A Letter to Maoist and Revolutionary Organizations
Recently the Communist Party of Italy
(Maoist) called for the convening of an international meeting of Maoist
organizations. This call comes some years after the RIM collapsed
following the development of evident revisionism within two of its
leading organizations, the RCP-USA and the UCPN.
Comrades! Let us carry out and celebrate
the firm break with the revisionism emanating from the leadership of the
RCP-USA and the UCPN. In doing so, let us reaffirm our defining points
of unity based on the experience of class struggle and distilled into
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
These include:
-All of history is the result of the
development of the means of production and the struggle between classes
over their ownership and use.
-Under capitalism, labor is utilized for
the sake of profit. Capital is accumulated surplus labor turned against
the masses of workers.
-That capitalist-imperialism entails the
indirect and direct exploitation of the majority of people by dominant
monopoly capital and reveals widening contradictions inherent in
capitalism.
-The only alternative to the continued
barbarism of imperialism is the struggle for socialism and communism.
Broadly speaking, people’s wars and united fronts are the most
immediate, reliable means to struggle for communism.
-Socialism entails the forceful seizure
of power by the proletariat. However, socialism is not the end of the
struggle. Under socialism, the conditions exist for the development of a
‘new bourgeoisie’ which will seek to establish itself as a new ruling
class. In order to counter this tendency, class struggle must be waged
relentlessly under socialism through the development of communism.
These are points all Maoists can agree on. Yet these do not capture all significant features of today’s world.
Comrades! A discourse and struggle over the nature of class under imperialism is sorely needed.
The Revolutionary Anti-Imperialist
Movement puts forward a line that includes the understanding that a
majority section of the populations of imperialist countries are
embourgeoisfied.
This embourgeoification often contours
around national oppression cast in the history of colonialism and
settler-colonialism. It is most wholly construed, however, as an ongoing
global distinction between parasitic workers in imperialist core
economies and exploited workers in the vast Third World periphery.
Though understandings of this split in
the working class was popularized as the ‘labor-aristocracy’ by Lenin,
the phenomenon itself was first noted by Friedrich Engels in a letter to
Karl Marx:
“[T]he English proletariat is actually
becoming more and more bourgeois, so that the ultimate aim of this most
bourgeois of all nations would appear to be the possession, alongside the
bourgeoisie, of a bourgeois aristocracy and a bourgeois proletariat. In
the case of a nation which exploits the entire world this is, of
course, justified to some extent.”
With some exceptions, Marxists have
focused and debated primarily on the ideological effects of the
controversial ‘theory of the labor aristocracy.’ Unfortunately, less
attention has been paid to the economic dimensions of the ‘labor
aristocracy.’
Within the imperialist world-economy,
First World workers (a minority of workers in the world) receive
compensation which exceeds the monetary rate of the full value of labor.
In effect, First World workers are a section of the petty-bourgeoisie
due to the fact that they consume a greater portion of social labor than
they concretely expend. This difference is made up with the
super-exploitation of Third World workers. Because prices (including
those of labor power) deviate from values, this allows First World firms
to obtain profits at equivalent rates while still paying ‘their’
workers a wage above the full monetary rate of labor value. The First
World workers’ compensation above the monetary rate of the full labor
value is also an investment, i.e., a structural means of by which
surplus value is saturated and concentrated in the core at the expense
of the periphery.
The structural elevation of First World workers also has strong implications for the struggle for communism.
One of the most dangerous and
devastatingly popular misconceptions is that social and political
reforms can raise the material standard of living for Third World
workers up to the level enjoyed by First World workers.
The illusion that Third World peoples can
‘catch up’ with imperialist countries through various reforms is
objectively aided by the common yet false First Worldist belief that
First World workers are exploited as a class.
If, as the First Worldist line states,
First Worlder workers have attained high wages through reformist class
struggle and advanced technology, then Third World workers should be
able to follow a similar route towards a capitalism modeled after
‘advanced capitalist countries.’ By claiming that a majority of First
Worlders are exploited proletarians, First Worldism creates the illusion
that all workers could create a similar deal for themselves without
overturning capitalism. By obscuring the fundamental relationship
between imperialist exploitation of Third World workers and
embourgeoisfication of First World workers, First Worldism actually
serves to hinder the tide of proletarian revolution internationally.
Another long-term implication of the
global division of workers is the ecological consequences of the
inflated petty-bourgeois lifestyles enjoyed by the world’s richest
15-20%. First World workers currently consume and generate waste at a
far greater rate than is ecologically sustainable. The First Worldist
line, which effectively states First World workers should have even
greater capacity to consume under a future socialism (that is, First
Worldists believe First Worlders are entitled to an even greater share
of social product than they currently receive), has obvious utopian
qualities which can only misguide the proletariat over the long term.
It is safe to say that First Worldism is
the root cause of the problems associated with the Revolutionary
Communist Party-USA (RCP-USA) and the Unified Communist Party of Nepal
(UCPN).
The RCP-USA, desiring some positive
significance to offset its terminal failure to organize what it sees as a
U.S. proletariat, chose to intervene in various international issues.
This typically occurred to the disservice of the proletarian struggle.
Now the RCP-USA heavily promotes Bob Avakian and his ‘New Synthesis.’
This ‘New Synthesis’ is better describes as an old bag of revisionisms.
Today, the RCP-USA, Bob Avakian, and his revisionist ‘New Synthesis’ is a
distraction from many of the important issues facing the international
proletariat.
The UCPN has given up the path of global
socialism and communism. It has instead sought to conciliate and collude
with imperialism in hopes of achieving conditions for class-neutral
development. It foolishly assumes monopoly capital will allow it be
anything but ‘red’ compradors or that Nepal will become anything other
than a source of super-exploited labor. The UCPN has abrogated the task
of constructing an independent economic base and socialist foreign
policy. It has instead embarked hand-in-hand with monopoly capital on a
path they wrongly believe will lead to progressive capitalist
development.
Through the examples set forth by both
the RCP-USA and the UCPN, it is evident how First Worldism corrupts even
nominal Maoists into becoming promulgators of the most backwards
revisionisms. The RCP-USA is deceptive and wrong in its claim that it is
organizing a U.S. proletariat. In reality it wrecks the international
communist movement for the sake of the U.S. petty-bourgeois masses. The
UCPN, whose leadership falsely believes capitalist development will
bring positive material effects for the masses of Nepal, has abandoned
the struggle for socialism and communism. The RCP-USA claims to
represent what it wrongly describes as an exploited U.S. proletariat.
The UCPN takes great inspiration in the level of material wealth
attained by what it wrongly assumes to be an exploited First World
proletariat.
Comrades! Our analysis must start with
the questions, “Who are our enemies? Who are our friends?” These
questions must be answered foremost in the structural sense (i.e., how
do groups fundamentally relate to the process of capital accumulation),
secondly in the historical sense (i.e. what can history tell us about
such class divisions and their implications for today), and lastly in a
political sense, (i.e., given what we know about the complex nature of
class structures of modern imperialism, how can we best organize class
alliances so as to advance the revolutionary interests of the
proletariat at large).
First Worldism is a fatal flaw. It is
both a hegemonic narrative within the ‘left’ and a trademark of
reformism, revisionism, and chauvinism. Unfortunately, First Worldism is
all-too-common within international Maoism.
Comrades! The consistent struggle against
First Worldism is an extension of the communist struggle against both
social chauvinism and the theory of the productive forces. As such, it
is the duty of all genuine Communists to struggle against First
Worldism.
Comrades! First Worldism has already done
enough damage to our forces internationally. Now is the time to
struggle against First Worldism and decisively break with the errors of
the past.
The importance of knowing “who are our
enemies?” and “who are our friends” never goes away. Instead, those who
fail in these understandings are prone to wider deviations. Gone
unchecked, First Worldism sets back the struggle for communism.
Comrades! We hope the topics of class
under imperialism and the necessity of the struggle against First
Worldism come up as specific points of future discussion within and
between Maoist organizations. The raising of these questions and the
firm refutation of First Worldism will mark a qualitative advance for
international communism.
Death to imperialism!
Long live the victories of people’s wars!
Revolutionary Anti-Imperialist Movement
No comments:
Post a Comment