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blindpig
01-07-2009, 02:33 PM
What Socialist America Will Look Like
James P. Cannon

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Delivered: 1953
Source: Fighting for Socialism in the “American Century”; Reprinted from The Militant, New York, July 27 ,1953 © Resistance Books 2001 Published by Resistance Books 23 Abercrombie St, Chippendale NSW 2008, Permission for on-line publication provided by Resistance Books for use by the James P. Cannon Internet Archive in 2003.
Transcription\HTML Markup: David Walters


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The following was the final lecture in a six-part series by Cannon on “America’s Road to Socialism”. It was given at the SWP’s Friday Night Forum in Los Angeles, January 23, 1953 and first published in The Militant on July 27 of the same year. We have added the subheads.


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We Marxists conceive of socialism, not as an arbitrary scheme of society to be constructed from a preconceived plan, but as the next stage of social evolution. The preceding lectures dealt with the struggle for socialism, which develops in succeeding stages foreseen, understood, and consciously organised by the revolutionary party on the basis of a program. The subject of this lecture—“What Socialist America Will Look Like”—carries us beyond our formal program.

Our discussion tonight deals with the socialist society itself, which will grow out of the new conditions when the class struggle will have been carried to its conclusion—that is, to the abolition of classes and consequently of all class struggles. Our preview of the socialist society, therefore, is not a program for struggle, but a forecast of the lines of future development already indicated in the present.

The architects and builders of the socialist society of the future will be the socialist generations themselves. The great Marxists were quite sure of this and refrained from offering these future generations any instructions or blueprints. Their writings, however, do contain some marvellous flashes of insight which light up the whole magnificent perspective. The insights of these men of transcendent genius will be the guiding line of my exposition tonight.

Auguste Blanqui, the great French revolutionist, said: “Tomorrow does not belong to us.” We ought to admit that, and recognise at the same time that it is better so. The people in the future society will be wiser than we are. We must assume that they will be superior to us, in every way, and that they will know what to do far better than we can tell them. We can only anticipate and point out the general direction of development, and we should not try to do more. But that much we are duty bound to do; for the prospect of socialism—what the future socialist society will look like—is a question of fascinating interest and has a great importance in modern propaganda.

The new generation of youth who will come to our movement and dedicate their lives to it will not be willing to squander their young courage and idealism on little things and little aims. They will be governed by nothing less than the inspiration of a great ideal, the vision of a new world. We are quite justified, therefore, in tracing some of the broad outlines of probable future development; all the more so since the general direction, if not the details, can already be foreseen.

In attempting an approximate estimate of what life will be like under socialism, we run up against the inadequacy of present-day society as a measuring rod or basis of comparison with the future. One must project himself into a different world, where the main incentives and compulsions of present-day society will no longer be operative; where in time they will be completely forgotten, and have merely a puzzling interest to students of an outlived age.

Material premise of socialism

Socialism will undoubtedly bring about a revolutionary transformation of human activity and association in all fields previously conditioned by the division of society into classes—in work, in education, in sports and amusements, in manners and morals, and in incentives and rewards.

But all these changes, which can be anticipated and predicted, will begin with and proceed from the revolutionary transformation of the system of production and the consequent augmentation and multiplication of the productivity of labour. This is the necessary material premise for a society of shared abundance. The revolutionary reorganisation of the labour process—of the manner of working and of regulating, measuring, and compensating the labour time of the individual—will take place first and should be considered first, because it will clear the way for all the other changes.

Here at the start we lack an adequate standard of comparison. The necessary amount of productive labour time which will be required of each individual in the new society cannot be calculated on the basis of the present stage of industrial development. The advances in science and technology which can be anticipated, plus the elimination of waste caused by competition, parasitism, etc., will render any such calculation obsolete. Our thought about the future must be fitted into the frame of the future.

Even at the present stage of economic development, if everybody worked and there was no waste, a universal four-hour day would undoubtedly be enough to provide abundance for all in the advanced countries. And once the whole thought and energy of society is concentrated on the problem of increasing productivity, it is easily conceivable that a new scientific-technological-industrial revolution would soon render a compulsory productive working day of four hours, throughout the normal lifetime of an individual, so absurdly unnecessary that it would be recognised as an impossibility.

All concepts of the amount of necessary labour required from each individual, based on present conditions and practices, must be abandoned in any serious attempt to approach a realistic estimate of future prospects and possibilities in this basic field. The labour necessary to produce food, clothing, shelter, and all the conveniences and refinements of material life in the new society will be operative, social labour—with an ever-increasing emphasis on labour-saving and automatic, labour-eliminating machinery, inventions and scientific discoveries, designed to increase the rate of productivity.

Withering away of labour and money

This labour will be highly organised and therefore disciplined in the interests of efficiency in production. There can be no anarchy in the cooperative labour process; but only freedom from labour, to an ever-increasing extent as science and technology advance productivity and automatically reduce the amount of labour time required from the individual.

The progressive reduction of this labour time required of each individual will, in my opinion, soon render it impractical to compute this labour time on a daily, weekly, or even yearly basis. It is reasonable to assume—this is my opinion, but only my opinion, and not a program—that the amount of labour time required of the individual by society during his whole life expectancy, will be approximately computed, and that he will be allowed to elect when to make this contribution. I incline strongly to the idea that the great majority will elect to get their required labour time over with in their early youth, working a full day for a year or two. Thereafter, they would be free for the rest of their lives to devote themselves, with freedom in their labour, to any scientific pursuit, to any creative work or play or study which might interest them. The necessary productive labour they have contributed in

a few years of their youth will pay for their entire lifetime maintenance, on the same principle that the workers today pay for their own paltry “social security” in advance.

On the road to that, or some similar arrangement, beginning already in the transition period which we discussed last week, there will be an evolutionary change of labour regulations, calculations, and payments. Emerging from capitalism, the transitional society, will carry over some capitalist methods of accounting, incentives, and rewards. People first will work for wages. They will be paid in money, backed by the gold in Fort Knox, for the amount of work performed. But after a certain period, where there is abundance and even superabundance, the absurdity of strict wage regulation will become apparent. Then the gold will be taken out of Fort Knox and put to some more useful purpose, if such can be found.

When people will have no further use for money, they will wonder what to do with all this gold, which has cost so much human labour and agony. Lenin had a theory that under socialism gold could be used, maybe, to make doorknobs for public lavatories, and things like that. But no Marxist authority would admit that in the socialist future men will dig in the earth for such a useless metal.

The accounting arrangements automatically registered by money wages based on gold will at a certain stage be replaced by labour certificates or coupons, like tickets to the theatre. But even that, eventually, will pass away. Even that kind of accounting, which would take up useless labour and be absolutely purposeless, will be eliminated. There will be no money, and there will not even be any bookkeeping transactions or coupons to regulate how much one works and how much he gets. When labour has ceased to be a mere means of life and becomes life’s prime necessity, people will work without any compulsion and take what they need. So said Marx.

Does that sound “visionary”? Here again, one must make an effort to lift himself out of the framework of the present society, and not consider this conception absurd or “impractical”. The contrary would be absurd. For in the socialist society, when there is plenty and abundance for all, what will be the point in keeping account of each one’s share, any more than in the distribution of food at a well-supplied family table? You don’t keep books as to who eats how many pancakes for breakfast or how many pieces of bread for dinner. Nobody grabs when the table is laden. If you have a guest, you don’t seize the first piece of meat for yourself, you pass the plate and ask him to help himself first.

When you visualise society as a “groaning board” on which there is plenty for all, what purpose would be served in keeping accounts of what each one gets to eat and to wear? There would be no need for compulsion or forcible allotment of material means. “Wages” will become a term of obsolete significance, which only students of ancient history will know about. “Speaking frankly”—said Trotsky—“I think it would be pretty dullwitted to consider such a really modest perspective 'utopian’.”

The ethic of capitalism and its normal procedure, of course, are quite different. But don’t ever, dear comrades, make the mistake of thinking that anything contrary to its rules and its ethics is utopian, or visionary, or absurd. No, what’s absurd is to think that this madhouse is permanent and for all time. The ethic of capitalism is: “From each whatever you can get out of him—to each whatever he can grab.” The socialist society of universal abundance will be regulated by a different standard. It will “inscribe on its banners”—said Marx—“From each according to his ability—to each according to his needs.” I speak now of the higher phase of socialist society, which some Marxist authorities prefer to call communism.

Removal of insecurity

In the present society people are haunted by insecurity Their mental health is undermined by fear for their future and the future of their children. They are never free from fear that if something happens, if they have a sickness or an accident for which they are not responsible, the punishment will be visited upon their children; that their children will be deprived of an education and proper food and clothing.

Under such conditions this “human nature”, which we hear so much about, is like a plant trying to flower in a dark cellar; it really doesn’t get much chance to show its true nature, its boundless potentialities. In the socialist society of shared abundance, this nightmare will be lifted from the minds of the people. They will be secure and free from fear; and this will work a revolution in their attitude toward life and their enjoyment of it. Human nature will get a chance to show what it is really made of.

The present division of society into classes, under which the few have all the privileges and the many are condemned to poverty and insecurity, carries with it a number of artificial and unnatural divisions which deform the individual and prevent the all-around development of his personality and his harmonious association with his kind. There is the division between men’s work and women’s work, to say nothing of men’s rights and women’s rights. There is the division of race prejudice between the Negroes and the whites, which is cruelly unjust to the former and degrading to the latter. There is the division between manual and intellectual labour, which produces half-men on each side. There is the division between the city and the country, which is harmful to the inhabitants of both.

These divisions are not ordained for all time, as some people may think. They are the artificial product of class society and will fall with it. And a great fall it will be.

Emancipation of women

The emancipation of women will begin in the very first days of the workers’ government, and very probably will be fully completed before the socialist society emerges from the transition period. The first condition for the real emancipation of women is their economic emancipation. That must presuppose the scientific organisation of housework, like all other work, so that women too can have time and leisure for cultural activity and the free choice of occupation. That will imperatively require the establishment of communal kitchens, housekeeping services, nurseries and kindergartens.

The average poor housewife in this country is made to think that she was born into this glorious world for the chief purpose of fighting dust and wrestling pots and pans. That’s not true. Women are capable of participating in all avenues of activity, in all trades, in all sciences, in all arts. Enough have already broken through to demonstrate that.

One thing I’m absolutely sure is going to happen early in the period of the workers’ government, maybe during the first five-year plan. Under the slogan of more efficiency in production, reinforced by moral arguments which are powerful in the case—the rights of women to leisure and freedom for cultural and spiritual growth—there will be a tremendous popular movement of women to bust up this medieval institution of 40 million separate kitchens and 40 million different housewives cooking, cleaning, scrubbing, and fighting dust.

Thirty or 40 million women every day of the year trudging to the market, each one loading her separate basket and lugging it home to cook 30 or 40 million different meals for 30 or 40 million different families. What a terrible waste of energy, waste of productivity; to say nothing of the cultural waste; to say nothing of the imposition upon the women victims. The enlightened socialist women will knock the hell out of this inefficient, unjust and antiquated system. The mass emergence of the socialist women from the confining walls of their individual kitchens will be the greatest jail break in history—and the most beneficent. Women, liberated from the prison of the kitchen, will become the free companions of free men.

The drudge

ry of housework will be organised like any other division of labour, on an efficient communal basis, so that women can begin to have some leisure too. Cooking and house cleaning, like any other work, can be done much better, much quicker, in an organised, scientific manner. Proper airconditioning and dust-catching “precipitrons”—which will be standard equipment for every home—will take care of most of the house cleaning automatically.

I cannot see why the average housewife, who isn’t specially trained for it or specially adapted to it, should want to bother with it. I cannot see why cooking, house cleaning, and janitor work shouldn’t be one of the national divisions of labour, for which various people take their turns in the process for a certain number of hours a day, a certain number of weeks in a year, however it may be allocated. Or if some people prefer to live communally, as many have found it advantageous, they’ll do that and simplify things still more.

By this forecast I do not mean to draw a picture of regimentation. Just the opposite, for any kind of regimentation such as that imposed by the present social order will be utterly repugnant to the free and independent citizens of the socialist future. They will live the way they want to live, and each individual—within the limits of his general obligation to society—will decide for himself. Better, in this case, say “herself”—for old-fashioned reactionaries who ignorantly think they know what “woman’s place” is, will run up against the hard fact—for the first time since class society began—that women will have something to say about that, and what they will say will be plenty.

What kind of homes will the people have under socialism, what kind of home life? I don’t know, and neither does anyone else. But they will have the material means and the freedom of choice to work out their own patterns. These two conditions, which are unknown to the great majority today, will open up limitless vistas for converting the “home” from a problem and a burden into a self-chosen way of life for the joy of living.

Homes will not be designed by real-estate promoters building for profit—which is what the great bulk of “home building” amounts to today. The people will have what they want. They can afford to have it any way they want it. If some of them want a house of their own in the country, and if they want to have their cooking and their house cleaning done on the present basis, nobody will stop them. But I imagine they will evoke public curiosity and quizzical glances. People will say: “They’ve got a perfect right to do that but they don’t have to.”

Every man can have his little house as he has it now, and his little wife spending her whole time cooking and cleaning for him—providing he can find that kind of a wife. But he will not be able to buy such service, and he’ll be rather stupid to ask for it. Most likely his enlightened sweetheart will tell him: “Wake up, Bud; we’re living under socialism. You’ve been reading that ancient history again and you’ve a nostalgia for the past. You’ve got to break yourself of that habit. I’m studying medicine, and I have no time to be sweeping up dust. Call up the Community Housecleaning Service.”

Eradication of racism

I must also break the news to the Southern crackers and their Northern cousins, and other members of the Jim Crow fraternity, that under socialism America will no longer be “a white man’s country”. It will belong to the coloured people too. They will own as much of it as anyone else and share to the full, without let or hindrance, all its bountiful prosperity and abundance, all its freedoms, rights and privileges—without any exceptions whatever.

The socialist society based on human solidarity will have no use for such unscientific and degrading inhuman notions as the idea that one man is superior to another because, many thousands of years ago, the ancestors of the first lived in an environment that produced in the course of time a lighter skin colour than was produced by the environment of the ancestors of the second.

The Jim Crow gangsters who strut around in self-satisfied ignorance as representatives of the “superior” race may have to learn their mistake the hard way, but they will learn—or “be learned”—just the same. The Negroes will play a great and decisive role in the revolution, in alliance with the trade unions and the revolutionary party; and in that grand alliance they will demonstrate and conquer their right to full equality.

The Negroes will very probably be among the best revolutionists. And why shouldn’t they be? They have nothing to lose but their poverty and discrimination, and a whole world of prosperity, freedom, and equality to gain. You can bet your boots the Negroes will join the revolution to fight for that—once it becomes clear to them that it cannot be gained except by revolution. The black battalions of the revolution will be a mighty power—and great will be their reward in the victory.

As in the emancipation of women, the emancipation of the Negroes will begin with the absolute and unconditional abolition of every form of economic discrimination and disadvantage, and proceed from that to full equality in all domains. Race prejudice will vanish with the ending of the social system that produced and nourished it. Then the human family will live together in peace and harmony, each of its sons and daughters free at last to make the full contribution of his or her talents to the benefit of all.

Revolution in cultural life

The present big and crowded, ugly, unhealthy cities—I was asked at a previous lecture—what will happen to them? They will be no more. Once the transition period has been passed through, once all the problems of abundance and plenty have been solved, the people will want also to live right in the larger sense—to provide for their cultural and aesthetic aspirations. They will have a great hunger and thirst for beauty and harmony in all the surroundings of their lives. These monster cities we live in today are blights of modern society. They will certainly give way to planned cities interlinked to the countryside. Everybody will live with the natural advantages of the country and the cultural associations of the town. All the Marxist authorities were emphatic on this point. The crowded slums and the isolated, godforsaken farm houses will be demolished at about the same time.

A new science and new art will flower—the science and art of city planning. There is such a profession today, but the private ownership of industry and real estate deprives it of any real scope. Under socialism some of the best and most eager students in the universities will take up the study of city planning, not for the profitable juxtaposition of slums and factory smokestacks, but for the construction of cities fit to live in. Art in the new society will undoubtedly be more cooperative, more social. The city planners will organise landscapers, architects, sculptors, and mural painters to work as a team in the construction of new cities which will be a delight to live in and a joy to behold.

Communal centres of all kinds will arise to serve the people’s interests and needs. Centres of art and centres of science. Jack London in the Iron Heel, speaking in the name of an inhabitant of the future socialist society, referred as a matter of course to the numerous “Wonder Cities” which had been given poetic names—“Ardis”, “Asgard” and so on; wonder cities designed for beauty, for ease of living, for attractiveness to the eye and to the whole being.

Farming, of course, will be reorganised like industry on a large scale. The factory farm is already in existence to a large extent in the West. Tens of thousands of acres in single units are operated with modern machine methods and scientific utilisation of the soil, for the private profit of absentee owners. These factory farms will not be broken up. They will be taken over and developed on a vaster scale. Eventually the w

hole of agricultural production be conducted on the basis of factory farms. The agricultural workers will not live in cultural backwardness, in lonely, isolated farm houses. They will live in the town and work in the country, just as the factory worker will live in the country and work in the town.

The separation between manual and intellectual labour will be broken down. The division between specialised knowledge of single subjects and ignorance on the rest which is a characteristic feature of capitalism, will be eliminated. The half-men, produced by these artificial divisions, who know only one thing and can do only one thing, will give way to the whole men who can do many things and know something about everything.

There will be a revolution in art. The class society, which splits the population into separate and antagonistic groups of the privileged and the deprived, splits the personality of the artist, too. A few selected people have the opportunity to study and practice art, remote from the life of the people. At the same time, not thousands, but millions of children have the spark of talent, or even of genius, snuffed out before it has a chance to become a flame. Children of the poor, who like to draw already in school, soon have to put all those ideas out of their minds. They can’t afford to be drawing pictures. They have to learn some trade where they can make a living, and forget about their artistic aspirations.

In the new society everybody will be an artist of some sort or other, and every artist will be a worker. Education will be for intellectual pursuits and manual occupations simultaneously, from childhood to old age. Marx was of the emphatic opinion that children should engage in productive labour from the age of nine, not at the expense of their “education” but as an essential part of it. From an early age, children will learn to use tools and to make something useful to the people. The child will have the satisfaction of learning by doing, and the satisfaction of being useful and productive even when he’s a child.

Then older people will begin to treat him more respectfully. They will regard him, also, from an early age, as a human being, as a citizen, as a producer who shouldn’t be treated as a baby any longer. He will be reasoned with and talked to and treated as an equal, not beaten or scolded or shouted at, or pushed into a corner. Marx said: “Children must educate their parents.” And in some respects they will do that, too, when they get a fair chance.

There will be such a revolution in the relations of children and parents as we can hardly conceive of in this monstrous class society of the present. Parents often think they have been endowed by some mysterious supernatural power with the right to abuse and mistreat children. Primitive man never had such rights, never dreamed of such things. It is only due to the degeneration which followed the introduction of private property that the mistreatment of children and the double mistreatment of women became the rule. Primitive man in his natural state never knew such things. And the future society will know them still less.

Every child who has a talent for music or drawing or sculpting or moulding or writing—and there is no such thing as a child without some talent—can become an artist of one sort or another. One who has an instinct and feeling for words can become a writer. There will be poets who will glorify the great theme of human solidarity, and they will not be starved and ridiculed as they are in this ignorant society. The poets will be honoured, perhaps above all, because they have more insight than any others.

All-sided cultural development under socialism will not be some special gift or opportunity for favoured individuals, but the heritage of all. The socialist man will have the most priceless of all possessions. He will have time. He will have leisure. He will have time and the means to live, to play, to grow, to travel, to realise to the full the expression of his human personality. And that will not be the exception, but the rule. There will be a whole race of people enjoying and expressing all those things.

I have a theory—again a personal opinion and not a program—that there will be two kinds of labour under socialism. All, without exception, will participate in the organised productive process, the source of the people’s maintenance and abundance. But that will take up only a small amount of time, as already indicated. Then, I visualise another form of purely voluntary labour, unorganised, anarchistic, practiced as a means of artistic self-expression, and freely given for the general good or as a service of friendship.

Resurgence of handicrafts

Handicrafts, once the basic form of production, were virtually wiped out by the development of capitalism because of their comparative inefficiency, and many of the old skills of the artisans have been lost. The cooperative machine process, which produced more things faster and easier, eliminated handicraft as a serious factor in the productive process, and this progressive historical development can never be reversed.

But under socialism, where machine industry will be developed to the highest degree, producing even more abundantly many times over than at the present stage of its development, I can foresee a revival, a new flowering of handicrafts on a new basis. If this is theoretically inadmissible as a form of labour in the socialist society, perhaps my speculative suggestion can be considered under the heading of art.

I spoke before of the artificial division between intellectual and manual labour, and the half-men this division produces. The whole man of the socialist future will not be content merely to know what he reads in books, or to write books, or to confine himself exclusively to any other purely intellectual occupation. He will be trained from childhood to use his hands productively and creatively, and he will have plenty of time to exercise his skills in any way he sees fit; to do what he wants to do, what he likes to do.

I should imagine that under such conditions man, the tool-using animal, will assert himself once again. There will be a resurgence of freelance cabinetmakers, shoemakers, hand tailors, bookbinders, etc. These artisans of the future won’t compete with machine industry—that would be anachronistically absurd—but will ply their crafts as a special form of recreation and artistic self-expression, and to make gifts for friends. If they want to do it that way, who is going to stop them?

In the present society very few get a chance to do the work they really want to do, and thereby they are deprived of life’s most solid satisfaction. “Blessed is he who has found his work”, said Carlyle. But how many are so blessed? Most people do what seems best to make a living. Those who are able to choose their work, and to persist in it at all costs, are very rare.

Taking the present society as it is, I personally have had the work I wanted, that I thought the time required, the occupation I was made for—that of a professional revolutionist. But in a socialist society, where there will be no need and no room for social struggles or revolution, the likes of me would have to find another trade. I have thought that under such circumstances I would be a cabinetmaker, as my grandfather was, a man who took pride in his fine work with wood and tools. Another would be a bookbinder, another a shoemaker, another a tailor—there are a lot of fine old crafts which will challenge the ingenious and the tool minded.

Under socialism people will not fear to love their neighbour lest they be taken advantage of, nor be ashamed of disinterested friendship, free from all self-interest and calculation. There will be powerful impulses to give things to each other, and the only possible way of giving will be by doing, by making. There will be no chance to “buy” a present for anybody—because nothing will be for sale; and besides, everybody will be f

ree to take anything he needs from the superabundant general store of material things rolling from the assembly lines. Presents, to mean anything, will have to be made, outside the general process. I think they will be, and such gifts will be really treasured and displayed on special occasions.

I imagine that when a man goes to his wedding, he’ll wear a coat of many colours, like Joseph in the Bible, handmade for him by a friend who is an expert tailor, who has made it for him as a service of love. On holidays, he’ll wear a handmade shoe, moulded to his own foot by a friend who is a craftsman, who takes pride in his perfect work. And when he, in turn, wants to present a gift to a friend, he will make it for him.

Your house, the house of the well-regulated family, will have as the things it is proudest of, certain things specially made for you by people who like you. This easy chair made to your own measure by your friend so-and-so. This hand-mortised hardwood bookcase made for you by a cabinetmaker, as a gift. And those pictures and decorations on the walls—they were not machine stamped at the factory, but hand painted especially for you by an artist friend. And your important and most treasured books, which came well-bound from the print shops of the socialist society, have been rebound in fancy leather, by an old-fashioned bookbinder, a real craftsman. He does this outside his general contribution to the cooperative labour process, as a form of creative self-expression and as an act of friendship. I think it will be a great joy and satisfaction to be an expert craftsman in the coming time.

Transformation of morality

Morality, which in class society is either a hypocritical cover for material self-interest, or an escapist withdrawal from the harsh realities of the class struggle, will be changed inside out. The advancement of individual special interests at the expense of others—the highest standard of capitalist society—is summed up in the slogan: “Getting Ahead”—which means, getting ahead of others. It is the root cause of lying, demagogy, and deception, which are the central features in every election campaign, in advertising, and in all mediums of information and communication. The people are bombarded with lies every day of their lives. Capitalist morality itself is a lie.

There can be no doubt whatever that the new society will have a different morality. It will be a social morality based on human solidarity, having no need of lies, deception, demagogy, and hypocrisy. Those who cannot conceive of any human relationship without the “getting ahead” philosophy of capitalism say socialism would not “work” because people would have no incentives. They really have a low opinion of the human race. Incentives will not be lacking. But they will be different.

For one thing public opinion, uncontaminated by phony propaganda, will be a powerful force, as it was in the unspoiled primitive societies before people knew anything about private property and special class interests. The desire to be approved by one’s associates will be a powerful incentive. In the new society the most useful people will be acclaimed, not the most “successful” in the business of getting ahead of others; not the rich exploiters, the slick fakers, the lying politicians, and the generals famed for slaughter.

The youth will venerate heroes of a new type—the scientist, the artist, the poet; the inventor who discovers a means of shortening the labour time necessary in this or that occupation; the agricultural expert who discovers a new way of breeding seed and making bigger crops. The applause and approval of the people will be the highest incentive and the highest reward of the socialist man.

Scope for ambition will not be lacking either. The socialist people will be completely alive and animated by driving ambitions. But their ambitions will have a different motivation and a different direction. Struggle is the law of life, and so it will be under socialism. But under socialism the struggle of men against each other for personal gain will give way to the struggle for ideas; to competition and rivalry in serving and advancing the general good of all; and to their cooperative struggle to complete the conquest of nature.

The people will struggle cooperatively—and through the competition of alternate plans—to move mountains, to change the course of rivers, to control climate, and to get the full benefit of all its changes. They will organise huge migrations with the seasons. Why should only the birds have the right to move south when it gets cold in the north? The rich have already claimed this right. The people who own New York, for example, don’t live there much of the time. They spend their summers in Bar Harbour, Maine, where it’s cool and breezy, and their winters in Florida, on the sunny beach. Some of them travel to other countries with the changing seasons. They stop over in New York only in the spring and fall when the New York weather is better than that of Maine or Florida. That, it seems to me, is a very sensible way to live—if you can afford it.

A world without violence

Under socialism, everybody will be able to afford to live comfortably and to travel freely, without passports. Can you imagine people living in Chicago in the wintertime, when they might be in California on a six-months vacation? Nobody ever saw the sun in Chicago from Labour Day to the Fourth of July; but here—I am told—it shines every day in the year—even when it’s raining.

Some people who have lived in a frost-bound place all their lives may continue for some years, even under the new society, just from tradition, habit, and ignorance. But once you get them to come to the Land of the Sundown Sea on a trial journey, and see what California is like on the 23rd day of January, they will never be the same again. And the daring souls, the pioneers who will find this out, will write letters back and the word will pass, and the idea will grow up amongst the people in the frozen north: “Why shouldn’t we, with all our abundance—we can afford it, we have plenty—why shouldn’t we travel around and enjoy climate with the seasons—just like the birds.”

The people will have ambition, under socialism, to explore the great universe and to unlock its secrets, and to extract from their knowledge new resources for the betterment of all the people. They will organise an all-out war against sickness and disease and there will be a flowering of the great science of medicine. They will look back with indignation, when they read in their history books that at one time people had to live in a society where there was a shortage of doctors, artificially maintained. I believe it can be said with certainty that among the heroes of the new society, whom the youth will venerate, will be the doctors of all kinds who will really be at the service of man in the struggle for the conquest of those diseases which lay him low. Man’s health will be a major concern, and sickness and disease a disgrace, not to the victim, but to the society which permits it.

Having conquered nature, having solved the problems of material existence, having taken care of the problem of health, the socialist man will begin finally—as Trotsky forecast in his brilliant work Literature and Revolution—to study, to know, and to conquer himself. The study and mastery of the body and the mind will bring the socialist man to physical and mental harmony and perfection, to the realisation in life of the old aspiring motto: “a sound mind in a sound body”—producing a new race, the first worthy of the name of man.

Under socialism there will be no more private property, except for personal use. Consequently there can be no more crimes against private property—which are 90% or more of all the crimes committed today—and no need of all this huge apparatus for the prevention, detection, prosecution, and punishment of crimes against property. No need of jails and prisons, policemen, judges, probation officers,

lawyers, bondsmen, social workers, bureaucrats; no need for guards, bailiffs, wardens, prosecutors, stool pigeons, informers, and professional perjurers. No need for this whole mass of parasitical human rubbish which represents the present-day state and which devours so much of the substance of the people.

With the end of classes and their conflicting interests there will be no more “politics”, because politics is essentially an expression of the class struggle; and no more parties, as they are now known, for parties are the political representatives of classes. That is not to say there won’t be differences and heated debates. Groupings, we must assume, will arise in the course of these disputes. But they will not be based on separate class interests.

They will be “parties” based on differences of opinion as to what kind of an economic plan we should have; what great scheme of highways should be developed; what system of education; what type of architecture for the wonder cities. Differences on these, and numerous other questions of public interest and general concern, will give the competitive instincts of the people all kinds of room for free expression. Groupings will be formed and contend with each other for popular support without “politics” or parties in the old sense of class struggle and the conflict of material interests.

In the classless society of the future there will be no state. The Marxist formula that the state will wither away and die out has a profound ultimate meaning, for the state is the most concentrated expression of violence. Where there is violence, there is no freedom. The society of the free and equal will have no need and no room for violence and will not tolerate it in any form. This was the profound conception of the great Marxists.

I recall that when I was very young, I read Jack London’s Iron Heel and got from there for the first time, in one single reference, a glimpse of the socialist future wherein violence will be unknown. In a footnote to the manuscript in this great book about the ruthless class war in capitalist society, ostensibly written by an editor in the socialist society, the author calls attention to an enigmatic expression in the story. One of the characters is described as having the build of a prizefighter, and the editor thought it was necessary to explain to the citizens of the socialist society what prizefighting meant. This footnote reads: “In that day it was the custom of men to compete for purses of money. They fought with their hands. When one was beaten into insensibility, or killed, the survivor took the money.” That had to be explained in the socialist society because they wouldn’t know it otherwise.

Trotsky, in his last testament, written in anticipation of death, said: “Life is beautiful. Let the future generations cleanse it of all evil, oppression and violence and enjoy it to the full.”48 Just ponder those words—Trotsky was a writer who weighed every word. His last injunction to the people who would follow him was: “Cleanse life of all violence.”

In a talk with Gorky, Lenin said the same thing in almost the same words: “Our ideal is not to use force against anyone.”

It is difficult for us to comprehend such a possibility, living in a society where even the smallest children are taught that they have to fight and scramble to protect themselves in a hostile world. We can hardly visualise a world without violence. But that’s what socialism means. That was the ultimate meaning of our farseeing teachers when they said that the state will wither away and eventually die out. They meant that eventually all violence of people against each other will wither away and cease to be.

The people will turn their attention then to that most important problem of all—the problem of the free development of the human personality. Then human nature will begin to change, or rather, to assert its real self. People will recover some of the virtues of primitive society, which was based on solidarity and cooperation, and improve them and develop them to a higher degree.

The Golden Future

Leisure is the condition for all cultural development. “The glory that was Greece”, justly celebrated in song and story, was the first great confirmation of this law. Ancient Greece, borrowing from other civilisations, produced the first truly cultured class. In some important respects it touched the highest peaks our race has yet known; and in the Golden Age of Pericles it came to its fullest flower. Its attainments in literature, the drama, sculpture, architecture, philosophy; in the beginnings of science and in the graces and amenities of civilised intercourse—are the original pattern from which Western civilisation stems.

But that glorious Greece had a fatal flaw. Its leisure—and therefore its culture—were limited to a very narrow stratum of privileged aristocrats. It lacked the technological basis for universal leisure and culture. The society of ancient Greece rested on a base of dehumanised slave labour. It was surrounded by a world of barbarism. It was constantly embroiled in wars and eventually went down in ruins, and nothing was left of it but what is scratched on stone and preserved on parchment. A few ruins of the marvellous sculpture and architecture still stand to give an intimation of what was known and done 2500 years ago.

Socialist society will stand immeasurably higher than that of ancient Greece, even in its Golden Age. Machines and science will be the slaves, and they will be far more productive, a thousand, 10,000 times more productive, than the human slaves of ancient Greece. Under socialism, all will share in the benefits of abundance, not merely a favoured few at the top. All the people will have time and be secure for an ever higher development.

All will be artists. All will be workers and students, builders and creators. All will be free and equal. Human solidarity will encircle the globe and conquer it and subordinate it to the uses of man.

That, my friends, is not an idle speculation. That is the realistic perspective of our great movement. We ourselves are not privileged to live in the socialist society of the future, which Jack London, in his far-reaching aspiration, called the Golden Future. It is our destiny, here and now, to live in the time of the decay and death agony of capitalism. It is our task to wade through the blood and filth of this outmoded, dying system. Our mission is to clear it away. That is our struggle, our law of life.

We cannot be citizens of the socialist future, except by anticipation. But it is precisely this anticipation, this vision of the future, that fits us for our role as soldiers of the revolution, soldiers of the liberation war of humanity. And that, I think, is the highest privilege today, the occupation most worthy of a civilised man. No matter whether we personally see the dawn of socialism or not, no matter what our personal fate may be, the cause for which we fight has social evolution on its side and is therefore invincible. It will conquer and bring all mankind a new day.

It is enough for us, I think, if we do our part to hasten on the day. That’s what we’re here for. That’s all the incentive we need. And the confidence that we are right and that our cause will prevail, is all the reward we need. That’s what the socialist poet, William Morris, had in mind, when he called us to


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Back to the James P. Cannon Internet Archive
Back to the Marxists Internet Archive

http://www.marxists.org/archive/cannon/works/1953/socialistamer.htm

Kid of the Black Hole
01-07-2009, 02:54 PM
Hey Mike did BPs post here get cut off because of the character limit on posts that eats complained about?

About this article, I think Cannon is just being stupid. In a way that is a psuedo-compliment because there are far more disparaging adjectives to describe Cannon than "just" stupid.

I think he might be "right" if you condensed the above into the 5 most straightforward and intelligble sentences. Many of the things he points out are mere truisms: societal norms will be different after a revolution in societal norms? No shit, Einstein.

The above, written as a syllogism:

A. Cannon is always right, except when he's spewing crap
B. Cannon is always spewing crap

blindpig
01-07-2009, 03:25 PM
Hey Mike did BPs post here get cut off because of the character limit on posts that eats complained about?

About this article, I think Cannon is just being stupid. In a way that is a psuedo-compliment because there are far more disparaging adjectives to describe Cannon than "just" stupid.

I think he might be "right" if you condensed the above into the 5 most straightforward and intelligble sentences. Many of the things he points out are mere truisms: societal norms will be different after a revolution in societal norms? No shit, Einstein.

The above, written as a syllogism:

A. Cannon is always right, except when he's spewing crap
B. Cannon is always spewing crap


Naw Kid, that's how it ends, check the link. I thought it an interesting historical piece. I have no idea who Cannon was, I get the impression a Trot but as it didn't get into the usual 'no revolution is good enough' jive that it might be examined on it's merit, or lack thereof. He is a bit of a blowhard who goes on to do just what he said shouldn't be done, I guess that's a clue. Just wondering, if someone were to tackle the subject today what that might look like.

Kid of the Black Hole
01-07-2009, 04:16 PM
Abolishing class society doesn't mean what Cannon thinks it means. Pretty much all of what he writes is speculative hogwash and blue-skying it by pretending problems just disappear in time.

Both classes -- proletariat and bourgeoisie -- are abolished only when the real conditions dictate and demand it; by necessity. That necessity is materially manifested in class struggle, the demands of those who make everything but have nothing. It's not simply a matter of impoverishment and total immiseration. The productive forces of society are developed to the point that private ownership represents only a constriction and a retrograde, vestigal set of relations.

The culmination is when it is those who labor who control AND enjoy the product of their labor -- from production all the way to allocation and consumption. All of the other questions and antagonisms and contradictions get answered on an ad hoc basis -- which is why musing about labor coupons and "visions" is retarded.

Since most of the things we want to know about in the future are items of fairness, distribution, equitability, and so on -- with the attendant question of who is in control -- then it is patently impossible to disentangle them from the struggle in front of us. If you try, you tread on the liberal holy ground of attempting to solve the world's problems piecemeal without changing the underlying social conditions.

On that project, the credo of the bourgeoisie world hangs heavy indeed: "Good luck, you're on your own"

choppedliver
01-07-2009, 04:39 PM
Almost sweet in his vision...sadly...his hopes for youth and the arts are very rosy indeed...not a bad thing, necessarily to be reminded of what might in some way be... albeit "blue-skied"...

anaxarchos
01-07-2009, 06:12 PM
Naw Kid, that's how it ends, check the link. I thought it an interesting historical piece. I have no idea who Cannon was, I get the impression a Trot but as it didn't get into the usual 'no revolution is good enough' jive that it might be examined on it's merit, or lack thereof. He is a bit of a blowhard who goes on to do just what he said shouldn't be done, I guess that's a clue. Just wondering, if someone were to tackle the subject today what that might look like.


Cannon wasn't just "a Trot", he was THE Trot. He goes back to the Socialist Party, he was an early Communist and supporter of the Bolshevik Revolution, and didn't get involved with Trotsky and the "Left Opposition" until 1928, I think. After that, he was among the original founders and leaders of the SWP (Socialist Workers Party) and of American Trotskyism. He was an interesting guy. I've read a lot of his stuff over time and he is very uneven. On the one hand, he reflects a lot of the early pedigree of the pre-WWI Left Socialist/Communists; on the other hand, he is kind of "dreamy" and a genetic faction fighter. He is also sort of the perfect anti-Foster, which makes it tough for guys like me who are unapologetic Fosterites.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/81/Ungcannon.jpg

Kid of the Black Hole
01-07-2009, 06:44 PM
Naw Kid, that's how it ends, check the link. I thought it an interesting historical piece. I have no idea who Cannon was, I get the impression a Trot but as it didn't get into the usual 'no revolution is good enough' jive that it might be examined on it's merit, or lack thereof. He is a bit of a blowhard who goes on to do just what he said shouldn't be done, I guess that's a clue. Just wondering, if someone were to tackle the subject today what that might look like.


Cannon wasn't just "a Trot", he was THE Trot. He goes back to the Socialist Party, he was an early Communist and supporter of the Bolshevik Revolution, and didn't get involved with Trotsky and the "Left Opposition" until 1928, I think. After that, he was among the original founders and leaders of the SWP (Socialist Workers Party) and of American Trotskyism. He was an interesting guy. I've read a lot of his stuff over time and he is very uneven. On the one hand, he reflects a lot of the early pedigree of the pre-WWI Left Socialist/Communists; on the other hand, he is kind of "dreamy" and a genetic faction fighter. He is also sort of the perfect anti-Foster, which makes it tough for guys like me who are unapologetic Fosterites.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/81/Ungcannon.jpg


Interesting. I've only ever been exposed to his ummm progeny.

choppedliver
01-07-2009, 09:01 PM
Any chance for a brief synopsis of a Fosterite?

blindpig
01-07-2009, 09:04 PM
Any chance for a brief synopsis of a Fosterite?


Beat me to by a sec. Yeah, who was Foster?

Pinko
01-07-2009, 10:41 PM
Any chance for a brief synopsis of a Fosterite?


Beat me to by a sec. Yeah, who was Foster?


You'll of course hafta pardon my typically in-depth and scholarly response, but IIRC it was Bill Foster who bitch-slapped that pussy Earl Browder...

EDIT, yep:

Our Party does not live in a political vacuum. It is exposed to all the illusions and pressures of capitalism; hence it should surprise no Marxist that the present drive of American imperialism for world power should find certain echoes within the ranks of the Party. The tragedy of the situation is that it is precisely Comrade Browder who is giving voice to these imperialist illusions in our Party, especially with regrard to the postwar situation. And he is doing this under elaborate pretenses of a discerning and flexible Marxism-Leninism.

In the postwar world, which will face gigantic problems of industrial reconstruction and development, the United States, with its tremendous economic resources, is bound to play a very important role. What Comrade Browder does not see, however, is that if the role of the United States is to help in the realization of the programs of Moscow, Teheran and Yalta, this can only be accomplished if the broad masses of this country, especially the trade union movement, are very much on the alert to see to it that imperialist trends upon the part of our Government and the great capitalists are curbed and democratic policies imposed. The great goals of victory over fascism and the achievement of a lasting peace, laid down at Moscow, Teheran and Yalta, can be realized, but only upon the basis of eternal vigilance by the combined democratic forces of the world. Browder, contrary to this, is quite willing to leave the whole matter to the “intelligence” and “enlightened” self-interest of the big capitalists.

The imperialists could hardly ask for anything better than the free hand that Browder would so readily grant them. It is hard to conceive of a situation more favorable to American imperialism than the belief, such as Browder has expressed many times that we can rely upon these capitalists' “enlightenment” to follow a constructive and democratic world policy. The general result of such a reliance would be that American imperialism, without any popular checks upon it, would run hogwild and would soon have the whole world in a worse mess than it now is. Of course, Comrade Browder does not want any such situation, but Lenin has long since taught us that the objective results of political policies bear no necessary relation to the subjective desires of their initiators.

That the practical effects of Comrade Browder's revisionist ideas are to facilitate the policies of American imperialism is beyond question. Let me show this by indicating briefly a few of his major proposals and their imperialistic implications:

1. When Comrade Browder proposes that the United States in the postwar period should set out to build up a $40,000,000,000 yearly export trade, as he did in his book, Teheran: Our Path in War and Peace, he is in fact calling upon American imperialism to make a drive virtually to monopolize the markets of the world.

2. When Browder says (page 79 of his book, Teheran: Our Path in War and Peace), “I am entirely willing to help the free enterprisers realize the $40,000,000,000 foreign market that is required entirely and completely by their own chosen methods,” he is tailing the workers after the bourgeoisie and surrendering the American people into the hands of the imperialists.

3. When Browder proposes that the great capitalists of the United States have a free hand to carry through a postwar program of “Industrialization of all the devastated and undeveloped areas of the world,” he is in fact proposing American economic and political world hegemony.

4. When Browder says that “Britain and the United States have closed the books finally and forever upon their old expectation that the Soviet Union is going to disappear some day,” he is blinding the people of this and other countries to the dangerous machinations of American and British imperialists against the U.S.S.R. — “a consummation devoutly to be wished” by these sharks.

5. When Browder fails to signalize the danger of American imperialism (and he denies, incredible though it may seem, that there is any such imperialist menace), he is hiding from the American people the greatest danger to future world peace and progress. The imperialists could hardly ask for anything more convenient to their schemes of exploitation and domination.

6. When Browder fights against the American people curbing the monopolies, as he does, actually he is freeing from restraint the worst enemies of democracy, the generators of economic chaos, imperialist aggression, fascism and war.

7. When Browder spreads illusions among the workers to the effect that there will be a long period of class peace after the war during which they can safely bind themselves with a no-strike pledge, and that the employers will voluntarily radically improve the workers' real wages, he is tending to paralyze the working class in the face of the provocative attacks of big capitalists upon the trade unions and the workers' living standards.

8. When Browder (Daily Worker, April 8, 1944) hails the Labor-Management Charter without a word of criticism and deplores only that it is “unfortunate” the NAM is not a partner to the Charter, and when (Daily Worker, April 14, 1944), he proposes that the incentive wage be adopted generally in American industry in the postwar period, he is opening wide the doors for the speeding up and more intensified exploitation of the workers of this country.

9. When Browder dissolves the C.P. into the C.P.A., he is weakening the most dynamic force that the workers possess to counteract the reactionary activities of the great trusts at home and abroad.


One would have to be blind politically not to recognize that all these revisionist theories and proposals of Browder's dovetail with the interests of the great capitalists and that they are, in fact, a reflection of the aggressive program of American imperialism. Contrary to Browder's faith in the big bourgeoisie, the democratic forces of the country and the world will have to use all their united political strength to achieve complete victory, to establish a democratic peace, to win full employment and a better life generally.

BROWDER'S REVISIONISM IN THEORY

Bedazzled by the United States' great power in this war, by its enormous industrial expansion and output, by its gigantic political prestige, by the many concessions the capitalists made (under compulsion) to the workers during the Roosevelt regime — Comrade Browder in his present writings and policies leaps to the revisionist conclusion, especially after the Teheran agreement, that American capitalism and its capitalist class, including reactionary finance capital, has in some mysterious way become progressive.

Upon this false basis, Comrade Browder proceeds to build up a capitalist utopia in his book, Teheran: Our Path in War and Peace, in which he sees the “enlightened” great capitalists of this country, acting in “their true class interest,” leading our country and the world into an era of unprecedented democracy, industrial expansion and mass well-being. With this rosy picture in mind, he calls upon the workers to join hands harmoniously with the capitalist class in realizing it. He tries to stretch postwar nati

onal unity to include reactionary finance capital. All of which fantasy, of course, would boll down in reality to the workers in this country subordinating themselves to a more intensified exploitation at home, to the world being soon dragged into a fresh growth of fascism and a new world war.

Comrade Browder's revisionist ideas violate the most fundamental principle of Marxism-Leninism. They are more akin to the bourgeois notions of Eric Johnston than to the scientific principles of Marx and Lenin. As I said in my letter of January 20, 1944, to the National Committee, “In this (Browder's) picture, American imperialism virtually disappears, there remains hardly a trace of the class struggle, and Socialism plays practically no role whatever.” Browder's revisionism, while it goes in the general Social-Democratic direction of subordinating the workers to capitalist domination, is actually not Social-Democratic, but bourgeois liberal.
http://mltoday.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=144&Itemid=47

anaxarchos
01-07-2009, 11:54 PM
Any chance for a brief synopsis of a Fosterite?


http://www.marxists.org/glossary/people/f/pics/foster-william.jpg

William Z. Foster - arguably among the most important labor leaders and most important Socialists in American history. Born in 1881 and went to work at the age of ten, working every dirty industrial job known to turn-of-the-century America. Joined the Socialist Party in 1901 until thrown out for being too left-wing in 1909. Joined the I.W.W. (Industrial Workers of the World) and led the Spokane Free Speech Strike. Became one of the most important I.W.W. leaders alongside Gurley Flynn and Big Bill Heywood. Lost faith in the I.W.W.'s "Independent Unionism" and advocated joining the AFL, no matter how backward that organization was. Formed the Syndicalist League of North America in 1912 (which included Tom Mooney and James Cannon). Became a general organizer of the AFL in 1915. Led the Chicago Meat-packers strikes of 1917. Led the Steel Organizing Committee in 1918 and the Great Steel Strike of 1919. In two years, the committee went from zero to 350,000 steel workers and 250,000 went out on strike. This was the real genesis of the CIO.

He formed the Trade Union Education League (TUEL) in 1921 and immediately led it into the Railway Shopmen's strike of 1922. He joined the Communist Party in 1923. He was instrumental also in the formation of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party in the same year, though Foster mistrusted electoral politics.

Being a "Fosterite" means two very different things: On the one hand, he was a major leader of the Communist Party, USA, its general secretary from 1929 to 1932 and again from 1945 to 1957. In the course of all that, he presided over some tumultuous times, took a few dozen hard-ass positions, and apparently wasn't completely suited to the Party leadership role. Most of these are long forgotten and were never really known to people like me.

On the labor side, on the other hand, Foster was the inventor of the cult of "The Organizer". This is the sense in which I used the term "Fosterite". A Fosterite was simply an acolyte of the cult.

A monk-hood - part Franciscan and part Jesuit (culturally), - totally incorruptible, absolutely tireless, completely hostile to the concept of "self", taken to a double vow of extreme poverty, moving from union to union and industry to industry as easily as region to region, most often alone, alien to the idea of sleep, living in one flop house to the next - or on somebody's couch - often substituting a bottle for three meals, completely antithetical to academic or part-time socialism but by no means anti-intellectual, sporting a 10000 yard stare and living by experience and will power alone - everything good that ever happened in the Labor Movement, every strike and every single struggle was because of them.

They were the reason we got so far in the Labor Movement in the United States and the cult was still alive in the 1970s (and in vestiges, to this day). There were thousands of them... America's Rakhmetovki - Nechayev but without his double dealing and cynicism... or his firepower.

And William Z. created it all... and led it by example. Three quarters of them never even heard of him, but it didn't mean nothin'. He was the man.

Kid of the Black Hole
01-08-2009, 09:49 AM
Hard to find something that rightly depicts all of what Rakhmetov represented but here is a start. I've always thought of him as Rambo combined with a Zen Master.


Rakhmétov. Rakhmetov was created by Nikolai Chernyshevsky and appeared in Chto Delat? (What is to be done?) (1862-1863) Chernyshevsky (1828-1889) was a Russian socialist, reformer, and writer; he wrote for the radical journal Contemporary. What is to be done? was his most influential work, though, giving him the reputation as a forerunner of the Russian revolutionary movement as well as a primary influence on Dostoevsky, Notes from the Underground, and Crime and Punishment.

Rakhmetov is not the main character of What is to be done?, but is probably the most important character. (The novel, I should add, is heavy sledding, and not to be picked up lightly). Rakhmetov is, to quote one critic, "the emerging hero of history's and to some extent the novel's future." Rakhmetov is the descendant of a famous Russian family, renowned since the thirteenth century for their heroics, whether as boyars, crown officers, or generals-in-chief. Rakhmetov himself is the next-to-youngest child of eight, and so only has a small portion of the family's estates on the Medvyeditsa River. Rakhmetov, though, does not live the life of a young lordling, despite owning over four hundred serfs. Rakhmetov became a student in St. Petersburg and read widely, particularly in philosophy.

Rakhmetov is an exceptional person in many ways. Among the boatmen of the Volga Rakhmetov is known as "Nikitushka Lomof," after the legendarily huge and strong boatman hero. Rakhmetov wasn't born strong, but at age seventeen decided to improve himself, and so spent hours practicing gymnastics. Rakhmetov also spent time as a "common laborer," improving his physical strength, and feeding himself a special diet. The result was that he became exceptionally, almost superhumanly, strong. (At one point he catches the axle of a runaway wagon and holds it for long enough to stop the horses). He read widely, in philosophy, science, and literature, always trying to improve his mind and become as knowledgeable as possible. He traveled across Europe and North America, studying other languages, cultures, and peoples.

The result is that Rakhmetov becomes, in the words of a critic, "the prototype of hard-headed materialism and pragmatism, of total dissatisfaction with the government, and of the self-sacrificing nobility of spirit that was the ideal of many of the radical intelligentsia." Rakhmetov is a rationalist and ascetic who prepares himself for total and complete revolution against the Czarist regime. He is, in other words, a revolutionary Doc Savage.

http://www.geocities.com/jessnevins/vicr.html

m pyre
01-08-2009, 04:30 PM
You'll of course hafta pardon my typically in-depth and scholarly response, but IIRC it was Bill Foster who bitch-slapped that pussy Earl Browder...

EDIT, yep:

Our Party does not live in a political vacuum. It is exposed to all the illusions and pressures of capitalism; hence it should surprise no Marxist that the present drive of American imperialism for world power should find certain echoes within the ranks of the Party. The tragedy of the situation is that it is precisely Comrade Browder who is giving voice to these imperialist illusions in our Party, especially with regrard to the postwar situation. And he is doing this under elaborate pretenses of a discerning and flexible Marxism-Leninism.

In the postwar world, which will face gigantic problems of industrial reconstruction and development, the United States, with its tremendous economic resources, is bound to play a very important role. What Comrade Browder does not see, however, is that if the role of the United States is to help in the realization of the programs of Moscow, Teheran and Yalta, this can only be accomplished if the broad masses of this country, especially the trade union movement, are very much on the alert to see to it that imperialist trends upon the part of our Government and the great capitalists are curbed and democratic policies imposed. The great goals of victory over fascism and the achievement of a lasting peace, laid down at Moscow, Teheran and Yalta, can be realized, but only upon the basis of eternal vigilance by the combined democratic forces of the world. Browder, contrary to this, is quite willing to leave the whole matter to the “intelligence” and “enlightened” self-interest of the big capitalists.

(et cetera et cetera)

Comrade Browder's revisionist ideas violate the most fundamental principle of Marxism-Leninism. They are more akin to the bourgeois notions of Eric Johnston than to the scientific principles of Marx and Lenin. As I said in my letter of January 20, 1944, to the National Committee, “In this (Browder's) picture, American imperialism virtually disappears, there remains hardly a trace of the class struggle, and Socialism plays practically no role whatever.” Browder's revisionism, while it goes in the general Social-Democratic direction of subordinating the workers to capitalist domination, is actually not Social-Democratic, but bourgeois liberal.
http://mltoday.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=144&Itemid=47


I like this Foster guy. Looks like I've got some research to do.

Thanks Pinko.



A monk-hood - part Franciscan and part Jesuit (culturally), - totally incorruptible, absolutely tireless, completely hostile to the concept of "self", taken to a double vow of extreme poverty, moving from union to union and industry to industry as easily as region to region, most often alone, alien to the idea of sleep, living in one flop house to the next - or on somebody's couch - often substituting a bottle for three meals, completely antithetical to academic or part-time socialism but by no means anti-intellectual, sporting a 10000 yard stare and living by experience and will power alone - everything good that ever happened in the Labor Movement, every strike and every single struggle was because of them.

Even better. Thanks anaxarchos.

Pinko
01-08-2009, 06:04 PM
Even better. Thanks anaxarchos.


"even better" is a foregone conclusion, heh.

Two Americas
01-08-2009, 07:44 PM
http://www.marxists.org/archive/foster/index.htm

Kid of the Black Hole
01-08-2009, 08:11 PM
Hey guys

Apropos of both this thread and the Purging Stalin thread, I'd say his book is worth looking at. I've not dug into it that much yet myself

Toward Soviet America

http://ia331302.us.archive.org/1/items/towardsovietamer00fostrich/towardsovietamer00fostrich_bw.pdf


PREFACE
THERE is a great and growing mass demand in this
country to know just what is the Communist party
and its program. The masses of toilers, suffering
under the burdens of the crisis, are keenly discontented
and want to find a way out of their intolerable
situation. They are alarmed at the depth,
length and general severity of the crisis. They begin
to realize that "there is something rotten in
Denmark," that there are fundamental flaws in the
capitalist system. Their growing realization of
this is further strengthened as they see the spectacular
rise of Socialism in the Soviet Union. The
masses are beginning rightly to sense that Communism
has an important message for the human race,
and they want to know what it is.
Capitalism is deeply anxious that the masses do
not get this message. Hence, from the outset it
has carried on a campaign of falsification of the
Russian revolution entirely without parallel in history.
There has been a veritable ocean of lies in the
capitalist press against the U.S.S.R. The American
Federation of Labor leadership and the Socialist
party, defenders of the capitalist system, have
outdone even the capitalists themselves in this
vi PREFACE
wholesale vilification. The effort of the capitalists
and their labor lieutenants has been to set off the
Communists as willful enemies and destroyers of
the human race. But the masses begin to see
through this misrepresentation and they want to
know the truth.
The present book is an attempt to meet this mass
demand by a plain statement of Communist policy,
avoiding technical complexities and theoretical
elaboration. It outlines simply the program,
strength, strategy and perspectives of the Communist
party of the United States. It undertakes
to point out what is the matter with capitalism and
what must be done about it. It indicates where
America is heading and it makes a practical application
of the lessons of the Russian revolution to
the situation in this country. Its central purpose
is to explain to the oppressed and exploited masses
of workers and poor farmers how, under the leadership
of the Communist party, they can best protect
themselves now, and in due season cut their way
out of the capitalist jungle to Socialism.
WM. Z. FOSTER
New York City
May 1, 1932

anaxarchos
01-09-2009, 12:38 AM
http://www.marxists.org/archive/foster/index.htm


This is useful, Mike, thanks. I didn't know they had gathered his work. He's not the best writer but you get a sense of him easily. The Kid has been promising to go over the book, Them and Us which is the story of UE. It was written by Jim Matles who was among the more important of the acolytes and who was Director of Organizing for UE from the beginning. UE was a University of Fosterism. Not all of them (or even a majority) were Communists. They covered the spectrum and a (very) few were apolitical... but on the matter of the brother and sisterhood, they were indistinguishable from one another.

It was in the 1930s that Foster's work really took hold. Other Fosterites were responsible for Flint (and the San Francisco General Strike, and Little Steel, and Harlan County, and, and, and...)

http://www.noonewatching.com/archives/2006/11/egflynn.jpg
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn

Two Americas
01-09-2009, 01:39 AM
http://www.marxists.org/archive/foster/index.htm


This is useful, Mike, thanks. I didn't know they had gathered his work. He's not the best writer but you get a sense of him easily. The Kid has been promising to go over the book, Them and Us which is the story of UE. It was written by Jim Matles who was among the more important of the acolytes and who was Director of Organizing for UE from the beginning. UE was a University of Fosterism. Not all of them (or even a majority) were Communists. They covered the spectrum and a (very) few were apolitical... but on the matter of the brother and sisterhood, they were indistinguishable from one another.

It was in the 1930s that Foster's work really took hold. Other Fosterites were responsible for Flint (and the San Francisco General Strike, and Little Steel, and Harlan County, and, and, and...)

http://www.noonewatching.com/archives/2006/11/egflynn.jpg
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn


I read through the archives a while back, but never posted anything because as you say he is not the best writer. Fascinating read, though.

Kid of the Black Hole
01-09-2009, 08:27 AM
http://www.marxists.org/archive/foster/index.htm


This is useful, Mike, thanks. I didn't know they had gathered his work. He's not the best writer but you get a sense of him easily. The Kid has been promising to go over the book, Them and Us which is the story of UE. It was written by Jim Matles who was among the more important of the acolytes and who was Director of Organizing for UE from the beginning. UE was a University of Fosterism. Not all of them (or even a majority) were Communists. They covered the spectrum and a (very) few were apolitical... but on the matter of the brother and sisterhood, they were indistinguishable from one another.

It was in the 1930s that Foster's work really took hold. Other Fosterites were responsible for Flint (and the San Francisco General Strike, and Little Steel, and Harlan County, and, and, and...)

http://www.noonewatching.com/archives/2006/11/egflynn.jpg
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn


I'm still doing my homework on this

TBF
01-09-2009, 10:26 AM
The music leaves a little to be desired but the video is excellent - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHNwKN5D-Co

m pyre
01-09-2009, 12:50 PM
"even better" is a foregone conclusion, heh.

Yes, I was risking being the Minister of the Department of Redundancy Duplication Department with that one, eh?

anaxarchos
01-09-2009, 01:40 PM
The music leaves a little to be desired but the video is excellent - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHNwKN5D-Co





Thank you.

"You can't dig coal with bayonets..."

That is probably the overwhelming unknown truth of our times.

Perhaps chanting that line to burning incense would help.

On Edit: I once picked up a used book (for a quarter, probably) at some odd place. It was a straight transcript of Flynn's trial - not even propaganda (theirs or ours); just dry dry dry. It sat on a table for a couple of months and I was cleaning up one day and ran across it (with the intention of storing it)... but, I made the mistake of opening it and WHAM, I lost two days of my life - it had to be cover to cover.

Fifteen years later, I ran across the same book by accident in a box. This time, though... I'm a lot wiser. I remembered what had happened the last time so I gingerly picked it up with two fingers and WHAM.

Four days... I haven't seen it for a while but I hope I buried it.

choppedliver
01-09-2009, 11:34 PM
He is also sort of the perfect anti-Foster, which makes it tough for guys like me who are unapologetic Fosterites.




Great stuff in this thread thanks to all, not completely clear as to why Cannon is the perfect Anti-Foster yet...a little more, if possible??

choppedliver
01-09-2009, 11:42 PM
The music leaves a little to be desired but the video is excellent - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHNwKN5D-Co




Actually, I loved the music! TBF, good spoonin' tune...

Kid of the Black Hole
01-10-2009, 12:26 AM
He is also sort of the perfect anti-Foster, which makes it tough for guys like me who are unapologetic Fosterites.




Great stuff in this thread thanks to all, not completely clear as to why Cannon is the perfect Anti-Foster yet...a little more, if possible??


Anax mentions that Cannon bore the predigree of the pre-WWI, which revolved around fighting for industrial unionism vs the old time system of craft unionism. I don't know how big of a role this plays in it.

However, Foster organized. Cannon organized..if everything met with his approval and was up to his discerning standards. Foster organized huge strikes. Cannon organized small cliques. Foster stayed true to the cause during incredibly trying times, Cannon turned Trot the first time he ever read Trotsky..

I'm not sure which of those Anax had in mind, but those are some starting points

anaxarchos
01-10-2009, 01:05 AM
He is also sort of the perfect anti-Foster, which makes it tough for guys like me who are unapologetic Fosterites.




Great stuff in this thread thanks to all, not completely clear as to why Cannon is the perfect Anti-Foster yet...a little more, if possible??


Anax mentions that Cannon bore the predigree of the pre-WWI, which revolved around fighting for industrial unionism vs the old time system of craft unionism. I don't know how big of a role this plays in it.

However, Foster organized. Cannon organized..if everything met with his approval and was up to his discerning standards. Foster organized huge strikes. Cannon organized small cliques. Foster stayed true to the cause during incredibly trying times, Cannon turned Trot the first time he ever read Trotsky..

I'm not sure which of those Anax had in mind, but those are some starting points


Yes... That is a good start and there are many others. Cannon and Foster were comrades (which is why I brought him up in the first place) and they were allied for a long time. They had somewhat similar backgrounds and often a common attitude. But, they ended up completely alien to one another. Foster founded a generation of "organizers"; Cannon of "splitters". Foster built gigantic organizations of the working class; Cannon built tiny organizations of intellectuals. Foster was often "wrong"; Cannon was never "wrong"... and so on. One represents the working class and the other the radical middle class, although both came from the same "place" (welcome to America).

Don't get me wrong. I don't think this was because Cannon was a Trotskyist - just the opposite, I think he was a Trotskyist because of this. Earl Browder was in the Communist Party until he was thrown out but he was much more like Cannon.

Marxism, on discovery, always appears as the most powerful thing one could ever trip across... Its precision and rigor are very demanding. The problem is that it takes a while (sometimes forever) to decide what "big things" are actually trivial and what trivial things are all important. It is always about a perspective from the standpoint of class and the class-struggle and, oddly enough, "becoming a Marxist" doesn't really help all that much (at least on this subject). This is the Reed soldier story that Mike likes so much.

The above is also the exact American equivalent of our Russian Narodniki story, but without the conclusion - sort of an unfinished symphony.

http://weblogs.elearning.ubc.ca/ross/paris_commune_po1.jpg

blindpig
01-10-2009, 09:09 AM
Yes... That is a good start and there are many others. Cannon and Foster were comrades (which is why I brought him up in the first place) and they were allied for a long time. They had somewhat similar backgrounds and often a common attitude. But, they ended up completely alien to one another. Foster founded a generation of "organizers"; Cannon of "splitters". Foster built gigantic organizations of the working class; Cannon built tiny organizations of intellectuals. Foster was often "wrong"; Cannon was never "wrong"... and so on. One represents the working class and the other the radical middle class, although both came from the same "place" (welcome to America).

Don't get me wrong. I don't think this was because Cannon was a Trotskyist - just the opposite, I think he was a Trotskyist because of this. Earl Browder was in the Communist Party until he was thrown out but he was much more like Cannon.

That explains the problem with the Trots very nicely. I still have a need to understand Trotsky himself, just based on my reading of the History it is not apparent to me that he shared this disability with his followers.

vampire squid
01-10-2009, 01:19 PM
another thing about Trotskyites is their eurocentrism. it's not that there's no "perfect revolution" for them — that's not the problem: the problem is that white europeans aren't the ones conducting those revolutions, because they're not on imperialism's receiving end...meanwhile, in the third world, to the severe pooh-poohing of the trotskyite, "there is the tendency of the masses, who are more oppressed than before and who bear the whole brunt of imperialist wars, to cast off this yoke and to overthrow the bourgeoisie."

why do you think so many trotskyites blossomed into neo-cons? it's no fluke. trotskyites, too, entertain the notion that imperialism has a progressive role in the world; before you reach the socialist phase, you must pass through the liberal democracy phase, ad infinitum ...


In the first place, it would have been more correct to say that the entire history of mankind is governed by the law of uneven development. Capitalism finds various sections of mankind at different stages of development, each with its profound internal contradictions. The extreme diversity in the levels attained, and the extraordinary unevenness in the rate of development of the different sections of mankind during the various epochs, serve as the starting point of capitalism. Capitalism gains mastery only gradually over the inherited unevenness, breaking and altering it, employing therein its own means and methods. In contrast to the economic systems which preceded it, capitalism inherently and constantly aims at economic expansion, at the penetration of new territories, the surmounting of economic differences, the conversion of self- sufficient provincial and national economies into a system of financial interrelationships. Thereby it brings about their rapprochement and equalizes the economic and cultural levels of the most progressive and the most backward countries. Without this main process, it would be impossible to conceive of the relative leveling out, first, of Europe with Great Britain, and then, of America with Europe; the industrialization of the colonies, the diminishing gap between India and Great Britain, and all the consequences arising from the enumerated processes upon which is based not only the program of the Communist International but also its very existence.
GB and India, equalizing?? ha-ha, it is to laugh. GB deindustrialized india. trotsky should have known better.

blindpig
01-10-2009, 01:45 PM
another thing about Trotskyites is their eurocentrism. it's not that there's no "perfect revolution" for them — that's not the problem: the problem is that white europeans aren't the ones conducting those revolutions, because they're not on imperialism's receiving end...meanwhile, in the third world, to the severe pooh-poohing of the trotskyite, "there is the tendency of the masses, who are more oppressed than before and who bear the whole brunt of imperialist wars, to cast off this yoke and to overthrow the bourgeoisie."

why do you think so many trotskyites blossomed into neo-cons? it's no fluke. trotskyites, too, entertain the notion that imperialism has a progressive role in the world; before you reach the socialist phase, you must pass through the liberal democracy phase, ad infinitum ...


In the first place, it would have been more correct to say that the entire history of mankind is governed by the law of uneven development. Capitalism finds various sections of mankind at different stages of development, each with its profound internal contradictions. The extreme diversity in the levels attained, and the extraordinary unevenness in the rate of development of the different sections of mankind during the various epochs, serve as the starting point of capitalism. Capitalism gains mastery only gradually over the inherited unevenness, breaking and altering it, employing therein its own means and methods. In contrast to the economic systems which preceded it, capitalism inherently and constantly aims at economic expansion, at the penetration of new territories, the surmounting of economic differences, the conversion of self- sufficient provincial and national economies into a system of financial interrelationships. Thereby it brings about their rapprochement and equalizes the economic and cultural levels of the most progressive and the most backward countries. Without this main process, it would be impossible to conceive of the relative leveling out, first, of Europe with Great Britain, and then, of America with Europe; the industrialization of the colonies, the diminishing gap between India and Great Britain, and all the consequences arising from the enumerated processes upon which is based not only the program of the Communist International but also its very existence.
GB and India, equalizing?? ha-ha, it is to laugh. GB deindustrialized india. trotsky should have known better.


Well, yes, that is indeed hooey. And since Trotsky was undeniably a smart dude then what was the motivation of this pretzel logic?

Kid of the Black Hole
01-10-2009, 01:54 PM
Hey squid,

This is really easy to see in the paternalism of today's Trot enclaves, which are --shockingly (not!) -- as small, sectarian and isolated as ever. Right now, they have their target sights set on Hamas, however much they dress it up in mealy-mouthed equivocating about "support". Last year it was taking cheap shots at Ahmadinejad and categorically condeming FARC.

On the historical front they have to remind us about how there was "real", "principled" Trot resistance in Spain vs Franco -- they were the ones against the Popular Front, naturally. And Solidarity in Poland -- a movement for "real" democracy even though it was lead by the Church.

They're kind of confused about Bolivia -- MAS sounds like something they want to criticize, but Morales looks like he might be one of theirs..

If everyone would just take their advice the world would be a much better place..for the bourgeoisie

vampire squid
01-10-2009, 01:59 PM
Well, yes, that is indeed hooey. And since Trotsky was undeniably a smart dude then what was the motivation of this pretzel logic?

racism? or maybe he & his disciples gave way too much credence to m&e's views on "free trade" from the 40s & 50s that they later revised or rejected.

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1132/is_v35/ai_3070234/print?tag=artBody;col1.

vampire squid
01-10-2009, 02:10 PM
If everyone would just take their advice the world would be a much better place..for the bourgeoisie
reading the opinions of trotskyites is often as infuriating as reading the fucking economist! they seem like two sides of the same tarnished coin, honestly.

Two Americas
01-10-2009, 04:03 PM
Foster -


The Thieving Railroads

The supreme need of railroad men at the present time is a consolidation of our many labor organizations into one compact body. The power of the companies has become so enormous, their solidarity so intense, and their greed so voracious, that the prevailing type of federated craft unionism is no longer able to cope with the situation. If we are to maintain existing labor conditions, not to speak of making further advances, we must arrive at a more solidified form of organization. The tremendous latent power of the great army of railroad workers will have to be fully developed. This can be done successfully only by the amalgamation of the sixteen principal railroad craft unions into one industrial union covering every branch of the railroad service.

...

This anti-union campaign is, of course, calculated to reduce railroad workers to utter helplessness so that we may be ruthlessly exploited by the railroad owners. The latter are in business solely for profit. In their greed to make money they consider all means legitimate. They are the biggest single gang of thieves in the world. Humanity and fair play cut no figure with them. So long as their own profits are forthcoming they care not a rap for the sufferings of their workers. That is why they have so bitterly fought every working improvement in the railroad industry; collective bargaining, better wages, shorter hours, the sixteen-hour law, the safety appliance laws, etc. Because it paid them well, they were entirely content to have their workers exhausted by from 25 to 60-hour runs, abused like dogs by tyrannical foremen, pauperized by low wages, destroyed by piecework systems, crushed to death by faulty equipment, etc., etc. The only protection the workers have had from the most savage exploitation, the sole thing that has kept us from sinking into complete degradation is our trade unions. These organizations have achieved results entirely upon the basis of the amount of power they have been able to exert. The railroad owners can appreciate no other argument than that of might.

...

It would be wrong, however, to leave the impression that the railroad magnates have confined their efforts to exploiting Labor and defrauding the Government. That would be to misrepresent their nefarious business ethics. Their policy is to grab everything in sight that is not nailed down, no matter whom it may belong to. They are impartial in the matter. They rob each other as freely as they do outsiders. A time-honored device to do this is for the controlling clique in a company to milk the rest of the stockholders (and thus the people at large) by setting up an outside company, owned by themselves, to do construction and repair work for the parent railroad and then voting it contracts at fabulous prices. Thus the grafters have sucked in millions and millions of dollars in ill-gotten gains, and thus many a railroad has been bled white, thrown into a receiver’s hands and left for the people to re-finance. We see the same policy in operation at the present time, with the railroads letting out immense quantities of work to “independent” equipment companies while their own shops and workers stand idle.

Bitter, dog-eat-dog wars have raged between rival interests for many years over the control of the railroads. In these brutal encounters the law of fang and claw prevail. Everything from petty larceny to murder is considered legitimate. The struggle for the Erie was typical: Originally this road was built by public subscription, but as usual a bunch of thieves got title to it. They sucked it dry with the customary methods, and finally lost it to one Daniel Drew by a mortgage foreclosure. Drew used the road for speculative purposes, making millions. But the greedy Vanderbilt, whom Gustavus Myers calls “the foremost blackmailer of his time, the plunderer of the National Treasury in the Civil War, the arch-briber and corruptionist,” outwitted him, ruined him and seized the road. He made the mistake, however, of putting Drew, Jay Gould and Jim Fisk in charge of it. These worthies promptly double-crossed him and, by an illegal issue of stock, got control. Vanderbilt’s crooked judge thereupon issued an order against them. But they fled his jurisdiction with $7,000,000 in cash, the proceeds of their robbery. Later on Gould and Fisk bribed the New York Legislature for $500,000 to make their stock issue legal. This left them masters of the situation. Then, freed from the threat of jail, they turned on their partner, Drew, and bankrupted him. Some time afterward Fisk was shot, and finally Gould was ousted by an English syndicate that, copying Gould’s methods, spent $750,000 in bribery to do the job. Eventually the road fell into the grip of the great railroad octopus, Morgan & Co., and there it still remains. For these jungle fights, which raged everywhere, of course the workers had to pay the bill.

When the workers demand a few cents more per hour in wages the railroad companies always raise a howl about the dire things that will happen to the widow and orphan stockholders. But in their own brutal struggles for financial mastery they show no mercy to these elements. The robbery of the widow Colton was a case in point: Colonel Colton, her husband, was one of the four men who engineered the notorious Central Pacific land-grabbing, stock-jobbing steals for many years. It might have been thought that when he died his three partners in guilt would have shown his widow some consideration. But the principles of humanity never trouble railroad magnates. True to their kind, and like a pack of wolves rending one of their number that has fallen, the three remaining partners stole almost the last cent Mrs. Colton had. To do this they had to bribe her confidential adviser, her lawyer and a judge. But such matters are only details in the day’s work of railroad owners.

...

A favorite thieving device is the watering of railroad company stocks. Every worker should know how this chicanery is operated. Let us explain it briefly: Suppose, for instance, a certain railroad is capitalized at $100,000,000. To water its stock the controlling capitalists, on the pretext of improving the property, issue, say, another $100,000,000 of stock. Thus the burden of the industry is doubled. Thereafter it has to pay dividends upon $200,000,000 instead of $100,000,000. The advantages to the crooks engineering the hocus-pocus are many. For one thing they are enabled to steal scores of millions at a blow; and another is that the resultant cutting of the dividend rate (which in the case cited would be 50 per cent) puts the road in the position of being poverty-stricken and furnishes an excellent excuse for beating down wages and screwing up passenger and freight rates. When, however, through wage-cutting, rate-raising and the natural increase in business, the dividend rate rises on the watered stock, then the crooks inject more water and the whole process is gone over again.

...

The trade unions are more than merely a means to win a few cents an hour more in wages or a few minutes a day less of work; they are battalions of an army of emancipation in the making. The greedy railroad autocracy is intolerable. It must go, and along with it the balance of the parasitic capitalist class. Private property in social necessities must be abolished root and branch. There is no other cure for our industrial troubles. Then, and only then, will war, poverty and exploitation come to an end. To do this great work is the supreme mission of the labor movement. At heart and in their daily action the trade unions are revolutionary. Their unchangeable policy is to withhold from the exploiters all they have the power to. In these days, when they are weak in numbers and discipline, they have to content themselves with petty achievements. But they are constantly growing in st

rength and understanding, and the day will surely come when they will have the great masses of workers organized and instructed in their true interests. That hour will sound the death knell of capitalism. Then they will pit their enormous organization against the parasitic employing class, end the wages system forever and set up the long-hoped-for era of social justice. That is the true meaning of the trade union movement.

I don't mean to bury people with a wall of text here, but this is well worth reading. Foster's analysis of the railroad industry, and the machinations of the capitalists to rob the people and suppress labor is so concise and powerful that I encourage eevryone to read this.

http://www.marxists.org/archive/foster/1921/rrns.htm

anaxarchos
01-11-2009, 12:24 AM
I don't mean to bury people with a wall of text here, but this is well worth reading. Foster's analysis of the railroad industry, and the machinations of the capitalists to rob the people and suppress labor is so concise and powerful that I encourage everyone to read this.

http://www.marxists.org/archive/foster/1921/rrns.htm


The role of the Railroads in American economic and political history is hard to overstate. They were central to just about everything, from "westward expansion", to the original formation of truly sizable capital soon transformed into finance capital, and to the genesis of the trusts, monopolies, and robber barons. The railroads are in the middle of it all and demonstrate the interweaving of capital, government, and politics in America from the very moment that it was transformed from a nation of small farmers and slave holders into an industrial state. The U.S. was the first true State Capitalist nation-state, the exact opposite of the mythology of individual enterprise and the like which was really produced to help labor recruitment in the starving rural backwaters of Europe. All of it traveled on ribbons of iron rails, both literally and figuratively.

More than this, there is a direct analogy between the railroad workers and today's autoworkers. The railroad workers rose to be the first important labor aristocracy, setting the standard for the first (and much smaller) "middle-class". When the railroad workers were crushed and discarded, that "middle class" went down alongside them, with nary a whimper. None of it gets its proper play in history because other 'great things' were doin'... not just war but also the substitution of asphalt for iron.

http://www.dreamingaloud.com/Gallerys/images/EndLine2.jpg

Two Americas
01-11-2009, 01:56 AM
The role of the Railroads in American economic and political history is hard to overstate. They were central to just about everything, from "westward expansion", to the original formation of truly sizable capital soon transformed into finance capital, and to the genesis of the trusts, monopolies, and robber barons. The railroads are in the middle of it all and demonstrate the interweaving of capital, government, and politics in America from the very moment that it was transformed from a nation of small farmers and slave holders into an industrial state. The U.S. was the first true State Capitalist nation-state, the exact opposite of the mythology of individual enterprise and the like which was really produced to help labor recruitment in the starving rural backwaters of Europe. All of it traveled on ribbons of iron rails, both literally and figuratively.

More than this, there is a direct analogy between the railroad workers and today's autoworkers. The railroad workers rose to be the first important labor aristocracy, setting the standard for the first (and much smaller) "middle-class". When the railroad workers were crushed and discarded, that "middle class" went down alongside them, with nary a whimper. None of it gets its proper play in history because other 'great things' were doin'... not just war but also the substitution of asphalt for iron.

http://www.dreamingaloud.com/Gallerys/images/EndLine2.jpg


Unlike in Europe, rail lines were not so much built to where the towns were, rather the towns located themselves where the rail lines were, especially true the farther west you go.

I spent a lot of time as a kid down by the tracks. I had a 1959 copy of the Official Guide to the Railroads that I would read at night by flashlight for hours and hours planning the next trip. It contained all of the routes and passenger schedules, and was about 4 inches thick with very thin paper pages. There was hardly a town in the country you couldn't catch a train to.

I got to know the crews and got hundreds of rides in the locomotive or the caboose, often fairly long distances. I got the chance to see the last of the steam locomotives, wooden cabooses that were like homes on wheels with bunks and stoves, the last mixed trains. Once in a while I hopped a freight, but that was brutal and if I could get a ride from a crew that was much preferred. Then I would save lawn mowing, snow shoveling, and paper route money and buy passenger tickets, including a few cross-country trips. If I remember correctly, I paid $27 for a cross country ticket. That seemed like a fortune.

On the passenger trains, I would hang out with the dining car crew or the sleeping car crew and listen to their stories. Crews were segregated, with enginemen, firemen, brakemen and conductors all white, as well as the Maitre D on the dining car, while the porters, waiters and cooks were all Black. Many of the guys were from small towns in the South, and rarely got back home. I remember them telling me that for "a colored fellow, you understand" there were only three good options - go North and work in the plants; join the army; work the railroad. Of those, working the railroad was the best option, and they told me there were two things that got instant respect back home - an army uniform or a Pullman porter uniform.

Riding the freights out of Detroit, the guys were on a 16 on and 16 off work schedule. Depending on which railroad that might mean out to Battle Creek or Kalamazoo or Fort Wayne with one train, and then back with another. Crews working out of St. Louis and Chicago worked the other direction and they swapped trains at the half way point. That was the Grand Trunk, the Michigan Central and the Wabash. The B&O ran to Dayton, the C&O to Grand Rapids. Then there were the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National, running to various towns in Ontario. The Canadian National was the last steam holdout, and a bus ride to Windsor and you could catch those trains. I rode in the cab of several big Canadian steam locomotives. The C&O, New York Central and CP ran trains through the tunnel to Windsor, while the Wabash and GTW ferried their trains across the river.

I spent many an hour in little stations watching the clerk "work the key" typing out and deciphering Morse, and hearing the stories. Orders, called "flimsies," to moving trains were passed up to the crew with a wand, a long Y shaped stick with the order ties between the two forks. A crew member would lean out of the side of the train with his arm outstretched and when his arm hit the order the string would break and wrap around his arm and he could pull in the orders. Orders the other direction, from the train, were wrapped a round a small lead weight and tossed from the train. Mail bags were snatched and dropped on the fly, too, and that was pretty dramatic.

I saw the last of the "milk runs" - trains brought fresh milk into the city every morning from outlying farms. Produce cars - reefers - and stock cars were still common. In Detroit there were always lots of coal and ore trains, as well as gondolas full of steel stock - coils and bars, and lots of scrap steel loads. The hot shots carried new automobiles out. Those were the premiere trains.

Class awareness was pretty much universal among railroad men, and I learned very young that it was no joking matter. A man's livelihood, safety and self-respect depended upon the Brotherhood. It was a constant topic of conversation - the contract, work rules and what management was up to.