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The Hunter International Socialist Club will have a meeting today, Wednesday, 1-3pm @ TH305B

Proposed Agenda for Hunter International Socialist Club 

1) Discussion on Socialist and Movements Article (60mins)
Article Text also posted in previous blog post below

2) Report back on Hunter GA (20mins) – Given that this is such a huge priority I think that we should be doing weekly branch reports on it. Things shift very rapidly and new questions always arise and we need to make sure that everyone in our branch, although may not be able to attend the GA, knows what is going on, knows whats being discussed, what questions are being raised, and what arguments need to be made. As of now, it looks like these GA are going to be the focal point for all of our movement work on campus. This is exactly what we have been saying needs to happen – that OWS spread to local basis – and we need to be at the center of it.3) Sotheby’s Workers Strike – Labor and student alliance (20mins) – We need a report back from the rally this past Thursday – what is the potential for a real student labor alliance?I’m still trying to wrap my head around how to practically work this out. I think that this needs to be a serious discussion given the high potential for further mobilization around both labor issues and a larger student movement. Also given our last branch meeting on this very topic, I think that we should be formulating collectively as a branch on how we want to begin building this relationship.

I think that we need to rethink our branch roles a bit and we should add into that mix a labor point person.

Can people respond to this and give their thoughts and assessment. Its something that we’ve been thinking about and talking about outside of branch meetings and I feel like that discussion needs to be taking place in our meetings themselves. I’m also thinking that perhaps this is something that should be taken up in workings groups coming out of the GA, but I think that it will probably need to be initiated by our members. In any event its something that we need to wrap our heads around as a branch

5) Announcements (10mins):

– Next discussion topic – I’m going to propose that it be Tyranny of Structurelessness and we can vote on it.
– MoM study group
– Conference reminder
– Any others?

Like always please read and re-read the proposal and respond with any disagreements, amendments, questions, etc.

Our next meeting will have a discussion on this article. We want to discuss this article within the context of the Global Occupy movement and how socialists should organize together in the movement. The article is based on the Free Speech Movement on College Campuses in the 60’s and the role the International Socialists played at Berkeley College.

Originally posted here

Socialists and movementsBy JOEL GEIER

OVER THE past year mass consciousness has shifted to the left, as the now majority sentiment against the war and the mass immigrant rights movement show. For socialists this welcome turn is also a challenge: the radicalization of mass consciousness is a necessary precondition for creating a revolutionary socialist party. To build such an organization, radicals have to master the art of how revolutionaries function within mass movements.

Often in history, when mass movements came to socialist consciousness the potential for building a revolutionary party was missed because of the absence of the necessary cadres with the experience to provide socialist leadership. Aware of that history, we socialists have acknowledged the need for party building long before such mass radicalization occurs.

Yet for understandable reasons, party building in non-revolutionary situations has often been neglected. In reactionary periods, the unfavorable balance of class forces and the strength of capitalist ideology, as well as the low level of consciousness and struggle, can preclude party building. That was the reality of the 1950s during the era of the McCarthy witch-hunts, as well as during the Reagan era of the 1980s. The best socialist organizing was restricted to keeping revolutionary ideas alive, and recruits were a handful. But in radical situations like 1968, when the movement from below explodes, revolutionary organizations grow enormously. But without prior party building, the chance of success may be lost.

Crucial for success are the periods when a radicalization process has only just started. At those junctures the Left is still weak and recovering from past defeats. There is not the momentum of mass struggles, yet openings for organizing appear that form essential building blocks to lay the foundation of future struggles. In times like today, when consciousness starts to move left as new movements develop, socialists can ally in coalitions with others, organize small struggles, overcome isolation, and find a response in a radicalizing minority. We are now in a transitional period between conservative reaction and mass radicalization. It is a preparatory period in which revolutionaries can provide leadership in small struggles, build a left-wing base, and initiate the process of party building. Unfortunately, this continues to be a minority opinion in the socialist Left.

Party building, while no longer precluded, is not easy in a transitional period. Movement activity begins in fits and starts and radical consciousness emerges in fragile shape, difficult to retain or sustain. The conservative baggage of past setbacks and defeats weighs on the present. Confirmation of revolutionary perspectives by reality—i.e., by advancing, successful mass struggles—is still in the future. But the first signs of radical ferment are a wake-up call for socialists to grasp the potential.

That was demonstrated in the last period of mass struggle, the 1960s. First a warning: Romantic views of the 1960s lead some to conclude that it is impossible to organize under today’s conditions. Turn the clock back to 1959 for a reality check. Politics then were defined by the Cold War, an anti-communist crusade, and Jim Crow segregation enforced by police terror in the South. Abortion was illegal, and gays were still deep in the closet. The 1960s radicalization emerged from a more conservative social setting than today. Yet the potential for radical leadership and organization was apparent to those involved at the early stages of the movement.

The upsurge begins

The beginning of the upsurge began on February 1, 1960, when four Black students sat in at a Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina. Sit-ins quickly spread throughout the South, supported by boycotts in the North. But the movement was small; at most 10–20,000 people took part in its early stage. There is no revolutionary immaculate conception. As in all new movements, the activists had an extreme form of what Marxists call mixed consciousness. Their politics were an amalgam of liberal, conservative, and radical ideas. Elements of each existed in confused and uneasy collision within the same minds. Militants battled segregation courageously, but believed non-violence, Christian love, or alliance with the northern Democratic Party, could win the struggle.

Much of the Left dismissed the new movement on the grounds that the activists were Christian reformists with illusions in the Democratic Party. Revolutionaries, so went the argument, shouldn’t compromise their principles by involvement in such a movement. This static sectarian logic made them blind to the dialectic of struggle. Those who abstained from the existing struggle, while passively awaiting more radical struggle, were left behind. Some Left groups have quietly buried this part of their history because it seems so absurd. How could you go through the 1960s and not take part in the civil rights movement? But most Left groups then thought the movement not radical enough for their participation.

But ten years of civil rights, antiwar, women’s rights, and other struggles raised the consciousness of many of its participants, who began with liberal, bourgeois ideas and ended up embracing anti-imperialism, hostility to the Democratic Party, and sympathy to socialist ideas. As consciousness rose, and the movement became increasingly combative and confident, its radicalism deepened. In 1970, 40 percent of all Blacks under twenty-five identified themselves with the Black Panther Party, 40 percent of all college students said that a revolution in the United States was necessary, and more than 25 percent of the American army were AWOL or deserters. Soldiers within the army revolted against the war in Vietnam, refused to fight, and fragged [killed with fragmentation grenades] officers who tried to lead them into battle.

Each emerging movement took inspiration from, and was politically influenced by, other struggles—the movement for civil rights and later Black Power, the fight against the Vietnam War, the women’s liberation movement, the gay liberation movement, and the struggle for Latino and Native American rights. As the movements began to involve young workers, activists also began to question the meaning and nature of work under capitalism. Movement activists demanded control over the crucial decisions that affected their daily lives, and started to pose an alternative for a society without oppression and exploitation.

Consciousness changes in struggle, but there is no preordained level, or particular content, that rising consciousness automatically takes. Socialist consciousness emerges as the movement matures. Until then consciousness takes many different forms, including ideas that turn out to be dead-ends, which can derail a movement before it ever attains socialist consciousness. There are no inevitable lessons people mechanically learn from struggle. There has to be debate and clarification in the struggle over lessons of past fights and what is the best way forward, in which various arguments contend for influence. The active intervention of revolutionary Marxists in struggle sets out to generalize from the struggle, clarify its political lessons, formulate strategies to win, and pose initiatives for the movement that move it leftward, toward socialist consciousness.
Movement activists are not blank slates whose heads are waiting to be filled up. They carry ideological baggage from their past experiences and they are influenced by the clash of contending ideas and leaders that always exist within every struggle. Different political currents combat for the direction of the movement. Whether or not their ideas are appropriate or beneficial, most sincerely believe that what they are proposing is in the best interest of the movement. Revolutionaries are one contender among others for leadership, having to prove their ideas in practice and building a base of collaborators to struggle for the direction, policy, and perspectives of the movement.

For example, within the current antiwar movement, the International Socialist Organization (ISO) presented a principled left-wing political alternative based on its characterization of the American war on Iraq as one for oil and empire. It argued for an antiwar perspective centered on immediate withdrawal, self-determination for Iraq, mass mobilizations, non-exclusion of participants, defending Arabs and Muslims from racism, and no reliance on the Democrats. That perspective lost to the liberal politics presented by the popular front leftists that lead United For Peace and Justice (UFPJ). The movement, still at a very low level of consciousness, accepted their argument that the realistic way to end the war was by supporting the Democratic Party and its congressional wing.

The consequences of that policy was that the dynamic, massive movement of 2003 was subordinated to supporting a prowar candidate who called for more troops to Iraq, and a better way to fight American imperialism’s “war on terror.” This “realism” led to movement demoralization, and to its demobilization and disintegration in 2004. If the socialist Left were stronger, its alternative might have won, and the antiwar movement would have continued demonstrating, mobilizing, and gotten stronger and more radical. That is why the struggle of revolutionaries politically inside the movement is key to strengthening the movement.

Some radicals confine their movement work not to “antagonize anyone.” They are movement good guys. They go along to get along—“do good movement building work, but don’t raise politically controversial issues.” They are unwilling or unable to challenge existing movement consciousness. They are afraid to raise disagreements with liberals who might charge the Left with disrupting unity, or having “an outside agenda.” That often intimidates radicals who have not fully broken with liberal consciousness, are insecure about their radical ideas, or their ability to win other people to those ideas.
The right wing of the movement often red-baits anyone to their left, trying to restrict democratic debate to the confines of what the liberal party line defines as respectable politics. They claim that socialists’ attempts to raise consciousness hurt the unity and growth of the movement. Radicals don’t do the movement or themselves any good by capitulating to these movement policemen. If socialists don’t struggle for a set of political ideas to shape that movement, others will. Movements as well as nature abhor a vacuum. A policy and leadership will win out. If radicals fail, the movement will go in a more conservative direction that will set back its growth and hold it under the political control of the Democrats, and the liberal wing of imperialism.

Our ideas for the movement are based on our principles. The ways we introduce those politics are our tactics. We follow Lenin’s guideline, “firm principles; flexible tactics.” We don’t weaken our principles for popularity; we try to find the most effective way to win support for them, using the appropriate, totally flexible, tactics to do so. “By any means necessary,” as Malcolm X said.

In the early 1960s, at the beginning of the civil rights movement, radicalism first expressed itself around the question of tactics rather than politics. Not every movement is going to develop this way, but there is some similarity with today. From the beginning, activists accepted direct action, mass mobilizations, sit-ins, and arrests as legitimate and necessary tactics in the struggle. The most important lesson that a new movement has to learn is to rely upon itself, not to subordinate its struggle to the courts, politicians, or established institutions and authority. This is key to whether it will develop as a movement from below for social change, or whether it will be trapped in the politics of reform from above.

The civil rights movement began with self-reliance in 1960 because the Supreme Court had come out for Brown v. Board of Education in 1954, and six years later there were no integrated schools, public accommodations, or the right to vote in the South. It was obvious to the new activists that it was useless to wait for the courts or the liberal politicians, and that if you didn’t rely upon yourselves segregation would continue.
That sentiment of self-reliance has relevance to current struggles. After the appointments of archconservatives John Roberts and Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court without any serious resistance from Democrats, many activists are beginning to understand that you can’t wait for the Supreme Court and the Democratic Party to defend abortion rights. Even people who are going to vote Democratic are disgusted with the party and know it won’t fight for them. Rather than tapping into the mass antiwar sentiment, Democratic Party leaders are positioning themselves to the right of President Bush on matters of “national security.” One of the first steps in the process of radicalization is for the movement to accept that we have to rely upon ourselves, that we have to establish a course independent of the Democratic Party and not rely upon the liberal institutions and spokespeople of the established status quo. In the civil rights movement, people were prepared at the very beginning to break the law, to go to jail, and not to accept the authority of the American government. Today, some of the counter-recruitment demonstrations have shown a similar spirit.

An important aspect of socialist work in movements is to always be proposing ways to expand them. As the movement goes to the left, socialists always have to be sensitive not to create barriers that exclude new people from entering. Socialism can only occur by masses of people determining their own fate. We put that into practice inside struggles by always attempting to expand the movement to draw in more people, to involve them in the process of their own self-emancipation.

We reject elitism, the self-congratulatory feeling of some political tendencies that they are the elect few, superior to the “backward masses” around them. We are no different than other working class and student activists. We are just among the first people in this process of radicalization. Our job is to listen to those with whom we are in struggle, to hear what they’re saying, to be able to learn from them, but also to teach them what we have learned.

You cannot accept whatever the current level of struggle is. Our job is always to try to raise consciousness, awareness, and the level of struggle, wherever possible. We do not bow down to the current level of struggle nor opportunistically flatter the movement, by saying: “Whatever your doing, that’s right, that’s great, this is the best of all possible struggles, it could not possibly get any better.” We are always looking for ways to strengthen the movement, by expanding the number of its participants, raising its level of struggle, enriching its understanding, its politics, its combativeness, and its confidence. We always have to try and create a bridge between ourselves and movement activists, to move them closer to socialist politics.

Trotsky, to paraphrase, summarized it very simply: “We will work with anyone but we are going all the way.” We will work with anyone for however far they’re willing to go in the struggle. If they only want to go three steps, to achieve a particular aim, we work with them. Knowing that we are going all the way means we are not threatened by anyone else’s hesitancy. We don’t moralistically denounce them, saying, “We know that you really are sellouts who won’t go more than three steps.” We don’t blame them. It’s the job of the advanced always to try and get them to go further.

We try to develop the critical mass and political sophistication of the revolutionary organization so that we are capable of convincing them. But even if they don’t go further to begin with, we’re prepared to go with them as far as they are capable of at that time, having confidence in knowing where we’re going and what our direction is and that we will fight future battles in alliance with them.

The Berkeley Free Speech Movement

To illustrate how revolutionaries function in mass movements, I want to examine a chapter from our history—the role the International Socialists (IS), the predecessor to the ISO, played in the Berkeley Free Speech Movement (FSM). In that four-month-long struggle the radicals who led it won the active support and involvement of the entire campus. For the first time since the 1930s, the Left proved that it could lead and gain the allegiance of thousands. Following the FSM as radicalization spread through the national student movement it became clear that we were at a turning point in the New Left of the 1960s, that a whole generation was open to radical politics.

It was also a turning point for the IS. We formed as an organization on September 17, 1964, the same night that the FSM was organized. We started as a local, Berkeley group with eighteen people. Our founding meeting was by invitation only, to explain to our substantial periphery in the civil rights movement why we were setting up a new socialist organization. We had to move our scheduled meeting to an earlier time, so that participants, who included Mario Savio and Jack Weinberg, who were to become the most important FSM leaders, could attend the founding meeting of the FSM.

In 1960, there were two socialist groups at Berkeley. When we formed, we were the ninth socialist group on campus. After four years of movement struggle, the New Left had begun the process of developing an ideology, and had overcome the McCarthyism of the 1950s, when liberal and even some “Left” groups had helped the Right in red-baiting and policing the movement to keep out more radical socialist ideas. The result was that socialist ideas began to get a greater hearing.

There were substantial principled differences between the IS and the other Left groups. For example, the Communist Party, in its support for Stalinism, identified socialism as something bureaucratic and top-down, whereas our watchword was “socialism from below.” Other groups were utterly sectarian, refusing to have anything to do with those with whom they had any disagreements. Nevertheless, it was a problem to explain to people: “How do you differ from the eight other socialist groups,” or “why can’t all you socialists get together?” The fact that the ISO today is often the only socialist group in a city or at a school is an added reason to build an authentic socialist organization as rapidly as possible, before a host of other groups arise making socialist organization look like alphabet soup. People who are becoming socialists today don’t have to decide between the ISO and eight other groups, or worse, to use that confusion as the barrier for not committing themselves to any revolutionary politics.

Within weeks of its formation, the IS became not the largest but the most important left-wing group on campus. A student survey during the FSM revealed that the IS was better known than any other student organization at Berkeley. Our rapid prominence was a result of the role we played in the mass movement, a role we were prepared for by our involvement in the local civil rights movement.

The FSM was an outgrowth of the civil rights movement. Segregation de jure—legal segregation—existed in the South. In the North there was de facto segregation—racism in practice. In the liberal San Francisco Bay Area employers refused to hire Blacks as bank tellers, car salesmen, hotel waiters, supermarket clerks, among other jobs. Berkeley students had been mobilized in 1963–64 by the civil rights organizations to fight the employers’ racist hiring practices, gaining victories through mass demonstrations, sit-ins, and mass arrests.

The Berkeley Campus CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) chapter introduced a new tactic called the “shop-in” to open jobs for Blacks in the supermarkets. We would go into a store, load groceries into shopping carts, and wheel them to the cash register. The clerk would ring them up, and then we would say, “Oh gee, I forgot to bring any money.” We shut the stores down that way, until they would negotiate hiring with us. The university came under intense pressure from the employers, and their political representatives in the two capitalist parties, to clamp down on student political activity as a way to cripple the civil rights movement.

In September 1964, Clark Kerr, the university president, introduced new rules to restrict political activity on campus, banning on-campus meetings and fundraising for “off-campus political and social action.” Under the new university rules students could not raise money for the “illegal” Southern struggles, and those arrested at sit-ins, in addition to facing jail time, would also receive university discipline including expulsion, which the FSM labeled double jeopardy.

The main reason for the IS’s large role in the FSM was that the comrades who started the IS had the previous year organized the main student civil rights organization, Campus CORE. When the IS began it was already a leading political tendency in the Bay Area civil rights movement. We had struggled within the movement for over a year to train, educate and raise the political consciousness of the student civil rights activists. They were won to our perspectives and politics on civil rights, and on American politics. They agreed with our analysis on how the institutional racism of American capitalism and its political parties functioned.

They were our sympathizers and periphery. We had an ongoing political relationship with them and they looked to us for political direction and leadership. It was the CORE veterans who became the backbone, the militants, and the leadership of the Free Speech Movement. It is an important lesson. Some of the work the ISO has accomplished in educating and training activists in the current antiwar movement will carry over into the next phase of the radicalization, where they will have an ongoing and deepened political relationship to socialists.

The second reason the IS did so well was because the FSM began as a broad-based coalition, committed to the non-exclusion of any political tendency. Overcoming the ingrained red-baiting habits of American politics, we carried the argument that all groups, no matter their politics and ideology, should work together for a common aim. In fact, for the first three weeks of its existence the FSM was not called the FSM. Its original name was “The United Front.” It took in all campus organizations that were against the university rules that attempted to restrict student political activity. So, of course, that included the nine socialist clubs and the civil rights groups, but it also took in the Young Democrats, the Young Republicans, and Students for Goldwater, and Young Libertarians—everybody! All of the student groups that opposed restrictions on their own organizing were part of the movement. That was the bond that overcame exclusion and that held the united front together. Since it was the radicals who were most committed to the aims of the movement, the dynamic of the movement propelled them to leadership of the united front that became the FSM.

The third reason why we were so important inside the mass movement was that we helped shape its ideology, its major political principles, from its inception. The FSM began when Jack Weinberg—who had just joined the IS—was arrested at the Campus CORE table, and hundreds of students sat down around the police car in which he was held prisoner, preventing the police from hauling him off to jail. Mario Savio emerged as the main student leader, articulating the sentiments of the crowd as he spoke from the rooftop of the car.

The previous night, the IS had held its first public meeting with Hal Draper speaking on “Clark Kerr’s Vision of the University.” Both Jack and Mario, and other newly emerging FSM leaders, were at that meeting, and spoke to the crowd echoing what Hal had laid out. He argued that Kerr’s bureaucratic vision of the university—as a knowledge factory, with the students as raw material to be worked into an end product of middle management and civil servants—merged with the needs of the corporations.

After the first sit-in ended, we immediately published a pamphlet called The Mind of Clark Kerr, written by Hal Draper. It became the bible of the FSM. It was the most effective agit-prop pamphlet of the 1960s. The original press run was 2,000 copies, and in the first day, two of us sold 1,500 copies. The leadership and activists inside the FSM took up the ideas in it. They were saying, “We have to stop the factory, the bureaucratic machine, we’re human beings, not raw material to be processed.”

Our commitment to civil rights, free speech, mass movements from below, and no reliance on existing structures and politicians, allowed us to play an uncompromising role in the FSM, and to gain a reputation among the best militants, the best builders of the movement. That is a wonderful reputation to have, a necessity if an organization is to be accepted and contend for leadership. But by itself, being the best builder does not raise the political consciousness of the people in struggle. The respect we won for our activity gave us the credibility to argue for our politics, our ideas. We used that opening to show in practice that those ideas made sense, that our understanding of what was going on related to a basic socialist analysis of American society, and that our commitment to the movement was tied to our political principles.

We constantly, and publicly, analyzed all the events of these four months. The newly formed IS did not have a newspaper, so we put out leaflets for mass distribution that analyzed the unfolding struggle—the role of the administration; who the Board of Regents were, their politics, and ties to the economic and political establishment of California; the vacillations of the liberals; and the role of the liberal Democratic governor, Pat Brown, whose police were called in to brutalize students, make arrests, and try to break the movement. We explained events to people and their own feelings about these events in a better way than the mass movement with all of its different political currents and ambiguity could explain itself. The leaflets gave us a huge audience. There was tremendous sympathy for our political analysis of the movement and how to achieve its goals. We put into practice Marx’s method on revolutionaries in movement struggles. Marx stated in the Communist Manifesto that, “The Communists fight for the attainment of the immediate aims, for the enforcement of the momentary interests of the working class; but in the movement of the present, they also represent and take care of the future of that movement.”

At every major stage of the struggle we held a public meeting where in addition to IS speakers we tried to draw in speakers from the movement. Many of whom, like Mario Savio, were sympathizers. Others represented the major trends and disagreements that existed within the movement. We provided the opportunity for an open, sophisticated political forum to debate and discuss movement problems and direction. It provided a non-sectarian space in which people could come and talk, and it put us at the center of movement dialogue.

At each stage of the movement we used leaflets, public meetings, and interventions at FSM meetings to argue for what the next step of the movement should be. It is more difficult to lay out the next step than to come up with a program to cover all future steps. Radicals sometimes substitute their own consciousness for a realistic and honest assessment of where consciousness actually is. The most important thing in any struggle is to pick out the key link, of exactly what the movement should do next, to focus in on that, explain it to people, and win them to it so you’re not the only ones who are proposing this next step. We try to search for the next step so that we can win the movement to its next practice. There were many next steps during the FSM. But to illustrate the approach we will discuss the most important, the student strike.

The student strike

There was a huge student sit-in on December 2, 1964, in which 800 students were arrested. It was the largest student sit-in and mass arrest in U.S. history until then. Before this, the IS had proposed that there be a student strike to broaden the movement beyond the committed activists and to draw the whole campus into action.

There hadn’t been student strikes since the antiwar strikes led by socialists and communists of the 1930s. A student strike should never be proposed if only a small minority will go out. The strike will lose, people will be demoralized, and the movement set back. You have to have a down-to-earth assessment that says if a strike is called, at least a decisive minority, with the potential to gain majority support, will respond to the call, giving the strike a realistic chance of winning.

We had proposed a strike in the weeks leading up to December 2, but the FSM leadership bodies voted it down in favor of the more familiar tactic of a sit-in. But in the middle of the sit-in the steering committee of the FSM met and decided they also wanted a strike. Since the strike had been proposed by the IS, they requested that I leave the sit-in and start to organize the strike. The FSM asked us to organize the strike, which eventually brought us victory in the free speech fight, because we had been the people proposing it, and we were prepared to take responsibility for our proposal. As a result of our activity, we became known nationally.

Any honest assessment of socialist functioning has to review and evaluate everything that was done. Success is wonderful, but examining mistakes can be more productive—not to self-flagellate, or wallow in doubt and confusion, but to correct errors and learn from the mistakes. The biggest mistake was that we did not recruit. We did not build our organization. Even though the IS’s reputation and influence grew, the organization did not.

It was not because we adapted politically. The worst error socialists can make inside a mass movement is to adapt to its political level, depriving it of potential leadership for further development. We fought for radical politics within the movement in a principled and effective manner. But in 1964 we still carried political baggage from the 1950s. We didn’t believe that the period allowed for the building of a revolutionary party. It took the events of 1968 to bring us to that conclusion. So in 1964, out mindset was: Isn’t it better to gain mass influence than to recruit a few more people?

Mass struggle, when your influence is rising, is precisely the time to grow. One mistake that revolutionaries make is to get so caught up in the hectic pace and excitement of movement work that they don’t do the equally important job of winning people to revolutionary politics and its organizational expression. When you’re fighting for politics inside a mass movement and shaping it, you’re creating a political bridge between the mass movement and socialist organization. When consciousness is shifting leftward, when mass struggle convinces people that another world is possible, people are most willing to examine socialist ideas and organization.

If revolutionaries don’t reap what they have sown, others will. Democrats, anarchists, social democrats, authoritarians, elitists, sectarians, and opportunists will all present their alternatives. In the course of struggle—at its high points and at its culmination—activists search for a channel, an organized expression for their newfound radicalism. Without socialist organization, a vacuum is left that some other political tendency is going to fill.
Many activists who don’t join socialist organizations are going to disappear. They will have done something heroic for a couple of months of their life and then they’ll go back to the pressures of daily life and their personal problems. And all of us have personal problems—that’s a given in every stage of our lives. They go back to all the conservative pressures on them—from their friends and their family. They gave the antiwar movement two or three months and American imperialism didn’t collapse—“it was more difficult than I thought, so pass the joint.” They will be wasting their lives if we don’t recruit them. They will sink back into the liberal swamp.


The right wing of the movement may try to prevent socialist recruitment through red-baiting slander—“your poaching on the movement,” or, “you have another agenda.” We are not poaching on the movement; when we recruit we are building the movement, because socialist organization is the continuity between the struggles.

Even in the 1960s, there wasn’t just a rising tide of continuous struggle. There were ups and downs. After big struggles, there were three- or six-month lulls before another struggle. Mass movements have their ups and downs, but the revolutionaries—whose aim is to provide leadership—should not go up and down with the mass movements. We use lulls in one movement to shift resources into building another. We use lulls in the struggle for reading, discussing, educating, and training ourselves politically and organizationally to be stronger for the new upturn of struggle. We maintain a link between the struggles of the past and the future ones. We draw the lessons, and we train people so that when the next struggle begins, it doesn’t begin on the same primitive level as the preceding one.

Socialist organization trains new recruits to be organizers and leaders in various social struggles. If our educational work is successful, then the movement does not start from scratch each time. We don’t have to reinvent the wheel in each new struggle, because it starts with more people who are better trained. Our answer to critics who claim we “poach from the movement” is that they, not us, are holding the movement back. Whom do they educate? What do they do when the immediate struggle is over? We’re going to continue to organize, to educate, to train. We are building the basis for the movement, not just building the basis for socialist organization. The two of them go together. We have no interests separate from those of the movement to liberate the exploited and oppressed.

 

Join us this Wednesday, TH305B @ 1pm for a discussion about Occupy Wall Street.

The promise of Occupy

The Occupy movement is building a new U.S. left–and the fightback we need.

October 19, 2011
Originally posted here

Occupy participants on the march for a better future in New York City (Paul Stein)
Occupy participants on the march for a better future in New York City (Paul Stein)

OCCUPY. IT’S the movement of a new generation–but it’s also the voice for working people of all ages furious at the relentless decline in their living standards and mounting economic inequality.

And as it gathers momentum, the movement is showing that we have the power to resist the endless attacks on us–and win.

After the massive October 15 protest in midtown Manhattan–which drew as many as 100,000 people as part of an international day of action that involved an estimated 1 million–it’s obvious, if it wasn’t already, that the Occupy movement had deepened its social roots and broadened its base beyond the struggle that began four weeks before.

Even the New York Times–normally dismissive of social movements, when it doesn’t ignore them entirely–had to acknowledge what was taking place. “While the protesters seem united in feeling that the system is stacked against them, with the rules written to benefit the rich and the connected, they are also just as often angry about issues closer to home,” theTimes wrote.

Certainly the grievances of working people in the U.S. have been building–not just since the economic crash of 2008, but for decades. National Public Radio, which ignored Occupy Wall Street for most of its first two weeks, felt compelled to recognize the relevance of protesters’ demands in a story which pointed out that wages in the U.S. have been stagnant for 38 years.

This is why the Occupy movement caught fire. A group of some 500 people established the initial encampment in Zuccotti Park, near Wall Street, determined to cast a spotlight on the greed and corruption of the “1 percent.” Then there was the brutality of the NYPD–pepper spray in the faces of peaceful demonstrators caught on videotape, and a mass arrest on the Brooklyn Bridge.

But the spark caught because there was dry tinder in so many places. Add the turbulence in the world’s financial markets in August and news of slowing economic growth–plus a stretch of good weather on the East Coast–and the conditions were prime for the Occupy protests to expand.

The movement didn’t come from nowhere, of course. It was inspired in part by the Egyptian revolution, with its mass mobilizations in Tahrir Square, and the “indignados” movement of Spain and Greece, where masses of youth camped out in public squares. In the U.S., there was the labor-led occupation of the state Capitol in Wisconsin last winter against a Republican governor’s union-busting and savage cuts to social spending.

Occupy Wall Street soon showed that it could call forth the same kind of solidarity seen in Wisconsin. A big October 5 labor solidarity march, with some of New York City’s biggest unions involved, showed that Occupy Wall Street wasn’t the actions of a fringe group, of as the corporate media had portrayed it, but a working class movement, animated by youth but drawing upon the sympathy and support of millions.

Occupy groups that had been weeks in the planning took off with a bang in Boston, Los Angeles and other cities; others sprung up virtually overnight. A new social movement has been born.

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THE ENEMIES of the Occupy movement–and even some of its self-proclaimed friends–sneer at activists for their supposed lack of demands.

That misses the point. As in Wisconsin, the very act of occupying a public space and asserting the freedom to speak out was a powerful magnet for those who had felt isolated and powerless as they suffered the impact of the recession and its aftermath.

Suddenly, those who joined the occupations could shrug off the idea that it was their own poor choices or bad luck that left them jobless or underwater on their mortgage or without health insurance–or all of the above. As Occupy made clear, those centrally responsible for these social ills are the superrich–the 1 percent, as well as the politicians and bureaucrats who do their bidding.

The occupations have become centers of political education, with teach-ins routinely covering topics that range from Karl Marx and Frederick Engels’ Communist Manifesto to the composition of the local ruling class in different cities to the role of LGBT equality in the struggle. People new to activism and veterans alike have flocked to discussions that bring to life the hidden history of class struggle and radical politics that have always been central to every advance by workers in the U.S.

The occupations are anything but talk shops, however. Activists with Occupy Wall Street, for example, have organized solidarity with labor struggles, including the fight of locked-out workers at Sotheby’s auction house. Other activists protested the auction of a foreclosed home. And around the U.S., the Occupy movement contributed to bigger numbers and a higher energy level at demonstrations marking the 10th anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan.

By providing a center of debate, strategy and organizing, the occupations have been able to serve as a bridge into activism for people who have never been politically involved before, or even considered themselves political.

Those who are attracted to the Occupy movement’s broad message of opposition to corporate greed and big business’ dominance of politics can meet and work alongside people with similar interests. The numerous debates–from how to deal with police to whether capitalism could ever be a just economic system–are forging networks of young activists who will be central to the many struggles ahead.

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IN SHORT, Occupy is helping to build a new left on a scale unseen in the U.S. in the last 40 years–one that’s rooted in the working class. Zack Pattin, a 25-year-old longshore worker from Tacoma, Wash., who has been sleeping out at Occupy Seattle, summed up this dynamic:

This is one of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen…[T]his is exactly the kind of thing we need to revitalize the working-class movement. It’s an open movement, it has broad appeal, and it is passing radical politics to different sections of the 99 percent. It’s absolutely crucial that the working class, working poor and unemployed get involved and speak out to shape this movement. I only see it snowballing from here.

There are plenty of challenges ahead. One of the most central questions right now, for example, is how to confront efforts by police to break up encampments. Then there are the double-crossing Democratic politicians–from Barack Obama on down–who make sympathetic noises about the Occupy movement, even while pocketing Wall Street campaign contributions.

In general, Occupy activists in every city will have to come to grips with questions about how to sustain the movement and deepen its local roots in working-class struggles, from organizing unions to stopping foreclosures to protesting racist police brutality.

But whatever happens from this point, Occupy has already changed the reference points of U.S. politics. No longer can the hateful, corporate-funded Tea Party claim to speak for the disgruntled majority. Working people are finding their own political voice–and they’ll no longer keep silent.

That’s why it’s so important that everyone who supports the Occupy movement get actively involved–and build the fightback.

Join us this Wednesday, TH305B @ 1pm for a discussion about Occupy Wall Street by a Hunter Student OWS Organizer!

Stepping up the struggle

Growing numbers of people identify with the Occupy movement–and are being inspired by its example to take action for real change in society.

Originally Posted Here

Tens of thousands gathered for a demonstration against Wall Street greed (Morgan Shortell)
Tens of thousands gathered for a demonstration against Wall Street greed (Morgan Shortell)

WHEN BEN Bernanke, America’s head banker, says he understands why people are protesting against banks, there’s two things to say.

One, it’s clear that the Occupy Wall Street protest movement has shaken U.S. politics with greater force than any event since Wisconsin’s upsurge against union-busting and austerity last winter.

And two, watch your back.

In answer to a question about Occupy Wall Street at a congressional hearing, the Federal Reserve chair said: “They blame, with some justification, the problems in the financial sector for getting us into this mess, and they’re dissatisfied with the policy response here in Washington. And at some level, I can’t blame them.”

Bernanke isn’t the only unlikely sympathizer with the Occupy movement, which has spread from the financial district of Manhattan to hundreds of cities, towns, campuses and more around the country.

Nancy Pelosi, the top Democrat in the House, says she approves of “the message to the establishment, whether it’s Wall Street or the political establishment and the rest, that change has to happen.” Barack Obama declared at a press conference, “People are frustrated, and the protesters are giving voice to a more broad-based frustration about how our financial system works.”

This from the very people who engineered the bailout of Wall Street and made sure it got approved by Congress in 2008. Democrats like Obama and Pelosi are every bit as responsible as the free-market ideologues of the Republican Party for government policies that put the interests of the corporate elite first, while masses of working people bear the brunt of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

So those of us who supported the Occupy movement from the start and helped organize it before it became a talking point for Democratic Party leaders are justly suspicious of the claim that we’re now all on the same side against the bankers.

But we can also recognize that such comments show how Occupy Wall Street and its sister actions around the country have, for once, wrenched the spotlight away from the narrow political “debate” in Washington, and cast it on the concerns and views of ordinary people.

Mainstream media coverage of the Occupy movement has gone from the usual sneering contempt for protests to a grudging recognition of the depth of frustration and anger that is being expressed through the actions. According to MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, “[I]n the month before the Occupy Wall Street movement, there were, to our count, 164 mentions of the phrase ‘corporate greed’ in the news…In the month since the Occupy Wall Street movement has been underway, 1,801 mentions of that same phrase, ‘corporate greed,’ in the news.”

Occupy Wall Street has become a lightning rod for the accumulated discontent in so many corners of U.S. society–about unemployment and growing poverty, about the complicity of political leaders in carrying out an attack on working people’s living standards, about a social crisis that is hitting especially hard in minority communities, about the vast and growing gap between the haves and have-nots in the richest country on earth.

The Occupy movement isn’t only reflecting people’s ideas, either. It has tapped into the widespread sentiment that society needs to change–and it’s time to do something about it.

That’s an attitude that can be heard over and over again at Occupy protests: Finally, someone is taking action. Thus, the movement has spread from a core of mainly young activists who began the protests and encampment in New York City to speak for much larger numbers of people and broader layers of society.

The Occupy slogan “We are the 99 percent” gives expression to an elemental sense that there are sides in this struggle, that our side has been silent for too long, and we’re finally finding our collective voice.

In accomplishing this in just a few weeks, the Occupy movement already represents a great step forward in the struggle for a better world. And it offers hope for future steps forward, as more and more people are inspired by what they see–and join the fight.

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THE OCCUPY movement shows how quickly things can change in volatile political times.

The kickoff demonstration came on September 17 in New York, when more than 500 people gathered for a rally and then established the encampment in Zuccotti Park, rechristened Liberty Plaza in honor of Cairo’s Tahrir (Liberation) Square, with its daily General Assemblies that have continued ever since.

Organizers were disappointed by this initial turnout, but several factors helped Occupy Wall Street broaden its support. One was a September 22 “Day of Outrage” demonstration the day after Georgia death row prisoner Troy Davis was executed. Some 2,000 angry protesters marched from Union Square to the Liberty Plaza encampment–thus, establishing the practice that the Occupy movement would become a focal point for many struggles.

Along the same lines, Occupy activists reached out to labor, offering solidarity for local battles such as a strike at the famous Central Park Boathouse restaurant. In turn, major New York City unions recognized the importance of Occupy Wall Street and endorsed it–setting the stage for a labor-led demonstration on October 5 that brought out tens of thousands of people.

Then, on September 24, the New York Police Department did its part, unleashing officers on demonstrators during a peaceful protest from Occupy Wall Street. After this and the mass arrest a week later of demonstrators marching over the Brooklyn Bridge, even more people came to the encampment to show their solidarity against repression.

This experience, as brief as it is thus far, holds important lessons.

For one thing, while the movement’s slogan “We are the 99 percent” wonderfully expresses the determination to confront the tiny minority that monopolizes wealth and power in this society, it’s also crystal clear that the 99 percent aren’t all on the same side.

There’s the police, for example. With attacks on Occupy encampments in Boston and Atlanta on Monday night, as in New York City over the past weeks, the “boys in blue” showed which side they’re on–and it’s not the 99 percent.

Through their actions, the police are providing a fast education to anyone who believes they can be appealed to–for example, the groups of activists who escaped being trapped on the Brooklyn Bridge on October 1 and chanted, “Join us, you’re one of us.”

In reality, though most individual cops come from working-class backgrounds, the role of the police as an institution in capitalist society “puts them directly at odds with the aspirations and needs of the rest of the class,” as Amy Muldoon wrote for SocialistWorker.org. Their job is not to “protect and serve” everyone in society, but the same ruling minority that the Occupy movement is challenging.

Even among those who have mobilized for the Occupy protests, there are political divisions that must not be ignored.

For example, right-wing libertarians who support Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul have turned up at Occupy encampments, especially in the South. They are critical of the same financial institutions that the Occupy Wall Street struggle has focused on–but their objections come from the right. Paul supporters want to eliminate regulations on the financial elite–which would allow the 1 percent to grow even richer.

Paul and his supporters are viciously anti-immigrant, and their opposition to “big government” stops when it comes to the state imposing restrictions on women’s right to choose abortion. In 2004, Paul was the only member of Congress to vote against a resolution commemorating the Civil Rights Act of 1964–because he believes businesses should be able to discriminate.

To consider such bigotry part of our fight would make a mockery of the commitment to equality and democracy at the heart of the Occupy struggle–and it would drive a wedge between the movement and many of the people who have the most to contribute to it: immigrants, African Americans and those fighting the right’s reactionary agenda, to name a few.

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SO THE Occupy movement doesn’t represent all of the “99 percent.” But it certainly does give voice to a large majority of people in society–both their grievances and the hope for an alternative to the status quo.

The politicization of protesters and their determination to take a stand is tangible at the occupations, where both people new to activism and those with experience in other movements are part of the organizing.

But importantly, these same features can be felt beyond the encampments. In Portland, Ore., for example–the site of one of the largest Occupy movements outside of New York City–one SW contributor says her workplace, in a building that overlooks the encampment, is constantly abuzz with discussions about the struggle. Each march past the building, she says, brings her coworkers to the windows to find out what’s happening–along with hours of political discussions afterward.

This is being repeated in different ways around the country. Occupy Wall Street was launched by a core of activists, many of them already committed socialists, anarchists or radicals of various kinds. But much larger numbers of people now identify with the movement, even if they have little connection with the actual activities of the occupations, perhaps because of job or family responsibilities.

What’s more, the national attention being paid to the Occupy movement is infusing existing struggles with a new sense of relevancy and confidence. People committed to many different movements are being inspired by the success of the Occupy activists in making their voices heard–and are sure to follow suit themselves.

Of course, this intense interest and support is precisely why leaders of the Democratic Party are suddenly trying to cast themselves as sympathizers with the struggle against Wall Street greed.

Our question is simple: Where were Democrats like Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi when the Wall Street bankers looted the economy? The answer: They were part of the problem, from the deregulation of the financial system accomplished chiefly during the presidency of Democrat Bill Clinton, to the failure of the Obama administration over the past two years to hold the bankers and hedge fund operators responsible for the disaster they caused.

The Democrats care about Occupy Wall Street if it can help them corral votes for the next election. But the limits of their sympathies are clear–especially from the actions of Democratic mayors like Boston’s Thomas Menino, who sicced the police on Occupy protesters.

That’s the real attitude of the Democratic Party toward the Occupy struggle–not the empathetic statements of Barack Obama at a press conference, but the orders of Democratic mayors to clear the streets and parks.

Many participants in Occupy struggles recognize this–but there is an organizational weakness to the movement that gives a greater opening to such forces.

In many of the Occupy encampments, including New York City, the core activists involved in the day-to-day organizing are critical of Democrats for being complicit in a system that has given overwhelming wealth and power to the 1 percent. But the commitment of many to a particular strategy of refusing to formulate concrete demands–on the grounds that this would either limit the appeal of the Occupy actions or legitimize economic and political structures they oppose–actually opens a door to the Democrats.

If our movement doesn’t articulate its own demands, others will have the opportunity to fill them in for us. The basic elements of what the Occupy struggle stands for are clear and supported by the vast majority of people involved–tax Wall Street and the rich; regulate corporate power; use taxpayers’ money to create jobs and meet social needs, not bail out the banks or fund wars; defend workers’ right to form unions; and so on.

Such demands need to be championed forthrightly. As Doug Singsen wrote for this website, “We can be a model of cooperation and empowerment” and still be specific and explicit about what we want.

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SO WHAT comes next? The Occupy movement has shone a spotlight on the greed and corruption of the Wall Street elite–and more generally on the inequalities and institutionalized injustices of U.S. society. We need to keep dramatizing those issues for the millions of people who are now watching the protests closely.

Part of the commitment to continue this effort will now mean preparing for the threat of further police repression. So far, crackdowns like the one that took place in Boston or the assaults in New York City have been the exception. The authorities, aware of the popularity of the protests, have avoided a frontal attack in many cases.

But they will continue looking for opportunities to gain the upper hand. Occupy activists need to be aware of this threat, with an understanding that large numbers and even wider support have always been the best defense against repression for any movement.

In most occupations, proposals to reach out to other struggles have been met with enthusiastic support, at least from the majority of participants.

This is because the connections between the different fights are so obvious. Anyone who is angry about the bailout of the Wall Street bankers will know who is paying the price–workers in both the private and public sector, those with jobs and without. The brutal police tactics used against protesters are just a taste of what happens day in and day out in the Black community–which shows why the Occupy movement must be anti-racist.

By the same token, it’s important for every movement and struggle to recognize that Occupy Wall Street has changed the political climate and opened up a space for bolder action. There are willing and able allies to be found at the Occupy encampments–for the struggle against war and against racism, for a sustainable environment and for LGBT equality, and many more issues besides.

In particular, Occupy Wall Street has created tremendous new possibilities in the labor movement. Union members can go beyond being sympathizers with the struggle and organize their coworkers to take part in protests. It is also crucial for Occupy activists to reach out to labor and offer their solidarity, especially in providing support for the upsurge of union battles around the country.

Many people involved in the Occupy struggle have been inspired to describe this as “our Tahrir Square” or “our movement of the squares,” like in Greece. This is true to an extent–Occupy Wall Street and the similar actions it inspired are providing a place for people fed up with business as usual to come together and take a stand.

But we also need to know what the Occupy movement is not–yet. Tahrir Square during the Egyptian revolution was not just an occupation, but a mass mobilization that was the culmination of years of organizing, including militant working class struggles. Likewise, in Greece, the movement of the squares came after a string of general strikes and a youth-led rebellion against police brutality not long before that.

Occupy Wall Street has electrified many thousands of people and is bringing together the forces that can be part of struggles on another scale, as in Greece or Egypt. But whether those forces develop depends a lot on what activists do now.

It’s time to step up the struggle. In every city and town, there are teachers who are under attack, foreclosures mounting, instances of police violence. The Occupy movement can be a part of responding.

We want to build the occupations and defend them against police attack. And we also want to build a political space that goes beyond the occupations–a new resistance that brings the spirit of the Occupy movement to workplaces, campuses and communities throughout society.

Sick and tired of the Tea Party and their racist antics?  Ashamed that our government spends more money on prison than for college? Disgusted that more than 60% of those in prison are people of color? Want to end racism in this country?

Please join the Hunter International Socialist Organization
for the first segment in our
Marxism and Oppression Study Series

Wednesday Oct. 12th @ 1pm
Thomas Hunter room 305b

As Marxist we believe that the first step in any struggle for emancipation is challenging and dismantling oppression in all its many forms. Central to this struggle is having confidence and a deep understanding of a political perspective that can both explain oppression as well as provide a means towards its eradication.  We believe that Marxism provides this political perspective and would like to invite you to join us in enhancing our own understanding through readings and discussions on various topics.

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We are beginning our series with The Roots of Racism. Racism has played a very particular and central role in sustaining and upholding US capitalism from its very inception. For this reason the fight against racism must be front and center in every struggle we are engaged in. To better understand these dynamics and history we are reading and discussing the following articles:

Readings: Lance Selfa, “The Roots of Racism

Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, “Race, Class, and Marxism

The articles have also been posted in the blog posts below.

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Future study series:

Theories of Women’s Oppression

Readings:
Sharon Smith “The Origin of Women’s Oppression,” Chapter 1 in Women and Socialism (Haymarket books); Chapter 5, “Women and Socialism”;

Additional readings:

Lindsey German, “Theories of Patriarchy,”
Alexandra Kollontai, “The Social Basis of the Woman Question,”

Can the Working Class liberate the oppressed?

Readings:
Paul D’Amato, “Where Oppression Comes From,”
Jen Roesch, “Can the Working Class Unite?

Additional readings:
Sharon Smith, “Marxism and Identity Politics,”
Ahmed Shawki, Black Liberation and Socialism,Chapter 7, “Socialists, Communists, and Trotskyists”; Conclusion, “Black Liberation and Socialism

Marxism has been accused by its critics of misunderstanding race and downplaying the struggle against racism. Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor sets the record straight.

Originally posted here

Coming together to challenge racism at University of California San Diego

FOR REVOLUTIONARY Marxists, there is an inextricable link between racism and capitalism. Capitalism is dependant on racism as both a source of profiteering, but more importantly as a means to divide and rule. Racism is necessary to drive a wedge between workers who otherwise have everything in common and every reason to ally and organize together, but who are perpetually driven apart to the benefit of the ruling class.

Thus, any serious discussion about Black liberation has to take up not only a critique of capitalism, but also a credible strategy for ending it. For Marxists, that strategy hinges on the revolutionary potential of a unified, multiracial and multi-ethnic working-class upheaval against capitalism.

Marxists believe that the potential for that kind of unity is dependant on battles and struggles against racism today. Without a commitment by revolutionary organizations in the here and now to the fight against racism, working-class unity will never be achieved and the revolutionary potential of the working class will never be realized.

Yet despite all the evidence of this commitment to fighting racism over many decades, Marxism has been maligned as, at best, “blind” to combating racism and, at worst, “incapable” of it. For example, in an article published last summer, popular commentator and self-described “anti-racist” Tim Wise summarized the critique of “left activists” that he later defines as Marxists. He writes:

[L]eft activists often marginalize people of color by operating from a framework of extreme class reductionism, which holds that the “real” issue is class, not race, that “the only color that matters is green,” and that issues like racism are mere “identity politics,” which should take a backseat to promoting class-based universalism and programs to help working people. This reductionism, by ignoring the way that even middle class and affluent people of color face racism and color-based discrimination (and by presuming that low-income folks of color and low-income whites are equally oppressed, despite a wealth of evidence to the contrary) reinforces white denial, privileges white perspectivism and dismisses the lived reality of people of color.

Even more, as we’ll see, it ignores perhaps the most important political lesson regarding the interplay of race and class: namely, that the biggest reason why there is so little working-class consciousness and unity in the Untied States (and thus, why class-based programs to uplift all in need are so much weaker here than in the rest of the industrialized world), is precisely because of racism and the way that white racism has been deliberately inculcated among white working folks.

Only by confronting that directly (rather than sidestepping it as class reductionists seek to do) can we ever hope to build cross-racial, class based coalitions. In other words, for the policies favored by the class reductionist to work–be they social democrats or Marxists–or even to come into being, racism and white supremacy must be challenged directly.

Here, Wise accuses Marxism of: “extreme class reductionism,” meaning that Marxists allegedly think that class is more important than race; reducing struggles against racism to “mere identity politics”; and requiring that struggles against racism should “take a back seat” to struggles over economic issues. Wise also accuses so-called “left activists” of reinforcing “white denial” and “dismiss[ing] the lived reality of people of color”–which, of course, presumes Left activists and Marxists to all be white.

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What do Marxists actually say?

Marxists argue that capitalism is a system that is based on the exploitation of the many by the few. Because it is a system based on gross inequality, it requires various tools to divide the majority–racism and all oppressions under capitalism serve this purpose. Moreover, oppression is used to justify and “explain” unequal relationships in society that enrich the minority that live off the majority’s labor. Thus, racism developed initially to explain and justify the enslavement of Africans–because they were less than human and undeserving of liberty and freedom.

Everyone accepts the idea that the oppression of slaves was rooted in the class relations of exploitation under that system. Fewer recognize that under capitalism, wage slavery is the pivot around which all other inequalities and oppressions turn. Capitalism used racism to justify plunder, conquest and slavery, but as Karl Marx pointed out, it also used racism to divide and rule–to pit one section of the working class against another and thereby blunt class consciousness.

To claim, as Marxists do, that racism is a product of capitalism is not to deny or diminish its importance or impact in American society. It is simply to explain its origins and the reasons for its perpetuation. Many on the left today talk about class as if it is one of many oppressions, often describing it as “classism.” What people are really referring to as “classism” is elitism or snobbery, and not the fundamental organization of society under capitalism.

Moreover, it is popular today to talk about various oppressions, including class, as intersecting. While it is true that oppressions can reinforce and compound each other, they are born out of the material relations shaped by capitalism and the economic exploitation that is at the heart of capitalist society. In other words, it is the material and economic structure of society that gave rise to a range of ideas and ideologies to justify, explain and help perpetuate that order. In the United States, racism is the most important of those ideologies.

Despite the widespread beliefs to the contrary of his critics, Karl Marx himself was well aware of the centrality of race under capitalism. While Marx did not write extensively on the question of slavery and its racial impact in societies specifically, he did write about the way in which European capitalism emerged because of its pilfering, rape and destruction, famously writing:

The discovery of gold and silver in America, the extirpation, enslavement and entombment in mines of the aboriginal population, the beginning of the conquest and looting of the East Indies, the turning of Africa into a warren for the commercial hunting of Black skins, signalized the rosy dawn of the era of capitalist production.

He also recognized the extent to which slavery was central to the world economy. He wrote:

Direct slavery is just as much the pivot of bourgeois industry as machinery, credits, etc. Without slavery you have no cotton; without cotton you have no modern industry. It is slavery that has given the colonies their value; it is the colonies that have created world trade, and it is world trade that is the pre-condition of large-scale industry. Thus slavery is an economic category of the greatest importance.

Without slavery North America, the most progressive of countries, would be transformed into a patriarchal country. Wipe out North America from the map of the world, and you will have anarchy–the complete decay of modern commerce and civilization. Cause slavery to disappear and you will have wiped America off the map of nations. Thus slavery, because it is an economic category, has always existed among the institutions of the peoples. Modern nations have been able only to disguise slavery in their own countries, but they have imposed it without disguise upon the New World.

Thus, there is a fundamental understanding of the centrality of slave labor in the national and international economy. But what about race?

Despite the dearth of Marx’s own writing on race in particular, one might look at Marx’s correspondence and deliberations on the American Civil War to draw conclusions as to whether Marx was as dogmatically focused on purely economic issues as his critics make him out be.

One must raise the question: If Marx was reductionist, how is his unabashed support and involvement in abolitionist struggles in England explained? If Marx was truly an economic reductionist, he might have surmised that slavery and capitalism were incompatible, and simply waited for slavery to whither away. W.E.B. Du Bois in his Marxist tome Black Reconstruction, quotes at length a letter penned by Marx as the head of the International Workingmen’s Association, written to Abraham Lincoln in 1864 in the midst of the Civil War:

The contest for the territories which opened the epoch, was it not to decide whether the virgin soil of immense tracts should be wedded to the labor of the immigrant or be prostituted by the tramp of the slaver driver? When an oligarchy of 300,000 slave holders dared to inscribe for the first time in the annals of the world “Slavery” on the banner of armed revolt, when on the very spots where hardly a century ago the idea of one great Democratic Republic had first sprung up, whence the first declaration of the rights of man was issued…when on the very spots counter-revolution…maintained “slavery to be a beneficial institution”…and cynically proclaimed property in man ‘the cornerstone of the new edifice’…then the working classes of Europe understood at once…that the slaveholders’ rebellion was to sound the tocsin for a general holy war of property against labor…

They consider it an earnest sign of the epoch to come that it fell to the lot of Abraham Lincoln, the single-minded son of the working class, to lead his country through the matchless struggles for the rescue of the enchained race and the Reconstruction of a social order.

Not only was Marx personally opposed to slavery and actively organized against it, but he theorized that slavery and the resultant race discrimination that flowed from it were not just problems for the slaves themselves, but for white workers who were constantly under the threat of losing work to slave labor.

This did not mean white workers were necessarily sympathetic to the cause of the slaves–most of them were not. But Marx was not addressing the issue of consciousness, but objective factors when he wrote in Capital, “In the United States of America, every independent movement of the workers was paralyzed as long as slavery disfigured a part of the Republic. Labor cannot emancipate itself in the white skin where in the Black it is branded.”

Moreover, Marx understood the dynamics of racism in a modern sense as well–as a means by which workers who had common, objective interests with each other could also become mortal enemies because of subjective, but nevertheless real, racist and nationalist ideas. Looking at the tensions between Irish and English workers, with a nod toward the American situation between Black and white workers, Marx wrote:

Every industrial and commercial center in England possesses a working class divided into two hostile camps, English proletarians and Irish proletarians. The ordinary English worker hates the Irish worker as a competitor who lowers his standard of life. In relation to the Irish worker he feels himself a member of the ruling nation and so turns himself into a tool of the aristocrats and capitalists of his country against Ireland, thus strengthening their domination over himself. He cherishes religious, social and national prejudices against the Irish worker. His attitude is much the same as that of the “poor whites” to the “niggers” in the former slave states of the USA. The Irishman pays him back with interest in his own money. He sees in the English worker at once the accomplice and stupid tool of the English rule in Ireland.

This antagonism is artificially kept alive and intensified by the press, the pulpit, the comic papers, in short by all the means at the disposal of the ruling classes. This antagonism is the secret of the impotence of the English working class, despite its organization. It is the secret by which the capitalist maintains its power. And that class is fully aware of it.

Out of this quote, one can see a Marxist theory of how racism operated in contemporary society, after slavery was ended. Marx was highlighting three things: first, that capitalism promotes economic competition between workers; second, that the ruling class uses racist ideology to divide workers against each other; and finally, that when one group of workers suffer oppression, it negatively impacts the entire class.

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How the Marxist theory of racism developed

These questions get to the heart of Marxism and really begin to address whether Marxism subsumes political questions to economic ones.

Here’s how Marx described the issue of ideas themselves:

The production of ideas, of conceptions, of consciousness, is at first directly interwoven with the material activity and the material intercourse of men, the language of real life. Conceiving, thinking, the material intercourse of men appear at this stage as the direct efflux of their material behavior…Men are the producers of their conceptions, ideas, etc….Consciousness can never be anything else than conscious existence, and the existence of men is their actual life process.

This does not mean that humans are only automatons with no thought, creativity, ideas or agency, and that life is a linear and determined existence. Human action or inaction constantly impacts and changes the environment and the world around us. But human activity is shaped by the material world. Racism is ideological, but it has tangible implications in the real world. Stating that racism is ideological does not somehow, then, render it less important, but distinguishes the difference between a question of material conditions and consciousness.

It is undeniable that some in the socialist and Marxist traditions–primarily in the 19th and early 20th century–assumed that because African Americans were overrepresented as workers, simply focusing on the class struggle would by itself liberate Black workers and the poor from their oppression. But Marxist theory on the “Black question” has certainly evolved since then. Marxism should not be conceived of as an unchanging dogma. It is a guide to social revolution and political action, and has been built upon by successive generations of Marxists.

But theory doesn’t precede material and social conditions–it flows from them. In the mid-1920s, when hundreds of thousands of African Americans made their way to the urban North, socialists and communists were forced to theorize how they would relate to Black workers on a mass scale–something that had never been an issue before. Black revolutionary Claude McKay reported as a delegate to the Communist International in 1922:

In associating with the comrades of America, I have found demonstrations of prejudice on the various occasions when the white and black comrades had to get together, and this is the greatest obstacle that the Communists of America have got to overcome–the fact that they first have got to emancipate themselves from the ideas they entertained toward Negroes before they can be able to reach the Negroes with any kind of radical propaganda.

The Russian revolutionary Lenin directly intervened in the American Communist Party (CP) and directed it to immediately begin political agitation among African Americans. Thus, the founding convention of the Communist Party in 1919 stated merely that the “racial oppression of the Negro is simply the expression of his economic bondage and oppression, each intensifying the other.” By 1921, after Lenin’s involvement on the question, the stated approach of the CP had shifted, with its program stating:

The Negro workers in American are exploited and oppressed more ruthlessly than any other group. The history of the Southern Negro is the history of a reign of terror–of persecution, rape and murder…Because of the anti-Negro policies of organized labor, the Negro has despaired of aid from this source, and he has either been driven into the camp of labor’s enemies, or has been compelled to develop purely racial organizations which seek purely racial aims.

The Workers Party will support the Negroes in their struggle for Liberation, and will help them in their fight for economic, political and social equality…Its task will be to destroy altogether the barrier of race prejudice that has been used to keep apart the Black and white workers, and bind them into a solid union of revolutionary forces for the overthrow of our common enemy.

By the early 1940s, thousands of Blacks had joined the Communist Party. The politics of communism became the dominant political framework for most of the nonwhite world as hundreds of millions of people of color across the globe were inspired by the writings of Lenin on the rights of oppressed nations to fight for their own freedom. Lenin wrote:

The proletariat must struggle against the enforced retention of oppressed nations within the bounds of the given state…The proletariat must demand freedom of political separation for the colonies and nations oppressed by “their own” nation. Otherwise, the internationalism of the proletariat would be nothing but empty words; neither confidence nor class solidarity would be possible between the workers of the oppressed and the oppressor nations…

On the other hand, the socialists of the oppressed nation must, in particular, defend and implement the full and unconditional unity, including organizational unity, of the workers of the oppressed nation and those of the oppressor nation. Without this it is impossible to defend the independent policy of the proletariat and their class solidarity with the proletariat of other countries.

So it is an odd charge that Marxism is incapable of comprehending the racialized nature of capitalism, while simultaneously becoming the politics that led the vast majority of non-white national liberation movements in the 20th century. The critique of Marxism also minimizes the extent to which Black revolutionaries and the Black struggle itself shaped and impacted the trajectory of Marxist thought.

Thus, C.L.R. James, the Black revolutionary from the Caribbean and collaborator with Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky, advanced Marxist theory when he wrote–presciently in 1948, years before the emergence of the civil rights movement in the U.S. South:

We say, number one, that the Negro struggle, the independent Negro struggle, has a vitality and a validity of its own; that it has deep historic roots in the past of America and in present struggles; it has an organic political perspective, along which it is traveling, to one degree or another, and everything shows that at the present time it is traveling with great speed and vigor.

We say, number two, that this independent Negro movement is able to intervene with terrific force upon the general social and political life of the nation, despite the fact that it is waged under the banner of democratic rights and is not led necessarily either by the organized labor movement or the Marxist party.

We say, number three, and this is the most important, that it is able to exercise a powerful influence upon the revolutionary proletariat, that it has got a great contribution to make to the development of the proletariat in the United States, and that it is in itself a constituent part of the struggle for socialism.

In this way we challenge directly any attempt to subordinate or to push to the rear the social and political significance of the independent Negro struggle for democratic rights. That is our position. It was the position of Lenin 30 years ago. It was the position of Trotsky which he fought for during many years. It has been concretized by the general class struggle in the United States, and the tremendous struggles of the Negro people.

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The question of white workers

Much of the controversy about Marxism and race is over whether Marxist theory appropriately comprehends the centrality of race in U.S. society and beyond. But what is really at the heart of the debate is the view of revolutionary Marxists that: one, white workers do not have a privileged status in this country; two, white workers can gain revolutionary consciousness; and three, therefore a multiracial and united working-class revolution is possible.

Marxists start with the premise that all workers under capitalism are oppressed, but some workers face further oppression because of additional discrimination like racism, sexism, homophobia, anti-immigrant ideas, religious oppression, etc. Thus, in the United States, white workers are oppressed, but not to the same degree as non-white workers.

Oppression is not just an ideological tool to divide groups of workers, but has real material consequences as well. Because of racism, for example, the median household income for white families as of 2006 was over $50,000 a year. For Blacks, it was just under $32,000. By every measure of the quality of life in the U.S., whites are on the top and Blacks are on the bottom.

Marxists do not deny that these differences exist, nor do we deny that oppression means the lives of some workers are actually worse than others. For Marxists, the question is the cause of the differences. Are the disparities the result of white workers benefiting directly from the oppression of Black workers? That is, do white workers make more on average because Black workers make less?

To accept this explanation means to ignore the biggest beneficiary in the disparity in wages–employers and bosses. That employers are able to use racism to justify paying Black workers less brings the wages of all workers down–the employers enjoy the difference.

This is not to deny that white workers receive some advantages in U.S. society because they are white in a racist society. If they did not get some advantage–and with it, the illusion that the system works for them–then racism would not be effective in dividing Black and white workers.

The distinctions and differences among workers function to create a distorted view of reality that turns the traits attributed to the oppressed into a kind of “common sense,” which in turn deepens those divisions. African Americans are poorer, have worse housing, go to worse schools, have a shorter life span and generally live in worse conditions, which helps to perpetuate the image in the minds of white workers that African Americans are inferior.

But the problem with so-called “common sense” is that it is based on surface appearances and information, and does not reach deeper to give a systemic explanation for the disparities that exist in society. Instead, it creates what Frederick Engels was the first to call “false consciousness.”

False consciousness is simply ruling-class ideology that is used to explain away or cover up material reality. The point is that white workers, to the extent that they accept white supremacy, contribute to capitalism’s ability to exploit them more effectively. The purely “psychological” advantage obscures the very real material deficit that racist oppression helps reinforce.

Du Bois explained how “false consciousness” worked in the South and why a labor movement never developed there in the aftermath of slavery:

The race element was emphasized in order that property holders could get the support of the majority of white laborers and make it more possible to exploit Negro labor. But the race philosophy came as a new and terrible thing to make labor unity or labor class-consciousness impossible. So long as the Southern white laborers could be induced to prefer poverty to equality with the Negro, just so long was a labor movement in the South made impossible.

For Du Bois, racism wasn’t metaphysical, nor did it exist autonomously from class. Its development is a result of one class’ efforts to keep power away from another. Du Bois did come up with a famous formulation of poor whites gaining a “psychological wage”–as opposed to a material wage–from racism. But the psychological wage was to make the white worker feel superior because he wasn’t Black, even though he would have nothing material to show for it.

This leads to the question: If it isn’t in the interest of white workers to be racist, then why do they accept racist ideas? But the same question could be asked of any group of workers. Why do men accept sexist ideas? Why do Black workers accept racist anti-immigrant ideas? Why do many Black Caribbean and African immigrant workers think that Black Americans are lazy? Why do American workers of all races accept many racist ideas about Arabs and Muslims? If most people agree that it would be in the interest of any group of workers to be more united than divided, then why do workers accept reactionary ideas?

There are two primary reasons. The first is competition. Capitalism operates under the laws of false scarcity, which simply means that we are all told there isn’t enough to go around, so we must compete with each other for housing, education, jobs and anything else valued in society. While the scarcity is false, the competition is real, and workers fighting over these items to better themselves or their families are often willing to believe the worst about other workers to justify why they should have something and others should not.

The other reason is, as Marx wrote in the German Ideology, that the ruling ideas of any society are the ideas of the ruling class. We live in a racist society, and therefore people hold racist ideas. The more important question is whether or not those ideas can change. The consciousness of workers is both fluid and contradictory because of the clash between the “ruling ideas” in society and people’s lived experience. So, for example, while the media inundates people with constant images of Blacks as criminals or on welfare, people’s experience with Blacks at work completely contradicts the stereotype.

The Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci explained the phenomenon of mixed consciousness this way:

The active man-in-the-mass has a practical activity but has no clear theoretical consciousness of his practical activity which nonetheless involves understanding the world in so far as it transforms it. His theoretical consciousness can…be historically in opposition to his activity.

One might almost say that he has two theoretical consciousnesses (or one contradictory consciousness): one which is implicit in his activity and which in reality unites him with all fellow workers in the practical transformation of the real world; and one superficially explicit or verbal, which he has inherited from the past and uncritically absorbed. The person is strangely composite: it contains Stone Age elements and principles of a more advanced science, prejudices all past phases of history at the local level and intuitions of a future philosophy which will be that of a human race united the world over.

Whether or not a group of workers has reactionary, mixed or even revolutionary consciousness does not change their objective and real function as exploited and oppressed labor. The question of consciousness affects whether or not workers are in a position to fundamentally alter that function through collective action.

Just because white workers, to take a specific example, may at different times fully accept reactionary ideas about African Americans does not change the objective fact that the majority of the poor in the U.S. are white, the majority of people without health insurance are white and the majority of the homeless are white. While Blacks and Latinos are disproportionately affected by the economic reality of the U.S. today, in a country that is more than 65 percent white, it is a reality they share with the majority of white workers.

This shared reality shows the potential for a united struggle to better the conditions of all workers. But by the same token, losing the battle against racism undermines the overall project of working-class revolution. As Du Bois explained in Black Reconstruction about the defeat of the post-Civil War Reconstruction policies that briefly put the power of the federal government behind equal rights for the freed slaves:

The political success of the doctrine of racial separation, which overthrew Reconstruction by uniting the planter and the poor white, was far exceeded by its astonishing economic results.

The theory of laboring class unity rests upon the assumption that laborers, despite internal jealousies, will unite because of their opposition to exploitation by the capitalists. According to this, even after a part of the poor white laboring class became identified with the planters, and eventually displaced them, their interests would be diametrically opposed to those of the mass of white labor, and of course to those of the black laborers. This would throw white and black labor into one class, and precipitate a united fight for higher wage and better working conditions.

Most persons do not realize how far this failed to work in the South, and it failed to work because the theory of race was supplemented by a carefully planned and slowly evolved method, which drove such a wedge between the white and black workers that there probably are not today in the world two groups of workers with practically identical interests who hate and fear each other so deeply and persistently and who are kept so far apart that neither sees anything of common interest.

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Marxism and Black America today

Today, the need for a revolutionary alternative to the failures of capitalism has never been greater. The election of Barack Obama came 40 years after the passage of the 1968 Civil Rights Act, the last piece of civil rights legislation from the civil rights era of the 1960s. Despite the enormous shift in racial attitudes symbolized by the election of a Black president in a country built in large part on the enslavement of Black people, the condition of the vast majority of African Americans today is perilous.

For almost two years, Black unemployment has fluctuated between 15 and 17 percent. Almost 20 percent of African Americans under the age of 65 are without health insurance compared to 15 percent for the rest of the population. According to the Center for Responsible Lending, a home owned by an African American or Latino family is 76 percent more likely to be foreclosed upon than a white-owned home.

The wipeout of home ownership among African Americans threatens to widen even more the gap in median family net worth. In 2007, the average white family had a net worth of more than $171,000 compared to less than $29,000 for African American and Latino families. More than 25 percent of Blacks and Latinos languish below the official poverty line, and more than a third of Black and Latino children live in poverty.

The distressing numbers that document the full impact of racism and discrimination in the United States have no end. But while conditions across Black America threaten to wipe out the economic gains made possible by the civil rights movement, millions of white workers are meeting their Black brothers and sisters on the way down. Tens of millions of white workers are stuck in long-term joblessness, without health insurance and waiting for their homes to be foreclosed upon.

Thus, the question of Black, Latino and white unity is not abstract or academic, but must be a concrete discussion about how to collectively go forward.

For most of the 20th century, legal racism both North and South created a tension-filled cross-class alliance in the African American community that was focused on freedom and equal treatment. The legislative fruition of that in the form of legal civil rights removed the barriers to advance for a small section of Black America. To be sure, the “Black middle class” is tenuous, fragile and, for many, a paycheck or two away from oblivion, but a more stable and ambitious Black elite most definitely exists, and their objectives and aspirations are anathema to the future of the mass of Black people.

No serious Marxist organization demands that Black and Latino workers put their struggles on the backburner while some mythical class struggle is waged beforehand. This impossible formulation rests on the ridiculous notion that the working class is white and male, and thus incapable of taking up issues of race, class and gender. In fact, the American working class is female, immigrant, Black and white. Immigrant issues, gender issues and anti-racism are working-class issues and to miss this is to be operating with a completely anachronistic idea of the working class.

Genuine Marxist organizations understand that the only way of achieving unity in the working class over time is to fight for unity today and every day. Workers will never unite to fight for state power if they cannot unite to fight for workplace demands today. If white workers are not won to anti-racism today, they will never unite with Black workers for a revolution tomorrow. If Black workers are not won to being against anti-immigrant racism today, they will never unite with Latino workers for a revolution tomorrow.

This is why Lenin said that a revolutionary party based on Marxism must be a “tribune of the oppressed,” willing to fight against the oppression of any group of people, regardless of the class of those affected. And this is why, despite the anti-Marxist slurs from academics and even some who consider themselves part of the left, the idea that Marxism has been on the outside of the struggle against racism in the U.S. and around the world defies history and the legacy of Black revolutionaries who understood Marxism as a strategy for emancipation and liberation.

The challenge today it to make revolutionary Marxism, once again, a part of the discussion of how to end the social catastrophe that is unfolding in Black communities across the United States.

How is the struggle against racism connected to the struggle for socialism? SocialistWorker.org writers explain what Marxists have to say.

What do we mean by exploitation?

Gary Lapon explains Karl Marx’s understanding of exploitation under capitalism.

Originally posted here

Workers at a cheese factory in Oregon (James Yu)

THE TERM “exploitation” often conjures up images of workers laboring in sweatshops for 12 hours or more per day, for pennies an hour, driven by a merciless overseer. This is contrasted to the ideal of a “fair wage day’s wage for a fair day’s work”–the supposedly “normal” situation under capitalism in which workers receive a decent wage, enough for a “middle class” standard of living, health insurance and security in their retirement.

Sweatshops are horrific examples of exploitation that persist to this day. But Karl Marx had a broader and more scientific definition of exploitation: the forced appropriation of the unpaid labor of workers. Under this definition, all working class people are exploited.

Marx argued that the ultimate source of profit, the driving force behind capitalist production, is the unpaid labor of workers. So for Marx, exploitation forms the foundation of the capitalist system.

All the billions in bonuses for the Wall Street bankers, every dividend paid to the shareholders of industrial corporations, every dollar collected by capitalist landlords–all of this is the result of the uncompensated labor of working class people. And because exploitation is at the root of capitalism, it follows that the only way to do away with exploitation is to achieve an entirely different society–socialism, a society in which there is no tiny minority at the top that rules.

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EXPLOITATION IS not unique to capitalism. It has been a feature of all class societies, which are divided into two main classes, an exploited class that produces the wealth and an exploiter class that expropriates it.

Under slavery, exploitation is naked and obvious to exploiter and exploited alike. The slave is forced by sword and lash to work for the master, who provides just enough to keep the slave alive–all the rest of the fruits of their labor are forcefully appropriated by the slaveowner.

Similarly, under feudalism as it arose in its classical form in Europe, the serfs work on a plot of land that belongs to the lord. They work for part of the time for themselves, producing their means of subsistence, and the rest of the time, the product belongs to the lord. The terms of exploitation are clear to serf and lord alike–the serf labors for the lord, and receives nothing from the lord in return.

Capitalism is different among the chief forms of class societies Marx examined in that the exploitative nature of labor is hidden by the wage system. Except in cases of outright fraud, workers are hired, labor for a given amount of time and receive a wage in return. It appears on the surface that an equal exchange has taken place–but this isn’t the case.

Why not? The capitalist, in addition to purchasing various inputs into the productive process–machinery, raw materials, etc.–also buys what Marx called “labor-power,” increments of workers’ time during which the capitalist controls the workers’ creative and physical energies.

Under capitalism, most needs are met, at least for those who can afford them, by commodities–commodities being goods and services produced for sale on the market. Working class people, who don’t own the means to produce and sell commodities, have one commodity they can sell: their labor-power, their ability to work. In this way, workers are forced to sell themselves to some capitalist piecemeal in order to acquire money to buy the necessities of life.

Labor-power, according to Marx in writing his first volume of Capital, is “the aggregate of those mental and physical capabilities existing in the physical form, the living personality, of a human being, capabilities which he [or she] sets in motion whenever he [or she] produces a use-value of any kind.” In other words, labor-power is the capacity to work, to create value, which the worker sells to the capitalists in increments for a wage.

Labor, on the other hand, is the actual process of work itself. Like the buyer of any commodity, the capitalist claims the right to consume the commodity they purchase. In this case, the consumption of labor-power consists of the control of the labor process and the ownership of the products workers create during it.

According to Marx’s analysis, unlike machinery, raw materials and other inanimate inputs that pass on their value to the product but create no new value, labor-power is a “special commodity…whose use-value possesses the peculiar property of being a source of value.” In other words, workers produce new value contained in the final product, which belongs to the capitalist.

The distinction between “labor-power” and “labor” is the key to understanding exploitation under capitalism.

When a capitalist pays a worker a wage, they are not paying for the value of a certain amount of completed labor, but for labor-power. The soaring inequality in contemporary society illustrates this–over the past three decades of neoliberalism, the wealth that workers create has increased, but this has not been reflected in wages, which remain stagnant. Instead, an increasing proportion of the wealth produced by workers swelled the pockets of the superrich, who did not compensate the workers for their increased production on the job.

It appears that the capitalist pays the worker for the value produced by their labor because workers only receive a paycheck after they have worked for a given amount of time. In reality, this amounts to an interest-free loan of labor-power by the worker to the capitalist. As Marx wrote, “In all cases, therefore, the worker advances the use-value of his labor-power to the capitalist. He lets the buyer consume it before he receives payment of the price. Everywhere, the worker allows credit to the capitalist.”

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CAPITALISTS PURCHASE labor-power on the market. In general, the wage–the price of labor-power–is, like all other commodities, determined by its cost of production, which is in turn regulated by struggles between workers and capitalists over the level of wages and benefits, and by competition between workers for jobs.

As Marx wrote in Wage Labor and Capital, the cost of production of labor-power is “the cost required for the maintenance as the laborer…and for his [or her] education and training as a laborer.”

In other words, the price of labor-power is determined by the cost of food, clothing, housing and education at a given standard of living. Marx adds that “the cost of production of…[labor-power] must include the cost of propagation, by means of which the race of workers is enabled to multiply itself, and to replace worn-out workers with new ones.” So, wages must also include the cost of raising children, the next generation of workers.

So in Marx’s generalized analysis, the level of wages depends on what it takes to keep workers and their families (who represent the next generation of workers) alive and able to work–with their standard of living affected by the outcome of class struggles between workers and capitalists.

The crucial point is that the cost of wages or labor-power depends on factors completely independent of the actual value produced by workers during the labor process. This difference is the source of “surplus value,” or profit. So let’s compare the price of labor-power to the value, expressed in price, of the commodities that workers creates through their labor.

To take a simple example, let’s assume that a worker is able to produce in four hours new value that is equivalent to the value of their labor-power for the day–to, say, $100 in wages. Marx called this “necessary labor,” because it is the amount of labor required to replace the wages paid by the capitalist, and because if the worker labored independently and not for a capitalist, it would be “necessary” for them to work four hours to maintain their standard of living.

If it was a matter of “a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work,” workers ought to be able to go home after four hours of labor. In our example, the capitalist is paying them $100 for the workday, and the worker produced $100 worth of new value in the form of products that belong to the capitalist, which they can sell on the market to recoup what they spent on wages and other costs of production.

But things don’t work this way under capitalism. As Marx wrote in a pamphlet called Value, Price and Profit, “By buying the daily or weekly value of the laboring power of the [worker], the capitalist has, therefore, acquired the right to use or make that laboring power during the whole day or week.”

Hence, the worker, in order to receive a wage equivalent to the value they produce in four hours, is forced by the capitalist to work longer–a total of, in our example, eight hours. The value created during the additional four hours, embodied in the products produced by the worker during that time, is what Marx called “surplus value.”

When this surplus product is sold, the capitalist pockets the proceeds–this, according to Marx, is the secret to the source of profits. And it’s not only industrial capitalists whose profits derive from surplus value, or unpaid labor. The “rentier” classes, such as finance capital and landlords, take their cut from the wealth extracted from the labor of workers in the form of interest on loans to the industrial capitalists and to others in society, rent for factories and homes, and so on.

Exploitation forms the basis of all the profits shared among the entire capitalist class. It is not simply the case that the wealthy have a lot while workers have little; capitalists accumulate wealth through a system of organized theft from the working class.

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AN UNDERSTANDING of the basics of Marx’s theory of exploitation helps to explain the different forms of struggles between workers and capitalists. To take a few examples (although there are many more):

One of the earliest such struggles was over the length of the working day, which Marx discusses at length in the first volume of Capital. So long as everything else remains the same, capitalists can increase the amount of “surplus labor” over and above that needed to produce the value of wages by extending the length of the working day. This increases the rate of exploitation, as workers spend a greater portion of the working day performing unpaid labor for the capitalist.

In the 1880s in the U.S., workers, led by anarchists and socialists, waged heroic struggles to limit the working day to eight hours. These workers were struggling to decrease the rate of exploitation. By fighting for a shorter working day, they were fighting to decrease the amount of unpaid labor they were forced to perform for the capitalists.

Similarly, struggles over wages and benefits are struggles over the value and price of labor-power, which is an expression of workers’ standard of living. Capitalists seek to lower wages and slash benefits, decreasing the price of labor-power in order to increase the accumulation of surplus value, to maximize their profits.

This is evident in the current wide-ranging attack on workers’ living standards, from public sector workers’ wages, pensions and health benefits to private-sector workers such as those at Verizon. The 45,000 union workers who went on strike at Verizon and the public-sector workers and their allies who rose up in Wisconsin were fighting to defend the price of labor-power.

Most importantly, Marx’s theory of exploitation reveals that because the source of capitalists’ wealth is the unpaid labor of workers, the interests of workers and capitalists–like slave and master or serf and lord before them–are diametrically opposed and are impossible to reconcile. The two will always come into conflict since capitalists can only increase their share of the wealth at the expense of workers, and vice versa.

Workers have to struggle to decrease the severity of the exploitation they face under capitalism. But as long as the capitalist system exists, workers will be exploited, and their unpaid labor will remain the source of the profits that are the lifeblood of the system.

Therefore, Marx concluded that the only way for workers to control the wealth they create and use it to meet their needs was under a different system altogether. As he wrote in Value, Price and Profit, “Instead of the conservative motto ‘A fair day’s wages for a fair day’s work!’ they ought to inscribe on their banner the revolutionary watchword: ‘Abolition of the wages system!'”

According to Marx, only when workers control the means of production for their own benefit can exploitation be abolished–only then will “the expropriators [be] expropriated.”

Why Karl Marx was right

Lee Sustar explains why mainstream economists are referring to Karl Marx in discussions of the world economy–and why they won’t talk about the whole Marx.

September 13, 2011

originally posted here

Why Karl Marx was right (Eric Ruder | SW)

ECONOMIST NOURIEL Roubini, whose predictions of the financial crash of 2008 earned him the nickname “Dr. Doom,” has referred his patients to a specialist in capitalist crisis: Dr. Karl Marx.

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Roubini said:

Karl Marx had it right. At some point, capitalism can destroy itself. You cannot keep on shifting income from labor to capital without having an excess capacity and a lack of aggregate demand. That’s what has happened. We thought that markets worked. They’re not working. The individual can be rational. The firm, to survive and thrive, can push labor costs more and more down, but labor costs are someone else’s income and consumption. That’s why it’s a self-destructive process.

For several hours on August 12, the Journal website ran the video of the interview as a top story, under the headline, “Roubini: Marx was Right.”

Considering that the first edition of Marx’s three-volume masterwork Capital appeared in 1867, Roubini’s revelation isn’t exactly news to socialist opponents of capitalism. But given the intractable nature of the current crisis–a deep global recession, a weak recovery in the traditional core of the system in the U.S. and Europe, and now the possibility of a lurch into a second recession–mainstream, or bourgeois, economics has been exposed as ideologically driven and incapable of offering solutions.

Stimulus spending, championed by liberal followers of the economist John Maynard Keynes, was in full swing two years ago. It staved off total economic collapse after the financial crash, but failed to produce a sustained boom and led to big government budget deficits.

That opened the door to the free-market champions of the so-called Austrian economic school of Friedrich von Hayek, who argued that slashing spending was key to an economic revival–only to see such measures choke off growth in Europe and, more recently, the U.S.

But in August, stock markets gyrated worldwide amid a worsening European debt crisis, a near-stall in U.S. economic growth and a slowdown even in China, home of the world’s most dynamic big economy. Suddenly, the ideological crisis that accompanied the 2008 crash was palpable once more as the world system appeared on the brink of a new recession.

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ROUBINI, A professor at New York University, made his name–and quite a bit of money–by telling the unvarnished truth to Big Capital before the Wall Street meltdown hit. He’s done so once again, this time referring to Marx for an explanation.

In his interview with the Journal, Roubini argued that the U.S. economy is flagging because business is hoarding cash–more than $2 trillion by one estimate–rather than investing it in factories, new equipment and hiring workers. As he put it:

If you’re not hiring workers, there’s not enough labor income, enough consumer confidence, enough consumption, not enough final demand. In the last two or three years, we’ve actually had a worsening, because we’ve had a massive redistribution of income from labor to capital, from wages to profits.

That shift has taken place not during the crisis, but during the recovery, as economist David Rosenberg pointed out earlier this year when he noted that the “labor share of national income has fallen to its lower level in modern history,” 57.5 percent in the first quarter of 2011, compared to 59.8 percent when the recovery began. While that might seem like a small change, given the $14.66 trillion size of the U.S. economy, it’s huge.

In alluding to this trend, Roubini is apparently referring to Marx’s observation about a central contradiction of capitalism. “The consuming power of the workers is limited partly by the laws of wages, partly by the fact that they are used only as long as they can be profitably employed by the capitalist class,” Marx wrote in Capital Volume 3. “The ultimate reason for all real crises always remains the poverty and restricted consumption of the masses.”

It’s wrong to assume, Marx contended, that capitalists limit their investments during a crisis because “the absolute consuming power of society” has reached its limit. On the contrary, the unemployed want jobs and workers desire a higher standard of living as the slump wears on.

But during crises, capitalism can’t deliver, even when business has plenty of capital to invest. That’s because capitalists won’t put their money into building factories and offices and hiring workers–as Roubini pointed out–unless they have a reasonable chance of making a profit. Otherwise, they sit on their money.

“The capital already invested is then, indeed, idle in large quantities,” Marx explained. “Factories are closed, raw materials accumulate, finished products flood the market as commodities. Nothing is more erroneous, therefore, than to blame a scarcity of productive capital for such a condition.”

The result, Marx wrote, was both a “superabundance of productive capital” and “paralyzed consumption”–a fairly accurate description of recent trends in the U.S. economy.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

THE BIGGER questions are these: Why do such capitalist crises come about at all? And why are some downturns in the economy mild recessions, while others generate protracted crises, like the Great Depression of the 1930s or the “depression-with-a-small-d” that’s gripped the world economy since late 2007?

Marx wasn’t the first to observe what today’s mainstream economists call the “business cycle”–the economic slumps that take place every few years. His contribution was to delve into the reasons for that pattern. He concluded that the internal contradictions of capitalism doomed the system to periodic, highly destructive crises.

The root of these crises is in the unplanned and competitive nature of capitalist production. For the capitalist, what matters isn’t meeting social needs, but obtaining the maximum profit. If obtaining profit is possible from producing a life-saving medical device like a heart pacemaker, that’s fine. But if more money can be made by producing junk food or nuclear weapons, greater investment flows into those industries instead.

Meanwhile, competition puts capitalists under constant pressure. They have to make sure that workers produce goods in as little time as possible–at what Marx called the “socially necessary labor time” required to produce a particular commodity. Otherwise, more efficient capitalists will drive them out of business. Thus capitalists are constantly compelled to invest in labor-saving machinery to cut production costs.

That is the secret of capitalist profitability. For example, new technologies may allow workers to produce enough to cover the costs of their wages in, say, just three hours instead of the four needed previously. The result is an increase in labor time spent working just for the capitalist–increasing what Marx called “surplus value,” which is the source of profits.

But a portion of surplus value must also be reinvested in the production process. Refusing to do so is not an option for capitalists–who live by the rule of eat or be eaten. To the capitalist, Marx wrote in Capital Volume 1, the motto is:

Accumulate, accumulate! That is Moses and the prophets!…save, save, i.e., reconvert the greatest possible portion of surplus-value, or surplus-product into capital! Accumulation for accumulation’s sake, production for production’s sake: by this formula classical economy [the original bourgeois economics] expressed the historical mission of the bourgeoisie, and did not for a single instant deceive itself over the birth-throes of wealth.

The drive to accumulate is blind and chaotic. As Roubini recognized, “markets aren’t working” because what is rational for an individual person or corporation–the maximization of profit by pushing down labor costs–can be irrational for the system as a whole.

During the upswing of the business cycle, the problems are largely hidden. As long as profits are high and credit is available, companies can borrow to invest in new production and hire new workers. Pundits proclaim that recessions are a thing of the past.

But even as production expands, profits are squeezed as new entrants flood the market. Companies go bust, which hits their banks hard. The banks, in turn, raise interest rates or simply refuse to lend, which triggers further bankruptcies. Factory closings and mass layoffs ensure–and, in the modern era, job cuts hit the public sector as tax revenues decline.

In the section of Capital Volume 3 quoted above, Marx described how the crisis can seem to erupt out of nowhere. Thanks to the extension of credit, he wrote:

[E]very individual industrial manufacturer and merchant gets around the necessity of keeping a large reserve fund and being dependent upon his actual returns. On the other hand, the whole process becomes so complicated, partly by simply manipulating bills of exchange [i.e., checks and promises of future payment], partly by commodity transactions for the sole purpose of manufacturing bills of exchange, that the semblance of a very solvent business with a smooth flow of returns can easily persist even long after returns actually come in only at the expense partly of swindled money-lenders and partly of swindled producers. Thus business always appears almost excessively sound right on the eve of a crash.

Marx’s description of how credit could delay, but then exacerbate, a crash applies the financial debacle of 2008, which involved no small amount of the kind of manipulation and swindling Marx saw in his day. Set aside the toxic alphabet soup of today’s financial assets–CDS, CDO and MBS–and Marx’s analysis of the role of bankers sounds familiar: “the entire vast extension of the credit system, and all credit in general, is exploited by them as their private capital.”

The development of credit, in turn, helps expand capitalist production beyond the capacity of the market to absorb new commodities: “[B]anking and credit…become the most potent means of driving capitalist production beyond its own limits, and one of the most effective vehicles of crises and swindle.”

But Marx also stressed that the credit crunch is actually a symptom of problems in the underlying productive economy. He wrote in Capital Volume 2, “[W]hat appears as a crisis on the money-market is in reality an expression of abnormal conditions in the very process of production and reproduction.”

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

THERE ARE longstanding debates among Marxist economic theorists about just how capitalist crises play out in general and their manifestation in different historical periods.

Marx identified a long-term tendency in the rate of profit to fall–the result of the constant pressure to invest in technology to replace workers, who are the source of surplus value. But capitalists have been able to counteract the falling rate of profit in various ways–for example, by destroying unprofitable capital through highly disruptive means, ranging from bankruptcies to wars like the Second World War, which ultimately was the most important reason the system finally overcame the Great Depression and was launched into a postwar boom.

In the 1970s, severe slumps returned to the world system as a revived Europe and Japan, along with several newly industrialized countries, emerged as more effective competitors to the U.S. But the restructuring of uncompetitive industries, free-market policies and corporate globalization opened the way to a new boom in the 1990s, when the U.S. declared that its “miracle economy” was the model for the world.

Ultimately, however, the economic expansion of the 1990s set the stage for a new crisis–one that Marx would have recognized. In the Communist Manifesto, written in 1847, years before he undertook a systematic study of the system, Marx and co-author Frederick Engels noted that capitalism’s drive to expand led to crises of overproduction–of too many goods to be sold at a profit:

In these crises, there breaks out an epidemic that, in all earlier epochs, would have seemed an absurdity–the epidemic of overproduction. Society suddenly finds itself put back into a state of momentary barbarism; it appears as if a famine, a universal war of devastation, had cut off the supply of every means of subsistence; industry and commerce seem to be destroyed; and why? Because there is too much civilization, too much means of subsistence, too much industry, too much commerce…

And how does the bourgeoisie get over these crises? On the one hand by enforced destruction of a mass of productive forces; on the other, by the conquest of new markets, and by the more thorough exploitation of the old ones. That is to say, by paving the way for more extensive and more destructive crises, and by diminishing the means whereby crises are prevented.

That passage still has the ring of truth. It was capitalist overproduction on a world scale in the 1990s that set the stage for the 1997 East Asian financial crisis and the recession of 2001. But by dropping interest rates to rock bottom, the Federal Reserve was able to postpone the real day of reckoning for the U.S. for nearly a decade. Cheap credit and the housing bubble kept American consumers spending and the number of Asian factories growing, even if the number of manufacturing jobs in the U.S. continued to decline during the 2002-2007 expansion.

As we now know, banks were happy to make the loans for mortgages and then pass them along to Wall Street, which bundled them into securities that later turned toxic. When even a limited number of sub-prime loans started to go bad, a credit squeeze quickly destroyed investment banks Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers. Nouriel Roubini, who had been warning about all this for years, was suddenly a business celebrity–and even Karl Marx made the financial press.

The bad debts of that era of casino capitalism continue to weigh down the world economy. Yesterday’s toxic assets held by private banks have morphed into today’s government budget deficits, thanks to the no-questions-asked, multitrillion-dollar bailouts in the U.S. and Europe.

And the global crisis of overproduction is still unresolved. In the U.S., the capacity utilization rate for total industry was 77.5 percent in July, some 2.2 percentage points above the rate a year earlier, but 2.9 percentage points below the average for the period between 1972 and 2010. That’s unmistakable evidence of a depressed economy–and it’s what Roubini was talking about when he cited “excess capacity” and mentioned Marx.

With mainstream economists fresh out of ideas about how to overcome the crisis, perhaps it shouldn’t be surprising that Marx made news even in Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal. But don’t hold your breath waiting for a follow-up Journal headline: “Capitalism Isn’t Working: Socialism is the Alternative.” That part is up to us.

First public event @ Hunter!

Global Meltdown meets Global Resistance:
Why You Should Become A Socialist

Following the biggest economic crisis in four generations, the financial meltdown of 2008, the ruling classes of World have embarked on a program to extend the same policies that led to the crisis while also shifting the mass of this private debt into public debt. Through massive budget cuts of crucial social services and public institutions (which disproportionately devastate already underserved communities of color), the mass job layoffs, the ever increasing and costly policing and state surveillance, and the continuance of hyper-expensive wars and militarization expansion- for “our sake” yet at our expense – is defining this austerity program that is only accelerating the race to bottom of living standards for majority of the world.

This austerity program, in its global resonance of working class and poor degradation, has prompted a significant response – a response just as serious as the one that threatens the lives and future of the majority of the world. From the mass popular democratic revolutions in North Africa, the social upheavals throughout Europe, as well as the recent student rebellion in Chile, lie the sure signs of a consciousness and struggle that is being mounted in order to challenge this nominally legal yet unjustifiable attack on the poor and working people everywhere.

In this country, class-conscious struggle has already began to emerge and break through the surface – Madison, Wisconsin, the strike of Verizon workers along the East Coast – what is missing is a generalized struggle and a strategy for achieving victory for working class people.  
 As we witness the all-out assault on working people everywhere, NOW is the time to learn about building a political alternative and organizing a real challenge… 

JOIN US FOR A DISCUSSION THIS WEDNESDAY 9/14
 7:30 PM ROOM 305B; THOMAS HUNTER BLDG.

The “war of terror” decade

Anthony Arnove, author of Iraq: The Logic of Withdrawal and coauthor with Howard Zinn of Voices of a People’s History of the United States, looks back at the 10 years since the September 11 attacks–and how politicians have used the tragedy.

September 11, 2011

Originally posted here

Tank crews in Afghanistan wait for the order to move out (Edward Stewart)

TEN YEARS after the tragic events of September 11, 2001, the world is still reeling from the consequences of the terrorist attacks and the geopolitical shifts that followed.

Moments after the attack, President George W. Bush and his military planners were discussing how to use people’s anger and fear for their political advantage.

The Bush administration saw the horrific events of September 11 as a rare chance to carry out plans that long predated the attacks and package these as defensive rather than offensive measures. Bush and his vice president, Dick Cheney, immediately set to work to target Iraq, despite the fact that the country had no link at all to the attacks.

Leading members of the Bush administration were open about describing the post-September 11 moment as an “opportunity.” After September 11, Condoleezza Rice, Bush’s National Security Adviser and later Secretary of State, asked senior national security staff to think about how to “capitalize on these opportunities,” which were “shifting the tectonic plates in international politics” to U.S. advantage.

“I really think this period is analogous to 1945 to 1947,” Rice told one journalist. “And it’s important to try to seize on that and position American interests and institutions and all of that before they harden again.”

Bush invoked al-Qaeda and the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks repeatedly in his public speeches on Iraq, as the administration consciously set about selling the war, eventually creating the false impression among a majority of the U.S. population that Iraq was connected to September 11.

The most immediate target, though, was Afghanistan. Bush and Co. claimed that they were invading and occupying Afghanistan–still occupied to this day, with no end in sight–because Afghanistan was a base for the September 11 attacks.

In reality, the Bush administration was simply looking for revenge and an easy target to strike, despite the fact that the people who would suffer the consequences were civilians of Afghanistan, who had no responsibility whatsoever for September 11.

With the Democrats safely in tow, the Bush administration intended the invasion of Afghanistan to be a show of force that would have a “demonstration effect,” signaling to other states that the U.S. government has the right–one which it may extend on a limited basis to allies, such as Israel–to engage in “preemptive strikes” against any country it chooses.

While many sought to explain the aggressive policies of the Bush administration as an aberration or a case of neoconservatives or Republicans engineering a radical shift in U.S. principles, the fundamental policies of the so-called “war on terror,” whatever name they go by, have been overwhelmingly bipartisan and have continued in significant respects under President Barack Obama.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

ON OCTOBER 6, 2011, the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan will enter its eleventh year. Even after Osama bin Laden was assassinated in May 2011 in Pakistan, the occupation continues as before.

The extrajudicial murder led to grisly celebrations of U.S. imperial might and lawlessness, but almost none of the media commentators cared to mention how the United States had cultivated bin Laden and his allies as part of their sponsorship of the Jihadists fighting against the Soviet Union–much as Washington had also supported Saddam Hussein for years in Iraq as he carried out his worst crimes.

Despite talk in the press of “withdrawal,” ThinkProgress.com notes that even if active-duty troop “reductions are carried out as planned, the United States would still have far more troops in Afghanistan than it did when Obama came into office and more than at any point during former President George W. Bush’s administration. This means that the troop reduction would not put us much closer to actually ending the war by the end of 2012.”

Civilian deaths in Afghanistan in the first half of 2011 were up 15 percent over the same period in 2010, according to a United Nations study. As the Wall Street Journal reported, May 2011 “was the deadliest month since the counting of civilian casualties started in 2007, with 368 civilian deaths and 593 civilian injuries, according to the report. June had the highest number of security incidents, with 11,862 security incidents in the first half of 2011, compared with 8,242 in the first half of 2010 and 5,095 in the same period in 2009.”

Many of these deaths have come from the under-reported drone warfare the U.S. military has been escalating in Afghanistan. As author Tom Engelhardt writes in his forthcoming Haymarket book The United States of Fear, “assassination-by-drone has become an ever more central part of the Obama administration’s foreign and war policy, and yet the word assassination–with all its negative implications, legal and otherwise–has been displaced by the far more anodyne, bureaucratic term targeted killing.”

The Obama administration is seeking ways to continue its troop presence in Iraq beyond a previously negotiated deadline of the end of 2011.

While the fate of active-duty troops is still uncertain, various “advisers” and private contractors will certainly remain, and Iraq is littered with installations and bases that the U.S. military does not want to abandon. In Baghdad, the United States has built the largest embassy that any government in the world has ever constructed, and it will use every opportunity it can to extend its control over Iraq’s vital resources and to leverage its strategic location in a region that is of immense importance to U.S. projection of power.

The U.S. global war on terror extends well beyond Afghanistan and Iraq. The United States has used drone strikes against Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia; led an air war against Libya without any Congressional authorization; and cooperated with Israeli attacks on Gaza, Lebanon and Syria based on the idea of “preventive” war. Other countries, from Russia to India, have asserted that they, too, have the right to invade and bomb countries to thwart terrorism.

As Nick Turse observes, “Last year, Karen DeYoung and Greg Jaffe of the Washington Post reported that U.S. Special Operations forces were deployed in 75 countries, up from 60 at the end of the Bush presidency. By the end of this year, U.S. Special Operations Command spokesman Col. Tim Nye told me, that number will likely reach 120.”

The U.S. has taken part in global kidnapping and assassination operations in multiple countries, set up torture centers from Guantánamo Bay in Cuba to Bagram in Afghanistan and vastly expanded the apparatus of both the military-industrial complex and a new “national security” complex that increasingly is being used to target dissent and curb civil liberties in the United States.

In the process, President Obama has embraced many elements of the expansion of executive power Bush and Co. engineered in the wake of September 11. As Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, noted in an interview with in International Socialist Review, “[O]ften, Obama’s policies are squarely consistent with Bush policies–they are the same. Sometimes…Obama’s actually going beyond Bush.”

Literally trillions of dollars have been poured into the costs of running these wars abroad and at home, draining funds from schools, health care and other vital social needs.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

IN THE process, we have also experienced cultural shifts with far-reaching and damaging consequences.

The establishment media has played a vital role in selling the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as the broader “war on terror.” The New York Times and other liberal journals such as the New Yorker sold the invasion of Iraq in a way that Bush alone never could have without their reporting lies and propaganda as truth.

We have also seen the open targeting of Muslims, Arabs, immigrants and people of color more broadly to shore up popular support for war. This rhetoric, far more than justifying killing of civilians abroad, has also legitimized racist attacks at home and had a chilling effect in communities understandably fearful of what would happen to them if they spoke out in public against U.S. actions.

Rather than making the world a safer place or spreading democracy, as Bush and Obama claim, U.S. policies have only destabilized the world, fueled a number of reactionary movements at home and abroad, contributed to the appeal and recruitment of the Taliban and al-Qaeda, and made the United States more hated in the world–and in the process made it more likely someone would seek to launch another terrorist attack here.

The balance sheet of the last 10 years is grim. It would have to include the immense loss of life in Iraq and Afghanistan; the millions displaced by the invasions and their aftermath; the deaths of the working class youth, mostly from rural areas, sent to kill and die in Afghanistan and Iraq for no reason; the impact on the communities and families torn apart by these traumas; the erosions of civil liberties; and much else.

Some thought that the election of Barack Obama would close this terrible chapter in our history. It has not. Instead, Obama has mostly engineered refinements of Bush-era policies, a process that Bush himself had already begun in his second term as his advisers realized that the abusive and arrogant unilateralism of the initial phase of their wars was needlessly alienating allies.

Obama has repackaged and in fact given new legitimacy to policies that were once seen by some as outlandish, but are now defended or excused by those whose political horizons are defined by the politics of a prowar Democratic Party.

Not surprisingly, we have seen new setbacks for the antiwar movement and a dwindling of activism since Obama’s election, not the growth of the left that some predicted when calling for a vote for Obama, despite his clear intention of escalating the U.S. presence in Afghanistan and his predictable embrace of numerous Bush-era policies.

But the fact remains that an enormous gap exists between the views and actions of Washington (and of its establishment media echo chamber) and those of the majority of the country.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

THE 10 years since September 11 have demonstrated to millions that we live in a topsy-turvy world. It has led millions more to oppose war and occupation, despite the barrage of media and government propaganda and the exclusion of antiwar voices from political discussion and debate. Around the world, people have taken to the streets and marched to demand change.

Despite a continuing shift rightward at the top, most people came to reject the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. People want less money spent on the military and more on social security and health care. And on a broad range of issues, people feel the government does not serve their interests.

There is still a crying need to close the gap between these popular sentiments and the organization we need to turn that into effective forms of protest.

We need, first and foremost, to start by rebuilding an antiwar movement that is independent of both the corporate pro-war parties. That movement needs to be inclusive of Muslims and others targeted as part of the ideological support for endless war. And it needs to also involve the soldiers and veterans, and their families, being asked to fight these wars.

The tenth anniversary of 9/11 will be used by many to shore up nationalism and militarism and justify continuation of the disastrous wars fought in our name.

But we can’t let this barrage intimidate those of us who know that the tragedy of the deaths of September 11 are only compounded by each new death in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan and beyond.

On October 6, and in the days that follow, people will gather in Washington, D.C., to protest the ongoing occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq–with solidarity events taking place in other cities. A new organization, the United National Antiwar Coalition, is trying to fill the vacuum left by the collapse of other organizations and coalitions that failed to effectively build an independent antiwar movement in the last decade.

These are still modest steps, but vital ones. It took years of many ups and downs to build effective opposition to the U.S. war in Vietnam, but in the end, the movement here and resistance in Vietnam led to a defeat for the United States and a brief moment in which more far-reaching changes could have been won.

We should not be deterred by the setbacks and challenges of the last decade. Far too much is at stake. The course our leaders have set us down is one that leads to more wars and the very real possibility of annihilation, through nuclear war or environmental devastation. It is a path toward barbarism.

We need to set down another path–toward a world without occupations, a world rid of nuclear weapons, a world in which we share rather than make war over the resources of the planet, a world based on solidarity and cooperation. In a word, socialism.