Comrade Scott,

LRNA statement:


".....A huge social motion will arise on these changes. Auto is the harbinger 
of things to come. As nationalization proceeds in the interests of the 
capitalists, the workers are objectively thrown up against the state. 
The workers who keep their jobs can only protect that toehold against 
disaster by inevitably moving closer to the ruling class, while a larger
 section will be cast adrift. This growing polarization will create 
greater motion, instability and provide fertile ground for fascist 
propaganda...."

COMMENT:

This is the crux of the problem.... and indeed a "fertile ground for fascist 
propaganda"  but not so much because those "who keep their jobs can only 
protect that toehold against 
disaster by inevitably moving closer to the ruling class" but because certain 
"communists" will try to create a political schism within the class already 
distraught by a crippling economic circumstance "akin" to capitalism.  The 
unity and struggle between the working class and the bourgeoisie will exhaust 
itself as the decadent aspect further decays.  The working class is NOT  the 
moribund aspect of the contradiction, as least, not from the working class 
perspective.  There shall be a break between the workers and capital,  as 
confirmed by the class struggle in Venezuela, Europe, Cuba, Korea, Vietnam (and 
we'll see how the class struggle develops in China).   

Man's prime want is to be active or work and partake with nature, and not be 
exploited by another human being.   The working class displays no indication of 
being, like Trotsky used to say, "lazy".  Mankind's alienation from nature that 
turned him into slave, peasant, surf, worker,  or their anti thesis, for that 
matter (pharaoh, noble, landlord, capitalist)  occurred  out of necessity,  as 
humanity divided labor and introduced private property thus immediately 
accelerating the struggle to advance the productive forces that would catapult 
humanity AGAIN into a new version  of communism in the near future.  Socialism 
is already with us....  and so 7,000 years of class division vs. Hundreds of 
thousands of years of primitive communalism was that necessary contradiction.   

The working class will never follow these people, so vile as to ostracize it as 
concessionary to capitalism; the  working class shall always be the majority!   
And any group who deems it necessary to stigmatize the working class  is alien 
to it and belongs to the reactionary side of history, and the class will purge 
itself of it.

yours,
f580

--- On Thu, 12/30/10, Mark Scott <mark1scot...@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: Mark Scott <mark1scot...@yahoo.com>
Subject: [MLL] Know Your Enemy, Know Yourself
To: marxist-leninist-list@lists.econ.utah.edu
Date: Thursday, December 30, 2010, 4:30 PM

 

"Therefore I say: Know your enemy and know yourself; in a hundred battles you 
will never be in peril. When you are ignorant of the enemy, but know yourself, 
your chances of winning or losing are equal. If ignorant both of your enemy and 
of yourself, you are certain in every battle to be in peril."
– Sun Tzu, The Art of War
 
This well-known advice from Sun Tzu's Art of War holds many lessons for 
revolutionaries. Knowing one's enemy begins with an accurate assessment of the 
real processes underway that both determine what the adversary must do, what he 
can do, the forces at his disposal, as well as the areas where he is weak. 
Knowing oneself – oneself being the revolutionary forces in this country – is 
to understand how those same processes shape what can be done, what must be 
done, the forces at our disposal, as well as the areas where we are weak. By 
basing political conclusions on the accurate estimate of the processes underway 
– from both sides of the table – revolutionaries can begin to develop the 
strategy and tactics that can most effectively teach our class its true 
interests and move the process toward the conclusion that benefits our class.
 
This accurate assessment begins with the understanding that the economy and 
society are undergoing a leap. This leap is the transformation from a system of 
production and distribution based on the exploitation of labor power as a 
commodity – and the productive relations that arose on that basis – to one 
where production without labor, and therefore value, is emerging. Yet, new 
productive relations do not arise spontaneously. They must be fought for.
 
As the crisis advances, and political polarization deepens, both the ruling 
class and the workers will be forced to fight for a political solution that is 
dictated by the objective character of the changes underway. If the ruling 
class wants to survive as a ruling class and preserve private property under 
their control, it will have to fight for a fascist political solution. If the 
workers want to survive at all, they will have to fight for a communist 
political solution.
 
In the period of the leap the battle shifts to the subjective. All of society 
is dragged into a fight to align thinking with the actual changing conditions, 
and into the struggle to enforce their interests. Without a unity of the 
subjective understanding of what is objectively possible nothing can move 
forward. This is as true for the fascists as it is for the communists.
 
Today, we see the objective impulses toward fascism developing from within the 
actual process far ahead of, and without a cohesive or unified, subjective 
side. The fascist forces are scattered and divided. The task of the ruling 
class is to create the subjective unity necessary for the process to move 
forward.
 
State transformed in capitalists' interest
 
While universal laws inform its motion, the development of fascism today is not 
unfolding in the same way as it did in the past. The main distinctive 
difference is the existence of the actual, objective basis for political 
revolution.
 
In the past period, fascism was not objectively necessary to protect capitalism 
as a system. In the Nazi period, for example, fascism protected the national 
interests of a section of the larger section of finance capitalists under very 
specific historical conditions. These conditions were the worsening economic 
crisis, the weakening of social democratic influence and the rising strength of 
revolutionary forces in Germany, Italy and Austria, as well as the influence of 
the newly formed Soviet Union. If these forces had taken power, certainly they 
would have attempted to put an end to capitalist property relations. It was in 
this sense only that a threat to capitalism existed, not because of the 
introduction of qualitatively new technology as today. In this sense, fascism 
arose first as a subjective movement. The fascists seized power first, then 
created the conditions for changes in the economy and society.
 
Today, this process has been stood on its head. The foundation for fascism is 
emerging from the actual processes of destruction, polarization and the battle 
to determine how society will be reconstructed. Objectively, the ruling class 
cannot solve the problems it faces within the existing order.
 
History teaches us that a ruling class is capable of changing economic 
foundations to remain a ruling class. The feudal class in Europe transformed 
itself into the land-owning section of the bourgeoisie. In Japan, they 
transformed themselves from feudal lords to the industrial section of the 
bourgeoisie. Their content was to remain a ruling class.
We do not know what today's ruling class will become, but they have to endorse 
change – and unite around that change – in order to remain as a ruling class.
 
They cannot allow the interests of individual corporations, or even industries, 
or sections of the economy, to interfere with this overarching, and what is for 
them life or death, long term goal. All of their efforts are towards 
stabilizing the economy and bringing the vast capitalist economic and political 
order under control. Only the state can intercede to impose this kind of 
stability. The transformation that is taking place in the state is itself 
becoming the vehicle to reconstruct society around the interests of the ruling 
class in the new epoch.
 
This is no more apparent than in the 180 degree turnaround in ruling class 
actions over the past year. From fighting for decentralization, the free market 
and unregulated commerce they have mobilized the power of the state to dominate 
and lead the restructuring of the economy. The virtual nationalization of the 
banks, to the nationalization of Chrysler and General Motors, express steps in 
the transformation of the state from the mere facilitator of corporate will to 
its taking a direct role as the guardian of private property.
 
A huge social motion will arise on these changes. Auto is the harbinger of 
things to come. As nationalization proceeds in the interests of the 
capitalists, the workers are objectively thrown up against the state. The 
workers who keep their jobs can only protect that toehold against disaster by 
inevitably moving closer to the ruling class, while a larger section will be 
cast adrift. This growing polarization will create greater motion, instability 
and provide fertile ground for fascist propaganda.
 
The growing economic crisis is bound to bring on political crisis - the clash 
of two antagonistic processes, with one forced to destroy the other to survive. 
The developing crisis is the impossibility of maintaining the bourgeois 
democratic superstructure with the qualitatively new economic foundation that 
is being created.
 
Battle to control state emerging
 
This is not a matter of forces from the right against which the "left" must 
fight. Any dictionary, any book on politics will state that politics expresses 
economics – it clears the way for the economy or a section of the economy to 
develop. Thus, prior to the Civil War, the Democratic Party was the political 
expression of the agrarian bourgeoisie, and the rising industrial class had to 
create a new party, the Republican Party, to represent its interests. In later 
times, the Roosevelt coalition, which dominated the Democratic party, was the 
political expression of international finance capital, and it stood against the 
Republicans, which were the expression of national finance capital. Political 
right and left expressed definite sections of the capitalist class. Today, 
there is no objective foundation for a split in the ruling class today, as 
there was in the past epoch.
 
Of course, there is an ideological right and left, and people drift in and out 
as they choose. There are all kinds of ideas out there – pro-slavery, 
anti-black, anti-immigrant, neo-confederates, religious dominionists and 
reconstructionists to name a few – and they are beginning to get into 
scattered, and sometimes violent (if still isolated) motion. They are dangerous 
and have to be fought.
 
The key thing is revolutionaries have different tactics to fight a right that 
is based in the economy and a right based in abstract ideology.
 
Today, our starting point has to be the qualitatively new conditions – a leap 
in the economy, and the dissolution of that economic system and its relations. 
The struggle has moved from a struggle between two groups within the ruling 
class to a struggle between two hostile classes. The process of nationalization 
is underway - the question is in whose interests. The battle that is emerging 
today is who will control the state. The ruling class has to control the state 
if they are going to protect private property. The workers have to control the 
state if they are going to gain control of their lives. That struggle is not 
"fight the right". It is the beginning of revolution.
 
Fascists' next step: unite scattered forces
 
Without the unity of the subjective and the objective, the process cannot move 
forward. New ideas have to be introduced – and have to be broadly accepted – to 
facilitate the objective changes taking place. Today, the radical changes on 
the objective side are outrunning the subjective side. There is talk about 
anti-communism and anti-socialism. But at the moment, fascism has not been put 
forward openly as the political solution to facilitate the objective changes 
that are already taking place.
 
We can see how the unity of the objective and the subjective pushed forward 
events in our own history. The defeat of Reconstruction, for example, was only 
possible with the unity of the southern plantation owners and a section of 
white workers and small producers united ideologically to stop the blacks and 
re-enslave them by the millions. This would not have been possible without the 
unity of the objective and subjective. That kind of unity does not exist today.
 
There is motion, social upheaval and developing polarization, flux, 
contradiction. The fascist movement is scattered and divided. At its core are 
serious, conscious fascists. All kinds of people and groups with all kinds of 
ideas gravitate toward this fascist core as a means of accomplishing their own 
goals. For this disparate movement to unite around a fascist solution and into 
cohesive political force will require some kind of general line that pulls them 
all together, regardless of their individual programs.
 
Future is up to us
 
Although the objective side of the process is quite advanced, fascist political 
revolution is not inevitable. The fascists must fight to impose it. Conversely, 
it can be, it must be, defeated. How can this be done? What is the first step, 
and the next one after that? These are the questions which every revolutionary 
is grappling with today.
 
The revolutionary process is moving into uncharted territory. We must leave 
behind the preconceptions of the past period and begin to grapple with the new 
conditions. Our starting point as revolutionaries is to describe as accurately 
as possible the situation faced by our class, where it is in its development, 
and use that information to constantly examine and reexamine our political 
conclusions, and the strategy and tactics that flow from those conclusions. The 
answers to the questions revolutionaries face are not the purview of this or 
that person, or this or that organization. They are questions of the 
revolution, and as such involve all who seek to end the destruction around us 
and build a new world.
 
Political Report of the Standing Committee of League of Revolutionaries for a 
New America, June 2009. 
July.2009.Vol19.Ed4
This article originated in Rally, Comrades!
P.O. Box 477113 Chicago, IL 60647 ra...@lrna.org
Free to reproduce unless otherwise marked. 
Please include this message with any reproduction. 

 
 




      
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