> Date sent:      Thu, 11 Dec 1997 18:52:32 -0500 (EST)
> Send reply to:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> From:           Paul Zarembka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To:             [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:        re: What Is to Be Done? 

> On Thu, 11 Dec 1997, Ricardo Duchesne wrote:
> 
> > No, What Is to Be Done? is Lenin's most original political text; 
> > indeed it is the foundation of Bolshevism: the working class 
> > movement does not have a revolutionary consciousness of its own; left 
> > to itself, such movement will never develop beyond trade-union 
> > consciousness. A marxist consciousness can only be brought 
> > from the outside by a centralized party.  
> 
> "Centralized" party.  I thought it was a party of "democratic
> centralism", not the Stalinist distortion.


Stalin used "democratic centralism" for his own ends.

 
> > What worries marxists about this text is that Lenin is right. 
> > Luxemburg is wrong. A centralized party, like the Bolshevik Party, 
> > which claims to have a "true" understanding of the interests of the 
> > working class, is a must. The workers themselves are incapable of 
> > marxist consciousness, incapable of knowing their "real" interests. 
> 
> I don't think Lenin thought the workers as "incapable" as described
> above.  Maybe it is correct that spending 8-12 hours a day in a factory
> burns one's energy up, but...


But...if they spend less time, and earn more, they will definitely 
have no revolutionary consciousness. 

ricardo

 
> Paul
> 
> 


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