In a message dated 1/2/2011 12:12:49 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, 
_intangib...@aphenomenal.com_ (mailto:intangib...@aphenomenal.com)   writes: 
 
Like the Devil avoiding holy water, WL is silent about the quote from  
Lenin's 1908 pamphlet on Marxism and Revisionism. So it is reiterated here, in  
the context of WL's evident fascination with the allegedly socially  
transformative powers of Monopoly Capital's latest scams and schemes for 
further  
bleeding the workers white: 
 
Every more or less "new" question, every more or less unexpected and  
unforeseen turn of events, even though it change the basic line of development  
only to an insignificant degree and only for the briefest period, will always 
 inevitably give rise to one variety of revisionism or another. 
 
Comment 
 
Lenin's Marxism and revisionism is 3,066 words according to my word count  
program. Generally a submission no longer than 3,000 words seems to be  
reasonable for a list of daily and weekly exchanges. I am presenting Lenin's  
"Marxism and Revisionism" published in 1908 in its entirety. 
 
WL. 
 
Marxism and Revisionism 1908
 

There is a well-known saying that if geometrical axioms affected human  
interests attempts would certainly be made to refute them. Theories of natural  
history which conflicted with the old prejudices of theology provoked, and 
still  provoke, the most rabid opposition. No wonder, therefore, that the 
Marxian  doctrine, which directly serves to enlighten and organise the 
advanced class in  modern society, indicates the tasks facing this class and 
demonstrates the  inevitable replacement (by virtue of economic development) of 
the present system  by a new order-no wonder that this doctrine has had to 
fight for every step  forward in the course of its life. 
 
Needless to say, this applies to bourgeois science and philosophy,  
officially taught by official professors in order to befuddle the rising  
generation of the propertied classes and to "coach" it against internal and  
foreign 
enemies. This science will not even hear of Marxism, declaring that it  has 
been refuted and annihilated. Marx is attacked with equal zest by young  
scholars who are making a career by refuting socialism, and by decrepit elders  
who are preserving the tradition of all kinds of outworn "systems". The 
progress  of Marxism, the fact that its ideas are spreading and taking firm 
hold among the  working class, inevitably increase the frequency and intensity 
of these  bourgeois attacks on Marxism, which becomes stronger, more 
hardened and more  vigorous every time it is "annihilated" by official science. 
 
But even among doctrines connected with the struggle of the working class,  
and current mainly among the proletariat, Marxism by no means consolidated 
its  position all at once. In the first half-century of its existence  (from 
  the 1840s on) Marxism was engaged in combating theories  fundamentally 
hostile to it. In the early forties Marx and Engels settled  accounts with the 
radical Young Hegelians whose viewpoint was that of  philosophical 
idealism. At the end of the forties the struggle began in the  field of 
economic 
doctrine, against Proudhonism. The fifties saw the completion  of this struggle 
in criticism of the parties and doctrines which manifested  themselves in 
the stormy year of 1848. In the sixties the struggle shifted from  the field 
of general theory to one closer to the direct labour movement: the  ejection 
of Bakuninism from the International. In the early seventies the stage  in 
Germany was occupied for a short while by the Proudhonist Mühlberger, and in 
 the late seventies by the positivist Dühring. But the influence of both on 
the  proletariat was already absolutely insignificant. Marxism was already 
gaining an  unquestionable victory over all other ideologies in the labour 
movement. 
 
By the nineties this victory was in the main completed. Even in the Latin  
countries, where the traditions of Proudhonism held their ground longest of 
all,  the workers' parties in effect built their programmes and their 
tactics on  Marxist foundations. The revived international organisation of the 
labour  movement-in the shape of periodical international congresses-from the 
outset,  and almost without a struggle, adopted the Marxist standpoint in all 
essentials.  But after Marxism had ousted all the more or less integral 
doctrines hostile to  it, the tendencies expressed in those doctrines began to 
seek other channels.  The forms and causes of the struggle changed, but the 
struggle continued. And  the second half-century of the existence of Marxism 
began (in the nineties) with  the struggle of a trend hostile to Marxism 
within Marxism itself. 
 
Bernstein, a one-time orthodox Marxist, gave his name to this trend by  
coming forward with the most noise and with the most purposeful expression of  
amendments to Marx, revision of Marx, revisionism. Even in Russia 
where-owing to  the economic backwardness of the country and the preponderance 
of a 
peasant  population weighed down by the relics of serfdom-non-Marxist 
socialism has  naturally held its ground longest of all, it is plainly passing 
into  
  revisionism before our very eyes. Both in the agrarian question (the 
programme  of the municipalisation of all land) and in general questions of 
programme and  tactics, our Social-Narodniks are more and more substituting 
"amendments" to  Marx for the moribund and obsolescent remnants of their old 
system, which in its  own way was integral and fundamentally hostile to 
Marxism. 
 
Pre-Marxist socialism has been defeated. It is continuing the struggle, no  
longer on its own independent ground, but on the general ground of Marxism, 
as  revisionism. Let us, then, examine the ideological content of 
revisionism. 
 
In the sphere of philosophy revisionism followed in the wake of bourgeois  
professorial "science". The professors went "back to Kant"-and revisionism  
dragged along after the neo-Kantians. The professors repeated the platitudes 
 that priests have uttered a thousand times against philosophical 
materialism-and  the revisionists, smiling indulgently, mumbled (word for word 
after 
the latest  Handbuch) that materialism had been "refuted" long ago. The 
professors treated  Hegel as a "dead dog",[2] and while themselves preaching 
idealism, only an  idealism a thousand times more petty and banal than Hegel's, 
contemptuously  shrugged their shoulders at dialectics-and the revisionists 
floundered after  them into the swamp of philosophical vulgarisation of 
science, replacing  "artful" (and revolutionary) dialectics by "simple" (and 
tranquil) "evolution".  The professors earned their official salaries by 
adjusting both their idealist  and their "critical" systems to the dominant 
medieval "philosophy" (i.e., to  theology)-and the revisionists drew close to 
them, trying to make religion a  "private affair", not in relation to the 
modern state, but in relation to the  party of the advanced class. 
 
What such "amendments" to Marx really meant in class terms need not be  
stated: it is self-evident. We shall simply note that the only Marxist in the  
international Social-Democratic movement to criticise the incredible 
platitudes  of the revisionists from the standpoint of consistent dialectical 
materialism  was Plekhanov. This must be stressed. all the more emphatically 
since profoundly  mistaken attempts are being made at the present time to 
smuggle in    old and reactionary philosophical rubbish disguised as a 
criticism 
of  Plekhanov's tactical opportunism.[1] 
 
Passing to political economy, it must be noted first of all that in this  
sphere the "amendments" of the revisionists were much more comprehensive and  
circumstantial; attempts were made to influence the public by "new data on  
economic development". It was said that concentration and the ousting of  
small-scale production by large-scale production do not occur in agriculture 
at  all, while they proceed very slowly in commerce and industry. It was 
said that  crises had now become rarer and weaker, and that cartels and trusts 
would  probably enable capital to eliminate them altogether. It was said 
that the  "theory of collapse" to which capitalism is heading was unsound, 
owing to the  tendency of class antagonisms to become milder and less acute. It 
was said,  finally, that it would not be amiss to correct Marx's theory of 
value, too, in  accordance with Böhm-Bawerk.[3] 
 
The fight against the revisionists on these questions resulted in as  
fruitful a revival of the theoretical thought in international socialism as did 
 
Engels's controversy with Dühring twenty years earlier. The arguments of the 
 revisionists were analysed with the help of facts and figures. It was 
proved  that the revisionists were systematically painting a rose-coloured 
picture of  modern small-scale production. The technical and commercial 
superiority of  large-scale production over small-scale production not only in 
industry, but  also in agriculture, is proved by irrefutable facts. But 
commodity 
production is  far less developed in agriculture, and modern statisticians 
and economists are,  as a rule, not very skilful in picking out the special 
branches (sometimes even  the operations) in agriculture which indicate that 
agriculture is being  progressively drawn into the process of exchange in 
world economy. Small-scale  production   maintains itself on the ruins of 
natural economy by  constant worsening of diet, by chronic starvation, by 
lengthening of the working  day, by deterioration in the quality and the care 
of 
cattle, in a word, by the  very methods whereby handicraft production 
maintained itself against capitalist  manufacture. Every advance in science and 
technology inevitably and relentlessly  undermines the foundations of 
small-scale production in capitalist society; and  it is the task of socialist 
political economy to investigate this process in all  its forms, often 
complicated 
and intricate, and to demonstrate to the small  producer the impossibility 
of his holding his own under capitalism, the  hopelessness of peasant 
farming under capitalism, and the necessity for the  peasant to adopt the 
standpoint of the proletarian. On this question the  revisionists sinned, in 
the 
scientific sense, by superficial generalisations  based on facts selected 
one-sidedly and without reference to the system of  capitalism as a whole. 
>From 
the political point of view, they sinned by the fact  that they inevitably, 
whether they wanted to or not, invited or urged the  peasant to adopt the 
attitude of a small proprietor (i.e., the attitude of the  bourgeoisie) instead 
of urging him to adopt the point of view of the  revolutionary proletarian. 
 
The position of revisionism was even worse as regards the theory of crises  
and the theory of collapse. Only for a very short time could people, and 
then  only the most short-sighted, think of refashioning the foundations of 
Marx's  theory under the influence of a few years of industrial boom and 
prosperity.  Realities very soon made it clear to the revisionists that crises 
were not a  thing of the past: prosperity was followed by a crisis. The forms, 
the sequence,  the picture of particular crises changed, but crises 
remained an inevitable  component of the capitalist system. While uniting 
production, the cartels and  trusts at the same time, and in a way that was 
obvious 
to all, aggravated the  anarchy of production, the insecurity of existence of 
the proletariat and the  oppression of capital, thereby intensifying class 
antagonisms to an  unprecedented degree. That capitalism is heading for a 
break-down-in the sense  both of individual political and economic crises and 
of the complete collapse of  the entire capitalist system-has   been made 
particularly clear, and  on a particularly large scale, precisely by the new 
giant trusts. The recent  financial crisis in America and the appalling 
increase of unemployment all over  Europe, to say nothing of the impending 
industrial crisis to which many symptoms  are pointing-all this has resulted in 
the recent "theories" of the revisionists  having been forgotten by everybody, 
including, apparently, many of the  revisionists themselves. But the 
lessons which this instability of the  intellectuals had given the working 
class 
must not be forgotten. 
 
As to the theory of value, it need only be said that apart from the vaguest 
 of hints and sighs, à la Böhm-Bawerk, the revisionists have contributed  
absolutely nothing, and have therefore left no traces whatever on the  
development of scientific thought. 
 
In the sphere of politics, revisionism did really try to revise the  
foundation of Marxism, namely, the doctrine of the class struggle. Political  
freedom, democracy and universal suffrage remove the ground for the class  
struggle-we were told-and render untrue the old proposition of the Communist  
Manifesto that the working men have no country. For, they said, since the "will 
 of the majority" prevails in a democracy, one must neither regard the 
state as  an organ of class rule, nor reject alliances with the progressive, 
social-reform  bourgeoisie against the reactionaries. 
 
It cannot be disputed that these arguments of the revisionists amounted to  
a fairly well-balanced system of views, namely, the old and well-known  
liberal-bourgeois views. The liberals have always said that bourgeois  
parliamentarism destroys classes and class divisions, since the right to vote  
and 
the right to participate in the government of the country are shared by all  
citizens without distinction. The whole history of Europe in the second half 
of  the nineteenth century, and the whole history of the Russian revolution 
in the  early twentieth, clearly show how absurd such views are. Economic 
distinctions  are not mitigated but aggravated and intensified under the 
freedom of  "democratic" capitalism. Parliamentarism does not eliminate, but 
lays bare the  innate character even of the most democratic bourgeois republics 
as organs of  class oppression. By helping to enlighten and to organise 
immeasurably  wider   masses of the population than those which previously took 
an  active part in political events, parliamentarism does not make for the  
elimination of crises and political revolutions, but for the maximum  
intensification of civil war during such revolutions. The events in Paris in 
the  
spring of 1871 and the events in Russia in the winter of 1905 showed as 
clearly  as could be how inevitably this intensification comes about. The 
French  bourgeoisie without a moment's hesitation made a deal with the enemy of 
the  whole nation, with the foreign army which had ruined its country, in 
order to  crush the proletarian movement. Whoever does not understand the 
inevitable inner  dialectics of parliamentarism and bourgeois democracy-which 
leads to an even  sharper decision of the argument by mass violence than 
formerly-will never be  able on the basis of this parliamentarism to conduct 
propaganda and agitation  consistent in principle, really preparing the 
working-class masses for  victorious participation in such "arguments". The 
experience of alliances,  agreements and blocs with the social-reform liberals 
in the 
West and with the  liberal reformists (Cadets) in the Russian revolution, 
has convincingly shown  that these agreements only blunt the consciousness of 
the masses, that they do  not enhance but weaken the actual significance of 
their struggle, by linking  fighters with elements who are least capable of 
fighting and most vacillating  and treacherous. Millerandism in France-the 
biggest experiment in applying  revisionist political tactics on a wide, a 
really national scale-has provided a  practical appraisal of revisionism that 
will never be forgotten by the  proletariat all over the world. 
 
A natural complement to the economic and political tendencies of  
revisionism was its attitude to the ultimate aim of the socialist movement. 
"The  
movement is everything, the ultimate aim is nothing"-this catch-phrase of  
Bernstein's expresses the substance of revisionism better than many long  
disquisitions. To determine its conduct from case to case, to adapt itself to  
the 
events of the day and to the chopping and changing of petty politics, to  
forget the primary interests of the proletariat and the basic features of the 
 whole capitalist system, of all capitalist evolution, to sacrifice these 
primary  interests for the   real or assumed advantages of the moment-such is 
 the policy of revisionism. And it patently follows from the very nature of 
this  policy that it may assume an infinite variety of forms, and that 
every more or  less "new" question, every more or less unexpected and 
unforeseen 
turn of  events, even though it change the basic line of development only 
to an  insignificant degree and only for the briefest period, will always 
inevitably  give rise to one variety of revisionism or another. 
 
The inevitability of revisionism is determined by its class roots in modern 
 society. Revisionism is an international phenomenon. No thinking socialist 
who  is in the least informed can have the slightest doubt that the 
relation between  the orthodox and the Bernsteinians in Germany, the Guesdists 
and 
the Jaurèsists  (and now particularly the Broussists) in France, the Social 
Democratic  Federation and the Independent Labour Party in Great Britain, 
Brouckère and  Vandervelde in Belgium, the Integralists and the Reformists in 
Italy, the  Bolsheviks and the Mensheviks in Russia, is everywhere 
essentially similar,  notwithstanding the immense variety of national 
conditions and 
historical  factors in the present state of all these countries. In reality, 
the "division"  within the present international socialist movement is now 
proceeding along the  same lines in all the various countries of the world, 
which testifies to a  tremendous advance compared with thirty or forty years 
ago, when heterogeneous  trends in the various countries were struggling 
within the one international  socialist movement. And that "revisionism from 
the left" which has taken shape  in the Latin countries as "revolutionary 
syndicalism",[4] is also adapting  itself to Marxism, "amending" it: Labriola 
in Italy and Lagardelle in France  frequently appeal from Marx who is 
understood wrongly to Marx who is understood  rightly. 
 
We cannot stop here to analyse the ideological content of this revisionism, 
 which as yet is far from having developed to the same extent as 
opportunist  revisionism: it has not yet become international, has not yet 
stood the 
test of  a single big practical battle with a socialist party in any single 
country. We  confine ourselves therefore to that "revisionism from the right" 
which was  described above. 
 
Wherein lies its inevitability in capitalist society? Why is it more  
profound than the differences of national peculiarities and of degrees of  
capitalist development? Because in every capitalist country, side by side with  
the proletariat, there are always broad strata of the petty bourgeoisie, small 
 proprietors. Capitalism arose and is constantly arising out of small 
production.  A number of new "middle strata" are inevitably brought into 
existence again and  again by capitalism (appendages to the factory, work at 
home, 
small workshops  scattered all over the country to meet the requirements of 
big industries, such  as the bicycle and automobile industries, etc.). These 
new small producers are  just as inevitably being cast again into the ranks 
of the proletariat. It is  quite natural that the petty-bourgeois 
world-outlook should again and again crop  up in the ranks of the broad 
workers' 
parties. It is quite natural that this  should be so and always will be so, 
right 
up to the changes of fortune that will  take place in the proletarian 
revolution. For it would be a profound mistake to  think that the "complete" 
proletarianisation of the majority of the population  is essential for bringing 
about such a revolution. What we now frequently  experience only in the 
domain of ideology, namely, disputes over theoretical  amendments to Marx; what 
now crops up in practice only over individual side  issues of the labour 
movement, as tactical differences with the revisionists and  splits on this 
basis-is bound to be experienced by the working class on an  incomparably 
larger scale when the proletarian revolution will sharpen all  disputed issues, 
will focus all differences on points which are of the most  immediate 
importance in determining the conduct of the masses, and will make it  
necessary in 
the heat of the fight to distinguish enemies from friends, and to  cast out 
bad allies in order to deal decisive blows at the enemy. 
 
The ideological struggle waged by revolutionary Marxism against revisionism 
 at the end of the nineteenth century is but the prelude to the great  
revolutionary battles of the proletariat, which is marching forward to the  
complete victory of its cause despite all the waverings and weaknesses of the  
petty bourgeoisie.
 

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