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Title: Workerâs ice pick Author: Free Earth Language: en Topics: a reply, book review, anti-Bolshevism Source: Retrieved on 2nd August 2020 from http://struggle.ws/freeearth/ice_pick.html
This essay is written in response to the book âBlackshirts and Redsâ by
Michael Parenti, a large part of which is taken up with apologetics for,
and praise of, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and itâs
satellites .
This is not some minor dispute, or idle debate, but is of great
relevance.
It derives itâs relevance from the presence in every corner of the globe
of adherents of Sovietphilia , people and organisations whose goal is
the replication of the USSR (at whatever period in itâs history), in
most parts of the world this is not a likely prospect, but nonetheless
this phenomenon is a harmful one . Why so? Firstly because of their
tendency to recreate/maintain central features of existing society
within social movements capable of changing society, principally that is
the division between order givers and order takers, something seemingly
as dear to their hearts as it is to the heart of any boss, politician or
corporate chairman . Thereby nullifying the liberatory potential of
these movements . Secondly by discrediting the idea that there is an
alternative to capitalism . For instance, during the September 26^(th)
2000 demonstration against the World Bank/IMF in Prague they came
covered with hammers and sickles, red stars and other such symbols of
peace and freedom and were given great prominence in the local media
&endash; each photo saying take your pick the tyranny of the state or
the tyranny of the market. Of course now that the âSovietâ Union has be
cast into the dust bin of history , itâs place as the recipient of
groupieâs accolades has been taken by Cuban dictatorship, lately
embraced by well known major label revolutionaries the Manic Street
Preachers, nonetheless the âSovietâ Union was, and is the original model
and as such retains a relevance today. But I will say one thing about
Cuba, or rather Iâll let a representative of the Cuban State controlled
Trade Union movement say something: âThere were some initial
inequalities between those workers working in Cuban companies and those
in the joint venturesâ (i.e. joint ventures between the Cuban state and
multi-nationals) ; however âThe Cuban Workersâ Confederation is working
to improve conditions in the state-owned companies.â[1]
Need I comment? This was actually published in a pro-Castro newspaper
under the heading âWorkersâ Rights in Cubaâ.
Mine is an essay, Parentiâs is a book , so I cannot deal with every
single assertion, with every point, I have instead homed in on a number
of crucial areas of concern.
Parenti defends the USSR on the following grounds: firstly, itâs moral
superiority over capitalist states ; secondly, by arguing that itâs
deformation was caused by the civil war, imperialist encirclement
etc...; thirdly, by claiming that itâs âLeft anti-Communistâ and âpure
socialistâ critics have no, and offer no, practical alternative to what
he calls the âsiege socialismâ of the Soviet Empire ; and finally by
trying to downsize the extent of repression. I will deal with each part
of his defence of âCommunistâ tyranny in turn.
According to Parenti : âin communist countries there was less economic
inequality than under capitalismâ . By economic inequality he means
inequality of income, consumption and lifestyle presumably not regarding
a situation where by the value produced by the labour of the majority is
expropriated by a minority to be âeconomic inequalityâ nor a situation
where the bulk of economic activity is determined by a minority and
imposed on the rest of society .
Still, his claim in regard to âeconomic inequalityâ does not withstand
examination. In the words of Foreign Minister Molotov âBolshevik policy
demands a resolute struggle against equalitarians as accomplices of the
class enemy, as elements hostile to socialism.â [2]
Orlando Figes, historian and author of âPeasant Russia, Civil Warâ and
âA Peopleâs Tragedyâ describes the opulent lifestyle of the new ruling
class in the early days of the âworkerâs stateâ:
âFive thousand Bolsheviks and their families lived in the Kremlin and
the special party hotels, such as the National and the Metropole, in the
centre of Moscow. The Kremlinâs domestic quarters had over 2,000 service
staff and itâs own complex of shops, including a hairdresser and a
sauna, a hospital and a nursery, and three vast restaurants with cooks
trained in France. Its domestic budget in 1920, when all these services
were declared free , was higher than that spent on social welfare for
the whole of Moscow. In Petrograd the top party bosses lived in the
Astoria Hotel, recently restored to its formal splendour, after the
devastationâs of the revolution, as the First House of the Soviets. From
their suites, they could call for room service from the âcomrade
waitersâ, who were taught to click their heels and call them âcomrade
masterâ. Long-forgotten luxuries, such as champagne and caviar, perfume
and toothbrushes, were supplied in abundance. The hotel was sealed to
the public by a gang of burly guards in black leather jackets. In the
evening government cars were lined up by the entrance waiting to take
the elite residents off to the opera or to the Smolny for a banquet.â
[3]
This was at a time when many of the common people of Russia were
literally starving to death.
Erwin Weit, one time interpreter for the fat chieftains of Polish
âcommunismâ, relates his insight into âprivate enrichmentâ Eastern Bloc
style, how privileged State officials were able to use their privilege
to enrich themselves:
âI got into a conversation with some embassy officials which taught me a
good deal about the âprivate enterprise sidelinesâ indulged in by the
Polish diplomats in Berlin.... Since they saw no reason to hide their
transactions from me they were quite willing to explain. âYou see,
Comrade Weit, in Warsaw anyone can buy a Soviet-made Zorki camera for
2,000 zlotys in a state shop. But the cheapest car on the market, an
East German âTrabantâ ... costs at least 85,000 zlotys on the black
market. Since we have the right to travel freely between East and West
Berlin we can take the cameras into West Berlin at any time. We have a
buyer there who will give us 70 dollars for them . At a rough estimate
if you convert 70 dollars into West German marks they are worth about
800 East German marks. And a Trabant car costs 7,200 East German marks.
In Warsaw we can buy nine Zorki cameras for 18,000 zlotys. And in
exchange for these 18,000 zlotys we make 85,000 zlotys when we sell the
car in Poland. So we make a clear profit of nearly 70,000 zlotys.â I
made a few calculations in my head. Since the average wage in Poland is
about 2,000 zlotys per month they could make as much from a single
transaction of this kind as an ordinary Polish worker would earn in two
and a half years.â [4]
The income of the party bosses and state bureaucrats was bloated not
only through the perks of position, and opportunities for corruption,
considerable though they were, but also through their official income,
for example, during the Second World War a private in the Red Army got
ten roubles a month, lieutenants 1000, and colonels 2,400. By contrast
,in that well known bastion of socialism, the U.S. Army, privates got 50
dollars a month, lieutenants 150, and colonels 333. American soldiers of
the time did not have F.B.I. machine gunners behind them to make sure
they didnât retreat, nor were they imprisoned for the crime of being
imprisoned by the enemy, nonetheless the USSR is a utopia and the U.S.A.
an evil empire.
According to Parenti, in what he calls communist countries âpriority was
placed on human servicesâ the evidence for this is âguaranteed
education, employment, housing, and medical assistanceâ representing
âsomething different from what existed in the profit-driven capitalist
worldâ this is an âorganising principle for every communist system to
one degree or the otherâ and does not âapply to free market countriesâ.
State welfare programs began in Germany under Bismarck and in Britain in
Victorian times (or earlier i.e. ârelief workâ, âworkhousesâ , etc..),
they received a boost in Britain when it was discovered that recruits
were not healthy enough for the army. They continue to exist to this
day, to a greater or lesser extent, in all West European states.
Obviously advanced capitalism requires a healthy, housed and educated
workforce and furthermore it needs to introduce reforms from now and
then when the grumblings from below get too loud, in any case we pay for
it all in our taxes . As regards employment currently the Republic of
Ireland has less unemployment than contemporary Cuba and besides letâs
not kid ourselves âguaranteed employmentâ is a polite term for
compulsory exploitation. In any case the social policy of âCommunistâ
states ranged from welfarism similar to Western Europe (but not as good)
to âsocial cleansingâ similar to Latin America (i.e. the extermination
of those left as orphans by the Civil War and famine). Romaniaâs
orphanages are hardly world renowned as the zenith of social welfare and
State health care.
Not then âsomething different from what existed in the profit driven
capitalist worldâ.
According to Parenti: âin communist countries, productive forces were
not organised for capital gain and private enrichment ; public ownership
of the means of production supplanted private ownershipâ .
In âcommunistâ states the state owned the means of production as the
public did not control the state we cannot therefore speak of âpublic
ownershipâ. In reality the means of production was controlled by the
Nomenklatura ruling class and organised for âcapital gain and private
enrichmentâ as is evident from the mere fact of minority control. Unless
that is you believe in the existence of such wonderful selfless people
who invested with absolute power proceeded to use it to for the benefit
of all and not for âcapital gain and private enrichmentâ while time and
time again the ungrateful proles of one country and then another rose
against them.
According to Parenti âcommunist countries did not pursue the capital
penetration of other countries. Lacking a profit motive as their driving
force and therefore having no need to constantly find new investment
opportunities, they did not expropriate the lands, labor, markets, and
natural resources of weaker nations, that is, they did not practise
economic imperialism.â
Iâm sure it was a great relief to the Polish prisoners massacred in
Katyn forest that the USSR did not in fact âpractise economic
imperialismâ . In any case, what Parenti is saying here is just plain
wrong . Those areas which became independent from the Russian Empire, or
attempted to, during the Revolution, for example, the Ukraine or the
Baltic states, and which were later incorporated into the USSR at
gunpoint, had their entire economies, all the land, all the natural
resources, etc.. , expropriated (ânationalised under public ownershipâ)
by Moscow. The Bolshevik invaders of the Ukraine in 1918 were exhorted
by Lenin to âsend grain, grain and more grainâ [5], that country
performing the same function for Moscow as it did for Berlin during the
two world wars. Executions for the crime of speaking Ukrainian was
however a Leninist innovation. Moving on to the post-W.W.2 period we
find âSoviet Shareholding Companiesâ as well as mixed companies (jointly
owned by the USSR and the local state) owning much of the heavy industry
of Russian occupied Eastern Europe. This was brought about by the
seizure of all German held property while in East Germany itself the
pretext for this confiscation was the political views of the previous
owners. In any case the âsurplus valueâ (that share of the value
produced not required to maintain the existence of the worker) extracted
from the employees of these firms was now going not to âNational
Socialistâ capitalists in Germany but to âCommunistâ capitalists in
Russia. Likewise colonial trade relations existed between occupied
Eastern Europe and the âsocialist motherlandâ with the USSR buying cheap
and selling dear to this itâs captive market . This was also true in
regard to Red China and Yugoslavia which is why of course they broke
away from the bearâs embrace. Furthermore those countries which had been
ruled by indigenous government which were part of the Axis were hit with
a massive reparations bill.
The question as to whether the Bolsheviks were forced into
authoritarian, hierarchical and dictatorial methods, forced into the
establishment of State capitalism, or âSiege socialismâ as Parenti calls
it, by the practical necessities of civil war or whether all this was
inherent in Leninism all along, and the natural product of Leninist
ideology, is actually not to difficult to answer. We merely have to look
at the record of the Bolsheviks prior to the civil war. If this was a
lab experiment we would have a âsubjectâ that is to say Bolshevism plus
civil war and a âcontrolâ that is to say Bolshevism minus civil war and
by looking at the difference between the two we can ascertain the effect
of the civil war. The civil war didnât really heat up until the Summer
of 1918 with the offensive of the Czech Legion and the establishment of
the Komuch (an alternative Social Revolutionary led government) . Allied
intervention reached a new level at this time as well with the landing
of a Allied force in Vladivostok (the British section of it was under a
Labour party M.P. and comprised of old soldiers unfit of service on the
Western front) â previously British troops had landed in Murmansk as an
anti-German action . There was a low level of violence prior to this,
consisting of very small armies and very small casualty figures, for
example the famous âice marchâ carried out by the White âvolunteer armyâ
in the extreme south of Russia involved only 4,000 soldiers. On the
3^(rd) of March 1918 the brief hostilities between Berlin and the
Bolsheviks were ended ; on the 10^(th) of April 1918 the volunteer and
Cossack white armies (the only anti-Bolshevik armed forces of any
substance at this time) were well defeated; so the article on âThe
immediate tasks of the Soviet Governmentâ, written by Lenin and
published on the 25^(th) of April 1918 , could be considered our
âcontrolâ i.e. Leninism minus military threat ; all the more so given
that on March 14^(th) 1918 Lenin said âThe Soviet Government has
triumphed in the Civil Warâ and again on April 23^(rd) he said âOne can
say with certainty that the Civil War in its main phases has been
brought to an endâ.[6]
Furthermore this was before the failure of the German revolution dimmed
hopes of spreading âsocialismâ to the more advanced states .
In this article Lenin writes : âWe must raise the question of piece-work
and apply and test it in practise .... we must raise the question of
applying much of what is scientific and progressive in the Taylor
system.â
âThe irrefutable experience of history has shown that ... the
dictatorship of individual persons was very often the vehicle , the
channel of the dictatorship of the revolutionary classes.â
âLarge-scale machine industry â which is the material productive source
and foundation of socialism â calls for absolute and strict unity of
will ... How can strict unity of will be ensured? By thousands
subordinating their will to the will of oneâ.
â Unquestioning submission (emphasis in original) to a single will is
absolutely necessary for the success of labour processes that are based
on large-scale machine industry ... today the Revolution demands , in
the interests of socialism , that the masses unquestioningly obey the
single will (emphasis in original) of the leaders of the labour
process.â [7]
Note the building of socialism requires âthousands subordinating their
will to the will of oneâ in other words submission to authority is an
inherent prerequisite of socialism not a temporary expedient employed to
win the civil war or to maintain âsocialism in one countryâ.
âCommunistâ political repression and class oppression likewise dates
back to before the civil war began in earnest . The All-Russian
Extraordinary Commission for Struggle against Counter-Revolution and
Sabotage or Cheka (later known as the N.K.V.D. , G.P.U. , K.G.B. and
currently F.S.B.) was established on the 7^(th) of December 1917 . Itâs
definition of âcounter-revolutionâ and âsabotageâ included absenteeism
from work and private trading (which was a necessity) . All
non-Bolshevik political factions were to fall victim to the Cheka within
the first year of itâs operations, within itâs first month the infamous
Peter and Paul fortress in St Petersburg was filled to the brim with
political prisoners. On the night of April the 11^(th) 1918 (again
during our âcontrolâ period ) Cheka units raided 26 anarchist centres in
Moscow , killing 40 in the initial fighting and arresting over 500.
The terror was not just a means of disposing of dissidents but also a
means of labour discipline, to quote Lenin again, this time writing in
December 1917, : âIn one place they (i.e. the Cheka) will put into
prison a dozen rich men, a dozen scoundrels, half a dozen workers who
shirk on the job..... (my emphasis)â ,âone out of every ten idlers will
be shotâ. [8]
Then we have the famous fourteen Imperialist armies or the âfourteen
capitalist nationsâ as Parenti calls them. Who were they? Well we have
Turkey, Germany and Austria-Hungary for starters all of whom were outed
from the territory of the Russian empire as a result of their defeat in
the First World War. Then we have the Allied intervention which really
took off after the First World War, that is the intervention of the
Britain, France, Japan, the United States, Italy and Canada. Then we
have newly independent Poland involved in intermittent incursions into
the what is now the Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania culminating in the
offensive into Bolshevik occupied Ukraine in the spring of 1920. Count
them thatâs ten states, or seven really as the Central Powers pulled out
early in the game and only had a very minimal involvement in the
beginning of the civil war.
Where/who are the other four? or seven? Is it? Georgia, the Ukraine,
Finland, who by declaring their independence from Russia (in most cases
later to be quashed by the state which to quote Parenti âprovided vital
assistance to national liberation movements in countries around the
world.â â around the world perhaps meaning as far away from the U.S.S.R.
as possible) could be said to have invaded the Soviet Union, even if
only someone cloned by the Kremlin would say this. Perhaps the fourteen
includes the Czech legion â a force of former war prisoners and
nationalist activists fighting for Czech independence on the side of
Russia in the great war and later to clash with the Bolsheviks. Or
perhaps the other four are the different white armies of Russia, a neat
trick presenting the Whites as more formidable than they actually were
by counting their weakness i.e. division as a strength. Or perhaps New
Zealand, South Africa and Australia were also involved , though I find
no mention of them in the official history of the Communist party or
elsewhere.
In any case why are you questioning this I hear you cry and ignoring
that far more interesting and pressing concern â the single-handed
victory of the Red Army over the combined forces of the United States,
Britain, France, Italy, Canada and Japan plus the White Armies, and the
various nationalist forces which would be surely the single most amazing
event in world history especially when you consider that only a matter
of months before the Bolsheviks could not even resist imperial Germany
alone. It would be the single most amazing event in world history except
for the fact that it is beaten into third place by the ability of the
establishments in those countries to obscure the extent of their
intervention from the public and by the ability of the Polish state that
well known militaristic, imperialist super-power to defeat the Red Army
in 1920 thereby achieving a feat which all the others together could not
do. Or perhaps all is not as it seems and this âAllied interventionâ was
not all it was cracked up to be. To quote Voline, a Russian anarchist
sent into exile by both of Russiaâs absolutist regimes :
âAccording to legend, that intervention was highly important. It is
primarily in this way that the Bolsheviks explain the strength and
success of some of the white movements. That assertion, however, belies
reality. It is a gross exaggeration. In fact, the foreign intervention
during the Russian Revolution was never either vigorous or persevering.
A modest amount of aid, in money, munitions, and equipment: that was all
. The Whites themselves complained bitterly of [its paucity] later on.
And as for the detachments of troops sent to Russia, they always were of
minor significance and played almost no tangible part.â [9]
Essentially these military units occupied a few ports and guarded parts
of the rear areas of the White armies to ensure that supplies got
through to them (a somewhat futile task as due to the corruption with
the white movement much aid ended up on the black market ) . The main
body of Allied troops appears to have been centred on the port of
Vladivostok , those of you unfamiliar with the distance between Moscow
and Vladivostok think London to Hong Kong.
Says Parenti: âBut a real socialism, it is argued , would be controlled
by the workers themselves through direct participation instead of being
run by Leninists, Stalinists, Castroites, or other ill-willed, power
hungry, bureaucratic cabals of evil men who betray revolutions.
Unfortunate, this âpure socialismâ view is ahistorical and
nonfalsifiable; it cannot be tested against the actualities of history.
It compares an ideal against an imperfect reality , and the reality
comes off a poor second.......The pure socialistsâ ideological
anticipations remain untainted by existing practise. They do not explain
how the manifold functions of a revolutionary society would be
organised, how external attack and internal sabotage would be thwarted,
how bureaucracy avoided, scarce resources allocated, policy differences
settled, priorities set, and production and distribution conducted.â
In refuting this argument we must keep in mind a number of things:
firstly Parenti is ignoring the âexisting practiseâ of just about any
revolution worthy of the name for they all included directly democratic
aspects which âpure socialistsâ or âLeft anti-Communistsâ see as the
answer to the questions he raises and from whence we derive our ideas;
secondly a revolution is a mass movement of the people, by the people,
for the people, it is a creative act produced by, who shall I say the
public? the people? so the average guy reading this knows what Iâm on
about or the proletariat? so the robots from the Red planet reading this
will not accuse me of lacking a âmaterialist class analysisâ or some
such; and finally a number of âpure socialistsâ active during the
Russian revolution published works which have been translated into
English and answer, at least in part or attempt to, the questions he
raises .
We can see these three points and the answer to Parentiâs argument in
the following snapshot of an âactuality of historyâ of âexisting
practiseâ in Krondstadt during the Russian Revolution:
âAll maters concerning public services in Kronstadt and the internal
life of the city were administered by the citizens themselves, through
the medium of house committees and militia, and little by little they
advanced towards the socialisation of dwellings and of all urban
services. Generally speaking, at Kronstadt and elsewhere in Russia
before the enthronement of the Bolsheviks, the inhabitants of a house
first organised a number of tenantsâ meetings. These meetings named a
tenantsâ committee, which consisted of men who were energetic and
capable of fulfilling some necessary function.
The Committee supervised the upkeep of the house and the welfare of the
inhabitants, it designated the day and night janitors, etc.. Each House
Committee delegated one of itâs members to the Street Committee, which
was in charge of matters that concerned the whole street. Then came the
District Committee, the Borough Committee and finally the City
Committee, which was concerned with the interests of the whole city and
, in a natural and logical manner, carried out whatever centralisation
of services was necessary. The organisation of the militia was similar
to that of the Committees : each house had a group of militiamen, drawn
from the tenants ; there were also street militia, district militia,
etc....â
âAnother interesting constructive enterprise was a kind of horticultural
commune which was set up when the inhabitants of Kronstadt used the
empty land between the shores and the city for collective vegetable
gardens. Groups of city people, consisting of about 50 persons living in
the same district or working in the same shop, undertook to work the
land in common. Each of these communities received from the city a plot
of land chosen by lot. The community members were helped by specialists,
surveyors and agronomists.
All questions of interest to members of these communities were discussed
at meetings of delegates or in general assemblies.â
âThese kitchen gardens rendered an important service to the inhabitants
of Kronstadt, especially, during periods of famine, in 1918 and later.â
[10]
Thatâs just a glimpse into a far wider phenomenon , but it serves to
illustrate some guiding principles of democratic organisation . Firstly
mass assemblies of all people in the area, workplace or army unit, in
this case the tenants of a house, then the establishment of committees
of delegates, mandated by the assembly, and finally their federation
with other local committees to form an administration for a city or
industry. During the Russian Revolution there was a proliferation of
democratic organisations, the traditional peasant commune seized control
of the landed estates, and organised trade with the cities; factory
committees took control over workplaces ;there was a democratisation
within the army, with officers elected by the men, a practise carried on
into the Red Guard militia and into some of the partisan units of the
Civil War . Similar directly democratic organisation is to be found in
every revolutionary period.
This should answer much of Parentiâs argument . Though the answers to
some of his questions are obvious e.g. how would âpolicy differences be
settledâ and could only be posed by an advocate of totalitarian
âMarxistâ dictatorship evidently unfamiliar with the concept of majority
vote. Others, however , are more problematic, in particular âhow
external attack ...would be thwartedâ. So I will turn again to the
âactualities of historyâ , to the âexisting practiseâ of the Russian
Revolution , and to how âpure socialistsâ and âLeft anti-Communistsâ
active in the Russian Revolution explained their idea of meeting
military threats .
In 1926 exiled veterans of the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of the
Ukraine published their answer to this particular question. Given as the
Insurgent Army was considered cognisant enough with the business of
thwarting eternal attack for the Bolsheviks to enter several alliances
with them, and for the Bolsheviks to devote whole regiments to their
destruction, it is fair to say that these veterans might know something
of what they are talking about . Rather than localised partisan units
they advocate âunity in the plan of operations and unity of common
commandâ. They advocate voluntary service rather than conscription, as
it was the Bolshevikâs conscription policy probably helped the Whites
for it proved to be yet another policy alienating them from the
peasantry .
In sharp contrast with the âCommunistâ party , they advocate âthe total
submission of the revolutionary army to the masses of the workers and
peasants as represented by the worker and peasant organisations common
throughout the country â [11] , in other words the army is to be
subordinate to the sort of organisations described in the above extract
on Kronstadt. Whereas the Red Army was the instrument not of a free
people but of an absolutist state.
Five.
Parenti points to archival documentation suggesting that between 1921
and 1953 a total of 799,455 executions were carried out by the N.K.V.D.,
thus the repression did not have the millions of victims as is claimed.
The idea that perhaps the documentation does not exist appears not to
have occurred to him, certainly it seems to me that for much of itâs
history the Russian secret police has been too busy shooting to do much
counting. Nonetheless, there is according to the literature a
inconsistency in Soviet census results suggesting millions of missing
persons in the 1930âs. Parenti doesnât mention this. Ascertaining the
death toll from earlier repression is more a matter of guesswork, but
evidence from the writings and sayings of State functionaries would
suggest a large numbers of deaths, larger than the figure from the
N.K.V.D. archives. In any case suppose this is a matter of only 799,455
executions some of which may (as Parenti says) have been of
non-political offenders and of wartime collaborators (Parenti mentions
the âconsiderable numbers who collaboratedâ if the U.S.S.R. was such a
wonderful society why would there be these âconsiderable numbersâ ?) . I
wish that these âsocialistsâ valued Russian, Ukrainian, Belorussian,
Latvian, Polish, Hungarian, Chinese, Cambodian , etc... lives as much as
they value American lives ; if it was a matter of only 799,455 people or
half that figure or an eight of that figure dying in political
repression in the United States I think these âsocialistsâ would not be
so quick to counterbalance the horror by speaking of the social
achievements of American capitalism. During the 20^(th) century
political repression in the U.S.A. took hundreds of lives, at the same
time in the U.S.S.R., if we accept Parentiâs argument , political
repression took hundreds of thousands of lives. Yet Parenti praises the
U.S.S.R. and damns the U.S..
A footnote in Parnetiâs chapter dealing with repression, giving what
appears to be his sole mention of famine, reads âNo doubt, the famines
that occurred during the years of Western invasion,
counter-revolutionary intervention, White Guard civil war, and landowner
resistance to collectivisation took many victims.â
You would never think it from that , but these famines to a large degree
were caused by the policies of the âCommunistâ party state, this was the
exclusive cause of the latter one. The first famine was the product of,
partly, the legacy of Tsarist society, but principally of the Bolshevik
policy of Grain Monopoly. The Grain Monopoly was instituted prior to the
real beginnings of civil war and made the state the sole trader of grain
(it was later extended to most food stuffs), under it the peasantry had
to sell their produce to the state and accept a completely devalued
currency as payment. Naturally, this, which was obviously coupled with
the suppression of private trade, was not conducive to agricultural
productivity . Worse was to come, this was followed by grain requisition
which simply meant that armed âCommunistâ detachments extorted the
products of peasantâs labour from them at gun point and frequently
resorted to torture to find hidden stocks. Quotas were set at such a
level that the producers were at times even left with insufficient food
for themselves and insufficient seed for sowing. The result of this
policy, which made zero economic or political sense, was major famine
and millions of deaths. It is this and not âWestern invasion,
counter-revolutionary intervention, White Guard civil war ... â which
caused the famine. In fact the American Relief Association sent food
supplies to Russia with the support of the American government and
received praise from none other than Kremlin boss Kamenev for doing so.
I remember seeing a âDaily Workerâ cartoon of the time, criticising the
lack of food aid for Russia, depicting the stereotype fat capitalist
before a victim of starvation and saying (before doleing out the
support) âBut first what is your politicsâ ; in actuality this was the
Kremlinâs policy â food was diverted from disloyal areas.
Parenti devotes much of his book to the effects of âcapitalist
restorationâ post 1989 and leaves much unanswered, principally he gives
no account of why, if life pre-1989 was so good and life post-1989 so
terrible, was there no massive reaction against this âcapitalist
restorationâ . It does not occur to him that perhaps the social problems
of post-âCommunistâ Eastern Europe gestated in the 70âs and 80âs rather
than springing into life fully born in 1990 .
He gives a long litany of the crimes of various âcapitalist restorativeâ
governments in Eastern Europe, but seems to be confused as to exactly
what is âcapitalist restorationâ and what is âcommunismâ. Witness the
following description of one of those nasty restorers of capitalism
(amazing the amount of these people produced in the upper echelons of
âCommunistâ states ) âa self -professed admirer of Adolph Hitlerâs
organisational skills, shut down the independent newspapers and radio
stations â (of course thousands of these were allowed to openly exist
throughout the Eastern bloc in the good old days) â and decreed the
opposition parliament defunct.â (exactly as Lenin had done in 1918! ). â
was awarded with absolute power in a referendum that claimed an inflated
turnout, with no one knowing how many ballots were printed or how they
were counted.â (all similarity to the âSovietâ Union purely
co-incidental ) . âSome opposition leaders fled for their livesâ
(something never known to happen under âCommunismâ) . The only problem
is that the politician so described is none other than Alexander
Lukashenko, Tsar of Belarus, a state where not only is so-called âpublic
ownershipâ very much alive and kicking ( most of the economy is
state-owned) but which retains much of the trappings of the U.S.S.R..
Likewise the leaders of Polandâs Solidarity party are attacked for
various anti-Semitic outbursts, another nasty innovation of âcapitalist
restorationâ ? Yes, but only yes if the anti-Semitic campaigns of the
Polish âCommunistâ state are sent down Orwellâs âmemory holeâ into
oblivion.
Ultimately, however, even Parenti can give no account of post-1989
âcapitalist restorationâ without reference to the discontent felt by the
subjects of the âCommunistâ states . That said, he does manage to ignore
the long history of uprisings and revolutions against the
âMarxist-Leninistâ system, which date right back to itâs inception . His
explanation for this discontent in utopia is priceless: âPeople took for
granted what they had in the way of human services and entitlements
while hungering for the consumer goods dangling in their imaginations.
The human capacity for discontent should not be underestimated. â
âOnce our needs are satisfied, then our wants tend to escalate , and our
wants become our needs. A rise in living standards often incites a still
greater rise in expectations. As people are treated better , they want
more of the good things and are not necessarily grateful for what they
already have.â
âIn 1989, I asked the G.D.R. ambassador in Washington, D.C. why his
country made such junky two-cylinder cars. He said the goal was to
develop good public transport and discourage the use of costly private
vehicles. But when asked to choose between a rational, efficient,
economically sound and ecologically sane mass transportation system or
an automobile with itâs instant mobility, special status, privac , and
personal empowerment, the East Germans went for the latter, as do most
people in the world.â
I am reminded of Bertold Brechtâs poem âThe Solutionâ :
âThe Secretary of the Writerâs Union Had leaflets distributed in
Stalinallee Stating that the people Had forfeited the confidence of the
government And could win it back only By redoubled efforts. Would it not
be easier In that case for the government To dissolve the people And
elect another?â
All quotations of Micheal Parenti are from his book âBlackshirts and
Reds: Rational Fascism and the Overthrow of Communismâ , published by
City Lights Books.
All comparisons between the United States and the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republic are purely for the purpose of exposing double
standards and should not be taken as support for any state.
[1] Quoted in âAn Phoblacht/Republican Newsâ 4 May 2000.
[2] Quoted in âState Capitalism in Russiaâ by Tony Cliff page 69.
[3] From âA Peopleâs Tragedy. A History of the Russian Revolutionâ by
Orlando Figes page 683.
[4] From âEyewitness : The Autobiography of Gomulkaâs Interpreterâ by
Erwin Weit page 123.
[5] Quoted in âThe Harvest of Sorrow : Soviet Collectivisation and the
Terror Famineâ by Robert Conquest page 35.
[6] Quoted in âThe Guillotine at Work : Volume 1 : The Leninist
Counter-Revolutionâ by Gregory Petrovich Maximoff page 53.
[7] Quoted in âThe Bolsheviks and Workers Control : 1917 to 1921 : the
State and Counter-Revolution â by Maurice Brinton pages 40/41.
[8] Quoted in âA Peopleâs Tragedy. A History of The Russian Revolutionâ
by Orlando Figes page 524.
[9] From âThe Unknown Revolutionâ by Voline page 431.
[10] Ibid. pages 456/457/458.
[11] From âOrganisational Platform of the Libertarian Communistsâ by
Makhno, Mett, Archinov, Valevsky, Linsky, page 31.