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SEP candidate addresses University of Maine meeting on Marxism,
Militarism and War
By our reporter
28 September 2004
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Socialist candidate
Carl Cooley, running in Maines 2nd Congressional district,
addressed a meeting at the University of Maine campus in Orono
on September 16 on the topic of Marxism, Militarism and
War. The meeting was part of a Marxist and Socialist luncheon
discussion series organized by some university faculty. The attendance
of about 35 included students, faculty and others.
Cooleys remarks to the meeting emphasized the objective
roots of US militarism. He explained that the Bush administration
was a dangerous symptom of a deeper disease, and not the fundamental
cause of the war and threat of dictatorship.
What I would like to show today is that the movement
to the right of American foreign policy is not the result of the
particular evil of its leaders, but is rather part of the trajectory
of capitalism itself, the candidate explained.
The speaker traced the development of American and world capitalism
in the post-World War II period. The long economic boom and relative
political stability that characterized the industrial countries
of the West in the first several decades after the war was undermined
from within and led to the collapse of the Bretton Woods system
of fixed currencies. The developing pressure on profit rates and
the decline in the average rate of profit led to a fundamental
shift in social policy, especially and most sharply in the US.
Capitalism went on the attack, Cooley explained,
referring to the period beginning in the 1970s. Union conditions
were reduced or abolished. Wages stagnated. The union bureaucracy
was reduced to fighting for its own jobs and became instruments
for the control of the working class, rather than leading any
fight for pay and conditions. Whole industries left the United
States, some destined for more modern plants in Europe, other
seeking low-wage locations in the so-called Third World.
The rapid economic decline of American capitalism in relation
to its international rivals is behind the eruption of US militarism.
The corporate elite has tried many things: outsourcing,
mergers, offshoring, tax cuts, social service cuts, said
Cooley. Nothing has been enough.... They have the most powerful
military in the world ... they must play the military card.
The candidate explained, furthermore, the connection between
militarism and the attacks on civil liberties and democratic rights
at home, a necessary precondition for waging the kind of worldwide
campaign of plunder and aggression on which the ruling elite has
embarked.
We have been led to believe that the reason we are at
war is the problem of Arab extremism; that once we
get that fixed everything will be OK, said Cooley. Nothing
could be further from the truth. The wars in the Middle East (and
there may be several of them) are only the prelude to even more
dangerous confrontations.
Cooley explained how this profound crisis was manifesting itself
in the campaigns of both big business parties in the 2004 elections.
Both major parties rely on militarism. We in the Socialist
Equality Party said long before Kerry was a candidate that the
Democrats would support the war. When Howard Dean was the frontrunner,
the media and the Democratic Party leadership put on a display
of shock and awe such as we have rarely seen before.
In the matter of a few days the issue of the war was off the electoral
agenda.... Millions of antiwar voters were effectively disenfranchised.
When one percent of the people control 40 percent of the wealth,
and this one percent has control of both major parties, there
cannot be true democracy.
While sections of the ruling elite have openly encouraged and
utilized fascistic elements, Cooley explained, they have not yet
been able to eliminate the democratic rights of the working people.
We must use this time to build a truly independent working
class party, said Cooley. He pointed to conditions in such
countries as Germany and China. In Germany, where wages
and working conditions are better than ours, recent weekly demonstrations
brought tens of thousands of people into the streets to protest
cuts in social services and unemployment insurance. In China,
where wages and working conditions are far worse than ours, there
are almost daily demonstrations against intolerable conditions
under a repressive regime. We seek to unite with workers in these
countries and all others, in a coordinated struggle to maintain
and improve the quality of our lives.
The international working class needs a perspective and leadership.
Two points are foremost, said Cooley. The working
class must have a party that is completely independent of the
capitalist-controlled Democrats and Republicans; and this organization
must have as its goal the democratically controlled reorganization
of the world economy to satisfy the needs and wants of the international
working class, not the profits of the elite.
The candidates presentation was followed by a lively
period of questions and discussion. The topics raised included
the nature of socialism and of Stalinism in the former Soviet
Union; the socialist candidates position on the environment
and health care; and the claim that the SEP candidate is playing
the role of spoiler in the 2nd Congressional district,
given the fact that Democrat Michael Michaud, running for reelection,
had a winning margin of only about 4 percent in the 2002 vote.
The candidate stressed that socialism would have to be based
on the democratic control and decisions of the working class itself,
and that Stalinism, the nationalist degeneration of the Russian
Revolution, had had a devastating impact on the consciousness
of the working class. He explained that such basic needs as the
defense of the environment, along with the basic human right to
health care, demonstrated the incompatibility of the profit system
with human needs. As for the Democrats and their candidate Michaud,
Cooley said that spoiler is a word used by those who
would cave in to the capitalist two-party system, that it is an
anti-democratic label used by those who accept capitalism and
want to condemn workers to choose between one candidate of the
ruling elite and another.
The response to the socialist candidate was warm and supportive,
with a number of those present indicating that they would cast
ballots for the Socialist Equality Party. The discussion continued
until the room had to be vacated, at which point it adjourned
to a nearby lunchroom, where it continued for another half hour.
See Also:
SEP candidate for Congress addresses
forum on disability issues in Maine
[17 September 2004]
Why Maine workers should vote
for the Socialist Equality Party
Exchange between SEP candidate Carl Cooley and Bangor Central
Labor Council president
[10 July 2004]
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