http://www.marxist.com/2012-once-more-on-optimism-and-pessimism.htm

 As 2012 dawns: Once more on optimism and pessimism
<http://www.marxist.com/2012-once-more-on-optimism-and-pessimism.htm>
Written by Alan Woods Wednesday, 04 January 2012
[image: 
Print]<http://www.marxist.com/2012-once-more-on-optimism-and-pessimism/print.htm#>

*Exactly twelve months ago, in an article entitled: **2011: - Optimism or
pessimism? * <http://www.marxist.com/2011-optimism-or-pessimism-1.htm>*I
wrote the following: “The first effect of the crisis was one of shock, not
only for the bourgeois but also for the workers. There was a tendency to
cling to jobs and accept cuts in the short term, especially as the union
leaders offer no alternative. But this will be replaced by a general mood
of anger and bitterness, which will sooner or later begin to affect the
mass organisations of the working class.”*

These predictions were translated into reality far more quickly than I had
any right to expect. The world is changing rapidly before our eyes. Over
the last 12 months events have been unfolding with breathtaking speed.

It is difficult to imagine that one year ago Ben Ali, Mubarak and Gaddafi
were apparently firmly in power. Berlusconi, Papandreou and Zapatero were
still at the head of their respective countries. Nobody had heard of the *
indignados* or the Occupy Wall Street Movement. Nobody talked of the
imminent demise of the euro.

How things have changed! As the New Year dawns, the ruling class is gripped
by a growing sense of pessimism, bordering on panic. All the attempts to
breathe new life into a languishing world economy have failed. The
injection of trillions of dollars into the banks has only served to
transform a black hole in the heart of the world financial system into a
black hole in the public finances of Europe and the USA.
No way out

The capitalists can see no way out of the present crisis. Their only policy
is to cut, cut and cut again, seeking to destroy all the conquests made by
the working class over the past 50 years. If they succeed, it would mean
pushing society back to the kind of conditions experienced by the workers
in the days of Marx and Charles Dickens – the kind of conditions the
Chinese workers are suffering at the present time.

Such a policy will not solve the crisis but, on the contrary, will only
make it ever deeper. By slashing wages and pensions, they will reduce
demand still further, and so aggravate the crisis of overproduction, which
manifests itself as excess capacity on a global scale.

In a confused fashion this is understood by the Keynesians who advocate
measures to reactivate the economy by boosting demand. The same song is
sung by the reformists of all shades, from the Social Democrats to the
ex-Stalinists who have abandoned all pretence of allegiance to communism
and seek solutions within the bounds of capitalism. These people do not
like the present capitalism. They want to replace it, not with socialism
(they no longer even mention the word) but a different capitalism, a nicer
capitalism, a gentler, more humane capitalism – *capitalism with a human
face.* This is what they call “realism”. It resembles a desperate attempt
to square the circle, or teach a man-eating tiger to eat salads.

They believe that it is merely a question of stimulating demand. But how it
is possible to boost demand? Maybe by reducing interest rates? But interest
rates are close to zero already. Or by boosting state expenditure? But the
main problem facing Europe and the USA is precisely how to eliminate the
huge mountain of public debt left over from the banking crisis of 2008. How
can governments that are bankrupt boost state expenditure? Despite all
their best efforts, the alchemists never succeeded in transforming base
metal into gold. And, as the ancients used to say, “ex nihilo, nihil fit” –
nothing comes from nothing.

The only possible solution to this conundrum is what they call
“quantitative easing”, that is, that the state should print large amounts
of money to plug the yawning gap in the public finances. This is a
desperate measure that would inevitably lead to an explosion of inflation
and a new and even deeper collapse later on. Compared to the voodoo
economics of the Keynesians, the hocus-pocus of the old alchemists was a
brilliant exercise in logic.

The picture could scarcely be more desolate. On 31st December the Financial
Times, the most prestigious organ of the British capitalist class, summoned
up the courage to publish an editorial with the encouraging title: *Finding
reasons to be cheerful* – after all who wants to be miserable on New Year’s
Eve? What is significant is that reasons to be cheerful must be searched
for in the first place. In any case, the readers of the FT will have found
very little cheer in an article that begins with these words:

“Will anybody mourn the passing of 2011? This has been a year of non-stop
crisis and deepening economic gloom. From the tsunami that sparked the
nuclear catastrophe of Fukushima, to the paralysis of European leaders as
investors’ faith in the euro began to founder, there is little reason to
ring out the year with any sense of regret.

“Next year looks little better with the prospect of recession looming over
large parts of Europe, while even the economic powerhouses of Asia are
beginning to feel the pressure. Far from welcoming 2012, many of us will be
reluctant to celebrate a new year that promises even more austerity and
uncertainty.”

Whatever crumbs of comfort the FT could think of in its editorial were
immediately contradicted by the front page headline of the same edition,
which informs us that $6.3 trillion were wiped off markets in 2011. Sharp
falls in the world’s stock markets indicate that the capitalists, who had
no cause to celebrate the year 2011, will have even less to celebrate the
advent of 2012.

The bosses moan about their falling profits and sliding shares. But in the
midst of the crisis, the super rich remain super rich. The same bankers who
presided over the ruin of the world’s financial system are rewarding
themselves hundreds of millions in bonuses. Nobody is called to account.
Nobody goes to gaol. The money keeps pouring in. The champagne still flows.

For the poor and unemployed, by contrast the crisis of capitalism signifies
a nightmare of poverty and humiliation, homelessness and despair. For
millions of families in the USA there is no cause for New Year celebration.
The masses move into action

But every action has an equal and opposite reaction. Everywhere the masses
are beginning to move into action. The most striking manifestation of the
changed situation is the emergence of a worldwide protest movement that is
rejecting capitalism. A growing number of people are reacting against the
existing order: the unemployment that condemns millions to enforced
inactivity; the endless wars, racism and injustice: and above all, the
gross inequality, which concentrates obscene wealth in the hands of the 1%
who rule society, while condemning the vast majority of the world’s
population to a life of increasing impoverishment, misery and degradation.

The most significant feature of this worldwide movement is the similarities
both in causes and aims. This has been realised by the most perceptive
representatives of the bourgeoisie. Thus, Gideon Rachman writes:

"For all the patent differences in levels of wealth and freedom between
Europe and the Arab world, it was difficult not to see some parallel
between Europe and the Arab world, it was difficult not to see some
parallel between the crowds of angry, young unemployed people in North
Africa and southern Europe. The *indignados* - who occupied central Madrid
in May to protest against a youth unemployment level of 40 per cent in
Spain - made the connection explicit by rather vaingloriously claiming the
mantle of Tahrir Square.

"After riots in London and popular protests against inequality and
corruption in countries as diverse as Chile, China, Israel and India, I
wrote a column at the en of August, headlined - '2011, the year of global
indignation.' At the time, I speculated that the US might prove immune to
the wave of social protest spreading around the world. But that idea was
quickly proved wrong. By September, the Occupy Wall Street movement had got
going." (FT, 30/12/11)

*The movements that are unfolding display many of the features of a
revolutionary or prerevolutionary situation. That is true not only of Egypt
and Greece but of the United States of America. “In the face of popular
fury, political invective and protest movements on their doorsteps, the
rich are fighting back in the new bout of US class warfare”, we are
informed by the FT (22/12/11).*

Of course, we are speaking here only of the very early stages of the
revolution – that stage when the mass of people who hitherto took little or
no interest in politics now find themselves on the streets protesting and
demonstrating against a social and political order that has become
intolerable.

It is easy to point out the deficiencies of the movement: its unorganized,
spontaneous and chaotic character, the lack of clear objectives and
programmes. But such deficiencies are characteristic features of the early
stages of every revolution in history.
The school of revolution

The masses everywhere and at all times do not learn from books but only
from their direct experience. Great events are needed to shake the masses
out of their customary apathy and political indifference. The revolution is
their school, where they learn some very painful lessons. But in a
revolutionary situation they learn more in a single day of action than in
twenty years of “normal” existence. Who can doubt that the workers and
youth of Egypt learnt more in a few weeks of struggle than in all the
previous decades of their lives?

One can, of course, object that none of the basic objectives of the
Egyptian Revolution have as yet been achieved. Cynics will say: “You see!
The old order has merely changed its form of rule, while all the old
corrupt elements remain in power. The military holds power and is crushing
the revolution under its jackboot.” Such is the “wisdom” of the Pharisees,
who can see no further than the end of their nose and the sceptics who see
only the backside of history, never its face.

All revolutions pass through definite stages, following a pattern that
reproduces itself in the most variegated circumstances with the most
astonishing regularity. Above and beyond the individual events, Marxism
enables us to see the process as a whole –with all its inevitable
contradictions, cross-currents and incessant ebbs and flows.

The initial stage is always the same: a phase of euphoria in which the mass
movement seems to sweep everything before it. For those who live through
it, this is an intoxicating experience. It is as though suddenly everything
is possible. Victory seems inevitable, defeat unthinkable. It is the stage
of democratic illusions.

In 1917 in Russia this phase was represented by the February Revolution,
when the workers and soldiers overthrew the Tsar and set up the Soviets.
But despite the euphoria of the masses, the February Revolution solved
nothing fundamental. After the fall of the Romanovs, the landlords and
capitalists, the bankers and generals, regrouped behind the protective
facade of the Provisional Government. They ruled by “democratic” means,
while simultaneously preparing the counterrevolution.

The Bolshevik Party under Lenin and Trotsky remained a minority in the
Soviets, which were dominated by the reformist leaders of the SRs and
Mensheviks who backed the Provisional Government. The Bolsheviks demanded
the transfer of power to the Soviets, but the reformists clung to the
bourgeoisie.

As a result, the pendulum swung sharply to the right. Lenin had to flee to
Finland. Pravda’s printing presses were smashed by reactionary mobs.
Trotsky and other Bolshevik leaders were imprisoned. The result was the
attempted coup of General Kornilov, which was defeated by the action of the
masses.

This prepared a new swing to the left, in which the Bolsheviks won the
decisive majority in the Soviets, preparing the way for the transference of
power to the Soviets in October (7 November in the modern calendar). We see
a similar pattern in the Spanish Revolution of 1931-37, and also in the
French Revolution of 1789-93.

The overthrow of Mubarak was a huge step forward. It showed the immense
power of the masses. But, like the February Revolution in Russia, it did
not solve any of the fundamental problems of the masses. And it is not
possible to solve problems like unemployment, homelessness and poverty as
long as the land, the banks and big industries remain in the hands of a
privileged minority.

Even the promise of democracy will remain an empty phrase under capitalism.
The propertied classes are regrouping behind the army officers, who
themselves own a great part of the Egyptian economy and have a vested
interest in resisting change. The masses have understood this and are
acting accordingly. The youth are naturally in the front line of the
revolutionary struggle. Borzou Daraghi writes:

“Asked again and again what they would do if someone tried to hijack their
revolution, young Egyptians, Tunisians and Libyans have given the same
answer: stage another revolution. Few have suggested forming or joining a
political party to represent their interests.

*“‘We are the ones who made the revolution,’ said Siraj Moasser, a
26-year-old Libyan. ‘If the revolution goes awry, we will make another one.
We have nothing else to lose’.”*

And again:

*“‘We hope the freedom and justice, and for the shabab [working-class
youth] to finally find jobs,’ says Mohammad Medhad, a 21-year-old
unemployed Cairo man who was among the Tahrir Square protesters in January
and again last month. ‘The youth are the ones who should be in charge
because they made the revolution’.” (Financial Times, 30/12/11)*

This is the authentic voice of the revolutionary masses and the youth.
The weakest link

Last January I wrote:

*“Those sceptics who moan about the alleged ‘low level of consciousness’ of
the masses merely show that their knowledge of Marxism consists only of
undigested scraps. Their pedantic approach to the class struggle is a toxic
mixture of ignorance and intellectual snobbery. All the impotent jeremiads
of the sceptics will be confounded on the basis of the titanic events that
are being prepared. Unlike the eunuchs, the masses can only learn through
struggle. There will, of course, be many defeats, mistakes and setbacks,
but through all these experiences, the movement will learn and grow. There
is no other way.*

*“Step by step, the disintegration of capitalism is preparing the way for
revolutionary developments. The road to great social transformations is
prepared by a whole series of partial struggles. This is the necessary
preparatory stage in which we find ourselves.”*

Twelve months later I have no need to change a single comma of what I wrote
then. The preparatory stage of the worldwide revolutionary struggle for
socialism will inevitably be long drawn out because of the weakness of the
subjective factor: the revolutionary party and leadership. This will have
to be built in the fire of events.

The real significance of the Arab Revolution is this: that capitalism has
begun to break at its weakest link. The crisis in the Arab world is far
deeper and more explosive than the crisis in Europe or the United States.
But at bottom it is the same crisis. This is recognized by at least some of
the strategists of Capital, like Andreas Whittam Smith,a financial
journalist and founder of the Independent.

On* 20 October 2011* Whittam Smith* wrote a piece with the title: **Western
nations are now ripe for revolution.* In this article he points out that at
the beginning of 1848 no one believed that revolution was imminent.
Naturally! Hypnotised by superficial phenomena, the so-called experts of
the bourgeoisie are blind to the processes at work in the deepest recesses
of society. Above all, they are organically incapable of understanding the
real moods of anger and frustration that are developing in the masses.
Therefore, they are always taken by surprise by revolutions.

The inability of the bourgeois to understand revolution was starkly exposed
by the Arab Revolution. As late as January 6, 2011, *The Economist* wrote:
“Tunisia’s troubles are unlikely to unseat the 74 year-old president or
even to jolt his model of autarchy.” A few weeks later Ben Ali had been
overthrown and his regime was in ruins.

On January 25, 2011 Hilary Clinton stated: “Our assessment is that the
Egyptian government is stable and is looking for ways to respond to the
legitimate needs and interests of the Egyptian people.” This was when the
masses had already come out onto the streets of Cairo.

The same lack of awareness was shown by other bourgeois commentators, such
as the BBC correspondent in Cairo who wrote on January 17 that no revolt
would happen in Egypt because people there are apathetic: “Unlike Tunisia,
the population has a much lower level of education. Illiteracy is high,
internet penetration is low.”

The article, signed by Jon Leyne in Cairo was entitled: “No sign Egypt will
take the Tunisian road.” To make matters worse, these lines were also
included in his report of the events on January 25, the mass demonstration
which marked the beginning of the revolution. That was the full extent of
the wisdom of the bourgeois experts who even less than twelve months ago
denied the very possibility of the Arab Revolution.

Of course, it is clear that the Revolution is not finished and must still
run through a whole series of stages, the precise course of which it is
impossible to predict. There are too many variable factors both nationally
and internationally to perform such a task. All that is possible is to
predict the general line of development and indicate the different
possibilities inherent in the situation. *However, the main thing is to see
that the revolution has begun* *and will continue to unfold through a whole
series of stages before it reaches its final denouement.*
The fight for a new world

*The events that are shaking the Arab world to its foundations are just one
manifestation of the general crisis of world capitalism. Not one of the
problems faced by the peoples can be solved in the narrow confines of the
capitalist system. That is the root cause of the revolutionary explosions
in North Africa and the Middle East. That is why the Arab Revolution cannot
stop until it has tackled the root problem which is private ownership of
the means of production and the nation state, which are too narrow to
contain the colossal potential of the productive forces.*

*The new movements are an expression of the deep crisis of the capitalist
system. On the other hand, these movements themselves have not understood
the seriousness of the situation. For all their energy and élan, these
movements have limitations that will quickly be exposed. The occupation of
squares and parks, though it can be a potent statement, ultimately leads
nowhere. More radical measures are necessary to bring about a
root-and-branch transformation of society.*

*Unless the movement is taken to a higher level, at a certain stage, it
will subside, leaving the people disappointed and demoralized. Upon
reflection of their experience, an increasing number of activists will come
to see the need for a consistent revolutionary programme. It is the
contention of this writer that this can only be provided by Marxism.*

*The road we have entered will not be an easy one. There will be many ups
and downs. There will be defeats as well as victories. But one thing is
clear. The capitalist system has entered into a phase of terminal and
irreversible decline. It has nothing to offer humanity except a future of
convulsions, chaos, crises and wars. Its continuation threatens the very
foundations of civilization and culture, and in the long run even places a
question mark over the future of life on earth.*

It is easy to be discouraged by the horrors that surround us on all sides:
the starving millions, the mass unemployment, the constant wars and
upheavals, the inevitable defeats and setbacks. Sentimental moralists and
tearful pacifists may shake their heads at this monstrous spectacle. They
see only the surface manifestations but are ignorant of the deeper causes.
But what is needed is not plaintive moans and sighs about “man’s inhumanity
to man” but a scientific diagnosis and proposals for a remedy.

History is not just a senseless catalogue of disasters and crimes. Careful
observation will reveal definite patterns that constantly repeat
themselves. The period we are now living through has many similarities to
the period of the decline of the Roman Empire, which reflected the impasse
of an outmoded system of production – slavery. This long decline was drawn
out for several centuries. There were periods of apparent revival, which
were only the prelude to new and even steeper falls.

The stagnation of the productive forces led to a general crisis of
confidence, beginning with the ruling class itself. In the period of its
decline there was a general feeling of pessimism in Roman society,
reflected in irrational tendencies in philosophy and religion. Almost
nobody believed in the old Gods. Instead there was an epidemic of mystical
sects from the Orient. The same all pervasive smell of decay – economic,
social, moral and intellectual – everywhere clings to capitalist society
today.

Reactionaries blame the youth for their lack of belief. But what is there
for young people to believe in? There was a time when the Socialist and
Communist Parties held out the perspective of a fundamental change in
society. It is one of the central contradictions of the period that the
leaders of the parties and organizations set up by the working class to
change society have become monstrous obstacles in the path of change.

Nevertheless, the working class is a thousand times more powerful than the
most powerful bureaucratic apparatuses. The events of the last twelve
months are a devastating answer to all the cynics and sceptics. They
provide an irrefutable proof that nothing can destroy the will of the
masses to change society.

The rulers of society – like the elite of the Roman Empire – are struggling
to strangle this new world at birth. They are not willing to surrender
power, or cede a single particle of their wealth and privileges. They will
not give up without a ferocious fight. They must be overthrown by the
conscious movement of the working class – those modern slaves who produce
all the wealth of society and who alone are capable of reconstructing a new
social order from the ruins of the old. What is plain from the inspiring
events in Tunisia and Egypt is that once the masses are mobilised to change
society, no force on earth can halt them.

The worldwide revolutionary movement has begun. It will experience many
vicissitudes, defeats and setbacks. But through all these experiences the
advanced workers and youth will learn and draw conclusions. Marxists place
all our faith in the workers and youth of Egypt, Tunisia, Greece, Spain,
the United States... Our role is not to preach from the sidelines but to
engage in the struggle. Our place is by their side, participating in each
and every struggle, while explaining that the only real solution is the
overthrow of capitalism and its replacement by a society fit for human
beings to live in – socialism.

*We understand that all the horrors we see around us are the painful
travails of a new world that is struggling to be born. Temporary defeats
will not deter us from our course. Capitalist society is rotten to the very
marrow. It is sick unto death. It cannot be saved, and all the attempts to
prolong its existence merely prolong its death agony, provoking new horrors
for humanity: new outbursts of violence, wars, terrorism and death for
millions of people. The capitalist system must die in order that humanity
may live.*

*Somebody once told Durruti – the courageous Spanish anarchist who through
his own experience came close to Bolshevism – “even if you win you will be
sitting on a pile of ruins”. To this Durruti delivered a characteristically
revolutionary answer: “We have always lived in slums and holes in the wall.
We will know how to accommodate ourselves for a while. For, you must not
forget, we also know how to build. It is we the workers who built these
palaces and cities, here in Spain and in America, and everywhere.*

*“We, the workers, can build others to take their place, and better ones!
We are not in the least afraid of ruins. We are going to inherit the earth;
there is not the slightest doubt about that. The bourgeoisie might blast
and ruin its own world before it leaves the stage of history. We carry a
new world, here, in our hearts. That world is growing this minute”.*

London, 3rd January, 2012


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:laamn-unsubscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:laamn-subscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:laamn-dig...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:laamn-ow...@egroups.com?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:la...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/laamn@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    laamn-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    laamn-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    laamn-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to