Left in Crisis

Yoshie Furuhashi 

http://lists.econ.utah.edu/pipermail/a-list/2008-January/069816.html
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<http://montages.blogspot.com/2008/01/left-in-crisis.html>
<http://leninology.blogspot.com/2008/01/left-in-crisis.html>
Left in Crisis  posted by Yoshie

Responses to the Robert Brenner-Sam Gindin debate (7 December 2007),
as well as the debate itself, make me think, yet again, that it would
be better for leftists to drop the oft-asked question -- "Is
capitalism in crisis?" -- and ask different questions.

Capitalism as a mode of production will never be in crisis on the
global scale. There are always global economic trends, some of which
negatively impact profit rates sometimes, but their impacts differ
dramatically from one nation to another, depending on their political
economies, social structures, and (most importantly) cultural
conditions (which alone are subject to leftists' interventions at
least to a certain extent even before leftists find themselves in a
position to change political economy and social structure on the
national level).

Capitalism is always changing, but more profound changes happen during
some periods than others, changes that amount to transition from one
regime of accumulation to another regime, shifting from old national
and inter-national political structures functional to the old regime
to new national and inter-national ones that better fit the new
regime. The emergence of US hegemony, made possible by the Second
World War whose outcome ended the age of inter-imperialist wars, was
one such shift; the end of the post-WW2 boom was another such shift;
the possibility of the end of the dollar hegemony on the horizon today
may be another shift.

Each transition presents popular classes with political openings. The
question is whether popular classes are so organized and motivated to
take advantage of them. It is on this crucial question that Brenner
and Gindin agree: whether or not capitalism is in crisis, it is
certain that leftists, especially leftists in the North, are, in large
part due to the undeniable problem of increasing atomization of
working people in the North, working people in the USA above all, and
in no small part due to the absence of a systemic alternative1 to
capitalism that inspires people and commands their allegiance.

When people are neither organized nor motivated to take advantage of
the openings, the ruling classes will, establishing a new regime of
accumulation.

Even when and where people are organized and motivated, they are not
necessarily organized and motivated by forces and ideas that come from
the Marxist tradition.2 "Indeed, for the moment at least, Marx has
yielded the historical stage to Mohammed and the Holy Ghost. If God
died in the cities of the industrial revolution, he has risen again in
the postindustrial cities of the developing world," declares Mike
Davis ("Planet of Slums," New Left Review 26, March-April 2004).

Recognizing the same phenomenon, Aijaz Ahmad says:

     The secular world has to be just twice over: in terms of
     what it has defined for itself, and also to ward off the
     claim that God would have given better justice. That is to
     say, the secular world has to have enough justice in it for
     one not to have to constantly invoke God's justice against
     the injustices of the profane. ("Islam, Islamism and the
     West," Socialist Register 2008)

But how? In more practical terms than Davis and Ahmad, Randhir Singh
clarifies what is to be done: "better negotiate the necessary
trade-offs between economic development and social justice, between
requirements of productivity or efficiency and environmental
sustainability or quality life which is not entirely a matter of
material progress or economic growth" ("Future of Socialism," MRZine,
29 December 2007). And yet it is far from self-evident to all, the
least of all to the religious, that secular leftists are better at
negotiating the aforementioned trade-off -- as well as another
trade-off, that between liberty and security -- than those who "invoke
God's justice against the injustices of the profane," given the
experience of state socialism of the 20th century and still existing
governments led by self-identified socialists or other secular
leftists. The crisis of the secular Left will thus continue.
Recognizing that as the more urgent problem than whether capitalism
today is dynamic or stagnant is the first step toward overcoming it.

1 The idea of socialism of the 21st century, struggled over in
Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia, is still in its infancy, at present
more an alternative to US hegemony and the neoliberal regime of
accumulation than an alternative to capitalism as such, and forces
that pushed and have kept Hugo Chávez, Rafael Correa, and Evo Morales
in power are composed of contradictory classes and political currents.

2 At least consciously. The Marxist tradition, however, has left
indelible marks upon all forces of popular classes, even those that
have expressely rejected it:

     [D]espite the fashion for comparing it with political
     movements of the far right, Islamism could more
     accurately be described as "Islamo-Leninism." If
     Leninism is a secular movement that denies its
     origins in religion, Islamism is an avowed religious
     movement that suppresses its debts to secular
     thinking; eschatological thinking is equally central
     to both. (John Gray, "Faith in Reason: Secular
     Fantasies of a Godless Age," Harper's Magazine,
     January 2008, p. 88)

I'd qualify Gray's remark: those who may be properly called
"Islamo-Leninists" are those Islamists, such as the Islamists of Iran,
Hizballah, and Hamas, who have the capacity to build mass
organizations of popular classes for their own national projects
inflected with populism and anti-imperialism, not to be confused, for
instance, with terrorist cells of Al-Qaeda-type Islamism.
--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>




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