The Coming of a New Democratic Revolution I

In the
article<http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/27/magazine/how-can-donald-trump-and-
bernie-sanders-both-be-populist.html?mabReward=CTM&action=click&pgtype=Homep
age&region=CColumn&module=Recommendation&src=rechp&WT.nav=RecEngine>,
Michael Kazin quoted the Populists’ 1892 platform “The fruits of the toil
of millions are boldly stolen to build up colossal fortunes for a few,”
those fruits have grown over the past several hundred years by unpaid
surplus labor of hundreds of millions of hard-working people to such a
gigantic scale or the overwhelming material abundance that, if not being
stolen or otherwise they had completely recovered the stolen goods, would
have so enriched everyone of this country as to enable all become
multi-millionaires. The root cause for the undemocratic status quo is
capital and neither its political representatives nor the populists.
Whenever a remedy is to be sought, one has to focus on capital as a social
relation that controls and abuses its privilege on the entire society. 

The number of manufacturing job in the U.S. has kept falling since the late
1980s thanks to Ronald Reagan’s infamous anti-labor neo-liberal
“revolution.” In their 1992 book: “America: What Went Wrong?” Donald
Barlett and James Steele wrote: “During the 1950s, 33 percent of all
workers were employed in manufacturing. The figure edged down to 30 percent
in the 1960s, and plunged to 20 percent in the 1980s. It is now 17
percent-and falling. ” In 1999, it further plunged to 10.3%, thanks to the
“invisible hand” of the market as the determining force of outcomes. While
one third of the plunge is attributed to manufacturing strength decline due
to flat investment and trade deficit, two thirds of the plunge of
manufacturing job number is due to increased labor productivity as a result
of automated production. (See, for an example,
<http://www.industryweek.com/workforce/why-americas-manufacturing-job-loss-g
reater-other-industrialized-countries?page=3> ) 

The flat investment and trade deficit factors imply trade-led job loss and
stagnant and eventually race-to-the-bottom wage level. Donald Trump and
Bernie Sanders both rebuke the manufacturing industry for shipping jobs to
Mexico and overseas and win over working people’s general approval, and as
a result the number of their combined electorate must exceed the sum of
other candidates including Hillary Clinton. To be sure, a deeper
understanding of the problem should be found elsewhere. Ever-increasing
force of production is indispensable to the existence and development of
capitalism. When such a stage of increase has arrived that labor
productivity reaches its highest possible level, the system tends to go
through with its general average rate of profit ebbing away from its more
common phenomena of ebb and flow. Hasn’t such a stage arrived as yet?  

For a discussion refer
to<https://thenextrecession.files.wordpress.com/2016/01/recessionsdepression
s-and-recoveries-0712151.pdf> ;
<https://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2016/01/29/the-global-gdp-story/#res
pond> and other papers. 

The fact that capitalism has reached its late stage of declining rate of
profit seems to agree on some common-sense observations, such as flat
investment, unfree and unwanted investment outlet - plenty of investment
objects, e.g., infrastructure, renewable energy sources, health-care
facility, public education, etc. exist but they remain unattractive to
capital; disposable capital to the tune of about $1 trillion to 2 trillion;
insolvent debt; unemployment and underemployment rates remain far too high
for the economy to recover; record low interest rate (some going negative)
does not seem to spur new investment interests except on the stock market
and in financial casinos, yet investment and not consumption drives a
capitalist economy; manufacturing remains under pressure, for an example,
durable goods orders in the U.S. drop 2.8% in February 2016; world market
has run up to its expansion top,  economies of the BRICS countries either
barely grow, are slowing down or in deep slumps and money is flowing out of
emerging markets - so far close to $1 trillion has fled China alone. Capital
looks forward for immediate return more than long-term investments as its
horizon has been dimmed by the falling driving force of capitalist
production, namely, the rate of profit. To gain immediate higher return,
capital resorts to increased labor productivity by means of full-speed
automation in production. The price to pay for this endeavor is the
increased surplus population or unemployment and underemployment of labor.
As a consequence, the (unpaid) surplus value or profit created by higher
labor productivity has increased, while the value embedded in commodity has
decreased together with its price to such an extent that price deflation
becomes a reality as a whole. Capital, over-accumulated and over-idled at
the same time, is about to be suffocated by its own success in making
monopoly private profits.

Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders, the two patriotic vanguards, certainly want
to save the system, it is a pity that they may stall for time but most
definitely fail to succeed unless they venture their lives for sublation or
Aufheben des Werdens of the rotten line of anarchism in the capitalist
production. 

The much scolded and condemned hideous Donald Trump has touched off strong
repercussions not only from the far left but also from the far right,
especially the establishment. Is Trump a fascist who will be bound to set up
a Trumpist dictatorship? Capital has monopolized the political landscape in
a dictatorial manner for more than a hundred years, what could a Trumpist
dictatorship gain his ends of the democratic freedoms rigged by capital? As
it has bogged down in the quagmire of its own making, further digging
through its life-saving democracy of sheer formality means nothing but
suicide.

The current situation would call for a political revolution deeper and more
radical than what Bernie Sanders has done. The hegemony, to which capital
has laid claim for hundreds of years on the premises that whatever it does,
it would never let the system go down the drain, is both questionable and
broken. A few years ago, no one would think capital’s hegemony could ever
be off the hinges, now capital faces petrified challenges that it can no
longer bluff its way through business as usual, its existing authority is
undermined. A true democratic revolution under the sovereignty of the
people, not only in this country but also over the world, will likely break
out as a successor to the American and French democratic revolutions of the
late 18th century. Their enemies are no longer old monarchies, aristocrats
and the clergy, the new kings are the capitalist ruling class under its
dictatorship in various countries, the new aristocrats are the
establishment, its apologist three-branch governing class, and the new
"clergy” consists of the corporate media, mainstream think tanks, elite at
colleges and universities, lobbyists and Super Pacs. 

Donald Trump already warned the establishment of riot as he is ahead of his
time. Revolution against the dictatorship of capital certainly will involve
not only riots but also uprisings by militant social movements against the
establishment which refuse to make any change for the better of people’s
interests. Its early stage �C democratic revolution �C will confine its
scope to only repeal bad laws, force bad legislative-executive-judicial
members to resign, transform the political system into a pro-people and
multiparty one and save the dying system. Its later stage �C socialist
revolution �C will expand its scope to destroy the system and replace it
anew. It’s an irony that in order to achieve the latter goal, the former
one has to be taken as a dress rehearsal for the full-scale revolution;in
order to destroy it, one has to save it.

The system’s major stumbling block to progress is capital’s absolute
monopoly of production. In order to save the system from demise, when
capital has failed miserably to solve the problems of economic as well as
political crises, of living conditions of vital importance and enhance
people’s political economy, all means of production will have to be
nationalized either through confiscations or buy-outs. The means of
subsistence will remain largely in private hands but allow of
community-owned enterprises during the democratic revolution stage. The
second stumbling block is capital’s monopoly on the political system of no
change for the betterment of people’s immediate and long-term well-beings.
Instead of a representative democracy already fatefully damaged by capital
dictatorship, a direct democracy must be established and subject to changes
as needed. People should not only vote for representatives but also line
items in their federal and state budgets and policies by either yes or no
vote or by percentage allocation of their tax return despite of the
representative’s own votes by their veto power. Only after people wield
political power, the system then can be saved from ruin that the
undemocratic hegemony of capital brings on. 

Any revolution will cause a crisis spawned by the anger of anti-revolution
force together with the indifference of looking-on neutral forces. But then,
without revolution, people would have no future at all.

Mark

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