RALLY COMRADES:

"The struggle for survival of the jobless is not the struggle of worker 
against employer, but a struggle to demand that the State provides what the 
private sector is not providing. None of the practical and economic problems
of  the jobless and the part-time, temporary and minimum wage workers can be 
addressed except in the political struggle over which class the government
will  serve. "

COMMENT:

It is so true.  How can the struggle of the jobless be one against the 
capitalists [employer]  if they don't work.  They must demand of the State to 
provide subsistence.   But the "part-time, temporary and minimum wage workers" 
DO WORK and must address their challenges to the CAPITALIST CLASS, or, the 
"employers".   The struggle of the working class is against CAPITAL,  power is 
taken via the STATE.  It's just the way how things develop in this world.

RALLY COMRADES:

"...Confronting them is a revolutionary class created by the new means of 
production. The demands of this new class for food, clothing, housing, 
education, peace and health care are revolutionary demands. This social force 
is 
capable of bringing about the reorganization and restructuring of society in
the  interests of the world’s people, so that the means of production are
communally  owned and the abundance is distributed according to need."


COMMENT:

Well, even the WORKING CLASS requires  "food, clothing, housing, 
education, peace and health care".  Primitive man required these necessities 
too, but they labored for it  and profited from the exercise.   Now, of course, 
and since the hey days of capitalism, there is no work for a surplus  
population, and for about a 1/3 of the population in the USA today;  and for 
that crime, CAPITALISM will be held responsible.  In the meantime, those who 
work will share the bill,  as there is no other way to sustain everyone, 
including the BANKS.  

There is plenty of prospects for exploitation  in India, China, Africa, South 
America..... nations that are developing in uneven capitalist conditions.  
Imperialism would like to keep a higher hand in that, but social forces are  
thwarting their efforts.

I surely believe that the unemployed and destitute and the homeless will be a 
"social force [ ] capable of bringing about the reorganization and 
restructuring of society in the  interests of the world’s people....."

f580






 

--- On Mon, 1/3/11, waistli...@aol.com <waistli...@aol.com> wrote:

From: waistli...@aol.com <waistli...@aol.com>
Subject: [MLL] New Epoch Makes New World Possible
To: marxist-leninist-list@lists.econ.utah.edu
Date: Monday, January 3, 2011, 7:20 AM

The current economic crisis is more than a cyclical recession, depression,  
or even Great Depression. This crisis is a stage in the final stages of  
capitalism. In the wake and undertow of capitalism’s demise, billions of 
people  worldwide are suffering. Society in transition, as one economic system 
comes to  an end and another begins, is extremely unstable. All political 
activity must be  guided by an understanding of both the opportunities and 
dangers created by this  instability and the leap or revolutionary change from 
one form of human  organization to another, from one society to another. 
 
Understanding the ultimate and underlying causes of the changes in the  
economy arms us and provides the foundation for political strategy and 
activity.  In this article we will review the roots of a process that began 
over 
sixty  years ago, and in observing how this process has been unfolding – the 
process of  cause and effect – we will understand that the massive changes 
experienced so  far have set the stage for even greater changes to come. We are 
on the verge —  in fact have already begun to experience — a dramatic leap 
in societal  disruption caused by a new generation of electronic means of 
production. The  automation of the factory floor and the replacement of 
unskilled and  semi-skilled human labor in manufacturing and industry is almost 
complete. 
 
The next stage, robots replacing humans in service and professional jobs,  
has already begun. Minimum wage, temporary and part-time workers in the 
service  industry — already part of the new class created by electronic 
technology — will  lose what little they have and flood the ranks of the 
permanently 
jobless. 
 
Technology and Jobs 
 
The central relationship of capitalism is that between capitalist (owner of 
 the means of production) and worker (whose labor is the only means of 
survival).  Capitalist pays worker; worker buys products. This relationship is 
constantly  being affected by changes in technology in production. The 
spinning wheel, the  steam engine, and electricity all created new conditions 
of 
work, new jobs, and  new relations between capital and labor. The capitalist 
class is revolutionary,  constantly innovating as each capitalist scrambles 
to survive in a competitive  market where increased productivity and lower 
labor costs are key to success.  Such competition led to the changes in the 
means of production that drove the  expansion of capitalism from tiny 
manufacturing centers in England through the  stages of heavy industry, 
imperialism 
and this era’s globalization. These early  stages of innovation were labor 
saving, expanding the labor force and markets. 
 
Competition drives capitalism to introduce new technology even when the  
consequences of that new technology create conditions that make capitalism  
itself untenable. The introduction of electronics into production is labor  
replacing rather than labor saving and thus challenges the fundamental  
relationship of capitalism, that between worker and capitalist. 
 
Crisis and instability today 
 
Today’s jobless “recovery” from the recession only benefits corporations  
and the financial sector and even for them it is a futile attempt to hold on 
to  something that is no longer viable, a temporary and unstable respite 
from the  inevitable end of capitalism. 
 
This so-called recovery will never produce full employment, because the  
private sector will not and cannot provide humans with jobs to produce what  
robots and computerization can produce cheaper and more effectively. In May 
of  this year, for example, the private sector added only 41,000 jobs, fewer 
than  March or April, not even enough to provide jobs for estimated 100,000 
new  entrants to the labor force each month. Earlier this year the New York 
Times  reported, “Automation has helped manufacturing cut 5.6 million jobs 
since 2000 –  the sort of jobs that once provided lower-skilled workers with 
middle-class  paychecks.” The article quoted Allen Sinai, chief global 
economist at the  research firm Decision Economics, “You basically don’t want 
workers. You hire  less, and you try to find capital equipment to replace them.
” ( “Despite Signs  of Recovery, Chronic Joblessness Rises”, Feb 20, 2010) 
 
History 
 
Computerized automation of industrial production has fundamentally  
challenged capitalism. The process of development has been uneven; cause and  
effect not immediately revealed; and even now when the transformation of 
society  
is evident everywhere, many serious observers of society dismiss the 
seminal  importance of computerized production. In the 1950’s Norbert Weiner, 
the 
father  of cybernetics, said the “automatic machine” was the equivalent of 
slave labor  and that any labor which competes with slave labor must accept 
the economic  consequence of slave labor. He was prescient in anticipating 
the social impact  of the electronic technology (cybernetics) which has 
caused widespread permanent  unemployment, driving down the value of 
labor-power 
and consequently driving  down wages; and creating slave like conditions for 
workers in minimum wage,  temporary and part-time jobs. These objective 
conditions are creating a new  class. In the 1970’s American workers began to 
feel the severe impact of the new  technology as the major industrial giants 
such as auto, steel, and rubber closed  plants and reopened new ones with 
labor replacing technology. A GMC  advertisement aired during the 2010 NBA 
playoffs of a Sierra being assembled  robotically showed how completely 
robotics have replaced human labor in  industry. 
 
(See: Automation and Robotics News, collected and compiled by Tony  
Zaragoza, _http://academic.evergreen.edu/z/zaragozt/arnewsarchive.html_ 
(http://academic.evergreen.edu/z/zaragozt/arnewsarchive.html) ; 
 
“No Humans, Just Robots,” 
_http://singularityhub.com/2010/02/11/no-humans-just-robots-amazing-videos-of-the-modern-factory/_
 
(http://singularityhub.com/2010/02/11/no-humans-just-robots-amazing-videos-of-the-modern-factory/)
 ) 
 
The crisis to come 
 
ATM machines replace bank tellers; self serve check out at supermarkets  
replace cashiers. These are the harbingers of the future when Wal-Mart, Target 
 and every big box store will be introducing totally automated inventory  
management systems. As described by Marshall Brain in his Robotic Nation  
internet series, mobile pick-and-place robots will locate every product through 
 RFID tags. They will be able to restock from warehouse and stack items on  
shelves. All maintenance, customer assistance, shopping and check out will 
be  automated. He predicts that the transition will take about five years,  
eliminating ten million jobs. 
 
And that is not all. At least 50 percent of jobs today are in fast-food  
restaurants, retail stores, delivery companies, construction, airlines,  
amusement parks, hotels and motels, warehousing and so on. All are prime 
targets  
for robotic replacement. Brain projects that taken all together about 50 
million  jobs will be lost due to automation by mid-century. 
 
(Marshall Brain, Robotic Nation, _www.marshallbrain.com/robotic-nation.htm_ 
(http://www.marshallbrain.com/robotic-nation.htm) ). 
 
Political implications 
 
Computerized production and robotic automation frees us from backbreaking  
labor and opens the opportunity to fulfill our unlimited potential for  
creativity and social development. Under the economic laws of capitalism,  
however, where jobs are the nexus to all that provides for our health and well  
being, we are faced with destruction and misery rather than freedom. To 
resolve  the jobs crisis, some call for a new New Deal, which was intended to 
save  capitalism by stimulating demand to kick start investment and hiring. 
WWII, not  the New Deal, created the conditions that ended the Depression and 
catalyzed the  post war expansion. 
 
Now, neither war nor a New Deal will create the conditions for the private  
sector to hire human labor that robots can do cheaper and more efficiently. 
The  private sector, while demanding bailouts and using its control of the 
State to  feed its insatiable demand for greater corporate welfare, will not 
be providing  jobs. 
 
The struggle for survival of the jobless is not the struggle of worker  
against employer, but a struggle to demand that the State provides what the  
private sector is not providing. None of the practical and economic problems 
of  the jobless and the part-time, temporary and minimum wage workers can be  
addressed except in the political struggle over which class the government 
will  serve. 
 
The government intervention in the economy in the interests of the  
capitalist class and private property opens the door for a political struggle 
in  
the interests of the people. Bail out the financial sector? Or bail out laid 
off  workers and foreclosure victims? Nationalize in the interests of 
private  property? Or in the interests of the people? 
 
Vision of the future 
 
The ability of the computerized, robotic, electronic means of production to 
 provide abundance to satisfy all human needs without human labor is 
incompatible  with capitalist relations of production. Thus, society is 
experiencing  tremendous instability and is in the process of revolutionary 
change. 
 
The ruling class and the State, intertwined and entangled, face the  
challenge of holding on to the wealth and power that they now have, while  
preparing for something new, a revolutionary change to a new form of private  
property. They are moving toward fascism in an attempt to stabilize an  
inherently unstable situation. 
 
Confronting them is a revolutionary class created by the new means of  
production. The demands of this new class for food, clothing, housing,  
education, peace and health care are revolutionary demands. This social force 
is  
capable of bringing about the reorganization and restructuring of society in 
the  interests of the world’s people, so that the means of production are 
communally  owned and the abundance is distributed according to need. 
 
This will not happen automatically. It must be consciously fought for.  
Thus, revolutionaries must arm the class with a vision of the new society, and  
with the knowledge of its class interests to prepare for the difficult 
stages it  must go through in its quest for the power to direct the 
revolutionary  restructuring of society made possible by the new means of 
production. 
 
July.2010.Vol20.Ed4 This article originated in Rally, Comrades! P.O. Box  
477113 Chicago, IL 60647 _ra...@lrna.org_ (mailto:ra...@lrna.org)  Free  to 
reproduce unless otherwise marked. Please include this message with any  
reproduction. 
 
 
 

_______________________________________________
Marxist-Leninist-List mailing list
Marxist-Leninist-List@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxist-leninist-list



      
_______________________________________________
Marxist-Leninist-List mailing list
Marxist-Leninist-List@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxist-leninist-list

Reply via email to