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Definitions: Proletariat By Gaither Stewart
9/12/08 Simulposted with
The
Greanville Journal
“Suppose that some great
disaster were to sweep ten million families out to sea and
leave ‘em on a desert island to starve and rot. That would
be what you might call an act of God, maybe. But suppose a
manner of government that humans have set up and directed,
drives ten million families into the pit of poverty and
starvation? That’s no act of God. That’s our fool selves
actin’ like lunatics. What humans have set up they can take
down….Whoever says we’ve got to have a capitalist government
when we want a workers’ government, is givin’ the lie to the
great founders of these United States….”
A Stone Came Rolling
Olive Tilford Dargan
Dedication: To all those who
must really work for a living.
(Rome-Asheville, N.C.) I
was back in Asheville where I started out. I found her
gravesite in the obscure Green Hills Cemetery in the
frontier territory of the West Bank part of this mountain
city, across the French Broad River that the Cherokee called
Tahkeostee.
OLIVE TILFORD DARGAN
JAN. 10,1869
JAN.22, 1968
HER HUNDREDTH YEAR
The poet is now forgotten. Her tomb lies far
from the monumental cemetery-resting place of other
Asheville writers such as Thomas Wolfe and O. Henry. In her
long life she was neglected because she was a proletarian
writer, no easy undertaking in her times in Western North
Carolina. Concerning the workers’ struggles in America last
century, Dargan admitted that literature was secondary to
her social commitment. ‘The struggles lie closer to real
experience than the flutter of an eyelid which has occupied
bourgeois writers ….’ A widely traveled Radcliff graduate,
Olive Tilford Dargan lived most of her life in Asheville,
NC. Acclaimed poet and novelist and in Who’s Who, she was
blacklisted during the McCarthy Communist Scare in 1950s.
Other writers labeled her writings propaganda because she
“hobnobbed” with Communists.
Dargan described her first novel, Call Home
the Heart, published in 1932 by Longmans, Green and Company,
under the pseudonym of Fielding Burke—as ‘a proletarian
novel depicting the role of mountain folks in the Gastonia,
North Carolina cotton mill strikes,’ also largely forgotten
as are the wave of violent textile worker strikes that swept
through North Carolina in 1929. The strike in Gastonia
reflected the tensions rising from the industry’s rapid
development in the South after World War I when northern
capitalists took over the southern mills to exploit cheap
labor. Since Gastonia was the epicenter of the phenomenon,
mountaineers from the Smokies swept into town to work in the
mills. The Loray Mill (pronounced Low-Ray) was the first in
the South to undergo new “techniques” such as speed-ups
forced on the worker rather than new technology. That
exploitation of labor ignited the anger of textile workers
in the region and eventually walkouts began. The strike in
the Loray Mills was the most famous and the most violent.
I still remember the red brick buildings,
the chain-link fences and the little houses in Loray Village
in West Gastonia that we passed each time we arrived in
Gastonia where my grandparents lived. At that point my
father always said, “Well, we’re at Loray, so we’re nearly
there.”
Mill owners and state law enforcement
crushed those strikes so viciously that subsequent attempts
to organize labor in the North Carolina textile plants were
unsuccessful. Yet the history of the strike remains,
recorded in novels like those of Dargan and in the writings
of one of the organizers of the Gastonia strike, Vera Buch
Weisbord, a Communist and member of the National Textile
Workers Union, NTWU. No less than Marxist writings, such
histories of the battles for social justice throw light on
the eternal struggle between labor and capital.
The history of the clash in Gastonia offers
the perfect setting for an epic film or a social play of an
insurrection. All the classic characters are present: evil
capitalist mill owners, exploited workers in hot dusty
factories, tiny ragged children and their emaciated mothers
and wives in the square wooden houses, strikers, scabs and
strike-breakers and both dedicated and corrupt union
leaders.
Dargan claimed the sequel to her first
novel—A Stone Came Rolling, same publisher, same
pseudonym—was even more proletarian. She claimed that she
strove not to write propaganda while she fought with
conflicting feelings about writing poetry and her social
responsibility. Can one combine the two? she wondered. Or
are fiction and social reality destined to take separate
paths?
Dargan was an idealistic dreamer. To the end
she continued to see good in a southern folk that has always
been not only violent and brutal but also lacking in any
kind of class-consciousness. They were no shield against the
capitalism she detested. Neither her Asheville nor
strike-ridden Gastonia 100 miles away were safe places for
radicals.
PROLETARIANS, THE PROLETARIAT AND
CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS
This article should be dedicated to wage
earners—especially in the USA and Europe—as well as to those
peoples of the world who have no wages at all, the
potentially class-conscious proletarians who have the
capability of changing the reigning social-economic order.
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The prologue to this historical play begins
in ancient Rome where the proletariat was the lowest class,
the plebs, the masses. Then, a jump forward through the
English Revolution to the French Revolution where the
curious wage earner-spectator finds the same lower classes
now represented by the sans culottes, the ragged have-nots
of society, ruled over by the bourgeois and the royalty.
Then, a half century later, Marx attaches the old label of
proletariat to the workingmen and the downtrodden masses
capable of war against the bourgeoisie. By the time of the
Russian Revolution the working class there had become
class-conscious and in the vest of the industrial
proletariat—no longer simply ignorant masses—executed its
revolution.
Textiles were at the front of the Industrial
Age, and many legendary labor-management conflicts took
place in and around textile mills and towns famous for their
exploitative conditions. The poem below mirrors such
realities.
THE MILL MOTHERS’SONG
by Ella May Wiggins?
Tune: Little Mary Feigan
(This song was sung at the funeral of Ella
May by one of the women strikers)
We leave our home in the
morning,?
We kiss our children good bye,?
While we slave for the bosses,?
Our children scream and cry.
And when we draw our money,?
Our grocery bills to pay,?
Not a cent to spend for clothing,?
Not a cent to lay away.
And on that very evening,?
Our little son will say,?
“I need some shoes, dear mother?
And so does sister May.”
How it grieves the heart of a
mother,?
You every one must know,?
But we can’t buy for our children,?
Our wages are too low.
Ten years later, when those textile workers
strikes spread over the American South, bombs flew,
agitation was real and the potential for proletarian
revolution was in the air. The missing factor in America was
effective leadership as in Russia. There were only strikers
for more pay, strikebreakers, scabs and suffering people.
Marx, Engels, Mao, and especially Lenin warned repeatedly
that trade unionism, per se, was not revolutionary; that
without an effective leadership that looked beyond securing
crumbs from the capitalist table, a form of endless
meliorism, such approach was bound to fail and eventually
degenerate into complicity with the system. A way of
thinking in which the workers forever seek concessions from
their masters, without ever challenging their hold over
society, stifles the true political development of the
masses, and fosters a sense of resignation toward the status
quo. But the idea of the work stoppage, the strike, is not a
dead-end. It remains a powerful and feared tool in the
self-defense arsenal of the working class.
Online I found this eloquent testimony in
the book by John A. Salmond, The General Textile Strike of
1934, From Maine To Alabama, University of Missouri Press,
Columbia and London.
WE DIDN’T HAVE NO BACKING…. WE
SHOULDN’T have done it. The South hadn’t even begun to
organize well by then, ” remembered Kasper Smith, former
textile worker and striker. “What happened in 1934 has a
whole lot to do with people not being so union now.” The
veteran organizer, Solomon Barkin, made much the same point
at a 1984 symposium commemorating the strike’s outbreak. The
strike’s leaders had had little “experience with leading
large strikes, ” he asserted; there was no money to sustain
the effort; “organizational preparation was practically
nil”; there was little support from other unions, the
federal bureaucracy or the president, “preoccupied” as he
then was “with recovery rather than labor relations.”
More-over, the AFL generally had failed its local union
base, especially those “which had been spontaneously formed”
in the wake of the NIRA’s passage. They were essentially
left to their own resources during the strike. There was no
national direction, no widespread public or union support.
This was not a national strike at all, but rather the sum of
thousands of essentially local efforts, often with differing
impulses and aims, and this was especially true of the
cotton textile South, the strike’s supposed epicenter, where
the workers’ sacrifices were the greatest, the repression
the most severe, and the consequences of failure the most
long-lasting.
No, the idea of the proletariat is not
passé. The word proletariat still conveys the sense of
resistance to oppression, of action, of force and strength,
of an ideal. The words labor and capital, as Marx used them,
are real-life categories. The capitalist and the wage earner
are the personification of capital and wage labor. To
disparage such words or use them in derision is to deny the
dignity of human existence and to engage—wittingly or
unwittingly—in conservative propaganda. For today as
yesterday the proletariat is no less than the great masses
of the world. It is the people. It is one of those words
that are exciting and stimulating … but in the abstract. In
fact the concrete proletariat is hard to touch.
Though those masses personified by
proletariat constitute a class, they themselves are seldom
aware of it. To become a class of action the proletariat
requires leadership, something those furious, hungry,
striking textile workers did not have.
The proletariat is complex. It comprises
much more than the industrial proletariat of the Russian
Revolution. It comprises any wage earner, the property-less
class, which sells its labor to the class of property, money
and power who however do not work. Work in the marketplace
implies necessity. (What Warren Buffet, David Rockefeller,
or Bill Gates do these days is not work in the class sense;
it is to direct and administrate their vast financial
assets. Quite a difference. They could retire tomorrow and
live a million years on what they have. Most wage-earners
live a different reality. And who will fire them?)
Thus those two classes—those who work and
those who don’t—stand face to face on the stage of life,
interdependent, but forever at war with each other. The
capitalist class understands instinctively this eternal
dichotomy dividing men since the Persians, Mesopotamians and
the Greeks. But the super-indoctrinated American working
class dulled by the “American dream” does not get it. On the
other hand the middle class in America and Europe
[especially members of the comfortable “upper middle class”]
has not grasped that they too are now part of the
proletariat.
Having a mortgaged home, a car and a TV does
not change the proletarian’s status because his very
lifestyle depends on wages determined by the capitalist
class which controls property, power and money. The wage
earner depends on money lent him by the capitalist bank to
buy his home, his car and his TV. The current subprime
crisis demonstrates eloquently that those loans make the
wage earner a prisoner of his employer, be it industry or
banks or the state bureaucracy.
Though the man who works for wages, blue
collar or middle class, is a member of the working class,
his wage earner status does not make him automatically a
class-conscious revolutionary. He can be anything, from a
priest to the blackest reactionary, which unfortunately is
often the case in the USA. Otherwise how to explain the
legions who applaud McCain and Palin these days?
Modern history shows that the American wage
earner—the potential proletarian—is in reality the
staunchest flag-waving defender of the capitalist system
that exploits him, does nothing for him except pay him
unfair wages, sends him to war to defend capitalist
interests, and throws him aside at will. American wage
earners are so amorphous, so blunted in their ballyhooed
ignorance, so unstructured and ill-organized that they do
not even constitute a conscious class. Their ignorance,
atomization, and acceptance of their situation represents
one of the great victories of capitalism.
The arrangement doesn’t make any sense at
all.
Many Europeans workers are still
class-conscious. But not the reactionary American
workingman. The absence of class-consciousness of the
American workingman exemplifies Marx’s statement that “the
working class is either revolutionary or it is nothing.”
Even more: not even the mildly
class-conscious workingman is aware that he is willy-nilly
engaged in a war with the capitalist class. He continues to
accept his role as an indistinct part of an illusion of a
society, as an abstraction of a cradle-to-grave category,
destined to make no mark on society, to leave no traces of
his passage though life.
However, those 1930s textile strikes in
North Carolina show that his illusions may one day fall
away. The day he and his new middle class companions wake up
from their incubus and genuine, fully developed class
awareness arrives, the newborn proletariat can then become
revolutionary.
That day will be the death of American
capitalism, as we know it.
Meanwhile, caution. Let’s don’t confuse
revolution with either liberal reform or armed insurrection.
Reform is adjustment made by the rulers in order to maintain
power, as happened for decades in Tsarist Russia, and we saw
under F.D.R. As a rule, reforms are too little and too late
or woefully inadequate (by definition) to staunch the
eventual descent into complete degeneration. Insurrection on
the other hand is a local, spontaneous and one-issue matter,
as was the 1929 Gastonia cotton mill strike. Insurrection is
not revolution.
Since drastic and radical social-political
change should be the goal of thinking world citizens today,
everything that inhibits social solidarity, the blossoming
of resistance, the redistribution of wealth, and the
creation of a rebellious mindset against a negative myth are
obstacles to be overcome.
But wait a minute! A myth? What myth? In
this case—the myth is America itself. The Greeks too
wondered how can you battle a myth? In the aftermath of the
fall of Troy, Menelaus stood before Helen with his sword
raised: he stared at the traitoress and let his sword fall.
He couldn’t kill her. Helen was a myth. Menelaus wondered
how you can kill a myth. He was not a revolutionary. In the
final countdown, myths too, that is illusions and false
consciousness, must be destroyed to make room for
legitimacy.
Speaking of myths, let’s keep in mind that
though born out of solidarity and resistance and reason, the
United States of America has always harbored violence in its
soul. We now see that peaceful, anti-war, mankind-loving
America is a myth. A parallel violent world lives within
American society. In America, violence and war are so much a
part of life that non-violent opposition to its inbred
violence seems to be hopeless folly and unreason. In
comparison to America’s homebred terrorism and violence,
just a heartbeat away from mainline life, al-Qaeda is stuff
for babies and schoolgirls. In comparison to today’s
institutional state terrorism, past student non-violent
protest or even pistol-armed Black Panthers and Weather
Underground insurrections appear as innocent as breaking
plate-glass windows.
Another illusion to be overcome is that the
abstract workingman-proletarian can develop
class-consciousness alone. As suggested earlier,
class-consciousness must be instilled from outside the
class. That role inevitably falls to the intelligentsia and
activists. Marx wrote in German Ideology that “one of the
most difficult tasks confronting philosophers (let’s say,
educated people), is to descend from the world of thought to
the actual world.” That is, to the world where the
workingman lives.
Yet, proletarians reject interference by
intellectuals. The American workingman appears allergic to
knowledge and history. Therefore he is the most truant in
class awareness. The American working people have forgotten
that they constitute a class, that classes even exist. They
act as if the class idea belongs to another planet. To the
world of Communism! That it too is an illusion.
Moreover, the poor economic classes of
America accept the American Dream rhetoric that the rich
deserve to be rich because they are smarter. Wealth is proof
of their virtue. It is good to be rich. The poor are guilty
for their poverty. As John Steppling points out on these
pages, the American poor produce and reproduce the values of
the ruling class, the values and ideals of the rich. The
poor live in the illusion of real choices in life while in
reality they live their little lives in servitude.
While the “people” are as if paralyzed,
blind and dumb, in its name travesty after travesty are
committed by those same capitalist leaders who betray the
people routinely and abominably, making themselves traitors
in the process and making the people complicit in their
crimes against humanity. In Nazi Germany it was “we didn’t
know.” In America today it is “we don’t want to know”. No
false airs, please. That’s un-American. Who cares about
social theories? Who cares where Laos is located? Or
Georgia? If Saddam Hussein wasn’t responsible for 9/11, he
could have been, which is the same thing. Only evildoers and
anti-Americans believe he didn’t have weapons of mass
destruction. The wide admiration for ignorance, I think, is
in imitation of the ignorance of the nation’s leaders. And,
as we know, ignorance is the handmaiden of the crime of
Fascism.
By a strange coincidence I just opened at
random the book The Origins Of Bolshevism by one of the
forgers of the Russian Revolution, the Menshevik Theodore
Dan, and found his remark about the “open war of the
Orthodox folk (in pre-revolutionary Russia) with educated
people.” Also then, in those different but analogous
circumstances of pre-revolutionary Russia, educated people
were isolated from the masses. From that perspective the
working class in the US has become politically worse than
nothing. As a collective it has been molded into a
reactionary force that keeps the power elite in power.
Conditioned, brainwashed and hoodwinked, the bribed workers
seem to believe ignorance is for their own good.
So what happened to the collective? Or,
worse, was it always that way? Except for sporadic
insurrections in face of starvation in the depression years
and isolated periods of resistance, the American collective
has never emerged in the glory it must harbor somewhere.
(The relative passivity of the American masses has always
puzzled foreign observers. Werner Sombart, a noted German
sociologist and onetime avowed Marxist, indeed asked the
inevitable question: Why is there no socialism in the U.S.?
He could have also asked why is there no real socialism in
Britain? America, although the most notorious case, is not
alone as a major nation lacking a substantive socialist
movement.)
Marx said that if the proletariat is not
revolutionary, what good is it? And that is the pertinent
question today. Is the American workingman, the wage earner,
the proletariat, reformable? I pose that question for that
American wage earner who does not pose the question himself.
At this point we can’t go much further in
the American part of the proletarian tragedy without some
class distinctions. Today, up there on the political stage
we see the prancing billionaire puppets of the capitalist
class who control property, money, and, consequently
political power. Whom they decide to place at the top of the
pyramid today to represent their interests and misrepresent
the masses should be a matter of indifference to the blue
collar-middle class wage earner masses. In my mind not
voting for any of them is an acceptable choice if
accompanied by compensatory revolutionary activity. The most
one can say is that a growing number of Americans, now
approaching a majority, either through choice or
indifference have opted for the non-vote route, while a tiny
minority finds satisfaction in minimal grassroots agitation.
And here, another character mentioned above
steps on stage. Today, as in recent centuries in the
Occident, there is an in-between class. It is part of the
middle class, elsewhere and at other times called the petty
bourgeois, from which emerge America’s liberals and
progressives. Many petty bourgeois beyond America’s borders,
chiefly in Europe, prefer to label themselves Social
Democrats. Far from wanting to transform society in the
interests of revolutionary proletarians, they aspire to
making the existing society tolerable … for themselves. In
their own interests they want to counteract the rule of
capital by the transference of as much power and employment
as possible to the state of which they are an integral part.
[The Social Democrats are on the run all over Europe, as
their alliance with the capitalists to front for the system
has finally backfired and many are deserting the center-left
for the real left. —Eds.]
HOWEVER, in their conception of state and
society, the workers, the wage earners, the proletariat, are
to remain forever workingmen, wage earners, proletariat.
Therefore the petty bourgeois (again, the liberals and
progressives) social programs for better wages and security
for the workers, with which they bribe the workers to stay
in line.
That was the warning Marx and Engels brought
to the Central Committee of the Communist League in 1850.
But how modern it rings.
That’s where the proletariat must step
forward and shout, NO!
It’s true that every event that happens
leaves traces. It is something like mirrors and their
reflections. Except that in the mirror’s reflections, the
left is right, and the right is left. Illusions all!
Illusions are like words unspoken that are no longer words
at all. Sometimes we have to banish all possibilities of
illusion. Sometimes we have to stop, close our eyes, and
allow ourselves to see real reality, not illusion where
right is left, and left right. Reality free of brainwash.
Free of all those words and euphemisms we hear on TV and
read in the establishment press. We can trust none of it.
One problem facing the wage
earner-proletariat is the lack of a suitable program. I
can’t see an acceptable program for changing the world. The
“Another World Is Possible” movement is at best a loose
agreement around the planet that change would be a good
thing. One answer to those who wonder what the new
resistance wants is simple: they want a just society.
Sometimes it is comforting—but not much more
than that—to recall that though protest movements of the
past have been broken and scattered by Power, many of those
people and like-minded others are still out there in
society. They could rejoin the growing number of mature
people with eyes to see and ears to hear.
But what are they to do? one wonders.
That has always been the question.
Studies show that the class of Power in the
USA is surprisingly small, numbering in the tens of
thousands. The potential opposition on the other hand is
enormous, including all those Che Guevara had in mind when
he quipped, “If you tremble in indignation at injustice then
you are my comrade.” El Che had in mind the proletariat of
the world.
Though much of the ruling class is stashed
away in corner offices on top floors behind batteries of
secretaries, apparently in hiding, out of its vanity it
still wants to be seen. For what is Power if no one knows
YOU hold it? Members of the Power class are visible on stage
each day, in TV, in Congress, in the military hierarchy, in
diplomacy, multinationals, religions and the universities.
The higher they ascend the ladder of Power, the more
entrenched in the Power system they become. However, those
at the very summit are in hiding, the rulers who really
rule. The most dangerous are those who meet in secret
societies like the Bilderbergers. We can suspect who they
are.
Since it seems that the people sitting in
the top tiers of our political-social theater have abdicated
from the struggle, we tend to underestimate their power. For
they too have a stake in the land. One forgets the potential
force of those textile strikes of the 1930s. One forgets
that organized workers can bring a small city like Asheville
in North Carolina or a metropolis like New York or a company
like General Motors to a standstill in a matter of hours.
The reason that seldom happens is because the people have
forgotten their own strength.
People don’t think about their strength
because of Power’s astute use of myth and illusion: the myth
of freedom and the illusion of happiness made of comfort and
ease. And today, above all, more and more out of fear!
Though most people seem to prefer ignorance,
some people are learning to distinguish between myth and
reality. For many issues are glaringly real and evident: the
Iraq War, globalization, US imperialism, legalized torture
and genocide, the new American police state, and the
degradation of social life in the West in general.
Solidarity too is growing. Resistance
spreads. The superiority of “the American way of life” has
revealed itself to be a great lie. The result of extended
and prolonged resistance is inevitably state violence
against dissent. State violence in turn has a multiplier
effect: when Power steps in to taser dissenters, it
intensifies resistance. An explosion becomes inevitable.
First collective action, then civil disobedience, then state
violence, then the explosion. This time around the explosion
can become something much different than Power imagines. An
organized people can shut down the nation without firing a
shot.
The people! Today the American people are
broken, fragmented and bewildered, devoid of unity of
purpose, as existed briefly, let’s say, during the Vietnam
War. According to recent studies the vast majority of
American people are still unaffected by America’s ongoing
permanent war. The discussion about whether 70,000 or over
one million Iraqis have been massacred has a certain
theoretical-academic air about it. Not even the mothers of
the American dead in Iraq can get organized.
At the same time more and more people have
lost faith in the electoral system. Some of them have taken
on the job of breaking down the natural passivity of the
dissatisfied and fragmented people who, though in potential
agreement with revolutionary analyses, are unused to
resistance because of the illusionist spin conducted by
Power. Therefore the suggested antidote of not voting for
any of them.
Then there are the wars to be ended. If the
people can’t share the government’s war effort, it can share
in anti-war objectives. There is vast and growing poverty
and social injustice to be resolved. There is a dramatic
need for universal health care. There is a corrupt and mean
political class to be removed. All of it. Both parties.
There is every need to give power back to the people.
Grassroots organizer Abigail Singer,
co-founder of Rising Tide North America and of a recent
Southeast Climate Convergence conference in Asheville, North
Carolina, said in an interview that voting is not enough
because the electoral process has been sold to the highest
bidder and that people who get into positions of power have
to sacrifice whatever principles they started out with to
the point that systemic change is impossible. Real change
can come only from the grassroots.
At the same time a growing number of people
are losing faith in nonviolence. Singer points out that
capitalism itself is extremely violent. “If you’re not nice
and polite, some people consider that violence. But most
violence is in business as usual and capitalism grinding on,
killing workers, forests and oceans. We’re surrounded by
normalized violence and don’t recognize it for what it is.
Confronting this normalized violence in a direct way is not
violent; it’s necessary.”
While liberals and progressives argue that
you have to work within the system, the modern activist is
mutating because the political climate has changed. The
violence of government repression creates violent reaction
in the same way war against Iraq creates new shahids.
Violent resistance is nothing new: Black Power backed up the
Civil Rights movement. Historically the US government didn’t
grant more workers rights because it became good but because
people rose up and demanded their rights. People organizing
to defend themselves reaches back through the history of
man. Today in America some few people are coming together
and developing new ideas of resistance. Their number is
destined to grow to the degree that government repression
grows.
After my youth in America I have lived my
adult life abroad. Traveling to the USA today is to go
abroad. Therefore I have acquired a double sensibility about
my homeland. When I arrive there, abroad, but also at home,
I feel double tensions in the air: the tension connected
with the widespread fear of losing “the American way of
life” and the tension of a minority of dissatisfied people
also fearful because it knows it is living an illusion, and
that mutiny—still so nebulous as to appear a chimera—will be
necessary to change things. In America I sense both a fear
of action and a fear of non-action. Perhaps also a fear of
change, fear that things can only get worse. The fear, as
one friend wrote me today, that something very bad is about
to happen to America. A fear like that of a people
inhabiting the wrong house, or the haunting fear that the
real house it once inhabited is today occupied by usurpers
and has lost its soul.
One senses also a disturbing atmosphere of sick pragmatism
and a depoliticalization coupled with widespread contentment
with just analyzing the current situation rather than
challenging it.
It is a good sign that across the land some
grassroots activists are working to break down indifference.
Radical change presupposes an end to blind acceptance of
Power’s fictionalized version of reality. Activists no
longer need feel alone. Each person arrested in anti-war
demonstrations acquires new faith in resistance and each of
them creates new converts.
Acceptance of the legitimacy of Power, indifference to
Power’s deviations and passivity in the face of Power’s
threats against external enemies seem to have peaked. More
and more people believe that Power gone mad has to be put
aside. The eventual end of acceptance and passivity could
result in a kind of explosion the world has never seen.
Today however that clash is still more hope
than reality. Hope that a new strategy of liberation from
the oppression of illegal American Fascism will mushroom. In
other times, in an older language, that strategy would be
called revolutionary theory. The old Leninist concept is apt
here: there can be no revolutionary movement without a
revolutionary theory. The theory here, the strategy, must
explain that it is not just George W. Bush, the system’s
current representative, or his replacement, who must go, but
the system itself run by that tiny minority at the top.
But people don’t rebel easily. People prefer
reforms. People do everything possible to avoid social
convulsion and upheaval, even compromising with a Fascist
police state, precisely as happened in Nazi Germany and
Fascist Italy.
On the other hand, today’s US government is
aware that the spirit of mutiny/revolution is brewing. That
is why it has armed itself with a set of illegal and
anti-constitutional laws to crush it. At this juncture the
alternative to ousting today’s corrupt American system is a
permanent police state, which if it becomes any more fixed
than it is now just might last a thousand years.
The American people will have to decide what
to do and how to act. Meanwhile many non-Americans agree
that the most extreme problem of this century for mankind is
the confused, powerful and violent United States of America.
Finally, as an epilogue, see what Henry
David Thoreau (1817-78), great American author and
philosopher, wrote in his “On the Duty of Civil Obedience”:
“All men recognize the right of
revolution; that is, the right to refuse allegiance to, and
to resist, the government, when its tyranny or its
inefficiency are great and unendurable. Those who, while
they disapprove of the character and measures of a
government, yield to it their allegiance and support, are
undoubtedly its most conscientious supporters, and so
frequently the most serious obstacles to reform.
“If the injustice is part of the
necessary friction of the machine of government, let it go,
let it go…. if it is of such a nature that it requires you
to be the agent of injustice to another, then I say, break
the law. Let your life be a counter-friction to stop the
machine. What I have to do is to see, at any rate, that I do
not lend myself to the wrong, which I condemn.
“But what shall I do? You ask.
My answer is, If you really wish to do anything, resign your
office. When the subject has refused allegiance, and the
officer has resigned from office, then the revolution is
accomplished.”
Gaither Stewart, novelist, poet, and
veteran correspondent, is Cyrano’s Journal Online’s Special
Editor for European Matters. Normally based in Rome, he’s
currently on his way to Paris to take a fresh look at the
business-induced rollback of the social contract in almost
all nations in the European Union, including now France.
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