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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Marxism, the International Committee, and the science of perspective:
an historical analysis of the crisis of American imperialism
Part One
By David North
11 January 2005
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On the weekend of January 8-9, the Socialist Equality Party
held a meeting of its national membership in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
The opening report was given by David North, the national secretary
of the SEP and chairman of the editorial board of the World
Socialist Web Site. The report will be published in three parts.
The first part appears below; the second
will be published tomorrow; the final
part will be posted on Thursday, January 13.
In opening this national meeting of the membership of the Socialist
Equality Party, it is appropriate that we observe a minute of
silence to pay tribute to the memories of the tens of thousands
of people in South Asia who perished last month in the tsunami
that swept across the Indian Ocean.
All across the globe there has been an outpouring of deeply
felt empathy for the victims of the tsunami, as well as genuine
expressions of solidarity. How different these manifestations
of real grief are from the grudging, hypocritical and pro-forma
expressions of concern on the part of the leaders of American
and British imperialism! Neither Bush nor Blair was capable of
articulating, in a manner that anyone could find convincing, concern
for the fate of the millions of people whose lives have been devastated
by the catastrophe.
Even the media was embarrassed by the manner in which the White
House respondedor, to be more precise, failed to respondto
the unfolding tragedy. First, the extraordinary silence, which
persisted for nearly three days, as the president puttered around
his Texas ranch and the British prime minister looked after his
tan on an Egyptian beach, all but oblivious to the consequences
of the tsunami. Then came Bushs piddling offer of $15 million
in aid, grudgingly raised to $35 million, and, later, as the White
Houses stinginess became the subject of international derision,
upped further to $350 million. Of course, when compared to the
sums expended by the United States in operations designed to kill
peopleparticularly in Iraqthe figure of $350 million
amounts to little more than pocket change.
In fact, $350 million is only a small percentage of the total
amount of money paid out annually to the top 500 American CEOs
in the form of salaries and stock options. This figure runs well
into the billions of dollars. In 2003, the total compensation
of Charles M. Cawley of MBNA exceeded $45 million; that of Stanley
ONeal of Merrill Lynch was $28.3 million; that of Daniel
P. Amos of Aflac was $37.3 million; that of Kenneth L. Chennault
of American Express was $40 million; that of Patrick Stokes of
Anheuser Busch was $49 million. I selected these names somewhat
randomly from a list of about 1,000 executives published on a
web site that tracks corporate compensation.[1]
When one considers the amount of money that is sloshing around
in the investment accounts of these people, the size of the charitable
contributions coming out of the United States that have been reported
in the media does not seem to be all that impressive. One can
be sure that the average working class contributor is donating
a far larger percentage of his or her weekly income to relief
efforts than the corporate executives who, before writing a check,
talk the matter over with their accountants and calculate the
tax benefits.
In the aftermath of the tsunami, there have been a number of
articles in the press explaining the geological causes of the
disaster. This is important scientific information. But it needs
to be supplemented by analyses of the significant social factors
that constitute a major causal element in the horrendous loss
of life. This task is generally avoided by the media, which finds
it easier to pontificate on the inscrutability of natures
awful purposes. Thus, we are informed by columnist David Brooks
of the New York Times: Humans are not the universes
main concern. Were just gnats on the crust of the earth.
The earth shrugs and 140,000 gnats die, victims of forces far
larger and more permanent than themselves. Commentary of
this sortwhich is composed in equal parts of ignorance and
contempt for humanityserves a definite purpose: to evade
reality and conceal unpleasant socioeconomic and political truths.
The impact of the tsunami exposes in an especially graphic
manner the irrational nature of capitalism, its inability to develop
the productive forces in a manner that raises the living standards
of the broad masses of the people. The media enthuses about the
Asian miracle, but the fact of the matter is that
the benefits of the infusion of capital into the region over the
past decade are showered upon small privileged elites. Hundreds
of millions of Asias people live in shanties that, even
under the most favorable climatic conditions, afford scant protection
from the elements. It testifies to the inhumane character of economic
development in the region that a disaster that cost the lives
of more than 150,000 people is not considered by the international
financial community to be a major economic event. The stock exchanges
in the regionincluding those of Indonesia, Thailand, India
and even Sri Lankahave not suffered any significant decline
in the aftermath of the tsunami. The reason is that large segments
of the population of these countries live in a state of such dire
poverty that their relationship to the national economy is of
a tangential character.
The social conditions that exist in these countries must be
related to their political histories. Let us look at the countries
that suffered the greatest losses last week: Indonesia and Sri
Lanka. It is impossible to understand the nature of modern Indonesian
societythe appalling poverty, widespread malnutrition, a
life expectancy for men of under 65without referring to
the events of October 1, 1965. On that day, the CIA, working with
fascistic Indonesian military officers led by General Suharto,
organized a coup that removed the left-nationalist president,
Sukarno, from power. In the aftermath of the coup, military personnel
and right-wing Muslim religious death squads, operating with lists
supplied by the CIA, slaughtered over a half million members of
the Indonesian Communist Party and other left-wing groups. For
the next three decades, General Suhartos brutally repressive
US-backed regime kept Indonesia safe for capitalist investment.
The chaotic and destructive nature of capitalist development culminated
in the financial tsunami that devastated Indonesias economy
in 1998.
As for Sri Lanka, long before the tsunami swept over its vulnerable
coastline, the country had been devastated by the reactionary
and chauvinist policies of successive bourgeois governments. The
development of critical social infrastructure had been subordinated
to the financial demands of a civil war provoked by the Sri Lankan
bourgeoisie.
When examined in its true socioeconomic and political context,
it becomes clear that the destructive impact of a tsunami is far
more the consequence of mans work than that of nature.
At some point in the future, the development of science and
technology should enable humanity to master nature to such an
extent that it would be inconceivable that a force so elemental
and primitive as a tsunami could extinguish thousands of lives.
At the very least, man should be able to foresee such an event
in a manner that would allow life-saving counter-measures. Indeed,
we know that such technology exists and is in place throughout
the Pacific. The point is, the mastery by man of nature depends
upon his mastery of the socio-economic foundations of his own
existence, on the abolition of all elements of irrationality from
the economic structure of societythat is, upon the replacement
of capitalism with socialism.
In the prevailing environment of political reaction, with its
stifling impact on peoples emotions and intellect, the possibility
of such a transformation seems impossibly remotewhich is
one of the indications that historical conditions for that very
transformation are rapidly maturing. Indeed, there are growing
indications as we begin a new year that world capitalism is entering
into a new period of economic crisis and political upheaval. The
task before this meeting is to make as accurate an appraisal as
possible of the world situation, to judge on this basis the real
prospects for socialism, and determine the political tasks that
flow from this appraisal. This work is of a scientific character.
In April 1933, Leon Trotsky wrote a letter to Sidney Hook,
challenging certain formulations in an essay entitled MarxismDogma
or Method? which the young radical professor had written
for the Nation. Hook had written that Marxism is
neither a dogma, myth, nor objective science, but a realistic
method of class action. To which Trotsky replied, What
means here the word realistic? Obviously, it means
based upon the true knowledge of the objectivein that case,
social processes; the knowledge of the objective is a science.
The Marxian policy is realistic insofar as it is based on Marxism
as a science. [2]
Trotskys conceptionthat the formulation of political
perspectives is scientific workcontains within itself the
premise that political processes unfold in a lawful manner. This
attitude is anathema to all pragmatic varieties of anti-Marxism,
which elevate contingency and accident to the level of the absolute
in the historical process, which insist that history and politics
are determined, in the final analysis, by the interplay of accidents
and a limitless number of unforeseeable and/or unpredictable variables.
The late Francois Furet, a historian who had once been a member
of the French Communist Party, summed up this viewpoint as follows:
A true understanding of our time is possible only when we
free ourselves from the illusion of necessity: the only way to
explain the twentieth century, to the extent an explanation is
possible, is to reassert its unpredictable character, an attribute
denied by those most responsible for its tragedies. [3]
Furets argument unfolds within a very rigid framework:
as it is not possible to predict the future with any significant
level of certainty, it is absurd to speak of historical necessity.
For Furet, necessity implies the existence of irresistible forces
that lead to one and only one conceivable outcome. As it is clear
that the path of historical development may lead to different
and even quite contradictory outcomes, the conviction that the
historical process is subject to laws, and that, moreover, these
laws can be understood and acted upon, constitutes a Marxist illusion.
It should come as no surprise that Furets diatribe against
historical determinism is made within the context of a book-length
polemic devoted to establishing the absolute necessity of capitalism
now and for all time.
The position of Furet, quite common among anti-Marxists, reveals
a naïve misunderstanding of what is signified by the concept
of law and necessity. The scientific character of Marxism is not
determined by the exactness of its predictions. The degree of
exactness that Marxism or any scientific discipline can attain
in its description of any given phenomenon is determined ultimately
by the nature of the phenomenon itself. The objective nature of
the phenomenon that is the subject of historyhuman societyis
not of a character that would enable even the most conscientious
historical materialist to predict exactly what will
happen two days, two weeks, or two months hence. This is not an
argument against the lawfulness of the historical process or the
possibility of its scientific study. Rather, it requires a more
profound appreciation of how lawfulness is manifested in the historical
process. As Lukács explained, scientific laws can
only fulfill themselves in the real world as tendencies, and necessities
only in the tangle of opposing forces, only in a mediation that
takes place by way of endless accidents. [4]
That the outcome of the historical process is not predetermined,
that its development may move in various directions, is a consequence
of the fact that social evolution proceeds through the struggle
of classes, which are in pursuit of different, mutually incompatible
ends. But neither the classes as a whole nor the parties and individuals
through which their socioeconomic interests find more or less
adequate expression function as free agents. The breadth and nature
of their activity are essentially defined by the laws of the capitalist
mode of production.
This is true not only for the working class, but for the bourgeois
ruling elite as well. The political perspective of our party does
not proceed from subjectively motivated hopes and desires. Marxists
conceive of revolution neither as punishment for the evil-doings
of capitalists, nor as reward for their own altruistic efforts
to abolish poverty. The perspectives of the revolutionary party
must develop out of an analysis of the objectively real contradictions
of the capitalist mode of production. This analysis forms the
most general basis of the revolutionary perspective. Its more
detailed elaboration requires that the development of these contradictions,
in their real-life social and political expression, be traced
through the many layers of historical, social, cultural and intellectual
mediation through which they must pass.
A Marxist perspective may concern itself with broad historical
processes spanning decades, or a more immediate set of concrete
political conditions in which the time frame of revolutionary
action is of far briefer duration. But even in the latter case,
the reference point of the Marxist party is always the broader
historical process. The tactics that are devised to meet the exigencies
of the conjunctural problems and circumstances must be in accordance
with the principled aims that are defined by the historic program
and tasks of the international socialist movement. It should be
added that it is not possible to understand conjunctural problems
and conditions unless they are studied within the framework of
the strategic goals defined by the nature of the historical epoch.
Finally, the development of revolutionary perspectives requires
an active, rather than contemplative, attitude toward society
and the class struggle. Objectivity does not mean passivity. The
revolutionary partys appraisal of objective reality and
the balance of class forces includes an estimate of the impact
and consequences of its own intervention in the revolutionary
process. The correct interpretation of the world, as Marx explained
in his eleventh thesis on Feuerbach, can be developed only in
the struggle to change it.
But the correct appreciation of the active element
in the process of cognitionwhose discovery and elucidation
constituted one of the great achievements of German classical
idealist philosophy in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
century (above all, in the work of Hegel)must not be taken
to mean that the objective world can be changed and reshaped anyway
one pleases. There exists no philosophical tendency with more
dangerously reactionary implications than one that separates the
activity of the will from the scientific cognition
of objective, law-governed social processes that are the essential
determinants of mans social practice. The activity of the
revolutionary party must proceed from a correct appraisal of the
basic tendencies of socioeconomic development on a world scale.
Unless grounded in this foundation, the work of the revolutionary
movement will rest on nothing more substantial than impressions
and guess work...and it will end in disaster.
To be continued
Notes:
1. http://www.aflcio.com/corporateamerica/paywatch/ceou/database.cfm
2. Writings of Leon Trotsky 1932-33 (New York, 1972), pp.
232-33.
3. The Passing of an Illusion (Chicago 1999), p. 2.
4. The Ontology of Social Being, Volume 2 (London, 1978),
p. 103.
See Also:
New Release from Mehring
Books: The Crisis of American Democracy: the Presidential elections
of 2000 and 2004
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