Log in

View Full Version : What is 'Civil Society'?



chlamor
11-06-2007, 09:40 PM
What is 'Civil Society'?

After the break up of the Soviet Union most 'left intellectuals' have been gripped with the fever of Civil Society. From Non-Governmental Organisations and Human Rights Groups to academics and activists, the so called 'democratic' opposition has taken recourse to the concept of Civil Society to fight the evils of the modern world. However, few have questioned, and others have deliberately not spoken about, what the concept Civil Society actually means.

The French and American Revolutions are recognised as the corner stones of Democracy and Civil Society. The ideological framework developed during these bourgeois democratic revolutions is the accepted foundation of Civil Society.

According to the constitutions formed during the French and American revolutions, Civil Society is based on six tenets: Property, Equality, Liberty, Security, Secularism, and the Free Press. For example, in The Declaration of the Rights of Man, Article 2 defines natural inviolable rights as Equality, Liberty, Security, Property. At first glance these concepts appear to be the embodiment of justice. Indeed, that is what is incessantly preached by top journals to daily newspapers. However, a closer look reveals that Civil Society goes no further than the rule of the capitalist class. In a word, Civil Society is a euphemism for the dictatorship of the capitalist class.


Property

The central tenet of Civil Society is the inviolability of private property. For example, Article 16, Constitution of 1793: "The right of property is the right which belongs to all citizens to enjoy and dispose at will of their goods and revenues, the fruit of their work and industry." This tenet is true of all constitutions premised on civil society.

Marx says: "Thus, the right of man to property is the right to enjoy his possessions and dispose of the same arbitrarily, without regard for other men, independently from society, the right of selfishness. It is the former individual freedom together with its latter application that forms the basis of Civil Society. It leads man to see in other men not the realisation but the limitation of his own freedom."

Thus, the use of private property at will, in other words, in utter disregard for the rest of mankind, is enshrined in the very constitutions of bourgeois democracy and civil society. The selfish use of resources is a central tenet of civil society.

We understand from a study of economics that private property obeys certain laws of development. What interests us is the law of concentration of capital: the fact that the richest 3 individuals have more money than 600,000,000 people in the world. It is clear that this type of growing inequality does not contradict the tenet of private property.

Equality

Civil Society defines the concept of equality as (Article 3, Constitution of 1795): "Equality consists of the fact that the law is the same for all, whether it protects or punishes."

In other words, 'equality' in Civil Society consists in 'equality before the law' but not equality of opportunity. In other words, it is equality in the purely legal sense and not in the economic or human sense. Equality within Civil Society, therefore, is entirely compatible with vast and growing economic disparity, concentration of wealth, power, and privilege. In fact it would be more correct to say that the concept of 'equality' touted by Civil Society is premised on economic inequality since Civil Society itself is premised on private property. One must ask the question 'in what sense can we talk about liberty in such a society?'

Liberty

The grand word 'Liberty' conveys a sense of freedom from exploitation. However, this notion is entirely incorrect. According to Article 6: "Liberty is the power that belongs to man to do anything that does not infringe on the right of someone else." Similarly according to the Declaration of the Rights of Man of 1791 "Liberty consists in the power of doing anything that does not harm others" defined by law.

Therefore, 'liberty' within Civil Society implies the right to do anything that does not infringe on the property of others. The boundaries of 'liberty' within Civil Society are defined by law that upholds the inviolability of private property as the central tenet of Civil Society. In other words, 'liberty' is premised upon the right to exploit workers via the institution of private property. Furthermore, the attempt on the part of workers to change social relations (which cannot be done without infringing upon private property) is not the realisation of liberty but the infringement of 'liberty'. In conclusion, 'liberty' within Civil Society is nothing other than liberty for the capitalist to exploit the workers.

Security

Civil Society is prevented from falling apart from the stress of economic inequality by the concept of security. Article 8 of the Constitution of 1793 says, "Security consists in the protection afforded by society to each of its members for the conservation of his person, rights, and property."

Marx writes: "Security is the highest social concept of civil society, the concept of the police. The whole of society is merely there to guarantee to each of its members the preservation of his person, rights and property."

In other words, 'security' within Civil Society is not the security of people from hunger, poverty, depravation. But merely the security of property and 'rights' defined as the unimpeded individual use of that property. Therefore, security is not understood as security of the people or the individual in general but specifically security of property and the utilisation of property.

Marx writes: "Thus, none of the so-called rights of man goes beyond egoistic man, man as he is in civil society, namely an individual withdrawn behind his private interests and whims and separated from the community. … The only bond that holds them together is natural necessity, need and private interest, the conservation of their property and egoistic person."

Civil Society is based on capitalist exploitation (property), formal 'equality' before the law, 'liberty' to exploit workers, and a police force to guarantee 'security'. It is high time that those who speak in the name of Civil Society should realise that they speak only the name of capitalist exploitation.

Some might argue that while the above may be correct, nonetheless, secularism and the free press are positive benefits of Civil Society.

Secularism

The common impression about secularism is that it is the anti-thesis of religion or of religious intolerance. This view is supported by the religious right who never tire of inveighing against the secularists. As we find out this view is also not correct.

According to the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, 1791, Article 10, "No one should be molested because of his opinions, not even religious ones." Furthermore, "the liberty of every man to practice the religion to which he adheres" is guaranteed as human right. The Declaration of the Rights of Man 1793, Article 7, upholds "the free exercise of religious practice". The Constitution of 1795, Section 14, Article 354, argues that freedom of religion is so obvious that the 'necessity of announcing these rights supposes either the present or the recent memory of despotism'. Similarly, the Constitution of Pennsylvania, Article 9, Paragraph 3 says, "All men have a natural and indefeasible right to worship Almighty God according to the dictates of their own consciences: no man can of right be compelled to attend, erect or support a place of worship, or to maintain any ministry, against his consent; no human authority can, in any case whatever, control or interfere with the rights of conscience." The Constitution of New Hampshire, Article 5 & 6 says, "Among the natural rights, some are in their very nature unalienable … Of this kind are rights of conscience."

In Pakistan the point of contention between the bourgeois secularists and the religious-right is not concerned with whether or not there should be religion or religious worship (both uphold the right of religious worship). The central issue between these two parties is whether the state should be a theocracy or a secular state.

The bourgeois secularists, who are 'highly educated' capitalists, wish to see the capitalist economy run in accordance with the most modern notions of capitalist relations. Amongst other things, this includes the 'emancipation' of women but obviously within the confines of a capitalist economy. Naturally, such an 'emancipation' is unable to mobilise working class or peasant women because of the limited nature of its class aims.

The religious-right, who are 'less well educated' small capitalists, wish for a capitalist economy with a more traditional superstructure. This traditional superstructure, in reality, is a better ideological defence against the rising working class movement than pure bourgeois democracy. Therefore, they are the principle obstacle in the path of development of working class consciousness.

The conflict between these two social groups is over the particular form of capitalism (modern or traditional). While the religious-right is a more obvious enemy, the bourgeois secularists are the more devious and clever enemies of the working class and women. Revolutionary forces must use the right hand to fight the influence of the narrow minded right-wing forces, and the left hand to fight the influence of the 'left-wing' devious bourgeois secularists in the realm of ideology.

Free Press

According to the Constitution of 1793, Article 122, the 'unlimited freedom of the press' is guaranteed as a consequence of the right of man to individual freedom. However, a deeper reading shows that the freedom of the press is limited by the concept of public liberty. The same article says, 'the liberty of the press must not be permitted when it compromises public liberty'. In other words, the freedom of the press must not be permitted when it impinges on the right of the capitalist class to exercise its liberty to exploit the workers through the institution of private property. It has become quite obvious that a tight censorship is maintained over all the media of the world, despite the claim that we have entered an era of communications and free information. But it is less obvious that such censorship is not contradictory to Civil Society. Civil Society is premised on the right of censorship in to protect 'liberty' based on private property. This can be seen in the attitude that the US state has taken towards the attacks against Iraq and Afghanistan in the 'free press'.

Conclusion

The reader can see from the above exposition of the concept of Civil Society that it is wholly tied to the class rule of the capitalists. Therefore, the conclusion that Civil Society is merely a euphemism for the dictatorship of the capitalists is not unfounded. Furthermore, the argument that the use of the concept of Civil Society by a particular group is different from the above exposition ignores the nature of politics. The subjective desires of individuals or groups are wholly irrelevant in relation to the use of the concept Civil Society. In the political field, the concept is intellectually and morally tied to the class rule of the capitalists. This link cannot be changed and the concept cannot be 'appropriated' for revolutionary purposes.

Therefore, it is high time that activists realise that ‘Civil Society’ is premised on exploitation, selfishness, oppression, inequality, and censorship. Those who are genuine to the people must develop new theoretical premises upon which to conduct the struggle for the emancipation of people.

http://www.geocities.com/cmkp_pk/civil_society.htm

anaxarchos
11-06-2007, 11:02 PM
It is not as if the bourgeoise did not realise the relationship between Civil Society and property from the very beginning:


ON THE ORIGIN AND FOUNDATION OF THE INEQUALITY OF MANKIND[/b], 1755, Jean-Jacques Rousseau]THE first man who, having enclosed a piece of ground, bethought himself of saying "This is mine", and found people simple enough
to believe him, he was the real founder of civil society. From how many crimes, wars and murders, from how many horrors and
misfortunes might not any one have saved mankind, by pulling up the stakes, or filling up the ditch, and crying to his fellows,
“Beware of listening to this impostor; you are undone if you once forget that the fruits of the earth belong to us all, and the
earth itself to nobody.” But there is great probability that things had then already come to such a pitch, that they could no longer
continue as they were; for the idea of property depends on many prior ideas, which could only be acquired successively, and
cannot have been formed all at once in the human mind...

http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2007/08/jean-jacques_rousseau.jpg
The quasi-religious acceptance of property without consideration only comes much later. The twists and turns not reported by the author above, concern the degree to which this property is to be mediated by all of the other "Rights of Man". What else could explain 3 Constitutions in 4 years? Of the French Constitutions mentioned above, that of 1791 is the original Constitution of the French Republic, exceedingly conservative in its outlook. That of 1793 is the "radical" Constitution of the "Montagne", forced in large part by the mobilization of the people (but only very indirectly incorporating their demands). The Constitution of 1795 is that of counter-revolution, enacted after the Jacobins are overthrown. Interestingly, all three exceed in many respects, the "Rights" of the American Constitution. The Battle of the Constitutions shows the very real understanding by all portions of the people of the nexus between property and "Civil Society".

The understanding of the "State" as growing directly out of the "Police" and the army, and intended for no other purpose than to enforce property dates back much, much farther. The original organization of Athens is based on military districts which not only yield a fixed quota of troops but also revenues to fund mounted archers who are slaves - the first police force. The rule of the demos, i.e. "democracy", grows directly from this. The innovation here, is not the "fairness" of the Athenian democracy. In fact it is a huge step backward from the Greek Tribes which were based on consensus and one vote for each adult. In place of that, the "Democracy" recognizes only one out of every 32 people as citizens. It's key is not its incorporation of the people (except for those formally so defined), but in its organization of the state, and through it, the guarentee of personal property, most importantly in slaves.

This is yet another example of a thing we see through a thick fog, whereas those who came before us had a much clearer view.
.