful to

ensure that the communists did not totally control the army. However,

Caplan states that “most of the Iron Column joined units which, while

nominally part of the army of the central government, were actually part

of the private fiefdom of the CNT.” In other words, damned if you do,

damned if you don’t. Above Caplan bemoans the fact the CNT collaborated

with the communists. However, now, when the CNT tries to undermine

communist power in the army, they are creating their own “private

fiefdom.” (as the Catalan regional committee correctly pointed out, “it

would be very childish to hand over our forces to the absolute control

of the government” – but apparently that’s want Caplan prefers. And I

may note that under CNT “control” the militias would have remained far

more democratic/libertarian than under state control. A point not lost

on the government).

The CNT just cannot win. As for the decree on conscription, the CNT was

a minority in the government, and even if it did oppose conscription

could not have stopped it.

Caplan then goes on to say that “the CNT made no attempt to subsist

merely on voluntary donations of time and resources. It readily accepted

government hand-outs.”

Actually, according to Fraser, “thousands of workers contributed their

wage increases to the support of the militias at the front” [p. 232] But

as Fraser points out, many workers saw their wages being eaten by

inflation and rising prices. Many were not in the position to donate. In

addition, rural collectives did provide troops with voluntary donations

of time and resources, as did industrial ones. And as far as government

“hand-outs” go, obviously the anarchists at the front should have not

accepted funds or weapons from the state in the name of theoretical

purity. But hungry and weaponless men would find it hard to fight

fascism.

Caplan finishes by stating “as the next section reveals, when the

Anarchists realized that food and valuable agricultural commodities

could be extorted out of forced collectives of terrorized peasants, they

saw an opportunity that was simply too good to refuse.” The truth of

this is discussed below.

E. The Rural Collectives

In this section Caplan “review[s] the history of the Anarchists and

rural collectivization” using Burnett Bolloten’s The Spanish Civil War

as the base.

He states that “After the attempted military coup in July 1936, there

was a revolution in many rural areas somewhat similar to that in urban

areas. It should be noted, however, that the power of the CNT was

centered in the cities rather than the countryside, so it would be

extremely surprising if the rural revolution were as ‘spontaneous’ as

the urban revolution.” He quotes Fraser as follows:

“Very rapidly collectives, in which not only the means of production but

also of consumption were socialized, began to spring up. It did not

happen on instructions from the CNT leadership – no more than had the

collectives in Barcelona. Here, as there, the initiative came from CNT

militants; here, as there, the ‘climate’ for social revolution in the

rearguard was created by CNT armed strength: the anarcho-syndicalists’

domination of the streets of Barcelona was re-enacted in Aragon as the

CNT militia columns, manned mainly by Catalan anarcho-syndicalist

workers, poured in. Where a nucleus of anarcho-syndicalists existed in a

village, it seized the moment to carry out the long-awaited revolution

and collectivized spontaneously. Where there was none, villagers could

find themselves under considerable pressure from the militias to

collectivize... ”

Caplan then states “Note well Fraser’s point that the anarchists in

rural Aragon relied heavily on urban Catalonian anarchists to get off

the ground. However over-stated the Anarchists’ claim to represent ‘the

people,’ was in Barcelona, in rural Aragon such a claim was absurd.”

But Fraser does mention the “nucleus of anarchosyndicalists” that

existing in many villages, meaning that the CNT did have a presence in

Aragon. Fraser states that in “some [of the Aragonese villages] there

was a flourishing CNT, in others the UGT was strongest, and in only too

many there was no unionisation at all.” [Blood of Spain, p. 348]

Elsewhere, Fraser points out that the Aragon rural collectivisation was

“carried out under the general cover, if not necessarily the direct

agency, of CNT militia columns.” [p. 370] So, what does this mean in

practice?

Before the revolution, the Spanish countryside was marked by high

concentrations of land owned by a handful of people (67% of the land was

owned by 2% of the population). Life in this capitalist rural economy

was dominated by powerful caciques [local bosses]. Hence, when the

balance of class forces changed in Aragon (i.e. when the caciques would

not get state aid to protect their property,) many landless workers took

over the land. In other words, the presence of the militia ensured that

land could be taken over by destroying the capitalist “monopoly of

force” that existed before the revolution.

Therefore, by removing the capitalist “monopoly of force,” the CNT

militia allowed the possibility of experimentation by the Aragonese

population. Caplan suggests that to claim that the CNT had strong

support in Aragon is “absurd.” However, the evidence suggests that it is

Caplan’s claims that are absurd. Murray Bookchin summarises the

situation well:

“The authentic peasant base of the CNT [by the 1930s] now lay in Aragon

...[CNT growth in Zaragoza] provided a springboard for a highly

effective libertarian agitation in lower Aragon, particularly among the

impoverished laborers and debt-ridden peasantry of the dry steppes

region.” [The Spanish Anarchists, p. 220]

Graham Kelsey, in his social history of the C.N.T. in Aragon between

1930 and 1937, provides the necessary evidence to more than back

Bookchin’s claim of C.N.T. growth. Kesley points out that as well as the

“spread of libertarian groups and the increasing consciousness among

C.N.T. members of libertarian theories ...contribu[ting] to the growth

of the anarchosyndicalist movement in Aragon” the existence of “agrarian

unrest” also played an important role in that growth

[Anarchosyndicalism, Libertarian Communism and the State, pp.80–81].

This all lead to the “revitalisation of the C.N.T. network in Aragon”

[p. 82] and so by 1936, the C.N.T. had built upon the “foundations laid

in 1933... [and] had finally succeeded in translating the very great

strength of the urban trade-union organisation in Zaragoza into a

regional network of considerable extent.” [Op. Cit., p. 134]

Kelsey and other historians note the long history of anarchism in

Aragon, dating back to the late 1860s. However, before the 1910s there

had been little gains in rural Aragon by the C.N.T. due to the power of

local bosses (called caciques):

“Local landowners and small industrialists, the caciques of provincial

Aragon, made every effort to enforce the closure of these first rural

anarchosyndicalist cells [created after 1915]. By the time of the first

rural congress of the Aragonese CNT confederation in the summer of 1923,

much of the progress achieved through the organization’s considerable

propaganda efforts had been countered by repression elsewhere.” [Graham

Kelsey, “Anarchism in Aragon,” p. 62]

A C.N.T. activist indicates the power of these bosses and how difficult

it was to be a union member in Aragon:

“Repression is not the same in the large cities as it is in the villages

where everyone knows everybody else and where the Civil Guards are

immediately notified of a comrade’s slightest movement. Neither friends

nor relatives are spared. All those who do not serve the state’s

repressive forces unconditionally are pursued, persecuted and on

occasions beaten up.” [cited by Kelsey, Op. Cit., p. 74]

However, while there were some successes in organising rural unions,

even in 1931 “propaganda campaigns which led to the establishment of

scores of village trade-union cells, were followed by a

counter-offensive from village caciques which forced them to close.”

[Ibid. p. 67] But even in the face of this repression the C.N.T. grew

and “from the end of 1932... [there was] a successful expansion of the

anarchosyndicalist movement into several parts of the region where

previously it had never penetrated.” [Kesley, Anarchosyndicalism,

Libertarian Communism and the State, p. 185]

This growth was built upon in 1936, with increased rural activism which

had slowly eroded the power of the caciques (which in part explains

their support for the fascist coup). After the election of the Popular

Front, years of anarchist propaganda and organisation paid off with a

massive increase in rural membership in the C.N.T.:

“The dramatic growth in rural anarcho-syndicalist support in the six

weeks since the general election was emphasized in the [Aragon CNT’s

April] congress’s agenda... the congress directed its attention to rural

problems ... [and agreed a programme which was] exactly what was to

happen four months later in liberated Aragon.” [Kesley, “Anarchism in

Aragon”, p. 76]

In the aftermath of a regional congress, held in Zaragoza at the start

of April, a series of intensive propaganda campaigns was organised

through each of the provinces of the regional confederation. Many

meetings were held in villages which had never before heard anarcho-

syndicalist propaganda. This was very successful and by the beginning of

June, 1936, the number of Aragon unions had topped 400, compared to only

278 one month earlier (an increase of over 40% in 4 weeks). [Ibid., pp.

75–76]

This increase in union membership reflects increased social struggle by

the Aragonese working population and their attempts to improve their

standard of living, which was very low for most of the population. A

journalist from the conservative-Catholic Heraldo de Aragon visited

lower Aragon in the summer of 1935 and noted “[t]he hunger in many

homes, where the men are not working, is beginning to encourage the

youth to subscribe to misleading teachings.” [cited by Kesley, Ibid., p.

74]

Little wonder, then, the growth in CNT membership and social struggle

Kesley indicates:

“Evidence of a different kind was also available that militant trade

unionism in Aragon was on the increase. In the five months between

mid-February and mid-July 1936 the province of Zaragoza experienced over

seventy strikes, more than had previously been recorded in any entire

year, and things were clearly no different in the other two provinces

... the great majority of these strikes were occurring in provincial

towns and villages. Strikes racked the provinces and in at least three

instances were actually transformed into general strikes.” [Ibid., p.

76]

Therefore, in the spring and summer of 1936, we see a massive growth in

C.N.T. membership which reflects growing militant struggle by the urban

and rural population of Aragon. Years of C.N.T. propaganda and

organising had ensured this growth in C.N.T. influence, a growth which

is also reflected in the creation of collectives in liberated Aragon

during the revolution. Therefore, the construction of a collectivised

society was founded directly upon the emergence, during the five years

of the Second Republic, of a mass trade-union movement infused by

libertarian, anarchist principles. These collectives were constructed in

accordance with the programme agreed at the Aragon C.N.T. conference of

April 1936 which reflected the wishes of the rural membership of the

unions within Aragon (and due to the rapid growth of the C.N.T.

afterwards obviously reflected popular feelings in the area).

In the words of Graham Kesley, “libertarian dominance in

post-insurrection Aragon itself reflected the predominance that

anarchists had secured before the war; by the summer of 1936 the CNT had

succeeded in establishing throughout Aragon a mass trade-union movement

of strictly libertarian orientation, upon which widespread and

well-supported network the extensive collective experiment was to be

founded.” [Ibid., p. 61]

Additional evidence that supports a high level of C.N.T. support in

rural Aragon can be provided by the fact that it was Aragon that was the

centre of the December 1933 insurrection organised by the C.N.T. As

Bookchin notes, “only Aragon rose on any significant scale, particularly

Saragossa ...many of the villages declared libertarian communism and

perhaps the heaviest fighting took place between the vineyard workers in

Rioja and the authorities” [M. Bookchin, Op. Cit., p. 256]

It is unlikely for the C.N.T. to organise an insurrection in an area

within which it had little support or influence. According to Kesley’s

in-depth social history of Aragon, “it was precisely those areas which

had most important in December 1933 ... which were now [in 1936], in

seeking to create a new pattern of economic and social organisation, to

form the basis of libertarian Aragon” [G. Kesley, Anarchosyndicalism,

Libertarian Communism and the State, p. 161] After the revolt, thousands

of workers were jailed, with the authorities having to re-open closed

prisons and turn at least one disused monastery into a jail due to the

numbers arrested.

Therefore, it can be seen that the majority of collectives in Aragon

were the product of C.N.T. (and UGT) influenced workers taking the

opportunity to create a new form of social life, a form marked by its

voluntary and directly democratic nature. For from being unknown in

rural Aragon, the C.N.T. was well established and growing at a fast rate

– “Spreading out from its urban base… the CNT, first in 1933 and then

more extensively in 1936, succeeded in converting an essentially urban

organisation into a truly regional confederation.” [Ibid., p. 184]

Additional evidence that refutes Caplan’s claim of little CNT support in

rural Aragon can be provided by the fact that it was Aragon that was the

centre of the December 1933 insurrection organised by the CNT. As

Bookchin notes, “only Aragon rose on any significant scale, particularly

Saragossa ...many of the villages declared libertarian communism and

perhaps the heaviest fighting took place between the vineyard workers in

Rioja and the authorities” [M Bookchin, Op. Cit., p. 256]

It is unlikely for the CNT to organise an insurrection in an area within

which it had little support or influence. According to Kesley’s in-depth

social history of Aragon, “it was precisely those areas which had most

important in December 1933 ... which were now, in seeking to create a

new pattern of economic and social organisation, to form the basis of

libertarian Aragon” [G. Kesley, Op. Cit., p. 161]

Therefore, Caplan’s claim (a claim, I should note, unsupported by any

direct evidence) that the CNT militia imposed collectivisation in Aragon

by force is false. The historian he quotes does not state this and the

pre-war history of Aragon suggests that CNT support was far stronger

than Caplan cares to admit. This suggests that Kesley’s summary is truer

that Caplan’s:

“Libertarian communism and agrarian collectivisation were not economic

terms or social principles enforced upon a hostile population by special

teams of urban anarchosyndicalists ...” [G. Kesley, Op. Cit., p. 161]

And I should add that Gabriel Jackson notes that “[i]n large portions

of... Aragon practically no revolutionary violence occurred.” [The

Spanish Republic and the Civil War: 1931–1939, p. 532] This, combined

with Kesley’s important work in demonstrating the massive and rapid

growth of the Aragon CNT before the war, places Caplan’s claims in a new

light.

Caplan then quotes Bolloten on how the collectives were formed and then

states that “It barely took a month for Anarchists to set themselves up

as the government of those parts of Aragon until their control,

euphemistically dubbing themselves the ‘Regional Defense Council of

Aragon.’”

This council was set up in a conference which contained delegates from

those collectives which had been created as well as the militia columns.

It should be noted that most the militia columns opposed the setting up

of the defence council. Caplan considers that this council showed “the

actions of the government of Aragon reveal the proclivities of undivided

Anarchist rule.”

And what were the actions of this council? To encourage the formation of

collectives and ensure that the front line was supplied with food. The

council also kept records of surplus’ delivered to it and used them to

buy the collectives machinery (for example, “The collective procured a

Czech machine powered by an electric motor...[i]t was ‘paid for’ by the

collective’s produce... with which it had run up a credit with the

Council of Aragon” [Fraser, p. 356]). In other words, the collectives

and the council allowed the pooling of resources which enabled new

investments that otherwise the Aragon population would never have seen.

Next he notes that “Many people fled for fear of their lives. Their land

was seized almost immediately. After all, who but a ‘fascist’ would

flee? The expropriation of land from anyone too terrified of the new

regime to even wait to see what their new life would be like provided

the nucleus for the collectives.”

In other words, those who could afford to flee did so. And as they had

fled, their land should have been left untouched? No, strangely enough,

landless farm workers and tenant farmers took it over. Given the role of

cacique’s in rural life, it’s hardly surprising that many left. Treating

day-workers as “animals” becomes dangerous when these people are no

longer held down by the state. And, I must add, it seems strange that

Caplan does not acknowledge the nature of oppression within the Aragon

countryside when making the above statement. Yes, many people did flee

for their lives, because they had either supported the uprising (and so

favoured totalitarianism) or knew that their lives would be in danger

for their pre-war oppression of the rural population.

Caplan goes on to say:

“Farmers who fled for their lives were obviously not voluntary

participants in the Anarchists’ collectivization experiment. What about

the remainder? One of the persistent claims of defenders of the

Anarchists’ collectives was that the farmers were usually ‘free to

choose’: they could either join the collective, or continue to farm

individually so long as they hired no wage labor.”

Obviously those who fled for their lives were not participants

(voluntary or forced) of the collectivisations – they were not there to

take part! Perhaps Caplan is applying the usual neo-classical technique

of confusing the owners of capital with the capital itself? As for those

who were left, this was a population of day-workers, poor peasants with

barely enough land to feed themselves, and various small and medium

peasants. Unsurprisingly, the day-workers and the poor (who had flocked

to join the CNT before the war) also flocked to join the collectives.

Therefore, Caplan fails to discuss the differences in the rural

population and so paints a picture of rural Aragon which is misleading

to say the least. Perhaps he thinks that only those who own land are

worthy of mention when evaluating the Aragon collectives? If so, his

argument fails to base itself on the reality of Aragon life and so is

flawed.

He concludes that “The overwhelming majority of the evidence reveals

that the collectives’ defenders are simply wrong” on the issue of

peasants being “free to choose”, quoting Bolloten as saying:

“Although CNT-FAI publications cited numerous cases of peasant

proprietors and tenant farmers who had adhered voluntarily to the

collective system, there can be no doubt that an incomparable larger

number doggedly opposed it or accepted it only under extreme duress.”

However, Caplan ignores an important point about rural Spain. Not

everyone was a peasant or tenant farmer. As Bolloten points out:

“If the individual farmer viewed with dismay the swift and widespread

collectivisation of agriculture, the farm workers of the

Anarchosyndicalist CNT and the Socialist UGT saw it as the commencement

of a new era.” [The Spanish Civil War, p. 63]

In other words, Caplan only considers one side of the picture and does

not mention the other. How objective — obviously day labourers (the ones

“treated like animals”) and other farm workers and poor peasants do not

matter here. This means that there is no such “overwhelming” body of

evidence and what evidence that does exist suggests a conclusion

radically different from Caplan’s.

He then argues that “Bolloten goes on to explain that it was the

presence of the Anarchist militia which made collectivization possible.

The Anarchist militants, convinced of their superior wisdom, arrived

carrying a plan for a new way of life for the farmers:

“‘We militiamen must awaken in these persons the spirit that has been

numbed by political tyranny,’ said an article in a CNT newspaper,

referring to the villagers of Farlete. ‘We must direct them along the

path of the true life, and for that it is not sufficient to make an

appearance in the village; we must proceed with the ideological

conversion of these simple folk.’”

The arrogance and paternalism of these remarks is clear; is there no

possibility that the farmers might be right and the Anarchists might be

wrong?”

How dare the anarchists try to convince people of their ideas! Of

course, many people (not just anarchists) are convinced of the truth of

their ideas and express them in such arrogant ways. We have come across

many “anarcho”-capitalists who do so as well. However, the question

arises how did this “conversion” take place. Here is an example of such

“arrogance and paternalism” in action:

“There were, of course, those who didn’t want to share and who said that

each collective should take care of itself. But they were usually

convinced in the assemblies. We would try to speak to them in terms they

understood. We’d ask, “Did you think it was fair when the cacique [local

boss] let people starve if there wasn’t enough work?” and they said, “Of

course not”. They would eventually come around. Don’t forget, there were

three hundred thousand collectivists [in Aragon], but only ten thousand

of us had been members of the C.N.T.. We had a lot of educating to do”.

[Felix Carrasquer, quoted in Free Women of Spain, p. 79]

In other words, by discussion and debate within democratic assemblies.

Hardly “arrogance” or “paternalism” and far more in fitting with true

libertarian ideas – that people are convinced of new ideas by debate and

by positive examples.

Caplan then quotes Bolloten as follows:

“The fact is that many small holders and tenant farmers were forced to

join the collective farms before they had an opportunity to decide

freely. Although the libertarian movement tended to minimize the factor

of coercion in the development of collectivized agriculture or even to

deny it altogether, it was, on occasions, frankly admitted. ‘During the

first few weeks of the Revolution,’ wrote Higinio Noja Ruiz, a prominent

member of the CNT, ‘the partisans of collectivization acted according to

their own revolutionary opinions. They respected neither property nor

persons. In some villages collectivization was only possible by imposing

it on the minority.’”

In some villages, collectivisation may have only been possible by taking

the land of a minority of big land owners. That is true, as is the claim

that many people were forced to join (against CNT policy, it should be

noted) by local CNT members. But, it should be noted, according to

testimony in Blood of Spain, only around 20 collectives in Aragon were

“total” ones (out of 450). Hence the “some” villages were not as

widespread as Caplan suggests.

Caplan continues:

“Fraser amply confirms Bolloten’s allegations. ‘There was no need to

dragoon them at pistol point: the coercive climate, in which ‘fascists’

were being shot, was sufficient. ‘Spontaneous’ and ‘forced’ collectives

existed, as did willing and unwilling collectivists within them.’”

Of course a civil war would produce a “coercive climate,” particularly

at the front line and so the CNT can hardly be blamed for that (although

Caplan does try). As far as “forced” collectives go, the figures given

by Fraser states that only around 20 were “total” (i.e. forced)

collectives (out of 450) and 30% of the population felt safe enough not

to join. In other words, in the vast majority of collectives those

joining could see that those who did not were safe. These figures should

not be discounted, as they give an indication of the movement and why it

found people to support it in the face of both communist and capitalist

attacks.

Caplan again:

“Fraser goes on to explain that rural collectivization was very

different from urban collectivization; while the latter was indeed

typically carried out by the workers, the former was not:

‘The collectivization, carried out under the general cover, if not

necessarily the direct agency, of CNT militia columns, represented a

revolutionary minority’s attempt to control not only production but

consumption for egalitarian purposes and the needs of the war. In this,

agrarian collectives differed radically from the industrial collectives

which regulated production only.’”

So who did carry out the rural collectivisation? Fraser states that it

was not the CNT militia columns. So the original initiative must have

come from the CNT membership in Aragon. How did they do it? Its clear

that they took the opportunity that the destruction of the state by the

CNT militia created to suggest the creation of collectives. In many

villages, the CNT militants who lived and worked there took the

opportunity to set up what they had “always talked about,” namely

voluntary collectives [Fraser, p. 352]. Even in villages without a

pre-war CNT presence, the voluntary nature of the experiment was

stressed – “no one was to be mistreated” by villagers (in the words of

CNT representatives who visited one village [Fraser, p. 360]) and the

decision to join the collective or not was left entirely in the names of

the villagers.

Therefore, to state as Caplan goes that rural collectives were

“typically” carried out by the CNT militia is simply false. The evidence

suggests otherwise. It is of course clear that given the number of

anarchist troops, many people joined the collectives “just to be safe,”

but 30% of the Aragon population felt safe enough to not to join. In

addition, we have indicated that the rural labourers supported the

collectives, as did many poor farmers, as well as the growth of

influence in the CNT before the war, so indicating that collectivisation

may not have been as unpopular as Caplan is arguing.

In addition, it should be noted that in the examples Fraser gives the

CNT made no attempt to determine how the collectives would work. The

decisions on how the collectives were to be organised and who would join

was left in the hands of the villagers themselves. This indicates that

the villagers themselves was carried out by those involved.

Of course, given Caplan’s claim that the rural collectives were created

by the CNT militia we would expect the militia column leaders to have

initiated the process. However, nothing could be further from the truth.

As Faser notes, the advice by one militia leader not to collectivise

“was not heeded” [p. 349] and “the CNT column leaders ... opposed” the

creation of the Council of Aragon [p. 350]. Hardly suggesting a militia

organised collectivisation process, now is it?

Caplan then claims that “Bolloten makes a few statements about the

voluntary character of the Anarchist collectives which can be taken out

of context to make it appear that Bolloten accepts the apologists’ view

that rural collectivization was ‘voluntary.’”:

“While rural collectivization in Aragon embraced more than 70 percent of

the population in the area under left-wing control, and many of the 450

collectives of the region were largely voluntary, it must be emphasized

that this singular development was in some measure due to the presence

of militiamen from the neighboring region of Catalonia, the immense

majority of whom were members of the CNT and FAI.”

In other words, Caplan is suggesting that if we point out these figures

then we are “apologists” of “anarcho-statism.” However, these figures

are interesting, for if the collectives were created by anarchist

terror, why did only 70% join and not 100%? Caplan does not even raise

the question.

Little wonder, for if the collectives had been created by anarchist

terror or force, we would expect a figure of 100% membership in the

collectives. This was not the case, indicating the basically voluntary

nature of the experiment. In addition, if the C.N.T. militia had forced

peasants into collectives we would expect the membership of the

collectives to peak almost overnight, not grow slowly over time.

However, this is what happened:

“At the regional congress of collectives, held at Caspe in mid-February

1937, nearly 80,000 collectivists were represented from ‘almost all the

villages of the region.’ This, however, was but a beginning. By the end

of April the number of collectivists had risen to 140 000; by the end of

the first week of May to 180,000; and by the end of June to 300,000.”

[Graham Kelsey, “Anarchism in Aragon,” pp. 60–82, Spain in Conflict

1931–1939, Martin Blinkhorn (ed), p. 61]

If the collectives has been created by force, then their membership

would have been 300,000 in February, 1937, not increasing steadily to

reach that number four months later. Neither can it be claimed that the

increase was due to new villages being collectivised, as almost all

villages had sent delegates in February. This indicates that many

peasants joined the collectives because of the advantages associated

with common labour, the increased resources it placed at their hands and

the fact that the surplus wealth which had in the previous system been

monopolised by the few was used instead to raise the standard of living

of the entire community.

So, around 30% of the Aragon population felt safe enough not to join and

membership within collectives increased slowly over time. In other

words, in the vast majority of collectives those joining could see that

those who did not were safe. In addition, the steady growth in the

membership of the collectives indicates that they were not imposed by

the C.N.T. militia, for if they had been imposed then we would expect a

100% membership overnight. Instead we see a steady growth over a period

of months, hardly evidence which can support Caplan’s claims. These

figures should not be discounted, as they give an indication of the

basically popular, spontaneous and voluntary nature of the movement.

Another of Bolloten’s statements is as follows:

“But in spite of the cleavages between doctrine and practice that

plagued the Spanish Anarchists whenever they collided with the realities

of power, it cannot be overemphasized that notwithstanding the many

instances of coercion and violence, the revolution of July 1936

distinguished itself from all others by the generally spontaneous and

far-reaching character of its collectivist movement and by its promise

of moral and spiritual renewal. Nothing like this spontaneous movement

had ever occurred before” [Op. Cit., p. 78]

Bolloten also quotes a report on the district of Valderrobes:

“Collectivisation was nevertheless opposed by opponents on the right and

adversaries on the left. If the eternally idle who have been

expropriated had been asked what they thought of collectivisation, some

would have replied that it was robbery and others a dictatorship. But,

for the elderly, the day workers, the tenant farmers and small

proprietors who had always been under the thumb of the big landowners

and heartless usurers, it appeared as salvation” [Op. Cit., p. 71]

Notice the “generally spontaneous” character. Imposed collectives are

not spontaneous. This indicates that Bolloten’s “few statements” are in

fact more significant than Caplan likes to suggest. As for the report

Bolloten quotes, this reflects the diverse nature of the rural

population and indicates that Caplan’s picture of it is distinctly

false. As these groups who supported the collectives were the ones

treated “like animals” before the revolution, it is hardly surprising

that Caplan ignores them. They obviously do not count in his eyes (as

indicated by his statements above).

Caplan argues that “it is important to realize that Bolloten rightly

regards the ‘voluntary’ collectives as nearly as coercive as the

‘forced’ collectives:”

“However, although neither the UGT nor the CNT permitted the small

Republican farmer to hold more land than he could cultivate without the

aid of hired labor, and in many instances he was unable to dispose

freely of his surplus crops because he was compelled to deliver them to

the local committee on the latter’s terms, he was often driven under

various forms of pressure, as will be shown latter in this chapter, to

attach himself to the collective system. This was true particularly in

villages where the Anarchosyndicalists were in the ascendant.”

Caplan states that “while the illegality of hiring wage labor seemed

perfectly fair to the Anarchist militants, this fact plainly

demonstrates that the mere existence of collectives hardly ensures that

no one will voluntarily contract to work for a capitalist.”

However, as Bolloten notes, “the collective system of agriculture

threaten to drain the rural labour market of wage workers” [p. 62],

which it did seem to do (as Bolloten notes, the wage labourers viewed

the collectives in a vastly different light than the wealthier farmers).

And as the evidence Caplan presents of is of “brothers and neighbours”

helping individualists this hardly counts as wage labour (i.e. non

economic reasons would have been the determining reason for aiding

them).

Caplan states that “Fraser provides evidence that the prohibition

against hiring wage labor was often even stricter than it seems...

Plainly it is possible to preserve a nominal right to be an

‘individualist,’ while in practice imposing so many unreasonable

restrictions on them that the independent farmers break down and join

the collective.”

Is this any more unreasonable than denying free access to land by

wealthy land owners before the revolution? Is it the case that the

wealthy should determine the rules and not the majority? And is “free

riding” during a bitter civil war a “reasonable” activity? Could not the

“restrictions” Caplan bemoans can be the result of the war? As for some

of the restrictions Bolloten and others note is that “individualists”

could not get the benefits of the collectives. The is hardly

“unreasonable.” Of course Caplan ignores the example of collectives

helping individualists with machinery and so on which Level and others

have documented. Therefore, the “restrictions” placed upon independent

farmers was the result of the fact they would not be expected to have a

“free-ride” while others paid for the public good of resisting fascism.

I’m surprised to hear a neo-classical economist support “free-riding” to

such a degree that Caplan does in this essay.

Caplan then lists the “various forms of pressure” to which Bolloten

alludes and concludes as follows:

“It is especially strange that anarcho-socialists, who frequently claim

that superficially voluntary interaction (such as the capitalist-worker

relationship) is really coercive, so credulously accept the voluntarist

credentials of the Anarchist-run rural collectives. At least the worker

can try to find another employer; but how ‘voluntary’ was the decision

of a farmer to join the collective when he had to sell his crops to a

legally protected Anarchist monopsony anyway? If the middlemen and

speculators had not been banned by the Anarchists, an independent farmer

could always have sold to them if the Anarchists’ price was too low.”

However, as has been mentioned in passing, there was a war on. Many

collectivists obviously considered it a lesser evil to control prices

than allow increased prices which would have resulted in food being

unavailable to those fighting fascism (for example). Many avowed

capitalist countries have introduced rationing and price controls in war

time so such activity is hardly unexpected in a war. That Caplan ignores

the existence of the war when attacking the collectives is hardly

surprising given his motive for this essay. And I should add, his

expression “the Anarchists’ price” is misleading as the evidence

indicates that the collectives were democratically run and so prices

would have been agreed at collective meetings, and not by “the

Anarchists.”

As the war effort could be considered a “public good,” it is hardly

surprising that the collectives tried to ensure that prices were

controlled to stop inflation and ensure it got to the troops fighting

the war. But, of course, as “anarcho” capitalism has never existed nor

faced fascism in a civil war, its easy for Caplan to point out that the

collectives were not perfect.

Moving on, Caplan quotes Graham Kelsey (“an historian with unbridled

sympathy for the Anarchist movement”) as “reluctantly” revealing “an

important prod used to push the hapless peasantry into the collectives.”

“The military insurrection had come at a critical moment in the

agricultural calendar. Throughout lower Aragon there were fields of

grain ready for harvesting… At the assembly in Albalate de Cinca the

opening clause of the agreed programme had required everyone in the

district, independent farmers and collectivists alike, to contribute

equally to the war effort, thereby emphasizing one of the most important

considerations in the period immediately following the rebellion.”

Caplan concludes: “The independent farmer, in short, had no option to

remain aloof from the Anarchists’ cause and do his own thing; even if he

could keep his land, a large part of his product belonged to the CNT”

Or to the war effort, as Kelsey puts it. Again, we are faced with the

fact that the CNT were fighting a war against fascism and many

considered that this war situation meant that everyone should be

involved. If the fascists won, then everyone would be subjected to their

rule. Could winning the war be considered a “public good”? Many

anarchists (and non-anarchists) thought so. It is even admitted by

certain “anarcho” capitalists that national defence would be a problem

in their vision of a new “society” (see David Friedman, The Machinery of

Freedom, for example). Therefore, given the problem facing them, the

Aragon collectives solved it by the only means in their power – by

making all contribute equally to the war effort.

Caplan then notes that “[t]he fact that only a small percentage of the

Anarchist collectives were called ‘total,’ cannot alter the fact that

aside from the intense monopolistic pressure wielded by the CNT through

its stranglehold over the economy and agricultural markets, an

independent farmer still had to ‘contribute equally to the war effort.’”

This is because those independent farmers would benefit if fascism was

defeated. In other words, we face the “free rider” problem, and a war

situation may not the best time to come up with new solutions to the

problem. But, of course, the war is irrelevant for Caplan. This can be

seen when he calls the war effort against fascism “the CNT” or “the

CNT’s cause.”

Caplan then quotes the testimony of Fernando Aragon and his wife

Francisca on the totalitarian nature of their collective. However, he

fails to mention either of the following:

Firstly, Fraser himself points out, that, for “extraneous reasons,” he

could not “talk to supporters and detractors of the collectives… in the

Angues collective… The testimony of Fernando ARAGON and his wife — a

view of the inherent undemocratic dangers contained within the

collectivisation experiment — must stand on its own” [p. 369]

Secondly, the democratic nature of the other three collectives Fraser

discusses:

According to one member of the Beceite collectives, “it was marvellous…

to live in a collective, a free society where one could say what one

thought, where if the village committee seemed unsatisfactory one could

say. The committee took no big decisions without calling the whole

village together in a general assembly. All this was wonderful” [p. 288]

Or how about another Aragon collective, in which “Once the work groups

were established on a friendly basis and worked their own lands,

everyone got on well enough, he recalled. There was no need for

coercion, no need for discipline and punishment…. A collective wasn’t a

bad idea at all” [p. 360]. This collective, like 95% of the 450

collectives, was voluntary, “I couldn’t oblige him to join; we weren’t

living under a dictatorship” [p. 362]

Fraser states that “For detractors of Aragon collectives, Fernando’s

experience was more or less typical: For supporters exceptional, but

undeniable.” And as can be seen from both Fraser and Bolloten, it was

“exceptional” and not “typical.” It is funny how Caplan concentrates on

Aragon’s account and not on the other collectives described by Fraser.

The question of why Caplan feels happy to quote the uncollaborated

testimony of 2 people out of 300 000 in preference to overwhelming other

evidence available is easily answered – it helps create the picture of

“anarcho-statism” that Caplan is trying to create. That he builds his

case on such evidence indicates its (lack of) strength.

Caplan then states “[i]n a footnote, Fraser insightfully explains that

once the CNT engineered the abolition of money (no one even tries to

explain how the abolition of money could be voluntary), the peasants

were helpless. A poor person with a little money has options; the

Aragonese peasantry did not.”

“The problem of the collectivists’ freedom to leave villages –

permanently or on trips – exercised the imagination of observers from

the start. With the abolition of money, the collective held the upper

hand since anyone wishing to travel had to get ‘republican’ money from

the committee. This meant justifying the trip.”

However, the collectives individually decided on the question of the

abolition of money (as can be seen different collectives tried different

techniques at different times), not the CNT. In addition, the committees

were elected from and accountable to mass assemblies. In other words, an

individual in a collective did had options — to join the collective, to

convince his fellow members to provide him or her resources to make a

trip he or she needed to make. Under capitalism, many peasants did not

have the resources to make long trips, within a collective they did so.

And, I should note, the options of the poor Aragonese before the war

seemed to consist of work for one of the local bosses on the poverty

level (as indicated pre-war Aragon saw mounting poverty, and social

unrest), subject to their rule in the village (the power of the local

bosses ensured that workers had a hard time if they joined a union) or

leave for another region of Spain (like Catalonia, with its strong union

movement). Needless to say, Caplan does not indicate what the “options”

available to a “poor person with a little money” under the capitalist

regime that existed before the revolution actually considered of — after

all, work for poverty-level wages, be treated like “animals” or move

somewhere else is hardly a great example of free freedom to choose. So,

as far as options available to poor peasants in pre-war Aragon goes, its

clear that the collectives went beyond them.

It should also be noted that Caplan “insightfully” ignores the testimony

in Fraser and Bolloten of people easily getting “permission” to travel

and that Fraser concludes by saying “Conditions obviously varied from

collective to collective and, as in many other aspects, generalisation

is impossible” [p. 368]

Nevertheless, Caplan feels able to generalise and ignore the evidence of

people travelling from collectives.

Caplan then discusses the “despotism of the Anarchists” and ends by

saying “[t]hus, the freedom of the Aragonese peasantry was the Orwellian

freedom to live precisely as the Anarchist militia deemed right.”

However, the quotes he presented makes it clear that the decisions were

made by the collectives in question and not by the militia. This can be

seen from the references to “the inhabitants,” “one peasant” and “the

collectivists” and no mention of the militia. This suggests that these

examples of “anarchist despotism” were the democratic decision of the

collectives involved. Of course, anarchists would not take democracy

that far, but the collectives were not run by anarchists but by those in

them.

Caplan then goes on to compare the anarchist collectives with the

“forced agricultural collectivization, in both Communist and other Third

World countries.” He states that the “ugly secret of the Anarchists is

that the underlying objective of forced collectivization was to fund

their military and cement the power of their councils and committees.”

However, as noted Caplan has not presented a case that forced

collectivisation occurred. Only 5% of collectives were “total” (i.e.

forced) and the collectives themselves based on mass assemblies and

elected committees. As for the pressures which individualists were

subject to, these clearly resulted from the need to win the war. In

addition, “the ugly secret of the Anarchists” was well known at the

time. The newspapers reported that the collectives were feeding the

front free of charge. In addition, (as Caplan himself notes later) the

underlying objective for the collectives was not to feed the front but

to create a new society based on co-operative labour and in this they

were successful. The vast majority of the collectives were voluntary and

based on mass assemblies and elected committees.

As many of the Aragonese had relatives at the front and most had a lot

to lose by a victory for fascism (i.e. the land they had just taken

over), it’s little wonder that the collectives agreed to send their

surplus to the front. Caplan claims that the surplus was used just for

feeding the troops and for armaments, but this is false. The surplus was

also used for investment in the collectives, new machinery, schools and

so on. The question should arise, who actually controlled where the

surplus went. Caplan is strangely silent on this question, for good

reason. The facts state that it was the collectivists themselves who

controlled their own surplus. This quote summarises the situation well:

“The policies to be followed by collectives were usually determined in

general membership meetings that also decided upon the distribution of

profits and agricultural surpluses.” [The Agony of Modernization, p.

393]

And, I may note, its interesting to compare the Aragon collectives to

those in Stalin’s Russia. After 5 years of brutal “reform” the Russian

collectives had 85% membership, but such a high membership was also

associated with the deaths of 10–20 million people. In Aragon, 70%

membership occurred after 10 months and no mass murder. This indicates

well that the Aragon collectives were not the product of “forced

collectivisation” but instead an essentially local development, one that

built upon and reflected the growth of the CNT just before the war (and

years of anarchist propaganda work as well).

In other words, Caplan’s claims of an anarchist “ugly secret” are simply

false. Caplan, by ignoring all these established facts, exposes himself

as less than objective.

He then quotes Graham Kelsey, who he claims “tries his best to portray

this naked exploitation favorably,” as follows:

“To organize the provisioning of the front-line volunteers as rapidly

and as equitably as possibly was to be more than merely an aim in

itself. One of the most common corollaries of war in a capitalist system

is the development of such social and economic evils as

black-marketeering, profiteering, and, as a consequence, arbitrarily

imposed shortages and serious inflation. The villages from which large

numbers of volunteers had joined the columns had immediately organized

the despatch of supplies to the front. These villages, however, were but

a handful, chiefly those with strong anarchosyndicalist traditions.

Evidently the situation had to be regularized, particularly as the

initial insurrection had begun to assume all the characteristics of a

prolonged military confrontation. Agricultural collectivisation,

therefore, became both a way of ensuring the equal contribution of all

villages to the burden posed by the conflict and also a way of making it

impossible for those who possessed the means or the inclination to

profit from the exigencies placed upon the regional economy by the

presence of civil war. It was not just a libertarian theory; it was also

the only way to ensure the maximum agricultural production with the

minimum economic corruption.”

Of course, war as a “public good” does not spring into Caplan’s

neo-classical mind. Therefore the anarchists must have had a “hidden

agenda” in their activities. However, the simple fact is that the war

against fascism led to the decisions that the anarchists made. Kesley

does not “portray” “naked exploitation” favourably, he indicates the

social context of the decisions that were made – a context that Caplan

seeks to deny in favour of a text-book free market system.

Caplan goes on to state that “Kelsey is virtually the only academic

historian who attempts to affirm the voluntary character of the

Anarchist collectives,” but as noted above, Caplan states that

Bolloten’s comments should be ignored. This means that Kelsey is

“virtually” the only historian if we agree with Caplan and ignore the

comments of the others!

He then states that “among his many puzzling statements, one that stands

out is his attempt to prove that the collectives had to be voluntary

because everyone supporters them, regardless of party.”

“Another sign of the acceptance of agricultural collectivisation was the

adherence of the members of other trade-union and political groups all

of which, nationally, maintained a hostile stance towards

collectivisation.”

Caplan maintains that “[n]ormal people see an unnatural degree of

unanimity and infer that such agreement could only be the result of

extreme coercion. Kelsey sees an unnatural degree of unanimity and

infers that such agreement could only be the result of the extraordinary

goodness of the collectives.”

Of course, normal people see that some measures in violation of

libertarian principles may occur during a civil war, but not Caplan.

However, as noted by Bolloten (but ignored by Caplan), only 70% of the

population joined the collectives. Fraser’s evidence indicates that many

of the members of other parties and groups did not join. In other words,

the evidence that those who joined the collectives had to do so is

false. In addition, that the collectives increased production,

introduced machinery, allowed members to get medical treatment they

could never have afforded alone, etc. would also have had an impact on

decisions to join. But, of course, these positive aspects of the

collectives would weaken his case so they are ignored. And I must add,

it seems strange that Caplan claims that there was “an unnatural degree

of unanimity” which could only be the “result of extreme coercion” – a

coercion which did not produce 100% collectivisation over night but was

enough to create “an unnatural degree of unanimity”? Hardly convincing –

coercion to the degree Caplan implies here would have resulted in a very

high collectivisation rate overnight, but that did not happen. And given

that the historian Gabriel Jackson notes that “[i]n large portions of...

Aragon practically no revolutionary violence occurred” [The Spanish

Republic and the Civil War: 1931–1939, p. 532] we can suggest that

Caplan’s claims of “extreme coercion” are false. Instead, the obvious

success of the collectives in terms of democratic self-management,

improved production and consumption, the building of hospitals, roads,

and so on, as well as the introduction of labour saving machinery and so

on, is the reason that people joined and supported the collectives.

Of course, in today’s world, the vast majority of politicians and

“experts” have an “unnatural degree of unanimity” about the free market.

Perhaps that suggests “extreme coercion” as well? The idea that the

collectives worked, that the majority saw their liberty and living

standards increase due to them, and that this was the reason for their

acceptance by members of other organisations is lost on Caplan. And

given that 30% of the population did not subscribe to the collectives,

this does not suggest “an unnatural degree of unanimity,” quite the

reverse! Of course Caplan ignores this sizeable minority in passing his

judgement.

It should also be mentioned that Kesley immediately after the quote

cited by Caplan highlights the existence of collectives organised by

groups other than the CNT. He notes the existence of a CNT-UGT

collective, a UGT one and a few organised by the Communists. In other

words, collectives not run by the CNT which is at odds with Caplan’s

suggestion of a CNT run statist regime.

Now, Caplan is trying to present a case of “extreme coercion,” but does

not present any evidence to back up his claims. If there had been the

“extreme coercion” Caplan claims, we would have expected 100%

collectivisation rate. This did not occur. As addition evidence against

Caplan’s claims, we can cite the make up of the new municipal councils

created after July 19^(th). As Kesley notes, “[w]hat is immediately

noticeable from the results is that although the region has often been

branded as one controlled by anarchists to the total exclusion of all

other forces, the CNT was far from enjoying the degree of absolute

domination often implied and inferred.” [p. 198]

These facts cannot be reconciled with Caplan’s claims of “extreme

coercion” and so Caplan’s claims are not supported by the evidence.

Caplan then quotes Royo, an anarchist militant, and comments on his

statement that “if there had been a free market, the farmers would be

paid the value of their labor. There is much irony in Royo’s tacit

admission that the ‘problem’ with the free market is that it _prevents_

exploitation, ensuring that everyone gets paid for the product of their

labor.” Of course, as Caplan is a supporter of capitalism, he states

that the market provides the worker with the “value of their labour.”

However, the worker does not in fact receive this, as capitalists

control the product of that labour and keep a slice of the value created

for themselves (that is why Kropotkin, echoing Proudhon’s analysis,

noted that “the only guarantee not to be robbed of the fruits of your

labour is to possess the instruments of labour.” [The Conquest of Bread,

p. 145]). However, this point is ignored by Caplan when evaluating

capitalism. And, of course, a free market is not a policy usually suited

to a war situation. But the war is irrelevant to Caplan’s case, and so

is ignored.

Caplan then states that “[p]resumably the poor workers of the villages

did not realized that ‘equality’ would also guarantee an equal share for

Anarchist soldiers who never set a foot in the village.” Of course these

troops were holding back the fascists, and so would have found it hard

to “set foot in the village.” It could be argued that they were

supplying a “service” which many considered worth paying for. But Caplan

does not seem to think that fighting fascism is a service of any kind.

Many “normal” people would disagree. In addition, it should be pointed

out that many at the front were Aragonese. In fact, many in the

Catalonia CNT militia would have been originally from Aragon (21% of

migrants to Catalonia before the war came from Aragon) and many

Aragonese joined the militias when they passed through their towns and

villages.

Caplan moves on to the end of the Aragon collectives and notes that

“[i]n July of 1937, the Aragonese Anarchists were desperately trying to

avoid the fate of their Catalonian comrades. The Communists had replaced

the Anarchists as the dominant force in Catalonia. Was Aragon next?” He

then quotes Jose Peirats, the Anarchist historian, to “provide” the

“setting” – “In his commemorative speech on July 19, 1937, the President

of the Council of Aragon was extremely pessimistic… ‘it would be

regrettable if anyone tried to make trouble for [the Council of Aragon],

for that would force [the Council] to unsheathe its claws of iron and

teeth of steel.’”

Of course, any socio-economic organisation is entitled to defend itself

– Caplan does not deny this right to capitalist companies (indeed, he

would prefer capitalist companies to hire “claws of iron” without having

to worry that these claws are somehow accountable to those it

represses). And as future events prove, these “claws of iron” were in

fact non-existent (and, indeed, the accounts of the collectives indicate

a specific lack of repression within them – e.g. Fraser’s eye-witnesses

accounts of how the collectives operated). Caplan then goes on to note

that “[i]n December of 1936, the Council agreed to share some of its

power with members of other Republican parties, but the dominant

position of the Anarchists remained.” Again, sharing power is hardly the

policy of totalitarians and we may note that the “power” of the council

was pretty limited and involved supporting and co-ordinating the

activities of the collectives

Caplan goes on to state that “[c]learly in a conciliatory mood, the

President emphasized that the right to farm individually would be

protected (thus implicitly admitting widespread violation of this

right).” What logic! But first, to correct a mistake of Caplan, the

President of the Aragon council did not make remarks. Actually, if you

read Pierats its clear that this remark is not from the President, but

from an “agreement signed by representatives of all political and union

forces in Aragon”. This is clear from the text.

But to return to the “logic” – the fact that individual farmers would be

protected (along with the right to farm it collectively) is taken to

“imply” that this right had seen widespread violation. The report

actually states that “the council will protect the right of peasants to

work the earth individually or collectively”. I suppose that this means

that the report is “implicitly” admitting widespread violation of the

right to farm collectively as well! The idea that the council did

support the rights of peasants to farm their own land (and, we may add,

a fact which can be seen from membership figures in the collectives)

does not cross Caplan’s mind. Funny, but stating that individualist

peasant’s rights would be protected could mean exactly that – that they

would, and did, oppose forced collectivisation and would “defend the

smallholder.” However, such statements (like the fact of 95% voluntary

collectives, 70% of the population joining) are turned by Caplan into

“proof” that collectivisation was “forced” – what logic.

Caplan then quotes the agreement signed by all of the Republican

factions of Aragon as follows: “‘The Council of Aragon, which will

collaborate enthusiastically with the legitimate government of the

Republic, will increase production in the rearguard, mobilize all the

region’s resources for the war effort, arouse the antifascist spirit of

the masses… and undertake an intense purge in the liberated zones; it

will impose unrelenting order and hunt down hidden fascists, defeatists

and speculators.’”

And makes the statement “The totalitarian tone of these words is hard to

overlook.” Lets think about this – and place it in context. Most wars

result in such statements, they are made by many different political

opinions. A war, particularly a civil war, requires the defence of the

rear-guard against enemies who would undermine the war effort. The idea

that fascists should be allowed to undermine the war effort in the name

of “liberty” is a strange one. Again, as far as speculators go, such

activity can and does demoralise the rear-guard and ends up with a few

enriching themselves at the expense of the majority, the majority who

are making the sacrifices necessary to win the war – the victory of

which will also benefit the speculator. So, yes, in wars political

groups often talk about “purging” the rearguard, of increasing

production and so on. Does it have “totalitarian” tones? Only if the

society in which these statements are made is also totalitarian. For

example, the “tone” of the British war effort during world war 2 would

seem “totalitarian” if quoted in the here and now, but obviously in

context such statements would mean something totally different is

uttered within Nazi Germany or Stalin’s Russia. In the case of Aragon,

we state that the “totalitarian tone” does not imply a totalitarian

reality (it does imply a society in a civil war against fascism though).

Periats notes that meetings of the Popular Front of Aragon occurred

during this time (which consisted of the Communist Party, the UGT and

the Republican Left). Hardly a “totalitarian” regime which allows

non-regime parties to meet and organise – and so indicating well that

the “tone” reflects a society in a life and death struggle against

fascism (a fascism which was slaughtering tens of thousands of people at

the time, I must add) and nothing more. Given the mass murder that was

occurring under Franco, we can understand desires to make sure that the

Republic wins the war and the rear-guard is safe from pro-fascists. But

context is not Caplan’s strong point.

Caplan then moves on to the end of the Aragon Collectives. He states

that “[t]he Council’s protestations of its loyalty and ecumenical spirit

did not save it from an invasion of Communist-led forces under the

orders of the central government. The Communists broke up many

collectives, even voluntary ones (although as noted the “voluntarism” of

the collectives was universally questionable).”

As noted above, the voluntarism of the collectives was not “universally

questionable” – far from it, given the problem of the war the Aragon

collectives did a reasonable job in ensuring that individuals who did

not want to join were reflected. Of course, Caplan may try to claim that

individuals should not be forced to pay for the war effort, but such a

support for “free riding” would be strange coming from a

right-libertarian.

And he quotes Bolloten:

“the land, farm implements, horses, and cattle confiscated from

right-wing supporters were returned to their former owners or to their

families; new buildings erected by the collectives, such as stables and

hen coops, were destroyed, and in some villages the farms were deprived

even of seed for sowing, while six hundred members of the CNT were

arrested.”

He concludes that “[a]fter their initial onslaught, the Communists

backed off somewhat; so long as the Anarchists were out of power, the

Communists were generally willing to accept a milder form of

collectivization.”

However, this ignores an important result of the suppression of the

collectives, namely the collapse of the rural economy. At a meeting of

the agrarian commission of the Aragonese Communist Party (October

9^(th), 1937), Jose Silva emphasised “the little incentive to work of

the entire peasant population” and that the situation brought about by

the dissolution of the collectives was “grave and critical.” [quoted by

Bolloten, p. 530] A few days earlier the Communist-controlled Regional

Delegation of Agrarian Reform acknowledged that “in the majority of

villages agricultural work was paralyzed causing great harm to our

agrarian economy” [Ibid.]

If the collectives were as unpopular as Caplan claims, then why the

collapse of the economy? If Lister had overturned a totalitarian

anarchist regime, why did the peasants not reap the benefit of their

toil? Could it be because Caplan gets it wrong? This is backed up by

Yaacov Oved’s statement (from a paper submitted to the XII Congress of

Sociology, Madrid, July 1990 – Oved, as far as I am aware, is not an

anarchist):

“Those who were responsible for this policy [of “freeing” the Aragon

Collectivists], were convinced that the farmers would greet it joyfully

because they had been coerced into joining the collectives. But they

were proven wrong. Except for the rich estate owners who were glad to

get their land back, most of the members of the agricultural collectives

objected and lacking all motivation they were reluctant to resume the

same effort of in the agricultural work. This phenomenon was so

widespread that the authorities and the communist minister of

agriculture were forced to retreat from their hostile policy” [Yaacov

Oved, Communismo Libertario and Communalism in the Spanish

Collectivisations (1936–1939)]

In other words, the picture Caplan paints is incomplete and ignores the

existence of the rural day labourers and poor peasants who supported the

collectives. But, of course, people at the bottom of the social pyramid

are unimportant and so can safely be overlooked.

Caplan, ignoring the fact of economic collapse, states that “Apologists

for the Anarchists frequently point to the fact that many collectives

persisted even after the Communist-led forces destroyed the Council of

Aragon,” and answers this by stating that “[e]ven after the destruction

of the Council of Aragon, might not some farmers have remained within

the collectives out of fear of later persecution if the CNT regained

power?” However, this hypothesis about some farmers does not explain how

they managed to survive or the fact that the economy collapsed. It’s

undoubtably true that many people left the collectives when they had the

chance. Many people did not join freely. It’s also true that many left

because of the repression by the communists. Could it be that Caplan

does not present the whole picture in his account? We have noticed how

he ignores the democratic nature of the collectives as well as the day

workers who supported the CNT or UGT and favoured the collectives.

Moreover, as far as post-collective Aragon goes, even the Communist

Party noted that the old bosses took their dominating role within Aragon

society back again after the Communists crushed the collectives. They

obviously felt safe enough to return to their own ways, an event that

must have been very widespread to get even the Communist Party to

mention it. So, I think we can say that Caplan’s argument about “farmers

fear” keeping the collectives going after the Communists “liberated”

Aragon is simply false – the popular support for the collectives in the

Aragon working class is a far more likely explanation, and one that fits

the facts better.

To requote the report on the district of Valderrobes:

“Collectivisation was nevertheless opposed by opponents on the right and

adversaries on the left. If the eternally idle who have been

expropriated had been asked what they thought of collectivisation, some

would have replied that it was robbery and others a dictatorship. But,

for the elderly, the day workers, the tenant farmers and small

proprietors who had always been under the thumb of the big landowners

and heartless usurers, it appeared as salvation” [p. 71]

In other words, Caplan ignores a sizeable portion of the rural

population in his argument against the collectives — the same portion

that was “treated as animals” by the bosses, a treatment not even worth

a comment by our defender of “liberty.” We must ask, then: how objective

is Caplan if he ignores the existence of a whole segment of society as

irrelevant, instead focusing on wealthy property owners as if they were

the only ones who count?

As Yaacov Oved argues in relation to the breaking up of the collectives:

“Through the widespread reluctance of collectivists to co-operate with

the new policy it became evident that most members had voluntarily

joined the collectives and as soon as the policy was changed a new wave

of collectives was established. However, the wheel could not be turned

back. An atmosphere is distrust prevailed between the collectives and

the authorities and every initiative was curtailed” [Op. Cit.]

In other words, Caplan thesis is directly questioned by Oved who uses

the same sources as Caplan. This combined with Bolloten’s comments

(which Caplan asks us to ignore) suggests that Caplan is wrong.

Caplan concludes as follows:

“Bolloten aptly sums up the ironclad case against the Anarchist rural

collectives, a case which need not rely on Communist-tainted testimony

or sources:”

“If, theoretically, during the Spanish Revolution, the CNT and FAI were

opposed to the state dictatorship established by the Marxists, they

nevertheless established a form of parochial dictatorship in many

localities, with the aid of vigilance groups and revolutionary

tribunals. While these fell far short of the ‘scientific concept’ of

totalitarian dictatorship defined by Lenin, the CNT and FAI exercised

their power in a naked form not only against priests and landowners,

moneylenders and merchants, but in many cases against small tradesmen

and farmers.”

But he ignores the following statement immediately after it:

“But in spite of the cleavages between doctrine and practice that

plagued the Spanish Anarchists whenever they collided with the realities

of power, it cannot be overemphasized that notwithstanding the many

instances of coercion and violence, the revolution of July 1936

distinguished itself from all others by the generally spontaneous and

far-reaching character of its collectivist movement and by its promise

of moral and spiritual renewal. Nothing like this spontaneous movement

had ever occurred before”

This places the first statement in a new light. The thesis of “CNT

dictatorship” is hardly supported by reference to a “spontaneous

movement;” and, as noted by both Fraser and Bolloten, the collectives

themselves were run by mass assemblies in a democratic manner.

Considering that only around 20 of the 450 collectives were total, the

“many localities” may not have been that widespread in Aragon and

elsewhere, although we are sure they did occur. If, as Caplan claims,

his case is “ironclad,” then why did he ignore so much relevant

information — for example, the democratic internal nature of the

collectives, the existence of the day laborers, the introduction of

machinery, the collapse of the economy after the collectives were

crushed, and so on? Why does “many localities” become all localities for

Caplan? What about the fact that 70% of the population joined and 95% of

the collectives were voluntary? If the CNT had created a dictatorship in

Aragon, the figures would have been 100% and 0% respectively. Or the

fact that collectives existed in all parts of Republican Spain (in areas

nowhere near the CNT militias)? Could the existence of 1500 collectives

in total (450 in Aragon) suggest that the creation of rural collectives

was not imposed by the CNT militia?

Caplan concludes stating that “[t]his dictatorship would undoubtedly

have become even more egregious if the Anarchists had ever become the

dominant power in Spain; Bolloten cites numerous Anarchist publications

explaining that the concessions to voluntarism and individualism were

merely temporary expedients which would be withdrawn as soon as the

Anarchists were too powerful to be challenged.” However as Bolloten also

notes, “the official policy of the CNT...was, within certain limits, one

of respect for the property of the small Republican farmer” [p. 64], and

so these “concessions” were nothing of the kind.

Caplan, we are sure, thinks that he is exposing anarchist dictatorship

in Aragon. But the facts do not back up his claims. Voluntary,

democratic collectives are not dictatorship. Of course, he has tried to

argue that those who did not join the collectives (all 150,000 of them)

were “forced” to take part in the war effort. Again, this is undoubtedly

true, but as the war effort was a “public good,” this is hardly

surprising. All Caplan has shown is that some farmers joined the

collectives because of the presence of the CNT militia and the climate

caused by the war, and that in some areas, CNT members acted as

dictators. However, this is not the whole picture, as we have indicated

above.

In other words, his thesis of anarchist dictatorship in Aragon has not

been proven, and in fact has been proved to be false. To requote one

eye-witness from an Aragon collective:

“it was marvellous… to live in a collective, a free society where one

could say what one thought, where if the village committee seemed

unsatisfactory one could say. The committee took no big decisions

without calling the whole village together in a general assembly. All

this was wonderful” [Blood of Spain, p. 288]

Hardly anarchist dictatorship and more in line with Bolloten’s “few

statements” on the “spontaneous character” of the collectives.

Therefore, Caplan’s case against the rural collectives falls in the face

of all the evidence. Evidence which Caplan was aware of but decided to

ignore.

3. Economics and the Spanish Anarchists

A. Background for the Civil War: The Great Depression and the Labor

Market

Caplan attempts to present a case why Spain suffered a depression in the

1930s. He notes that if “Spanish industrial production in 1929 is set

equal to 100, then in 1935 it remained at a stagnant 86.9 in spite of

six years’ worth of population growth.” without actually mentioning that

1933 marked the lowest point in industrial production (of 84.4) with

1934 and 1935 both seeing a slight increase in output (output in the USA

was two-thirds the 1929 level in 1932, by way of contrast). And he

states that unemployment was by all accounts...correspondingly high.”

However, compared to other western countries unemployment in Spain was

far lower: “[a]t the worse moments of the depression [in Spain] there

were about a half-million unemployed, proportionally one-fourth the

extent of the unemployment suffered in the United States and Germany in

1932.” [Gabriel Jackson, The Spanish Republic and Civil War: 1931–1939,

p. 96]

According to Fraser, in 1930 over 2,500,000 people were part of the

industrial working class, approximately 26% of the working population.

Which means a total workforce of about 9–10 million (at least). This

means that around 5–8% of the working population was unemployed in

Spain, compared to around 20–30% in the USA. Therefore, while

unemployment was high, it was very low compared to other western nations

in the 1930s. This is so even if we assume that a sizeable percentage of

the working population worked their own land (Paul Preston notes that in

December 1933, 619 000 were unemployed, 12% of the workforce). Over 70%

of the unemployed were rural workers.

This suggests that the “depression level” unemployment Spain suffered

was less extreme that in other countries (due, in part to the fact Spain

was less integrated into the global economy and, in part, if we accept

Michal Kalecki’s analysis of capitalist crisis, to the high level of

workers’ organisation which increased effective demand by distributing

income to the working class – more on this later).

However, Caplan attempts to explain it in terms, firstly, of the “large

consensus of economic historians [which] argues, persuasively in my

view, that the essential cause of the Great Depression was the

international monetary contraction of the late 20’s and early 30’s.”

However, an equally large consensus argues that this is not the case.

For example, “The central case [for the contraction argument] is the

onset of the Great Depression... [Milton] Friedman attributed this

plunge to a sharp contraction in his monetary aggregates... But the

Federal Reserve did not actually pull money out of the system. What

happened instead was... a wave of bank failures” which occurred due to

the 1929 crash. [Paul Krugmen, Peddling Prosperity, p. 38] Nichola

Kaldor pointed out that “[a]ccording to Friedman’s own figures, the

amount of ‘high-powered money’... in the US increased, not decreased,

throughout the Great Contraction: in July 1932, it was more than 10 per

cent higher than in July, 1929 ... The Great Contraction of the money

supply ... occurred despite this increase in the monetary base. “ [“The

New Monetarism”, The Essential Kaldor, pp. 487–8]

Other economists also investigated Friedman’s claims, with similar

result. Peter Temin, for example, critiqued them from a Keynesian point

of view, asking whether the decline in spending resulted from a decline

in the money supply or the other way round. He noted that while the

Monetarist “narrative is long and complex” it “offers far less support

for [its] assertions than appears at first. In fact, it assumes the

conclusion and describes the Depression in terms of it; it does not test

or prove it at all.” He examined the changes in the real money balances

and found that they increased between 1929 and 1931 from between 1 and

18% (depending on choice of money aggregate used and how it was

deflated). Overall, the money supply not only did not decline but

actually increased 5% between August 1929 and August 1931. Temin

concluded that there is no evidence that money caused the depression

after the stock market crash. [Did Monetary Forces Cause the Great

Depression?, pp. 15–6 and p. 141] In other words, the depression caused

the contraction, not vice versa.

Caplan notes that the “seminal academic work” by Milton Friedman and

Anna Schwartz (A Monetary History of the United States) “established”

this point of “the magnitude and importance of the monetary

contraction.” However, not all economists agree. To quote Michael

Stewart (Keynes and After – who notes correctly that “Monetarist

assumptions bear little relation to reality” p. 181) this book “was

supposed to show the crucial importance of the behaviour of the money

supply... Yet what appears to be the concluding summary of the book (on

page 695) reads as follows:

“‘Changes in the money stock are therefore a consequence as well as an

independent source of change in money and prices. Mutual interaction,

but with money rather clearly the senior partner in longer-run movements

and in major cyclical movements, and more nearly an equal partner with

money income and prices in shorter-run and milder movements – this is

the generalisation suggested by our evidence.’

“More clearly an equal partner? Generalisation suggested by the

evidence? It is little short of extraordinary that such a qualified and

tentative finding should become the basis of the widespread assertion

that changes in the money supply determine money incomes and prices,

rather than the other way round. And some Keynesians would argue that

the detailed statistical tables in the book do not in fact bear out even

such a qualified and tentative finding as this.” [pp. 188–9] Another

critique argued that Friedman’s assumptions have “been shown to be

fallacious and the empirical evidence questionable if not totally

misinterpreted.” Moreover, “none of the assumptions which Friedman made

to reach his extraordinary conclusions bears any relation to reality.

They were chosen precisely because they led to the desired conclusion,

that inflation is a purely monetary phenomenon, originating solely in

excess monetary demand.” [Thomas Balogh, The Irrelevance of Conventional

Economics, p. 165 and p. 167]

And, I must note, when Milton’s Friedman’s ideas on monetarism were

applied by the 1979 Thatcher government in the UK, they produced a

massive depression which increased unemployment massively in a few

years. Which suggests his ideas on the monetary nature of unemployment

and recession were somewhat at odds with reality. The “rise in

unemployment, from about 5 percent of the labour force to over 13

percent, had not been foreshadowed by the monetarists.” [Stewart, p.

191] Indeed, the government changed the way unemployment was measured in

light of reality, meaning that the 13 percent figure is too low!

Moreover, the Thatcher government could not meet the money controls it

set. It took until 1986 before the Tory government stopped announcing

monetary targets, persuaded no doubt by the embarrassment caused by its

inability to hit them. In addition, the variations in the money supply

showed that Friedman’s argument on what caused inflation was also wrong.

According to his theory, inflation was caused by the money supply

increasing faster than the economy, yet inflation fell as the money

supply increased. Between 1979 and 1981–2, its growth rose and was still

higher in 1982–3 than it had been in 1978–9 yet inflation was down to

4.6% in 1983. As the moderate conservative MP Ian Gilmore pointed out,

“[h]ad Friedmanite monetarism... been right, inflation would have been

about 16 per cent in 1982–3, 11 per cent in 1983–4, and 8 per cent in

1984–5. In fact ... in the relevant years it never approached the levels

infallibly predicted by monetarist doctrine.” [Ian Gilmore, Dancing With

Dogma, p. 57 and pp. 62–3] So, as Henwood summarises, “even the periods

of recession and recovery disprove monetarist dogma.” [Wall Street, p.

202]

Unfortunately for Caplan, Monetarism was simply wrong. It cannot be

stressed enough how deeply flawed and ideological Friedman’s arguments

were. As one critique noted, his assumptions have “been shown to be

fallacious and the empirical evidence questionable if not totally

misinterpreted.” Moreover, “none of the assumptions which Friedman made

to reach his extraordinary conclusions bears any relation to reality.

They were chosen precisely because they led to the desired conclusion,

that inflation is a purely monetary phenomenon, originating solely in

excess monetary demand.” [Thomas Balogh, The Irrelevance of Conventional

Economics, p. 165 and p. 167] For Kaldor, Friedman’s claims that

empirical evidence supported his ideology were false. “Friedman’s

assertions lack[ed] any factual foundation whatsoever.” He stressed,

“They ha[d] no basis in fact, and he seems to me have invented them on

the spur of the moment.” [The Scourge of Monetarism, p. 26] There was no

relationship between the money supply and inflation.

It should be noted, though, that Monetarism had the side-effect of

breaking workers’ resistance to the demands of their bosses, via mass

and persistence unemployment. This was what caused inflation to drop, as

workers were in no position to demand wage rises in the face of rising

prices. As Kaldor summarised, inflation may have dropped but this lay

“in their success in transforming the labour market from a

twentieth-century sellers’ market to a nineteenth-century buyers’

market, with wholesome effects on factory discipline, wage claims, and

proneness to strike.” [The Scourge of Monetarism, p. xxiii] Another

British economist described this policy memorably as “deliberately

setting out to base the viability of the capitalist system on the

maintenance of a large ‘industrial reserve army’ [of the unemployed] ...

[it is] the incomes policy of Karl Marx.” [Thomas Balogh, The

Irrelevance of Conventional Economics, pp. 177–8] The aim, in summary,

was to swing the balance of social, economic and political power back to

capital and ensure the road to (private) serfdom was followed.

Caplan, however, notes that monetary contraction “by any measure” “did

not occur” in Spain and states that the “standard monetary explanation

fails to explain the Spanish depression” and spends the rest of this

section blaming the depression in Spain before the war on the

militantism of the unions; in other words, in his view union workers

priced others out of work. He states that “what other factors might be

involved [to explain the Spanish depression]? The preponderance of the

evidence indicates that the Spanish labor unions, of which the CNT was

foremost, through their intransigent militancy and activism, succeeded

in raising real wages approximately 20% from 1929 to 1936...In their

ignorance and emotional hostility to classical economic theory, the

trade-unionists probably did not realise that the necessary consequence

of pushing real wages so far above the market level would be massive

unemployment; but massive unemployment was indeed the result. The

increasing hostility to employers, sabotage, and so on undoubtedly

decreased the expected marginal productivity of labor, leaving the

prevailing union wage scale even farther above the market-clearing

level.”

Caplan earlier bemoaned the “arrogant and paternalistic” statements of a

CNT member. Here, however, he blames the depression on the workers, who

were “ignorant and emotional.” Does it not even strike him that the

workers could be right and he wrong? Does he really expect people facing

low wages just to accept their lot and not struggle for higher wages?

And by pushing the wages “above” the “market level,” could this not have

increased aggregate demand and so have reduced unemployment? Of course,

bosses profits may have been affected, but there is no mention of this

(obviously high profits, unlike high wages, are fine). And are we to

believe that the world-wide economic slump had nothing to do with the

high level of unemployment in Spain?

This last point, namely the international context of the Great

Depression, is not even considered by Caplan as “another factor.” As

Raymond Carr notes, exports were down by 75% in 1934 [The Spanish

Tragedy, p. 33]. Spanish producers faced reduced external markets for

goods, either due to lack of demand or by protectionist measures of

other states. In the face of an international slump, unsurprisingly

production fell and workers were made unemployed. In addition, Caplan

ignores the fact that by the end of 1933, 100 000 Spaniards had returned

to Spain, “joining a similar number who would normally have emigrated

but could not do so.” [Paul Preston, The Coming of the Spanish Civil

War, p. 80] And we may add that Gerald Brenan (The Spanish Labyrinth, p.

253) noted that in the early 1930s many banks introduced a credit freeze

and employers locked out workers to try and make the Republic unpopular.

But Caplan ignores these factors in favour of increases in workers real

wages.

However, let us assume that Caplan is correct, that unions and workers

struggle against capitalist authority and exploitation had resulted in

an increase of workers’ real wages above the market clearing level.

There are two central flaws in his argument that decreasing workers’

real wages would have reduced unemployment.

First, it is assumed that reductions in wages (to the level of market

clearing real wages) would increase the demand for goods and jobs. But

investment does not occur overnight. Neither can we assume that it is

always possible for a company to take on new workers. Increasing

production requires more than just labour. If raw materials, production

goods and facilities are not available, employment will not be

increased. Therefore the assumption that labour can always be added to

the existing stock is plainly unrealistic. So approximately the same

number of workers working for a lower wage will merely decrease demand

for goods without automatically increasing investment to compensate for

this. By redistributing income from workers to capitalists the net

effect would be a reduction in effective demand and so increased

unemployment as gains in profits would not be applied immediately into

investment (and in a slump, capitalists may be more inclined to

financial caution and so delay investment until too late). Indeed, a

vicious circle may result by which cuts in wages led to cuts in

employment, which led to further cuts in wages.

Second, classical economics also assumes that prices depend, at least in

part, on wages. If all workers accepted a cut in wages, then all prices

would fall and there would be no effective reduction in the real wages

of workers. We would expect that Caplan would have recognised this, but

this would only have got in the way of his anti-union argument. Of

course, we could assume that cutting wages has no impact on prices (if

so, where does the excess money end up? In the capitalist pocket, as

usual). If prices do not fall it is still worse, for then real wages are

reduced and unemployment is increased directly by the fall in consumer

demand.

So, from these considerations (put most famously by Keynes but more

powerfully by Michal Kalecki) we can say that Caplan’s claims are

questionable in the extreme. Indeed, there may be no means by which

labour as a whole can reduce its real wage to a given figure by means of

the normal capitalist market. Indeed, attempts to do so within the

capitalist market may result in increased unemployment, not less. So, we

may note, the likely effect of CNT and UGT activity may have been to

reduce unemployment in Spain by increasing effective demand within the

local economy.

There is extensive evidence from real life (as opposed to “classical

economic theory”) to suggest that my explanations for unemployment are

more correct than Caplan’s. Will Hutton, the UK based neo-Keynesian

economist, provides an excellent critique of the fallacies of “classical

economic theory” and how it views the labour market in The State We’re

In. The classical theory essentially views the labour market as any

other market. This is wrong (and ethically dubious) simply because

workers are not a commodity. While capitalism tries to treat labour as

analogous to all other commodities, it denies the key distinction

between labour and other “resources” namely its inseparability from its

bearer – hence labour unlike other “property” is endowed with will and

agency, feelings and reason, hopes and dreams and so when one speaks of

selling labor there is a necessary subjugation of will.

Reality bares out the poverty of classical and neo-classical ideas on

the labour market. As Hutton summarises, the “level of employment

refuses to respond to lower wages” [The State We’re In, p. 105] and so

attempts to commodify labour, as well as provoking labour struggle in

defence of individual self-respect and autonomy, will fail to reduce

unemployment (and, in all likelihood, increase social disruption, crime,

alienation and individual disempowerment). So, perhaps, the trade

unionists had more than enough reasons to be “hostile” to a set of

economic dogmas which reduced them to the level of “resources” along

with iron and corn (in other words, dehumanised them) as well as having

little in common with actual economic life.

How, Caplan claims that it was union activism that caused unemployment

by increasing wages above market levels. This theory, however, is

contradicted by real life evidence. To quote Hutton, “the British

economists David Blanchflower and Andrew Oswald [examined] ... the data

in twelve countries about the actual relation between wages and

unemployment – and what they have discovered is another major challenge

to the free market account of the labour market... [They found]

precisely the opposite relationship [than that predicted “classical

economic theory”]. The higher the wages, the lower the local

unemployment – and the lower the wages, the higher the local

unemployment. As they say, this is not a conclusion that can be squared

with free market text-book theories of how a competitive labour market

should work” [Op. Cit., p. 102]

Therefore, in a real economy (as opposed to a text-book one) there are

many equilibria and that a “cut in real wages [like Caplan is

suggesting] is ... likely to reduce workers’ consumption and, via the

Multiplier mechanism... the incomes and consumption of other workers.

Thus there will be a fall in the output of the economy and a rise, not a

fall, in employment.” [Michael Stewart, Keynes and After, p. 184]

As noted above, I suggested that increased wages could reduce

unemployment by increasing aggregate demand. The evidence suggests that

this is true, and so CNT activism reduced unemployment by increasing the

buying power of unionised workers. Hutton also presents extensive

evidence that indicates that there are real costs involved in companies

laying off workers and employing new ones at lower wages, something

“classical economic theory” ignores. All these factors ensure that the

“ignorance and emotional hostility to classical economic theory” Caplan

assigns to the trade union militants is false and that their hostility

to classical economic theory came from their real life experiences which

proved that such theory was wrong and their rejection of the idea that

workers should be treated like a commodity (i.e. as a thing like iron or

corn).

Caplan then bemoans the “ample assistance from the government” that the

unions received, which “sometimes greatly improved the labor unions’

bargaining position” (without noting that the world slump started in

1929, the Republic was declared in 1931 and so these measures were in

response to existing unemployment and slump, not their cause! Of course,

Caplan can argue that this response made things worse, but as I will

indicate, the facts do not back this up).

He quotes Paul Preston as follows:

“The so-called ‘decree of municipal boundaries’ prevent the hiring of

outside labor while local workers in a given municipality remained

unemployed. It struck at the landowners’ most potent weapon, the power

to break strikes and keep down wages by the import of cheap blackleg

labor.”

Obviously, landowners rights are more important that wage workers, in

Caplan’s view. As the law code of every state defends the power of

property, could these laws not be considered as a means to balance the

power between sides? Of course, Caplan seems to thing it a truism that

the law code should be so framed as to protect the landowners’ “most

potent weapon” however, those not blinded by ideology are entitled to

ask for proof of such an assumption.

I should also note that there was a simple solution to much of the

unemployment in Spain during the 1930s, namely land reform. Given the

international depression which had reduced exports by a massive amount,

the capitalist landlords decided to restrict production, making hundreds

of thousands of land workers unemployed (whose ranks were increased

because emigration was no longer an option). However these workers

needed food, and the land was left unworked. With 70% of the unemployed

land workers, unemployment could have been more than halved by workers

simply refusing to acknowledge capitalist monopoly. Such an option of

course would violate the landowners rights to make a profit, so the

rural workers right to life was instead violated and hundreds of

thousands of workers forced to rot in idleness and poverty.

Caplan quotes Preston again:

“Largo Caballero did something that Primo de Rivera had not been able to

do: he introduced arbitration committees for rural wages and working

conditions, which had previously been subject only to the whim of the

owners. One of the rights now to be protected was the newly introduced

eight-hour day. Given that, previously, the braceros had been expected

to work from sunup to sundown, this meant that owners would either have

to pay overtime or else employ more men to do the same work. [Or produce

less output, which was probably the most important response. -B.C.]

Finally, in order to prevent the owners from sabotaging these measures

by lock-outs, a decree of obligatory cultivation prevented them from

taking their land out of operation.”

Obviously braceros should work “from sunup to sundown,” subject “only to

the whim of the owners.” Hardly an environment which suggests much

liberty or dignity for the braceros, but (as usual) it is the workers

who Caplan blames for unemployment, not the bosses or capitalism. Of

course Caplan does not question the fundamentals of classical economics

and assumes that workers are happy to be at the “whim” of the boss. He

also does not question the assumption that by reducing wages, a boss can

expand production, that he will expand production, and if he does, will

be able to sell its output.

However, increasing production requires more than just labour. If, as is

likely in a depression, plant, markets and investment are not available,

then employment will not increase no matter how low the wages go. In

addition, bosses may just replace current workers with cheaper ones, or

use the threat of so doing to reduce wages. Hence, unemployment may not

be affected. And lastly, goods must be sold, but purchasing power may

decline and so goods may not be sold.

In other words, unless one has blind faith in classical economics, there

is no reason to assume that cutting wages will reduce unemployment or

even that cutting wages is a possibility. Maybe Caplan is being arrogant

here when attacking the “selfishness” of the workers? No, such a thought

does not cross his mind, no more than the thought that workers may not

wish to be treated as commodities and subject to the whim of the boss.

He continues: “Thus, while it avoided the monetary contraction which

plagued other nations in the early 30’s, Spain enjoyed a depression

courtesy of its militant labor unions, assisted by the labor laws of the

Republican government.”

What is interesting, however, is the fact he does not mention that the

“pro-labour” government was replaced by a “pro-capital” government in

1933 (nor does he mention that under the “pro-labour” government the

“machinery to enforce the decrees was almost non-existent” [Paul

Preston, The Coming of the Spanish Civil War, p. 83]). This new

government did not enforce the social reforms of the previous government

and its repression of the labour movement earned this time the

expression “Two Black Years.”

According to Preston, the new government “dismantled the entire social

legislation of the Republic as it applied to rural areas” [p. 125].

According to Murray Bookchin, “the new ministry began an unconscionable

assault upon the meagre social legislation enacted by the Constituent

Cortes. Agrarian reform, limited as it was, came to a dead halt.

Pro-industry chairmen replaced Largo Caballero’s pro-labour (more

precisely pro-Socialist) appointees. Agricultural wage increases

achieved under the Azana coalition were rolled back 40–50 percent.” [The

Spanish Anarchists, p. 255] Falling rural wages is confirmed by Raymond

Carr (the Spanish Tragedy, p. 49] along with the eviction of tenants —

as does Preston (“Members of the FNTT union were systematically being

refused work, and wages had dropped by 60 percent” by January 1934, [p.

135])

Now, if Caplan’s claims are true we would expect to see a fall in

unemployment as the landlords were no longer subjected to “outside”

interference and wages fell. The opposite is the case – “Once landlords

began to ignore social legislation entirely and take reprisals for the

discomfort of the previous two years, unemployment rose even further. By

April 1934 it had reached 703 000.” [The Coming of the Spanish Civil

War, p. 122] and unemployment “mounted steadily throughout” 1931 to 1936

according to G. Payne, Spain’s first democracy, p. 154] (Payne also

suggests that Caplan’s claims that real earnings increased is false,

indicating that “in toto they fell back at least 3 percent (possibly

more) between 1933 and 1935” [p. 153] which is unsurprising, considering

the anti-labour climate). By May 1935, unemployment was 732 034 and by

November that year, 806 221 [Preston, p. 192]

If we look at Caplan’s “powerful unions” during the 1933–35 period we

find a series of crushing defeats for the labour movement. In 1934, the

UGT’s landworkers union the FNTT was crushed by state repression. In

response to landowners taking “advantage of official acquiescence to

slash wages and discriminate against union labour” [Preston, p. 148] the

FNTT organised a strike. The result? A crushing defeat for the union —

“There were no longer any rural unions, social legislation or municipal

authorities to challenge the dominance of the caciques” and the “Casa

del Pueblo [union halls] were not reopened and the FNTT was effectively

crippled until 1936.” [Preston, p. 153]

In industry, union after union of the UGT “was drawn into strikes and

defeated.” [Preston, p. 155]. The CNT was recovering from the series of

insurrections it had organised between 1931 and 1933 (over 30,000 CNT

members were imprisoned during this time).

So between 1933 and the start of 1936, the labour movement suffered

major defeats. Rural labour saw its wages cut and its organisations

repressed (and some of its leaders assassinated). Industrial workers

also lost many strikes. During this period of successful repression,

Caplan expects us to believe that wages were unaffected! However, Payne

notes a drop. And did unemployment fall? No, it increased.

In other words, his arguments do not find support in the facts.

And, I should note, the monetary contraction which plagued other nations

was more likely the result of an economic down-turn than its cause (as

many economists agree). Given the situation in Spain, the rise in real

wages (caused in part by it’s militant unions at least between 1931 to

33) would have had the effect of supporting local production, increasing

demand as wages are costs for some industries, income for others. This

local demand would have helped stop the fall in production and rise in

unemployment which were the result of the international slump (which

reduced international trade via falling demand and protectionist methods

and which predated the labor laws of the Republican government) and the

activities of the local ruling class. As can be seen, under the

repressive rule of pro-capital government, unemployment continued to

increase (a period marked by non-enforcement of labor laws and

repression directed against unions, particularly in rural areas).

Caplan goes on:

“Disturbed by the plight of the workers, the unions and the government

simple-mindedly tried to make matters better by pushing up wages and

improving working conditions. The necessary and empirically observed

result was massive unemployment; many workers were simply not worth the

higher price, and so no one chose to hire them. Rather than blame the

unions and the ‘pro-labor’ government, many unemployed workers turned to

ever greater militancy and hatred of the capitalist system.”

Obviously, the majority of people are “simple-minded” and “not worth”

the “higher price.” They should be grateful to be at the “whim” of the

employers and have no thoughts about self-government or being treated as

persons rather than things. Of course, it never occurs to Caplan that he

could be wrong about his claim that those who “simple-mindly” blame

capitalism who are responsible for capitalism’s problems. In addition,

the idea that the “worth” of an individual is indicated by their market

prices suggests a disregard for the dignity of life – can the worth of

an individual be discovered on the market? In other words, do people

have a right to life? If not, then what does that say about capitalism?

Therefore their hatred of the capitalist system seems justified, given

that it resulted in workers being haunted by the fear of poverty and

unemployment plus having to be subjected to the authority of the boss

during work.

And, as I just pointed out, under the new right-wing government between

1933 and 1935/the start of 1936, unemployment rose. The government did

not “make matters worse” because it did not enforce the social reforms

of the last government and repressed the labour movement. This can

easily be found from Preston’s work (which Caplan quoted above). Given

that rural unemployment counted for 70% of the total, this suggests that

Caplan’s “blame the workers” argument is somewhat at fault (and, of

course, his failure to mention the change in government is somewhat

strange). Given that, due to the Great Depression affecting the world,

many of Spain tradition markets for its produce had placed protectionist

measures on imports, it is unsurprising that production (particularly

rural production) would have been reduced, causing unemployment.

However, this obvious fact is ignored in favour of an obviously

ideological based argument which is somewhat contradicted by the facts.

That unemployment increased during the right-wing government which

repressed labour and that the “powerful” unions lost strike after strike

suggests that Caplan’s arguments are simply false and have no basis in

empirical fact. Given the analysis outlined above, we can suggest that

the labour defeats of the 1933–1935 period helped increase unemployment

by cutting demand (although the effect of falling rural wage levels on

the price of food, which would have increased real wages even as the

unions were defeated, must be factored in). And, of course, the eviction

of tenants by land-lords and the blacking of workers who refused to rip

up their union cards all would have increased unemployment.

I should also point out that Caplan’s claim of “necessary and

empirically observed result was massive unemployment” is not actually

proven in reality. He presents no actual evidence to prove his case,

just logical conclusions from a priori assumptions. He makes no attempt

to prove his assumptions are correct and so all he states is that

logically, from his assumptions, the evidence supports his analysis.

Unfortunately for him, the evidence supports the direct opposition.

The high unemployment before 1933 does not prove that the actions of the

unions or the changes in the law actually produced unemployment. As

indicated above, there is evidence to suggest that the unemployment was

caused by factors outwith union control and that union activity actually

reduced unemployment by increasing aggregate demand. Indeed, the rise in

unemployment under the 1933–35 right-wing government contradicts his

theory as the new reforms were not enforced and the labour movement was

subjected to repression by the newly empowered employers.

In other words, Caplan creates the assumptions required to prove his

conclusions – this dependence on a priori theorems is commonplace in

right-libertarian theory and will be commented upon again.

He concludes with the following:

“Perhaps the most plausible criticism of capitalist economies is that

they allow useful labor and capital to go to waste. Under the

circumstances, one might expect that the workers’ revolutionary

take-over of their employers’ property in 1936 would have to make

matters better. With all of idle workers seizing the empty factories,

wouldn’t production have to increase? It did not; after the

establishment of worker control, unemployment became even more severe

despite the wartime economy’s massive monetary growth and conscription.

The next section investigates this puzzle in detail.”

Which should prompt the question: why would the unemployed seize empty

factories? The assumption here seems to be that the plant is just

sitting there waiting to be used. This is likely as the plant would have

been sold and not left lying about. Nor would this plant have the

necessary stocks of raw materials required to start production (and, we

may add, problems in actually getting raw materials was a constant

problem during the civil war). However, Caplan lets his classical

economics get the better of his common-sense (as we will see again and

again).

Of course Caplan ignores another “plausible” criticism of capitalist

economics, namely that it creates a class based society in which there

are a few “order givers” and many “order takers.” In other words, it

undermines liberty. But such non-economic criticism’s pass Caplan by.

However, this defence of freedom against capitalist hierarchy can in

part explain the CNT’s success. As J. Romero Maura argues, “the demands

of the CNT went much further than those of any social democrat: with its

emphasis on true equality, autogestion [self-management] and working

class dignity, anarchosyndicalism made demands on the capitalist system

could not possibly grant to the workers” [“The Spanish case”, page 79,

from Anarchism Today, edited by James Joll et al.]

That Caplan ignores these human demands in favour of economics suggests

that liberty, dignity, equality and self-management are still human

needs which the capitalist system cannot possibly grant to the workers.

And, we may add, never will.

B. The Economics of the Civil War: Collectivization, Inflation, and

the Black Market

Caplan states that “The puzzle of urban collectivization begins at the

outset. With massive unemployment still prevailing, the CNT began

closing plants and concentrating workers in the most ‘modern’ firms. The

obvious measure would have been to open the doors of every collective to

the mass of unemployed workers and invite them to select their new

workplace.”

However, above Caplan argues that the workers themselves controlled

their workplaces right at the start. Now he claims that “the CNT” closed

plants from the “outset”. This is contradictory. However, we can suggest

an answer, to this contradiction, namely that when something happened in

Spain Caplan agrees with it’s “the workers,” who do it and when it is

something he disagrees with, it’s “the CNT.” However, real life is more

complicated than this. The simple fact is that the collectives were run

by the same people in all cases and acted in ways they thought best at

the time.

As for closing plant to consolidate operations, this does not mean

unemployment, for the workers would be given a job in the new

workplaces. This rationalisation has the advantage of reducing hours and

improving working conditions for all. There is more than enough evidence

that the collectives went out of their way to ensure that workers’ were

not sacked (see, for example, The Free Women of Spain p. 74 where union

militants indicated that they refused to make their members unemployed

and introduced such measures as the three day week). Therefore, the

rationalisations did not result in more unemployment as Caplan would

like to suggest.

After bemoaning the union’s lack of economic understanding, Caplan

states that “While this program did nothing to alleviate massive

unemployment, it did have other advantages from the point of view of the

employed trade unionists. It helped to curtail production, protect

themselves against competition, and thus keep prices high. Moreover, it

helped centralize each industry, making it somewhat easier to run them

top-down, to secure compliance to the orders of the Anarchist

leadership.”

But Caplan has already argued that the workers originally ran each

collective for their own profit. Now he claims that “the unions” were

the source of this program. However, the reasons for this program may

have been different than the implied desire of the “Anarchist

leadership” to run them top-down. It may have been to get rid of unsafe

workplaces and ensure that workers had better working conditions.

To quote Bolloten (the part in capitals being the bit that Caplan

decides to replace by “…” for obvious reasons):

“In accordance with this outlook, the CNT workers, sweeping along with

them those of the UGT, closed down more than seventy foundries in the

region of Catalonia and concentrated their equipment and personnel in

twenty-four. ‘IN THESE,’ A SPOKESPERSON FOR THE SOCIALIZED INDUSTRY

DECLARED. ‘WE RECTIFIED THE DEFECTS [IN THE FOUNDARIES] OF THOSE SMALL

EMPLOYERS WHO DID NOT CONCERN THEMSELVES WITH TECHNICAL MATTERS, AND

WHOSE PLANTS WERE CENTRES FOR TUBERCULOSIS.’ In Barcelona, the CNT and

UGT woodworkers’ unions — which had already set up control committees in

every shop and factory and used the former employers as technical

managers at the standard wage for workers — reorganized the entire

industry by closing down hundreds of small workshops and concentrating

production in the largest plants. In the same city the CNT carried out

equally radical changes in the tanning trade, reducing 71 plants to 40,

while in the glass industry, 100 plants and warehouses were cut down to

30.”

Bolloten points out that the initiative came from the CNT workers, and

an important aspect of why they did it was because of safety issues.

Obviously Caplan is not able to understand why workers would desire to

work in safe and healthy workplaces and close those down that might kill

them. And we can quote Gaston Leval on how the decision to rationalise

industries was taken:

“general assemblies were called, attended as on other occasions by the

workers [of the woodworkers industry] in their thousands. The situation

was examined, and in the end it was decided to take steps to put things

right [in the industry]. A fair number of the largest workshops passed

over to syndical control, each with its community number. The authority

of the Syndicate, that is to say of the assemblies whose decisions were

final, in the end prevailed. [Collectives in the Spanish Revolution., p.

231]

This account is confirmed by Fraser in Blood of Spain and indicates that

the rationalisation process was a democratic one and not imposed by “the

Anarchist leadership.”

He quotes “the sympathetic observer” Gaston Leval as “evidence” for this

hidden agenda of “the Anarchist leadership.”

“The machinery was gathered together in several workshops, sometimes in

a single workshop. In this way, the regulation of production was

simplified and co-ordination of effort was more effective.”

As this co-ordination and regulation was to be done by the workers

themselves in anarchist theory, this does not suggest what Caplan

wishes. Given desire to improve working conditions and produce “good

[products] at cheap prices” (to quote one CNT militant) it is hardly

surprising that workers constantly re-organised their industries and

workplaces to achieve these goals. Caplan’s unsupported claims are more

a product of his ideology than the facts.

He then states that “By all accounts, the workers swiftly raised their

own wages, cut their own hours, and improved working conditions. One

obvious motive, as mentioned earlier, was to eliminate accounting

profits by simply increasing wages until no taxable profits remained.”

Or they did it because they desired better working conditions and so on.

We can easily recognise that workers would not put up with the regime

imposed by bosses but would act to ensure that they had safe and healthy

working conditions. Also, there is plenty of evidence that collectives

reduced hours because they did not have orders and had no desire to sack

people [see Free Women of Spain for an account for this]. In addition,

many eye-witnesses state that “Profit and loss was a secondary

consideration” for most collectives [Fraser, p. 221] and so avoidance of

the “profit tax” was not a concern of those involved (particularly as

its collection seems to have been weakly enforced, if at all).

But, more importantly, there are many accounts which indicate that

workers did not in fact “swiftly raised their own wages.” According to

the CNT militant Santacana, “[b]ecause of economic difficulties, it was

impossible to raise the workers wages” [Fraser, p. 218] in his workplace

and as his workplace faced the same problems as all the others, I would

imagine that this was a common occurrence. Indeed, this is confirmed

when Borkenau notes (in December 1936) workers wages “had hardly been

changed since May” [The Spanish Cockpit, p. 184]. According to data

provided by Fraser, after two years of war, workers real wars had fallen

(the cost of living quadrupled while wages only doubled). Therefore

Caplan’s claims are not found in “all accounts”

Caplan then states that workers control made the “essential problem of

the labor market before the Civil War...worse. Real wages were too high;

in consequence, there was a labor surplus, or ‘unemployment.’ When the

workers seized control, they simply compounded the problem by raising

their own wages even further, improving working conditions (i.e.,

selecting more comfort and less productivity), abolishing piece rates

(i.e., selecting more leisure and less productivity), and so on.”

Again, the “greedy” workers are to blame, not the war. Caplan quotes the

experience of CNT member and textile foreman Josep Costa, who mentions

that “the working week reduced to forty hours (and soon to much less

because of raw materials shortages),” and as Catalonia was dependent for

raw materials from outside the region, the fact of civil war may have

been responsible for much of the unemployment. That this is the case can

be seen from Fraser. He notes that 98 percent of the cotton required by

the textile industry was imported into Catalonia [p. 230] while the

disruption of internal markets because of the war was a major problem.

As he notes, it was “[d]ependent on importing the bulk of its raw

materials and on selling its finished product in the rest of Spain...”

[p. 217] And he notes that partial unemployment rose “mainly [due] to

the short-time working in the textile industry.” [p, 234] In addition,

Catalonia received its fair share of refugees, which would also have

increased the unemployment figures.

Despite these obvious facts (which Caplan must have been aware of as he

uses Fraser’s book as a reference), the problems facing an economy

during a civil war are unmentioned by Caplan, who states that “No one

seemed to realize that the higher pay and improved working conditions

were the primary reason there was an unemployment problem in the first

place.” Of course, Caplan seems not to realise that higher pay means

higher demand and so lead to a reduction in unemployment as supply

increases. And, of course, the evidence presented by members of

collectives suggested that economic difficulties that occurred due to

the Civil War were the root of much, if not all, of the problems that

faced the Catalan economy (such as unemployment). Indeed, according to

Fraser, complete unemployment actually fell in Catalonia by some 10 per

cent in the first year, while partial unemployment doubled “owing mainly

to the short-time working in the textile industry.” [p. 234] This lead

to the fall in overall employment bemoaned by Caplan of nearly a quarter

in the first year. These facts (plus the accounts that indicate wages

did not, in fact, increase, for example, according to Franz Borkenau in

January 1937, “wages ... had hardly changed since May” while prices had

“increased” [The Spanish Cockpit, p. 184] — which indicates a lower real

wage due to price inflation, an inflation which Caplan is aware of as he

bemoans it elsewhere) indicate that Caplan’s “neo-classical” explanation

for the unemployment in Catalonia fails to meet any kind of empirical

test, and so can be classed as pure ideology.

So, far from increasing unemployment, collectivisation actually

decreased it. The major problem was a rise in partial unemployment,

which, as noted, seems to have been the fault of lack of raw materials

and a market outwith Catalonia. Therefore, the factual basis of Caplan’s

case are flawed. And, to place the problems associated with a war

economy in a clear light, it “is worth recalling that same phenomenon

[rising overall unemployment] occurred (in a non-revolutionary context)

in Britain during the first year of the Second World War, and it that it

took two more years before unemployment ceased to exist.” [Fraser, p.

234f]

So, the unemployment afflicting Catalonia during the war was a product

not of improved working conditions and wages for workers but of the war

itself, the lack of raw materials and funding that it produced. The

collectives actually reduced full unemployment and shared the burden of

unemployment more fairly across the working class (in Badalona, for

example, collectives made sure that “a proportion of those out of work

were found jobs outside the textile industry” [Fraser, p. 229] and we

have already noted the common practice of introducing 3 day weeks and

paying workers their full wages). The international “non-interference”

policies and the lack of raw materials this resulted in is a more

important factor in explaining unemployment than workers desiring to

improve their lot in life, as does the total break up of pre-war

economic links within Spain that resulted in the existence of

front-lines.

Of course, many collectives refused to sack people and instead paid

their wages, thus reducing unemployment. If the collectives had followed

Caplan’s advice, unemployment would have increased far more than it did.

If wages decrease, so does demand. Only in classical economics does the

assumption that plant can automatically increase production with

increased labour hold any water. In real life, more raw materials,

plant, and so forth is required as well as increased labour. Therefore

Caplan’s classical assumptions give a radically false picture of the

problems facing Catalan industry, which is unsurprising.

In addition, the policy of the state to with-hold funds from

collectivised industries would have played an important role in keeping

unemployment in existence. As Leval notes, “the Syndicate of the wood

industry... exposed ... [the] keeping [of] tens of thousands of

unemployed idleness rather than give the syndicate the money distributed

among them, in order to create new industries or to keep going those

which were essential but were in difficulties. The wasteful spending was

preferred to the strengthening of the new social order.” [Collectives in

the Spanish Revolution, p. 337] And the deliberate restrictions of raw

materials and credit by the government to collectivised industries is

infamous, and also played a major role in causing unemployment. But all

these obvious points are ignored by Caplan in favour of neo-classical

economic dogma.

Caplan goes on to state: “There did exist a simple expedient whereby the

unionized workers could have retained their privileged positions while

creating opportunities for the innumerable jobless workers. They could

have created an openly two-tier regime: old workers present before the

collectivization get paid the high wage and get to share in the profits;

new workers get a meager, market-clearing wage and don’t share in the

profits. Of course, to have done so would have required the trade

unionists to indirectly admit that their militancy had created the

problems which they had always blamed on the capitalist system.

Moreover, it would have forced them to abandon their egalitarian ethic.

Better to let a person rot in idleness than permit inequality.”

Firstly, there was a simple way to solve the large scale unemployment

before the war – namely land reform. However, Caplan seems to be

bothered about people “rotting in idleness” when he can claim workers

cause it. Of course, such reforms would have been a violation of the

“property rights” of the capitalist landlords – far better to let

hundreds of thousands of rural workers “rot in idleness” (and poverty,

as there was no unemployment benefit in Spain) than allow them to

abolish inequality by their own direct action. If land reform had

occurred, unemployment would have fallen by around 70% as hundreds of

thousands of workers took possession of the land they were barred from

by the capitalist private property laws.

Secondly, here Caplan is admitting that capitalism and workers control

in fact do not go together. And of course, it’s better to be paid

“meagre” wages and be at the whim of the unionised workers than to “rot

in idleness” — in other words, hierarchy is fine for this “anarchist.”

Interesting that yet again Caplan prefers to blame the thoughts of the

workers than the actual economic problems that the economy was facing

(and its interesting to note that this egalitarian spirit is somewhat at

odds with Caplan’s earlier claims that the collectivised industries

deliberately avoided the “profits” tax out of “greed” – the facts

suggest otherwise, as does this opposition to a “two-tier” system but

then again logic is not important when trying to score points against

anarchism). And, I most note, workers did find a “simple expedient” to

reduce unemployment, namely by sharing it out which reduced full

unemployment but increased partial employment. This suggests an

egalitarian spirit which makes a mockery of Caplan’s “profit tax”

theory, a theory (as we noted) he has no evidence to justify.

The assumption here is that the available raw materials and market

actually existed to support such a policy. But introducing wage labour

would not have solved the problem of raw materials nor plant capacity,

etc. Most collectives did not have enough work for the workers they did

have, never mind new workers. To a “classical economist” there is no

such thing as “involuntary unemployment;” outside the books, however, it

does exist. No amount of wage labour would have ended the civil war or

the raw material shortages (which existed over and above the state’s

infamous policy of refusing credit and raw materials to collectivised

workplaces).

In a footnote, Caplan notes that the collectivised industries did show

“a slight interest in the unemployed workers, since complete

unemployment fell by 10 percent while partial unemployment doubled.

Still, considering the depression-level unemployment at the outset of

the war, the massive money supply growth, and the presence of

conscription, a mere 10 percent fall (not a 10 percentage-point fall)

from high pre-war unemployment is truly abysmal performance.”

Given that the majority of unemployment before the war was in the rural

workforce, and Catalonian rural workers mostly were smallholders, it is

likely that the majority of unemployment in pre-war Catalonia was

industrial. Therefore, the problems facing the collectivised industries

noted above (the global depression, protectionism, the hostility of

other nations to Republican Spain, lack of raw materials, lack of

credit, official hostility, influx of refugees, etc.) means that the 10

percent fall is far more significant than Caplan claims. As Fraser

notes, unemployment existed in the UK until 1941 and the problems facing

the Catalan workers were just as bad, if not worse. And we may note, a

fall of unemployment by 10 percentile points would have resulted in full

employment in Catalonia (unemployment in pre-war Spain was about 8% of

the working population, perhaps 12% excluding the self-employed –

compared to 20–30% in the USA at the same time). A fall of 10 percentile

points would have effectively eliminated unemployment (something which

capitalism can only do during short lived boom periods). Are we

seriously to expect, faced with the many economic problems I have listed

(and Caplan ignores), that the collectives could have achieved in the

space of a few months something capitalism itself has rarely achieved

without such problems (and which the UK war-time economy couldn’t do in

two years)? Hardly!

Caplan then states that “Urban workers overall often suffered from urban

collectivization... Unemployed workers who were previously priced out of

the labor market by Catalonia’s powerful unions probably found life even

harder. Whether capitalists or the workers ran the factories, the

redistribution from unemployed and non-union workers to employed and

union workers remained constant.”

In other words, the civil war had no impact on the economy; instead, it

was all the fault of the unionised workers. Very believable. The

available evidence indicates that Caplan’s claims are a serious

misrepresentation of the situation (and indicates that neo-classical

economics is more an ideological weapon than an attempt to understand

the real dynamics of the war-time economy).

Caplan then states that “the rural agricultural workers’ plight was very

different. The redistribution was not normally from one rural worker to

another; rather, the mass of rural workers were exploited by the

Anarchist military elite in their effort to win the war.”

Here Caplan is referring to the collectives policy of giving food free

to the militia at the front. As Fraser points out, “[f]eeding the

columns without payment became a source of pride or resentment,

depending on the villagers ideological commitment,” [p. 349] and as the

collectives were run by mass assemblies, the surplus that was provided

reflected the collective’s needs as well. This is confirmed by Benjamin

Martin in his summary of the rural collectives (already quoted above)

when he notes that:

“The policies to be followed by collectives were usually determined in

general membership meetings that also decided upon the distribution of

profits and agricultural surpluses” [The Agony of Modernization, p. 393]

As have as the “mass of rural workers” being “exploited by the Anarchist

military elite” goes, its clear that this was not the case. As Martin

points out, “[t]hough it is impossible to generalize about the rural

land take-overs, there is little doubt that the quality of life for most

peasants who participated in co-operatives and collectives notably

improved.” [p. 394]

Hardly exploitation when the workers decide what happens to their

surplus and feed themselves better than they did before.

As it is well known that everyone in the anarchist militia received the

same rations and pay, Caplan use of the word “elite” is strange. Is he

actually suggesting that every member of a militia was part of this

“elite”? If so, it is a strange use of the word “elite.” However, as

indicated, the evidence suggests that Caplan is false in his claim of

“exploitation” and in fact most rural workers agreed to feed the militia

for obvious reasons. Those who did not either submitted to the majority

decision within their collective or, if an individualist, were equally

“taxed” to pay for the public good provided by the troops on the

front-line.

He then states that “the harsh truth reveals itself: the Anarchists took

the surplus of the farmers, gave them little or nothing in return, and

used it to fight the war.”

Obviously fighting on the front line against fascism is “giving them

little or nothing in return.” It should also be noted that the column

heads opposed the creation of the Aragon Council [Fraser, p. 350]. In

addition, the collectives are documented as getting new machinery, new

buildings, roads, schools, health care and so on. Most people ate better

in the collectives and had access to numerous “services” which they

would never had been able to afford before (for example, health care,

education and so on). To state that the collectives did not give them

much in return is false. And, of course, the collectives gave the poor

and day workers better conditions and control over their own work than

they had before. But all this is “little or nothing” in return for

Caplan (who does not even mention these benefits, which is hardly

surprising).

He then quotes Bolloten as confirming “that the Anarchists were

over-eager to collectivize because they were desperate for supplies and

intended to extort what they needed out of the peasantry.”

“By October 1936, the uncontrolled requisitioning of food and animals by

the militia columns, the majority libertarian, had become so serious as

to threaten, according to Joaquin Ascaso, the Anarchist president of the

council, the ‘total ruin’ of the region. This, he said, impelled the

council to prohibit the heads of the columns from making requisitions

without its prior approval. ‘We hope that everyone, without exception,

will abide by this order, thus avoiding the lamentable and paradoxical

circumstance of a free people hating its liberty and its liberators, and

the no less sad situation of a people totally ruined by the Revolution

for which it has always yearned.’”

In other words, the council and collectives were created in order to

stop requisitions by the militia and ensure that the collectives had

enough for themselves. Again, the anarchists are damned if they do,

damned if they don’t. Caplan is really clutching at straws here,

presenting an obvious attempt to improve relations between militia and

the rural population, to reduce militia requisitioning of produce, as an

attempt to increase it. And I must note again, that the militia heads

opposed the creation of the council of Aragon, which was created to stop

these acts of random requisitioning in favour of a system in which the

Aragonese population can a say in what was given and what was required

for them.

Caplan goes on to say that “The urban sector simply went from bad to

worse.... Production fluctuated between 100 and 94 until July 1936 when

the revolution broke out. Production plummeted to 82, but in the midst

of chaos, transfer of control, and fighting with Nationalists, this is

understandable. What is not understandable is that production never rose

_above_ the July 1936 level for as long as the war lasted. It fell to 64

in August, recovered slightly to 73 in September, and then fluctuated

between 71 and 53 until April of 1938.”

Of course, the total disruption of normal raw material distribution,

difficulties in exporting and importing goods, the withholding of credit

and orders from collectivised workplaces by the government, and the

opposition of capitalist firms outside Spain are all easily examples of

why production did not rise above July 1936 levels. However, as Caplan

is keen to blame all the problems of the economy on the unions, it’s

easy to understand his myopic statement.

Next, he discusses the rural sector, stating that “Collectivization was

most widespread in Aragon, but existed everywhere to some extent.

Apologists for the Anarchist collectives find the 20 percent output

increase in Aragon to be stunning evidence for the value of their

institutions. (The equally drastic _decline_ in Catalonia is often

discounted because collectivization was less complete there than in

Aragon.) In fact, due to the prior depressed conditions, any system

which made use of idle land and workers, however inefficient, might very

well have made great strides forward.”

Or it might not have, depending on the situation. Thus, comparing Aragon

and Catalonia, we find that the number of collectives was 450 in the

former, 80 in the latter. But Aragon saw a 20% rise in production while

Catalonia saw a 20% decrease. In Catalonia, smallholdings were the norm.

Does this mean that in Catalonia, where workers laboured for themselves,

there was a decrease in production, while in Aragon (where, according to

Caplan, they worked for the anarchist militia), there was an increase?

It seems strange that being exploited by the anarchists resulted in

increased production, particularly as Thomas noted (as quoted by Caplan)

there was “increased consumption at the place of production” — in other

words, that the Aragonese peasants had enough for themselves. We have

already noted the collapse of the Aragon economy after Lister “freed

it,” indicating that the collectives may have been more widely supported

than Caplan suggests.

Caplan then goes on to suggest that “When the workers actually had

control, output declined 30 to 40 percent below its previous depressed

level. When the workers’ control was largely nominal, production

sometimes increased by 20 percent — albeit 20 percent above the level of

the depression. The urban workers who actually had control had no

incentive to tap into the vast unemployed resources; doing so would

merely dilute the value of each worker’s share. In contrast, the

Anarchist militants who ran the agricultural collectives had no reason

to keep resources idle; they weren’t really paying the peasants anyway,

so why not make use of as many of them as possible. Slavery is often

economically inefficient, but this is not a necessary truth; slaves may

work with less energy than free workers, but the slave-owner may opt to

force the slave to work so many additional hours that his overall output

rises.”

Thus Caplan suggests that the rural collectives were a form of slavery.

However, there is a few problems with this claim. Firstly, the

collectives were run by mass assemblies and elected committees, i.e.

workers’ control was far from “nominal.” We have quoted the evidence

above and will not repeat ourselves here beyond re-quoting this short

summary on how the collectives worked:

“The policies to be followed by collectives were usually determined in

general membership meetings that also decided upon the distribution of

profits and agricultural surpluses” [The Agony of Modernization, p. 393]

It is hardly credible that a system of “slavery” would be based on

workers’ control of both policy and product, democracy and free debate.

As discussed above, Caplan claims of “slavery” have to be rejected as

false as he ignores counter-evidence that puts his case into doubt.

In addition, it should be noted that the 20 per cent increase in

production was in relation not to a previous “depression” level but on a

year that had seen “a good crop.” [Fraser, p. 370] In other words,

Caplan yet again gets his facts wrong. The rural collectives, due to the

extensive workers’ control on which they were based, saw an increase of

production over a previous years good crop. Unsurprisingly, “[t]hough it

is impossible to generalize about the rural land takeovers, there is

little doubt that the quality of life for most peasants who participated

in cooperatives and collectives notably improved” [The Agony of

Modernization, p. 394] which is a conclusion shared by all historians on

the subject.

Therefore, given the overwhelming evidence (which he ignores), Caplan’s

statements about rural slavery can be ignored as the nonsense they are.

If anything, the evidence supports Kropotkin’s claim that “their [the

economists] thesis in favour of private property against all other forms

of possession, should not the economists demonstrate that under the form

of communal property land never produces such rich harvests as when the

possession is private. But this they could not prove; in fact, it is the

contrary that has been observed.” [The Conquest of Bread, p. 146]

Caplan, not wanting to admit to this possibility, instead charges the

anarchists with enslaving the rural population. Unfortunately the facts

do not back him up.

He then states:

“Kelsey notes that women and even elderly farmers toiled in the fields

under Anarchist rule. ‘Throughout the collectives many people were

working harder and longer than before. The large number of men who had

gone to man the front-lines meant that others, including women and older

people, were needed to assist with much of the work. Many writers found

that contrary to this being resented people were ready and willing to

work extra hours and that, as at Graus, pensions were actually looked

upon as something of an insult, older workers demanding the right to

give their labour as everyone else.’ An alternative explanation for the

same facts is that the Anarchist leaders terrorized as many people as

possible to work in the fields, and that the victims were too frightened

to inform Anarchist journalists of the real story.”

But this hypothesis does not explain the oral testimony gathered later

by Fraser, which indicates that the vast majority of collectives were

run by democratic means and that many of those whom joined had relatives

at the front. In addition, if people were so terrified under the

Anarchists, why did agriculture collapse after Lister “freed” Aragon,

and why did many collectives continue? In other words, Kelsey’s comments

are as true as Caplan’s. Some people working in the collectives did not

want to be there, but many others did. Of course, Caplan also ignores

the fact that many villages had seen “large numbers of volunteers

...join[ing] the [militia] columns” [Kesley, p. 163] and the obvious

fact that the villagers knew what fascism was and desired to stop it. In

addition, the fact that many of the younger population left to fight at

the front would have ensured a lack of person power in the villages they

left, so ensuring that many older people and women had to join in the

work effort.

Caplan, by ignoring these realities of the Aragon rural economy,

produces an argument that is seriously flawed and one that has little

basis in the facts of the situation.

C. The Dilemma, Part I: Capitalist Anarchism

Here Caplan argues that if workers owned their own mean of production it

would still be a capitalist system, because “there is still private

property in the means of production, it simply has different owners than

before. The economy functions the same as it always did: the workers at

each firm do their best to enrich themselves by selling desired products

to consumers; there is inequality due to both ability and luck; firms

compete for customers. Nothing is changed except the recipient of the

dividends.”

This statement is simply false, as there is no capitalist class and so

the workers work for themselves. Moreover, the power relations within

the workplace are drastically changed, with hierarchy replaced with

self-management (Proudhon’s “industrial democracy must ... succeed

industrial feudalism” in other words [Selected Writings, p. 167]). As

Proudhon argued, “either the workman... will be simply the employee of

the proprietor-capitalist-promoter; or he will participate in the

chances of loss or gain of the establishment.... [and] become an

associate” for “[i]n the first case the workman is subordinated,

exploited: his permanent condition is one of obedience and poverty. In

the second he resumes his dignity as a man and citizen... he forms part

of the producing organisation, of which he was before but the slave ...

he forms part of the sovereign power, of which he was before but the

subject... it is necessary to form an ASSOCIATION among the workers ...

because without that, they would remain related as subordinates and

superiors, and there would ensue two industrial castes of masters and

wage workers, which is repugnant to a free and democratic society.” [The

General Idea of the Revolution, pp. 215–6]

In other words, from an anarchist perspective, something has changed

within the collectives (and it has nothing to do with who got the

dividends). The collectives effectively replaced autocratic rule by

capitalists with self-management, the elimination of hierarchy with

self-government, an increase in freedom. It says a lot about his

“libertarian” politics that Caplan ignores this utter transformation in

the authority structures within the workplace. And given that the

workers did not employ themselves as wage labours, such a system was not

capitalist. This is a conclusion shared by many people, socialists and

non-socialists alike, the most famous non-socialist being (perhaps) John

Stuart Mill (although according to Ludwig von Mises, Mill was, in fact,

a socialist — given Mill’s awareness that wage-labour utterly violated

his liberal commitment to liberty and self-determination such a

conclusion has its merits as Mill supported co-operatives as the means

of extending liberty into the workplace, a position shared by anarchists

and many other socialists).

Caplan states that the collectives were capitalist simply because “there

is still private property in the means of production, it simply has

different owners than before.” But such a position is ultimately

meaningless (for example, nationalisation means that the property

“simply has different owners than before,” namely the state) and ignores

the fundamental defining aspect of capitalism, namely wage labour. Thus

Caplan ignores the difference between property and possession, as argued

by anarchists from Godwin onward.

Unsurprisingly, then, we discover Proudhon arguing in 1851 that

socialism is “the elimination of misery, the abolition of capitalism and

of wage-labour, the transformation of property, ... the effective and

direct sovereignty of the workers, ... the substitution of the

contractual regime for the legal regime.” [quoted by John Ehrenberg,

Proudhon and his Age, p. 111] Fourteen years later, he argued the same,

with the aim of his mutualist ideas being “the complete emancipation of

the workers ... the abolition of the wage worker.” Thus a key idea of

Proudhon’s politics is the abolition of wage labour: “Industrial

Democracy must... succeed Industrial Feudalism.” [quoted by K. Steven

Vincent, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and the Rise of French Republican

Socialism, p. 222 and p. 167]

It could be argued that Proudhon was not really a socialist. This seems

hard, given the universal opinion that he was one. Thus we find Karl

Marx, for example, writing of “the socialism of Proudhon.” [Capital,

vol. 1, p. 161f] Engels talked about Proudhon being “the Socialist of

the small peasant and master-craftsman” and of “the Proudhon school of

Socialism.” [Marx and Engels, Selected Works, p. 254 and p. 255] Bakunin

talked about Proudhon’s “socialism, based on individual and collective

liberty and upon the spontaneous action of free associations.” He

considered his own ideas as “Proudhonism widely developed and pushed

right to these, its final consequences” [Michael Bakunin: Selected

Writings, p. 100 and p. 198] Kropotkin became a socialist after reading

Proudhon and called him a socialist on many occasions (for example, in

his Ethics). For Kropotkin, while Godwin was “first theoriser of

Socialism without government — that is to say, of Anarchism” Proudhon

was the second as he, “without knowing Godwin’s work, laid anew the

foundations of Anarchism.” He lamented that “many modern Socialists”

supported “centralisation and the cult of authority” and so “have not

yet reached the level of their two predecessors, Godwin and Proudhon.”

[Evolution and Environment, pp. 26–7] These renown socialists did not

consider Proudhon’s position to be in any way anti-socialist (although,

of course, being critical of whether it would work and its desirability

if it did). Tucker, it should be noted, called Proudhon “the father of

the Anarchistic school of Socialism.” [Instead of a Book, p. 381]

And Proudhon’s analysis is a common socialist one. For example Karl Marx

argued that “Political economy confuses, on principle, two very

different kinds of private property, one of which rests on the labour of

the producer himself, and the other on the exploitation of the labour of

others. It forgets that the latter is not only the direct antithesis of

the former, but grows on the former’s tomb and nowhere else.” Marx goes

to note that “capital is not a thing, but a social relation between

persons” and that “the means of production and subsistence, while they

remain the property of the immediate producer, are not capital. They

only become capital under circumstances in which they serve at the same

time as means of exploitation of, and domination over, the worker.

[Capital, vol. 1, p. 931 and p. 938] Of course, Marx is repeating

Proudhon’s analysis here (as put forth in What is Property?).

Unsurprisingly, then, Marx (like Proudhon) notes that such a system is

not capitalist:

“Let us suppose the workers are themselves in possession of their

respective means of production and exchange their commodities with one

another. These commodities would not be products of capital.” [Marx,

Capital, vol. 3, p. 276]

Of course, it could be argued that neither Proudhon nor Marx (being

socialists) understood what capitalism and socialism really are.

However, the idea that (market) syndicalism was basically the same as

capitalism was one rejected by such leading ideologues of capitalism as

Ludwig von Mises and Murray Rothbard. The former concluded that while

syndicalism was “not genuine socialism, that is, centralised socialism,”

it would be “misleading” (as he had previously done in 1920) to call

syndicalism workers’ capitalism. Rather, syndicalism was “the ideal of

plundering hordes.” [Socialism, p. 270, p. 274fn, p. 275] Murray

Rothbard, another leading right-“libertarian” with whom Caplan is

familiar, agreed with von Mises. With the end of Stalinism, he argued

for the transfer of industry from the state bureaucracy to workers by

means of “private, negotiable shares” as ownership was “not to be

granted to collectives or co-operatives or workers or peasants

holistically, which would only bring back the ills of socialism in a

decentralised and chaotic syndicalist form.” Significantly, this

transfer was not to be done by the workers themselves rather it was a

case of “granting shares to workers” by the state. [The Logic of Action

II, p. 210 and pp. 211–2]

Thus, both von Mises and Rothbard (like Proudhon and Marx) saw market

syndicalism as a form of socialism, not capitalism. At best, ironically,

it could be argued along with von Mises that this was not “genuine”

socialism but it is significant that both he and Marx agreed that such a

system was not capitalist.

In summary, Caplan’s claims are false, co-operatives are not a

capitalist system as the means of production belong to the immediate

producer. This analysis is, as can be seen, a common socialist one,

shared by anarchists like Proudhon and Bakunin as well as Karl Marx.

Rather than enrich the capitalist, the workers enrich themselves

(independent producers, as well as being their own bosses — i.e.

practice self-government, anarchy — also, to use Marx’s words, “work for

themselves instead of for capital, and enrich themselves instead of the

capitalist”). Thus looking at the social relationships generated within

the collectives we easily see that there were fundamentally

anti-capitalist and socialist as they were based upon self-management

and possession rather than property.

Nevertheless, from this “simple experiment” we find the “the dilemma of

the anarcho-socialist.” Namely that “If the workers seize control of

their plants and run them as they wish, capitalism remains. The only way

to suppress capitalism — to eliminate greed, inequality, and competition

— is to force the worker-owners to do something they are unlikely to do

voluntarily. To do so requires a State, an organization with sufficient

firepower to impose unselfishness, equality, and co-ordination upon

recalcitrant workers. One can call the State a council, a committee, a

union, or by any other euphemism, but the simple truth remains:

socialism requires a state.”

Firstly, if workers do seize their plant and places them under workers

control they have destroyed the basis of capitalism, the wage-labour

social relationship. Such a situation is not capitalism (as Rothbard,

von Mises, Marx and Proudhon all agreed). Moreover, Caplan’s argument

assumes that workers will not voluntarily co-operate. If workers do

consider that co-operation between workplaces is in their best

interests, then a state is not required (this process of voluntary

co-operation between collectives can be seen in the revolution, as many

workers’ became convinced of the benefits of co-operation and voted to

federate together independently of the “collectivisation” degree”).

Caplan assumes that the worker-employees will act in ways he approves

of, any other possibility must indicate that force must be used! Really,

this is taking the ahistoric assumptions of neo-classical economics to

new heights (or depths). As Gaston Level documents this process of

voluntary co-operation was processing under the difficult political

conditions of revolutionary Spain:

“local industries went through stages almost universally adopted in that

revolution... [I]n the first instance comites nominated by the workers

employed in them [were created]. Production and sales continued in each

one. But very soon it was clear that this situation gave rise to

competition between the factories... creating rivalries which were

incompatible with the socialist and libertarian outlook [of the CNT]. So

the CNT launched the watchword: ‘All industries must be ramified in the

Syndicates, completely socialised, and the regime of solidarity which we

have always advocated be established once and for all.’”

He goes on to note that the “idea won support immediately” [Collectives

in the Spanish Revolution, pp. 191–2] Rather than be something which the

workers would be (in Caplan’s eyes) “unlikely to do voluntarily” this

federalist tendency was decided upon by different groups of workers

freely, after debate and discussion in union meetings. Ronald Fraser,

for example, indicates two attempts at co-operation, one in the

Woodworker’s industry and the other in retail industry. Both industries

discussed socialisation and the former decided to do socialise while the

later rejected socialisation. In this debate within the woodworker’s

industry a “union delegate would go round the small shops, point out to

the workers that the conditions were unhealthy and dangerous, that the

revolution was changing all this, and secure their agreement to close

down and move to the union-built Double-X and the 33 EU.” [Ronald

Fraser, Blood of Spain, p. 222]

Thus Caplan’s notions that workers would refuse to co-operate freely are

proven false. And would this agreement require force to back it up? If

so, then so does the capitalist firm. After all, managers and owners

must have the means to impose their will on any “recalcitrant workers”

that may exist. However, it is likely that the CNT created federations

would require far less force than capitalist contracts as they were

based on true free agreement between equals and not imposed on the weak

by the strong via “market forces” and economic necessity (for more on

this, see below). Rather than being an argument against anarchism,

Caplan’s point is really a blow against capitalism and its inherent

hierarchical nature — bosses require force to back up their orders.

Co-operation between equals requires people to keep their word,

something which does not require force to impose (as Kropotkin

constantly argued).

And note that Caplan equates co-operation and equality with

“unselfishness” when, in fact, the traditional anarchist argument for

both of these is based on “selfishness” (i.e. self-interest), namely

that equality and co-operation is in our best interests (in terms of

liberty, material living standards, health, social relationships and so

on). Indeed a very strong case can be argued that inequality and

competition actually does more harm than good in all aspects of life

(see, for example, Alflie Kohn’s No Contest: The case against

competition and Andrew Glyn and David Miliband’s Paying for Inequality:

The economic costs of social injustice). Caplan assumes that everyone

will agree with his own thoughts on the subject and on the typical

right-libertarian misrepresentation of anarchist viewpoints on equality

and co-operation.

What is also interesting is that Caplan assumes that capitalism does not

require a state. But how is this possible? How, for example, are

property rights to be enforced against the unemployed, strikers, wage

workers, the dispossessed, the homeless and so on? How are people to be

forced to respect property or the power that goes with it? How are

sub-branches of the same company to be forced to follow the overall

company plan? To do so requires a State, an organisation with sufficient

firepower to impose property rights against the non-owners. Therefore,

it is “anarcho”-capitalism that requires a state (as does “actually

existing capitalism”). And, of course, if we do have a series of

“private states” who need to co-operate together to provide their

“product” (namely “justice” and social peace) to the property-class,

such co-operation will soon lead to a cartel of armed companies, a new

public state made up of well armed, unaccountable forces. So,

“anarcho”-capitalism implies statism, a network of private states that

soon will form a cartel and become a public state. Unlike every other

market, the “private state” market needs co-operation between

competitors in order to work. Such co-operation builds monopolisation

into the system from the start.

Also, the assumptions Caplan makes about greed, inequality and

competition are interesting. Could not “greed” for a more meaningful

life, one without hierarchies and the economic problems resulting from

competition not lead to a more egalitarian and so freer society?

However, such a wide definition of “greed” (one that takes into account

more than money) is lost on Caplan.

Caplan states that “A priori reasoning alone establishes this, but

empiricists may be skeptical.” But only if one assumes Caplan’s

assumptions, which are question begging in the extreme. As for

“empiricists,” we should note that free-market experiments are usually

created by authoritarian governments (i.e. dictatorships, or

“democracies” in which less than 10% of people can vote), which would

suggest that capitalism and democracy do not go together any more than

capitalism and anti-statism. Moreover, as far as empirical evidence

goes, it usually ends up refuting claims assumptions and claims rather

than backing them up (as we have constantly indicated).

Caplan then goes on to ask, “Surely there is some ‘middle way’ which is

both anarchist and socialist?” and answers by saying that “To the

contrary; the experience of Spanish Anarchism could give no clearer

proof that insofar as collectivization was anarchist, it was capitalist,

and insofar as collectivization was socialist, it was statist. The only

solution to this dilemma, if solution it may be called, is to retain the

all-powerful State, but use a new word to designate it.”

Such a statement is false, as a solution could be voluntary

socialisation of workplaces based on workers’ control of production — as

practised in some industries in Spain (in opposition, it should be

noted, to the collectivisation decree). At worst these socialised

industries became like large capitalist companies but with elected

managers and workforce assemblies; at best they provided workplace

control and co-ordination to ensure the overall success of the

socialised collectives.

Therefore, Caplan aside, socialisation goes not require “the

all-powerful state,” which the defence of capitalist companies does. It

is also pretty clear that Caplan considers that if the collectives were

capitalist, they would not remain collectives for long. Hence workers’

control and capitalism do not go together (no matter what Caplan

suggests).

He then goes on to state that “An overwhelming body of evidence from a

wide variety of sources confirms that when the workers really controlled

their factories, capitalism merely changed its form; it did not cease to

exist.”

This is true in a sense. As many anarchists pointed out, the collectives

were not truly socialist (if by socialism we mean anarcho-communism or

anarcho-syndicalism rather than anarcho-mutualism or

anarcho-collectivist) and in fact half-way between capitalism and

anarchism. This is hardly surprising, as change does not occur

“overnight,” and so problems would of course arise. However, what is

false is the idea that the collectives were capitalist because of such

problems. Under capitalism, workers do not “really control their

factories;” does that mean capitalism is “socialism”?

He then goes on to ask, “How, one might wonder, could avowed socialists

act so contrary to their principles? The workers’ behavior was not

particularly different from that of wealthy Marxist professors who live

in luxury while denouncing the refusal of the West to share its wealth

with the Third World. Talk is cheap. When the worker-owners had the

option to enrich themselves, they seized it with few regrets.”

This is not unsurprising, as anarchism is not about people refusing to

“enrich” themselves but about trying to maximise freedom and improve the

living standards of those marginalised and dispossessed by capitalism.

In this sense, the collectives had many features that were decidedly not

capitalist, the most important being they did not employ wage labour.

Caplan’s suggests that the problems caused by this “popular capitalism”

would have soon resulted in the end of workers control and the creation

of a new class of property owners and a state to protect those “rights.”

But then the “anarcho” capitalist is faced with a problem, as workers

control is not compatible with capitalism, and so it is their system

that requires a state to enforce the authority of the owners.

Caplan goes on and quotes Andrade, a POUM leader, on the way workers

looked upon collectives as their own, not social property. Caplan

comments:

“The ‘particular working-class attitude’ to which Andrade refers is just

the view that the revolution is supposed to make the workers their own

bosses. Many workers took the slogans about worker-control literally.

They overlooked the possibility that these slogans were intended to win

their support for a revolution to replace capitalists with party

bureaucrats.”

Which is a strange way of putting the CNT’s long standing policy of

socialisation which had been agreed at numerous CNT congresses. In other

words, Caplan is claiming that the CNT leadership all along desired to

create a centralised system run by themselves. He then quotes Albert

Perez-Baro (who he claims is a former member of the CNT, although this

is not mentioned by Fraser)m who played a prominent role in the

collectivization movement in Catalonia, from a speech given seven months

after the revolution, as painting a good picture of the aspiring

bureaucrats’ hidden agenda:

“…the immense majority of workers have sinned by their indiscipline;

production has fallen in an alarming manner and in many instances has

plummeted; the distance from the front has meant that the workers have

not experienced the war with the necessary intensity. The former

discipline, born of managerial coercion, is missing, and has not been

replaced, owing to the lack of class-consciousness, by a self-imposed

discipline in benefit of the collectivity. In an infantile manner the

workers have come to believe that everything was already won… when in

reality the real social revolution begins precisely in the period of

constructing the Economy…”

Caplan states that “While Perez-Baro berates the workers as ‘infantile,’

he does not consider the possibility that the workers’ attitude is

perfectly sensible. It is easy to see why workers expect to benefit by

becoming their own bosses. Why they should believe that replacing their

employers with the State or an Orwellian Anarchist council will serve

their interests is a different matter.”

However, as is clear, Perez-Baro is attacking the “infantile” behaviour

of ignoring the fact there was a war on and that workers should consider

reconstructing the economy. As it stands, by not reconstructing the

economy, the gains made by workers were lost, because credit problems

resulted in the state taking over their workplaces. In addition, lack of

production would have a serious effect on the war effort. Is Caplan

seriously suggesting it was in workers best interests to lose the war?

The assumption Caplan makes throughout is that socialisation means that

workers are no longer their own bosses and do not benefit. However,

according to a CNT militant, socialisation was not thought about like

that by the CNT:

“It was our idea in the CNT that everything should start from the

worker, not — as with the Communists — that everything should be run by

the state. To this end we wanted to set up industrial federations —

textiles, metal-working, department stores, etc. — which would be

represented on an overall Economics Council which would direct the

economy. Everything, including economic planning, would thus remain in

the hands of the workers.” [Fraser, p. 220]

Therefore CNT militants did not consider union control to mean control

by them, but by their members. These federations would only administer

decisions made by the workers themselves and be under their direct

control. Hence Caplan’s suggestion of a “hidden agenda” in the CNT is

false.

And, as is clear from Caplan’s account, if the workers did embrace

capitalism, then some of them would soon have stopped being their own

bosses and would have become someone else’s. Hardly anarchistic. His

argument seems to be if the collectives are anarchist, then capitalism

will result, and if capitalism results then the collectives will stop

being anarchist. Hardly convincing, and hardly leading to libertarian

social relationships. (But as capitalism is not based on libertarian

social relationships, who can blame him?).

Caplan goes on to state that “Inequality existed within collectives as

well as between them. Invariably, the participants attribute the

tolerance of inequality to the fact that it was impossible for one

collective to impose equal wages unless the other collectives did the

same. As Fraser summarizes the testimony of CNT militant Luis Santacana,

‘But the ‘single’ wage could not be introduced in his plant because it

was not made general throughout the industry. Women in the factory

continued to receive wages between 15 per cent and 20 per cent lower

than men, and manual workers less than technicians.’ In other words, it

was impossible to impose equality so long as there was competition for

workers. If one firm refused to pay extra to skilled workers, they would

quit and find a job where egalitarian norms were not so strictly

observed.”

However, as the workplace in question was run by the workers themselves,

it follows that social equality did exist. Strict “equal wages” are not

the defining aspect of the anarchist principle of equality.

Self-management in which each worker has equal power, meaning an equal

voice in decision-making, is. It’s interesting to note that Caplan wants

to replace self-management with bosses, i.e. wants to replace liberty

with authority.

Caplan states that “If there is competition, exploitation is virtually

impossible. This principle holds whether the competing bidders are

capitalists or worker collectives,” as competition results in more

skilful workers getting higher wages. But Caplan ignores a key point

here. Buyers of labour power will only employ the worker if they can

make more money from the worker than they pay him or her in wages — in

other words, capitalism is based on exploitation. Kropotkin makes this

point well when he wrote:

“As to the employer who pays an engineer twenty times more than a

labourer, it is simply due to personal interest; if the engineer can

economise $4000 a year on the cost of production; the employer pays him

$800 ... He parts with an extra $40 when he expects to gain $400 by it;

and this is the essence of the Capitalist system.” [The Conquest of

Bread, p. 165]

Of course, Caplan’s ignores the fact that wages are more a product of

the number of available workers than any sort of individual capacity. To

take a more realistic example than the one Caplan provides, if there are

thousands of workers and only a few capitalist’s then the workers’ wages

will fall. This means that for most workers, capitalism ensures low pay

in relation to what the worker produced. Exploitation marks capitalism

and Caplan’s attempts to ignore this fact are unconvincing. For most

people capitalism results in being reduced to “order takers” and trying

to survive on the market.

Caplan’s example also indicates a common feature of

Right-libertarianism, namely paternalism. Right-libertarianism is

marked, like all forms of “rugged individualism” by a (usually distant)

paternalism. You have those in authority protecting the “individualist”

against his friends, neighbours, fellow workers who are all trying to

exploit him and hold him down. The authority figure, in this case the

capitalist, protects the “good” worker from “exploitation” by his or her

fellow workers by placing them in the authority structure and paying

them a little more. Of course, that protection comes at a price (the

capitalist must get his profit and the “individualist” must obey the

rules).

When it boils down to it, the right-Libertarian is the most dedicated

supporter of authority and hierarchy, all in the name of

“individualism.” The idea of liberty being self-government and free

association is lost on them.

Caplan then goes on to say that poor wages are the result of labour

being unproductive and that “the only long-term solution for Spanish

poverty was to increase the supply of capital goods in Spain; thus, once

again the militant tactics of the Spanish unions were grossly

counter-productive. While Spanish workers should have done everything

possible to attract foreign capital, they instead chose to frighten away

a large fraction of Spain’s already meager capital stock.”

In other words, by the Spanish workers standing up for their dignity and

resisting being “treated like animals,” they were actually being

“counter-productive.” Caplan here indicates that the best thing that

workers should do is not resist being badly treated — not stand up for

their rights but submit to the capitalist bosses and hope that capital

will be attracted to their area so that they can, possibly, get a nicer

boss and better conditions. What a servile character structure Caplan

suggests for the majority of the population under capitalism. In other

words, if you stand up for your humanity you will frighten investors

away. Hardly a mental attitude which encourages liberty and respects

individual dignity.

However, let us assume that Caplan is correct and workers do become so

servile and capital is attracted to the area. As supply outstrips

demand, workers become in a better position to get higher wages, etc. In

other words, workers may find themselves unemployed as market forces

result in capital disinvesting to move to better areas or other workers

coming to that area and undercutting the wages of the original workers.

In other words, capitalism results in both hierarchy and unemployment

(i.e. booms and slumps). This is hardly a fit society for individual

freedom and dignity.

Caplan states that “the real socialist complaint against capitalism is

not that capitalism exploits workers, but that it prevents exploitation

of workers. It prevents able workers from being exploited for the

benefit of less able workers, the elderly, and children.”

To put Caplan’s thought more correctly, capitalism ensures that workers

are exploited on behalf of the correct people — namely capitalists. Of

course, Caplan seems happy to support the implications of his

statements. Thus he indicates that workers’ control would not exist in

capitalism and that people are only motivated by wages. However, this

need not be the case, as in reality people are motivated by many

different concerns and hopes. In addition, it should be noted that if,

as for Caplan, the market price reflects the value of the goods you

produce then why were women paid “between 15 per cent and 20 per cent”

less than men for the same work (it should be noted that the collectives

reduced pay differences to this level but could not abolish it)? Or, as

is more likely, that market prices are dependent on cultural and other

influences (like supply and demand) than if a worker is “able”?

Of course, the logical result of Caplan’s analysis is that capitalism

results in archy (namely hierarchy) and in statism (to defend private

property). In fact, given his statements on foreign capital, it’s clear

that both the servile character suggested by this hierarchy and the

restrictions on freedom which it entails are nothing to worry about in

his view. Anarchists would disagree.

D. The Dilemma, Part II: Socialist Statism

Caplan notes that even in the rural collectives, there were differences

between rich and poor collectives. However, given that the collectives

were apparently ruled by an “anarchist government,” this seems strange.

Could we not conclude that the collectives themselves decided what to do

with their produce and not the council of Aragon? If that is so, then

his case of “rural slavery” is exposed for the nonsense it is – does he

really think that “slaves” control the product of their own labour?

Therefore Caplan, when pointing out that there existed rich and poor

rural collectives, blows his own case out the water and does not even

notice. We have presented more than enough evidence to prove that the

vast majority of collectives were voluntary, democratic associations

based on free debate and self-management, i.e. non-statist organisations

and far freer than any capitalist company.

Caplan states that “[o]verall, however, the socialist ideologue had

nothing to fear from the rural collectives. For the most part,

capitalism had been stamped out by the only means possible: the state.

The Anarchist military was the backbone of a new monopoly on the means

of coercion which was a state in everything but name.”

But before the revolution, land ownership was enforced by a state, which

suggests that capitalism requires a “monopoly on the means of coercion”

in order to exist. Why didn’t landless peasants take over estates before

the revolution? Because private property rights were defended. Hence

capitalism needs a state. What the “anarcho” capitalist claims is that

by allowing the owner to select between competing companies which will

provide the force required, liberty will be increased. It would be only

liberty for the owners, however, as their workers would be subject to

private states.

As we proved above, the rural collectives were not run by the anarchist

military but were run by their members, in mass assemblies and decisions

reached by free debate and agreement. The anarchist militia had only

swept away the old capitalist means of coercion, nothing more. What

Caplan fails to consider is that capitalism had not been “stamped out”,

it had been replaced by a freer form of society.

Moving on, Caplan claims that the existence of the anarchist militia

made it “possible to use the peasantry like cattle, to make them work,

feed them their subsistence, and seize the ‘surplus.’” Yet, as noted

above the collectives were run democratically, and each collective

worked out its own surplus. As Thomas notes, consumption increased in

the collectives. Therefore Caplan’s claims of using the peasantry “like

cattle” are false (as we indicated above).

He quotes Bolloten on the democratic nature of the collectives and asks

“What is to be done with someone who says that he neither wishes to

serve on the committee, nor consent to its rulings? Who says that he

intends to work his own land, get rich, and refuse to share a peseta

with anyone else? This person would receive the same treatment that any

tax resister in any modern State would receive – increasingly severe

threats and sanctions under he either submits or perishes.”

As 30% of the population of Aragon were not in collectives, the answer

is simple — they did not have to join and could work their own land.

Whether they could get rich is an interesting question, as most riches

are the result of employing others to do the work while the capitalist

claims the profits. Of course, we could ask the question, What would

happen if a peasant before the revolution had announced that he rejected

private property in land and the law that protects it, and so decided to

work for himself on the land of a land owner? This person would receive

the same treatment as anyone breaking the law, increasingly severe

threats and sanctions until he either submitted or perished.

In other words, capitalism has its own governments and laws which

protect the interests of the rich. The collectives changed these local

laws in favour of a democratic system. Caplan claims that these

“Anarchist ‘committees’ were governments in the standard sense of the

word.” As we have indicated, the collectives were run by mass assemblies

which made policy and elected committees that carried out these policies

and made administration decisions. Therefore, the key aspect of

government (namely hierarchical power relations) had been destroyed. The

collectives were based upon horizontal links between individuals, and

not power centralised in the hands of a few.

Now, compare this to private property in which the property owner holds

the power of what happens on his or her property. Those working for

him/her are subject to a very specific form of government and so

capitalism is based upon governments in the Caplan’s sense of the word

(monopoly of power over a given area). Unlike the anarchist collectives,

capitalism is marked by vertical links between boss and wage workers and

so is marked by obvious concentrations of power in the hands of the

few). As noted above, pre-war rural Spain was noted for its rule by the

cacique (local boss) who totally dominated village life and oppressed

many.

Caplan’s attempt to “prove” that the anarchist collectives where

actually “governments” backfires on himself – by his own logic he proves

that capitalism is based upon governments (and this form of government

being fascist/dictatorial in nature).

Caplan goes on to say that “Still, initially rural collectivization was

indeed fairly ‘cantonalist,’ and it is conceivable that eventually

peasant mobility would have forced local committees to relax the

harshness of their regimes.” But this ignores the fact that the

committees in question were elected by and accountable to the collective

in mass assemblies. This feature of collective life is well documented

by Bolleten and Fraser (amongst others). In other words, the collectives

were as relaxed as their members wanted them to be.

Caplan then states that “[t]he Anarchist leadership sensed this almost

instinctively; soon voices urged regional and even national

‘federations,’” and he quotes a February 1937 congress, without

mentioning that the congress was made up of delegates from the various

collectives that existed to co-ordinate their activities. In addition,

he does not quote one delegate cited in Fraser, who stated that “[t]he

congress was persuaded of the need for a regional federation” [Fraser,

p. 366] through discussion and debate. To state that the “rest of the

agreement reveals an intent to permit even more severe exploitation of

the peasantry” just shows Caplan’s personal feelings and not factual

reporting.

Caplan then discusses the various CNT conferences in which the CNT

expressed desires for increased centralisation of collectives. As many

anarchists have argued, the CNT rejected anarchist ideas totally in the

examples Caplan quotes, and we can agree with him here. The rhetoric

used had far more to do with the political situation than anarchist

ideas.

Caplan claims that “[f]or some Anarchists, these pacts represented

compromises. But then again, the CNT’s initial programs were themselves

a compromise between the Anarchists who wanted total power for the CNT

from the outset.” However, if the CNT had smashed the state on July

19^(th), would the various compromises that anarchists made, the joining

of state bodies and the resulting corruption, have taken place? If the

CNT had, as many anarchists thought, created a confederal assembly to

co-ordinate activities (as the CNT had co-ordinated strikes before),

would these betrayals of anarchist ideas taken place? We doubt it.

Caplan thinks otherwise, stating that in “the earliest days of the

revolution many Anarchists and Anarchist journals cried out for an

Anarchist dictatorship. These remarks often make it clear that even the

Anarchist opponents of taking total power agreed that once the

Nationalists were defeated, the Anarchist dictatorship would swiftly

follow.”

However, this is a false account of what the anarchists were suggesting.

What many anarchists were arguing was for a social revolution based

around democratic collectives and federations. The anarchists would have

taken part in these self-managed assemblies like any other group or

union, trying to convince others of their ideas. Hardly “dictatorship”

as Caplan knows. To quote a FAI member on Caplan’s “anarchist

dictatorship”:

“How else could libertarian communism be brought about? It would always

signify dissolution of the old parties dedicated to the idea of power,

or at least make it impossible for them to pursue their politics aimed

at seizure of power...the masses would have complete freedom of

expression in the unions as well as...their political organisations in

the district and communities” [Anarchist Organisation: the History of

the FAI, page 188].

In other words, a self-managed system based on debate and free

expression and not “anarchist dictatorship.” Caplan ignores these facts

in favour of his own “ideas” of what the Spanish anarchists desired. I

should like to point out that Caplan displays a common feature of the

Libertarian right here, namely the ability to read minds. Caplan

suggests that the anarchists “really” wanted an “anarchist dictatorship”

while presenting no evidence that this is the case. In other words,

Caplan states what he knows the CNT-FAI members “really” wanted as

opposed to what they actually desired and argued for. That the Spanish

anarchists said no such thing as Caplan wants must indicate how well

they had hidden their “anarcho-statist” nature.

He then quotes a prominent Anarchosyndicalist saying that the CNT would

“intensify collectivization and socialization, and make them complete.”

However, as this statement comes from the time when workers controlled

the collectives directly, it clear that the reference is to extending

the revolution to create workers’ control everywhere. As far as rural

collectives go, the CNT did desire to extend them, but as CNT policy was

for voluntary collectives, the use of “good examples” would have been

the means.

As far “anarchist dictatorship” goes, if the anarchists had smashed the

state and created a voluntary confederal structure based on workplace

and community assemblies, it would not have been a “dictatorship.” This

is because the assemblies would have been based on direct democracy and

voluntary co-ordination — in exactly the same way that the CNT had been

organised before the revolution. Hence some anarchists were urging full

workers control and not anarchist dictatorship. It is funny that Caplan

thinks that abolishing the state by self-managed unions and collectives

means creating a “dictatorship”!

Caplan then states that “[i]t is evident that many of the Spanish

Anarchists had such a revolution in mind; a revolution which, like other

modern totalitarian revolutions, would not only enslave the body, but

enslave the mind. In this light, the Anarchists’ much-praised focus on

education seems far more malevolent.” But this is merely Caplan’s

reading of the quotes he presents. Like many people, anarchists desire

to convince others of their ideas. This is not enslaving the mind by any

means and indicates Caplan’s paranoid thoughts on anarchists than the

reality of the situation. For the record, the Spanish Anarchism movement

supported the ideas of “Free schooling,” namely education than

encouraged the child to think for themselves. In other words, Caplan’s

paranoid ranting about “anarchists enslaving children” by educating them

has no basis in fact.

Caplan concludes as follows:

“An overwhelming amount of evidence indicates that worker control never

eliminated the greed, inequality, and competition for which the

Anarchosyndicalists denounced the capitalist system.”

Nevertheless, workers’ control did start the process of eliminating it,

and it is clear that the “greed, inequality and competition” that did

exist resulted in the defeat of the experiment. As individual

collectives competed, they bred inequalities between themselves and

credit disappeared. This allowed the central and Catalan governments to

take the collectives over and so destroy workers’ control. If the

collectives had acted differently, then the revolution in Spain may have

lasted longer.

So, far from disproving anarchosyndicalist ideas, the collectives proved

once against that mutual aid, not mutual struggle, is in our long term

interest.

Caplan then states that:

“The classical anarchists repeatedly claimed that once the state was

destroyed, capitalism would automatically collapse. They were wholly in

error. Insofar as the state was destroyed, capitalism merely changed its

form; it did not cease to exist. Genuine worker control essentially

changed the recipients of the dividends, nothing more.”

Capitalism did collapse as “the dividends” went to those who created

them in the first place. Capitalism, an economy based on wage labour,

had been replaced (however imperfectly) by one based on socialist

principle. As Caplan pointed out, because the state was weak, the

collectives could not have issued shares and got capital by that means.

In other words, a state is required to protect capitalism. If the

collectives had taken Caplan’s advice, “genuine” workers’ control would

quickly have been replaced by capitalism and a strong state would have

been required to protect it.

He ends by saying that “The only feasible route for the elimination of

capitalism was to create a new state (often given a new name, such as

‘council’ or ‘committee’) and coerce obedience by any means necessary.”

Again, however, this is purely Caplan’s opinion. As noted, his

suggestions explicitly acknowledge the need for a state to protect

capitalism. As indicated above, voluntary co-operation between

collectives could have been a possible means of supporting and

protecting workers’ control. This form of mutual aid existed in some

places, but it was not widespread enough. So this anti-statist form of

co-operation has possibilities which the collectives did not pursue far

enough. Thus the only “feasible” route would have been to work freely

together as equals in order to maximise the options of all and such

federations would not have been a new state, regardless of Caplan’s

claims (and, of course, capitalist firms can and do coerce obedience by

any means necessary – the role of private “defence firms” crushing

strikes and unions, shooting down pickets and even assassinating union

militants is well known. But such obedience and coercion is only what is

required to protect “economic liberty” – for the property owner…)

4. Philosophy and the Spanish Anarchists

Caplan in this section asks the question:

“To what extent did the tyrannies and atrocities of the Spanish

Anarchists flow from their ideas? Could their ideas ever be the basis

for a free and just society, given propitious circumstances?”

He answers by saying:

“The sequel argues that that the ideas of the Spanish Anarchists were

utterly in error. The Spanish Anarchists faced numerous dilemmas largely

because they endorsed an incoherent set of principles; and almost

invariably, when they had the power, they acted on their most

totalitarian impulses. These failings were on the most fundamental level

epistemological; namely, the Spanish Anarchists were emotional, dogmatic

zealots whose failure to theorize objectively and rigorously led

millions to struggle to achieve a viciously evil goal.”

Strong words. It cannot be denied that some Spanish Anarchists were

zealots and acted in ways that were opposed to the ideas they proclaimed

to believe in. However, the whole of the movement was not like that, nor

is the anarchist movement as such like that. In addition, every movement

has its fair share of such individuals, and so the anarchist movement is

hardly alone here. So, to generalise as Caplan does presents a radically

false image of the CNT and FAI. The great majority of the Spanish

movement stuck to their libertarian principles – unfortunately such

practical libertarian ground work makes less interesting reading than

the actions of a few zealots. So, as we will see, Caplan’s claims are

fundamentally false and, ironically, can be applied to his own ideas and

the movement to which he subscribes.

A. What is Freedom?

Here Caplan states that:

“The writings and words of the Spanish Anarchists, even the titles of

their periodicals, proclaim their love of freedom, their desire for

liberty. The classical anarchists such as Bakunin indicated that they

opposed state-socialism because they rightly saw that a socialist state

was inconsistent with human freedom. But what exactly did the Spanish

Anarchists mean by ‘freedom’?”

After giving many examples of “anarchist intolerance”, he concludes

that:

“I would never presume to tell people how they may or may not use words;

I do however reserve the right to re-translates non-standard usages back

into plain English. The Spanish Anarchists had no love of ‘freedom’ in

the ordinary sense of the word. The ‘freedom’ of the Spanish Anarchists

was the ‘freedom’ to live exactly as the Spanish Anarchists thought

right.”

But Caplan ignores the majority of anarchists who agreed with him and

aimed at education to put their opinions across. For example, Caplan

does not mention The Free Women movement which organised 30,000 women

and used propaganda to convince prostitutes to take up “normal” work.

Instead he quotes the conversation of two CNT members as a “typical”

anarchist viewpoint while nothing could be further from “typical” than

this. Or again, there were the many anarchists who opposed

assassinations and tried their best to stop them. So, while the

anarchist movement did have its share of zealots (as does any movement),

the whole movement cannot be dismissed as composed of “zealots” as

Caplan attempts to do here. In fact, given the nature of the social

organisations the anarchists did create, it can be seen that anarchist

support for freedom was extensive (and far more than “anarcho”

capitalism’s any day) and its means very libertarian (i.e. based on free

debate between equals and the creation of viable alternatives

individuals were free to join).

From the experiences of the various collectives formed during the

revolution, its can be seen that the Spanish anarchists based their

activities on convincing people by argument and by example. The

collectives made their decisions based upon free debate and voting. This

is in stark contrast with capitalist companies, which show no love for

freedom and activity try to control what their employees do both in, and

increasely, out of the workplace.

Therefore Caplan is wrong to state that the Spanish Anarchists had no

love for freedom. They had their opinions and tried to convince others

of them by free discussion. Sadly, what makes good reporting is the

actions of the “zealots” and not those of the majority of a movement. In

the self-managed collectives they formed, the rules governing the

association were made by those affected by them. Unlike capitalism,

individuals governed themselves and helped form the rules that bound

their associations together. To claim that the decisions these

collectives reached are examples of “anarchist intolerance” is simply

false, simply because (as proved) these collectives were self-managed

directly by their members.

Caplan does state that “[m]any of the Spanish Anarchists were genuinely

anti-statist in the standard sense of the word. But since European

anarchism was essentially an offshoot of European state-socialism, the

Spanish anarchists had almost no anti-state tradition upon which to

build. Like the state-socialists, the Spanish anarchists were barely

even aware of the long-standing anti-statist liberal tradition, which

might have at least stirred them to think about what it is to be free.”

However, liberalism is not anti-statist (which is clear to such noted

liberals as von Mises and Milton Friedman — “liberalism is not

anarchism, nor has it anything whatsoever to do with anarchism” and

“[f]or the liberal, the state is an absolute necessity” for the

protection of “private property” and “peace” [von Mises, Liberalism, p.

37 and 39]. Rather it defends the need for a state and usually an

elitist state based upon rule by an enlightened minority. As Karl

Polyani notes, “from Macaulay to Mises, from Spencer to Sumner, there

was not a militant liberal who did not express his conviction that

popular democracy was a danger to capitalism.” [The Great

Transformation, p. 226]

How “anti-state” (or even libertarian) is a philosophy that happily

thinks that the majority should follow the laws made by a (rich)

minority and that this is the best defence of liberty? Simply put, the

right libertarian is anti-democratic, quasi-dictatorial, intolerant of

countervailing institutions. Nothing is to stand in the way of the free

market, and no such fripperies as democratic votes are to be allowed to

upset it.

Indeed, to ensure that the masses cannot influence the “natural order”

the right-libertarian must support centralised, authoritarian

governments

As Brian Barry (in “The continuing Relevance of Socialism”, in

Thatcherism edited Roberty Skidelsky) points out:

“Some observers claim to have found something paradoxical in the fact

that the Thatcher regime combines liberal individualist rhetoric with

authoritarian action. But there is no paradox at all. Even under the

most repressive conditions ...people seek to act collectively in order

to improve things for themselves, and it requires an enormous exercise

of brutal power to fragment these efforts at organisation and to force

people to pursue their interests individually... left to themselves,

people will inevitably tend to pursue their interests through collective

action – in trade unions, tenants’ associations, community organisations

and local government. Only the pretty ruthless exercise of central power

can defeat these tendencies: hence the common association between

individualism and authoritarianism, well exemplified in the fact that

the countries held up as models by the free-marketers are, without

exception, authoritarian regimes” [p. 146]

Therefore, the support that Caplan’s “anti-statist” liberal tradition

gives to rule by elites is clear. Only non-democratic societies can

repress the collective attempts to protect society and individuals from

market forces. Hence the often heard right-libertarian support for

regimes which are dictatorships (benevolent in the case of Hong Kong,

repressive in the case of Chile). The unadulterated free market is

unalterable, and those who dislike it or suffer from it must learn to

put up with it. In Rousseau’s language, they must be forced to be free.

Therefore, to claim that Liberalism is “anti-state” is laughable. It was

and remains militantly in favour of the right kind of state, one in

which an elite can make the laws all most obey. Hardly anti-state, and

hardly libertarian. I would suggest that Caplan consider the following

fact:

Anarchism, like all other forms of socialism, developed in response to

the evils and authoritarian nature of a relatively free market

capitalist order, run by and for (classical) Liberals. Does “freedom”

mean renting your liberty out to the capitalist, who in return for

ordering you about also keeps the full product of your labour and

returns a fraction of it? Does “freedom” mean being dispossessed from

the world, only being “free” to move about on the bits you own or can

buy access to? Is “freedom” a commodity, with no money meaning no

liberty? It is in response to this narrow definition of “freedom” that

anarchism developed and argued against. Freedom means more than picking

masters.

Perhaps this revolt by millions against capitalism at one of its most

pure periods would “at least stirred him to think about what it is to be

free” but instead he makes laughable statements on the “anti-state”

nature of this regime of elite rule. Hardly surprising, as supporters of

capitalism rarely give freedom much thought unlike the anarchist

movement with its extensive discussions on what form of association

increases the liberty of its members.

Moreover, many anarchists did discuss the need for tolerance and for the

importance of different ideas. All anarchists recognised the importance

of communism being free, explicitly arguing that those who wanted to

remain independent producers, working their own land and tools, would be

free to do on. Bakunin, Kropotkin, Goldman, Malatesta all instantly

spring to mind as arguing this point and so Caplan’s other claims of

lack of tolerance in anarchist theory can easily be refuted.

Caplan ends by stating that “[p]erhaps if some of the Spanish Anarchists

had pondered Mises’ exposition of liberalism, they might have had second

thoughts about the importance of tolerance, and the relationship between

toleration and freedom.”

If the Spanish Anarchists had read Mises’ exposition of liberalism they

would have found this gem about “tolerance” — the “tolerance”, indeed

support, of von Mises for fascism:

“It cannot be denied that Fascism and similar movements aiming at the

establishment of dictatorship are full of the best intentions and that

their intervention has, for the moment, saved European civilisation. The

merit that Fascism has thereby won for itself will live eternally in

history.” [Liberalism, p. 51]

Yes, indeed, Fascism in Italy and Spain did “save” capitalist

civilisation, but only at the expense of freedom and (in the case of

Spain) hundreds of thousands of lives. Of course, von Mises tries to

excuse Fascist tyranny and murder by arguing that it was in response to

the forces of the third International (i.e. Bolshevism) but in Spain and

Italy, the main political forces repressed were anarchism and social

democracy, not Leninism. Moreover, as anarchists have always opposed

private property (after all, he claims that the “program of

Liberalism... if condensed into a single word, would have to read:

property” — not liberty, I must stress) I am sure that von Mises would

attempt to “justify” Fascism as “defensive force”:

“What distinguishes Liberal from Fascist political tactics is not a

difference of opinion in regard the necessity of using armed force to

resist armed attackers, but a difference in the fundamental estimation

of the role of violence in a struggle for power.” [Ibid., p. 50]

As the capitalists have their private property and power already,

obviously any attempt to remove that power and property would be “armed

attack” — just as overthrowing a King is treason. Thus von Mises

“tolerance” for Fascism — like most capitalists he sees it as necessary

to protect capitalism for the dangers of anarchism and socialism.

Needless to say this places Caplan’s attempts to use von Mises as an

example of “tolerant” capitalist versus “intolerant” anarchists in a new

light. How “tolerant” is a philosophy who praises Fascism and does not

oppose its violence, only its use of violence to secure power (after

all, the capitalists already have power and so all their use of force is

“defensive” by definition).

Also, how does “tolerance” and property-rights go together in real life?

The experience of Spanish workers indicates that it does not —

“tolerance” is just another way of supporting the power of the boss. For

example, Murray Bookchin notes “the caciques [big rural landowners] who

threatened punitive action against entire villages that failed to return

rightist candidates [in the 1936 elections], and the landlords’ agents

who threatened to discharge agricultural workers and tenants who failed

to vote the reactionary ticket.” [The Spanish Anarchists, p. 255].

According to Paul Preston “[i]n Madrid offices, pressure was put on

employees to vote for the Right. Those who wanted to act as scrutineers

for the Left were told that they would get into trouble if they did.”

[The Coming of the Spanish Civil War, p. 208]

Of course, from a right-Libertarian perspective, such threats were just

owners exercising their property-rights and not really a danger to

freedom. But that does not suggest much “tolerance” for opposing

viewpoints (and lets not forget that the fascists von Mises apologies

for used violence to assassinate union and political activists before

the start of the Civil War).

Thus anarchists would reject Mises “tolerance” as purely an ideological

construct which is cast aside as required, for example to support

Fascism. Moreover, as noted, many anarchists did argue for tolerance and

did indicate the relationship between toleration and freedom (and

opposed Fascism, we must note, with all their might and often lives).

Therefore, to say that all the Spanish Anarchists were intolerant is not

true. Needless to say, it was the intolerant ones who most visibly acted

on their opinions. Perhaps Caplan would ponder the fact that free market

liberalism has historically been opposed to democracy and instead

supported elite rule – how libertarian is a society in which the many

follow the rules the (wealthy) few make?

The question arises is toleration the key aspect of freedom? If freedom

means self-government then its clear that tolerance by others is a

necessary part of it. However, tolerance is not enough. For example, in

the modern workplace the worker is subjected to the authority of his or

her boss. This means that the individual subjected to authority becomes

an “order taker” and so is no longer governing themselves. In other

words, that capitalism restricts freedom. To “tolerate” authority in the

name of liberty is a strange use of the word. However Caplan does not

even mention the authoritarian nature of the capitalist workplace (or

the well known effects of property concentrations on society and liberty

outside of the workplace).

As is clear from the comments of CNT worker quoted above, the

capitalist- work worker social relationship resulted in the workers

being treated “like animals.” This is to be expected. If you deny

someone the ability to control aspects of their own lives (in this case

their labour) then hardly surprising their liberty (and dignity) is

reduced. That Caplan ignores the prime concern of anarchism (namely

freedom) and concentrates instead on tolerance we can imagine that he

means we should tolerate oppression and wait until market forces

“liberate” us from bad bosses and restrictions on liberty.

In other words, should we tolerate authority and restrictions of liberty

arising from capitalist social relations? No, if human dignity and

freedom are important to us. That is why anarchists are not liberals

(and liberals are not anarchists, regardless of Caplan’s claims).

Anarchists do not “tolerate” being treated like animals or a system

which can produce such a situation. Perhaps Caplan should consider what

freedom actually means himself – its clear that by “anarcho”

capitalism’s “tolerance” for authority structures that they are not

anarchist by any means.

B. Socialism, Liberty, and the State

In this section, Caplan discusses the statement that “Some modern

admirers of the Spanish Anarchists argue that abolition of the state in

Max Weber’s sense of the word was not really their aim. On this view,

the Spanish Anarchists defined ‘state’ narrowly to refer only to _some_

legitimated geographical monopolies of the use of coercion.”

He concludes that “an overwhelming volume of evidence indicates that the

Spanish Anarchists repeatedly stated, as a matter of principle, that

they intended to abolish the state; and context indicates that they used

the word “state” in the standard sense, for they repeatedly specified

their opposition to a working-class state, parliamentary democracy, or

the establishment of any sort of revolutionary power.”

Which is, of course, true. Instead they desired to create a federal

system based on workers self-managed workplaces and communes. This would

not be a state, because hierarchy would not exist and so each body would

be autonomous. Of course, if we take Weber’s definition of what a state

is, then “anarcho” capitalism does not abolish the state. The owner of

private property determines the monopoly of coercion over the property

they own. Hence the state is “privatised” and not abolished. As far as

the “general libertarian law code” within which these private states

work then this is clearly a monopoly over a geographical area. Hence

from various viewpoints, “anarcho” capitalism does not aim to abolish

the state at all and so is not anarchistic in the slightest. In

addition, “anarcho”-capitalism assumes a network of “private states”

(they call them “protection firms”) would exist and that co-operation

between them would produce the “service” of “justice” and social peace.

As they point out, a firm which does not peacefully co-operate will soon

go out of business. However, what other market requires competitors to

co-operate together in order to provide their product? None. And such

co-operation will lead to a cartel forming, and so a de facto monopoly

of firms in a given area. Due to the need to co-operate to provide their

product, “protection firms” have a built-in tendency to form stable

cartels.

Caplan then states that “In spite of this fervent belief, the Anarchists

either formed or joined governments whenever the had the power to do so.

The reason is that the Spanish Anarchists were completely wrong to

assume that capitalism would disappear as soon as the capitalists had

been ‘displaced.’ Displacing the capitalists simply meant that the

workers were transformed into worker-capitalists. The result was

anarchist, but not socialist. To regulate the urban collectives or

collective the rural farmers, displacement of the capitalists was not

enough; only a state could do the job.”

However, the decision to collaborate with political parties occurred

before the collectives were formed and long before the problems of

collectivisation became apparent. This decision took place in July

20–21, and resulted in the Central Committee of Anti-Fascist Committees.

The decision to join the Popular Front governments was motivated by a

desire to ensure that the anarchists were not side-tracked by the

politicians and that weapons and credit were supplied to CNT forces and

collectives. The collectivisation decree was an attempt to legalise the

collectives and the revolution (the stupidity of this idea is clear). So

the context these decisions to join governments were made in are

important to understand why they were taken. That Caplan ignores the

context, namely the aftermath of a fascist coup and the pressing need to

work to defeat it, indicates that his attempts to make out the Spanish

Anarchists were “secret” “statists” is false.

Therefore the claim that the anarchists joined the government in order

to destroy capitalism is false. They obviously joined them because they

considered it a lesser evil than fascism – the need to work with other

unions and parties was placed before their politics.

Caplan then states that:

“Herein lies the Anarchists’ dilemma: capitalist anarchism or socialist

statism.”

However, as noted capitalism is not anarchist. It requires a state to

protect private property rights, as Caplan himself implies. Moreover, it

is a system based on private hierarchies, of the power of the property

owner (and their appointed managers) over those who happen to be on

their property (i.e. in effect, a dictatorship — “property is depotism”,

Proudhon). Therefore the dilemma is not between capitalism or socialism,

but between capitalism and anarchism. Caplan himself acknowledges that

capitalism produces inequality but he ignores the obvious conclusion —

inequality in power requires force to back it up. That’s why we have

never seen a stateless capitalism and never will. Therefore the

anarchist’s dilemma is thus anarchism or statism (capitalist or

socialist).

He goes on to ask “If inequality between collectives and within

collectives is morally acceptable, what was so immoral about the pre-war

inequality between capitalists and workers?” But this ignores the fact

that, as one CNT militant put it, the capitalists treated workers like

animals and hired assassins to gun them down. In other words, capitalism

leads to hierarchy and the restriction of liberty. Inequality of social

power is the key aspect of anarchist opposition to capitalism, not an

abstract desire to make everyone identical in terms of material

possessions.

The pre-war inequality between capitalists and workers was wrong because

it leads to a denial of liberty and a corrupting ethical influence. To

quote William Godwin “[t]he spirit of oppression, the spirit of

servility, and the spirit of fraud, these are the immediate growth of

the established administration of property. They are alike hostile to

intellectual and moral improvement.” [The Anarchist Reader, p. 131] In

other words, any system based in wage labour or hierarchical

relationships in the workplace will result in a deadening of the

individual and the creation of a “servile” character. This crushing of

individuality springs directly from what Godwin called “the third degree

of property” namely “a system...by which one man enters into the faculty

of disposing of the produce of another man’s industry” in other words,

capitalism. [Op. Cit., p. 129]

If Caplan understood basic anarchist theory, he would understand this

basic point. Capitalism produces hierarchy and anarchists oppose it in

the name of individual liberty and dignity.

Caplan then states that “Capitalist anarchism was so unpalatable to many

of the Spanish Anarchists that they often created or participated in

states to enforce socialism” however, as noted, these compromises

started before the problems with the collectives became apparent. In

fact, socialisation of certain industries occurred outwith the state and

the collectivisation decree. This itself is significant as is the fact

that the “The CNT’s policy was thus not the same as that pursued by the

[collectivisation] decree.” [Fraser, Op. Cit., p. 213]

He concludes that “This is why I call the Spanish Anarchists

‘anarcho-statists.’ They were avowed advocates of the abolition of the

state who suddenly that there was nothing wrong with the state if they

ran it.”

However, in order to do this he has to ignore the fact that a large

minority of anarchists opposed the collaboration with the state and

instead concentrate on the few who confirm his statement. And he must

ignore the context these decisions were made, the danger of the fascist

uprising and that the decisions made were in light of this greater evil.

Power corrupts, and it corrupts anarchists just as much as communists or

capitalists. In other words, Spain shows that anarchists must not

compromise their ideas and work with a lesser evil against a greater one

(i.e. a democratic state against a fascist one).

Of course, due to “anarcho” capitalism’s support of capitalist authority

and “general libertarian law codes” (both enforced by private states) a

good case can be made that they are not anarchists in any meaningful

sense of the word. Anarcho-statism can more easily, and meaningfully, be

applied to their ideology than to anarchism.

C. Thought and Action

Caplan states that “The Spanish Anarchists demanded the abolition of all

government in the name of human freedom; but once they had the power to

do so, they both participated in and established governments which were

no less oppressive than any other. The proximate cause, I have argued,

is that their underlying theories of freedom, capitalism, and socialism

were uniformly in error.”

Such an analysis, however, overlooks the fact that these compromises

occurred before not after the problems of collectivisation. This is

important and indicates that Caplan is putting in own pet theories in

place of analysis. The overwhelming reason for the CNT’s compromises

with the state was the threat of fascism. Therefore his theory is false

and disproved by the facts. As for Caplan’s own underlying theories of

freedom, capitalism and socialism they are far more uniformly in error

than anarchist ones. Indeed, anarchism exists because liberal ideas on

freedom do not deliver the goods (and only result in rule by an elite).

Caplan claims that “[t]here was however a deeper cause: The Spanish

Anarchists theorised emotionally and dogmatically, insofar as they

theorized at all. For the most part, they accepted their confused

theories as obvious, and instead focused their attention on ‘action.’”

It is clear that the Spanish Anarchist movement was mostly a working

class movement with few intellectuals taking part in it. Hence that

movement reflected the realities of Spain between 1868 and 1936, namely

one with high levels of illiteracy, and the need to earn a living (the

CNT had no full time officials). However, Caplan is simply wrong to

suggest that the Spanish anarchists did not theorised or discussed their

ideas. The anarchist press disproves this argument, as does the

extensive debates in CNT and FAI meetings and congresses. In fact, to

take just one example, the Spanish anarchist movement was at the

forefront of discussing the ideas of William Reich and sex-politics (see

Anarchist Studies, issue no.1). Hardly what would be expected if

Caplan’s claim was true.

However, Caplan is right when he states that:

“What the Spanish Anarchists failed to realize is that clear, rigorous

thinking is the most important form of ‘action’ that any critic of the

status quo can perform. It does no good to seize the initiative and try

to change the world unless you can reasonably expect your changes to be

genuine improvements.”

And that the Spanish Anarchists in fact devoted little time to “pure”

theory. But their theory was moulded by the realities of life as a

worker in Spain and the results of their union and anarchist activity.

In other words, they created a theory which met the requirements of

militant struggle and day to day organising. Therefore they did apply

clear and rigorous thinking to what they were doing and their ideas, as

can be seen by the extensive anarchist publications and growth in the

size of the CNT and libertarian movements over a 30 year period. Such

activity would have been impossible without clear and rigorous thinking

on many issues.

Caplan then states that:

“Peirats explains that due to widespread illiteracy, most peasants could

not read even the most elementary writings. Instead, ‘There were also

itinerant speakers, some of them peasants, who traveled the countryside,

addressing the villagers in simple words about understandable topics.

The efficacy of this type of propaganda can easily be understood if we

remember that the illiterate is not necessarily a brute and that lack of

learning often hides a perfectly good intellect.’ Quite possibly so; but

it does no good to have a ‘perfectly good intellect’ if you don’t use

it. Obviously, the CNT speakers were not giving a balanced presentation

of a number of different viewpoints; they were relying on the peasants’

ignorance of the existence of other points of view, hoping to win them

over while keeping them essentially ignorant.”

This seems a strange thing to state. Is Caplan suggesting that peasant’s

were not capable of asking questions and thinking for themselves?

Obviously the CNT speakers (like all speakers) were presenting their

ideas and argued for those ideas. However, to suggest this is “keeping

them essentially ignorant” is false. The Republicans, Socialists,

capitalists and so on also tried to win people over to their ideas. The

anarchists were not alone in this. That the anarchists had some success

in their educational efforts is also clear, suggesting that the

anarchists convinced people by argument that their ideas were valid.

In addition, I would like to point out that the anarchists encouraged

their fellow workers to learn to read and write, to educate themselves.

If they had desired to keep them “essentially ignorant” then they would

have done what the bosses had done and left them illiterate. However,

the Spanish anarchists recognised the importance of education as well as

explaining their own ideas (and disproving the ideas of others). To

claim that this process of education and discussion was based upon

keeping others “essentially ignorant” is simply false. Does this mean

that Caplan’s non-discussion of fascist theory in this essay means he is

“keeping the reader essentially ignorant”?

The CNT did have a problem, which was that many CNT militants did “not

spent a great deal of time thinking about what exactly they wanted to

do” (in Caplan’s words). Many (but not all, as can be seen from the

works of anarchists like Isaac Puente and Diego Abad de Santillan and

the many CNT congresses which discussed this issue, including the famous

1936 one) considered that “things would sort themselves out” after the

revolution, which does not solve anything because what happens then

depends on what people think now. However, given the injustices people

faced, it’s understandable that the anarchists desired to create a

better life, one in which workers had more liberty and justice than

under capitalism. However, they did not desire to impose their ideas on

others but to get them to act for themselves. In this they were pretty

successful.

As Caplan argues, “It is hard to resolve moral dilemmas sensibly when

you must decide swiftly. That is why it is important to consider

hypothetical issues _in advance_, when there is time to think about

them. The Spanish Anarchists were too intellectually lazy to do so, and

then blamed their poor choices on bad luck. The questions they should

have asked themselves were simple, yet turned out to have profound

implications. To take a few examples… What should we do if we have a

chance to join the government?… What should we do if worker-controlled

firms act like capitalist-controlled firms?… What limits are there to

how we may treat people who disagree with us?… How is a national

Economic Council different from a State, if at all?… What should be done

if some workers don’t want to join our Economic Council?… What should we

do if some farmers don’t want to join a collective?”

We could not have put it better ourselves. However, it should be noted

that the Spanish Anarchists did discuss some of these questions. Maybe

Caplan should ask himself similar questions about his own ideology? If

liberalism is “anti-state,” then why does liberalism support the state?

Is a “general libertarian law code” not a monopoly of government and are

“defence associations” not private states? How are private cops

enforcing the law different from public cops? How is this law to be

decided in the first place? Why do property rights need a state? If

anarchism is about freedom how can it be associated with capitalist

authority relationships? What if more and more people reject the

“libertarian” law code? What happens when a cartel of “defence firms” is

created and starts to repress everyone, not only the working class? And

so on.

He ends by saying that:

“After so many failures of this approach, it would have been refreshing

if the Spanish Anarchists had tried to do precisely the opposite.

Instead of proclaiming their empty devotion to ‘freedom,’ they should

have enumerated precisely what they thought people should and should not

be free to do. They should have tested the clarity and completeness of

their principles with the aid of thought experiments in which the right

answer is not immediately obvious. They should have deliberately

searched for disconfirming evidence which could throw their entire

paradigm in doubt. Victory is worthless if you were wrong all along.”

Again we agree. That this exactly what anarchists should be doing and

are doing. And it is what many Spanish anarchists did as well (although

Caplan ignores their contribution to the revolution in favour of the

minority who are more useful to his argument). And we would suggest, the

“anarcho” capitalists should do likewise. As indicated by Caplan, his

system implies a state of some sort to protect property rights (as

liberals state); however, he claims that liberalism is “anti-statist” as

is capitalism. This is not the case, obviously.

However, the question arises of whether Caplan’s own ideology actually

allows the clear and rigorous thought he recommends to the anarchist

movement or whether it is just based upon dogma and ideologically

correct assumptions. Earlier I noted Caplan’s use of a priori theorems

when critiquing his explanation of the failings of the Spanish economy.

Now would be an excellent time to discuss this further as it underlies

his whole argument.

In this use of a priori theorems, Caplan is not alone. Right-Libertarian

theory is full of it. Robert Nozick, for example, makes no attempt to

prove the existence of the rights his whole theory is based upon (see

Anarchy, State and Utopia) and his Libertarian theory is based solely

upon these assumptions. Similarly, Murray Rothbard builds his theory on

“natural law” and again does not attempt to prove that his assumptions

are anything beyond his own prejudices. However, Ludwig von Mises

indicates the full implications of this particular mode of thought (the

von Mises quotes I present are cited in Idealogy and Method in Economics

by Homa Katouzian).

Von Mises begins by noting that social and economic theory “is not

derived from experience; it is prior to experience…”

Which is true, in a way. A specific theory (while informed by your

general experiences) is not developed in light of specific information

but of general experience (i.e. few people look at data before

developing a theory, they develop a theory and check it against data).

Therefore, while it is obvious that experience of capitalism is

necessary to develop a viable theory about how it works, the specific

theory arrived at will have to get checked against reality to see if it

is viable.

However, von Mises goes on to argue at length that therefore “no kind of

experience can ever force us to discard or modify a priori theorems;

they are logically prior to it and cannot be either proved by

corroborative experience or disproved by experience to the contrary…”

And if this does not do justice to a full exposition of the

phantasmagoria of von Mises’ a priorism, you may take some joy (or

horror) from the following statement:

“If a contradiction appears between a theory and experience, we must

always assume that a condition pre-supposed by the theory was not

present, or else there is some error in our observation. The

disagreement between the theory and the facts of experience frequently

forces us to think through the problems of the theory again. But so long

as a rethinking of the theory uncovers no errors in our thinking, we are

not entitled to doubt its truth” [emphasis added]

In other words, if reality is in conflict with your ideas, do not adjust

your views because reality must be at fault! The scientific method would

be to revise the theory in light of the facts, however Mises rejects

this approach. He rejects this in favour of ideological correctness.

Caplan follows him in this and ignores the extensive facts that

contradict the claims of his theory.

As I hope I have proved, Caplan’s theory only appears viable when you

ignore reality and the extensive evidence he fails to mention. The would

method of analysis smacks of ideology and authoritarianism, not

scientific enquiry and free, critical thought. However, it also suggests

something worse, a frame of mind that can support authoritarian social

relationships. If the theory is correct and reality is irrelevant to the

argument, then the supporter of the theory may decide that reality must

be changed in order for it to meet the requirements of the theory.

This can be seen from Caplan’s analysis of the problems of capitalism,

where he blames everyone and everything but capitalism for them. Of

course, in the text-books capitalism works fine, however in reality this

cannot be said to happen. So, if the theory is fine, then reality is at

fault. If capitalism does not work as it should, then its because the

system is not “pure” enough and so state action is required on society

in order to make it fit. This process has been recognised by a few

social observers. For example:

“Hayek understood, of course, that the development of an economic

liberal society would always require a strong capitalist state. It is in

fact no paradox that a Thatcherite intention to roll back the frontiers

of the state can result in centralised power. Nor can it be

sociologically surprising to find such regimes concerned with reducing

intermediary centres of power in the process of reconstructing a society

of free market bargaining” [A.H. Halsey, “A Sociologist’s View of

Thatcherism”, Thatcherism, p. 183]

Therefore we see numerous right-libertarians and liberals supporting

authoritarian regimes which are creating a “free market” on their

populations. Hayek and Milton Friedman both supported the Fascist regime

in Chile under Pinochet and the Thatcher and Reagan governments (heavily

influenced by right-libertarianism) saw an increase in both state power

and centralisation.

[Note: David Friedman, Milton Friedman’s son, has contacted the author

of this reply to say that his father was not a supporter of the Pinochet

regime, only of its economic policies. However, this I consider to be

pure sophistry on the part of Milton Friedman. I argue that by praising

the results of the political regime (namely the so-called “economic

miracle” he talked about) he also supported the means by which it was

achieved. In other words, you cannot say you oppose the means while

praising the results. The means determine the ends.]

The interpretation that support for the economic policies that created

the “miracle” does not imply support for the political regime that

imposed them is built upon a bed of sand. To claim that the miracle was

the product of the government leaving people alone to do business with

each other, and depended not on terror but a drastic reduction of

government’s role in the economy is nonsense. I’m sure that the

experience of a bloody military coup, followed by years of threat of

arrest, “disappearances” and general ban on left-wing activism would

have a major effect on “leaving people alone to do business” and how

they did it. And, I may note, the drastic reduction of government’s role

in the economy under Pinochet did not extend to the state not enforcing

the new labour laws banning unions, “policing” strikes, and so on.

Yes, the economy may have been freer, but the people in that economy

were not. Funny, but being free to do what the dictatorship approved of

can hardly be called “economic freedom.” Interesting that Milton

Friedman would fail to see this.

In the earlier versions of this reply to Caplan’s attempts to rewrite

history, I foolishly assumed that most readers would have the

intellectual honesty to know that the political regime has an impact on

the economic life of a country. If workers are too scared to go on

strike, have seen their union representatives murdered or disappeared,

seen tens of thousands of their fellow citizens rounded up and dealt

with, seen their liberties restricted to what the regime thinks is best

for them, then to call the economic results of this regime a “miracle”

and then to say that the political regime had no impact on this

“miracle” is to stagger belief. And to claim that individuals who

supported this “miracle” can somehow disassociate themselves from

support of the regime is sophistry.

However, I have been proved wrong. Now that I am aware that human beings

can seriously claim that the individuals who praise the economic results

of such a regime can disassociate themselves from the terror and

dictatorship that were the means by simply saying “oh, I don’t support

the regime, just its economic policies” I have amended by comments and

expanded upon my statement and let the reader make their own minds up.

So, I do take the point that I did not clearly state why I considered

Milton Friedman a supporter of the Pinochet regime and have taken the

opportunity to amend the comment. I think it is fair to inform readers

of the reasons behind my comment, which I did not think needed to be

explained (for reasons that are clear). Obviously I was wrong, many

right-wingers obviously think that supporting the ends does not mean

supporting the means and that “economic liberty” can actually exist in a

regime which is based upon terror against ideologically incorrect

persons.]

The examples of governments that supported free market economics are

marked by the “free market, strong (and centralised) state” syndrome. As

Alan Haworth points out:

“The aspects of Thatcherism suggestive of a ‘police state’ [listed by

Peter Thorton in Decade of Decline] may have lacked Stalin’s grandeur of

scale, but the comparison is otherwise apt ... To give the police cate

blanche in the control of industrial disputes is, perhaps, no more than

to introduce the minimum force necessary to ensure that the ground rules

the market requires for its operation are observed. Likewise, it is

difficult to see how a [right] libertarian could think of the Economic

League (a sort of privatised secret police) as anything more than a

commercial undertaking legitimately purveying its wares to other

commercial undertakings who, presumably, have a ‘right to know’ certain

facts about potential employers ... philosophy suggests that, in certain

conditions at least, the preservation of [capitalism] is both necessary

and sufficient to ensure that denial of [political freedom]. If civil

liberties have survived the Thatcher years at all, it is not

libertarianism we have to thanks.” [Anti-libertarianism, p. 29]

This all flows from the use of a priorism as real life cannot be forced

into the Procrustean bed of theory except by the use of state power.

State power was required to create capitalism in the first place (“the

road to the free market was opened and kept open by an enormous increase

in continuous, centrally organised and controlled interventionism” by

the State [The Great Transformation, p. 140]). And, to keep society from

protecting itself from the catastrophes of capitalism, state power must

be used to disempower the mass of the population and restrict their

liberty and ensure that free market policies could be introduced without

opposition. In other words, whole countries are “forced to be free” by

the use of state power.

Any ideology is marked by a series of assumptions and dogmas. Right

libertarianism is marked by a desire to build whole social theories on

the use of assumptions and the disregard of reality. Such an approach

can only lead to the denial, firstly, of critical thinking by

individuals and, secondly, the evolution of society and so of individual

liberty. Life, ideas, dreams and hopes, unlike ideologies, evolve and

change with individuals and society. Any attempt to reduce society to

the assumptions required by a prior theorems will result in tyranny by

the elite who hold those ideas. Therefore, von Mises’ and a host of

other right-liberal and right-libertarian ideologes support for rule by

elites is hardly surpassing.

Caplan states that the anarchists should be condemned for “imposing”

their “half-baked” ideas on others. However, he makes no such

condemnation for those who imposed capitalism on numerous populations

across the world. For example, the terrible effects of the industrial

revolution in Britain or the “free market” in Chile. Both cases were

marked by governments representing a faction of the population and the

resulting social disruption, poverty and bad working conditions are well

documented. You would think that the many examples of the evil effects

of capitalism would have enlightened some that maybe people do not want

to be subject to market forces or treated “like animals”? Of course,

Caplan can argue that this happened because the systems in question were

not “pure” enough but how “pure” must it get before it is recognised

that it does not work?

The fact remains that right-libertarian influenced economists and

politicians imposed their “half-baked” ideas on Chile and a host of

other countries, and it resulted in a stronger, more centralised state

in order to make sure that the experiment worked. Indeed, the leading

economist in the Pinochet free market “experiment,” de Castro, stated

that the fascist regime was ideal to try out Hayek’s and Milton

Friedman’s dogmas:

“it provided a lasting regime; it gave the authorities a degree of

efficiency that it was not possible to obtain in a democratic regime;

and it made possible the application of a model developed by experts and

that did not depend upon the social reactions produced by its

implementation.” [quoted in The Radical Right and the Welfare State, p.

90]

Dictatorship and terror are effective means of creating the atomised

individualists required for free market capitalist assumptions. And the

effects of these “half-baked” ideas “imposed” upon the Chilean people?

Increased inequality, lower wages (in 1983, they were 86.7% of the 1970

level) and working conditions for the working class, increased

pollution, state terror and so forth. Unlike the Spanish anarchists, who

convinced working people by argument and example of their ideas,

Right-Libertarians most definitely “imposed” their “half-baked” ideas by

use of the state across the world – states which end up more centralised

and authoritarian than before the (classical) liberals got hold of it.

Of course, in most experiments in free market capitalism the experts

rush to aid those who are imposing it. Experts like Caplan whose class

interests (so clearly shown in his essay) allow him to ignore the

results of the experiments until they fail and then can claim it was

because they were not “pure” enough. But the fact remains, state action

resulted in capitalism and this capitalism resulted in massive poverty,

social disruption and terrible working and living conditions. In the

end, of course, things improved (partly because of empire building) but

the claim that the ends justify the means hardly seems a useful one

here.

Unlike the experts, the anarchists in Spain tried to convince ordinary

people of their ideas. Their success is denounced by Caplan as

“emotional” and “ignorant.” Could it be that the opposite is the case,

that people like Caplan are the ones who seek to impose their ideas by

claiming “scientific truth” as the means? Bakunin’s warnings about the

class interests of experts spring to mind here. Perhaps Caplan should

ponder these words of Bakunin in which he indicates the negative effects

of running society by means of science books (negative effects proved

beyond doubt the Pinochet’s regime in Chile and other experiments in

“free market” capitalism imposed by strong states):

“human science is always and necessarily imperfect...were we to force

the practical life of men – collective as well as individual – into

rigorous and exclusive conformity with the latest data of science, we

would thus condemn society as well as individuals to suffer martyrdom on

a Procrustean bed, which would soon dislocate and stifle them, since

life is always an infinitely greater thing than science.” [The Political

Philosophy of Bakunin, ed. G.P. Maximov, p. 79]

5. Conclusion

Here Caplan states that “[i]n fact, the Spanish Anarchists were

ultimately just a third faction of totalitarians.” As we have hoped to

indicate this is not an accurate statement and presented more than

enough evidence to prove that it is, in fact, totally wrong. However,

its up to the reader to decide.

In the last section, we quoted von Mises on the basic philosophy of

right Libertarianism, namely if reality contradicts your theory, ignore

reality. Caplan gives an excellent example of this in practice in his

essay on the Spanish Anarchists. His ideology assumes that socialism

must lead to totalitarianism (or, usually, is totalitarian). Therefore

he gathers his evidence to prove this thesis. However, to do so he must

ignore essential facts and so he does so. He is aware of these facts,

they are in the books he references, however he does not cite any of

them. In addition, he ignores common-sense economic facts in favour of

neo-classical theory. Noam Chomsky (in Objectivity and Liberal

Scholarship) indicated that political ideologies often get in the way of

objectivity. Caplan proves Chomsky’s thesis time and time again.

Caplan concludes by arguing that: “If they investigate the history of

Anarchism during the Spanish Civil War, they will be tremendously

disappointed. The experience of the Spanish Anarchists does not reveal

any ‘third way’; to the contrary, their experience eloquently affirms

that state-socialism and free-market anarchism are the two theoretical

poles between which all actual societies lie. The choice cannot be

evaded. The only alternative is to take yet another look at the

endpoints of the political spectrum and see if one has been rejected too

hastily.”

However, “free market” capitalism requires a state and police forces and

is based on deeply hierarchical social relationships (i.e. archy), and

so is not anarchism. As such a system will quickly undermine workers’

control, it is clear that it is based on a class of order givers

(capitalists) and order takers (workers). Hence the claim the capitalism

is anarchist is false. Looking over Caplan’s arguments it is clear that

he does not even recognise this obvious fact and that there may be other

options between state-socialism and state-capitalism. This is why the

Spanish Revolution is so important, as it can be used to piece together

lessons with which to inform our activity now.

Caplan’s attempts to force the facts of the Spanish Revolution into the

Procrustean bed of his ideology indicate that even as a set of

libertarian ideas, “anarcho”-capitalism is lacking – it has more in

common with theology than science and dogma than freedom. So, regardless

of Caplan’s claims, the question of whether capitalism will be replaced

does not boil down to economic efficiency, but of whether we want to

take the responsibility of freedom and organise together to take control

over own lives. The experience of the Spanish Revolution (once the full

picture is presented) eloquently affirms that capitalism and anarchism

are totally opposed and that freedom can only be extended and protected

by getting rid of capitalism and the state which is required to protect

it.

Caplan, like most right-libertarians, sees things in black and white

terms – “individualism” or “collectivism”, “free markets” or “statism.”

But do we just have “two choices”? No, we have to create our own “third

choice” — one that is based on liberty and not authority. As both state

socialism and capitalism clearly produce states and authoritarian social

relationships, we have to reject both and try to work out what we can

learn from history and the world around us. Caplan, by forcing history

between his two poles, indicates that “anarcho” capitalism excludes

itself from this process as well as any claim of being anarchist.

The choice we have is between free production or wage slavery. We must

try to extend liberty in all areas of life, and that includes

production. As Proudhon puts it, to keep capitalism means that “the

workers ... would remain related as subordinates and superiors, and

there would ensue two industrial castes of masters and wage-workers,

which is repugnant to a free and democratic society.”

That “anarcho”-capitalism wants to keep such a relationship (in which,

to use Proudhon’s words, employees are “subordinated, exploited” and

their “permanent condition is one of obedience” subject to the

“sovereign power” of their master) proves beyond doubt that they are not

anarchists nor interested in freedom. The choice ahead of us is to learn

the mistakes of the past and to ensure we do not repeat them. And that

means an honest and objective evaluation of the Spanish Revolution, an

evaluation that Caplan does not (and probably cannot) provide.