Because of my general revulsion towards Bob Avakian's style of party building, I
feel the need to make a disclaimer here. THis is probably the first time I have
forwarded his party's materials. I'll take a movement of Avakianists over these
Red-Baiting scum they are replying to.

Q: How do you know the movement is getting somewhere?
A: It's being red-baited by liberals.

I must say, liberals and anarchists are often just as anti-communist as each
other, but anarchists do not get caught up in this sell-out of principle &
witchhunting of fellow organisers. At least, not the relevant ones.

Macdonald

SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT
On Revolutionaries in the Anti-war Movement

By the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA

As the drumbeats of U.S. war on Iraq grow louder and more imminent; as new
government measures threaten Muslim and Arab immigrants; as sweeping new big
brother programs threaten massive surveillance on the entire population and the
denial of political rights -- it is more and more urgent to unite all who can be
united against the whole U.S. government agenda that we in the Revolutionary
Communist Party have called a juggernaut of war and repression.


Friend and foe alike acknowledge that a new movement is on the rise to meet
this challenge. We see it taking shape in the powerful "Not In Our Name"
Statement of Conscience, in the tens of thousands who took the Pledge of
Resistance in cities around the country on October 6, in the massive turnout
to the October 26 demonstrations in Washington D.C. and San Francisco, in the
determined youth who took the streets on November 20. Our party is proud to be
part of these efforts, uniting with people from a wide range of views to bring
an urgently needed movement of resistance into being.

In this context, journalist Michelle Goldberg of Salon.com (and a variety of
other voices in the media) have warned that the involvement of revolutionary
communists and radicals will harm the newly emerging anti-war movement.
But will the anti-war movement be more powerful if radicals and communists
are driven from the leadership and something Goldberg and others consider "a
more rational group" moves to the forefront? Will our movement build the kind of
resistance that needs to be built? Will it unite millions to oppose the
terrible injustices being carried out in our name by the U.S. government?
Will it give scope to the deep debate that needs to go on throughout society
on the nature of this juggernaut? Will it stop the war?

No.

In fact, the movement will not be more powerful, it will not be broader, and
it will not be more effective. It will be divided and weak. It will not reach
out to include the "change the world" youth and people for whom life under
this system is intolerable. It won't unite all the people who can and must be
united to stop this juggernaut. And it is really important for people to
understand this.

On one level, there is a certain absurdity to Goldberg's charge: from the
Paris Commune to World War 1 to the French War in Algeria to the Vietnam War,
radicals and communists have played an important, and at times decisive, role in
every movement against an unjust war by great powers. And these movements have
derived their strength, determination and breadth from the participation of the
most committed opponents of the status quo. But we will deal with the charges of
today, in the spirit of doing all that we can at this historic juncture to build
the kind of movement that is needed now.

>From the days after September 11 -- when it became clear that the U.S.
government was using these events to embark on a whole program to forcibly
recast the power relations on the planet -- our Party began a serious effort
to unite with others to build the kind of movement that could rise to these
historic and unprecedented challenges. We recognized the need for new
alliances, drawing on the creativity and commitment of people from many
different political perspectives. And we put forward our ideas on what we
thought this movement needed to be.

In December 2001, in the Revolutionary Worker (RW) newspaper, RCP Chairman Bob
Avakian spoke of the need to bring forward the "vision of a movement against the
war acts and repression of 'our own' U.S. government that is so powerful that it
cannot be hidden from the masses of people all over the world -- including in
the countries and areas that are targets of U.S.
imperialist aggression and are, justifiably, 'hotbeds' of hatred 'against
America.'

"Imagine the inspiration it will provide and the potential realignment it
will contribute to -- with ordinary people worldwide finding common cause
against the oppressors and bullies of the world, first and above all the
rulers of America -- who, it will be more and more clear, do not speak and
act in the interests, or in the name of large, and growing, numbers of
American people themselves."

In editorials in our newspaper and discussions with many organizations and
individuals, we talked about the need for a movement of resistance that could
unite people very very broadly -- from different perspectives, walks of life
and regions of the country -- to stand up and say: "not in our name."

Many people brought their creative thinking and contributions into the mix -
and a common vision and a common basis of unity emerged. This took concrete form
in a powerful statement of conscience, which opened up space for people all
across the country to voice their opposition; a pledge of resistance which has
captured the imagination and determination of hundreds of thousands; and a day
of resistance which signaled a serious Not In Our Name movement.

Our party also supported the October 26 actions in Washington, D.C. led by
the ANSWER Coalition, urging all those opposed to the war to be counted in
the streets -- and it was heartening that so many people turned out. While
our party has significant differences with the Workers World Party, which is
involved in the ANSWER Coalition, we are firmly opposed to the kind of
unprincipled attacks that have also come down against WWP in an attempt to
divide the mass movement against the war.

*****

Goldberg's Salon.com articles, and other distorted accounts, paint a picture
of manipulative "leftists" with hidden agendas in the anti-war movement.
This has nothing to do with reality.

Our party has a strategic approach to uniting with others who do not share
our Maoist politics and ideology. The Not In Our Name initiatives represent
real united front efforts, where people of different perspectives strategize
together and act together to oppose the great injustices that are coming
down. We recognize this united front as a place where we come together with
others to make something new. It is not "ours," it is not a so-called "front
group," and it certainly does not concentrate our whole revolutionary line or
analysis or program. But our vision of the importance of such united front
efforts does flow from our understanding of the need to change the political
climate and alliances in society. We are open and aboveboard about putting
forward our views on the dividing lines and directions of these united front
efforts, and we seek to learn from others.

We believe these are very crucial efforts for the people - they are serious
beginning steps on a path we need to walk together to stop this juggernaut.
Our party has contributed a lot to this process, and we are committed to give
our all to working with those who want to stop this juggernaut.

At the same time, we all need a great debate and discussion, throughout
society -- wrangling over the world situation and what to do about it.
Our party has a revolutionary agenda -- a vision of a radically different
world without classes and class distinctions. But it is hardly a hidden
agenda.

Our party believes that this juggernaut of war and repression is a product of
a political, economic and social system that will keep on causing enormous
suffering for people all over the world until a real revolution brings a
whole new social order into being -- a revolution involving the emergence of
a revolutionary people, where millions see this system for what it is and a
huge crisis in society creates conditions for people to rise up. And from
many different angles, we will continue to share our "independent line" on
this and many other questions, in the great debates within the anti-war
movement and throughout society.

But those we have united in the anti-war movement are not responsible for our
whole revolutionary line and program -- and we are not responsible for all of
their ideological positions. This is another tack by Goldberg and others --
attempting to divide the movement by forcing people to take responsibility
for all the revolutionary views of our party, which they may or may not agree
with. And this cannot be allowed to go down.

What we are all responsible for is to unite all who can be united to resist
and stop this juggernaut.

*****

>From the beginning, we asked: how can we build the kind of movement that can
speak to millions and unite all those who oppose this war and repression -
and bring out the truth?

And the irony is that the anti-war movement that we have been part of
building is speaking to millions. It is resonating with people who are not
activists, but who are being drawn into opposition to the actions of the
government. So it is curious that Michelle Goldberg, on one hand, describes
the Not In Our Name statement as a "beautifully written declaration of
conscience whose sentiments would be shared by a great many liberals" --
i.e. a statement that is actually giving voice to the sentiments of millions
-- and on the other hand, Goldberg demands that the movement take distance
from Maoists like C. Clark Kissinger, who has been an important organizer for
the statement, because his participation will alienate the masses.

A more logical conclusion would be that these communists and all the people
involved in these efforts are doing something right. If people like Goldberg
are so concerned about the anti-war movement and they think the statement is
"beautiful," then why not urge others to sign it? Why focus on attacking
revolutionaries in the mix?

Goldberg claims to be fulfilling her journalistic responsibility by calling
attention to Kissinger's politics in her articles. But we have to say quite
frankly that there are serious problems with Goldberg's journalism.

First, she has attributed completely false statements to Clark Kissinger --
relying on hearsay that Clark has previously refuted -- without even
bothering to ask Clark about it.

In characterizing Kissinger's political beliefs, the Salon article makes this
outrageous distortion: "In an article for WorkingForChange.com, Seattle Times
journalist Geov Parris writes about Not in Our Name statement coordinator Clark
Kissinger, who he identifies as a 'core member' of the RCP [Revolutionary
Communist Party], 'I still have vivid memories of Kissinger
explaining calmly to me once why, when the RCP took over, it would be
necessary to shoot everyone who didn't agree with them.'"

In response to this charge, Clark Kissinger writes: "Let me say clearly: Geov
Parrish is lying and Michelle Goldberg is repeating the lie. It is
unconscionable to resort to hearsay and gossip to characterize my views when I
have written many articles on a range of political questions, from the death
penalty to the experience of China during Mao's leadership. These manufactured
comments are totally antithetical to my revolutionary politics. The truth is
that for decades I have identified with the Maoist movement that has summed up
the experience, both positive and negative, of all previous socialist societies,
including the importance of dissent in any new socialist society."

A passage from the RCP Draft Programme speaks to the importance of having a
wrangling atmosphere with "air to breathe" for different views: "Dissent can
play an important role in sparking debate and struggle over the unresolved
contradictions and problems facing socialist society in moving toward classless,
communist society. But unless it is clear that there is 'space' for such dissent
in society, unless people feel that they have room to
disagree with those in authority, unless an atmosphere is created in which
the masses actually grasp not only the possibility but the importance of
their debate and wrangling over all the questions of the day - then any
dissenting views and sentiments will be forced underground, the vigorous
debate and struggle necessary to actually move society forward to communism will
not flower, and the atmosphere in society will become lifeless and boring."

This discussion of the RCP's view of dissent after the revolution is
available on the rwor.org website, along with extensive writings by RCP
Chairman Bob Avakian on dissent and intellectual life before and after the
revolution.

And if Goldberg were seriously concerned to share the truth with her readers,
she might have taken the trouble to find out what Kissinger and the RCP
actually think.

In a similar vein, Goldberg claims to reveal to her readers information on
the political positions of the RCP and assigns herself to set standards for
the leadership of the anti-war movement.

"The RCP's ideology isn't just harmless campus Marxism," she writes. She
then goes on to criticize the RCP for supporting the efforts of people around
the world to liberate themselves from oppression. Her writing is full of buzz
words and distortions. She resorts to crude characterizations of serious
revolutionary movements that echo the lies of the media -- describing the
Communist Party of Peru as "'fanatically brutal' terrorists" and the people's
war in Nepal as a "bloody insurgency."

Goldberg crudely dismisses a series of articles in the RW that go deeply into
the line and practice of revolutionaries in Tibet, during the revolutionary
days of Mao - articles that delve into the truth of this situation, including
the unbearable poverty and oppression suffered by the Tibetan people under
the old Dalai Lama.

She describes a 1997 article in the RW as an "impassioned defense" of Pol
Pot. She has not done her homework. In fact, that article was a call for a
real revolutionary investigation of what went wrong in Cambodia, and why. It
made clear that the policies of Pol Pot in Cambodia were very different than
Maoism. The RW article pointed out that any serious analysis of what happened in
Cambodia had to proceed from an understanding that the Cambodian people have a
right to liberate themselves from U.S. domination. But Goldberg mocks the idea
that traditional Cambodia was a brutal feudal society that needed a revolution.
And nowhere does Goldberg mention the massive secret bombing of Cambodia by the
U.S. - which subjected the Cambodian people to mass murder from the skies and
touched off a huge wage of protest in the early 1970s. (People who are
interested in subsequent Maoist analysis of what went wrong with the Pol Pot
regime could read an article in the London-based Maoist journal A World to Win,
issue #25, 1999.)

Goldberg apparently moves in a journalistic world where it is acceptable to
throw around facile denunciations of anyone who attempts to throw off
semi-feudal oppression and big power domination by rising up and taking up
arms. This is a world where facile verdicts on what actually happened in
Tibet, or China during the Cultural Revolution, pass for progressive politics
-- a world where no distinction is made between revolutionary society in
Maoist China and the actions of the pro-capitalist regime that carried out
the Tienanmen Square massacre; a world where no one asks why the Dalai Lama
worked with the CIA; a world where TINA (There Is No Alternative) rules.

It is all too fashionable for cynical verdicts about how "revolution is worse
than the social ills it attempts to cure" to cover for lack of any serious
discussion about real problems confronting oppressed classes taking history
into their hands. How convenient that such claims coincide with the
prevailing verdicts of the official ideology of the very people who profit
from global sweatshops and send arms to disgusting regimes all over the
planet.

But we live in a world where millions and millions of people are suffering
from oppressive regimes backed by the U.S. government who condemn the
peasantry to poverty, drive them off the land into vast urban shantytowns,
sell their daughters in the sex trade and work their fingers to the bone in
factories.

Our party's political support for the people's wars in Peru and Nepal stems
from the experience and analysis of our Maoist movement -- that the only way
the masses of people in the oppressed countries of the third world can get
free of this oppression is to rise up in a new democratic revolution, wage a
people's war, and build a new society. These movements and other movements now
under attack -- like the people's war in the Philippines -- are genuine
struggles for national and social liberation and they are based on mobilizing
the masses of people.

We know that many people involved in the anti-war movement do not share our
perspective on these problems. And, again, they are not responsible for our
positions.

But in a situation where the U.S. power structure is attempting to brand as
terrorists any movement that dares to challenge their domination -- or rises
up against a regime they support -- thinking people really need to insist on
more rigorous standards of debate and discussion about the rights of the
people of the world to make revolution.

And, while we continue to have healthy debate and struggle about the
direction of the anti-war movement, we cannot allow those who actually stand
opposed to the movement to tell us what we should say and who should be
involved. Part of their political objective is really to get us to water down
the message so that it means nothing. And to those people we have to say:
Don't tell us you have to cut off our arms and legs to make our movement more
powerful.

*****

>From the beginning, we have shared this concern with people: How can we build a
movement of resistance capable of withstanding repression - and a
government implementing fascistic measures in the name of safety?

Goldberg and others who are playing the game of "outing" communists and
radicals in the movement appear unconcerned about the whole history of
political witchhunts in this country, as well as the current political
climate. For anyone familiar with the period of the 1950s, there is a feeling
of McCarthyism about all this -- where government committees called people to
testify about their communist membership and people were branded by
affiliation.

For instance, C. Clark Kissinger is well known as a correspondent for the
Revolutionary Worker newspaper, but in one article Goldberg quotes a
political opponent saying that Kissinger is a "core member" of the RCP. In
her next article Goldberg claims to have "learned" that Kissinger "leads"
the party. This sort of gossip only plays into the hands of those who want to
crush the anti-war movement.

Political discussion and criticism in the movement is welcome and necessary.
But it is really crucial in the land of Ashcroftian madness to fight for and
respect the rights of people involved in all the resistance movements to
protect themselves from the prying eyes of the state.

*****

Together we need to take the anti-war movement to a whole new level. And we
confront formidable challenges. As always, we welcome the wrangling, the
serious discussion, the comradeship, the creative solutions, and the
courageous actions that come from people daring to take history into our own
hands.(END)

-------------------------------------------
Macdonald Stainsby
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/rad-green
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international
--
In the contradiction lies the hope.
                                     --Bertholt Brecht



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