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Title: The State is Counter-Revolutionary Author: Anark Date: 8/10/2020 Language: en Topics: the state, Chinese Revolution, Russian Revolution, Libertarian Socialism, Authoritarianism, Leninism, Stalinism, Maoism, Lenin, Mao, USSR, Soviet Union, Breadtube Source: Author’s script, video source.
The following is a compilation of the scripts I published in four parts
on my YouTube channel Anark
(
) over the course of a six month period. If you would like to watch the
video series, it is here:
Minor edits have been made to the script compilation to instead refer to
itself as an essay instead of a four part video series. Other than this,
content has remained the same and may be seen as a copy of the videos,
in text form, that can be distributed wholly in place of the video
series.
I hope this serves as an asset for comrades in learning about the events
at hand, in developing a strong introductory knowledge of the anarchist
theory of the state, aiding in the formation of strong
anti-authoritarian rhetoric. These scripts, although only part of the
videos that were made, comprised a huge amount of the effort that went
into the project. I hope they are useful for you!
Solidarity forever.
This essay will be focused upon a very important topic in leftist
theory, namely: the role and nature of the state in the revolutionary
process. It would be an understatement to say that this has been a point
of contention for a variety of committed socialists. Indeed, it
represents the most significant early theoretical split in the left, one
which has endured until this day. Over the course of this essay, we will
inspect why this is the case and why this division has not disappeared,
despite a century of experiments both with states and without.
As we begin this analysis, I would like to refer to a quote from the
book The Bolshevik Myth,[1] in which the anarchist Alexander Berkman
tells the story of his deportation from America to the Soviet Union
between the years of 1919–1922. Despite what you might assume, given his
anarchist ideology, Berkman was willing to sideline his skepticism of
the state in the revolutionary process. Indeed, upon his arrival he
wrote:
A feeling of solemnity, of awe overwhelmed me. Thus my pious old
forefathers must have felt on first entering the Holy of Holies. A
strong desire was upon me to kneel down and kiss the ground — the ground
consecrated by the life-blood of generations of suffering and martyrdom,
consecrated anew by the revolutionists of my own day. Never before, not
even at the first caress of freedom on that glorious May Day, 1906 —
after fourteen years in the Pennsylvania prison — had I been stirred so
profoundly. I longed to embrace humanity, to lay my heart at its feet,
to give my life a thousand times to the service of the Social
Revolution.
Shortly after, in fact, he recounts an event where he confronted a
dissident Russian anarchist who was giving a speech to a crowd:
“We Anarchists,” [the dissident anarchist] was saying, “are willing to
work with the Bolsheviki if they will treat us right. But I warn you
that we won’t stand for suppression. If you attempt it, it will mean war
between us.”
[Berkman] jumped on the platform. “Let not this great hour be debased by
unworthy thoughts,” I cried. “From now on we are all one — one in the
sacred work of the Revolution, one in its defense, one in our common aim
for the freedom and welfare of the people. Socialists or Anarchists —
our theoretical differences are left behind. We are all revolutionists
now, and shoulder to shoulder we’ll stand together to fight and to work
for the liberating Revolution. Comrades, heroes of the great
revolutionary struggles of Russia, in the name of the American deportees
I greet you. In their name I say to you: We’ve come to learn, not to
teach. To learn and to help!”
This was the attitude of many anarchists toward the Russian Revolution.
It was not perfect, they might have imagined, but it was the best bet
that leftism had at the time. Berkman, a committed opponent of the
state, counseled his fellow anarchists to support the Bolsheviks.
Kropotkin too, always a vocal critic of the state, was heartened by the
promise he saw there. The anarchists of the last wave of revolutionary
acts suspended their skepticism in order to see if the flower of state
socialism might bloom into liberation.
They cannot be blamed for having withheld their skepticism in the face
of what appeared to be an exhilarating victory. Indeed, it must have
seemed like the world revolution was just around the bend. However,
unlike the leftists of 1917, we now have in hand the empirical outcomes
of the state experiments of the 20^(th) century. Thus, in the following
essay I will argue for why we must reject a repetition of this
historical cycle; first I will carry out a theoretical inspection of the
state as an institution and disentangle how the ideologies which cling
to it have been corrupted so deeply. Then, in the following parts, I
will move on to inspect the historical record more closely, such that we
can witness the degradation of these revolutionary projects in greater
detail.
The tasks we have ahead of us are far too important to avoid speaking
the truth out of fears of sectarianism. It is a solemn duty that we have
to the people of our societies, to bring something far more than just a
marginal improvement, something better than a new aesthetic for an old
system. In order for this to happen, it depends upon our vocal
opposition to the failed tactics of the past. And all evidence that can
be found leads the careful observer to only one conclusion: the state is
counter-revolutionary.
So...if we are going to have this discussion, it only seems appropriate
that we should answer a very basic question, namely: “what is the
state?” There is a common definition first defined by Max Weber,[2] that
the state is:
the human community that (successfully) claims the monopoly of the
legitimate use of violence within a given territory.
This definition is largely functional and is a very good way to
disentangle complicated conversations, but it is insufficient if we are
to really develop a complete understanding of our goals and if we wish
to lay out what abolition of the truly oppressive aspects of the state
will even look like.
Errico Malatesta, however, gives a more expansive coverage:[3]
Anarchists, including this writer, have used the word State, and still
do, to mean the sum total of the political, legislative, judiciary,
military and financial institutions through which the management of
their own affairs, the control over their personal behaviour, the
responsibility for their personal safety, are taken away from the people
and entrusted to others who, by usurpation or delegation, are vested
with the powers to make the laws for everything and everybody, and to
oblige the people to observe them, if need be, by the use of collective
force.
This definition includes almost every important aspect of the state, yet
loses the territorial nature of Weber. Kropotkin, however, brings us
full circle, synthesizing Malatesta and Weber. The state, Kropotkin says
not only includes the existence of a power situated above society, but
also of a territorial concentration as well as the concentration in the
hands of a few of many functions in the life of societies. [...] A whole
mechanism of legislation and of policing has to be developed in order to
subject some classes to the domination of others.
We have left out the quibbles of these two thinkers in which they
develop distinctions between “state” and “government.” Although useful,
they will prove unnecessary for our inspection. Nonetheless, when we
combine these definitions, we can now see what aspects in particular
that the anarchist objects to in the institution of the state. It is not
only Weber’s legitimate use of violence within a territory which is
objectionable, although that certainly comprises the core ultimatum of
their paradigm, it is the fact that the state is a top-down schema of
social enforcement, inherently predicated upon diminishing the direct
control by the people, centralizing the judicial, military, and
political functions of society into a body of privileged rulers. The
very existence of such an entity is thus guaranteed to create a class
structure in which the functionaries of the state and their
collaborators operate above the people, transmuting the masses into
subjects. This last aspect is particularly emphasized by Rudolf Rocker
in his work Nationalism and Culture:[4]
Every power presupposes some form of human slavery, for the division of
society into higher and lower classes is one of the first conditions of
its existence. The separation of men into castes, orders and classes
occurring in every power structure corresponds to an inner necessity for
the separation of the possessors of privilege from the people.
And, although Rocker illustrates this beautifully in his own work, I
will leave that reading to you. If the origin and toxicity of the state
interests you, you will find plenty of food for thought in both the
works Nationalism and Culture by Rudolf Rocker and The State: Its
Historic Role[5] by Peter Kropotkin. Instead, I intend to use these
foundations to reformulate an argument I made in one of my videos for my
channel Anark, The Case Against Hierarchy. The argument goes as follows:
The state is a small group of people vested with unitary control over
the functions of governance and the legally legitimate power to coerce
others to abide by that control.
Regardless of the temporary existence of selfless leaders,
self-interested people will exist within the state.
The power of the state is what allows those people to act in their
self-interest.
Therefore it is in the interest of all people that operate the state, to
perpetuate the power of the state.
With this in mind, each time the power of the state is threatened, those
who operate the state will have a tendency to stymie that threat.
But every power structure that exists, is competition for the state.
Thus, the state stands at odds with any structure which may threaten its
control over society.
The masses, however, have an inherent power in their numbers and in
their primary function as the laborers that make society run.
So, the state will always have an institutional tendency to view the
masses as a threat to the unitary power of the state.
And, therefore, the state will always seek to control and suppress the
latent power of the masses, except when it serves the interests of the
state.
This formulation alone guarantees an antagonism between the people and
the institution of the state; centralized, vesting control over the
organs of coercion and violence, seeking to establish and maintain a set
of class hierarchies which bolster its own power. Just starting from the
simple assumptions that people sometimes act in their own self-interest,
that the state is comprised of people, and that the state is vested with
the power to coerce society, it is a guaranteed outcome that this affair
of subjugation will take place over a long enough timeline. As Rocker
said, “every power presupposes some form of human slavery.”
The only conceivable counter-argument, that a benevolent leadership
which does not act in their own self-interest may sit in the seats of
power, neglects a simple reality: all humans die eventually. And once
those benevolent dictators die, the reins will be handed back over to a
new group of human beings, turning the state, on a long enough timeline,
into a game of Russian Roulette with the future of the masses lying in
the balance.
It gets worse, however. It is not only that individuals in power often
seek to act in their own self-interest, nor is it the inherent tendency
of the state to create and perpetuate class structures by its nature. It
is also the tendency of even well intentioned human beings, given a
particular tool, to see the application of that tool as the solution to
all problems. This cognitive bias is sometimes called The Law of the
Instrument or “Maslow’s Hammer.” It is famously contained in the pithy
adage that “to the hammer, every problem looks like a nail.”
And we shouldn’t be shocked that this cognitive bias occurs enough to
have earned such a reputation. Humans have an inherent desire to solve
the problems that lie in front of them. And, given a single tool to
solve that problem, they will have a tendency to attempt and discover
every way that that particular tool could conceivably overcome that
particular problem. Every challenge that arises is then re-framed as a
question of how it is a problem for the wielder and mutated by this
frame into something which the wielder of the tool perceives as solvable
through their means.
Such a situation is even more perverse in light of the fact that the
state’s primary tools are coercion and the manufacture of consent.
Within its very nature, it is thus a paternalistic and chauvinistic
entity, bound to view all those who are subject to its will as unruly
when they disobey and useful only when they abide. It is an entity in a
perpetual process of moral decline, a warden eternally destined to
betray its charge. Left to its own devices over a long enough time, it
can only be guaranteed to represent its own interests and the joint
interests of its most powerful collaborators, not the exploited.
The very act of centralizing power is thus an act of violence against
the workers. So long as the state is allowed to exist, worker
emancipation is impossible, in the same way that the class antagonisms
of capitalism cannot be eliminated while the means of production are
controlled by the capitalists. Class abolition can then only ever hope
to succeed if it corresponds to an abolition of centralized power. Such
a statement is not a preference, it is a foundational requirement for
the next phase of human development, and all attempts to make the state
into a vehicle for liberation are misguided negotiations with a potent
counter-revolutionary force.
So why did leftists ever convince themselves that it could be otherwise?
We will now inspect what theoretical and rhetorical aspects of leftist
ideology led to the rot in the authoritarian foundations, so that we
might better understand what created their repeated failures in a
practical context.
First, lying at the center of the authoritarian left conceptualization
is the notion that any socialist project managed by the people is too
weak and too aimless to defend itself from sabotage and that, instead of
the people governing themselves in the interim, the state will need to
rapidly centralize power, then wield that power benevolently in the
interests of the masses. Said otherwise, the authoritarian conceives
that a period bearing similarities to both capitalism and socialism must
be created to rule in the interests of the the previously exploited
class and in suppression of the previous exploiter class, for an
extended period.
This particular affair, it must be said, is not strictly contained
anywhere within Marxist literature. In fact, Marx said something quite
contrary at the First International,[6] namely that “...the emancipation
of the working classes must be conquered by the working classes
themselves; that the struggle for the emancipation of the working
classes means not a struggle for class privileges and monopolies, but
for equal rights and duties, and the abolition of all class rule.”
However, some of Marx’s rhetorical choices and early theoretical
emphasis left the notion of what should be done and by what practice
struggle should take place, sufficiently vague, making the threat of
co-option inevitable. The most pertinent of these rhetorical choices was
that Marx called for a stage in which there would be a “dictatorship of
the proletariat.” But Marx almost certainly did not mean that a
centralized bureaucracy with complete control should domineer the
workers and the previous bourgeois alike. Although it is true that he
advocated centralization even as early as 1848 in The Communist
Manifesto, by 1891, in his Critique of the Gotha Program , Marx was
brutally criticizing the German socialists for their belief that
socialism could be achieved through a paternalistic state, saying:
Free state — what is this?
It is by no means the aim of the workers, who have got rid of the narrow
mentality of humble subjects, to set the state free. [...] Freedom
consists in converting the state from an organ superimposed upon society
into one completely subordinate to it; and today, too, the forms of
state are more free or less free to the extent that they restrict the
“freedom of the state.”
We can see by this that the notion that worker control meant centralized
state control was certainly not a view held by the end of Marx’s life.
Indeed, the only state that Marx could see as consistent with worker
control, was one completely subordinated to the direct will of the
workers. In fact, in Critique of the Gotha Program[7] he excoriated the
German Social Democrats for the notion that they should even presume to
educate the masses.
Government and church should rather be equally excluded from any
influence on the school. [...] the state has need, on the contrary, of a
very stern education by the people.
So where did the authoritarian tendency arise, if not from Marx?
Well...upon inspection of the historical record, the truest forerunner
to the authoritarian ideology appears to be an individual named Louis
Auguste Blanqui. Blanqui, an early French socialist revolutionary, did
not believe that the proletarian were up to the task of revolution on
their own. Instead, Blanqui conceived of the need of a small group of
revolutionary professionals who would form a vanguard party and then
lead the workers in a coup against the state, proceeding to suppress the
previous ruling class until a time would come that a transition to
socialism could take place. Blanqui did not attempt to conceive of the
socialist future nor when, how, and where the transition from vanguard
rule to worker control might take place. It was far more important that
the previous ruling class was defeated at all costs. This is not the
last we will hear of such a viewpoint, although its next adherents will
not call themselves Blanquists.
With these foundations in place, we can now turn our inspection to the
next and perhaps most significant development in the authoritarian
leftist ideology, calling itself “Marxist”-Leninism. This ideology,
basing itself on the thought of Vladimir Lenin, would animate a great
many revolutionary struggles and ideological offshoots to come. However,
we don’t have sufficient time to inspect all of those; instead we will
look at the most significant of these offshoots,
Marxist-Leninist-Maoism, in part 3 of this essay. For now, let us start
at the beginning. This quote from Lenin’s work What Is To Be Done?[8] is
quite instructive of the attitude he takes toward revolutionary
organization:
Class political consciousness can be brought to the workers only from
without, that is, only from outside the economic struggle, from outside
the sphere of relations between workers and employers.
Leninism is predicated on a fundamental lack of faith in the workers to
organize themselves and to arrive upon a coherent conception of their
class position without a party to lead them. To Lenin, the vanguard,
occupied by enlightened socialist thinkers, was a representative body of
proletarian class consciousness. Thus it was the job of the
revolutionary party to tutor the masses on their liberation “from
without.” Wherein the workers lacked such a guiding hand, Lenin took a
dim view of their mass potential, believing that the highest state that
they could achieve on their own was what he called trade union
consciousness; that is to say, the ability to band together into trade
unions.
Such a conception, of course, neglects the fact that trade unionism was
a movement with its own adherents and thinkers, developed and pioneered
forth by other revolutionaries, a movement, in fact, which would be far
more responsible for the radical and transformative elements of the
Russian revolution than the Bolsheviks. But, in Lenin’s mind, the masses
had to develop past this trade union consciousness to succeed in
revolutionary activity, and in order for them to develop in the way he
wanted, they would have to submit to vanguard rule.
In 1904, Rosa Luxemburg, after reading Lenin’s One Step Forward, Two
Steps Back wrote a response called Organizational Questions of the
Russian Social Democracy[9] to criticize this attitude, in it she said:
...the two principles on which Lenin’s centralism rests are precisely
these:
to the party center which alone thinks, guides, and decides for all.
from its social-revolutionary surroundings.
Such centralism is a mechanical transposition of the organizational
principles of Blanquism into the mass movement of the socialist working
class.
From this, we can see that the connection of Lenin’s thought to Blanqui
is not something I’ve just made up. Lenin was accused of having
advocated Blanquism so often he even saw fit to mount defenses against
the accusations. But his only defense was that he was not a Blanquist
because his vanguard would organize the masses to achieve absolute
control, unlike Blanqui whose vanguard planned the coup alone until the
last moment.
Ultimately, however, what has to be recognized is that Lenin’s
conception of the party was not really so much a body representing
proletarian consciousness, but a body demanding submission of the
proletariat to vanguard consciousness. This is what Luxemburg meant when
she mentioned how Lenin’s centralism represented a “separation of the
organized nucleus of revolutionaries from its social-revolutionary
surroundings.” Indeed, Lenin seemed to view the people as having a
natural desire to submit. She continues:
The authentic proletarian, Lenin suggests, finds by reason of his class
instinct a kind of voluptuous pleasure in abandoning himself to the
clutch of firm leadership and pitiless discipline.
The centralizing tendency of Lenin, far be it from any conception of
accountability to the revolutionary masses, was instead a way of
configuring machine-like obedience among the workers. In fact, it would
not even seem that Lenin viewed alienation of labor as something to be
dismantled.
Lenin seems to demonstrate again that his conception of socialist
organization is quite mechanistic. The discipline Lenin has in mind is
being implanted in the working class not only by the factory but also by
the military and the existing state bureaucracy – by the entire
mechanism of the centralized bourgeois state.
There is something perverse in this conception, wherein Lenin does not
seem to want to change the relations of the workers to the means of
production, but instead to simply refocus proletarian obedience to the
capitalists with proletarian obedience to vanguard authority. Luxemburg,
so disturbed by Lenin’s ideas would say:
Nothing will more surely enslave a young labor movement to an
intellectual elite hungry for power than this bureaucratic
straightjacket, which will immobilize the movement and turn it into an
automaton manipulated by a Central Committee.
And she was not the only one to have foreseen disaster based on Lenin’s
words. Trotsky himself, before the February Revolution ever took place,
saw in Lenin’s expedient ideology the risk for what he called
substitutionism. Said simply, Trotsky was worried that in Leninism:[10]
...the organisation of the party substitutes itself for the party as a
whole; then the Central Committee substitutes itself for the
organisation; and finally the ‘dictator’ substitutes himself for the
Central Committee.
Such an arrangement did indeed take place and justified itself by
Leninist logic that: since the party is the proletariat consciousness,
then when the party forms a state dictatorship, it is a dictatorship of
the proletariat. The practical results of such sophistry would be far
from trivial. It is a tragic irony that Trotsky himself, once in power
in that very same substitutionist party, only a few years after the
revolution, would be the one to vocalize its attitude so clearly:[11]
The Party is obliged to maintain its dictatorship...regardless of
temporary vacillations even in the working class...The dictatorship does
not base itself at every given moment on the formal principle of a
workers’ democracy...
I think it should be quite clear that none of this represents a
development of Marx. Quite the opposite, these ideas represent a drastic
break with Marxist theory. Whereas Marx believed that any power
representing the workers must be “completely subordinated” to the
workers, Lenin perceived that the workers had to be completely
subordinated to the party. Whereas Marx thought that the revolutionary
state had to be educated by the masses, Lenin thought that the masses
should be educated by the state.
Further, because Lenin astutely avoided a coherent understanding of
anarchism, his ideology was then destined to fall victim to all of the
problems that we laid out at the beginning of this essay. Leninism does
not eliminate the inherent antagonisms between the state and the
workers, it exaggerates them. Leninism not only views domination as a
useful tool, it can only conceive of domination as a tool.
For this reason, even projects that would come later, seeking to temper
the bureaucracy seen in Leninism while maintaining vanguard ideology,
would find out all too late what kind of contradictory thing they had
incubated in their revolutionary projects. Lenin’s ideology would carry
forth as a sort of Blanquist sickness, passed on by force in some
occasions and by willing recipients in others; but in all occasions
leading to an eventual abolition of socialism, as all centralist
attempts are invariably doomed to do.
Even after all of this analysis, however, I don’t expect you to take
what I’ve said for granted. After all, to exist only within the realm of
ideas is not sufficient if we’re going to build a revolutionary future.
That is why, in the next two parts of this essay I will focus on a
coverage of the two preeminent statist experiments, the USSR and Maoist
China. What I will demonstrate is that in both, though these two
projects had very different ideological premises to their leadership,
where there existed some possibility for socialism, it was destined to
be destroyed by a state driven counter-revolution. And the workers,
having allowed such an entity the excuse to domineer them, would
eventually find nothing left of their socialist aspirations.
Finally, in part 4, we will return to our theoretical considerations and
explain how the modern left has come to excuse these failures,
demonstrating the rhetorical emptiness of their appeals and offering a
countervailing narrative that will help us understand how we might avoid
the same pitfalls in the next revolutionary wave.
Before we finish our essay, however, I would like to return to Alexander
Berkman’s diary. Although initially he sidelined his principles out of
an almost religious awe at the potential for liberation in 1919, by 1922
his tone had changed considerably. These were the last words he recorded
before returning to America:
Gray are the passing days. One by one the embers of hope have died out.
Terror and despotism have crushed the life born in October. The slogans
of the Revolution are foresworn, its ideals stifled in the blood of the
people. The breath of yesterday is dooming millions to death; the shadow
of today hangs like a black pall over the country. Dictatorship is
trampling the masses under foot. The Revolution is dead; its spirit
cries in the wilderness.
High time the truth about the Bolsheviki were told. The whited sepulcher
must be unmasked, the clay feet of the fetish beguiling the
international proletariat to fatal will o’ the wisps exposed. The
Bolshevik myth must be destroyed.
I have decided to leave, Russia.
Soon we shall see what events led Berkman to this change of heart.
So let us continue the analysis that began in the first part of this
essay. In the last part we explored why the state is an inherently
counter-revolutionary and anti-socialist institution from a theoretical
standpoint and then outlined what ideological trends led to its
emergence in the left. In this part, we will trace the progression of
the Leninist method as it was first practiced in the USSR and
demonstrate its material impact as a justifying ideology. In part 3 we
will trace the continuation of this ideological approach as it
manifested in Maoist China, inspecting how Mao’s revisions were still
insufficient to stop the state from eventually overwhelming worker
control.
This second and third part of the essay are very important, I believe,
because the temptation of the authoritarian ideology lies within a
belief that it has seen success when implemented. However, what we will
demonstrate here is that the success of these projects is not the
success of socialism, but instead a demonstration that a statist model
of centralization and military conformity is part of a successful method
of hoarding power for a privileged ruling class.
When understood through this lens, longevity becomes trivial. No one was
in doubt that a central vanguard party could properly seize control and
overthrow a previous central dictator; this is how every bourgeois
revolution is carried out, after all. The conversation at hand is
whether this method can bring about worker control of society. And, as
we shall see, it cannot.
In part 1 of this essay, we offered a series of foundational critiques
and outlined some of the anarchist theory which helped explain the state
as an entity. We also listened as Rosa Luxemburg, a contemporary of
Lenin, critiqued the foundations of his ideology and expressed her
skepticism of his organizing ethos. However, the anarchist Mikhail
Bakunin saw much further than this. We have left his predictions for
this part, because I would like for them to stay fresh in your mind as
we proceed.
Bakunin did not even have to read Lenin to know what kind of expediency
was on its way. Indeed, he could see the embryonic justifications within
Marx. For example, in 1869, nearly fifty years before the USSR even came
into existence, he said:[12]
the Dictatorship of the Proletariat... In reality it would be for the
proletariat a barrack regime where the standardized mass of men and
women workers would wake, sleep, work and live to the beat of a drum;
for the clever and learned a privilege, of governing: and for the
mercenary minded, attracted by the State Bank, a vast field of lucrative
jobbery.
Then, later, in 1873:[13]
the leaders of the Communist Party, namely Mr. Marx and his followers,
will concentrate the reins of government in a strong hand. They will
centralize all commercial, industrial, agricultural, and even scientific
production, and then divide the masses into two armies — industrial and
agricultural — under the direct command of state engineers, who will
constitute a new privileged scientific and political class.
How is it, given the evolution we discussed in Marx’s ideology over the
course of his life, that Bakunin was able to foresee this threat so
clearly? Well...it is perhaps not because Bakunin accurately understood
Marx, but instead because Marx had chosen a terminology which obscured
his desires. It did not matter if, after dissection and distinction,
Marx was not an authoritarian; in speaking of “dictatorships” of the
proletariat and “worker’s states,” Marx had allowed the political
language of the authoritarians to form his rhetoric. That later
authoritarians might then transform that rhetoric into justification for
their power is not shocking. This is, in fact, what has come to be
called the linguistic turn in Russia. In this view then, Bakunin’s
critiques are being levied against the risk of what Marx’s ideology
might become if appropriated by a centralized state.
After all, Bakunin and other contemporary anarchists recognized quite
deeply that, if socialism is worker ownership and control of the means
of production, then the state, a centralized, top-down power structure
which seeks the monopoly of violence, is inherently in opposition to
socialism. Any bureaucracy that domineers the workers, directing their
work, setting their compensation, and deciding their production and
distribution, inevitably reproduces a class system, no matter what
aesthetics it uses. Keep these predictions by Bakunin and the
inspections of the last part of this essay in mind as we proceed through
this part and the next. Each will be vindicated in full in both
projects.
In the year 1917 Russia was deep in the despair of World War 1. Although
the conflict had originally been a rallying cry that served to distract
the masses from their suffering under Czar Nicholas II, soldiers were
now returning home from a pointless, traumatizing conflict only to find
their wives in breadlines and large groups of the industrial workforce
now engaged in early conflict with the state. Both the peasantry and the
urban proletariat had lost faith in the regime. The combination of
war-weariness, brewing dissatisfaction with the very institution of
monarchy, and food shortages had driven the populace into mass strikes
and riots. The government itself was fractured due to a series of
foolish decisions. As inflation rose, as war threatened the ability of
the Russian market to access the world, the people of the nation were at
a breaking point. That breaking point would come to be called the
February Revolution. By the end of February 1917, Czar Nicholas, his
troops having abandoned him and the masses having joined together to
oppose him, abdicated the throne.
Following this, a provisional government was created, led by a man named
Alexander Kerensky. But this government was not to last either. Already,
inspired by socialist theory, the workers had begun creating a variety
of direct-democratic bodies and trade unions; and although they took
many forms, we will call the direct-democratic bodies Factory Committees
and we will call the broader hierarchical representative organizations
Trade Unions, from here on out. The distinction is meaningful: these
Factory Committees were not mere unions. They were not managed by an
internal hierarchy and they did not just seek to negotiate with the
workplace owners; they sought to collectively become the workplace
owners. These Factory Committees often seized the means of production
from capitalist control and proceeded to institute direct worker control
through democratic means, whereas the trade unions were structured
through internal elections and acted as bargaining bodies between the
workers and the workplace owners.
During this period, mechanisms of direct worker control were being
created so fast that the citizens had essentially built the dual power
structures that would rival the power of the state. Maurice Brinton
explicates this in his work The Bolsheviks and Workers’ Control:[14]
Soviets and Factory Committees were appearing everywhere at a phenomenal
rate. Their growth can be explained by the extremely radical nature of
the tasks confronting the working class. Soviets and Committees were far
more closely associated with the realities of everyday life than were
the unions. They therefore proved far more effective mouthpieces of
fundamental popular aspirations.
Even the historian E.H. Carr, a scholar who has demonstrated an affinity
for the Bolsheviks in the past, had to admit of this period:[15] “the
spontaneous inclination of the workers to organize factory committees
and to intervene in the management of the factories was inevitably
encouraged by a revolution which led the workers to believe that the
productive machinery of the country belonged to them and could be
operated by them at their own discretion and to their own advantage.”
This is to say, throughout this period, the workers were not under the
impression that the bodies they were meant to create, were supposed to
prefigure vanguard rulership. They were instead intent upon directly
configuring socialist property relations. Indeed, at the very first
national meeting of the Factory Committees in 1917, this spirit of
self-determination and bottom-up control was unmistakable in their
statement that the factory committees themselves “should emanate all
instructions concerning internal factory organization” including “hours
of work, wages, hiring and firing, holidays, etc.”
This was echoed clearly in the anarcho-syndicalist magazine Golos Truda,
saying the people demanded “total workers’ control, embracing all plant
operations, real and not fictitious control, control over work rules,
hiring and firing, hours and wages and the procedures of manufacture.”
The Bolsheviks, while maintaining views that centralization was
necessary, could not be seen to be in opposition to such a state of
affairs so long as the revolution was still underway. The Factory
Committees were the fighting bodies of the economic insurrection. The
Bolsheviks would even make public statements that the Factory Committees
were “the battering ram that would deal blows to capitalism, organs of
class struggle created by the working class on its own ground.”
Under such conditions of mass worker agitation and direct control, the
Bolsheviks swept into an electoral majority and by October of that same
year, the provisional government was overthrown in what is now called
the October Revolution.
Meanwhile, internal enemy forces, what came to be called the White Army,
were beginning to form and the Russian Civil War was brewing. So too
were the foreshocks of the Bolshevik sabotage of worker control and the
suppression of dissent rumbling at foot. Shortly after the revolution,
at the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets, a Bolshevik spokesman was
already at work attempting to bring the workers into obedience to the
party, saying:
...New laws will be proclaimed within a few days dealing with workers’
problems. One of the most important will deal with workers’ control of
production and with the return of industry to normal conditions. Strikes
and demonstrations are harmful in Petrograd. We ask you to put an end to
all strikes on economic and political issues, to resume work and to
carry it out in a perfectly orderly manner...Every man to his place. The
best way to support the Soviet Government these days is to carry on with
one’s job.
Indeed, the USSR existed for scarcely a single month before Lenin’s
draft decrees were issued, dark foreshadowing of the ultimate
dissolution of the Factory Committees and thus any hope for Russian
socialism. Although it could have been missed, given that Lenin’s first
decree solidified what the Factory Committees had already achieved
through struggle prior to the October Revolution, a deadly poison was
included within it. Namely that: “the decisions of the elected delegates
of the workers and employees were legally binding upon the owners of
enterprises” however, they could be “annulled by trade unions and
congresses.” Further, Lenin’s decree declared that “in all enterprises
of state importance” all delegates from the Factory Committees were
“answerable to the State for the maintenance of the strictest order and
discipline and for the protection of property.”
And what qualified as “enterprises of importance to the State?” Well
“all enterprises working for defence purposes, or in any way connected
with the production of articles necessary for the existence of the
masses of the population.” If these extremely broad requirements were
met, any delegate appointed by the workers could be dismissed by the
Bolsheviks and thus management by the workers became utterly subverted
to the state machinery. This may seem to have been something utilitarian
given the possibility of reaction. However, it can be seen that it was
carried out very consciously with the intention to dissolve worker
control and thus to sabotage the brief existence of socialist economic
conditions in Russia. Lozovsky, a Bolshevik trade unionist made very
clear:
...the lower organs of control must confine their activities within the
limits set by the instructions of the proposed All-Russian Council of
Workers’ Control. We must say it quite clearly and categorically, so
that workers in various enterprises don’t go away with the idea that the
factories belong to them.
But the factory committees did not intend to go down without a fight.
Just after the revolution, they attempted to form their own national
organization, meant to establish these directly democratic worker bodies
as the rightful managers of the economy. Here too we see the precursor
of a form of anti-socialism beginning; the Bolsheviks for the first time
worked to pit the trade unions against the factory committees. The trade
unions, more hierarchical and thus easier to co-opt, would become the
preferred worker body for the Bolsheviks as time went on. Thus they
called on the trade unions to renounce the factory committees and to
call for full submission to the Bolshevik party. The trade unions, as
they would do repeatedly in the years to come, obliged; a deal made with
the devil that they would eventually come to regret.
By next year, Lenin produced an article outlining the intentions of the
Bolsheviks proceeding forward. In this article he explained a need for
“raising labor discipline,” by which he meant that there should be an
emulation of the American capitalist form of labor control called
Taylorism. In fact, he said it plainly:
...we must raise the question of applying much of what is scientific and
progressive in the Taylor system...the Soviet Republic must at all costs
adopt all that is valuable in the achievements of science and technology
in this field...we must organize in Russia the study and teaching of the
Taylor system.
Such a system included strict measurement of every workers’
productivity, staunch regulations, and a “Rate-of-Output” bureau which
would report and enforce output quotas for every worker. In enacting
such a system, literally formed by the managerial philosophy of
capitalism and attendant with a brutal subjugation of the workers, the
system of state capitalism was configured in a most coherent and
explicit fashion. Lenin said without compunction that:
...today the Revolution demands, in the interests of socialism, that the
masses unquestioningly obey the single will of the leaders of the labour
process.
In correspondence with the height of the civil war, the industries which
were now conceived of as being affected by the need of “unquestioning
submission” and thus would be summarily expropriated from the workers
were to include the mining, metallurgical, textile, electrical, timber,
tobacco, resin, glass and pottery, leather and cement industries, all
steam-driven mills, local utilities and private railways. In this
process, all industries were taken out of the hands of the workers and
now, within the course of barely a year, the workers were already turned
into nothing more than military servants. Everything became a supply
chain for the front, not at their own direction, but at the demand of
the central apparatus.
And, although it might seem tempting, in light of the pressures of the
war, to claim that this was needed in order to fight the White Army,
Maurice Brinton points out that:
This period witnessed a considerable fall in production, due to a
complex variety of factors which have been well described elsewhere. The
trouble was often blamed, however, by Party spokesmen on the influence
of heretical ‘anarcho-syndicalist’ ideas.
While it may be true that popular aspirations held similarities to
anarcho-syndicalist ideas, the anarcho-syndicalists as a faction had
little formal power left by this point. The Bolsheviks had crushed the
power of the factory committees and the anarchist press was being
actively dismantled. The anarchist contingent of Russia was being
forcefully driven into obscurity. The syndicalists which had done much
of the work organizing the factory committees which waged Russian
revolution before 1917, now had to flee to groups like Workers’
Opposition, the Socialist Revolutionaries, or choose to agitate as
Non-Party workers, at constant risk of suppression by the Cheka.
That the Bolshevik centralization and brutal crushing of worker control
so quickly after the revolution may have led to a loss of enthusiasm
among the masses of laborers and that that subjugation led to the drop
in production, was an idea the state simply could not entertain.
Instead, the workers and their desire for worker control had to be
turned into a heresy. Every time that popular support for socialist
policies arose, it would be called “anarchist” “syndicalist” or
“counter-revolutionary” as an excuse to suppress it. But the socialism
that the Russian workers fought to produce was one which afforded the
workers the freedom to direct their labor and they only tolerated its
suspension temporarily. Such a proletarian consciousness, with its
practical through-line to syndicalist ideology, represented an
existential threat to state monopoly and thus had to be destroyed at all
costs.
On August 25^(th) of 1918, at the First All-Russian Conference of
Anarcho-Syndicalists, they would not mince words. The Bolshevik party
was “betraying the working class with its suppression of workers’
control in favour of such capitalist devices as one-man management,
labour discipline and the employment of ‘bourgeois’ engineers and
technicians. By forsaking the Factory Committees — the beloved child of
the great workers’ revolution — for those ‘dead organizations,’ the
trade unions, and by substituting decrees and red tape for industrial
democracy, the Bolshevik leadership is creating a monster of ‘state
capitalism,’ a bureaucratic Behemoth, which it ludicrously calls
socialism”
Other anarchists were more measured in their assessment. Brinton
paraphrases an article seen in the anarcho-syndicalist magazine Volny
Golos Truda, which was established after Golos Truda was forcefully shut
down by the Bolsheviks earlier that year. In this assessment:
Lenin and his followers were not necessarily cold-blooded cynics who,
with Machiavellian cunning, had mapped out the new class structure in
advance to satisfy their personal lust for power. Quite possibly they
were motivated by a genuine concern for human suffering...But the
division of society into administrators and workers followed inexorably
from the centralization of authority. It could not be otherwise. Once
the functions of management and labour had become separated (the former
assigned to a minority of ‘experts’ and the latter to the untutored
masses) all possibility of dignity or equality were destroyed.
However, it did not matter that they had taken this moderate tone. Volny
Golos Truda was shut down by the Cheka after five issues. Even some
fellow anarchists called them “anarcho-bureaucratic Judases” for daring
to question the Bolsheviks. But such condemnations would ring hollow; by
Autumn, the National Soviet was completely absorbed into the state. It
had no more meetings and the last direct mechanism of control for the
factory committees was therefore dead.
What remained for workers who wished to steer the ship of the Russian
machine were the trade unions. But they were already a ghost of their
former selves, vast numbers of delegates that had been appointed by the
workers had already been annulled by the Bolsheviks. Brinton recounts an
event in which the Bolshevik politician Vyacheslav Molotov underwent an
analysis of the composition of these delegates:
Of 400 persons concerned, over 10% were former employers or employers’
representatives, 9% technicians, 38% officials from various departments
(including the [central state])...and the remaining 43% workers or
representatives of workers’ organizations, including trade unions. The
management of production was predominantly in the hands of persons
“having no relation to the proletarian elements in industry.”
The [delegate bodies] had to be regarded as “organs in no way
corresponding to the proletarian dictatorship.” Those who directed
policy were “employers’ representatives, technicians and specialists”
“It was indisputable that the Soviet bureaucrat of these early years was
as a rule a former member of the bourgeois intelligentsia or official
class, and brought with him many of the traditions of the old Russian
bureaucracy”
It was not only Molotov who discovered such a thing, either. Brinton
recounts other independent sources who verified the same facts:
A Congress delegate, Chirkin, claimed for instance that ‘although in
most regions there were institutions representing the trade union
movement, these institutions were not elected or ratified in any way;
where elections had been conducted and individuals elected who were not
suitable to the needs of the Central Council or local powers, the
elections had been annulled very freely and the individuals replaced by
others more subservient to the administration.’
Another delegate, Perkin, spoke out against new regulations which
required that representatives sent by workers’ organisations to the
Commissariat of Labour be ratified by the Commissariat. ‘If at a union
meeting we elect a person as a commissar-i.e. if the working class is
allowed in a given case to express its will-one would think that this
individual would be allowed to represent our interests in the
Commissariat, would be our commissar. But, no. In spite of the fact that
we have expressed our will-the will of the working class-it is still
necessary for the commissar we have elected to be confirmed by the
authorities... The proletariat is allowed the right to make a fool of
itself.’
Such an arrangement as has been laid out here has no similarity to
socialism. And indeed, contrary to those who uncritically praise the
USSR, Lenin himself made no such claim. In his Economics and Politics in
the Era of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat he said:
Socialism means the abolition of classes. The dictatorship of the
proletariat has done all it could to abolish classes. But classes cannot
be abolished at one stroke. And classes still remain and will remain in
the era of the dictatorship of the proletariat. The dictatorship will
become unnecessary when classes disappear. Without the dictatorship of
the proletariat they will not disappear.
Yet even this admission was an act of bare propaganda. What Lenin and
the Bolsheviks had transfigured here bore no resemblance to Marx’s
dictatorship of the proletariat, as we spoke about in part 1. Instead,
what we can see is that Bakunin’s most dire concerns had come to be
realized. The USSR was now “for the proletariat a barrack regime where
the standardized mass of men and women workers would wake, sleep, work
and live to the beat of a drum.”
The red flags, the fawning praise for Marxist theory, and all other
considerations, were mere aesthetics. Worker control had become a
propagandistic figment, a promise not only unfulfilled, but actively
betrayed by Bolshevik power. Lenin’s later statement that “the
syndicalist deviation leads to the fall of the dictatorship of the
proletariat” can really be interpreted as “the demands of the workers to
control the means of production require the dissolution of the state.” A
fact that it is unfortunate a more sizable majority of the populace did
not recognize.
Malatesta, watching from afar in Spain, could also see what was taking
place in 1919, when he said:
...what we have is the dictatorship of one party, or rather, of one
party’s leaders: a genuine dictatorship, with its decrees, its penal
sanctions, its henchmen, and above all, its armed forces which are at
present also deployed in the defense of the revolution against its
external enemies, but which will tomorrow be used to impose the
dictators’ will upon the workers, to apply a brake on revolution, to
consolidate the new interests in the process of emerging and protect a
new privileged class against the masses.
He could not have even known how right he was, not “tomorrow,” as he
said, but at the very moments he made this statement. And, although
those who seek to make excuses for this Bolshevik counter-revolution may
have claimed that it was necessary to consolidate a military discipline
to defeat the White Army, by 1920, the Civil War was essentially over.
Indeed, very little resistance remained of the White Army or any
interlocutors.
Yet, as Brinton recounts:
At the gathering of the Bolshevik faction Lenin and Trotsky together
urge acceptance of the militarization of labour. Only two of sixty or
more Bolshevik trade-union leaders support them. “Never before had
Trotsky or Lenin met with so striking a rebuff”
Trotsky, however, was known to have said that:
The working class [...] cannot be left wandering all over Russia. They
must be thrown here and there, appointed, commanded, just like soldiers
[...] Compulsion of labour will reach the highest degree of intensity
during the transition from capitalism to socialism [...] Deserters from
labour ought to be formed into punitive battalions or put into
concentration camps.”
Then later in the year, as the workers were becoming angered at their
treatment:
the militarization of labour...is the indispensable basic method for the
organization of our labour forces
And
Is it true that compulsory labour is always unproductive? [...] This is
the most wretched and miserable liberal prejudice: chattel slavery too
was productive. Compulsory slave labour [...] was in its time a
progressive phenomenon. Labour [...] obligatory for the whole country,
compulsory for every worker, is the basis of socialism.
Although it is popular to despise Trotsky, as some sort of unique
tyrant. He was saying nothing that most of the Bolsheviks did not
believe themselves and were not enacting on a daily basis. Trotsky
merely spoke in less propagandistic language than the rest of them,
veiled his intentions under less deception. In doing so, he explicated
Bakunin’s other prediction that the centralist tendency “will centralize
all commercial, industrial, agricultural, and even scientific
production, and then divide the masses into two armies — industrial and
agricultural — under the direct command of state engineers, who will
constitute a new privileged scientific and political class.”
By March of 1921, the civil war was over but the state capitalist
configuration of the economy had not changed at all. After enduring
several years of so-called “War Communism,” the workers had begun to
realize the sacrifices they made in the name of centralization and were
beginning to agitate widely. Tired of suppression in the opposition
parties, they built a movement as Non-Party workers and demanded a
return to the ideals of the revolution.
At this point, if one is trying to read the Bolshevik dissolution of
worker control in the Russian revolution as motivated by material
conditions, it would be appropriate to expect that this would have been
the right time to hand control back over to the workers. Indeed, if this
were a “dictatorship of the proletariat” in any way, this is the precise
juncture at which the state would have attempted to dissolve itself. But
quite the opposite of this took place at the Tenth Party Congress.
Instead, Lenin proposed the banning of all political parties and thus a
final consolidation of power in the state. The Non-Party workers’
movement was a final threat that had to be destroyed. Mass arrests and
suppression followed.
But even this did not defeat the spirit of the workers to take back
their revolution: in Petrograd, spurred by extremely long work days, by
unheated homes, by lack of food, anger at the inequality of rations
between workers and party bureaucrats, by the decisions of the Tenth
Congress, and a complete absence of remuneration from the Bolsheviks,
workers began mass strikes and protests. They were tired of being
treated like empty automatons, especially if they would experience
little material benefit for having suffered to defeat the White Army.
The strikers released a statement[16] as follows:
A complete change is necessary in the policies of the Government...First
of all, the workers and peasants need freedom. They don’t want to live
by the decrees of the Bolsheviki; they want to control their own
destinies. We demand the liberation of all arrested Socialists and
non-partisan workingmen; abolition of martial law; freedom of speech,
press, and assembly for all who labor; free election of shop and factory
committees, of labor union and Soviet representatives.
Alexander Berkman, still present in Russia during these movements,
reported that the workers were being arrested in mass by the Bolsheviks
and that any of the trade unions who were still radical enough to
participate were being dissolved by the government. Meanwhile at
Kronstadt, a key naval base, tensions were rising. These Kronstadt
sailors were not some fringe contingent, in fact they had been
implemental in the success of the Bolsheviks during the early days of
the revolution, called the “pride and glory of the Russian Revolution”
by Trotsky himself. But after they sent a delegation to survey what was
taking place with the striking workers abroad and seeing how the state
was doing everything it could to dismantle the revolt, they issued a
statement outlining their demands, in solidarity with the strikers.
Berkman recounted the mood as follows:
Great nervous tension in the city. The strikes continue; labor disorders
have again taken place in Moscow. A wave of discontent is sweeping the
country. Peasant uprisings are reported from Tambov, Siberia, the
Ukraina, and Caucasus. The country is on the verge of desperation. It
was confidently hoped that, with the end of civil war, the Communists
would mitigate the severe military régime. The Government had announced
its intention of economic reconstruction, and the people were eager to
cooperate. They looked forward to the lightening of the heavy burdens,
the abolition of war-time restrictions, and the introduction of
elemental liberties.
The fronts are liquidated, but the old policies continue, and labor
militarization is paralyzing industrial revival. It is openly charged
that the Communist Party is more interested in entrenching its political
power than in saving the Revolution.
An official manifesto appeared today. It is signed by Lenin and Trotsky
and declares Kronstadt guilty of mutiny. The demand of the sailors for
free Soviets is denounced as ‘a counter-revolutionary conspiracy against
the proletarian Republic.’ Members of the Communist Party are ordered
into the mills and factories to ‘rally the workers to the support of the
Government against the traitors.’ Kronstadt is to be suppressed.
Correspondence shows that Kronstadt sent word that “we want no bloodshed
[...] Not a single Communist has been harmed by us.”
The Bolsheviks did not care however. Such an affront had filled their
eyes with blood. Trotsky released a statement that said:
[The workers] have come out with dangerous slogans. They have made a
fetish of democratic principles. They have placed the workers’ right to
elect representatives above the Party. As if the Party were not entitled
to assert its dictatorship even if that dictatorship temporarily clashed
with the passing moods of the workers’ democracy!
Berkman again, on March 7^(th): “Distant rumbling reaches my ears as
cross the Nevsky. It sounds again, stronger and nearer, as if rolling
toward me. All at once I realize that artillery is being fired. It is 6
P.M. Kronstadt has been attacked!
Days of anguish and cannonading. My heart is numb with despair;
something has died within me. The people on the streets look bowed with
grief, bewildered. No one trusts himself to speak. The thunder of heavy
guns rends the air.”
Ten days later, he writes in his diary. “Kronstadt has fallen today.
Thousands of sailors and workers lie dead in its streets. Summary
execution of prisoners and hostages continues.”
Berkman notes on March 18^(th), the irony that: “the victors are
celebrating the anniversary of the Commune of 1871. Trotsky and Zinoviev
denounce Thiers and Gallifet for the slaughter of the Paris rebels...:”
After the Bolsheviks slaughtered the strikers, they went on to smear the
Kronstadt sailors and all those who took part in the mass demonstrations
as being inside plotters who were trying to coup the government. Once
more, anarchism is associated with the revolutionary demands of
socialism by Lenin when he calls the worker revolts “petty-bourgeois,”
“syndicalist,” “anarchist” “caused in part by the entry into the ranks
of the Party of elements which had still not completely adopted the
Communist world view.”
But the reality of the matter did not escape the people. During the
years of 1921–1922 would come the first of two enormous spikes in
suicide rates among communists in Russia. In 1923, M. Reisner[17] wrote:
It’s hardest of all for the revolutionary romantics. The vision of a
golden age unfolded so close to them. Their hearts burned out [...]. And
sad stories are circulating. Here, one of our war heroes went home and
shot himself. He couldn’t stand vile little squabbles any longer. One
drop and the cup overflowed.
By 1923, even Lenin recognized that the dream of socialism had died in
Russia and that it was the fault of the bureaucratic domination of the
workers. Maurice Meisner,[18] in a work which we will use extensively in
the next part of this essay, recounts this story:
Less than five years after the Russian Revolution, Lenin pondered why
the new Soviet order had quickly become so bureaucratic and oppressive.
On his deathbed he somberly concluded that he had witnessed the
resurrection of the old czarist bureaucracy to which the Bolsheviks “had
given only a Soviet veneer.” Lenin’s worst fears were soon realized with
the massive bureaucratization of the Soviet state and society during the
Stalinist era, and the unleashing of what Isaac Deutscher called “an
almost permanent orgy of bureaucratic violence.”
In these same deathbed reflections, Lenin said he was “guilty before the
workers of Russia” for having not warned them about the ruthless
concentration of power sooner. Of course, it would not have mattered if
he had told them or not. As soon as the first decrees by Lenin had been
issued which allowed the state to nationalize anything which could be
deemed pertinent to the state, he had, himself, set the stage to destroy
the revolution. It is cold comfort to the martyred workers that he
lamented those mistakes.
In the years to follow, suppression not only persisted, but escalated
prolifically. Economic control would never return to the embryonic
socialism of 1917. Quite the contrary, the Bolsheviks would carry out a
series of Five Year market experiments and in doing so, the USSR would
sacrifice even its questionably revolutionary state centralization and
begin a slow decline back into traditional capitalist property
relations. Indeed, the institution of the New Economic Plan would prove
so discouraging for the Russian revolutionaries that between 1924–1926
there would be a doubling of the level of suicides that had occurred
after Kronstadt; seven times the average for party communists and
fifteen times the average for those in the Red army.
It is hard to blame the Russian revolutionaries for such hopelessness.
All means of forcing the leadership of the USSR to meet the needs of the
people and to fulfill their vanguard promises, had failed. While the
workers suffered miserably and fought valiantly to safeguard the
revolution, the Bolsheviks crushed their dreams of socialism under heel
and ruthlessly turned back all the progress that had been made toward
worker control. The state, an inherently centralized entity made even
more centralized by Leninist mutation of Marxist rhetoric, had
suffocated the birth of revolutionary socialism in Russia.
And it was not only domestic, the USSR would go on to sabotage the
anarchists who had enacted socialism in Civil War Spain, to invade the
Free Territories of Ukraine, to attempt repeated destruction of the
market socialism of Yugoslavia, and to undermine almost every single
other place where actual worker control was enacted during its lifetime.
The Soviet state could tolerate only unquestioning submission and was
therefore second only to the United States in its sabotage of worker
movements during the 20^(th) century.
But even after all of this, one might be tempted to imagine: what if the
ideology of the rulers in the central apparatus was of a sort which
actually made an attempt to dissolve and dismantle bureaucracy? What if
we applied some of the anarchist critiques of the state, but did not
abandon the notion completely? The next part, inspecting revolutionary
China will serve to answer such questions. As we shall see, even with
the ostensibly anti-bureaucratic and unorthodox approach of Mao Zedong,
no amount of recuperation can ever solve the inherent antagonisms
between the workers and the state. It is not a matter of which leader
sits in the seat of power. The seat of power itself is the enemy to the
proletarian revolution.
Just as the topic of the last section was a historical coverage of the
revolutionary period of the USSR, this section will be a coverage of the
aftermath of the Chinese revolution under Mao. The reason this is
included in the essay is because, even after an inspection of the USSR,
someone might contend that the solution lies in a restrained state, one
which is built from an ideology that seeks to dismantle its own power
once it has defeated the old order.
Mao’s China is therefore the perfect project for us to inspect. As we
shall see, while Maoism maintained the state apparatus, Mao nonetheless
sought significant departures from the Leninist and Marxist ideology,
attempting numerous times to dissolve state bureaucracy, listening to
peasant concerns about power hoarding, and letting slack the reins of
power at certain key moments. If the state is a body which can
conceivably dissolve its own power under the right conditions, one would
have to conclude that Maoist China would turn out quite different from
the USSR. However what we will see in this part is a convergence of
China upon very similar economic affairs as to what took place in
Russia, even though their paths to that end varied wildly.
As we proceed, I would like you to hold this quote by Kropotkin from Are
We Good Enough?[19] in mind:
We earnestly invite those who like to reason for themselves to study the
history of any of the great social changes which have occured in
humanity...They will see that history is nothing but a struggle between
the rulers and the ruled, the oppressors and the oppressed, in which
struggle the practical camp always sides with the rulers and the
oppressors, while the unpractical camp sides with the oppressed.
Although the story of the Chinese revolution began just before the
Second Sino-Japanese War in the late 1930s, let us instead start in
1921. This is the year that the Chinese Communist Party was fully
constituted, although it would not rise to power until decades later. By
this point, the USSR was a geopolitical powerhouse and its influence
could be felt in nations all over the region, including China. The USSR,
cooperating with the nationalist party which ruled China, the
Guomindang, helped build a fully modernized army for the conservative
rulership in order to protect their regional control.
However, this proved to be an utterly disastrous foray. The Guomindang
had no intentions to yield power to the communists, neither domestically
nor abroad, and in 1927, after the Guomindang had used the communist
insurrections to gain unparalleled control over most major Chinese
cities, they then turned the modernized army that the USSR had helped
them build, against the Chinese communists. This event is called the
Shanghai Massacre; a nationwide purge of the urban communists, resulting
in an estimated three-hundred thousand communist party deaths and many
more imprisonments.
In this we see a recurring tendency of the USSR to meddle in the affairs
of foreign communists and to support existing liberal and nationalist
governments, accepting profound compromises in order to gain power
within them, but for these compromises to ultimately lead to the
destruction of socialism in that project. The Shanghai Massacre is why,
several decades later when Mao arrived on the scene, the only
constituency that was available for the communists to organize was the
rural peasantry.
However, despite the orthodox Marxist notions that the peasantry did not
contain a socialist revolutionary consciousness, they would find that
many of China’s peasants were fertile soil for radicalization and
organization, having been harassed by high taxation by the government
and suffering greatly under conditions of warlordism and gangsterism.
The primary difference was that, whereas in Russia, dual power was
largely embodied in urban entities which gave direct, bottom-up power to
the workers, the peasantry of China would instead be highly motivated by
promises to expropriate the land from feudal rentiers and to enact
social leveling.
Adding to these unique conditions Mao, unlike many Marxists and
Leninists before him, had actually read some anarchist theory. Indeed,
he had spoken extensively with some of the Chinese exchange students who
had visited France, where anarchism was in vogue at the time before
World War 1. He said, in his interviews [20] with Edgar Snow that:
I read some pamphlets on anarchy, and was much influenced by them. With
a student [...] who used to visit me, I often discussed anarchism and
its possibilities in China. At that time I favored many of its
proposals.
This is elaborated upon In the work The Chinese Anarchist Movement,[21]
where Scalpino and Yu write:
Mao’s interest in Anarchism was by no means unique. On the contrary, it
marked him as a part of the central radical stream of those times.
Anarchism preceded Marxism in northeast Asia as the predominant radical
expression of the Westernized intellectual. Between 1905 and 1920,
Anarchist thought was a vital part of the intellectual protest movement
in both Japan and China. Indeed, in many respects, it possessed the
coveted symbol among intellectuals of being the most scientific, most
‘progressive,’ most futuristic of all political creeds.
But this isn’t to suggest that Maoism should be considered part of the
anarchist tradition. Quite the contrary, Mao’s Leninist and Stalinist
influences would largely overwrite these early lessons. But it gives
some context to what comes ahead. This unique combination of ideological
underpinnings would provide the substrate for a new sort of statist
praxis and with it, a new strain of Marxist theory.
In 1937, the Japanese invaded the Chinese mainland and began the Second
Sino-Japanese War. Previous to this, China had gained relative stability
compared to the previous years. However, in response to a land invasion,
the Guomindang had to print copious amounts of money to fund the
conflict, creating terrible inflation and thus leading to starvation and
mass unemployment. Making matters worse, as imperial Japan pillaged its
way through the country, it utterly demolished much of the Chinese
infrastructure.
Under Japanese control, the Chinese workers would spearhead numerous
waves of strikes, although organized to some degree by clandestine urban
communists, they were mostly the autonomous action of the Chinese
laborers. In the year 1947 alone, there were more than 3 million workers
taking part in the strikes, a task it would have been impossible for the
communists, severely diminished after the Shanghai Massacre, to have
organized alone.
In 1945, the United States and the Soviet Union would both intervene,
ending the Japanese occupation in China. But, while the USSR assisted
the Guomindang in reclaiming their territory, they also looted
significant portions of Manchuria to prop up their own economy, loading
much of the developed industry onto trains and shipping it back west.
And, despite the fact that the Guomindang was handed control of the
nation after the Japanese had been ousted, they were not prepared to
manage the system that the Japanese imperialists had built, with its
byzantine industrial structures and intense reliance on technicians.
Under these conditions, the Chinese Communist Party would organize the
peasantry and, to a lesser degree, the urban workers in the coming
years, waging a new civil war against the Guomindang. Although they
suffered enormously in the conflict, the communists took over more and
more areas of the mainland, where they would institute a highly mixed
economic program, largely owing to the differing levels of
industrialization, but also because of the mismatch of skills of the
trained cadres and the new demands of economic management. For this
reason, the cadres would, especially in areas like Manchuria, simply
re-staff the gang boss system with leaders from the revolutionary urban
communists instead. In other areas, some businesses would be run by the
workers themselves, even during the period of seizure by the state, but
it was by no means the standard arrangement. At the same time,
nationalization spiked. Before the war was even over, Sorghum and Steel
notes that the new state sector, helmed by the CCP:[22]
owned 58 percent of the country’s electric power resources, 68 percent
of coal output, 92 percent of pig iron production, 97 percent of steel,
68 percent of cement, 53 percent of cotton yarn. It also controlled all
railways, most modern communications and transport, and the major share
of the banking business and domestic and foreign trade. [...] But these
enterprises, despite being under state monopoly, were still yoked to the
capitalist imperatives of value accumulation, and were therefore
understood as ‘state capitalist,’ rather than ‘socialist.’
Unlike the USSR, the new Maoist government admitted quite openly that
these were state capitalist property relations and that a “national
united front” in which the proletariat cooperated with the petty and
national bourgeois, was needed. Mao said plainly that China:
must utilize all elements of urban and rural capitalism that are
beneficial and not harmful to the national economy. […] Our present
policy is to control, not to eliminate, capitalism.
This new state, however, would not be a bourgeois republic, Mao argued,
because it would be “under the leadership of the working class and the
Communist Party.” In other words, just as Trotsky had criticized Lenin
for many years ago, the Maoist state was practicing substitutionism: A
sort of metaphysical transformation wherein the state is dubbed a
“worker’s state,” because it is led by ideological communists who claim
to be acting in the interests of the workers.
During this period, the main goal of the communist party would be to
normalize economic organization and bring urban production back to
previous levels, while, in the countryside, delivering on their promises
to expropriate land from the landlords and return it to the peasants.
But the countryside was not their focus at this stage. In 1949, Mao
declared that “the centre of gravity of the Party’s work has shifted
from the village to the city.”
Although some program of productivism was clearly necessary in light of
the devastation that had been wrought by years of war, the choice of
class collaboration would also spell the recreation of much of what came
before. In many areas the previous bourgeois would leverage their
technical knowledge and ability to secure foreign loans in order to
maintain control of the labor process. And this was no mistake. This
arrangement was the goal of what was called the Coexistence Policy seen
in the Common Programme in 1949.
Sorghum and Steel summarizes by saying that:
It aimed to complete the ‘bourgeois revolution’ in the cities, utilizing
the elements of capitalism ‘that are beneficial and not harmful to the
national economy.’ In other words, to ‘control, not to eliminate,
capitalism.’ What this meant was effectively the appeasement of the
remaining urban capitalists, who would be gradually bought out of their
own industries by the state in exchange for offering their technical
expertise to the project of industrial recovery and development.
Only a year later, China would sign the Sino-Soviet Friendship,
Alliance, and Mutual Assistance Treaty, which would establish formal
ties between the USSR and China, including an influx of Soviet
technicians. These Soviet technicians, having been trained to manage the
state capitalism of the USSR, would play a significant role in
configuring China’s economy in that same image, a constant
countervailing force against China’s attempts to experiment in the
coming years.
As a result, Chuang says that:
...the size of the private sector in this period was significant. Though
it composed only 55.8% of the gross output value of industry as a whole,
private production was some 85% of total retail sales—making it central
to the circulation of goods.
This period, even though temporary, as a wave of nationalization was
already beginning, did configure a dangerous aspect of the previous
paradigm. The state, already coming to rely heavily on grain from the
countryside, enacted a grain standard which would standardize the
funneling of harvests from rural to urban areas, widening the
rural-urban divide that had been so important to eliminate during the
revolution.
Ultimately, with much of the gang-boss system in place in the port
cities, with a significant reliance on previous bourgeois and Soviet
engineers, and in maintaining the extraction of grain from the
countrysides, the CCP would quickly create a system which harkened back
to what had come before. The workers were angered to find how similar
the post-revolution economy was to the one they had fought so hard to
abolish. Thus strikes were now once again becoming rampant and many
private owners were simply closing their factories, firing workers, and
planning to expropriate their businesses and flee the country instead of
deal with the challenges.
The CCP would, however, force the business owners to increase wages and
improve living standards for those in urban areas. They would also seed
new unions into the urban economy and establish a national Labor Board
in hopes that these entities could mediate the needs of the workers with
the bourgeois. However, the workers did not just want better wages and
living conditions or bodies of mediation with their employers. They
wanted socialism. They especially wanted an end to the gang-boss system
and private ownership. Thus, as wages quickly found a new ceiling, the
unions just became industrial bodies to facilitate worker agitation and
there was a real risk, in the eyes of the party, that they would seize
the economy for themselves.
For this reason, in 1952, the party underwent a series of actions called
the Five-Anti movement that were supposedly aimed at rooting out
infiltration by the rulers of the old system, but which would ultimately
serve to suppress the strike waves. This would be a recurring theme in
the response of the state in coming years, to avoid systemic critiques,
and to instead blame individual operators within the system for
incomplete devotion to ideological orthodoxy as a tool to suppress
dissent. For this reason, the solution was also non-systemic. Instead of
giving the means of production to the workers, the state instead
encouraged workers to carry out elaborate denunciations of their
capitalist employers.
The party would also use this as an opportunity to seize over 1.7
billion dollars in fines from private enterprises for engaging in, as
they said, “various illegal transactions.” This plus various
denunciation campaigns, would create a pliable private industry, ready
to be seized and transformed by the CCP. But, as Sorghum and Steel
notes:
While successful in restraining the workers from a direct seizure of
power and in crippling the influence of private capital, these programs
led to a dip in production as workers and union cadre were constantly
mobilized in attacks against their employers and enterprises were
stripped of their working capital countrywide. The Five-Anti movement,
at its height, ‘cause[d] a number of enterprises to cease operations and
interfered with production in many others’ while also setting a
dangerous precedent of giving workers power over their managers and
enterprise owners. Fearing economic stagnation and renewed demands for a
seizure of enterprises by workers, the Party began rolling back the
reform movement.
As a result of copying this Soviet project of class collaboration,
Stephen Andors in China’s Industrial Revolution: Politics, Planning and
Management[23] noted that:
...by 1953 approximately 80 percent of the managerial personnel were of
bourgeois background and 37 percent of these were pre-1949 graduates,
returned overseas Chinese students, or factory owners. [...] By 1953
only 20 percent or so of managerial and technical personnel was made up
of urban Communist Party members, promoted workers or directors and
trade-union officials appointed directly by the Party.
In 1951, seeing the trend toward nationalization and central management,
Gao Gang, a party leader was known to have said:
We are not God, and we cannot work out a perfect plan.
It is ironic then, that Gao Gang himself would be set to the work of
creating just such a “perfect plan” in the form of China’s first Five
Year Plan, helping develop some of the early Taylorist quota setting and
production goals in emulation of the USSR. Although the beginning of
this era would see the toleration of forms of worker control, the Five
Year Plan would heavily favor the Soviet style of state centralization
and Taylorism. Overall, implementation would be uneven and worker
revolts would pockmark institution. But the Soviet model, with its
reliance on central management and investment in heavy industry, would
eventually win out.
In his book Mao’s China and After,[24] Maurice Meisner discusses the
effects of this industrial transition:
The decision to adopt the Soviet model of industrialization necessitated
Soviet-type forms of political organization and state administration.
Centralized economic planning demanded the bureaucratization and
routinization of state and society. [...] the cadres of a revolutionary
party were transformed into administrators and bureaucratic
functionaries; workers in factories were subjected to increasing control
by factory managers; the revolutionary ideal of the “guerilla”
generalist was replaced by a new-found faith in the virtues of
specialization and the technological specialist; old egalitarian ideals
clashed with a new hierarchy of ranks and new patterns of social
inequality; the revolutionary faith in the initiative of the masses
faded as industrialization demanded authoritarian discipline, social
stability, and economic rationality; socialist goals were postponed and
partly ritualized in favor of the immediate and all-embracing goal of
economic development. The tendency for revolutionaries to become
bureaucratic rulers began in 1949, but it was now vastly accelerated.
Gao Gang’s rise would not last long however. The first internal party
purges would begin in 1954, wherein Gao Gang would be among those
accused of attempting a coup of the state. Ultimately, Gao would commit
suicide, but news would not be given to the populace until an entire
year later. As a result of his work however, Sorghum and Steel notes
that:
Government orders as a percentage of total private industrial output
rose from a mere 12% in 1949 to 82% by 1955. In order to soften backlash
by the former owners of these enterprises, the state agreed to reimburse
them at a fixed rate of interest out of future revenue.
The first Five Year Plan had produced a great deal of economic growth,
but the people of this new society, both workers and many of the party
revolutionaries, were becoming disillusioned with what they saw playing
out. Even the general increase in wages during this period would be
distributed very unevenly and would come along with intricate piece-meal
systems and incentive structures. Meisner says:
As in the Soviet Union, the disappearance of the old economically based
ruling classes was accompanied by the emergence of a new politically
based bureaucratic ruling class, albeit one in still embryonic form
whose members saw themselves as servants of the people.’
This would create tension, however, because:
The old cadres had come from a revolutionary milieu and were the
carriers of the values of a spartan and egalitarian style of life and
work. In the early years of the People’s Republic they had been treated
in a relatively egalitarian fashion, the government providing housing,
food, and a small monetary allowance for the basic necessities of life.
By 1955, however, cadres were divided into 26 distinct ranks with
corresponding salaries ranging from 30 to 560 yuan ($12-$224) per
month...
China was experiencing many of the exact same struggles as the USSR had
as they passed through this process. Meisner continues:
For the workers, the industrialization drive meant subjection to
increasingly strict codes of labor discipline. It also meant increasing
wage and status differentials within their ranks. The more skilled
workers put in charge of factory work teams or became foremen exercising
authority over fellow workers. [...] Before the First Five Year Plan
trade unions had acquired some degree of independence as representatives
of the interests of the workers, but by the mid-1950s, the unions had
become instruments of state policy designed to raise workers’
productivity.
In the spring of 1957, discontent had risen to such a level that the
strikes would utterly dwarf all other waves that had come before.
Elizabeth Perry wrote about this in her piece “Shanghai Strike Wave of
1957.”[25]
Major labor disturbances erupted at 587 Shanghai enterprises [...]
involving nearly 30,000 workers. More than 200 of these incidents
included factory walkouts, while another 100 or so involved organized
slowdowns of production.
The laborers were furious. In fact, they were so mobilized toward action
that they began to relate their struggle to the Hungarian rebellions,
chanting “Let’s create another Hungarian incident!” and saying their
conflict would proceed: “from district to city to Party central to
Communist International.” They built bodies of insurrection,
distributing handbills in the streets to publicize their demands, and
forming autonomous unions. Secret societies, like those before the
upheaval, were now arising and there was real planning for the next
revolt.
In fear of what these revolts could become and seeing the resistance
against Soviet interventions in Eastern Europe, in 1956, the CCP would
encourage a vigorous campaign of criticism toward the party called the
Hundred Flowers campaign. The name came from a poem, one line of which
read:
Let a hundred flowers bloom; let a hundred schools of thought contend.
Accounts differ quite significantly over whether this campaign was
carried out in good faith by the party or whether it was a ploy in order
to draw out dissent, but what is clear is that it was motivated by a
desire to lessen tensions and resolve contradictions that had been
created by state capitalist implementation. But nothing of the sort took
place. Instead, a deluge of criticism was unleashed on the party and its
bureaucracy, claiming it had betrayed its socialist principles and that
the state was becoming a new class of rulers. A leader of the Peasants’
and Workers’ Democratic Party was known to have said:
In leading the masses to carry through the revolution in the past, the
Party stood among the masses; after the liberation, it felt the position
had changed and, instead of standing among the masses, it stood on the
back of the masses and ruled the masses.
Another veteran Communist revolutionary echoed this, in a lengthy letter
to Mao and the Central Committee:
There is a privileged class in existence. Even if a national united
class has not yet been formed, the embryo of this class is forming and
developing.
Even Mao recognized that this central critique was true, even going so
far as to locate this bureaucratic class among the Communist Party:
A dangerous tendency has shown itself of late among many of our
personnel--an unwillingness to share the joys and hardships of the
masses, a concern for personal position and gain.
Yet, despite this seeming agreement, the party would go on to suppress
the Hundred Flowers movement and wage what it called the Anti-Rightist
Campaign in response. In this campaign, the party condemned many of
those taking place in the Hundred Flowers movement as “rightists” or
“bad elements.” Intellectuals and students would be grouped in as
“rightists” and sometimes given the benefit of being asked to publicly
renounce their previous views and reform, whereas workers were grouped
in as “bad elements” which condemned them to be treated like nothing
better than common criminals. Workers and even some union officials, who
had agitated in the strikes and who lobbied anti-bureaucratic criticisms
were often imprisoned, sent to labor camps, and even executed. Sorghum
and Steel notes that:
When high-ranking ACFTU officials [...] stood behind the workers, even
going so far as to advocate for independent unions, the result was
vilification, dismissal, and a general purge of the ACFTU.
Ultimately, the inability of the dissident labor movement to develop a
general strike in the face of prolific state repression would spell the
destruction of the Hundred Flowers movement. But, while such a brush
with disaster may have convinced other governments to be wary of
experimentation and uncertainty, the Chinese communists would then
undertake one of the most ambitious projects carried out in human
history, The Great Leap Forward.
To understand why the Chinese Communist Party turned its focus to rural
areas during this period, it is necessary that we come to understand the
dynamics of the post-revolutionary countryside and Mao’s ideology toward
these elements. Notably, he diverged from Marx, who thought that the
proletariat were the only class where a truly revolutionary
consciousness would arise. Mao instead believed that, because the
peasants had not yet been propagandized by capitalist social relations
and that they were the most incentivized to escape their conditions,
they were the most revolutionary class, not the proletariat.
However, projects being carried out in the countryside, while delivering
on the desires the peasants had before the revolution to give over
ownership of the land, were also concentrating wealth in the hands of
many of the small proprietors. Now controlling their land and producing
the grain which fueled the needs of the growing Chinese economy, it was
feared that they were becoming a new capitalist class. The task of
confiscating the land of the rich peasants and equalizing the share with
those less fortunate, had been postponed until somewhere around 1955.
But now it was done with brutal quickness.
In less than a year, the entirety of the Chinese peasant population had
been forced into collectives. And, as expected, this process was not
carried out without resistance by the peasants. There were riots in many
rural areas during 1957 and general unrest, some of them even forcefully
dissolving the cooperatives they were forced into.
But, whereas the CCP had suppressed the Hundred Flowers movement in the
urban areas through the anti-rightist campaign, they would need a much
different approach to the rural areas. Although the pre-revolutionary
state had been worthy of overthrow, it had also been much more distant,
accommodating the peasants to lifestyles of self-sufficiency and
distance from the ruling class. For this reason, they were not simply
motivated by promises of socialism, but were also quite anarchic in
their desire to have state interference reduced in their lives.
With all of these factors together, and in perhaps one of boldest
decisions of the entire Chinese revolutionary project, Mao decided to
send a huge number of party apparatchiks and urban intelligentsia into
the countryside, demanding that they go and work the fields and labor
alongside the peasants. This move would dissolve much of the bureaucracy
of the central party, but it would also concentrate power even further
in the hands of Mao and his inner circle, as it decreased the number of
power holders in the state and thus decreased internal competition.
Indeed, the state still maintained absolute control during this period;
there were simply fewer bureaucrats involved in the construction and
administration of that control.
Meanwhile, as the bureaucrats flooded into the countryside, the peasants
were told through official proclamations to carry out a variety of
economic experiments and that they would be given complete freedom in
doing so. However, in reality, the state would pick from the vast array
which arose, those which were most preferable to its needs and exert
heavy pressure on the peasants to abide by it. That preference was
called the Commune model.
In this commune model, all property was shared among several thousand
households, all activities, farming, food preparation, and so on, were
carried out in large communal facilities. Yet the administration of
labor was not determined openly and democratically by the people.
Instead, in this model, administrators (often party bureaucrats banished
from the central apparatus) would determine everything about the
workdays of the peasants; what fields they would work, how long they
would labor at each, and what production quotas would be set. In this
way, although property had been communalized, control was handed over to
a thousand petty dictators. And the workers therefore had less control
over their work than they had before during the years of individual
farmship laboring which they had become accustomed to.
Even Mah-Ki, a writer who was sympathetic to the policies of this era,
says in his work The People’s Communes[26] that:
The commune movement as a whole was largely compulsory in character.
Though the CCP agrees in words with the principle of voluntary consent
by the peasants, it has not complied with it in deeds. The people’s
communes started as an experiment in April, 1958, but the documents
concerning them were first published in August, 1958. Then in a period
of not more than two months 99% of the rural population was organized
into the communes. In such a short period, the superiority of the
communes could not be proved by an increase in production and by an
improvement in the standard of living of the people. Also there was
insufficient time for discussion among the masses on how to form the
communes .... All was decided simply by decree in this hastily organized
movement.
In these new dictatorial communes, the workers were held to highly
regimented and militaristic standards. Maurice Meisner summarizes in
Mao’s China and After:
‘Our revolutions are like battles,’ Mao had declared in January 1958,
and by July peasants on communes were organized in battalions marching
off to labor in the fields in step, with martial music blaring from
loudspeakers. The slogans of the time called upon the masses not only to
collectivize but also to “militarize,” “combatize,” and “disciplinize.”
Although the militarization of work was ideologically rationalized by
Marxist references to the Commune as a community dominated by the armed
masses, the purpose was increased labor productivity. But the result was
to be the physical exhaustion of the peasants, who were subjected to
intolerable physical demands and an increasingly unrealistic extension
of the working day
Indeed, the party cadres forced the workers to extend their work to
eleven or even twelve hours a day. And such demands were not borne
without complaint. In the Honan province for example, the First
Secretary of the Party P’an Fu-Sheng would say:
‘Peasants’ production enthusiasm is not as high as in 1951’; ‘we are
sitting on a volcano’; ‘the peasants will revolt; and may reject the
leadership of the Communist Party.’ ‘The peasants were not equal to
beasts of burden in the past, but are the same as beasts of burden
today. Yellow oxen are tied up in the house and human beings are
harnessed in the field. Girls and women pull ploughs; harrows, with
their wombs hanging down.
For these complaints, the Deputy First Secretary Wang T’ing-tung, the
Secretary of the Provincial Committee Yang Chueh, and P’an Fu-Sheng
would all be purged from the local leadership.
Meanwhile, the party pushed a plan called the Four Pests Campaign, which
instructed the people to kill all mosquitoes, flies, mice, and sparrows.
Done with the belief that these pests were leading to lessened grain
harvests, the policy precipitated an ecological catastrophe. The
sparrows had been the environmental check on the locusts and with the
sparrow population in rapid decline, the locusts would therefore boom
wildly out of control, decimating the harvest. This, on top of what was
already turning out to be a weak season.
But the unfortunate intersection of events does not end here. The state
also insisted on higher agricultural productivity so that it could
export a record amount of grain to the urban centers. All the while,
Mao’s party cadres in the villages were falsely reporting that the
harvests were increasing as the new program moved forward, giving the
impression that this central demand could actually be achieved. All
together, in a horrific mismatch of state priorities and the needs of
the masses, the party exported the food that was needed to sustain the
peasantry while they were in more need of food than usual. All the
while, the state insisted that many peasants in agricultural areas be
diverted into steel production instead of the production of more grain
in what was called the Backyard Steel Campaign.
All of this together led to one of the worst famines in human history,
lasting from roughly 1959–1961. Workers, under military regimentation by
party cadres, forced to kill animals which would consume the locusts
destroying their crops, were being marched at the end of full workdays
to distant fields, only to return home and produce low quality steel in
backyard furnaces. This confluence of inept leadership and labor
coercion would lead to the loss of the Chinese Communist Party’s mandate
among the rural peasantry.
Terrified to see what was unfolding, the CCP took the opportunity to
recentralize power, to reintroduce market dynamics, and to concentrate
production in a small number of profitable enterprises. The Great Leap
Forward would therefore be abandoned. Indeed, this failure would prove
to be one of the most important turning points in Chinese history; To
the party bureaucrats, this was not a disaster of mismatched priorities,
it was a practical failure of the workers to manage themselves. From
this point on, decentralization would be seen as untenable in the eyes
of the party and Mao’s internal control would be significantly weakened.
This party’s retreat into more traditional modes of market operation and
their disputes over his leadership did not cause Mao to demure from
experimentation, however. He still saw the bureaucrats as the main
opposition to socialist progress. In 1965, he would say:
The bureaucratic class is a class in sharp opposition to the working
class and the poor and lower-middle peasants. How can these people who
have become or are in the process of becoming bourgeois elements sucking
the blood of the workers be properly recognized? These people are the
objectives of the struggle, the objectives of the revolution.
It’s not difficult to hear echoes of Mao’s early foray with anarchism in
these words. But we should not get too carried away, as Mao never
conceived of the possibility that the state could be abolished. Instead,
he thought that the ills of the state could be diminished through
staunch reductions in bureaucracy and by marshalling the masses to
brutally criticize unjust hierarchies that were arising within those
bureaucratic organizations.
This concept is what draws the line of coherence between the events of
the Hundred Flowers movement and the Cultural Revolution and its ensuing
suppression. In revolutionary China, criticism was always called for,
but it was only meant to be a tool in service of the goals of
leadership. Not always the narrow goals of Mao’s self-interest persay,
but always within the confines of the critiques he had of bureaucracy
and no further.
In 1966, Mao would push forward with what is called the Cultural
Revolution. In some ways a more ambitious version of the Hundred Flowers
Movement, this era would be predicated upon a call to open criticism and
revolt, but would also come along with calls to organize new forms of
social and economic arrangement, not just in the countrysides as it had
been during the Great Leap, but now in the urban centers. Just as “let a
hundred flowers bloom, let a hundred schools of thought contend” was the
rallying cry of the Hundred Flowers movement, the rallying call of the
Cultural Revolution would be “it is right to rebel!” And so they did;
far more radically than the party had ever anticipated.
In 1966, a group of students called The Red Guard began criticizing the
school officials for being intellectual elitists and representing
bourgeois tendencies and were denounced as “counter-revolutionaries” by
the school administration. However, after Mao read their manifesto, he
sided with the students, then had it aired on national radio and
published it in newspapers. This turned the Red Guards into a movement,
now comprising students and young intellectuals all over the nation.
In January of next year, would come one of the most promising attempts
of the Cultural Revolution, the Shanghai Commune. The Shanghai Commune
was notable, of all those that were developed during this period, for
attempting to emulate the style of the Paris Commune most closely. And
it was no coincidence that such an affair arose in Shanghai. Shanghai
was not only the center of modern industrial radicalism, it was the very
birthplace of the Chinese Communist Party. Further, to add to its threat
to state hegemony, it was one of the most populated areas of the entire
country. The Shanghai workers, although deeply beset by internal
disputes, were extremely radical and intended to take the ideas of the
Cultural Revolution to their furthest extent. They made up a list of
demands:
The workers demanded that the Headquarters be recognized as a legal
organization under ‘the dictatorship of the proletariat,’ thereby
challenging the Party’s monopoly of political power; they insisted that
the workers be provided with the means to organize all factories in the
city; and they called for the municipal government to give a public
accounting of its administration.
However, the instructions from the capital told them to return to work
and to fulfill their eight hour work days, warning the Shanghai
organizers that it was a dire provocation to defy the central party’s
instructions, and reminding them that their place as workers was to
work. But the workers were fearless. Outraged, some of them took a train
to Beijing to deliver the demands to Mao himself, which led to a three
day stand-off between the workers and party cadres. At the end, however,
the party conceded to their demands. This, and the enormous wave of
strikes and direct action by radicals against party bureaucrats, would
come to be called the January Storm or sometimes, the January
Revolution.
The state would quickly begin working out how to subvert this new body
of worker control. Unlike the Soviet Union, however, the Chinese party
would be much more clever in its machinations. They did not crush the
Shanghai Commune by force. Instead, they used the existence of temporary
transition leaders in the commune to undermine the delegate democracy
that the workers were trying to create.
Like the Great Leap, the party saw the multitude of experiments playing
out and they had a preference for which would win the day. Where the
workers had demanded a leadership elected directly by the masses and
able to be recalled at their whim, Beijing demanded that they instead
emulate projects that were taking place elsewhere and implement
top-down, centralized leadership. When one of the heads of the Shanghai
Commune, Zhang Chunqiao, went to visit with Mao in Beijing he told Mao
that they were planning on eliminating all the heads of the commune in
emulation of the Paris Commune and it was conveyed to him that this
would not be allowed to happen. Mao was known to say of these demands:
This is extreme anarchism, it is most reactionary [...] In reality there
will always be heads.
The structure that the party preferred was called a “revolutionary
committee” and it was predicated upon cooperation between the mass
organizations, party cadres, and the army. The army, being the direct
representative of the central party’s will, would become the dominant
partner in these “revolutionary” committees, destroying what power the
workers had seized through the January Revolution. At the demands of the
state, when Zhang Chunqiao returned, he dissolved the Shanghai Commune
and instead transformed it into a “revolutionary committee” with
top-down control. Projects elsewhere which instated these revolutionary
committees would also see nothing more than reformist progress, instead
doomed to watch the goals of the Cultural Revolution degrade in slow
motion over the next decade.
A year later, in 1968, another group of students, their name abbreviated
as Sheng-Wu-Lien, wrote a scathing critique, titled “Whither China?” In
it they called out what they saw as the counter-revolutionary attitude
of the army and the new state government.
Before the liberation the army and the people fought together to
overthrow imperialism, bureaucratic capitalism, and feudalism. The
relation between the Army and the people was like that between fish and
water. After the liberation, [...] some of the armed forces in the
revolution have not only changed their blood-and-flesh relations with
the people that they obtained before the liberation, but have even
become tools for suppressing revolution.
They were also outraged at what had been done to the Shanghai Commune,
saying:
Why did Comrade Mao Tse-tung, who energetically advocated the ‘commune,’
suddenly oppose the establishment of ‘Shanghai People’s Commune’ in
January? That is something which the revolutionary people find it hard
to understand. Chairman Mao, who foresaw the ‘commune’ as a political
structure which must be realised in the first cultural revolution,
suddenly put forward ‘Revolutionary committees are fine!’
Their critiques were sometimes even independent discoveries of ideas
that anarchists had warned about almost a century before:
Facts as revealed by the masses and their wrath told people initially
that this class of “Red” capitalists had completely become a decaying
class that hindered the progress of history, and that the relations
between them and the people in general had changed from relations
between the leaders and the led to those between the rulers and the
ruled, the exploiters and the exploited, from the relations of
revolutionaries of equal standing to those between the oppressors and
the oppressed. The special privileges and high salaries of the class of
‘Red’ capitalists was built on the basis of the oppression and
exploitation of the broad masses of the people. In order to realize the
‘People’s Commune of China,’ it was necessary to overthrow this class
[...] The fruit of victory of the January revolution [...] has been
basically usurped by the bourgeoisie. Social reforms were aborted,
social changes were not consolidated and thoroughly realized, and the
‘end’ of the first great cultural revolution has not been reached. As
the masses have said, ‘Everything remains the same after so much ado.’
The ultimate failure of Mao’s statist program to create socialism and
his death shortly after, would lead to the final abandonment of
socialist experimentation in China. This event would be what
precipitated a change of power within the party and the rise of Dengism.
Sadly, we have not yet seen the defeat of the enemies of Sheng-Wu-Lien
in China. Quite the opposite; the authoritarian bureaucracy that
outraged the Chinese laborers has grown to catastrophic proportions. In
2011, a man named Xu Lizhi, a laborer at a Foxconn factory, wrote a poem
describing what it felt like to be a worker in modern China, titled “I
Fall Asleep, Just Standing Like That”:[27]
Xu Lizhi would go on to take his own life just three years later, in
2014. What is left of the dream that so many died for? Nothing but
symbols and flags and glory-by-association. The only succor for those
revolutionaries now living there are the aesthetics of their rulers.
In the last part of this essay, we will return to an inspection of
theory, so that perhaps we can arrive at a synthesis of the thoughts of
the many great thinkers we have inspected and understand what it was
that took place in these projects.
In the previous parts of this essay, we spent some considerable time
inspecting the historical record and laying out theoretical and
empirical arguments as to why states are forces of anti-socialist
self-sabotage. We sought two examples in which states were used where
very different approaches were taken, so that we could compare and
contrast their outcomes.
If the state could produce any other outcome than forced submission of
the masses and sabotage of worker control, we should have seen China and
the USSR differ in enacting those conditions. But they, in fact,
underwent very similar trajectories despite very different material
circumstances and ideological approaches. Why? And given this fact, what
drives someone in the modern era to continue supporting these projects
which, by all means, have now devolved into capitalist property
relations? These are the two questions we will inspect in this fourth
and final part of this essay.
As we get started I just want to say, a socialist existing before the
failures of the 20^(th) century could hardly be blamed for having
believed that the state might function as a transitory mechanism.
Despite the theoretical justifications and historical examples that the
anarchists used to demonstrate their concerns, the matter of whether the
state could be repurposed to serve the needs of the proletariat was
still an open question, needing experimentation to conclude. After all,
the bourgeois revolutions all utilized a state in the process of
overthrowing monarchy. Perhaps, they might have thought, the anarchists
were just purists or cynics.
However, we are no longer in that era, we now have within the body of
our historical analysis a record of those attempts to use the state for
the means of socialism. It is now a matter of fact that the state
sabotaged the project of worker liberation in precisely the way the
anarchists predicted it would. The anarchists were neither purists nor
cynics, they were the realists. Many variations of state socialism were
tried and all degraded into capitalism, state capitalism, fascism, or
social democracy in the best cases, and we saw only a repeated and
thoroughgoing vindication of Bakunin’s words[28] that:
No dictatorship can have any other aim but that of self-perpetuation and
it can beget only slavery in the people tolerating it; freedom can be
created only by freedom.
So, as we embark on this conversation, let’s just establish what the
common goals of all socialist revolutionaries are:
So how do they justify their ideology in face of the fact that their
praxis in action inevitably suffocated socialism in its cradle and then
recreated the conditions of capitalism? As we have inspected in part 1,
it is not justified by any sort of theoretical coherence. And, as we saw
in part 2 and 3, it is not because it has a winning track record for
worker control. As we shall see, the primary issue which animates all of
this rhetoric is that the statists have constructed a mythology in which
they are the true utilitarians of the left. They believe they are making
the necessary sacrifices that will bring about socialism and they are
unconcerned if they are viewed as villains as they bloody their hands,
because one day they believe they will be recognized as heroes. Said
otherwise, they believe that the ends justify the means, without any
conception of how the ends are fundamentally intertwined with the means.
Much of the foundation for this utilitarian mythology was created by
Lenin himself, but it was spurred along afterwards by a procession of
leftist apologists and hagiographers. Many of which marshalled their
vast knowledge and intelligence not toward the re-discovery of a
liberatory path, but toward the accumulation of excuses for why ailing
state capitalist projects around the globe were not producing worker
control. Desiring to appropriate these political systems as examples of
success, they arrogantly called them “Actually Existing Socialism,” as
to suggest that all other forms of socialist praxis were impractical,
idealist, or fantastical. The most primary examples of “Actually
Existing Socialism” were then the USSR and Maoist China, which is part
of what has motivated our coverage of those projects in parts 2 and 3,
but it has included many other projects which we have left out for
brevity’s sake.
One of the key aspects that comes up over and over in defending
authoritarian leftism is the claim that these projects are structured as
a siege response to the existence of a global capitalist hegemony.
However, contained in this claim is one that is unspoken, namely that
socialism is too weak to defend itself. This is the claim, in fact, that
is always fundamentally embodied in the usage of the “socialist” state:
the workers are too improvident and unfocused to lead themselves against
capitalism. The state is a necessary evil to manage the ignorant masses
in the war against other hierarchies. Even if one takes the most
charitable form of this argument, that it is not the weakness of
socialism, so much as the strength of capitalism, it still makes an
equally counter-revolutionary claim: command is more efficient than
self-governance!
Indeed, this is what motivates arguments around “productivism,” which
claim that these projects have to proceed through a period of capitalism
so that they can develop the productive capacities of their nations.
Said otherwise: they believe capitalism is more effective than socialism
at developing infrastructure and productive capacities. From this we can
see, even the most charitable version of this argument is anti-socialist
at its core.
If worker control is so supposedly fragile to sabotage and so bad at
developing its own infrastructure, under the state socialist praxis,
when and how will this golden age supposedly come that all of the
enemies to worker control are abolished, where productive capacities are
sufficiently developed? Are we to imagine some naïve circumstance where
the whole planet will be one international state capitalist economy and
the supreme global vanguard which has hoarded power away from the
workers for decades or even centuries while achieving global dominion,
will benevolently decide to hand over its power to the people? Even
accepting the charitable interpretation, how will these future vanguard
rulers even know that the productive capacities of the economy have
reached a condition sufficient to undergo transition?
These questions remain unanswered because they are built on a fantasy.
We are expected to blindly trust the future of human liberation to a
narrow group of rulers and their future willingness to dissolve their
own absolute power. Such a naive bargain is not a new one. It is, in
fact, the story of how the masses have sacrificed their own autonomy and
dignity in every era.
In Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution[29] and The State: Its Historic
Role,[30] Kropotkin recounts what remains, to this day, a very
compelling case for how the earliest vestiges of lordship arose in the
village communities of Europe. In this period, forms of society which
had persisted for thousands of years through principles of mutual aid
and folk law, were set upon by warring tribes. This did not lead to a
Hobbesian “war of all against all,” however. The village communities
much preferred peace. For this reason they were easy to persuade that
they should exchange some amount of their harvest and land for
protection by military brotherhoods. At the same time, the peasants, for
long centuries having been the storehouses of folk law, increasingly
began to trust this memory and application to specialists. Ensuing from
these sacrifices, Kropotkin says:[31]
...gradually the first ‘concentration of powers,’ the first mutual
assurance for domination — by judge and military leader — is made
against the village community. A single man assumes these two functions.
He surrounds himself with armed men to carry out the judicial decisions;
he fortifies himself in his turret; he accumulates for his family the
riches of the time — bread, cattle, iron — and slowly imposes his
domination over the peasant in the vicinity.
In this way, the foundations, although not the entire form, of the
lordly order, were laid. As the people sacrificed their power to a small
group, they made a bargain with their own autonomy: even a superior one
to the ones that state socialists expect of us, as they did not
originally cede dictatorial authority to these brotherhoods. But, having
accepted the seeds of rulership, it would not be until the eleventh and
twelfth centuries that they would tear the roots of domination from the
ground, much belatedly recognizing what bargain they had made so long
ago.
Where the village communities revolted and threw off the yoke of their
lords, they created the walled free cities of the medieval era, the only
places during this time that the aspects of communal living and
distribution based on need, the most prolific creation of art,
architecture, and scientific advancement flourished for centuries. And
wherever village communities ceded to the lords, through failure to
resist or through capitulation, the communal ways were destroyed and
were superseded by the cultural dominance of petty kings and their
ideology of power perpetuation for centuries to come.
Like all rulers throughout history, modern states seek to convince us of
that foundational lie: that the subjugation of the ruler is the only
thing standing between us and a more brutish subjugation. No state can
be configured such that it is truly a tool for liberation. Such a notion
is only a mirage brought upon by transition from one set of masters to
another or in resistance to such a transition. States care only for
control of the masses. In believing in their foundational lie, in acting
out of fear of internal and external enemies, we accept a pervasive,
daily domination by the state itself. In short, we internalize that we
deserve to be ruled. We accept a supreme protection racket.
After all, there will always be some perceived enemies to progress,
internally and externally. And if we are to believe the claim that
socialism is inherently fragile, as we have been asked to do by
authoritarian leftists, it will be susceptible to that same sort of
sabotage for all of future history. What will prevent someone from
creating a capitalist counter-revolution if indeed centralization and
hierarchy are such efficient means of siege? What will prevent them from
laying siege to us once more in the future and unraveling our delicate
web of social connections? Is a socialist society in this conception not
one which will then be constantly on the edge of reverting into state
dominance?
In this way, the statist line is a potent form of counter-revolutionary
nihilism, because it supposes that socialism is not effective at
combating capitalism as a force in and of itself. The authoritarian,
socialism is a weak antithesis that must be bolstered by mimicking the
power structures of the previous era, not even capable of undergoing
synthesis with capitalism under a socialist economic and governmental
program.
And, viewing our future in such a way, you can be certain of one thing:
if the state is allowed to rule, it will forever insist that it must
continue to rule, such that it can protect our supposedly weak projects
of worker control from an infinite procession of threats. Every
semblance of resistance, every force of sabotage that remains will be
transfigured into an existential threat that only the state can protect
us from. This isn’t some new trick: this is the foundational lie of the
state in action.
Authoritarians, having argued so doggedly for the domination of a
paternalistic state and having therefore turned themselves into
ideological infants, then develop a hyper-reductive view of geopolitics;
precisely the one, in fact, that a state would like for them to have.
“Socialism” becomes pathologically confused with “opposing capitalist
nations” or more appropriately, “opposing all states aligned with the
United States.” They attempt to simplify the struggles of the entire
planet down into two camps, the “bad guy imperialist states” and the
“good guy anti-imperialist states.” In doing so, worker emancipation is
simplified into a single question: “do you support the imperialists or
the anti-imperialists?” Woe be to those who do not submit to their
reductive understanding. The statists who advocate this position are
completely incapable of even understanding what an “anti-imperialist”
entity might look like. They, in fact, simply support one imperialist
bloc over the other in a battle of two power-hoarders.
Just as the feudal societies of old had more and less power in the
monarch, more and less a presence of trade guilds and worker control,
these geopolitical blocs of monarchs did not then represent the
transition from feudalism into capitalism. They represented only
variations of the feudal project carried out with varying degrees of
freedom. This black and white campist view of the world is then
essentially no different than supporting France over Great Britain in
feudal Europe.
This is why it is highly questionable to call authoritarian projects
anti-imperialist. If a state becomes powerful enough to defeat the
previous empire through centralizing an extraordinary control away from
the people, it will then have assembled all of the tools of empire and
arrayed them underneath a centralized body. All states are mechanisms
for power-hoarding and, given sufficient size and strength, will
inevitably bring forth the brunt of their accumulated dominance to
degrade the power of any group of people which threatens that continued
dominance. In this way, they force all projects within their influence
to re-submit to state power. It is not a matter of moral fortitude in
leadership, it is a matter of mechanical certainty and time.
More than just being a body of imperialism itself, the state apparatus,
desiring only dominance and accumulation, will only tolerate vassals and
its operators know quite instinctively that no body of people who have
banished the institution of the state will bow to their will. Thus the
only experiments that the state leftist can tolerate are other
centralized, state projects with similar socialist aesthetics. The
existence of bottom-up management, whether fragile or robust, gives way
to the lie of the state’s necessity. After all, if socialism can exist
in this world and thus demonstrate itself as a possible mechanism to
enact the downfall of capitalism, the single-minded accumulation of
state power will be proven a dangerous waste of time, having betrayed
the cause in its ideological adherence to a counter-revolutionary praxis
and the long decades of propaganda which hung upon a loose thread, will
be left to unravel.
Imperialism is then not just the end stage of capitalism, imperialism is
the end stage of all concentrations of power if allowed to successfully
pursue their goals. Kōtoku Shusui, a Japanese anarchist living at the
turn of the 20^(th) century, says in his work Monster of the Twentieth
Century,[32] that imperialism is to be viewed like a plague and that
...patriotism is the microbe that causes the disease while militarism is
the means by which the microbe is transmitted.
Such patriotic propaganda is an inevitable outcome of the state. The
state, defining its necessity through the need to protect from internal
and external enemies, insists on itself as the storehouse of a canonical
national identity, it is the upholder of borders, it is a waystation at
which the authenticity of the national vision is validated. To
perpetuate a shallow patriotism is therefore contained within its very
foundations.
Although a central vanguard may serve to free its people from a previous
despot and will almost certainly present itself as the only protection
from external forces of sabotage, over enough time, allowed to expand,
that vanguard will become a new despotic ruling class, just as the
military brotherhoods were to the peasants of the village communities.
Thus, the authoritarian praxis can be summarily dismissed as a force for
true anti-imperialism because it can never actually eliminate
imperialism as a construct; it is instead an ideology of imperial
protection at best and imperial competition if left to its devices of
accumulation. The true antithesis to imperialism is the destruction of
the very structures which produce empires and the only entity which can
achieve such an affair, is a stateless and direct control by the masses.
Perhaps recognizing these facts, you will sometimes hear authoritarian
leftists backpedal from these arguments and make a very different sort
of argument. They will say that statist projects represent successful
socialist transformations because economic conditions are superior to
what preceded them, appealing to increased quality of life as the only
meaningful metric to be discussed. This can be seen in the oft-repeated
quote by Michael Parenti: “the revolution that feeds the children gets
my support.” And such an argument sounds good on its face, until one
really turns it over in their mind. While it makes a very fair point,
that any revolution which overturns the horrors imposed by some imperial
aggressor and improves the quality of life of the people, can be said to
have been a successful revolution and we should be very clear in saying
that we do not want a reversion to previous norms in these state
capitalist societies, that does not mean that these were successful
socialist revolutions. In fact, they can be most substantively
understood as successful bourgeois revolutions, much like those that
brought Europe out of feudalism and into capitalism. Having veiled
themselves in the imagery of socialism, these state capitalist projects
have constructed a twisted justifying ethos for the perpetuation of
capitalist property norms.
As Marx said in Critique of the Gotha Program:[33]
The capitalist mode of production [...] rests on the fact that the
material conditions of production are in the hands of nonworkers in the
form of property in capital and land, while the masses are only owners
of the personal condition of production, of labor power. If the elements
of production are so distributed, then the present-day distribution of
the means of consumption results automatically. If the material
conditions of production are the co-operative property of the workers
themselves, then there likewise results in a distribution of the means
of consumption different from the present one. Vulgar socialism [...]
has taken over from the bourgeois economists the consideration and
treatment of distribution as independent of the mode of production and
hence the presentation of socialism as turning principally on
distribution.
Sometimes, when recognizing this fact, this is when the statist will
offer another argument. They will say “okay, so the workers do not own
the means of production, but socialism does not happen in a day!
Socialism is best understood as the transition between capitalism and
communism, thus what these projects are practicing is socialist.” But
while this also sounds reasonable, it is just another one of Lenin’s
conjurations, a meaningless tautology, even a piece of placating
anti-socialist propaganda. Because such a description offers zero
features to identify when an economic or social system is socialist, it
implicitly encourages the replacement of progress in worker control with
bare aesthetics and empty promises. If socialism is just “the transition
between capitalism and communism” after all, and does not come along
with any attendant features to identify that a society factually
fulfills this descriptor, all it requires is a government claiming it
will one day become communist. It is a definition requiring a time
machine to verify, an invitation for rule by charlatans.
When a state believes that all it must do to be considered socialist is
call itself socialist, it then has no obligation to actually change the
conditions which represent capitalism. Quite the opposite of these
projects representing transitions from capitalism to communism, as
authoritarians will sometimes admit in their arguments about “developing
productive capacities,” they actually represent programs to build out
the infrastructure of capitalism, only controlled by the state instead
of a market of private capitalists. Worse, in many cases, market control
increasingly returns to private capitalists anyway.
The only thing that meaningfully defines a political or economic system
is a mechanical description of its institutions and an analysis of who
holds power. Only within its actual material structure can it truly be
understood. And do not think that this is the opinion of only
anarchists. This was the understanding of all the most radical
socialists before the capitulations of the 20^(th) century. Even Engels,
often considered to be more authoritarian than Marx, says in his work
Anti-Duhring:[34]
State ownership [...] does not do away with the capitalistic nature of
the productive forces. [...] The more [of them the state takes over],
the more does it actually become the national capitalist, the more
citizens does it exploit. The workers remain wage-workers —
proletarians. The capitalist relation is not done away with.
Marx concurred in Das Kapital,[35] saying:
The veil is not removed from the [...] process of material production
[...] until it becomes the production by freely associated people, and
stands under their conscious and planned control.
In the wake of all these empty arguments, there is left only an
aesthetic husk of the socialist and communist project that so many once
fought for. Anything done in the name of communism, anything using its
auspices, appropriating its symbols, or mimicking its rhetoric, gets
called socialist, so long as it promises that, one day, it will
transition into an economic project of worker control. The modern
authoritarian leftist, after they have sacrificed every semblance of
worker liberation, is then little more than an aesthete. Because they
have no examples of a promising future socialist economic paradigm to
point to, they become more concerned with aesthetics and claims of
ideological fealty, than they are with actual material re-organization
of society into the hands of the workers.
Tragically, this then places authoritarian leftists who have committed
themselves to defense of these state capitalist projects in opposition
to existing worker controlled economies when they arise. The
authoritarians, having attached themselves to bourgeois revolutions,
defame anyone who opposes the statist bloc. Even committed socialists
are labeled reactionaries, counter-revolutionaries, anti-communists, and
so on… And so when a project of worker control and confederation appears
in struggle as it is born, the centralized state and its adherents will
not only broadcast that project’s failures far and wide, they will often
even actively work to undermine it from abroad, such as in the case of
the CNT-FAI in Civil War Spain, or the Free Territories of Ukraine, or
Socialist Yugoslavia, or the Shinmin Commune in Korea.
Sitting atop this mountain of contradictions and a long, established
record of anti-socialist measures in their state projects, the
authoritarians allow not a single flaw in horizontal, worker controlled
projects. Nor is it expected that these worker controlled societies,
attempting as best they can to actually produce a material opposition to
capitalism, will receive the barest material aid. To the authoritarian
it is counter-revolutionary compromise for me, self-destructive purity
for thee. Utilitarians, they are most certainly not. They are, instead,
aesthetes worshipping at the shrine of the state.
In his book, Seeing Like a State,[36] James C. Scott lays out a robust
theory of how and why the disasters of the state take place. The main
thesis of his book can be explained in the following way. First and
perhaps most important is the idea of what Scott calls “legibility.”
Scott says that in order for information to be processed by any given
entity, either collective or individual, it must be legible to that
entity. This is to say, the information must fit within the framework of
that entity and must be compressed to the degree that it can actually be
received and processed.
The state, as an inherently centralized entity, is composed of a small
group of people, yet it makes dictates which affect the entire populace
it rules. And, both because this body of people will have their own
needs as individuals and as a collective body, as well as because of the
literal limitations of individuals within this state body to process the
vast complexity of the world around them, the state forces information
to be legible to it. But this simplification cannot conceivably
represent the diversity and depth of information on the ground and in
many occasions it does not want to! Instead, in making the complexity of
the real world legible to it, the state will have a tendency to pick and
choose the pieces of information which are most useful to it.
This narrowing of the information through need for legibility is what
Scott calls “the synoptic view.” That is to say, the legible information
becomes a synopsis of the real world. And in choosing the content of
that synopsis and making decisions based on it, the state enforces its
dominance cyclically, first in the act of choosing which information it
gathers, and then as it acts, back onto societies and ecosystems as it
perpetuates its needs. The state, viewing “order” as “adherence to state
dictums,” then comes to suffocate the robust diversity of the real
world. This is one very important reason why there is no possible
metaphysical transmutation of the state, no ideological re-translation
of the intentions of its ruling body which can ever ultimately achieve
control by the masses. The structure of the state is fundamentally built
contrary to the needs of the masses in achieving self-determination.
In Rudolf Rocker’s work Nationalism and Culture,[37] he presents a very
similar thesis. His focus, however, is instead on how the synoptic view
of the state also creates stagnation in the creative cultural aspects of
humanity. He summarizes this well, early on in the work:
Political power always strives for uniformity. In its stupid desire to
order and control all social events according to a definite principle,
it is always eager to reduce all human activity to a single pattern.
Thereby it comes into irreconcilable opposition with the creative forces
of all higher culture, which is ever on the lookout for new forms and
new organisations and consequently as definitely dependent on variety
and universality in human undertakings as is political power on fixed
forms and patterns. Between the struggles for political and economic
power of the privileged minorities in society and the cultural
activities of the people there always exists an inner conflict. They are
efforts in opposite directions which will never voluntarily unite and
can only be given a deceptive appearance of harmony by external
compulsion and spiritual oppression.
The synoptic view is not an error to regard idly, a hiccup to be
mitigated after power has been accumulated, it is an eternal fact about
how societies are necessarily ordered as bottlenecks in popular control
are implemented. The more thoroughly that centralized power structures
intervene in the lives of the people, the more do they force them into
rigid, recalcitrant schemas which compress the robust diversity of the
real world, and thus bring about the misery of humans and the collapse
of complex ecosystems.
This aspect, the collapse of complex ecosystems, is covered by James C.
Scott in Seeing Like a State, but it is covered perhaps even more
thoroughly by the life’s work of ecologist Murray Bookchin. In his work,
Ecology and Revolutionary Thought,[38] he gives a very good elaboration
on this aspect:
...man is undoing the work of organic evolution. By creating vast urban
agglomerations of concrete, metal, and glass, by overriding and
undermining the complex, subtly organized ecosystems that constitute
local differences in the natural world — in short, by replacing a highly
complex organic environment with a simplified, inorganic one — man is
disassembling the biotic pyramid that supported humanity for countless
millennia. In the course of replacing the complex ecological
relationships on which all advanced living things depend with more
elementary relationships, man is steadily restoring the biosphere to a
stage that will be able to support only simpler forms of life. If this
great reversal of the evolutionary process continues, it is by no means
fanciful to suppose that the preconditions for higher forms of life will
be irreparably destroyed and the earth will become incapable of
supporting man himself.
Centralization and hierarchy of power are not only strangling human
creativity, they are not only pushing societies into modernized slavery,
they are at the root of our failure to steward the environment. Or, as
Bookchin says in that same piece:
[T]he imbalances man has produced in the natural world are caused by the
imbalances he has produced in the social world.
We cannot conceivably solve the problems at hand unless we are willing
to oppose all schemas of simplification and centralization, all
hierarchies of power and privilege. These plans for human development
are not simply enemy to socialist revolution, they are enemy to the
future conditions of life on Earth.
Because, ultimately, this is the true realization that needs to be had,
if we’re going to reclaim the revolutionary vigor that was once seen in
the early 1900s: We did not win the last world revolution. We lost.
Cuba, China, Venezuela, the DPRK, and their like, do not represent
socialist successes; improvements over previous paradigms perhaps, but
they are ultimately the co-option of a liberation movement gone to die
in the counter-revolutionary state. We must envision a struggle fought
anew and we must envision that struggle contrary to the failures of the
authoritarians. They were given their chance and their praxis betrayed
the millions whose blood was spilled to bring about worker control.
Hopeful projects exist across the planet, some small and some large, but
today, the workers do not control the means of production in any place
where those original statist revolutions arose. All of those projects
are instead now locked in a cycle of revanchism and bourgeois
paternalism. As Guy Debord said in his Society of the Spectacle: “the
bourgeoisie is the only revolutionary class that ever won.”
So, be certain: the only path forward in the task of liberation is the
joining together of all oppressed peoples to overthrow the power
hoarders and to destroy all of the mechanisms with which they hoard that
power; whether those be the the state and capital or whether they be
white supremacist ideology, of colonialism, of imperialism, of
transphobia, of sexism, of ableism, and of all other variety of bigotry.
The ideology which might fuse together these diverse struggles in
respect of the structures as they truly stand is anarchism, libertarian
socialism, no matter the name it is called by, no matter the people who
practice it. Liberation can only come through the hatred of hierarchies
of power and privilege.
The state is but one of many forms of human rulership, one that is so
pervasive that it has fooled even many fellow socialists of its
necessity. But in allowing themselves to be fooled by this myth, they
have become the pawns of a machine, convinced of its great men and of
their righteous place in the turning of its wheels. Having allowed
themselves to become sycophants to this machine, they have placed
themselves in ready opposition to the goals of those who seek
liberation.
Even more, they have come to believe that their great men and their
parties are what drive revolutionary change. They turn dictators and
leaders into religious figures, they dismiss the needs of the masses as
short-sighted, they appeal to the wisdom of their failed vanguards.
These statists, seeking to cope with the anti-socialist outcomes of
their attempts, have forgotten that it is the people who drive
transformation and that all suppression of the people’s immediate
liberation is unacceptable. Only where the people reign have we
surpassed the age of capitalism.
The revolution of the masses does not wait for permission; it is not an
activity of states and power hoarders. Socialist revolution is an act of
mass emancipation and thus it can only be an act of the masses. Those
who have forgotten this are now the conservatives of the left,
counter-revolutionaries laying in wait, hoping to co-opt liberation
movements so that they might lead them down the dead-end of state power
once again.
As we come to a close, I would like to end on a quote by Leo Tolstoy, a
passage from his book War and Peace:
In quiet and untroubled times, it seems to every administrator that it
is only by his efforts that the whole population under his rule is kept
going, and in this consciousness of being indispensable every
administrator finds the chief reward of his labor and efforts. While the
sea of history remains calm, the rule administrator in his frail bark,
holding it with a boat hook to the ship of the people and himself
moving, naturally imagines that his efforts move the ship he is holding
on to. But as soon as a storm arises and the sea begins to heave and the
ship to move, such a delusion is no longer possible. The ship moves
independently with its own enormous motion, the boat hook no longer
reaches the moving vessel, and suddenly the administrator, instead of
appearing a ruler and a source of power, becomes an insignificant,
useless, feeble man.
ALL POWER TO THE PEOPLE
[1] Alexander Berkman, “
”
[2] Max Weber, “
readings/weber/politicsasavocation.pdf Politics as a Vocation
”
[3] Errico Malatesta, “
”
[4] Rudolf Rocker, “
”
[5] Peter Kropotkin, “
”
[6] Karl Marx, “
Rules and Administrative Regulations of the International Workingmen’s Association
”
[7] Karl Marx, “
”
[8] Vladimir Lenin, “
”
[9] Rosa Luxemburg,
“[[https://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1904/questions-rsd/index.htm][Organizational
Questions of the Russian Social Democracy [Leninism or Marxism?] ]]”
[10] Leon Trotsky, “
”
[11] Leon Trotsky, “
Speech to Tenth Party Congress
,” cited by Maurice Brinton in “
The Bolsheviks and Workers’ Control
”
[12] Mikhail Bakunin, “
Marxism, Freedom, and the State
”
[13] Mikhail Bakunin, “
”
[14] Maurice Brinton, “
The Bolsheviks and Workers’ Control
”
[15] Noam Chomsky, “
The Soviet Union Versus Socialism
”
[16] Alexander Berkman, “
”
[17] Simon Pirani
“[[https://libcom.org/files/[Simon_Pirani]_The_Russian_Revolution_in_Retreat,_(b-ok.org).pdf][The
Russian Revolution in Retreat]]”
[18] Maurice Meisner, “
”
[19] Peter Kropotkin, “
”
[20] Edgar Snow interviews with Mao Zedong; Scalpino and Yu, “
The Chinese Anarchist Movement
”
[21] Scalpino and Yu, “
The Chinese Anarchist Movement
”
[22] Chuang, “
”
[23] Stephen Andors, “
China’s Industrial Revolution: Politics, Planning and Management
”
[24] Maurice Meisner, “
”
[25] Elizabeth Perry, “
”
[26] Mah-Ki, “
”
[27] Xu Lizhi, “
I Fall Sleep, Just Standing Like That
”
[28] Mikhail Bakunin, “
”
[29] Peter Kropotkin, “
Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution
”
[30] Peter Kropotkin, “
”
[31] Peter Kropotkin, “
”
[32] Kotoko Shusui, “
Monster of the Twentieth Century
”
[33] Karl Marx, “
”
[34] Friedrich Engels, “
”
[35] Karl Marx, “
”
[36] James C. Scott, “
Like a State — James C. Scott.pdf Seeing Like a State
”
[37] Rudolf Rocker, “
”
[38] Murray Bookchin, “
Ecology and Revolutionary Thought
”