FASCISM OR SOCIALISM?

HOW NEAR IS THIS?
With the incoming Political change, nearer than
you might think!

Having made all haste to write to you
about the common salvation, beloved, I had need to write to you to exhort you to
contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the saints.
For certain men stole in, those of old having been written before to this
judgment, unrighteous ones perverting the grace of our Elohim into unbridled
lust, and denying the only Master, even our Sovereign Yahshua the Messiah.
But I intend to remind you, you once knowing these things, that Yahweh
having saved a people out of the land of Egypt, in the second place destroyed
the ones not believing. Judah 1:3-5
I say to you, that he will avenge
them speedily. Nevertheless, when the Son of man comes, shall he find faith on
the earth? Luke 18:8
With lines becoming blurred/obfuscated between
Socialism and Fascism, will the world incorporate this atheistic doctrine?
Preceding the final world ending war, the beast (government) will impose their
way of thinking on the world for their own good. The one-world government
doctrine is an old concept as we have explained on this website. Social
engineering is taking place at every level so it seems. The liberal
intellectuals (or so they want you to believe) think they know what's best for
you! Cradle to grave mentality! Can Socialism solve the world's
problems? Read the following descriptions, and compare the
supplied information to the agenda clearly observable in today's Liberal leaders.
Nazism and Fascism:
-
Benito Mussolini giving the Roman salute standing
next to Adolf Hitler
The extent and nature of the affinity between Fascism
and Nazism has been the subject of much academic debate. Although the
modern consensus sees Nazism as a type or offshoot of fascism, there are
some experts who still argue that Nazism is not fascism, either
on the grounds that the differences are too great, or because they
disagree that fascism can be generic.
Differences:
Cover of a September 1938 Italian magazine, titled
La difesa della razza ("The Defence of the Race"). In 1938
the Italian Fascist state made a sudden turn towards
anti-Semitism.
Nazism differed from Italian Fascism in the emphasis
on the state's purpose in serving its national ideal on the basis of a
national race, specifically the
social engineering of
culture
to the ends of the greatest possible prosperity for the Germanic race at
the expense of all else and all others. In contrast, Mussolini's Fascism
held that cultural factors existed to serve the state, and that it
wasn't necessarily in the state's interest to serve or engineer any of
these particulars within its sphere. The only
purpose of government under Fascism was to uphold the state as
supreme above all else, and for these reasons it can be said to have
been a governmental
statolatry. Where Fascism talked of "State," however, Nazism spoke
of the "Volk"
and of the
Volksgemeinschaft (the "national community").
While Nazism saw both party and government as a means
to achieve an ideal condition for certain chosen people, fascism was a
squarely anti-socialist form of
statism
that existed as an end in and of itself. The Nazi movement, at least in
its overt ideology, spoke of class-based society as the enemy, and
wanted to unify the racial element above established classes. The
Fascist movement, on the other hand, sought to preserve the class system
and uphold it as the foundation of established and desirable culture
[citation needed],
although this is not to say that Fascists rejected the concept of
social mobility. Indeed a central tenet of the Corporate State was
meritocracy. However, Fascism also heavily based itself on
corporatism, which was supposed to supersede
class conflicts.
Mussolini and Hitler weren't always allies. This
seemed to be especially the case in 1934 when
Engelbert Dollfuss the
Austrofascist leader of
Austria
was assassinated by Nazi
Brown shirts on Hitler's orders in preparation for a planned
Anschluss, which prompted Mussolini to move troops to the
Austrian-Italian border in readiness for war with Hitler. Also when
Hitler and Mussolini first met Mussolini referred to Hitler as 'a silly
little monkey' before he was forced by the Western Allies into an
agreement with Hitler.
Similarities
Nevertheless, despite these differences, Kevin
Passmore (2002 p.62) observes:
There are sufficient similarities between Fascism
and Nazism to make it worthwhile applying the concept of fascism to
both. In Italy and Germany a movement came to power that sought to
create national unity through the repression of national enemies and
the incorporation of all classes and both genders into a permanently
mobilized nation.
Hitler and Mussolini themselves recognized
commonalities in their politics. The second part of Hitler's Mein
Kampf, "The National Socialist Movement", first published in 1926,
contains this passage:
I conceived the profoundest admiration for the great
man south of the Alps, who, full of ardent love for his people, made
no pacts with the enemies of Italy, but strove for their annihilation
by all ways and means. What will rank Mussolini among the great men of
this earth is his determination not to share Italy with the Marxists,
but to destroy internationalism and save the fatherland from it. (p.
622)
Leon Trotsky's
FASCISM
What It Is and How To Fight It
First compilation under title "FASCISM: What it is and how to
fight it" by Pioneer Publishers in August 1944 and reprinted in 1964. This
revised compilation was published in April 1969. Transcribed for the Internet by
Zodiac, the former diretor of the Marx-Engels Internet Archive, in August 1993.
This pamphlet is not copyrighted.
PAMPHLET CONTENTS
1969 PAMPHLET INTRODUCTION
By George Lavan Weissman
* * *
Liberals
and even most of those who consider themselves Marxists are guilty of using the
world fascist very loosely today. They fling it around as an epithet or
political swearword against right-wing figures whom they particularly despise,
or against reactionaries in general.
Since WWII, the fascist label has been applied to such figures
and movements as Gerald L. K. Smith, Senator Joseph McCarthy, Senator Eastland,
Barry Goldwater, the Minutemen, the John Birch Society, Richard Nixon, Ronald
Reagan, and George Wallace.
Now, were all these fascist, or just some? If only some, then
how does one tell which are and which aren't?
Indiscriminate use of the term really reflects vagueness about
its meaning. Asked to define fascism, the liberal replies in such terms as
dictatorship, mass neurosis, anti-Semitism, the power of unscrupulous
propaganda, the hypnotic effect of a mad-genius orator on the masses, etc.
Impressionism and confusion on the part of liberals is not surprising. But
Marxism's superiority consists of its ability to analyze and differentiate among
social and political phenomena. that so many of those calling themselves
marxists cannot define fascism any more adequately than the liberals is not
wholly their fault. Whether they are aware of it or not, much of their
intellectual heritage comes from the social-democratic (reformist socialist) and
Stalinist movements, which dominated the left in the 1930s when fascism was
scoring victory after victory. These movements not only permitted Nazism to come
to power in Germany without a shot being fired against it, but they failed
abysmally in understanding the nature and dynamics of fascism and the way to
fight it. After fascism's triumphs, they had much to hide and so refrained from
making a Marxist analysis which would, at least, have educated subsequent
generations.
But there is a Marxist analysis of fascism. It was made by
Leon Trotsky not as a postmortem, but during the rise of fascism. This was one
of Trotsky's great contributions to Marxism. He began the task after Mussolini's
victory in Italy in 1922 and brought it to a high point in the years preceding
Hitler's triumph in Germany in 1933.
In his attempts to awaken the German Communist Party and the
Communist International (Comintern) to the mortal danger and to rally a
united-front against Nazism, Trotsky made a point-by-point critique of the
policies of the social-democratic and Stalinist parties. This constitutes a
compendium of almost all the mistaken, ineffective, and suicidal positions that
workers' organizations can take regarding fascism, since the positions of the
German parties ranged from opportunistic default and betrayal on the right
(social democratic) to ultra-left abstentionism and betrayal (Stalinist).
The Communist movement was still on its ultra-left binge (the
so-called Third Period) when the Nazi movement began to snowball. To the
Stalinists, every capitalist party was automatically "fascist". Even more
catastrophic than this disorienting of the workers was Stalin's famous dictum
that, rather than being opposites, fascism and social democracy were "twins".
The socialists were thereupon dubbed "social fascists" and regarded as the main
enemy. Of course, there could be no united front with social-fascist
organizations, and those who, like Trotsky, urged such united fronts, were also
labeled social fascists and treated accordingly.
How divorced from reality the Stalinist line was may be
illustrated be recalling its translation into American terms. In the 1932
elections, American Stalinists denounced Franklin Roosevelt as the fascist
candidate and Norman Thomas as the social-fascist candidate. What was ludicrous
as applied to US politics was tragic in Germany and Austria.
(Recently [1969], the term social fascism had begun cropping
up in articles by members of the new left. Do those using it imagine that they
have invented the term? Or, if they are aware of its history, are they
indifferent to its connotations?)
After the Nazis came to power, the Stalinists boasted that
their line had been 100 per cent correct, that Hitler could only last a few
months, and that a Soviet Germany would then emerge. The time limit for this
miracle was extended from three, six, to nine months, and then the idle boasts
dwindled into silence. The magnitude of the defeat suffered by the working
class, the special character of fascism, distinguishing it from other
reactionary regimes or dictatorships, became apparent to all, and the threat to
the Soviet Union or a rearmed German imperialism began to take on reality. This
brought about a change in Moscow's line in 1935 and the Communist parties
throughout the world thereupon zigzagged far to the right, to the right even of
the social-democrats. This was their stance in the face of the spreading fascist
danger in France and Spain.
The military ruin of German and Italian fascism in WWII
convinced most people that fascism had been destroyed for good and was so
utterly discredited that it could never again entice any followers. Events since
then, particularly the emergence of new fascist groups and tendencies in almost
every capitalist country,have dispelled such wishful thinking. The illusion that
WWII was fought to make the world safe from fascism has gone the way of the
earlier illusion that WWI was fought to make the world safe for democracy. The
germ of fascism is endemic in capitalism; a crisis can raise it to epidemic
proportions unless drastic countermeasures are applied.
Since forewarned is forearmed, we offer this new compilation
-- a small selection from Trotsky's writings on the subject -- as a weapon for
the anti-fascist arsenal.
FASCISM -- WHAT IS IT?
Extracts from a letter to an English comrade, November 15
1931;
printed in The Militant, January 16, 1932
* * *
What
is fascism? The name originated in Italy. Were all the forms of
counter-revolutionary dictatorship fascist or not (That is to say, prior to the
advent of fascism in Italy)?
The former dictatorship in Spain of Primo de Rivera, 1923-30,
is called a fascist dictatorship by the Comintern. Is this correct or not? We
believe that it is incorrect.
The fascist movement in Italy was a spontaneous movement of
large masses, with new leaders from the rank and file. It is a plebian movement
in origin, directed and financed by big capitalist powers. It issued forth from
the petty bourgeoisie, the slum proletariat, and even to a certain extent from
the proletarian masses; Mussolini, a former socialist, is a "self-made" man
arising from this movement.
Primo de Rivera was an aristocrat. He occupied a high military
and bureaucratic post and was chief governor of Catalonia. he accomplished his
overthrow with the aid of state and military forces. The dictatorships of Spain
and Italy are two totally different forms of dictatorship. It is necessary to
distinguish between them. Mussolini had difficulty in reconciling many old
military institutions with the fascist militia. This problem did not exist for
Primo de Rivera.
The movement in Germany is analogous mostly to the Italian. It
is a mass movement, with its leaders employing a great deal of socialist
demagogy. This is necessary for the creation of the mass movement.
The genuine basis (for fascism) is the petty bourgeoisie. In
italy, it has a very large base -- the petty bourgeoisie of the towns and
cities, and the peasantry. In Germany, likewise, there is a large base for
fascism....
It may be said, and this is true to a certain extent, that the
new middle class, the functionaries of the state, the private administrators,
etc., can constitute such a base. But this is a new question that must be
analyzed....
In order to be capable of foreseeing anything with regard to
fascism, it is necessary to have a definition of that idea. What is fascism?
What are its base, its form, and its characteristics? How will its development
take place? It is necessary to proceed in a scientific and Marxian manner.
HOW MUSSOLINI TRIUMPHED
From What Next? Vital Question for the German Proletariat,
1932
* * *
At
the moment that the "normal" police and military resources of the bourgeois
dictatorship, together with their parliamentary screens, no longer suffice to
hold society in a state of equilibrium -- the turn of the fascist regime
arrives. Through the fascist agency, capitalism sets in motion the masses of the
crazed petty bourgeoisie and the bands of declassed and demoralized
lumpenproletariat -- all the countless human beings whom finance capital itself
has brought to desperation and frenzy.
From fascism the bourgeoisie demands a thorough job; once it
has resorted to methods of civil war, it insists on having peace for a period of
years. And the fascist agency, by utilizing the petty bourgeoisie as a battering
ram, by overwhelming all obstacles in its path, does a thorough job. After
fascism is victorious, finance capital directly and immediately gathers into its
hands, as in a vise of steel, all the organs and institutions of sovereignty,
the executive administrative, and educational powers of the state: the entire
state apparatus together with the army, the municipalities, the universities,
the schools, the press, the trade unions, and the co-operatives. When a state
turns fascist, it does not mean only that the forms and methods of government
are changed in accordance the patterns set by Mussolini -- the changes in this
sphere ultimately play a minor role -- but it means first of all for the most
part that the workers' organizations are annihilated; that the proletariat is
reduced to an amorphous state; and that a system of administration is created
which penetrates deeply into the masses and which serves to frustrate the
independent crystallization of the proletariat. Therein precisely is the gist of
fascism....
* * *
Italian
fascism was the immediate outgrowth of the betrayal by the reformists of the
uprising of the Italian proletariat. From the time the [first world] war ended,
there was an upward trend in the revolutionary movement in Italy, and in
September 1920 it resulted in the seizure of factories and industries by the
workers. The dictatorship of the proletariat was an actual fact; all that was
lacking was to organize it and draw from it all the necessary conclusions. The
social democracy took fright and sprang back. After its bold and heroic
exertions, the proletariat was left facing the void. The disruption of the
revolutionary movement became the most important factor in the growth of
fascism. In September, the revolutionary advance came to a standstill; and
November already witnessed the first major demonstration of the fascists (the
seizure of Bologna).
[NOTE: The fascist campaign of violence began in Bologna,
November 21, 1920. When the social-democratic councilmen, victorious in the
municipal elections, emerged from city hall to present the new mayor, they were
met by gunfire in which 10 were killed and 100 wounded. The fascists followed up
with "punitive expeditions" into the surrounding countryside, a stronghold of
the "Red Leagues". Blackshirt "action squadrons" in vehicles supplied by big
landowners, took over villages in lightning raids, beating and killing leftist
peasants and labor leaders, wrecking radical headquarters, and terrorizing the
populace. Emboldened by their easy successes, the fascists then launched
large-scale attacks in the big cities.]
True, the proletariat, even after the September catastrophe,
was capable of waging defensive battles. But the social democracy was concerned
with only one thing: to withdraw the workers from combat at the cost of one
concession after another. The social democracy hoped that the docile conduct of
the workers would restore the "public opinion" of the bourgeoisie against the
fascists. Moreover, the reformists even banked strongly upon the help of King
Victor Emmanuel. To the last hour, they restrained the workers with might and
main from giving battle to Mussolini's bands. It availed them nothing. The
crown, along with the upper crust of the bourgeoisie, swung over to the side of
fascism. Convinced at the last moment that fascism was not to be checked by
obedience, the social democrats issued a call to the workers for a general
strike. But their proclamation suffered a fiasco. The reformists had dampened
the powder so long, in their fear lest it should explode, that when they finally
with a trembling hand did apply a burning fuse to it, the powder did not catch.
Two years after its inception, fascism was in power. It
entrenched itself thanks to the facts the first period of its overlordship
coincided with a favorable economic conjuncture, which followed the depression
of 1921-22. The fascists crushed the retreating proletariat by the onrushing
forces of the petty bourgeoisie. But this was not achieved at a single blow.
Even after he assumed power, Mussolini proceeded on his course with due caution:
he lacked as yet ready-made models. During the first two years, not even the
constitution was altered. The fascist government took on the character of a
coalition. In the meantime, the fascist bands were busy at work with clubs,
knives, and pistols. Only thus was the fascist government created slowly, which
meant the complete strangulation of all independent mass organizations.
Mussolini attained this at the cost of bureaucratizing the
fascist party itself. After utilizing the onrushing forces of the petty
bourgeoisie, fascism strangled it within the vise of the bourgeois state.
Mussolini could not have done otherwise, for the disillusionment of the masses
he had united was precipitating itself into the most immediate danger ahead.
Fascism, become bureaucratic, approaches very closely to other forms of military
and police dictatorship. It no longer possesses its former social support. The
chief reserve of fascism -- the petty bourgeoisie -- has been depicted. Only
historical inertia enables the fascist government to keep the proletariat in a
state of dispersion and helplessness....
In its politics as regards Hitler, the German social democracy
has not been able to add a single word: all it does is repeat more ponderously
whatever the Italian reformists in their own time performed with greater flights
of temperament. The latter explained fascism as a postwar psychosis; the German
social democracy sees in it a "Versailles" or crisis psychosis. In both
instances, the reformists shut their eyes to the organic character of fascism as
a mass movement growing out of the collapse of capitalism.
[NOTE: The Versailles Treaty, imposed on Germany after
WWI; its most hated feature was the unending tribute to the victorious allies in
the form of "reparations" for war damages and losses. The "crisis" referred to
in the above paragraph was the economic depression that swept the capitalist
world after the Wall Street crash of 1929.]
Fearful of the revolutionary mobilization of the workers, the
Italian reformists banked all their hopes of the "state". Their slogan was,
"Help! Victor Emmanuel, exert pressure!" The German social democracy lacks such
a democratic bulwark as a monarch loyal to the constitution. So they must be
content with a president -- "Help! Hindenburg, exert pressure!"
[NOTE: Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg (1847-1934),
Junker general who gained fame in World War I and later became president of the
Weimar Republic. In 1932, the social democrats supported him for re-election as
a "lesser evil" to the Nazis. He appointed Hitler chancellor in January 1933.]
While waging battle against Mussolini, that is, while
retreating before him, Turati let loose his dazzling motto, "One must have the
manhood to be a coward." [Filippo Turati (1857-1937), leading reformist
theoretician of the Italian Socialist Party.] The German reformists are less
frisky with their slogans. They demand "Courage under unpopularity" (Mut zur
Unpopularitaet) -- which amounts to the same thing. One must not be afraid
of the unpopularity which has been aroused by one's own cowardly temporizing
with the enemy.
Identical causes produce identical effects. Were the march of
events dependent upon the social-democratic party leadership, Hitler's career
would be assured.
One must admit, however, that the German Communist Party has
also learned little from the Italian experience.
The Italian Communist Party came into being almost
simultaneously with fascism. But the same conditions of revolutionary ebb tide,
which carried the fascists to power, served to deter the development of the
Communist Party. It did not give itself an accounting as to the full sweep of
the fascist danger; it lulled itself with revolutionary illusions; it was
irreconcilably antagonistic to the policy of the united front; in short, it was
stricken with all the infantile diseases. Small wonder! It was only two years
old. In its eyes, fascism appeared to be only "capitalist reaction". The
particular traits of fascism which spring from the mobilization of the
petty bourgeoisie against the proletariat, the Communist Party was unable to
discern. Italian comrades inform me that, with the sole exception of Gramsci,
the Communist Party would not even allow for the possibility of the fascists'
seizing power. Once the proletarian revolution had suffered defeat, once
capitalism had held its ground and the counter-revolution had triumphed, how
could there be any further kind of counter-revolutionary upheaval? How could the
bourgeoisie rise up against itself! Such was the gist of the political
orientation of the Italian Communist Party. Moreover, one must not lose sight of
the fact that Italian fascism was then a new phenomenon, just in the process of
formation; it would not have been an easy task even for a more experienced party
to distinguish its specific traits.
[NOTE: Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937): a founder of the
Italian Communist Party, imprisoned by Mussolini in 1926, he died in prison 11
years later. He sent a letter from prison, in the name of the Italian party's
political committee, protesting Stalin's campaign against the Left Opposition.
Taglatti, then in Moscow as the Italian representative to the Comintern,
suppressed the letter. Throughout the Stalin era, Gramsci's memory was
deliberately effaced. In the period of de-Stalinization, however, he was
"rediscovered" by the Italian Communist Party and officially enshrined as a hero
and martyr. Since, there has been considerable international acclaim of his
theoretical writings, particularly his prison notebooks.]
The leadership of the German Communist Party today reproduces
almost literally the position from which the Italian Communists took their point
of departure; fascism is nothing else but capitalist reaction; from the point of
view of the proletariat, the difference between divers types of capitalist
reaction are meaningless. This vulgar radicalism is the less excusable because
the German party is much older than the Italian was at a corresponding period;
in addition, Marxism is enriched now by the tragic experience in Italy. To
insist that fascism is already here, or to deny the very possibility of its
coming to power, amounts politically to one and the same thing. By ignoring the
specific nature of of fascism, the will to fight against it inevitably becomes
paralyzed.
The brunt of the blame must be borne, of course, by the
leadership of the Comintern. Italian Communists above all others were duty-bound
to raise their voices in alarm. But Stalin, together with Manuilsky, compelled
them to disavow the most important lessons of their own annihilation.
[NOTE: Dmitri Manuilsky (1883-1952): Headed the Comintern
from 1929 to 1934; his removal heralded switch from ultra-leftism to the
opportunism of the Popular Front period. Later appeared on diplomatic stage, as
delegate to United Nations.]
We have already observed with what diligent alacrity Ercoli
switched over to the position of social fascism -- i.e., to the position of
passively waiting for the fascist victory in Germany.
[NOTE: Ercoli. Comintern pen name of Palmiro Togliatti
(1893-1964). Headed Italian Communist Party after Gramsci's imprisonment. He
survived all zigzags in Comintern line, but after Stalin's death he criticized
Stalin's rule as well some of its continuing features in the USSR and
International Communist movement.]
THE FASCIST DANGER LOOMS IN GERMANY
From The Turn in the Communist International and the
German Situation, 1930
* * *
The
official press of the Comintern is now depicting the results of the [September
1930] German elections as a prodigious victory of Communism, which places on the
order of the day the slogan of Soviet Germany. The bureaucratic optimists do not
want to reflect upon the meaning of the relation of forces which is disclosed by
the election statistics. They examine the figure of the increased Communist vote
independently of the revolutionary tasks created by the situation and the
obstacles it sets up. The Communist Party received around 4,600,000 votes as
against 3,300,000 in 1928. From the viewpoint of "normal" parliamentary
mechanics, the gain of 1,300,000 votes is considerable, even if we take into
consideration the rise in the total number of voters. But the gain of the party
pales completely beside the leap of fascism from 800,000 to 6,400,000 votes. Of
no less important significance for evaluation the elections is the fact that the
social democracy, in spite of substantial losses, retained its basic cadres and
still received a considerably greater number of workers' votes [8,600,000] than
the Communist Party.
Meanwhile, if we should ask ourselves, "What combination of
international and domestic circumstances could be capable of turning the working
class towards Communism with greater velocity?" we could not find an example of
more favorable circumstances for such a turn than the situation in present-day
Germany: Young's noose, the economic crisis, the disintegration of the rules,
the crisis of parliamentarism, the terrific self-exposure of the social
democracy in power. From the viewpoint of these concrete historical
circumstances, the specific gravity of the German Communist Party in the social
life of the country, in spite of the gain of 1,300,000 votes, remains
proportionately small.
[NOTE: "Young's noose": a reference to the Young Plan.
After Owen D. Young, American big businessman, who was Agent-General for the
German Reparations during the 1920s. In summer of 1929, he was chairman of the
conference which adopted his plan, which replaced the unsuccessful Dawes Plan,
to "facilitate" Germany's payment of reparations as per the Treaty of
Versailles.]
The weakness of the position of Communism, inextricably bound
up with the policy and regime of the Comintern, is revealed more clearly if we
compare the present social weight of the Communist Party with those concrete and
unpostponable tasks which the present historical circumstances put before it.
It is true that the Communist Party itself did not expect such
a gain. But this proves that under the blows of mistakes and defeats, the
leadership of the Communist parties has become unused to big aims and
perspectives. If yesterday it underestimated its own possibilities,then today it
once more underestimates the difficulties. In this way, one danger is multiplied
by another.
In the meantime, the first characteristic of a really
revolutionary party is -- to be able to look reality in the face.
* * *
In order that the social crisis may bring about
the proletarian revolution, it is necessary that, besides other conditions, a
decisive shift of the petty bourgeois classes occurs in the direction of the
proletariat. This gives the proletariat a chance to put itself at the head of
the nation as its leader.
The last election revealed -- and this is where its principle
symptomatic significance lies -- a shift in the opposite direction. Under the
blow of the crisis, the petty bourgeoisie swung, not in the direction of the
proletarian revolution, but in the direction of the most extreme imperialist
reaction, pulling behind it considerable sections of the proletariat.
The gigantic growth of National Socialism is an expression of
two factors: a deep social crisis, throwing the petty bourgeois masses off
balance, and the lack of a revolutionary party that would be regarded by the
masses of the people as an acknowledged revolutionary leader. If the communist
Party is the party of revolutionary hope, then fascism, as a mass
movement, is the party of counter-revolutionary despair. When
revolutionary hope embraces the whole proletarian mass, it inevitably pulls
behind it on the road of revolution considerable and growing sections of the
petty bourgeoisie. Precisely in this sphere the election revealed the opposite
picture: counter-revolutionary despair embraced the petty bourgeois mass with
such a force that it drew behind it many sections of the proletariat....
Fascism in Germany has become a real danger,
as an acute expression of the helpless position of the bourgeois regime, the
conservative role of the social democracy in this regime, and the accumulated
powerlessness of the Communist Party to abolish it. Whoever denies this is
either blind or a braggart....
The danger acquires particular acuteness in connection with
the question of the tempo of development, which does not depend upon us
alone. The malarial character of the political curve revealed by the election
speaks for the fact that the tempo of development of the national crisis may
turn out to be very speedy. In other words, the course of events in the very
near future may resurrect in Germany, on a new historical plane, the old tragic
contradiction between the maturity of a revolutionary situation, on the one
hand, and the weakness and strategical impotence of the revolutionary party, on
the other. This must be said clearly, openly and, above all, in time. >
* * *
Can
the strength of the conservative resistance of the social-democratic workers be
calculated beforehand? It cannot. In the light of the events of the past year,
this strength seems to be gigantic. But the truth is that what helped most of
all to weld together social democracy was the wrong policy of the Communist
Party, which found its highest generalization in the absurd theory of social
fascism. To measure the real resistance of the social democratic ranks, a
different measuring instrument is required, that is, a correct Communist tactic.
With this condition -- and it is not a small condition -- the degree of internal
unity of the social democracy can be revealed in a comparatively brief period.
In a different form, what has been said above also applies to
fascism: It emanated, aside from the other conditions present, in the tremblings
of the Zinoviev-Stalin strategy. What is its force for offensive? What is its
stability? has it reached its culminating point, as the optimists ex-officio
[Comintern and Communist Party officials] assure us, or is it only on the first
step of the ladder? This cannot be foretold mechanically. It can be determined
only through action. Precisely in regard to fascism, which is a razor in the
hands of the class enemy, the wrong policy of the Comintern may produce fatal
results in a brief period. On the other hand, a correct policy -- not in such a
short period, it is true -- can undermine the positions of fascism....
[NOTE: "Zinoviev-Stalin strategy": Gregory Y. Zinoviev
(1883-1936), chairman of the Comintern from its founding in 1919 till his
removal by Stalin in 1926. After Lenin's death, Zinoviev and Kamenev made a bloc
with Stalin (the Troika) against Trotsky and dominated the Soviet party. In the
period of the Zinoviev-Stalin domination of the Comintern, an opportunist line
led to a series of defeats and missed opportunities, most notably the calling
off of the German revolution of 1923. After breaking with Stalin, Zinoviev
united his following with the Trotskyist Left Opposition. But in 1928, after the
expulsion from the party of the United Opposition, Zinoviev capitulated to
Stalin. Readmitted to the party, he was expelled again in 1932. After disavowal
of all critical views, he was again readmitted, but in 1934, he was expelled and
imprisoned. He "confessed" at the first of the great Moscow Trials in 1936 and
was executed.]
If the Communist Party, in spite of the exceptionally
favorable circumstances, has proved powerless seriously to shake the structure
of the social democracy with the aid of the formula of "social fascism", then
real fascism now threatens this structure, no longer with wordy formulae of
so-called radicalism, but with the chemical formulas of explosives. No matter
how true it is that the social democracy by its whole policy prepared the
blossoming of fascism, it is no less true that fascism comes forward as a deadly
threat primarily to that same social democracy, all of whose magnificence is
inextricably bound with parliamentary-democratic-pacifist forms and methods of
government...
The policy of a united front of the workers against fascism
flows from this situation. It opens up tremendous possibilities to the Communist
Party. A condition for success, however, is the rejection of the theory and
practice of "social fascism", the harm of which becomes a positive measure under
the present circumstances.
The social crisis will inevitably produce deep cleavages
within the social democracy. The radicalization of the masses will affect the
social democrats. We will inevitably have to make agreements with various
social-democratic organizations and factions against fascism, putting definite
conditions in this connection to the leaders, before the eyes of the masses....
We must return from the empty official phrase about the united front to the
policy of the united front as it was formulated by Lenin and always applied by
the Bolsheviks in 1917.
AN AESOP FABLE
From What Next? Vital Question for the German Proletariat,
1932
* * *
A
cattle dealer once drove some bulls to the slaughterhouse. And the butcher came
night with his sharp knife.
"Let us close ranks and jack up this executioner on our horns,"
suggested one of the bulls.
"If you please, in what way is the butcher any
worse than the dealer who drove us hither with his cudgel?" replied the bulls,
who had received their political education in Manuilsky's institute. [The
Comintern.]
"But we shall be able to attend to the dealer as well
afterwards!"
"Nothing doing," replied the bulls firm in their principles,
to the counselor. "You are trying, from the left, to shield our enemies -- you
are a social-butcher yourself."
And they refused to close ranks.
THE GERMAN COPS AND ARMY
From What Next? Vital Question for the German Proletariat,
1932
* * *
In
case of actual danger, the social democracy banks not on the "Iron Front" but on
the Prussian police. It is reckoning without its host! The fact that the police
was originally recruited in large numbers from among social-democratic workers
is absolutely meaningless. Consciousness is determined by environment even in
this instance. The worker who becomes a policeman in the service of the
capitalist state, is a bourgeois cop, not a worker. Of late years, these
policemen have had to do much more fighting with revolutionary workers than with
Nazi students. Such training does not fail to leave its effects. And above all:
every policeman knows that though governments may change, the police remains.
[NOTE: "The Iron Front": A bloc between several big trade
unions and bourgeois "republican" groups with little or no following or prestige
among the masses. It was created by the social democrats toward the end of 1931.
Combat groups called the Iron Fist were set up within the unions, and workers'
sports organizations were brought into the Iron Front. However, its first
parades and rallies, at which thousands of workers raised their fists, shouted
"Freedom", and swore to defend democracy. The masses in the Social Democratic
Party and unions really believed that this organization would be used to stop
Hitler. It was not.]
In its New Year's issue, the theoretical organ of the social
democracy, Dar Freie Wort (what a wretched sheet!), prints an article
in which the policy of "toleration" is expounded in its highest sense. Hitler,
it appears, can never come to power against the police and the Reichswehr
[German army]. Now, according to the constitution, the Reichswehr is under the
command of the president of the Republic. Therefore fascism, it follows, is not
dangerous so long as a president faithful to the constitution remains at the
head of the government. Bruening's regime must be supported until the
presidential elections so that a constitutional president may then be elected,
through an alliance with the parliamentary bourgeoisie; and thereby Hitler's
road to power will be blocked for another seven years....
[NOTE: Heinrich Bruening was chancellor from 1930-32.
Regular parliamentary government in Germany ended in March 1930. There followed
a series of Bonapartist regimes -- Bruening, von Papen, von Schleicher, i.e.,
chancellors ruling not by ordinary parliamentary procedures but by "emergency"
decrees. These Bonapartist figures presented themselves as political saviors
needed to get the country through its crisis, and thus as above class and party.
They depended not on the old bourgeois democratic party system but on their
command of the police, army, and government bureaucracy. Pretending to be saving
the nation from the dangers on both the left (socialists and communists) and the
right (fascists), they struck their heaviest blows against the left, since their
primary interest was saving capitalism.]
The politicians of reformism, these dexterous wire-pullers,
artful intriguers and careerists, expert parliamentary and ministerial
machinators, are no sooner thrown out of their habitual sphere by the course of
events, no sooner are the placed face to face with momentous contingencies than
they reveal themselves to be -- there is no milder expression for it -- inept
bodies.
To rely upon a president is only to rely upon "the
government"! Faced with the impending clash between the proletariat and the
fascist petty bourgeoisie -- two camps which together comprise the crushing
majority of the German nation -- these Marxists from the Vorwaerts
[principal social-democratic newspaper] yelp for the nightwatchman to come to
their aid, "Help! Government, exert pressure!" (Staat, greif zu!)
BOURGEOISIE, PETTY BOURGEOISIE, AND PROLETARIAT
From The Only Road for Germany written September
1932, published in the USA April 1933
* * *
Any
serious analysis of the political situation must take as its point of departure
the mutual relations among the three classes: the bourgeoisie, the petty
bourgeoisie (including the peasantry), and the proletariat.
The economically powerful big bourgeoisie, in itself,
represents an infintesimal minority of the nation. To enforce its domination, it
must ensure a definite mutual relationship with the petty bourgeoisie and,
through its mediation, with the proletariat.
To understand the dialectic of the relation among the three
classes, we must differentiate three historical stages: at the dawn of
capitalistic development, when the bourgeoisie required revolutionary methods to
solve its tasks; in the period of bloom and maturity of the capitalist regime,
when the bourgeoisie endowed its domination with orderly, pacific, conservative,
democratic forms; finally, at the decline of capitalism, when the bourgeoisie is
forced to resort to methods of civil war against proletariat to protect its
right of exploitation.
The political programs characteristic of these three stages --
JACOBINISM [left wing of petty bourgeois forces in Great French Revolution; in
most revolutionary phase, led by Robespierre], reformist DEMOCRACY (social
democracy included), and FASCISM -- are basically programs of petty bourgeois
currents. This fact alone, more than anything else, shows of what tremendous --
rather, of what decisive -- importance the self-determination of the petty
bourgeois masses of the people is for the whole fate of bourgeois society.
Nevertheless, the relationship between the bourgeoisie and its
basic social support, the petty bourgeoisie, does not at all rest upon
reciprocal confidence and pacific collaboration. In its mass, the petty
bourgeoisie is an exploited and disenfranchised class. It regards the
bourgeoisie with envy and often with hatred. The bourgeoisie, on the other hand,
while utilizing the support of the petty bourgeoisie, distrusts the latter, for
it very correctly fears its tendency to break down the barriers set up for it
from above.
While they were laying out and clearing the road for bourgeois
development,the Jacobins engaged, at every step, in sharp clashes with the
bourgeoisie. They served it in intransigent struggle against it. After they had
culminated their limited historical role, the Jacobins fell, for the domination
of capital was predeterminated.
For a whole series of stages, the bourgeoisie entrenched its
power under the form of parliamentary democracy. Even then, not peacefully and
not voluntarily. The bourgeoisie was mortally afraid of universal suffrage. But
in the last instance, it succeeded, with the aid of a combination of violent
measures and concessions, of privations and reforms, in subordinating within the
framework of formal democracy not only the petty bourgeoisie but in considerable
measure also the proletariat, by means of the new petty bourgeoisie -- the labor
aristocracy. In August 1914, the imperialist bourgeoisie was able, with the
means of parliamentary democracy, to lead millions of workers and peasants into
the war.
[NOTE: August 4, 1914: collapse of the Second
International. The German Social-Democratic Party representatives in the
Reichstag voted for the war budget of the imperialist governments; on the same
day, representatives of the French Socialist Party did likewise in the Chamber
of Deputies.]
But precisely with the war begins the distinct decline of
capitalism and, above all, of its democratic form of domination. It is now no
longer a matter of new reforms and alms, but of cutting down and abolishing the
old ones. Therewith the bourgeoisie comes into conflict into only with the
institutions of proletarian democracy (trade unions and political parties) but
also with parliamentary democracy, within the framework of which arose the labor
organizations. Therefore, the campaign against "Marxism" on the one hand and
against democratic parliamentarism on the other.
But just as the summits of the liberal bourgeoisie in its time
were unable, by their own force alone, to get rid of feudalism, monarchy, and
the church, so the magnates of finance capital are unable, by their
force alone, to cope with the proletariat. They need the support of the petty
bourgeoisie. For this purpose, it must be whipped up, put on its feet,
mobilized, armed. But this method has its dangers. While it makes use of
fascism, the bourgeoisie nevertheless fears it. Pilsudski was forced, in May
1926, to save bourgeois society by a coup d'etat directed against the
traditional parties of the Polish bourgeoisie. The matter went so far that the
official leader of the Polish Communist Party, Warski, who came over from Rosa
Luxemburg not to Lenin but to Stalin, took the coup d'etat of Pilsudski to be
the road of the "revolutionary democratic dictatorship" and called upon the
workers to support Pilsudski.
[NOTE: Joseph Pilsudski (1876-1935): Originally a
socialist with nationalistic views, in 1920 he led the anti-Soviet forces in
Poland; in 1926, he led a coup d'etat and established a fascist dictatorship.
Warski: Friend of Rosa Luxemburg, he supported her differences with the
Bolsheviks. When Comintern zigzagged to the left in its "Third Period" phase,
Warski was demoted from leadership in the Polish Communist Party, but not
expelled. He disappeared in the USSR during the great purge of 1936-38. Rosa
Luxemburg (1870-1919): Great revolutionary theoretician and leader. Originally
active in socialist movement of her native Poland, she later became a leader of
the left wing of the German Social-Democratic Party. She and Karl Liebknecht
were imprisoned for opposing World War I. After their release, they led the
Spartakusbund. Both were arrested and assassinated during the unsuccessful
revolution of 1919.]
At the session of the Polish Commission of the Executive
Committee of the Communist International on July 2, 1926, the author of these
lines said on the subject of the events in Poland:
"Taken as a whole, the Pilsudski overthrow is the petty
bourgeois, 'plebian' manner of solving the burning problems of bourgeois
society in its state of decomposition and decline. We have here already a
direct resemblance to Italian fascism.
"These two currents indubitably possess common
features: they recruit their shock troops first of all from the petty
bourgeoisie; Pilsudski as well as Mussolini worked with extra-parliamentary
means, with open violence, with the methods of civil war; both were concerned
not with the destruction but with the preservation of bourgeois society. While
they raised the petty bourgeoisie on its feet, they openly aligned themselves,
after the seizure of power, with the big bourgeoisie. Involuntarily, a
historical generalization comes up here, recalling the evaluation given by
Marx of Jacobinism as the plebian method of settling accounts with the feudal
enemies of the bourgeoisie.... That was in the period of the rise of
the bourgeoisie. Now we must say, in the period of the decline of
bourgeois society, the bourgeoisie again needs the 'plebian' method of
resolving its no longer progressive but entirely reactionary tasks. In this
sense, fascism is a caricature of Jacobinism.
"The bourgeoisie is incapable of maintaining itself in power
by the means and methods of the parliamentary state created by itself; it
needs fascism as a weapon of self-defense, at least in critical instances.
Nevertheless, the bourgeoisie does not like the 'plebian' method of resolving
its tasks. It was always hostile of Jacobinism, which cleared the road for the
development of bourgeois society with its blood. The fascists are immeasurably
closer to the decadent bourgeoisie than the Jacobins were to the rising
bourgeoisie. Nevertheless, the sober bourgeoisie does not look very favorably
even upon the fascist mode of resolving its tasks, for the concussions,
although they are brought forth in the interests of bourgeois society, are
linked up with dangers to it. Therefore, the opposition between fascism and
the bourgeois parties.
"The big bourgeoisie likes fascism as little as a man with
aching molars likes to have his teeth pulled. The sober circles of bourgeois
society have followed with misgivings the work of the dentist Pilsudski, but
in the last analysis they have become reconciled to the inevitable, though
with threats, with horse-trades and all sorts of bargaining. Thus the petty
bourgeoisie's idol of yesterday becomes transformed into the gendarme of
capital."
To this attempt at marking out the historical
place of fascism as the political reliever of the social democracy, there was
counterposed the theory of social fascism. At first it could appear as a
pretentious, blustering, but harmless stupidity. Subsequent events have shown
what a pernicious influence the Stalinist theory actually exercised on the
entire development of the Communist International.
Does it follow from the historical role of Jacobinism, of
democracy, and of fascism, that the petty bourgeoisie is condemned to remain a
tool in the hands of capital to the end of its days? It things were so, then the
dictatorship of the proletariat would be impossible in a number of countries in
which the petty bourgeoisie constitutes the majority of the nation and, more
than that, it would be rendered extremely difficult in other countries in which
the petty bourgeoisie represents an important minority. Fortunately, things are
not so. The experience of the Paris Commune [first "dictatorship of the
proletariat", March 18, 1871] first showed, at least within the limits of one
city, just as the experience of the October Revolution [Russian Revolution of
1917] has shown after it on a much larger scale and over an incomparably longer
period, that the alliance of the petty bourgeoisie and the big bourgeoisie is
not indissoluble. Since the petty bourgeoisie is incapable of an independent
policy (that is also why the petty bourgeois "democratic dictatorship" is
unrealizable), no other choice is left for it than that between the bourgeoisie
and the proletariat.
In the epoch of the rise, the growth, and the bloom of
capitalism, the petty bourgeoisie, despite acute outbreaks of discontent,
generally marched obediently in the capitalist harness. Nor could it do anything
else. But under the conditions of capitalist disintegration, and of the impasse
in the economic situation, the petty bourgeoisie strives, seeks, attempts to
tear itself loose from the fetters of the old masters and rulers of society. It
is quite capable of linking up its fates with that of the proletariat. For that,
only one thing is needed: the petty bourgeoisie must acquired faith in the
ability of the proletariat to lead society onto a new road. The proletariat can
inspire this faith only by its strength, by the firmness of its actions, by a
skillful offensive against the enemy, by the success of its revolutionary
policy.
But, woe, if the revolutionary party does not measure up to
the height of the situation! The daily struggle of the proletariat sharpens the
instability of bourgeois society. The strikes and the political disturbances
aggravated the economic situation of the country. The petty bourgeoisie could
reconcile itself temporarily to the growing privations, if it arrived by
experience at the conviction that the proletariat is in a position to lead it
onto a new road. But if the revolutionary party, in spite of a class struggle
becoming incessantly more accentuated, proves time and again to be incapable of
uniting the working class about it, if it vacillates, becomes confused,
contradicts itself, then the petty bourgeoisie loses patience and begins to look
upon the revolutionary workers as those responsible for its own misery. All the
bourgeois parties, including the social democracy, turn its thoughts in this
very direction. When the social crisis takes on an intolerable acuteness, a
particular party appears on the scene with the direct aim of agitating the petty
bourgeoisie to a white heat and of directing its hatred and its despair against
the proletariat. In Germany, this historical function is fulfilled by national
Socialism (Nazism), a broad current whose ideology is composed of all the putrid
vapors of disintegrating bourgeois society.
THE COLLAPSE OF BOURGEOIS DEMOCRACY
From Whither France?, 1934
* * *
After
the war, a series of brilliantly victorious revolutions occurred in Russia,
Germany, Austria-Hungary, and later in Spain. But it was only in Russia that the
proletariat took full power into its hands, expropriated its exploiters, and
knew how to create and maintain a workers' state. Everywhere else the
proletariat, despite its victory, stopped halfway because of the mistakes of its
leadership. As a result, power slipped from its hands, shifted from left to
right, and fell prey to fascism. In a series of other countries, power passed
into the hands of a military dictatorship. Nowhere were the parliaments capable
of reconciling class contradictions and assuring the peaceful development of
events. Conflicts were solved arms in hand.
The French people for a long time thought that fascism had
nothing whatever to do with them. They had a republic in which all questions
were dealt with by the sovereign people through the exercise of universal
suffrage. But on February 6, 1934, several thousand fascists and royalists,
armed with revolvers, clubs, and razors, imposed upon the country the
reactionary government of Doumergue, under whose protection the fascist bands
continue to grow and arm themselves. What does tomorrow hold?
[NOTE: Gaston Doumergue: Bonapartist premier of France.
Succeeded Edouard Daladier. Daladier government fell the day after the fascist
riots of February 6, 1934.]
Of course, in France, as in certain other European countries
(England, Belgium, Holland, Switzerland, the Scandinavian countries), there
still exist parliaments, elections, democratic liberties, or their remnants. But
in all these countries, the same historic laws operate, the laws of capitalist
decline. If the means of production remain in the hands of a small number of
capitalists, there is no way out for society. It is condemned to go from crisis
to crisis, from need to misery, from bad to worse. In the various countries, the
decrepitude and disintegration of capitalism are expressed in diverse forms and
at unequal rhythms. But the basic features of the process are the same
everywhere. The bourgeoisie is leading its society to complete bankruptcy. It is
capable of assuring the people neither bread nor peace. This is precisely why it
cannot any longer tolerate the democratic order. It is forced to smash the
workers and peasants by the use of physical violence. The discontent of the
workers and peasants, however, cannot be brought to an end by the police alone.
Moreover, if it often impossible to make the army march against the people. It
begins by disintegrating and ends with the passage of a large section of the
soldiers over to the people's side. That is why finance capital is obliged to
create special armed bands, trained to fight the workers just as certain breeds
of dog are trained to hunt game. The historic function of fascism is to smash
the working class, destroy its organizations, and stifle political liberties
when the capitalists find themselves unable to govern and dominate with the help
of democratic machinery.
The fascists find their human material mainly in the petty
bourgeoisie. The latter has been entirely ruined by big capital. There is no way
out for it in the present social order, but it knows of no other. Its
dissatisfaction, indignation, and despair are diverted by the fascists away from
big capital and against the workers. It may be said that fascism is the act of
placing the petty bourgeoisie at the disposal of its most bitter enemies. In
this way, big capital ruins the middle classes and then, with the help of hired
fascist demagogues, incites the despairing petty bourgeoisie against the worker.
The bourgeois regime can be preserved only by such murderous means as these. For
how long? Until it is overthrown by proletarian revolution.
DOES THE PETTY BOURGEOISIE FEAR REVOLUTION?
From Whither France?, 1934
* * *
Parliamentary
cretins, who consider themselves connoisseurs of the people, like to repeat:
"One must not frighten the middle classes with revolution. They
do not like extremes."
In this general form, this affirmation is absolutely false.
Naturally, the petty proprietor prefers order so long as business is going well
and so long as he hopes that tomorrow it will go better.
But when this hope is lost, he is easily enraged and is ready
to give himself over to the most extreme measures. Otherwise, how could he have
overthrown the democratic state and brought fascism to power in Italy and
Germany? The despairing petty bourgeois sees in fascism, above all, a fighting
force against big capital, and believes that, unlike the working-class parties
which deal only in words, fascism will use force to establish more "justice".
The peasant and the artisan are in their manner realists. They understand that
one cannot forego the use of force.
It is false, thrice false, to affirm that the present petty
bourgeoisie is not going to the working-class parties because it fears "extreme
measures". Quite the contrary. The lower petty bourgeoisie, its great masses,
only see in the working-class parties parliamentary machines. They do not
believe in their strength, nor in their capacity to struggle, nor in their
readiness this time to conduct the struggle to the end.
And if this is so, is it worth the trouble to replace the
democratic capitalist representatives by their parliamentary confreres on the
left? That is how the semi-exploited, ruined, and discontented proprietor
reasons of feels. Without an understanding of this psychology of the peasants,
the artisans, the employees, the petty functionaries, etc. -- a psychology which
flows from the social crisis -- it is impossible to elaborate a correct policy.
The petty bourgeoisie is economically dependent and politically atomized. That
is why it cannot conduct an independent policy. It needs a "leader" who inspires
it with confidence. This individual or collective leadership, i.e., a personage
or party, can be given to it by one or the other of the fundamental classes --
either the big bourgeoisie or the proletariat. Fascism unties and arms the
scattered masses. Out of human dust, it organizes combat detachments. It thus
gives the petty bourgeoisie the illusion of being an independent force. It
begins to imagine that it will really command the state. It is not surprising
that these illusions and hopes turn the head of the petty bourgeoisie!
But the petty bourgeoisie can also find a leader in the
proletariat. This was demonstrated in Russia and partially in Spain. In Italy,
in Germany, and in Austria, the petty bourgeoisie gravitated in this direction.
But the parties of the proletariat did not rise to their historic task.
To bring the petty bourgeoisie to its side, the proletariat
must win its confidence. And for that it must have confidence in its own
strength.
It must have a clear program of action and must be ready to
struggle for power by all possible means. Tempered by it revolutionary party for
a decisive and pitiless struggle, the proletariat says to the peasants and petty
bourgeoisie of the cities:
"We are struggling for power. Here is our program. We are ready
to discuss with you changes in this program. We will employ violence only
against big capital and its lackeys, but with you toilers, we desire to
conclude an alliance on the basis of a given program."
The peasants will understand such language. Only, they must
have faith in the capacity of the proletariat to seize power.
But for that it is necessary to purge the united front of all
equivocation, of all indecision, of all hollow phrases. It is necessary to
understand the situation and to place oneself seriously on the revolutionary
road.
THE WORKERS' MILITIA AND ITS OPPONENTS
From Whither France?, 1934
* * *
To
struggle, it is necessary to conserve and strengthen the instrument and the
means of struggle -- organizations, the press, meetings, etc. Fascism [in
France] threatens all of that directly and immediately. It is still too weak for
the direct struggle for power, but it is strong enough to attempt to beat down
the working-class organizations bit by bit, to temper its bands in its attacks,
and to spread dismay and lack of confidence in their forces in the ranks of the
workers.
Fascism finds unconscious helpers in all those who say that
the "physical struggle" is impermissible or hopeless, and demand of Doumergue
the disarmament of his fascist guard. Nothing is so dangerous for the
proletariat, especially in the present situation, as the sugared poison of false
hopes. Nothing increases the insolence of the fascists so much as "flabby
pacificism" on the part of the workers' organizations. Nothing so destroys the
confidence of the middle classes in the working-class as temporizing, passivity,
and the absence of the will to struggle.
Le Populaire [the Socialist
Party paper] and especially l'Humanite [the Communist Party newspaper]
write every day:
"The united front is a barrier against fascism";
"the united front will not permit...";
"the fascists will not dare", etc.
These are phrases. It is necessary to say squarely to the
workers, Socialists, and Communists: do not allow yourselves to be lulled by the
phrases of superficial and irresponsible journalists and orators. It is a
question of our heads and the future of socialism. It is not that we deny the
importance of the united front. We demanded it when the leaders of both parties
were against it. The united front opens up numerous possibilities, but
nothing more. In itself, the untied front decides nothing. Only the struggle of
the masses decides. The untied front will reveal its value when Communist
detachments will come to the help of Socialist detachments nd vice versa in the
case of an attack by the fascist bands against Le Populaire or
l'Humanite. But for that, proletarian combat detachments must exist and be
educated, trained, and armed. And if there is not an organization of defense,
i.e., a workers' militia, Le Populaire or l'Humanite will be
able to write as many articles as they like on the omnipotence of the united
front, but the two papers will find themselves defenseless before the first
well-prepared attack of the fascists.
We propose to make a critical study of the "arguments" and the
"theories" of the opponents of the workers' militia who are very numerous and
influential in the two working-class parties.
"We need mass self-defense and not the militia," we are often
told.
But what is this "mass self-defense" without combat
organizations, without specialized cadres, without arms? To give over the
defense against fascism to unorganized and unprepared masses left to themselves
would be to play a role incomparably lower than the role of Pontius Pilate. To
deny the role of the militia is to deny the role of the vanguard. Then why a
party? Without the support of the masses, the militia is nothing. But without
organized combat detachments, the most heroic masses will be smashed bit by bit
by the fascist gangs. It is nonsense to counterpose the militia to self-defense.
The militia is an organ of self-defense.
"To call for the organization of a militia," say some opponents
who, to be sure, are the least serious and honest, "is to engage in
provocation."
This is not an argument but an insult. If the necessity for
the defense of the workers' organizations flows from the whole situation, how
then can one not call for the creation of the militia? Perhaps they mean to say
that the creation of a militia "provokes" fascist attacks and government
repression. In that case, this is an absolutely reactionary argument. Liberalism
has always said to the workers that by their class struggle they "provoke" the
reaction.
The reformists repeated this accusation against the Marxists,
the Mensheviks against the Bolsheviks. These accusations reduced themselves, in
the final analysis, to the profound thought that if the oppressed do not balk,
the oppressors will not be obliged to beat them. This is the philosophy of
Tolstoy and Gandhi but never that of Marx and Lenin. If l'Humanite
wants hereafter to develop the doctrine of "non-resistance to evil by violence",
it should take for its symbol not the hammer and sickle, emblem of the October
Revolution, but the pious goat, which provides Gandhi with his milk.
"But the arming of the workers is only opportune in a
revolutionary situation, which does not yet exist."
This profound argument means that the workers must permit
themselves to be slaughtered until the situation becomes revolutionary. Those
who yesterday preached the "third period" do not want to see what is going on
before their eyes. The question of arms itself has come forward only because the
"peaceful", "normal", "democratic" situation has given way to a stormy,
critical, and unstable situation which can transform itself into a
revolutionary, as well as a counter-revolutionary, situation.
[NOTE: "The Third Period": According to the Stalinist
schema, this was the "final period of capitalism", the period of its immediately
impending demise and replacement by soviets. The period is notable for the
Communists' ultra-left and adventurist tactics, notably the concept of
social-fascism.]
This alternative depends above all on whether the advanced
workers will allow themselves to be attacked with impunity and defeated bit by
bit or will reply to every blow by two of their own, arousing the courage of the
oppressed and uniting them around their banner. A revolutionary situation does
not fall from the skies. It takes form with the active participation of the
revolutionary class and its party.
The French Stalinists now argue that the militia did not
safeguard the German proletariat from defeat. Only yesterday they completely
denied any defeat in Germany and asserted that the policy of the German
Stalinists was correct from beginning to end. Today, they see the entire evil in
the German workers' militia (Rote Front) [i.e., Red Front Fighters:
Communist-dominated militia banned by the social- democratic government after
the Berlin May Day riots of 1929]. Thus, from one error they fall into a
diametrically opposite one, no less monstrous. The militia, in itself, does not
settle the question. A correct policy is necessary. Meanwhile,the
policy of Stalinism in Germany ("social fascism is the chief enemy"), the split
in the trade unions, the flirtation with nationalism, putschism) fatally led to
the isolation of the proletarian vanguard and to its shipwreck. With an utterly
worthless strategy, no militia could have saved the situation.
It is nonsense to say that, in itself, the organization of the
militia leads to adventures, provokes the enemy, replaces the political struggle
by physical struggle, etc. In all these phrases, there is nothing but political
cowardice.
The militia, as the strong organization of the vanguard, is in
fact the surest defense against adventures, against individual terrorism,
against bloody spontaneous explosions.
The militia is at the same time the only serious way of
reducing to a minimum the civil war that fascism imposes upon the proletariat.
Let the workers, despite the absence of a "revolutionary situation",
occassionally correct the "papa's son" patriots in their own way, and the
recruitment of new fascist bands will become incomparably more difficult.
But here the strategists, tangled in their own reasoning,
bring forward against us still more stupefying arguments. We quote textually:
"If we reply to the revolver shots of the fascists with other
revolver shots," writes l'Humanite of October 23 [1934], "we lose
sight of the fact that fascism is the product of the capitalist regime and
that in fighting against fascism it is the entire system which we face."
It is difficult to accumulate in a few lines greater confusion
or more errors. It is impossible to defend oneself against the fascists because
they are -- "a product of the capitalist regime". That means, we have to
renounce the whole struggle, for all contemporary social evils are "products of
the capitalist system".
When the fascists kill a revolutionist, or burn down the
building of a proletarian newspaper, the workers are to sigh philosophically:
"Alas! Murders and arson are products of the capitalist system", and go home
with easy consciences. Fatalist prostration is substituted for the militant
theory of Marx, to the sole advantage of the class enemy. The ruin of the petty
bourgeoisie is, of course, the product of capitalism. The growth of the fascist
bands is, in turn, a product of the ruin of the petty bourgeoisie. But on the
other hand, the increase in the misery and the revolt of the proletariat are
also products of capitalism, and the militia, in its turn, is the product of the
sharpening of the class struggle. Why, then, for the "Marxists" of
l'Humanite, are the fascist bands the legitimate product of capitalism and
the workers' militia the illegitimate product of -- the Trotskyists? It is
impossible to make head or tail of this.
"We have to deal with the whole system," we are told.
How? Over the heads of human beings? The fascists in the
different countries began with their revolvers and ended by destroying the whole
"system" of workers' organizations. How else to check the armed offensive of the
enemy if not by an armed defense in order, in our turn, to go over to the
offensive.
L'Humanite now admits defense
in words, but only in the form of "mass self-defense". The militia is harmful
because, you see, it divides the combat detachments from the masses. But why
then are there independent armed detachments among the fascists who are not cut
off from the reactionary masses but who, on the contrary, arouse the courage and
embolden those masses by their well-organized attacks? Or perhaps the
proletarian mass is inferior in combative quality to the declassed petty
bourgeoisie?
Hopelessly tangled, l'Humanite finally begins to
hesitate: it appears that mass self-defense requires the creation of special
"self-defense groups". In place of the rejected militia, special groups or
detachments are proposed. It would seem at first sight that there is a
difference only in the name. Certainly, the name proposed by l'Humanite
means nothing. One can speak of "mass self-defense" but it is impossible to
speak of "self-defense groups" since the purpose of the groups is not to defend
themselves but the workers' organizations. However, it is not, of course, a
question of the name. The "self-defense groups", according to l'Humanite
, must renounce the use of arms in order not to fall into "putschism". These
sages treat the working-class like an infant who must not be allowed to hold a
razor in his hands. Razors, moreover, are the monopoly, as we know, of the
Camelots du Roi [French monarchists grouped around Charles Maurras'
newspaper, Action Francaise, which was violently anti-democratic], who
are a legitimate "product of capitalism" and who, with the aid of razors, have
overthrown the "system" of democracy. In any case, how are the "self-defense
groups" going to defend themselves against the fascist revolvers?
"Ideologically", of course. In other words: they can hide themselves. Not having
what they require in their hands, they will have to seek "self-defense" in their
feet. And the fascists will in the meanwhile sack the workers' organizations
with impunity. But if the proletariat suffers a terrible defeat, it will at any
rate not have been guilty of "putschism". This fraudulent chatter, parading
under the banner of "Bolshevism", arouses only disgust and loathing.
During the "third period" of happy memory -- when the
strategists of l'Humanite were afflicted with barricade delirium,
"conquered" the streets every day and stamped as "social fascist" everyone who
did not share their extravagances -- we predicted: "The moment these gentlemen
burn the tips of their fingers, they will become the worst opportunists." That
prediction has now been completely confirmed. At a time when within the
Socialist Party the movement in favor of the militia is growing and
strengthening, the leaders of the so-called Communist Party run for the hose to
cool down the desire of the advanced workers to organize themselves in fighting
columns. Could one imagine a more demoralizing or more damning work than this?
In the ranks of the Socialist Party sometimes this objection is
heard: "A militia must be formed but there is no need of shouting about it."
One can only congratulate comrades who wish to protect the
practical side of the business from inquisitive eyes and ears. But it would be
much too naive to think that a militia could be created unseen and secretly
within four walls. We need tens, and later hundreds, of thousands of fighters.
They will come only if millions of men and women workers, and behind them the
peasants, understand the necessity for the militia and create around the
volunteers an atmosphere of ardent sympathy and active support. Conspiratorial
care can and must envelop only the technical aspect of the matter. The
political campaign must be openly developed, in meetings, factories, in
the streets and on the public squares.
The fundamental cadres of the militia must be the factory
workers grouped according to their place of work, known to each other and able
to protect their combat detachments against the provocations of enemy agents far
more easily and more surely than the most elevated bureaucrats. Conspirative
general staffs without an open mobilization of the masses will at the moment of
danger remain impotently suspended in midair. Every working-class organization
has to plunge into the job. In this question, there can be no line of
demarcation between the working-class parties and the trade unions. Hand in
hand, they must mobilize the masses. The success of the people militia will then
be fully assured.
"But where are the workers going to get arms" object the sober
"realists" -- that is to say, frightened philistines -- "the enemy has rifles,
cannon, tanks, gas, and airplanes. The workers have a few hundred revolvers
and pocket knives."
In this objection, everything is piled up to frighten the
workers. On the one hand, our sages identify the arms of the fascists with the
armament of the state. On the other hand, they turn towards the state and demand
that it disarm the fascists. Remarkable logic! In fact, their position is false
in both cases. In France, the fascists are still far from controlling the state.
On February 6, they entered in armed conflict with the state police. that is why
it is false to speak of cannon and tanks when it is a matter of the
immediate armed struggle against the fascists. The fascists, of course, are
richer than we. It is easier for them to buy arms. But the workers are more
numerous, more determined, more devoted, when they are conscious of a firm
revolutionary leadership.
In addition to other sources, the workers can arm themselves
at the expense of the fascists by systematically disarming them.
This is now one of the most serious forms of the struggle
against fascism. When workers' arsenals will begin to stock up at the expense of
the fascist arms depots, the banks nd trusts will be more prudent in financing
the armament of their murderous guards. It would even be possible in this case
-- but in this case only -- that the alarmed authorities would really begin to
prevent the arming of the fascists in order not to provide an additional sources
of arms for the workers. We have known for a long time that only a revolutionary
tactic engenders, as a by-product, "reforms" or concessions from the government.
But how to disarm the fascists? Naturally, it is impossible to
do so with newspaper articles alone. Fighting squads must be created. An
intelligence service must be established. Thousands of informers and friendly
helpers will volunteer from all sides when they realize that the business has
been seriously undertaken by us. It requires a will to proletarian action.
But the arms of the fascists are, of course, not the only
source. In France, there are more than one million organized workers. Generally
speaking, this number is small. But it is entirely sufficient to make a
beginning in the organization of a workers' militia. If the parties and unions
armed only a tenth of their members, that would already be a force of 100,000
men. there is no doubt whatever that the number of volunteers who would come
forward on the morrow of a "united front" appeal for a workers' militia would
far exceed that number. The contributions of the parties and unions, collections
and voluntary subscriptions, would within a month or two make it possible to
assure the arming of 100,000 to 200,000 working-class fighters. The fascist
rabble would immediately sink its tail between its legs. The whole perspective
of development would become incomparably more favorable.
To invoke the absence of arms or other objective reasons to
explain why no attempt has been made up to now to create a militia, is to fool
oneself and others. The principle obstacle -- one can say the only obstacle --
has its roots in the conservative and passive character of the leaders of the
workers' organizations. The skeptics who are the leaders do not believe in the
strength of the proletariat. They put their hope in all sorts of miracles from
above instead of giving a revolutionary outlet to the energies pulsing below.
The socialist workers must compel their leaders to pass over immediately to the
creation of the workers' militia or else give way to younger, fresher forces.
A strike is inconceivable without propaganda and without
agitation. It is also inconceivable without pickets who, when they can, use
persuasion, but when obliged, use force. The strike is the most elementary form
of the class struggle which always combines, in varying proportions,
"ideological" methods with physical methods. The struggle against fascism is
basically a political struggle which needs a militia just as the strike needs
pickets. Basically, the picket is the embryo of the workers' militia. He who
thinks of renouncing "physical" struggle must renounce all struggle, for the
spirit does not live without flesh.
Following the splendid phrase of the great military
theoretician Clausewitz, war is the continuation of politics by other means.
This definition also fully applies to civil war. It is impermissable to oppose
one to the other since it is impossible to check at will the political struggle
when it transforms itself, by force of inner necessity, into a political
struggle.
The duty of a revolutionary party is to foresee in time the
inescapability of the transformation of politics into open armed conflict, and
with all its forces to prepare for that moment just as the ruling classes are
preparing.
The militia detachments for defense against fascism are the
first step on the road to the arming of the proletariat, not the last. Our
slogan is:
"Arm the proletariat and the revolutionary peasants!"
The workers' militia must, in the final analysis, embrace all
the toilers. To fulfill this program completely would be possible only
in a workers' state into whose hands would pass all the means of production and,
consequently, also all the means of destruction -- i.e., all the arms and the
factories which produce them.
However, it is impossible to arrive at a workers' state with
empty hands. Only political invalids like Renaudel can speak of a peaceful,
constitutional road to socialism. The constitutional road is cut by trenches
held by the fascist bands. There are not a few trenches before us. The
bourgeoisie will not hesitate to resort to a dozen coups d'etat. aided by the
police and the army, to prevent proletariat from coming to power.
[NOTE: Pierre Renaudel (1871-1935): Prior to WWI,
socialist leader Jean Jaures' righthand man and editor of l'Humanite. During the
war, a right-wing social patriot. In the 1930s, he and Marcel Deat led
revisionist "neo-socialist" tendency. Voted down at the July 1933 convention,
this tendency split from the Socialist Party. After the fascist riots of
February 6, 1934, most of the "neos" joined the Radical Party, the main party of
French capitalism.]
A workers' socialist state can be created only by a victorious
revolution.
Every revolution is prepared by the march of economic and
political development, but it is always decided by open armed conflicts between
hostile classes. A revolutionary victory can become possible only as a result of
long political agitation, a lengthy period of education and organization of the
masses.
But the armed conflict itself must likewise be prepared long
in advance.
The advanced workers must know that they will have to fight
and win a struggle to the death. They must reach out for arms, as a guarantee of
their emancipation.
THE PERSPECTIVE IN THE UNITED STATES
From "Some Questions on American Problems", Fourth
International, October 1940
* * *
The
backwardness of the United State working class is only a relative term.
In very many important respects, it is the most progressive
working class of the world, technically and in its standard of living....
The American workers are very combative -- as we have seen
during the strikes. They have had the most rebellious strikes in the world. What
the American worker misses is a spirit of generalization, or analysis, of his
class position in society as a whole. This lack of social thinking has its
origin in the country's whole history....
About fascism.
In all the countries where fascism became victorious, we had,
before the growth of fascism and its victory, a wave of radicalism of the masses
-- of the workers and the poorer peasants and farmers, and of the petty
bourgeois class. In Italy, after the war and before 1922, we had a revolutionary
wave of tremendous dimensions; the state was paralyzed, the police did not
exist, the trade unions could do anything they wanted -- but there was not party
capable of taking the power. As a reaction came fascism.
In Germany, the same. We had a revolutionary situation in
1918; the bourgeois class did not even ask to participate in the power. The
social democrats paralyzed the revolution. Then the workers tried again in
1922-23-24. This was the time of the bankruptcy of the Communist Party -- all of
which we have gone into before. Then in 1929-30-31, the German workers began
again a new revolutionary wave. There was a tremendous power in the Communists
and in the trade unions, but then came the famous policy (on the part of the
Stalinist movement) of social fascism, a policy invented to paralyze the working
class. Only after these three tremendous waves did fascism become a big
movement. There are no exceptions to this rule -- fascism comes only when the
working class shows complete incapacity to take into its own hands the fate of
society.
In the United States you will have the same thing. Already,
there are fascist elements, and they have, of course, the examples of Italy and
germany. They will, therefore, work in a more rapid tempo. But you also have the
examples of other countries. The next historic wave in the United States will be
the wave of radicalism of the masses, not fascism. Of course, the war can hinder
the radicalization for some time, but then it will give to the radicalization a
more tremendous tempo and swing.
We must not identify war dictatorship -- the dictatorship of
the military machine, of the staff, of finance capital -- with a fascist
dictatorship. For the latter, there is first necessary a feeling of desperation
of large masses of the people. When the revolutionary parties betray them, when
the vanguard of workers shows it incapacity to lead the people to victory --
then the farmers, the small business men, the unemployed, the soldiers, etc.,
become capable of supporting a fascist movement, but only then.
A military dictatorship is purely a bureaucratic institution,
reinforced by the military machine and based upon the disorientation of the
people and their submission to it. After some time their feelings can change and
they can become rebellious against the dictatorship.
BUILD THE REVOLUTIONARY PARTY!
* * *
In
every discussion of political topics the question arises:
Shall we succeed in creating a strong party for the moment when
the crisis comes? Might not fascism anticipate us? Isn't a fascist stage of
development inevitable?
The successes of fascism easily make people lose all
perspective, lead them to forget the actual conditions which made the
strengthening and the victory of fascism possible. Yet a clear understanding of
these conditions is of especial importance to the workers of he United States.
We may set it down as a historical law: fascism was able to conquer only in
those countries where the conservative labor parties prevented the proletariat
from utilizing the revolutionary situation and seizing power. In Germany
two revolutionary situations were involved: 1918-1919 and 1923-1924. Even in
1929, a direct struggle for power on the part of the proletariat was still
possible. In all these three cases, the social democracy and the Comintern [the
Stalinists] criminally and viciously disrupted the conquest of power and thereby
placed society in an impasse. Only under these conditions and in this situation
did the stormy rise of fascism and its gaining of power prove possible.
* * *
Insofar as the proletariat proves incapable, at a
given stage, of conquering power, imperialism begins regulating economic life
with its own methods; the fascist party which becomes the state power is the
political mechanism. The productive forces are in irreconcilable contradiction
not only with private property but also with national state boundaries.
Imperialism is the very expression of this contradiction. Imperialist capitalism
seeks to solve this contradiction through an extension of boundaries, seizure of
new territories, and so on. The totalitarian state, subjecting all aspects of
economic, political, and cultural life to finance capital, is the instrument for
creating a supernationalist state, an imperialist empire, the rule over
continents, the rule over the whole world.
All these traits of freedom we have analyzed, each one by
itself and all of them in their totality, to the extent that they became
manifest or came to the forefront.
Both theoretical analysis as well as the rich historical
experience of the last quarter of a century have demonstrated with equal force
that fascism is each time the final link of a specific political cycle composed
of the following: the gravest crisis of capitalist society; the growth of the
radicalization of the working class; the growth of sympathy toward the working
class, and a yearning for change on the part of the rural and urban petty
bourgeoisie; the extreme confusion of the big bourgeoisie; its cowardly and
treacherous maneuvers aimed at avoiding the revolutionary climax; the exhaustion
of the proletariat; growing confusion and indifference; the aggravation of the
social crisis; the despair of the petty bourgeoisie, its yearning for change;
the collective neurosis of the petty bourgeoisie, its readiness to believe in
miracles, its readiness for violent measures; the growth of hostility towards
the proletariat, which has deceived its expectations. These are the premises for
a swift formation of a fascist party and its victory.
It is quite self-evident that the radicalization of the
working class in the United States has passed through only its initial phases,
almost exclusively, in the sphere of the trade union movement (the CIO). The
prewar period, and then the war itself, may temporarily interrupt this process
of radicalization, especially if a considerable number of workers are absorbed
into war industry. But this interruption of the process of radicalization cannot
be of a long duration. The second stage of radicalization will assume a more
sharply expressive character. The problem of forming an independent labor party
will be put on the order of the day. Our transitional demands will gain great
popularity. On the other hand, the fascist, reactionary tendencies will withdraw
to the background, assuming a defensive position, awaiting a more favorable
moment. This is the nearest perspective. No occupation is more completely
unworthy than that of speculating whether or not we shall succeed in creating a
powerful revolutionary leader-party. Ahead lies a favorable perspective,
providing all the justification for revolutionary activism. It is necessary to
utilize the opportunities which are opening up and to build the revolutionary
party.


Yours in Yahshua, Hawke

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