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అమెరికా పాలకవర్గాన్ని మరోసారి భయపెడుతున్న సోషలిజం-పార్లమెంటులో తీర్మానాలతో అడ్డుకోగలరా !

28 Tuesday Feb 2023

Posted by raomk in COUNTRIES, Current Affairs, History, imperialism, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Left politics, Opinion, Uncategorized, USA

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communism, Democratic party, Republican party, Socialism, US left politics, USA


ఎం కోటేశ్వరరావు


” అమెరికాలోని అనేక మంది జనం, ఐరోపా సోషలిస్టులు ప్రమాదకరంగా కమ్యూనిజానికి దగ్గర అవుతున్నారు.అమెరికా తరహా జీవనానికి ఒక ముప్పుగా మారుతున్నారు.” అమెరికా పత్రిక అట్లాంటిక్‌ 1951 ఫిబ్రవరి సంచికలో ఐరోపాలో సోషలిజం అనే పేరుతో ప్రచురించిన ఒక వ్యాఖ్యానం పై వాక్యాలతో ప్రారంభమైంది. అదే ఫిబ్రవరి రెండవ తేదీ( 2023) న అమెరికా ప్రజాప్రతినిధుల సభ (కాంగ్రెస్‌) సోషలిజం ఘోరాలను ఖండించే పేరుతో ప్రవేశపెట్టిన తీర్మానాన్ని ఆమోదించింది.సభలోని మొత్తం 219 రిపబ్లికన్‌ పార్టీ సభ్యులు, 109 మంది డెమోక్రటిక్‌ పార్టీ వారు దానికి అనుకూలంగా ఓటు వేశారు.డెమోక్రాట్లు 86 మంది వ్యతిరేకించగా 14 మంది సభలో ఉన్నా ఓటింగ్‌కు దూరంగా ఉన్నారు. వ్యతిరేకించిన వారిలో డెమోక్రటిక్‌ పార్టీకి చెందిన 86 మందిలో అలెగ్జ్రాండ్రియా ఒకాసియో కార్టెెజ్‌, రషీదా లాయిబ్‌, గోరీ బుష్‌, ఇల్హాన్‌ ఒమర్‌ ఉన్నారు. వీరిని డెమోక్రటిక్‌ సోషలిస్టు పార్టీ బలపరిచింది. అక్కడి మీడియా కమ్యూనిస్టులు, సోషలిస్టులని చిత్రించి వారి మీద వ్యతిరేకతను రెచ్చగొట్టేందుకు గత ఎన్నికల్లో చూసింది.ఇల్హాన్‌ ఒమర్‌ గతంలో సామ్రాజ్యవాద, యూదు దురహంకారాన్ని విమర్శించినందుకుగాను ఆమెను పార్లమెంటు విదేశీ వ్యవహారాల కమిటీ నుంచి తొలగించేంత వరకు రిపబ్లికన్‌ పార్టీ నిదురపోలేదు.


ప్రచ్చన్న యుద్ధంలో సోవియట్‌ను ఓడించాం, సోషలిస్టు వ్యవస్థలను కూల్చివేశాం, కమ్యూనిజానికి కాలం చెల్లింది, దాన్ని ఏడు నిలువుల లోతున పూడ్చిపెట్టాం అంటూ తమ భుజాలను తామే చరుచుకుంటూ అమెరికా, ఐరోపా, ప్రపంచంలోని యావత్తు కమ్యూనిస్టు వ్యతిరేకులు మూడు దశాబ్దాల నాడే పండగ చేసుకున్నారు. సోషలిజం జరిపిన ఘోరాలను ఖండించాలంటూ అమెరికా పార్లమెంటులో తీర్మానం ప్రవేశపెట్టాల్సిన అవసరం ఇప్పుడు ఏమొచ్చింది అన్నది ఆసక్తి కలిగించే అంశం. బ్రిటన్‌ నుంచి వెలువడే గార్డియన్‌ పత్రిక 2022 ఆగస్టు 25న ” ప్రతివారూ ప్రతి ఒక్కరినీ ప్రేమిస్తున్నారు: పెరిగిన యుగోస్లావియా బెంగ ” అనే శీర్షికతో ఒక విశ్లేషణను ప్రచురించింది.యుగోస్లావియా సోషలిస్టు దేశ స్థాపకుడు మార్షల్‌ టిటో ”ఐక్యత, సోదరత్వం ” అనే నినాదం కింద భిన్నమైన తెగలు, మతాల వారితో ఐక్య దేశాన్ని స్థాపించాలని లక్ష్యంగా పెట్టుకున్నాడని,1980 టిటో మరణం తరువాత తలెత్తిన జాతీయవాదంతో అది 1992 విచ్చిన్నానికి దారి తీసిందని ఆ పత్రిక పేర్కొన్నది. టిటో కాలంలో అనుసరించిన కొన్ని విధానాలు, వైఫల్యాలు వాటి మీద జనంలో తలెత్తిన అసంతృప్తి, దాన్ని ఆసరా చేసుకొని అమెరికా, ఐరోపా దేశాల గూఢచార సంస్థలు, క్రైస్తవమత పెద్దల కుమ్మక్కు, కుట్రలతో దాన్ని, ఇతర తూర్పు ఐరోపా దేశాల సోషలిస్టు వ్యవస్థలను కూల్చివేసిన చరిత్ర, దాన్ని రక్షించుకోవాలని జనం కూడా అనుకోకపోవటం మన కళ్ల ముందు జరిగిందే. ఆకాశంలో మబ్బులను చూసి చేతిలోని ముంతనీళ్లు పారబోసుకున్నట్లు ఆ దేశాల్లో పరిస్థితి తయారైంది. ఆకాశంలో కనిపించిన వెండి మబ్బులు వర్షించలేదు. పూర్వపు పెట్టుబడిదారీ వ్యవస్థను జనాల నెత్తిన రుద్దారు. దానికి తోడు యుద్దాలు, అంతర్యుద్ధాలను బోనస్‌గా ఇచ్చారు. ఈ నేపధ్యంలో మూడు దశాబ్దాల తరువాత గార్డియన్‌ పత్రిక 2022 ఆగస్టు 25న చేసిన విశ్లేషణలో ఉనికిలో లేని యుగోస్లావియా గురించి బెంగను, విచ్చిన్నంపట్ల విచారాన్ని వెల్లడించారని పేర్కొన్నది.విడిపోయిన సెర్బియాలో 81శాతం, బోస్నియాలో 77, తొలుతగా ఐరోపా సమాఖ్యలో చేరిన స్లోవేనియాలో 45, కొసావోలో పదిశాతం మంది విచ్చిన్నాన్ని తప్పుపట్టారని వెల్లడించింది.పూర్వపు సోషలిస్టు వ్యవస్థను వర్తమాన పెట్టుబడిదారీ విధానాన్ని పోల్చుకొని నిట్టూర్పులు విడిచేవారిని గురించి కూడా ఉటంకించింది. దీని అర్ధం ఆ దేశాల్లో ఉన్నవారందరూ తిరిగి సోషలిజాన్ని కోరుకుంటున్నారని చెప్పలేము.పెట్టుబడిదారీ ప్రపంచం గురించి కన్న కలలు కల్లలౌతున్నపుడు ఏం చెయ్యాలో తోచని స్థితిలో ఒక మధనం జరుగుతోంది. సోషలిజం పేరెత్తితే అణచివేసేందుకు ప్రజాస్వామ్యముసుగులో నిరంకుశపాలకులు వారి కళ్ల ముందు ఉన్నారు.


ప్రచ్చన్న యుద్దం, సోవియట్‌ బూచిని చూపి దశాబ్దాల పాటు అమెరికన్లను ఏమార్చిన పాలకులకు 1991 తరువాత అలాంటి తమ పౌరులను భయపెట్టేందుకు వెంటనే మరొక భూతం కనిపించకపోవటంతో ఉగ్రవాద ముప్పును ముందుకు తెచ్చారు.అదీ అంతగా పేల లేదు. ఈ లోగా వారు ఊహించని పరిణామం మరొకటి జరిగింది.సోషలిస్టు చైనా పురోగమనం, దాని మీద అన్ని రకాల వినియోగ వస్తువులకు ఆధారపడటం అమెరికన్లలో కొత్త ఆలోచనకు తెరలేపింది. సోషలిస్టు దేశాల్లో అన్నింటికీ కరువే, ప్రభుత్వం కేటాయించిన మేరకు సరకులు తీసుకోవాలి, దుకాణాలన్నీ ఖాళీ అని చేసిన ప్రచారాన్ని నమ్మిన వారిలో కొత్త ప్రశ్నలు. అదే నిజమైతే అమెరికా, ఐరోపా ధనిక దేశాలన్నింటికీ చైనా వస్తువులను ఎలా అందచేస్తున్నది. అక్కడ ఉపాధిని, ఆదాయాలను ఎలా పెంచుతున్నది అనే మధనం ప్రారంభమైంది.దానికి తోడు అమెరికాలో ఉపాధి తగ్గటం, నిజవేతనాలు పడిపోవటం వంటి అనుభవాలను చూసిన తరువాత మనకు పెట్టుబడిదారీ విధానం వలన ఉపయోగం ఏమిటి ? చైనా, వియత్నాంలో ఉన్న సోషలిజమే మెరుగ్గా కనిపిస్తోంది కదా అన్న సందేహాలు మొగ్గతొడిగాయి. దీనికి తోడు తమ పెరటి తోట అనుకున్న లాటిన్‌ అమెరికాలో తమ ప్రభుత్వం బలపరిచిన నియంతలందరూ మట్టి కరిచారు. సక్రమంగా ఎన్నికలు జరిగిన చోట అమెరికాను వ్యతిరేకించే వామపక్ష శక్తులు అనేక దేశాల్లో ఒకసారి కాదు, వరుసగా అధికారంలోకి రావటాన్ని కూడా అమెరికన్‌ పౌరులు, ముఖ్యంగా యువత గమనిస్తున్నది. సోషలిజం విఫలం అన్న ప్రచారానికి విలువ లేదు గనుక పాలకులు దాన్ని వదలివేశారు. తమ జీవిత అనుభవాలను గమనించిన వారు సోషలిజం సంగతేమో గానీ పెట్టుబడిదారీ విధానం విఫలమైంది, అది మనకు పనికి రాదు అనే వైపుగా ఆలోచించటం ప్రారంభించారు.అనేక విశ్వవిద్యాలయాల్లో, పుస్తక దుకాణాల్లో మూలన పడేసిన కాపిటల్‌ తదితర మార్క్సిస్టు గ్రంధాల దుమ్ముదులిపినట్లు దశాబ్దాల క్రితమే వార్తలు వచ్చాయి. వరుసగా వచ్చిన ఆర్థిక మాంద్యాలకు పెట్టుబడిదారీ దేశాలు ప్రభావితమైనట్లుగా చైనాలో జరగకపోవటం కూడా వారిలో సోషలిజం పట్ల మక్కువను పెంచింది. చైనా తమకు పోటీదారుగా మారుతున్నదన్న అమెరికా నేతల ప్రకటనలూ వారిని ప్రభావితం చేస్తున్నాయి.


ఇదే తరుణంలో అమెరికా రాజకీయవేదిక మీద బెర్నీ శాండర్స్‌ వంటి వారు డెమోక్రటిక్‌ సోషలిస్టు పార్టీని ప్రారంభించటం, అవును నేను సోషలిస్టునే అని ప్రకటించి మరీ సెనెట్‌కు గెలవటాన్ని చూసిన తరువాత ఇటీవలి కాలంలో మేమూ సోషలిస్టులమే అని చెప్పుకొనే యువత గణనీయంగా పెరిగింది. అమెరికా అధికార కేంద్రమైన కాపిటల్‌ హిల్‌ ప్రాంతం ఉన్న వార్డు నుంచి పెట్టుబడిదారుల కుంభస్థలం వంటి సియాటిల్‌ నగరంలో వరుసగా మూడు సార్లు కౌన్సిలర్‌గా ఎన్నికైన కమ్యూనిస్టు క్షమా సావంత్‌(49) అనే మహిళానేత ఇచ్చిన ఉత్తేజంతో పాటు, డెమోక్రటిక్‌ పార్టీ నుంచి కొంత మంది పురోగామివాదులుగా ఉన్న వారు అమెరికన్‌ కాంగ్రెస్‌కు ఎన్నిక కావటం వంటి పరిణామాలు కూడా జరిగాయి.వారు కుహనా వామపక్ష వాదులు అంటూ వామపక్షం పేరుతో ఉన్న కొన్ని శక్తులు కార్పొరేట్‌ మీడియా చేస్తున్న తప్పుడు ప్రచారాన్నే అందుకున్నాయి. ఎవరు ఎలాంటి వారు అన్నది చరిత్ర చెబుతుంది. ఒక వేళ నిజంగానే కుహనాశక్తులు వామపక్షం ముసుగులో వస్తే అలాంటి వారిని గమనించలేనంత అవివేకంగా అమెరికా కార్మికవర్గం, యువత లేదు.


అందుకే పాలకపార్టీలు రెండూ కంగారు పడుతున్నాయి. లేకుంటే సోషలిజం ఘోరాలను ఖండించేపేరుతో రెండు పార్టీలు ఒకే తీర్మానాన్ని ఎందుకు బలపరుస్తాయి ? కమ్యూనిస్టు వ్యతిరేక ప్రచారాన్ని, అమెరికాకు తిరుగులేదు అని చేప్పే గొప్పలను నమ్మటానికి అమెరికన్లు సిద్దంగా లేరు.తమ పక్కనే ఉన్న కమ్యూనిస్టు క్యూబాను అమెరికాతో పోల్చితే ఎలుక పిల్ల-డైనోసార్‌ వంటివి. అలాంటి క్యూబా దగ్గర అణ్వాయుధాలు లేవు, స్వంత క్షిపణులు లేవు. నిజానికి అమెరికా తలచుకుంటే ఒక్క నిమిషంలో క్యూబా దీవిని నామరూపాల్లేకుండా చేసే శక్తి ఉంది. అయినప్పటికీ మేము మీకెంత దూరమో మీరు కూడా మాకంతే దూరం అని ఫిడెల్‌ కాస్ట్రో నాయకత్వాన ఉన్న కమ్యూనిస్టు పార్టీ హెచ్చరించింది. కాస్ట్రో వారసులు ఇప్పటికీ దాన్నే కొనసాగిస్తున్నారు. అమెరికాకు తిరుగులేదు అన్నట్లు చిత్రించే హాలీవుడ్‌ సినిమాల బండారం కూడా ఎరిగిందే. వియత్నాం నుంచి 1975లో బతుకు జీవుడా అంటూ హెలికాప్టర్లు, విమానాల వెంట పరుగులు తీసి పారిపోయి వచ్చిన అమెరికా సైనికులు మరోసారి ఆప్ఘనిస్తాన్‌ తాలిబాన్ల చేతుల్లో కూడా అలాంటి పరాభవాన్నే పొందారంటూ వచ్చిన వార్తలను,దృశ్యాలను అమెరికా యువతీయువకులు చూడకుండా ఉంటారా ?


అమెరికా దిగువ సభ ఆమోదించిన కమ్యూనిస్టు వ్యతిరేక తీర్మానాన్ని ఎగువ సభ సెనెట్‌ ఆమోదించటం లాంఛనమే, తిరస్కరిస్తే చరిత్ర అవుతుంది. తీర్మానంలో ఏముందో చెప్పనవసరం లేదు. వెనెజులా,క్యూబా తదితర దేశాలపై విధించిన ఆంక్షలు, ఆర్థిక దిగ్బంధనం గురించి పల్లెత్తు మాట లేదు. అక్కడ జనం ఏవైనా ఇబ్బందులు ఎదుర్కొంటే అమెరికా పుణ్యమే అది.వ్యక్తిగత గౌరవార్హతల ప్రాతిపదిక మీద విశ్వాసం పునాదిగా అమెరికా ఏర్పడింది.సామాహిక వ్యవస్థగా నిర్మితమయ్యే సోషలిజం దానికి పూర్తి వ్యతిరేకం అని దానిలో పేర్కొన్నారు. ఇది ఎప్పటి నుంచో పాడుతున్న పాచిపాట, దాన్ని అమెరికా నూతన తరం అంగీకరించటం లేదని ముందే చెప్పుకున్నాం. ఉక్రెయిన్‌ వివాదానికి కారకులైన అమెరికా, ఐరోపా ధనిక దేశాలు ఇప్పుడు దాన్నుంచి గౌరవ ప్రదంగా బయటపడే దారి, పడాలనే చిత్తశుద్ది లేక మరింత తీవ్రంగా మార్చేందుకు పూనుకున్నాయి. తటస్థంగా ఉన్న చైనా పుతిన్‌ మిలిటరీకి మారణాయుధాలు ఇచ్చేందుకు పూనుకున్నదని ప్రచారం మొదలు పెట్టింది. ప్రస్తుతం జి20 దేశాల బృందం అధ్యక్ష స్థానంలో ఉన్న మన దేశాన్ని తమ వెంట నడవాలని బ్లాక్‌మెయిల్‌ చేస్తోంది.


ప్రతి ఏటా అమెరికాలోని కొన్ని సంస్థలు అభిప్రాయాలను సేకరిస్తాయి. వాటిలో సోషలిజం, పెట్టుబడిదారీ విధానాలను సమర్ధించటం, వ్యరేకించటం గురించి కూడా ఉంటాయి. ఒక ఏడాది శాతాలు పెరగవచ్చు, తరగవచ్చు మొత్తం మీద గ్రాఫ్‌ ఎలా ఉందన్నదానినే పరిగణనలోకి తీసుకుంటే సోషలిజం పట్ల మక్కువ పెరుగుతోంది. అందుకే దాని మీద తప్పుడు ప్రచారం చేసేందుకు ఏకంగా పార్లమెంటునే వేదికగా ఎంచుకున్నారు.ఆక్సియోస్‌ సర్వే ప్రకారం 2019 నుంచి 2021వరకు చూస్తే రిపబ్లికన్‌ పార్టీని సమర్ధించే 18-34 సంవత్సరాల యువతలో పెట్టుబడిదారీ విధానాన్ని సమర్ధించేవారు 81 నుంచి 66శాతానికి తగ్గారు. మొత్తంగా సోషలిజాన్ని సమర్ధించే వారు 39 నుంచి 41శాతానికి పెరిగారు. ” పూ ” సంస్థ సర్వే ప్రకారం 2019 మే నెలలో కాపిటలిజం పట్ల సానుకూలంగా ఉన్న వారు 65శాతం కాగా 2022 ఆగస్టులో వారు 57శాతానికి తగ్గారు.ప్రతికూలంగా ఉన్నవారు 33 నుంచి 39శాతానికి పెరిగారు. ఇదే కాలంలో సోషలిజం పట్ల సానుకూలంగా ఉన్నవారు 42 నుంచి 36శాతానికి తగ్గినట్లు, ప్రతికూలంగా ఉన్నవారు 55 నుంచి 60శాతానికి పెరిగినట్లు కూడా పేర్కొన్నది. దేశంలో 3.4 కోట్ల మందికి ఆహార భద్రత లేదు. వారిలో 90లక్షల మంది పిల్లలు ఉన్నారు. వారంతా ప్రభుత్వం లేదా దాన ధర్మాలు చేసే సంస్థలు జారీ చేసే ఆహార కూపన్లు (మన దేశంలో ఉచిత బియ్యం వంటివి) తీసుకుంటున్నారు. అద్దె ఇండ్లలో ఉంటున్న వారిలో . 40శాతం మంది తమ వేతనాల్లో 30 శాతం అద్దెకే వెచ్చిస్తున్నారు. ఇలాంటి అంశాలన్నీ సర్వేల మీద ప్రభావం చూపుతాయి. దిగజారుతున్న పరిస్థితులు తమ జనాన్ని మరింతగా సోషలిజం వైపు ఆకర్షిస్తాయి అన్నదాని కంటే పెట్టుబడిదారీ వ్యవస్థను వ్యతిరేకించే ధోరణులు పెరగటమే అమెరికా పాలకవర్గాన్ని ఎక్కువగా భయపెడుతున్నదంటే అతిశయోక్తి కాదు !

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Socialism isn’t perfect, but it’s damn better than what we have

05 Thursday May 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Left politics, Opinion, USA

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Black Futures, CAPITALISM, communism, Marxism, Socialism, US left politics

by: JANAÉ BONSU

may 4 2016

People’s World Series on Socialism

Everyone seems to be talking about socialism these days, but what does it mean? That was the question asked by Susan Webb in one of our most popular and widely-shared recent articles. Millions of Americans are considering alternatives to a system run by and for the 1 percent. They are taking an interest in socialism, a word that has meant a great many things to activists, trade unionists, politicians, and clergy around the world over the last century and a half. The article below is one of a series on socialism, what it can mean for Americans in the 21st century, and how we might get there. 

On February 1, 2016 BYP100 (Black Youth Project 100) released the Agenda to Build Black Futures – a comprehensive platform of bold economic goals developed by young Black people. As one of them, I admittedly didn’t have a firm grasp on all the nuances and distinctions between the different political economies I’d often hear mentioned in social justice circles – socialism, communism, Marxism…and I still don’t. I do know, however, that capitalism has been the bane of most people’s existence (99% to be exact), and it was the reason why we needed to even draft such a document.

My co-authors and I wrote the Agenda based on what we thought would get Black and all oppressed people closer to social, economic, and political freedom. It wasn’t until after it was released and the feedback started rolling in that I heard the Agenda is, in many ways, a socialist economic platform. This, in turn, caused me to reflect on what the hell socialism even means.

The Agenda covers a lot of ground, but many of the recommendations we put forth have been articulated and fought for in the social movements of yesteryear – universal childcare, guaranteed income, baby bonds, jobs with a living wage, the right to unionize without retaliation, paid family leave, community land trusts, and cooperatives – just to name a few things.

But there are some things that today’s freedom fighters are much more vocal on, like comprehensive healthcare that covers gender-affirming and transition-related care, valuing women’s paid and unpaid labor, reproductive justice, and taking the profit out of punishment. If folks say that the Agenda is socialist, then I’ve come to some conclusions about what socialism must mean.

I understand capitalism to correspond with competition. In a capitalist society, one is measured by the quantity and quality (i.e. value) of one’s labor. Everyone is disposable. Socialism, then, must mean not having to compete to climb up a proverbial ladder because someone will inevitably be below someone else. Socialism must mean obliterating the notion of struggling to survive. In a world where poverty does not exist, neither do police (or at least not in their historically oppressive capacity). In a world where police don’t exist, neither do prisons and jails. That is the world I we had in mind in drafting the Agenda. Utopian? Most would say “definitely”. But I know its possible.

If the “playing field” is to ever be leveled, those complicit and accessory to the harms done that have caused and perpetuate the inequities that society’s most marginalized face must make amends. Yes, I’m talking about reparations.

I’m writing this on the day that the Treasury Department announced that Harriet Tubman will be the next face on the $20 bill to replace Andrew Jackson. Harriet Tubman was a former slave and an embodiment of anti-capitalism who risked her life to liberate the people who white men like Jackson purchased as property and whose labor they exploited. If Tubman was alive, I’m pretty sure she would rather see all those bills that her face is about to grace to go towards righting the wrongs of racist public policy over many lifetimes.

What’s really ironic is that in 1862, Congress signed off on reparations to slaveholders in D.C. that were loyal to the Union for their freed slaves. Yet, the horrors that enslaved people and their descendants endured by their hands haven’t been enough to move Congress to grant reparations. Oh, America.

In many ways, I think the aforementioned recommendations put forth in the Agenda are forms of reparations. If those same recommendations are socialist, then perhaps we should really consider this socialism thing (and self-proclaimed socialist, Bernie Sanders, should certainly reconsider his stance on reparations).

In any case, I agree with Susan Webb when she says, “Socialism is simply about rebuilding our society so that…the people who make this country run – not a tiny group of super-rich corporate profiteers – are the deciders, the planners, the policymakers.”

I disagree with Webb, though, on this notion that “socialism is rooted in American values.” Freedom is one value she listed, but freedom can’t possibly be an American value if, from its founding and at present, the structures that hold it together withhold freedom from so many people. The America I know has no values, which is why I’m committed to rebuilding an America informed by the values of freedom, justice, love, radical inclusivity, collective power, and interdependence.

Taken together, I won’t ever say that socialism is perfect – nothing is. But it’s damn better than what we have now.

Janaé Bonsu is the National Public Policy Chair of Black Youth Project 100 (BYP100). Follow her on Twitter @janaebonsu.

Courtesy :http://peoplesworld.org/

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Sanders and the Left After Super Tuesday

17 Thursday Mar 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Left politics, Opinion, USA

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Tags

'Socialist' Bernie Sanders, 2016 US Elections, Bernie Sanders, Democratic party, U.S. president, US Left, US left politics

Why there is still hope and why the Left should rejoice and push forward

Brad A. Bauerly and Ingar Solty

While some have become skeptical, there are those – fromThe Nation
viaPolitico and Tom Cahill (U.S. Uncut) to Robert Reich – who are now saying that this is not the end of the line for Bernie Sanders U.S. presidential bid.

Not Me, Us!

And it is indeed true that we should remind ourselves that ever since the 1980s the Democratic party leadership has scheduled the primary season in ways that voters in more conservative states would go to the polls first in order to prevent leftist grassroots candidates from challenging the neoliberal party establishment. Keeping that in mind, it’s also true that pretty much all the upcoming states are way more favorable to Sanders than most of the ones that have already voted.

And it’s also true that only those will now despair who had somewhat unrealistic hopes with regard to what was actually possible Tuesday night. After all, despite all the Sanders momentum etc., another historic upset like the one in Michigan was unlikely.

Regardless of how critical one is of how the corporate media prefers to talk about polls and electability instead of about actual political issues, regardless of how the 2016 U.S. presidential election is taking place in a highly dynamic and ultimately unpredictable “populist moment” and regardless also of how incredibly wrong therefore FiveThirtyEight and other influential polling institutions were when it came to predicting Michigan, one must admit that the FiveThirtyEight predictions have been quite accurate in most of the previous states so far. And despite the come-from-behind momentum resulting from the Michigan boost, one could simply not expect another upset in the states that voted Tuesday night.[1] FiveThirtyEight’s predictions of Sanders victories, just based on their polls, were <1% in Florida, <10% in Illinois, <1% in North Carolina, only 3% in Ohio and 46% in Missouri. So in a way, it was rather surprising that Sanders even came so close to winning Illinois and Missouri, beating the delegate goals of the Clinton campaign.

End of the Firewall?

All in all, Sanders’ lost by big margins only in the two states where everyone knew he would. And although those two states increase Clintons’ lead by more than 70 delegates, Reich and others are correct when they note that the Democratic primary scheduling “firewall” for Clinton has now come to an end. In the upcoming states the situation looks much better for Sanders withFiveThirtyEight suggesting a Sanders win probability – based on the previous primary elections – of 40% in Arizona, 75% in Idaho, 82% in Utah (March 22), 91% in Alaska, 81% in Hawaii and 85% in Washington (March 26), 61% in Wisconsin (April 5), 80% in Wyoming (April 9) etc.

In other words, unless the corporate media message according to which the presidential bid of the leftist candidate – against whom both theNew York Times
and theWashington Posthave been fighting tooth and nail all along – ended last night leads to disillusionment, even lower millennial and working class voter turnout in the upcoming states etc., a Sanders comeback, which equals a continued presence of his extremely popular left social-democratic message, is not that unlikely and can and should be fought for. And Reich and others are right to point out that the majority of delegates are still in play – with big prizes like California (548 delegates) and Wisconsin (96 delegates) still to come. And if the momentum is back and the movement behind Sanders continues to further effectively deconstruct Clinton’s faux progressivism, “faux feminism”[2] and her zombie-ish electability myth (polls show that the probability of a Donald Trump or Ted Cruz presidency is much higher with a Clinton nomination), etc. then also the super-delegates will find it harder to support Clinton against the popular vote. And the left may find comfort in the fact that Sanders is actually still doing better than he ought to be doing according to at least one of the comprehensive three Sanders victory scenarios outlined byDailyKoslast month.

Nevertheless, yesterday obviously made things more difficult. Sanders’ come-from-behind momentum appears to have taken a brunt. And gone is the message that Clinton can only win the solid South (which – with maybe a few exceptions like Florida, Virginia and North Carolina – Democrats are bound to lose in the federal election anyway…) but hardly anywhere else, especially not in the Midwest/rust belt hard-hit by the highly unpopular free-trade agreements like NAFTA, CAFTA and TPP which Clinton embraced until she suddenly and without further explanation changed her mind on the trade issue in a blog post(!). So a successful Sanders nomination as the Democratic candidate in the 2016 presidential elections has become even more unlikely last night, for sure.

However, here’s why beyond this type of reasoning leftists should not be disillusioned. In the very narrow sense of success, i.e. a successful Democratic nomination, a Sanders victory was extremely unlikely from the get-go. No one, not even the wildest optimists among us, expected Sanders to even get this far last year. And this also appears to have been one of the reasons why many of his radical left-wing supporters today were initially very critical of his campaign when it started, not just because of some controversial foreign-policy stances or because of real “social-democratic illusions” (especially with regard to finance and banking reform) but especially because he was considered a catalyst of left-wing, anti-neoliberal grassroots mobilization for an eventual neoliberal Clinton presidential bid.

And even when the campaign developed what Loren Balhorn would have called Sanders’ “WTF?! dynamism” (if only the German publisher had let him get away with that), only the boldest (or most clueless) leftist observers ended up saying last week that they would once and for all declare Sanders to become the Democratic party nominee. Of course, we all have hopes and dreams. We would not be leftists if we didn’t believe in the possibility of sudden unexpected change. If history was left to the pollsters and ‘pundits,’ theOctober Revolution would never have happened. Still, we must remember that only an incredible mass movement can/could bring Sanders even close to winning the Democratic nomination.

Why Should the Left Rejoice?

First of all, in terms of the narrow question of a presidential bid, there is the fact that because of the far-reaching popularity of his unique left-wing social-democratic message there’s still hope to be generated from the fact that, as the polls show, Sanders still has the capability of building majorities both within the Democratic primary as well as in the federal elections in November. And even though he has commented that he wouldn’t run as an independent candidate because of how it would split the vote and possibly hand the election to the GOP, it is still a possibility. A possibility which presumably would depend on a mixture of how the dynamism plays out in both parties’ primary elections over the course of the next months and maybe also who is pushing Sanders in which direction. Generally speaking, with Trump having moved one step further in the direction of a Republican nomination Tuesday night by winning Florida (albeit losing in Ohio against the establishment’s new favorite candidate, John Kasich, as opposed to the tea party government shutdown leader Ted Cruz…) and with the Republican party establishment apparently being dead set on preventing Trump at whatever political cost, we might even see four presidential candidates in November. And obviously such a split in both parties would be highly beneficial to such a Sanders presidential bid, because otherwise the Ralph Nader 2000 trauma would be reawakened and it would be all Clinton vs. Trump.

“

The American left … has won by how the Sanders campaign politicized the usually completely depoliticized American presidential elections of neoliberal candidates of various shades vaguely promising ‘hope’ and ‘change’ and ‘conservative values’.”

However, the point why the global left should rejoice is, secondly, that all of these ifs-and-buts questions are really not even the most important ones. The main reason why the global left should rejoice is because the left in the U.S. will not only have won in case Sanders eventually wins, against all odds, the nomination and the 2016 presidential election (which, given the popularity of his message and the widespread hatred of Trump, he then probably would). The American left has already won no matter what happens next! It has won by how the Sanders campaign politicized the usually completely depoliticized American presidential elections of neoliberal candidates of various shades vaguely promising ‘hope’ and ‘change’ and ‘conservative values’. It has won by enforcing a debate about capitalism and its surface symptomology income and wealth inequality. It has won by pulling it out into the open how this obscene inequality is corrupting liberal democracy, how it has created an oligarchic power structure and how only a comprehensive strategy of conflict-oriented social movements at all levels – the workplace, the street, and the political/parliamentary system, i.e. a revolutionary realpolitik (Rosa Luxemburg) inside and against the state, which is aimed at shifting the balance of forces between capital and labour, can undo it. And it has won by clearly demarcating the divide between the left in the U.S. and the neoliberal wing of the Democratic Party.

Despite Sanders’ recent claim that he ran as a Democrat because it would give him greater media exposure and because they had an existing institutional structure, he clearly also did so to drive home just how neoliberal Clinton was and to reveal how a left Democrat could run. A very strong reason to keep hope alive in the Sanders camp is because of how he will continue to reveal this divide in the party. It is a real victory of this campaign in exposing what Sanders, based on decades of dealings with the party knows: that the DP is the main barrier to leftward movement in the U.S. and the true source of the neoliberal hegemony. By showing that it is possible to run as a socialist Democratic candidate and have a chance, Bernie has opened up future possibilities by exposing the rift in the party. In fact, we quite possibly will look back at this as the moment of the break with neoliberalism of the party. And Sanders’ run has also put the left on solid footing of attack if Hillary becomes the president. Again, this will take future work but it will be much harder to pass off future rightward drift as inevitable or just Democratic party business-as-usual with the divide in the party exposed. The background noise of future politics will always be: we had another path but chose this one. Conversely if Trump wins the left will also have a solid foundation to argue that his victory was due to the neoliberal drift of the Democratic Party and only a left Democrat could’ve/can stop the hard right in the future.

And finally, and this may be the most remarkable achievement, the American left has won by establishing Sanders’ concrete left-wing social-democratic and/or transformative transition demands in the American political landscape and imagination: single-payer health care, free public education, a federal living wage of $15/hour, the Workplace Democracy Act facilitating unionization, fundamental banking reform (even if focused on dismantling instead of socialization…). Hence, the American populace is now much more aware about the real tertium-non-datur alternative: A left-wing Social Green New Deal as a general, inclusive and solidarity-based high-road exit strategy from the crisis, which would re-shift the relationship of forces between capital and labour and could function as the most coherent entrance project to a post-capitalist future, or the global neoliberal unity coalition’s low-road exit strategy of austerity with further immiseration, nationalist exclusion and destruction of the public good.

All of this will not go away. Or rather, beyond carrying on the Sanders presidential campaign, the American left now has the opportunity (and, we think, obligation) to not let the Sanders mobilization eventually dissolve but integrate the millions of enthused, but often – not least because of their extremely young age – politically inexperienced Sanders supporters into (the already existing) social movements mobilizing around those concrete demands of “Medicare for all,” “Fight for 15 and a union” etc.

And in all of that, the Sanders movement is also a historic victory not only for the American left. Rather, the American left has given the world the greatest gift. And that is that, because of U.S. hegemony, the entire world has been watching how the anti-neoliberal left is now suddenly capable of building majorities around transformative transition programs. We cannot overestimate and should take pleasure in how this fact would send shivers down the spines of current and former third way social-democratic party leaders all across the core capitalist countries if only the Clintons, Blairs, Schroeders, Jospins, Zapateros, Hollandes, Gabriels, Renzis and Sánchez’ had spines. Yes, the entire world is watching how the anti-neoliberal left is now suddenly even moving into the direction of once again and realistically posing the question of (political) power – and not only in the “imperialist chain’s weakest links,” i.e. economically devastated peripheries with very, very little room for maneuvering such as Greece, but also in the very heart of the core capitalist countries and the American Empire.

Thus, the SYRIZA-Corbyn-Sanders freedom train continues zooming down the tracks. Its path is bumpy. To every up-hill there’s a down-hill. But it’s moving forward, and, despite it all, it’s moving forward fast. •

Brad Bauerly has his Ph.D. from York University and is an instructor in Political Science at SUNY Plattsburgh. His book on agriculture and U.S. state building will be out this summer.

Ingar Solty is a Fellow at the Berlin Institute for Critical Theory and a Fellow at the Institute for Social Analysis at the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation. His most recent books areThe USA under Obama: Charismatic Leadership, Social Movements and Imperial Politics in the Global Crisis(Argument Verlag, 2013),New German Foreign Policy, the Crisis and Left-Wing Alternatives(Rosa Luxemburg Foundation, 2016) andAesthetics in a Changing Capitalism: Studies on the Politics of Culture in Fascism, Fordism and Neoliberalism(forthcoming, Argument Verlag, 2016 – all in German).

Endnotes:

1. It is also unclear what impact the recent violence at Trump rallies had in the primaries outcomes. While those on the left would like to believe that seeing protesters take on and challenge the xenophobic and racist atmosphere of those events we should also be mindful that many would see that violence and the potential for more in the future and run back into the arms of the neoliberal Democrats who they see as able to protect them.

2. Liza Featherstone, Ed.,False Choices: The Faux Feminism of Hillary Rodham Clinton, Verso Books, London/New York 2016.

This article First Appeared in socialistproject.ca

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FOR A NEW COMMUNIST PARTY

13 Saturday Feb 2016

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, INTERNATIONAL NEWS, Left politics, USA

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

CAPITALISM, communism, Crowds and Party, Left politics, Occupy Wall Street’s, Socialism, US left politics

 So no, I don’t envision the Democratic Party as being that. That’s not at all what I have in mind. I’m thinking of a radical left party to which elections are incidental. Elections might be means for organizing, but the goal isn’t just being elected. The goal is overthrowing capitalism. The goal is being able to build a communist society as capitalism crumbles.

Transcribed from the 23 January 2016 episode of This is Hell! Radio(Chicago) 

“The goal isn’t just being elected. The goal is overthrowing capitalism. The goal is being able to build a communist society as capitalism crumbles.”

Chuck Mertz: Real change, the kind of change that Occupy Wall Street had hoped to start, can be achieved through—I know you’re going to find this hard to believe—a political party. I found it hard to believe, until I read Jodi Dean’s book Crowds and Party. Jodi is here to explain to us how a political party can bring about real change.

Welcome to This is Hell!, Jodi.

Jodi Dean: Hi! Thanks.

CM: Great to have you on the show.

Let’s start with Occupy. What, to you, explains the impact that the Tea Party had on Republicans, relative to the impact that Occupy seems to have had on the Democratic Party? All of the sudden there were “Tea Party Republicans.” There weren’t “Occupy Democrats.”

JD: That’s a good point. The Tea Party took the Republican Party as its target. They decided that their goal was going to be to influence the political system by getting people elected and basically by trying to take over part of government. That’s why they were able to have good effects. They didn’t regard the mainstream political process as something irrelevant to their concerns. They thought of it as something to seize.

The problem with many—but not all—leftists in the US is that they think the political process is so corrupted that we have to completely refuse it, and leave it altogether. The Tea Party decided to act as an organized militant force, and too much of the US left (we saw this in the wake of Occupy) has thought that to be “militant” means to refuse and disperse and become fragmented.

CM: So what explains the left turning its back on the collective action of a political party? It would seem like a political party would fit into what the left would historically want: an apparatus that can organize collective action.

JD: There are multiple things. First, the fear of success: the left has learned from the excesses of the twentieth century. Where Communist and socialist parties “succeeded,” there was violence and purges and repression. One reason the left has turned its back is because of this historical experience of state socialism. And we have taken that to mean that we should not ever have a state. I think that’s the wrong answer. That we—as the left—made a mistake with some regimes does not have to mean that we can never learn.

Another reason that the left has turned its back on the party form has been the important criticism of twentieth century parties that have been too white, too masculine, potentially homophobic; parties that have operated in intensely hierarchical fashion. Those criticisms are real. But rather than saying we can’t have a party form because that’s just what a party does, why not make a party that is not repressive and does not exclude or diminish people on the basis of sex, race, or sexuality?

So we’ve got at least two historical problems that have made people very reluctant to use the party. I also think that, whether or not you mark it as 1968 or 1989, the left’s embrace of cultural individualism and the free flow of personal experimentation has made it critical of discipline and critical of collectivity. But I think that’s just a capitalist sellout. Saying everybody should just “do their own thing” is just going in the direction of the dominant culture. That is actually not a left position at all.

CM: So does identity politics undermine collectivism? And did that end up leading to fragmentation and a weakening of the left? Because there are a lot of people we’ve had on the show—and one person in particular, Thomas Frank—who say that there is no left in the United States.

JD: First I want to say that I disagree with the claim that there is no left. In fact, I think that “the left” is that group that keeps denying its own existence. We’re always saying that we’re the ones who don’t exist. But the right thinks that we exist. That’s what is so fantastic, actually. Did you see the New York Post screaming that Bernie Sanders is really a communist? Great! They’re really still afraid of communists! And it’s people on the left who say, “Oh, no, we’re not here at all!”

The left denies its own existence and it denies its own collectivity. Now, is identity politics to blame? Maybe it’s better to say that identity politics has been a symptom of the pressure of capitalism. Capitalism has operated in the US by exacerbating racial differences. That has to be addressed on the left, and the left has been addressing that. But we haven’t been addressing it in a way that recognizes how racism operates to support capitalism. Instead, we’ve made it too much about identity rather than as an element in building collective solidarity.

I’m trying to find a way around this to express that identity politics has been important but it’s reached its limits. Identity politics can’t go any further insofar as it denies the impact of capitalism. An identity politics that just rests on itself is nothing but liberalism. Like all of the sudden everything will be better if black people and white people are equally exploited? What if black people and white people say, “No, we don’t want to live in a society based on exploitation?”

CM: You were saying that the left denies its own collectivity. Is that only in the US? Is that unique to the US culture of the left?

JD: That’s a really important question, and I’m not sure. Traveling in Europe, I see two different things. On the one hand I see a broad left discussion that is, in part, mediated through social media and is pretty generational—people in their twenties and thirties or younger—and that there’s a general feeling about the problem of collectivity, the problem of building something with cohesion, and a temptation to just emphasize multiplicity. You see this everywhere. Everybody worries about this, as far as what I’ve seen.

On the other hand, there are countries whose political culture has embraced parties much more, and fights politically through parties. Like Greece, for example—and we’ve seen the ups and downs with Syriza over the last two years. And Spain also. Because they have a parliamentary system where small parties can actually get in the mix and have a political effect—in ways that our two-party system excludes—the European context allows for more enthusiasm for the party as a form for politics.

But there’s still a lot of disagreement on the far left about whether or not the party form is useful, and shouldn’t we in fact retreat and have multiple actions and artistic events—you know, the whole alter-globalization framework. That’s still alive in a lot of places.

“I think holding on to the word ‘communism’ is useful, not only because our enemies are worried about communism, but also because it helps make socialists seem really, really mainstream. We don’t want socialism to seem like something that only happens in Sweden. We want it to seem like that’s what we should have at a bare minimum.”

CM: You mentioned the structure of the US electoral system doesn’t allow for a political party to necessarily be the solution for a group like Occupy. Is that one of the reasons that activists dismiss the party structure as something that could help move their agenda forward?

JD: We can think about the Black Panther Party as a neat example in the US context: A party which was operating not primarily to win elections but to galvanize social power. That’s an interesting way of thinking about what else parties can do in the US.

Or we can think about parties in terms of local elections. Socialist Alternative has been doing really neat work all over the country, organizing around local elections with people running as socialist candidates not within a mainstream party. I think that even as we come up against the limits of a two-party system, we can also begin to think better about local and regional elections.

The left really likes that old saw: “Think Globally, Act Locally.” And then it rejects parties—even though political parties are, historically, forms that do that, that actually scale, that operate on multiple levels as organizations.

That we have a two-party system makes sense as an excuse why people haven’t used left parties very well in the US, but that doesn’t have to be the case.

And one more thing: there is a ton of sectarianism in the far left parties that exist. Many still fight battles that go back to the twenties, thirties, forties, fifties, and haven’t let that go. That has to change. We don’t need that kind of sectarian purity right now.

CM: You ask the question, “How do we move from the inert mass to organized activists?” You mention how you were at Occupy Wall Street; you write about being there on 15 October 2011 as the massive crowd filled New York’s Times Square. And you mention this one young speaker, and he addresses the crowd; they’re deciding if they should move on to Washington Square Park or not, because they need to go somewhere where there are better facilities. You then quote the speaker saying, “We can take this park. We can take this park tonight. We can also take this park another night. Not everyone may be ready tonight. Each person has to make their own autonomous decision. No one can decide for you. You have to decide for yourself. Everyone is an autonomous individual.”

Did that kind of individualism kill Occupy Wall Street from the start?

JD: Yeah, I think so. A lot of times I blame the rhetorics of consensus and horizontalism, but both of those are rooted in an individualism that says politics must begin with each individual, their interests, their experience, their positions, and so on. As collectivity forms—which is not easy when everyone’s beginning from their individual position—what starts to happen is that people start looking for how their exact experiences and interests are not being recognized.

I think that the left has given in too much to this assumption that politics begins with an individual. That’s a liberal assumption. Leftists, historically, begin with the assumption that politics begins in groups. And for the left in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the operative group is class. Class is what determines where our political interests come from.

I try to do everything I can in the book to dismantle the assumption that politics, particularly left politics, should begin with the individual. Instead I want people thinking about how the individual is a fiction, and a really oppressive fiction at that. And one that’s actually, conveniently, falling apart.

CM: You write about Occupy Wall Street having been an opening but having had no continuing momentum. You mention that the party could add that needed momentum. That’s one of the things that parties can do. The structure of the party can continue momentum and keep the opening alive.

When you say that a party could be a solution for a movement like Occupy, you don’t mean the Democratic Party, do you?

JD: I’ve got a lot of layers on this question. My first answer is that no, I really mean the Communist Party. My friends call this “Jodi’s Fantasy Revolutionary Party” as a joke, because the kind of Communist Party I take as my model may not be real, or may have only existed for a year and a half in Brooklyn in the thirties. And I don’t mean the real-existing Communist Party in the US now, which still exists and basically endorses Democrats.

My idea is to think in terms of how we can imagine the Communist Party again as a force—what it could be like if all of our left activist groups and small sectarian parties decided to come together in a new radical left party.

So no, I don’t envision the Democratic Party as being that. That’s not at all what I have in mind. I’m thinking of a radical left party to which elections are incidental. Elections might be means for organizing, but the goal isn’t just being elected. The goal is overthrowing capitalism. The goal is being able to build a communist society as capitalism crumbles.

Second, it could be the case—as a matter of tactics on the ground in particular contexts—that working for a Democratic candidate might be useful. It could be the case that trying to take over a local Democratic committee in order to get communist/socialist/radical left candidates elected could also be useful. But I don’t see the goal as taking over the Democratic Party. That’s way too limited a goal, and it’s a goal that presupposes the continuation of the system we have, rather than its overthrow.

CM: But how difficult would it be for a Communist Party to emerge free of its past associations with the Soviet Union? Can we even use the word “communist” or is it impossibly taboo?

“It’s fantastic that Occupy Wall Street’s narrative of the 99% and the 1% asserted collectivity through division. This is class conflict. There is not a unified society. This is the collectivity of us against them. This narrative produced the proper collectivity: an antagonistic one.”

JD: We have to recognize that the right is still scared of communism. That means the term is still powerful. That means it still has the ability to instill fear in its enemies. I think that’s an argument for keeping the word “communism.”

It’s also amazing that close to half of Iowa participants in the caucuses say that they are socialist. Four or five years ago, people were saying socialism is dead in the US. No one could even say the word. So I actually think holding on to the word “communism” is useful not only because our enemies are worried about communism, but also because it helps make the socialists seem really, really mainstream, and that’s good. We don’t want socialism to seem like something that only happens in Sweden. We want it to seem like that’s what America should have at a bare minimum.

One last thing about the history of communism: every political ideology that has infused a state form has done awful things. For the most part, if people like the ideology, they either let the awful things slide, or they use the ideology to criticize the awful things that the state does. We can do the same thing with communism. It’s helpful to recognize that the countries we understand to have been ruled by Communist Parties were never really communist—they didn’t even claim to have achieved communism themselves. We can say that state socialism made these mistakes, and in so doing was betraying communist ideals.

I don’t think we need to abandon these terms or come up with new ones. I think we need to use the power that they have. And people recognize this, which is what makes it exciting.

CM: You write, “Some contemporary crowd observers claim the crowd for democracy. They see in the amassing of thousands a democratic insistence, a demand to be heard and included. In the context of communicative capitalism, however, the crowd exceeds democracy.

“In the 21st century, dominant nation-states exercise power as democracies. They bomb and invade as democracies, ‘for democracy’s sake.’ International political bodies legitimize themselves as democratic, as do the contradictory and tangled media practices of communicative capitalism. When crowds amass in opposition, they pose themselvesagainst democratic practices, systems, and bodies. To claim the crowd for democracy fails to register this change in the political setting of the crowd.”

So are crowds today, the protesters today, opposed to democracy? Or are they opposed to the current state of, let’s say, representative democracy?

JD: Let’s think about our basic environment. By “our,” now, I mean basically English-speaking people who use the internet and are listening to the radio and live in societies like the United States. In our environment, what we hear is that we live in democracy. We hear this all the time. We hear that the network media makes democratic exchange possible, that a free press is democracy, that we’ve got elections and that’s democracy.

When crowds amass in this setting, if they are just at a football game, it’s not a political statement. Even at a march (fully permitted) that’s registering opposition to the invasion of Iraq, for example, or concern about the climate—all of those things are within the general environment of “democracy,” and they don’t oppose the system. They don’t register as opposition to the system. They’re just saying that we want our view on this or that issue to count.

But the way that crowds have been amassing over the last four or five years—Occupy Wall Street is one example, but the Red Square debt movement in Canada is another; some of the more militant strikes of nurses and teachers are too—has been to say, “Look, the process that we have that’s been called democratic? It is not. We want to changethat.”

It’s not that we are anti-democratic. It’s that democracy is too limiting a term to register our opposition. We want something more. We want actual equality. Democracy is too limiting. The reason it’s too limiting is we live in a context that understands itself as “democratic.” So democracy as a political claim, in my language, can’t “register the gap that the crowd is inscribing.” It can’t register real division or opposition. Democracy is just more of what we have.

CM: We are so dependent. We use social media so much, we use Facebook so much, we use so many of these avenues of what you callcommunicative capitalism so much. How can we oppose or reject this system without hurting ourselves and our ability to communicate our message to each other? Can we just go on strike? Can we become the owners of the means of communicative production?

JD: One of the ways that Marxism historically has understood the political problems faced by workers is our total entrapment and embeddedness in the capitalist system. What makes a strike so courageous is that workers are shooting themselves in the foot. They’re not earning their wage for a time, as a way to put pressure on the capitalist owner of the workplace.

What does that mean under communicative capitalism? Does it mean that we have to shoot ourselves in the foot by completely extracting ourselves from all of the instruments of communication? Or does it mean that we change our attitude towards communication? Or does it mean that we develop our own means of communication?

There’s a whole range here. I’m not a Luddite. I don’t think the way we’re going to bring down capitalism is by quitting Facebook. I think that’s a little bit absurd. I think what makes more sense is to think of how we could use the tools we have to bring down the master’s house. We can consolidate our message together. We can get a better sense of how many we are. We can develop common modes of thinking. We can distribute organizing materials for the revolutionary party.

I don’t think that an extractive approach to our situation in communicative media is the right one. I think it’s got to be more tactical. How do we use the tools we have, and how do we find ways to seize the means of communication? This would mean the collectivization of Google, Facebook, Amazon, and using those apparatuses. But that would probably have to be day two of the revolution.

CM: Jodi, I’ve got one last question for you, and it’s the Question from Hell, the question we might hate to ask, you might hate to answer, or our audience is going to hate the response.

How much did the narrative that Occupy created, of the 99% and the 1%, undermine a of collectivity? Because it doesn’t include everyone…

JD: Division is crucial. Collectivity is never everyone. What this narrative did was produce the divided collectivity that we need. It’s great to undermine the stupid myth of American unity, “The country has to pull together” and all that crap. It’s fantastic that Occupy Wall Street asserted collectivity through division. This is class conflict. This says there is not a unified society. Collectivity is the collectivity of us against them. It produced the proper collectivity: an antagonistic one.

CM: Jodi, thanks so much for being on our show this week.

JD: Thank you! Take care.

This article first published in http://antidotezine.com/

Who is Jodi Dean ?

According to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   Jodi Dean (born April 9, 1962) is a professor in the Political Science department at Hobart and William Smith Colleges.[1] She has also held the position of Erasmus Professor of the Humanities in the Faculty of Philosophy at Erasmus University Rotterdam.

Dean received her B.A. in History of Princeton University. She received her MA, MPhil, and PhD from Columbia University. Before joining the Department of Political Science at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, she taught at the University of Texas in San Antonio. She has held visiting research appointments at the Institute for the Human Sciences in Vienna, Austria, as well as McGill University in Montreal and Cardiff University in Wales.

Drawing from Marxism, psychoanalysis, post-structuralism, and postmodernism, she has made contributions to contemporary political theory, media theory, and feminist theory, most notably with her theory of communicative capitalism; the online merging of democracy and capitalism into a single neoliberal formation that subverts the democratic impulses of the masses by valuing emotional expression over logical discourse. She has spoken and lectured in the United States, Canada, Ecuador, Peru, England, Wales, the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Austria, Norway, Denmark, Croatia, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Turkey. She is the co-editor of the journal Theory & Event.

Crowds and Party

by Jodi Dean
How do mass protests become an organized activist collective?
Crowds and Party channels the energies of the riotous crowds who took to the streets in the past five years into an argument for the political party. Rejecting the emphasis on individuals and multitudes, Jodi Dean argues that we need to rethink the collective subject of politics. When crowds appear in spaces unauthorized by capital and the state—such as in the Occupy movement in New York, London and across the world—they create a gap of possibility. But too many on the Left remain stuck in this beautiful moment of promise—they argue for more of the same, further fragmenting issues and identities, rehearsing the last thirty years of left-wing defeat. In Crowds and Party, Dean argues that previous discussions of the party have missed its affective dimensions, the way it operates as a knot of unconscious processes and binds people together. Dean shows how we can see the party as an organization that can reinvigorate political practice.
Hardback, 288 pages

ISBN: 9781781686942 February 2016

 

Ebook  ISBN: 9781781686720

Reviews

  • “In this enthralling and exhilarating book, Jodi Dean shows that, contrary to neo-anarchist cliche, the party form and class struggle are very far from being outmoded. The revival of the party has produced a surge of enthusiasm in contemporary left politics—an enthusiasm that Crowds and Party both explains and stokes up.”

    – Mark Fisher, author of Capitalist Realism

  • “Jodi Dean’s new book isn’t just a timely reminder that to change our thoroughly and deliberately atomized society demands collective action and militant organization; it is also a passionate analysis of the fractured passion of shared political commitment, linking the enthusiasm of group experience with the sustained and steady discipline of popular empowerment.”

    – Peter Hallward, author of Damming the Flood

 

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