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Title: Bourgeois Oligarchy Author: Mikhail Bakunin Date: July 1871 Language: en Topics: bourgeois, Libertarian Labyrinth Source: Retrieved on 25th April 2021 from https://www.libertarian-labyrinth.org/bakunin-library/bourgeois-oligarchy-la-revolte-july-1871/ Notes: La révolte, July 1871
It is obvious that liberty will not be restored to the world and that
the real interests of society, of all the groups, of all the local
organizations, as well as all the individuals who form society, could
find real satisfaction only after the abolition of the State. It is
obvious that all the so-called general interests of society, that the
State is supposed to represent, and that, in reality, are nothing but
the general and constant negation of the positive interests of the
regions, provinces, communes, associations and the majority of
individuals subject to the State, constitute an abstraction, a fiction,
a lie. The State is like a vast butcher’s shop, like an immense cemetery
where, under the sway of that abstraction, all the general men, all
those who make the living strength of a country, come foolishly to let
themselves be sacrificed and buried. Now, no abstraction exists by
itself, no abstraction having either the arms to create, or the stomach
to digest that mass of victims that we serve up to it, it is obvious
that the religious or celestial abstraction, God, represents, in
reality, the very positive, very real interests of a privileged class,
the clergy: it is equally obvious that its terrestrial complement, the
political abstraction, the State, represents the no less positive and
real interests of the class today principally, if not exclusively
exploiting, and which, besides, tends to include all the others, the
Bourgeoisie. And as the clergy is always divided and today tends to
divide still more into a very powerful and very rich minority, and a
majority very subordinate and quite miserable, just so the bourgeoisie
and its various social and political organizations, in industry, in
agriculture, in the bank and in commerce, as well as in the
administrative, financial, judiciary, university, police and military
functions of the State, tend to split more each day into a really
dominant oligarchy and a counter mass of creatures, more or less vain
and more or less defeated, living in a perpetual illusion, always more
cast off in the proletariat by an irresistible force, that of the
present economic development. The wretches are inevitably reduced to
serving as blind instruments of that all-powerful oligarchy.