Revolution

Revolution is a stage in the development of human society when the tools  
humans use change in such a way that the old social arrangements -- the way  
necessities are distributed to those who need them -- are no longer 
adequate,  and need to be changed to fit the new condition. 
 
A new class emerges from the changes in production and society, a class  
that no longer has a place in the old disintegrating system. This class, whose 
 ranks grow as the process develops, must fight for what it needs to 
survive. To  do so, it must understand itself as a class, and understand that 
its 
fight to  survive and thrive is in reality a fight for a new society, a new 
economic  system, and a transformed world. 
 
Revolutions go through stages. One stage sets the stage for and leads to  
another, but they also overlap and interact, occur together and inform each  
other. The first stage - the one that kicks off the revolutionary process - 
is  the introduction of new means of production that changes in a profoundly 
radical  way how things are produced. Today, the introduction of the 
computer chip - the  electronics revolution and automation - is replacing 
workers 
and eliminating the  need for labor, throwing the entire world into an 
irreversible crisis. This  process is well underway. 
 
This disruption and the social destruction it causes give rise to social  
revolution. Because the capitalist economic system is based on the 
exploitation  and selling of labor power, the very foundation of capitalism is 
being  
destroyed, along with the lives of the workers who are thrown-out of the  
production process. We see the maturing of this objective stage of the  
revolutionary process, and the scattered, but widening social response by the  
growing ranks of the poor and insecure who have no choice but to fight for what 
 they need. 
 
This social destruction is reaching into all sections of society, and  
polarizing the world and the American people into two camps: those few, the  
owners of the means of production, who are becoming obscenely rich from the  
plundering and profiteering on everything, and the mass of people being driven 
 down into poverty, indigence and homelessness. More and more families are  
slipping into the ranks of the poor, as good jobs are replaced by computers 
or  shipped to starvation-wage parts of the world. The "middle class" is 
being  destroyed, falling down into insecurity and poverty. 
 
This growing mass of the economically insecure, the permanently jobless,  
and the homeless form a new class. The demands of this new class - for 
housing,  health care, education, and the wherewithal to fulfill themselves 
materially,  culturally, and spiritually, free from misery and exploitation -- 
are 
 revolutionary demands. This class has been pushed outside capitalist 
relations,  and has no stake in them anymore. 
 
Without consciousness of itself as a class, without understanding its  
common class interests, this objectively revolutionary class of workers can  
neither link up their struggles, nor forge a strategy that will allow them to  
get what they need. The various struggles are fought out in isolation from 
each  other against an enemy that is organized and conscious, and -- whatever 
their  differences among themselves -- understands that it is a class. 
 
The ruling class knows that it must move to contain the brewing social  
struggle using all the weapons in its arsenal. These include the stripping of  
rights, mass incarceration (especially of our youth), war, police murder, 
forced  evictions, hunger, and the direct thievery of public resources known 
as  "privatization." They divide the working class with propaganda campaigns 
using  their historical weapons of division: racism and immigrant-bashing. 
The entering  of the Blackwater mercenaries, fresh from Iraq, into 
post-Katrina New Orleans  was an indication of the fascist nature of the ruling 
class 
response to the  growing class of the impoverished and the vast movement 
that is yet unorganized  and scattered, but whose demands are that of the 
revolution itself. 
 
In the context of this epochal change in the economic underpinning of  
society, none of the demands of this new class can be met without a revolution  
in the way society is organized -- to one that is based on cooperation and  
distribution according to need. Understanding this as the necessary outcome 
to  the various scattered struggles is key to workers being able to achieve 
their  goals Without this vision of what is being fought for -- beyond the 
specific  demands of the moment -- the fighters on the various fronts of 
struggle can only  fight for what they have known in the past. With a cause and 
a vision, workers  understand their scattered struggles are part of a larger 
social movement for a  new society. But understanding and vision do not 
arise spontaneously; new ideas  must be introduced. 
 
The role of the conscious revolutionaries is to teach the science of  
society and revolution in ways that relate to the specific struggles and the 
way  
people experience them, to raise this understanding of the common goals, 
and  articulate the vision of and teach about the nature of a communist 
economic  system and society - the only one compatible with humanity's 
evolution, 
and the  only one equal to its best dreams. 
 
The last stage of the revolutionary process is political. This means that  
the class understands itself as a class, aligns itself along common 
interests  with a common vision, and organizes itself politically on that 
basis, 
with the  goal of political power and the transformation of society in its 
interests. This  stage ends with a seizure of political power and the remaking 
of society in the  interests of the revolutionary class and humanity itself. 
 
This is the stage that people usually think of when they use the word  
revoluton, which is defined in the dictionary as "overthrow of a government,  
form of government, or social system by those governed, and usually by 
forceful  means, with another government or system taking its place." When this 
stage is  achieved, the work of the reconstruction of society begins. 
 
The revolution that is underway today - objectively maturing, but  
subjectively still unconscious and scattered - is of an epochal nature. With 
its  
victory, we will have the peace, equality, and abundance that humanity has  
dreamed of and struggled for throughout history. This is the vision that the  
conscious revolutionary brings to the social revolution, and the mission of 
a  revolutionary organization is to organize for this stage of the 
revolution's  development. 
 
 
 
October.2008.Vol18.Ed5 This article originated in Rally, Comrades! P.O. Box 
 477113 Chicago, IL 60647 _rally@lrna.org_ (mailto:ra...@lrna.org)  Free  
to reproduce unless otherwise marked. Please include this message with any  
reproduction. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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