The following article is based on an original presentation given by Stephen Tumino at the Occupy Kingsborough Teach-In that was held on November 17, 2011 at the City University of New York at Kingsborough. Is Occupy Wall Street Communist? Stephen Tumino
A spectre is haunting Europe—the spectre of
communism... It is high time to meet this nursery tale of the Spectre of
Communism with a manifesto of the party itself. — The Manifesto of the Communist Party by Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, 1848 1. The "Specter" of Communism From right-wing commentators like
Glenn Beck to liberal establishment news outlets like the New York Times,
the Occupy movement has been labeled "communist" because it has raised
the issue of class inequality in the US. You have people on the streets calling for
revolution... This is a Marxist revolution that is global in its
nature... The leaders of the movement... [are] saying, we're not here to
reform, we're going to collapse the system. We're not here to reform it.
They're calling openly for revolution. And what is
driving this revolution according to Beck? But what kind of
communism is this? The only sense in which we are communists is that we
care for the commons: the commons of nature; the commons of what is
privatized by intellectual property; the commons of biogenetics. For
this and only for this we should fight. Communism failed absolutely. But the problems of the
commons are here. They are telling you we are not Americans here. But
the conservative fundamentalists who claim they are really American have
to be reminded of something. What is Christianity? It’s the Holy Spirit.
What’s the Holy Spirit? It’s an egalitarian community of believers who
are linked by love for each other. And who only have their own freedom
and responsibility to do it. In this sense the Holy Spirit is here now.
And down there on Wall Street there are pagans who are worshipping
blasphemous idols. If communism means
Zizek's "nursery tale" of overcoming our differences through the power
of love to defend our common (national) interests against the greedy few
who would personally enrich themselves at others expense, then Glenn
Beck has nothing to worry about because what he fears is only a
ghost—the "spirit" of Jesus not the theory of Marx. What Marx's idea of communism
requires is the opposite of belief, of only looking at the world the way
we would like it to be rather than understanding how it is. What it
means is taking a closer look at the "actual relations springing from an
existing class struggle, from a historical movement going on under our
very eyes" (The Communist Manifesto).
According to Marx, communists "do not confront the world in a
doctrinaire way with a new principle: Here is the truth, kneel down
before it!" but rather "merely show the world what it is really fighting
for" (Marx to Ruge, September 1843). Communism, in Marx's terms, is thus
"not a state of affairs
which is to be established, an ideal to which reality [will] have to adjust itself" but "the
realmovement which abolishes
the present state of things" (Marx and Engels, The German Ideology).
While Glenn Beck
thinks that any re-distribution of wealth from the rich to the poor
would create a violent disruption of an otherwise peaceful, fair and
just society, Zizek thinks that the re-distribution of wealth from the
poor to the rich that has been the norm since Reagan's presidency is
brutal, unjust, and needs to be made fairer. By making it seem as if the roots of inequality lie in
personal greed and unfairness—and not the law of profit that exploits
labor—it becomes impossible to understand and abolish class inequality
at its roots. What Zizek and other "left" theorists promote as
"communism" presumes that if we only make the system a little fairer,
with a little more regulation of Wall Street and a little more
protection for workers, then everything will go back to the way it was
in some mythological past and democracy will be restored. However, without a
basic understanding of class that critiques the dominant ideology that
normalizes capitalism by representing it as open to being made "fair"
and "democratic," it is impossible to change it, and the domination of
social and political life by the 1% will continue. This ideological
limitation and accommodation to bourgeois norms means that OWS as it
currently exists is a reformist movement that is attempting to save
capitalism at a time of crisis rather than a genuine worker's movement
to replace capitalism—which is a system for making profit for a few off
of the labor of the many—with socialism—a system whose primary purpose
is meeting the needs of the many by abolishing the exploitation of labor
by capital. 3. The ABCs of Communism When Marx wrote his critique his image of capitalism's
end was not that it was attacked from outside, was not that it was in
danger from "terrorists." Marx's argument is that capitalism would
survive unless and until the internal contradictions, the things about
it that undermine each other, make it collapse and make the people who
live in that collapse declare that a new and different system has to be
begun. That's what's looming here. And Marx if he were here today would
have a big grin and probably say, in good German, "I told you so!" Leaving aside that the purpose of Wolff's speech was
to popularize a messianic vision of a more just society based on
workplace democracy, he is right about one thing: Marx's original
contribution to the idea of communism is that it is an historical and
material movement produced by the failure of capitalism not a moral
crusade to reform it. Today we are confronted with the
fact that capitalism has failed in exactly the way that Marx explained
was inevitable.[4] It has "simplified the class antagonism" (The
Communist Manifesto); by concentrating
wealth and centralizing power in the hands of a few it has succeeded in
dispossessing the masses of people of everything except their labor
power. As a result it has revealed that the ruling class "is unfit to
rule," as The Communist Manifesto concludes, "because it is
incompetent to assure an existence to its slave within his slavery,
because it cannot help letting him sink into such a state, that it has
to feed him, instead of being fed by him." And the slaves are thus
compelled to fight back. [1] http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/video/2011/nov/16/99-v-1-occupy-data-animation?fb=native [2] http://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/07/nov-7-1917-russian-government-overthrown-in-bolshevik-revolution [3] http://chronicle.com/article/Intellectual-Roots-of-Wall/129428 [4]
http://online.wsj.com/video/nouriel-roubini-karl-marx-was-right/68EE8F89-EC24-42F8-9B9D-47B510E473B0.html
|
THE RED CRITIQUE 14 (Winter/Spring 2012)
REDCRITIQUE.ORG
Back