Showing posts with label DSA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DSA. Show all posts

Sunday, December 31, 2023

Letter to the Comrades of Central Indiana DSA (CINDSA)

 

Comrades,

 

The strength of Central Indiana DSA (CINDSA) has lain in its positive, non-ideological, pragmatic approach that has concentrated on such vitals as housing and union organizing, items that directly

affect the working and personal lives of ordinary working people.  This has enabled CINDSA to reach out positively into the Indianapolis community, and draw support from people who would not ordinarily be drawn to an organization espousing socialism.  With good results, as we’ve seen in the recent campaigns for seats on the Indianapolis City-County Council for its new term that starts in 2024.  While CINDSA members may not be “thoroughly informed” on the often arcane left ideological causes of DSA at the national level and in the key national chapters, and where CINDSA has also been blessed by not having warring national caucuses who are roiled on these issues, its non-ideological, pragmatic approach has paid off and enabled CINDSA to do good work, from what I can see from my limited vantage point of not being able to participate much in CINDSA.

 

I have of necessity to work a political life-killing second-shift job at Kroger, which, because it is in retail, also means not having weekends available either.  (However, politically I’m able to somewhat make up for this by being a member of my union at Kroger, UFCW Local 700, and participating in the movement to build a strong reform caucus within this union.)  I participate somewhat more at the national level through Facebook, through a network of left Friends there, and I keep abreast of what national DSA is doing.  Although I am not a formal member, politically I’m aligned with the traditional social-democratic caucus within national DSA, North Star, and a strong adherent of DSA founder Michael Harrington’s “left wing of the feasible.”  I too am essentially pragmatic, and strongly believe that positive results, far more than “correct” ideology, are what are crucial and draw ordinary working people to support DSA politics and proposals.  However, I will say bluntly that much of what comes out of national DSA and its leading chapters is ultraleft, often drivel, and is even a throwback to neo-Stalinism. 

 

CINDSA has not become embroiled on issues such as Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas War, which are very much dividing points for DSA at the national and key local levels.  That is in fitting with CINDSA’s pragmatic approach.  For myself, I do not believe the struggle in Ukraine is a “proxy war” between Russia and the US and NATO.  I support the Ukrainian drive to preserve its independence, and achieve national self-determination.  This is, to me, consistent with the Marxist principle of, above all, the right of small nations to self-determination, even independence, and to be free of Great Power bullying.  For this same reason, I support (support which is only theoretical at this time) the rights of Xinjiang, Hong Kong, Tibet, and Taiwan to their own rights of self-determination, and to be independent of China should their peoples wish.  I wrote this up in an article published earlier this year by the excellent left group, the British Trotskyist Alliance for Workers Liberty, which is linked here, and which I hope CINDSA comrades will read.  (https://workersliberty.org/story/2023-06-26/marxist-case-tibet-xinjiang-hong-kong-and-taiwan-independence; see also, published as an addendum to my post here, https://workersliberty.org/story/2023-06-26/stalin-1913-and-national-question-note) On Hamas-Israel, I consider what Hamas did on October 7, 2023 to be atrocious and reprehensible, and although I am not at all an automatic pro-Israel supporter, I do defend Israel’s right to defend itself (which Sen. Bernie Sanders also supports), and believe Hamas must be extirpated, as it is an Islamofascist entity.  I know I differ from some comrades here, as the issue came up with two of them on Facebook, and they defriended me over my views, but that’s no matter—friendships often come and go on Facebook.  What was appalling to me was DSA’s support of the antisemitic “Free Palestine” rally in support of what Hamas did that occurred the very next day, October 8, in New York City, and which both New York DSA and national DSA doubled down in support of.  No, comrades, terroristic attacks on civilians are not, decidedly not, “resistance” and “decolonization,” and anybody who asserts so has lost both moral compass and intellectual bearing!  Some things are just simply beyond the pale; so atrocious there is no way to ever justify or excuse them.  Examples are the Pearl Harbor attack of December 7, 1941; 9/11; and the October 7 attacks by Hamas.  No one, now matter how grievous it is alleged they acted (and in the case of the October 7 attacks, all the Israeli victims did was be in the wrong place at the wrong time), certain things are never, ever justified.  We must be morally and intellectually clear on that, in my opinion.  It is to the great discredit of both national DSA and certain key DSA chapters that justified or even celebrated the Hamas attack that they did so.  Such is to be rooting for, act as cheerleaders for, unconscionable mass murderers, and far too many in DSA were simply, egregiously, wrong here.

 

Comrades of CINDSA, you are youthful for the most part, far younger than am I, 77 years old now.  I am a veteran of the 1960s left, an active left force that existed long before many of you were born, and which also petered out from both an onslaught from the right (Nixon, Reagan) and, just as tellingly, from its own inadequacies, principally its substitution of moral indignation for concrete political programs.  Comrades, the great US early 20th Century philosopher, Santayana, tells us so well:  “Those who do not remember history are condemned to relive it.”  So, please, Comrades, I urge you—learn the history of earlier left movements, both for the positive lessons they can give us, as well as for the negative ones.

 

On a positive note, youth is a time of vitality and questioning; however, it is also a time of know-it-all arrogance and stupidity.  Be willing to learn from older comrades, many of whom are resigning now in disgust from DSA, despite being members for decades, because of DSA’s present de facto pro-Hamas attitude.  This, Comrades, is no time for “Good riddance!” flippancy.  One of the great failures of the 1960s New Left was the great youth of its activists and leadership.  We of the New Left were young and arrogant, and so we made a lot of mistakes we needn’t make.  And in the end, following the fiasco of the 1969 SDS National Convention, literally went “poof!” overnight—from an organization 100,000 members strong to nothing!  That could happen too easily to DSA too—already it has lost 20% of its membership.  The youthful enthusiasm of those under 35 who are now drawn to DSA because of Israel-Hamas are not enough to make DSA grow if DSA alienates those of the population 35 and older, who are far more pro-Israel than those younger, with ignorance notable among the young, I’m sad to say.  A recent poll indicated that 20% of Gen Zers believe the Holocaust was a hoax!  67% believe that Jews as a class are “oppressors.”  Far too much of the US public believes there was an independent country called Palestine before the creation of Israel (as a fact, there was no such entity).  Comrades of CINDSA, “left” antisemitism is a big problem, every bit as significant, or even more significant, as Islamophobia. 

 

Which brings one more point.  What can I do now to participate well in CINDSA given my work limitations?  Well, for one thing, I could serve as an intellectual resource.  I’m well read on left literature, am a university graduate, am an extensively published writer in left magazines and on left websites, and have also taught adult education courses on China after Mao, Marxism, and the Communist Manifesto.  I also have a BlogSpot blog, “Politically Incorrect Leftist,” (politicallyincorrectleftist.blogspot.com), which I urge all of you to check out.  This Letter will also be posted there.

 

Finally, to end on a positive note, you Comrades of CINDSA are so much better than the hidebound, tired old leadership you replaced!  A leadership that no longer gave a damn about DSA, and certainly didn’t give a damn about you, young Comrades who wanted to carry on the organization.  You will be interested to know that these hidebound oldsters also were against me too.  Even though they had participated positively in my Marxism and Communist Manifesto classes, and was not the ogre I had been portrayed as being by the equally hidebound “peaceable religious progressives” of Indianapolis (with whom several of these old DSAers overlapped), I had committed the “unpardonable sin” of criticizing one of their cronies for designing and installing for Indianapolis DSA a most inadequate website.  In Indiana, overgrown high school clique that it is, one just does not criticize cronies!  And so, these hidebound “leaders” plotted against me.  I’ve published two blogs on what happened with them on my “Politically Incorrect Leftist” blog, the first one on August 14, 2010, “Dregs” (linked here:  https://politicallyincorrectleftist.blogspot.com/2010/08/dregs_14.html), and a second one that drew on the critical testimony of a lifetime resident of Indianapolis pointedly noting he’d never even heard of DSA here before meeting me.  This second blog, published on February 17, 2011, with the pointed subtitle, “Letter from One of ‘the Masses’” is linked here:  https://politicallyincorrectleftist.blogspot.com/2011/02/dregs-aftermath1-letter-from-one-of.html, I bring up this old history not to re-fight old sectarian battles, but to let you know, much younger Comrades, that roiling conflicts with the hidebound “old ‘progressives’” are nothing new here in Indianapolis, or in Indiana, truly a State of Mediocrity!  (Which the dictionary tellingly defines as “not good enough.”)  I hope you young Comrades will check out these blogs of mine, and realize the fight for a good, effective left confronts many obstacles, some of them even internal.  So, thank you, Comrades, good luck, and keep up the good fight!

 

In solidarity with you,

Comrades of CINDSA! 

 George Fish,

DSA member

since 1996

Monday, December 26, 2022

Can Marxist-Leninists and Leninist-Trotskyists be real democratic socialists?

 

[Self-disclosure:  As a young socialist radical in the 1960s and a member of SDS. I was enamored with the “far left,” particularly Leninism-Trotskyism.  During the fierce faction fight within SDS that began in earnest in 1968 between the Maoist/Stalinist Progressive Labor Party (PL) and the SDS National Office (N.O.), I reluctantly aligned myself with PL’s Worker-Student Alliance (WSA), as I considered them actually pro-working class and serious Marxists, in contradistinction to the SDS N.O., which I viewed as a bunch of hippies.  After the collapse of SDS and disillusionment with PL borne out by a summer of working with it and WSA in Chicago, I joined the youth group of the Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party (SWP), the Young Socialist Alliance (YSA), from which I was expelled—twice!  The late, great Peter Camejo congratulated me sincerely on this, telling me that as he got deeper into the SWP, he realized just how Stalinist it was internally also.  From 2001-2010 I was an at-large member of Solidarity, attended the 2006 Solidarity Summer School and Convention, and was an active writer for both Against the Current and the Solidarity internal discussion bulletin, until I too was expelled from Solidarity in October 2010 on “discipline” charges at a hearing before the National Committee,  which my defense witness called a “kangaroo court.”  Today, I wear all three expulsions as a—badge of honor!  In 2015 I became an enthusiastic supporter of the Presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders, and even wrote an article supporting his candidacy that was published that year on the website of the Third Camp socialist magazine New Politics.  I’ve also “moved politically” from the Third Camp “far left” to Third Camp democratic socialism because I enthusiastically embrace Michael Harington’s idea of socialist politics as achieving the “left wing of the feasible” (emphasis added), am a signatory to the DSA North Star Statement of Principles, and a member of Central Indiana DSA, which has adopted a pragmatic approach free of doctrine and jargon as its operating political philosophy—GF] 

Can Marxist-Leninists and Leninist-Trotskyists be good, real, democratic socialists?  I want to answer that in the negative.  Marxist-Leninists and Leninist-Trotskyists cannot be good, real, democratic socialists—and it’s not because democratic socialism is merely “social-democratic” in its politics, proposals and orientation; or insufficiently “anti-imperialist;” or “beholden to the Democratic Party and against the independent mobilization of the working class.”  No, it’s because democratic socialism is resolutely anti-authoritarian; values concrete results in the here-and-now, not off in some distant but “inevitable” future which no one can seriously predict; believes strongly in civil rights and civil liberties for all, even for those deemed “bourgeois” or “incorrect;” distinguishes between “incorrect” thoughts and writings and terroristic, violent, or discriminatory deeds, and while supporting appropriate criminal punishment for the latter, leaves the former alone—to be dealt with by open, democratic criticism and counterproposal, not by punitive sanction; and because democratic socialism respects the autonomy of the individual, and relies on his/her own personal political consciousness and ethical conscience instead of authoritarian, robotic, “discipline” imposed from above. 

Contrast that to Marxism-Leninism and Leninism-Trotskyism, which closes off discussion and criticism once a decision has been made by the “proper” higher-ups;  imposes an inviolable  “party line” on its members and adherents, and requires them to uphold that line affirmatively in all situations, even requiring them to vote robotically as a bloc at meetings and assemblies; and acts like an infiltrating sect in broader groups, assemblies and movements, where the goal of the sect is to impose its (and overwhelmingly, only its) “correct” line, proposals and programs upon others, whether they agree with them or not.  Be it with the CPUSA, Maoist groups, or Trotskyist groups such as the SWP/YSA, ISO, or Solidarity, historically that is precisely what has happened, and why so much of left history, notably in the US, is that of acrimony, sectarianism, accusations of bad faith, and other movement- and organization-dividing charges and countercharges, which has enervated the process of building a genuinely mass movement of the left.  Even at those times when there were mass movements of the left, notably here in the US, everyone politically aware knew that there were leading individuals and groups one did not cross or too strongly criticize.  That was true in the Popular Front era of the CP, within SDS, and, I fear, will become the new norm within DSA.  DSA has responded in the past with its principled ban on democratic centralism (the organizational hallmark of Marxism-Leninism and Leninism-Trotskyism, even of the “soft” Leninism-Trotskyism of Solidarity), but since DSA’s explosive expansion, that ban seems to be going by the wayside, so to speak; while not formally rescinded as of yet, it is becoming a dead letter in practice with the influx of Marxist-Leninist and Leninist-Trotskyist individuals and caucuses within DSA.  Which, I am convinced, will be the downfall of DSA as a viable democratic socialist organization, and cause it to be but another Solidarity, ISO, Maoist sect, other authoritarian grouping of the left, or all of the above, a gaggle of competing rivalries—and lead to its collapse, same as the influx of competing Marxism-Leninisms and Leninism-Trotskyisms into SDS in the 1960s led to its downfall.

The only solution, I assert, is for DSA to affirm its principled ban on democratic centralism within DSA, both in principle and in practice; while I certainly don’t want, or support, a wholesale expulsion of Marxism-Leninism- or Leninism-Trotskyism-sympathetic individuals, groupings or caucuses from DSA, I do steadfastly support a ban on their acting as such; let them, the supposed “far left,” participate openly within DSA and advocate for their policies and proposals, yet demand of them that they not practice any form of democratic centralism—which means a ban on robotic voting blocs held together by “discipline” instead of autonomous fealty to certain positions by individuals and groups of individuals.  Every individual and caucus member within DSA must to be free to dissent from and abstain from voting on caucus and group proposals, even as members of those caucuses or groups.  Individual autonomy, trust by comrades in the good consciousness and conscience of other DSA comrades, must become the sine qua non across the board—be they groupings and caucuses of Solidarity, as but one example, or of their “social-democratic” opposition, such as North Star!  “Let a hundred flowers bloom, let a thousand schools of thought contend” within a truly “big tent” DSA where a “disciplined” voting bloc does not determine the DSA “line” due to organizational maneuvering, but only through truly free, democratic and open debate involving all DSAers, or chapter delegates, who wish to participate, in truly free, democratic and open DSA meetings.  Otherwise, I fear, the inevitable takeover of DSA by some “disciplined” democratic centralist clique, caucus, or organization is inevitable.  If not in the foreseeable future, then eventually, as it did in SDS—to the complete disarray and unviability of SDS!  Which went from a mass organization of the mostly-student left of 100,000 members to poof! overnight.  (Already we are seeing the ill effects of this within DSA itself, which has seen its membership drop 20%, from 94,000 to 74,000; and while those numbers may seem large, remember, the whole of DSA membership in either case could fit within the confines of the average pro football stadium, which should give the reader a sense of just how small, in a country of 330 million, the organized left really is—GF)

Already we are seeing it within DSA in proposals, programs and resolutions of a “far left” cast being rammed through as supposedly the consensus thinking of the whole of DSA.  Further, from such as support for BDS to the “rank-and-file” strategy, and for several others, these DSA “proposals” are not only causing havoc and consternation within DSA itself, but also, in how DSA relates to other organizations of a progressive and leftist bent.  And may well be leading to DSA members dropping out in significant numbers, by not renewing their dues, for example, or not attending DSA meetings.  That surely is not what we in DSA want, but it is what all too easily could happen; and then DSA becomes but a shell of itself, just as the various Marxist-Leninist and Leninist-Trotskyist sects were but shells, sects little noticed or paid attention to in the outside world until their members and sympathizers (formally or informally) joined DSA and thus organizationally amplified their voices.  Such a DSA is not the DSA we of the democratic left, such as a caucus whose approach I generally support, but am not a member of, North Star, want, but it may become the DSA we are saddled with—as long as democratic centralism is given its new lease on life within DSA itself, as it has since 2016, with the explosive influx of new members.  That is why the principled ban on democratic centralism within DSA must be reaffirmed and upheld, both in principle and in practice:  not to squelch the voices within DSA that are “far left” (as will inevitably be charged), but to save DSA as a “big tent” organization itself, one where both socialism (in its many varieties and advocacies) and meaningful democracy can prevail.

While the “far left” may decry this as “bad faith” or even “anticommunism,” they would completely miss the point, which is—not to silence their proposal of ideas and policies, but to prevent them from being implemented by a mere voting bloc of robotic adherents acting under “discipline,” despite what others may think or wish.  Marxist-Leninists and Leninist-Trotskyists defend democratic socialist organizational norms as needed to create a “fighting army of the proletariat,” conveniently forgetting that an army is but a body for fighting that lacks a head; and thus, in this all armies are but instruments that can be used for fighting for good, or for fighting for ill.  In this, both the organizations of the Red Army under Trotsky which successfully staved off the Whites and the foreign imperialist invading armies in the Russian Civil War, and the Japanese Imperial Army which ravaged East Asia in the 1930s and 1940s, were exactly the same.  Also, the reactionary Guomindang (Kuomintang), which massacred thousands of Communists and workers, was a democratic centralist organization! (Specifically reorganized as such under the aegis of Comintern agent Michael Borodin as the “leading force of the “national democratic revolution” in China in the 1920s, let us recall.)  Democratic centralism is but an instrument, and a blunt one at that, and historically, has always been far more centralist than democratic.  Trotsky, before he became enamored of it, spoke trenchantly in 1904 of what becomes of democratic centralist organizations:

The organization of the party will take the place of the party itself; the Central Committee will take the place of the organization; and finally, the dictator will take the place of the Central Committee.

This dreary prognosis has been exactly confirmed historically, not only from the ascendancy of Stalin in the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), but also right up to the present, in the unquestioned and unopposable ascendancy not only of Mao and others,  and now Xi, in the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), but also of Jack Barnes in the SWP (which led to the demise of this venerable political voice of US Trotskyism) and Bob Avakian in the Maoist/Stalinist Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP).  Hardly models for a mass democratic socialist “big tent” organization such as DSA!

Democratic centralism can also be strongly criticized from the standpoint of “revolutionary socialism” itself, notably in the trenchant critique of it, solidly documented, by Rosa Luxemburg.  In The Letters of Rosa Luxemburg (London and New York: Verso, 2011), in an October 20, 1913 letter to the Editors of Social-Democraten, (pp. 325-328) she specifically excoriates Lenin (pp. 327-8) for organizational heavy-handedness and factionalism in attempting to split the Polish Social Democracy “in a planned and deliberate manner…as the one they [the Leninists—GF] pursue as their specialty in the Russian [Social-Democratic Workers’] Party [RSDRP]” (p. 327) .  The Russian Revolution and Leninism or Marxism? (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1961) consists of two notable essays by Luxemburg that criticize both democratic centralism and the undemocratic aspects of Bolshevism as found early on after the Russian Revolution of 1917.  “Leninism or Marxism?” was what her essay was titled in English; it was originally published in 1904 in Iskra, the newspaper of Russian Social-Democracy, in Russian, and in German in Neue Zeit, the newspaper of the German Social-Democracy, as “Organizational Questions of the Russian Social Democracy;” and excoriates Lenin’s One Step Forward, Two Steps Back as advocating Blanquism, undue centralization, and opportunism. (See especially pp. 84-91 in this volume.) Her unfinished 1919 “The Russian Revolution” is famous not only for its line, “Freedom only for the supporters of the government, only for members of one party—however numerous they may be—is no freedom at all.” (p. 69) But her following lines, a paean to individual freedom, are even downright “bourgeois liberal”! (In a positive sense, of course.)  She writes (ibid.) “Freedom is always and exclusively freedom for the one who thinks differently.  Not because of any fanatical concept of ‘justice’ but because all that is instructive, wholesome and purifying in political freedom depends on this essential characteristic, and its effectiveness vanishes when ‘freedom’ becomes a special privilege.”  In footnote 579 in Letters of Rosa Luxemburg (p. 330), it is noted, “On August 4, 1914, the SPD [German Socialist Party, Germany’s mass socialist party headed by Kautsky] parliamentary group—with group discipline applied against the minority (emphasis added—GF)—voted in favor of the war-credits motion of the imperial government.  The decision to approve money for war was made on August 3, after a heated debate within the SPD parliamentary group, by a vote of 78-14.  The support given by the majority to the war meant that an open split in the SPD was inevitable.”  “Group discipline” was also applied in the CPUSA in silencing and later expelling the Trotskyists, the followers of Earl Browder, and others, as well as causing splits within Leninist-Trotskyist groups to become especially acrimonious.   

Further, as Hal Draper, perhaps the leading ideological interpreter of Third Camp revolutionary socialism, notes in his The “Dictatorship of the Proletariat” from Marx to Lenin (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1987), Lenin and the Bolsheviks in power too easily made it into a “dictatorship over the proletariat” enforced by “party discipline.” (See especially pp. 101-105) Last, Trotskyism-sympathetic scholar Tom Smith, “Beyond Hero Worship: A Marxist Critique of Bolshevik Terror and Its Indebtedness to Jacobinism,” Socialism and Democracy 20, Vol. 10, No. 1, Summer 1996, writing at length that (p. 48)

Bolshevism has failed to be effective after 1917, or to inspire the masses of the world to revolution, or to prevent the Stalinist degeneration within its own process of development.  I would argue that one important reason for these failures (though by no means the primary or exclusive reason) is the following assumption on the part of the Bolsheviks:  that popular fear of arbitrary violence and of minority rule is actually irrational, a fear that the masses need to and should “get over.”  I also believe that such nonsense is a big factor in the tendency of Leninist groups to degenerate quickly into cults, with practically no effect upon the real world whatsoever. (Emphasis in original)

Later, (p. 75) Smith critiques Lenin’s “Can the Bolsheviks Retain State Power?” for arguing that 240,000 Bolsheviks could be “a permanent, collective, one-party ‘Lawgiver’….In other words, the soviets would become the means of whipping up support for the Bolsheviks’ policies—but not so much, for significantly challenging those policies.”  Or in other words, the Bolshevik Party would become the tail that wags the soviet, working-class, dog!  But such authoritarianism, that such “popular fear” of “minority rule” is “actually irrational,” is, as the critiques of Luxemburg, Draper and Smith show, a built-in feature of democratic centralism!  In fact, as Draper’s book so well shows, and as Smith’s essay also demonstrates, the “social democratic” rejection of democratic centralism, i.e., the organizational feature of Marxism-Leninism and Leninism-Trotskyism, is integral to Marx’s and Engel’s own conception of the “dictatorship of the proletariat.”  But not only that:  democratic centralism not only embraces and enhances myriad evils, but rejection of democratic centralism is far closer to what Marx and Engels themselves envisioned as constituting socialism and socialist organization.  Marx’s famous long essay on the Paris Commune, The Civil War in France, makes this abundantly clear, as does Engels’s remark that the “dictatorship of the proletariat” looks exactly like the Paris Commune—where the Marxists were actually a minority, and had to compete for influence with Prodhonists, Blanquists, and others. 

All this makes a strong, even overwhelming, case that democratic centralism has no place within DSA, and that its principled rejection by DSA must not only be upheld, but also deepened and enforced!

So let our “far leftists” within DSA eschew any practice of democratic centralism, not force through resolutions and policies based on robotic “discipline,” and trust the political instincts and consciousness of DSA members themselves to come to the “right” conclusions, and I would gladly say to all of them—“Welcome, comrades!  While we may disagree, we will, above all, agree to disagree, and agree wholeheartedly that dissenting comrades are not automatically class enemies.  We will win over by persuasion, not by the robotic force of ‘disciplined’ voting blocs.”

Our comrades in the British Leninist-Trotskyist organization Alliance for Workers Liberty (though some will call them only erstwhile comrades, or not comrades at all) strike a good balance between party discipline and individual autonomy with the following stipulation to its members that they must first present the Alliance’s position on an issue; then, if they disagree, they are fully allowed to present their dissent from that position without fear of discipline or expulsion.  Thus, striking a most acceptable balance between upholding the group’s position and individual autonomy within the organization as a trusted, principled member.  That is the way it must be within the organized caucuses within DSA:  the right to affirm the caucus’s position, the right to dissent from the caucus’s position, and the right to abstain—even when it comes to voting.  Sadly, that is not the way Marxist-Leninist and Leninist-Trotskyist organizations or caucuses work:  it’s either uphold the “line” or risk expulsion.  Which is unacceptable within a “big tent” democratic socialist organization such as DSA, or really, anywhere!  Also, there is nothing more cringeworthy than the way “freewheeling” Marxist-Leninists or Leninist-Trotskyists will fold in terror and fear when faced with threats from the organizational “disciplinary committee”!  Right now, this tolerance of democratic centralism (for that is what Marxist-Leninist and Leninist-Trotskyist organizational philosophy is, what it invokes is) has made DSA essentially inoperative except as a sounding board for outrageous ultraleft, often Stalinist, political positions, as each disciplined caucus tries to outdo the others in displays of “how left we really are.”  Such a political approach, however, will doom DSA to the 100+-year irrelevancy that has politically characterized Marxism-Leninism and Leninism-Trotskyism in the US, and from which the growth of DSA was as a beautiful flower emerging through the concrete cracks in the pavement.

My autobiographical note at the end of my manuscript is also of high relevance:

George Fish is a Central Indiana DSA member living in Indianapolis, Indiana, and a North Star Statement of Principles signatory.  A socialist writer and poet, he is a regular contributor to New Politics and other left periodicals and websites.


Friday, February 24, 2012

THE “JOBS FOR ALL” LETTER AGAINST THE CURRENT NASTILY REFUSED TO PRINT

Recently, I tried to post the following Letter to the Editors of Against the Current on Occupy movements and the unemployment crisis:

To the Editors of ATC:

While I appreciate the coverage of left movements I get from Against the Current (ATC), including the extensive posts on the Occupy movements in the latest issue, #156, January/February 2012, as a very much "self-interested" unemployed worker I have to object to the consistent exclusion of articles in ATC that has been going on for the last couple of years (only one exception), the unemployment crisis, which is at the heart of the people's massive misery caused by the Great Recession. I can't help but personally feel that this exclusion flows from the fact that the left generally has no personal understanding or awareness of the severity of the crisis, and cannot seem to grasp its devastating impact on the unemployed themselves, who often feel psychologically as though trapped in the lowest rungs of Dante’s hell.

Noted socialist writer Upton Sinclair wrote, "It is difficult to make a man understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it." That doesn't just apply to the business and managerial classes alone--I submit, it can also apply to those who are economically comfortable either as workers or as retirees--and thus have no inkling of what it's like to be one of the working poor, what it's like to be chronically unemployed and "living" on a mere $600/month in unemployment compensation, to live constantly desperate. Such as I do, even as a college graduate (but with the "wrong" degree for the job market!), along with my college graduate friends who also have the "wrong" degrees, who are also older (as I am), who have to try and subsist on only temp agency work that pays $10/hour or less (as I had to do for 10 years, before being cut loose even from this kind of employment!) And yes, Upton Sinclair's remark applies to many a putative socialist as well, and to numerous "activists" in Occupy movements and left groups who don't have to worry about the economic wolf at the door, at least for the time being.

It is literally shameful the way the U.S. left has ignored the unemployment crisis, either slighting it through silence altogether, or not proposing bold Keynesian measures such as a new WPA, which created 8.5 million jobs in the 1930s and provided paychecks to 9.7 workers then, according the UCubed, the "union of the unemployed" set up by the Machinists' union (but which is not conceived as an "unemployed council" such as were established in the 1930s, but merely as a voting bloc to pressure Obama and the Democratic Party to "do right."). The reformist socialists such as DSA and CCDS only advocate for Obama's tepid jobs program, which will create merely 1.2 million jobs in an economy with a far bigger workforce than existed in the 1930s. The "revolutionary" socialists are even worse, aiming their fire at the "inadequacy" and merely "reformist" measures that would result from implementing Keynesian measures such as were instituted during the New Deal. So afraid of "saving capitalism," our "revolutionaries" would rather sacrifice the unemployed upon the altar of ideological purity, thus presenting themselves through their inaction as tacitly “aligned” (though for much different reasons) with the obstructionist Republicans and Tea Partiers--who also don't want any Keynesian measures applied to help the unemployed by providing decent-paying, productive, valuable jobs that fulfill real economic needs such as repairing infrastructure, and can actually become Green jobs.

Fortunately, there is one honorable socialist exception, the semi-Trotskyist/Third Camp socialist journal and website New Politics, http://newpol.org, of which ATC Editor David Finkel is a Sponsor, and of which leading Solidarity member Dan La Botz is an Editor. I published on New Politics online on February 3, 2011 my "Open Programmatic Proposal to the Broad U.S. Left for Directly Dealing with the Present Unemployment Crisis" calling for a new WPA, http://newpol.org/node/425; in this I was ably seconded by Brian King's supportive article and history of the WPA, "Jobs for All," http://newpol.org/node/445. Radical historian Jesse Lemisch also contributed mightily to this discussion with two articles on New Politics online, "Occupy the American Historical Association: Demand a WPA Federal Writers' Project," http://newpol.org/node/555, and "A WPA for History: Occupy the American Historical Association," http://newpol.org/node/582. I also briefly discussed Occupy youth and their roles as probably unemployed workers once they leave the student confines in "Carl Davidson, Bill Ayers, and Zig Ziglar Moments," http://newpol.org/node/568, where I pointedly noted in a footnote that, according to the New York Times, only 56% of the graduates of the Class of 2010 had found jobs by 2011! But these are virtually unique in what is otherwise a blackout of articles and analyses on the unemployment crisis in "revolutionary" socialist publications!

Jack Rasmus’ article in ATC 135 (July/August 2008), “A New Phase of Economic Crisis,” http://solidarity-us.org/site/node/1608, which was touted to me by one of the Editors of ATC as an exception to my claim of silence on the unemployment crisis, is no exception, really, to this blackout. Much of the article is but a compendium of economic statistics that leads only to the weak, deterministic conclusion that essentially the unemployment and ancillary crises caused by the Great Recession can’t even be seriously ameliorated under capitalism. A “revolutionary” call to passivity in concrete action now while calling for the overthrow of capitalism in the indefinite future. Certainly not a call for a “Jobs for All” new WPA as we called for in New Politics, which, while possibly “saving capitalism from itself” (albeit with major restructuring of this “saved” capitalism), would directly benefit millions, galvanize and energize them, and draw them into more militant political action precisely because they would now feel a sense of real hope and empowerment—plus having the material means to live a decent life, not merely scrounge to survive! Same as the (admittedly) reformist and inadequate New Deal did in the 1930s—which aside from achieving real changes in the way capitalism worked, also radicalized millions and pushed the “limits of the possible” much further to the left. Good things, yes? One would really think so, especially on the part of the “revolutionary” left as represented by ATC and Solidarity, but—these “revolutionaries” tragically disappoint by only wanting to say “no” to this.

But as my comrade and fellow New Politics contributor Brain King put it in an e-mail comment to me that was shared with this ATC Editor, “Why don't ‘Socialist’ groups and journals want to support ‘Jobs for All’? That's a tough one, but it's gotta have something to do with how they see their own group interests and the maintenance of their institutions. They must figure that it's much cooler to promote some pie-in-the-sky version of an ethereal state of affairs called ‘socialism’ than to get jobs for all, gain a lot of control over labor markets, but leave capitalism still functioning. I also think a lot of these so-called ‘socialists’ don't much like the idea of being involved with a lot of politically incorrect schlubs, like me and you. If your gonna build a mass movement, you're gonna have to learn to get along with a lot of working people without left pedigrees.” [As originally written by King—GF]

Leaving socialists such as myself, Brian King and Jesse Lemisch who are aware of the horridness of the unemployment crisis and the sting of unemployment between the Scylla of reformist tailing after Obama's inadequate approach, or the Charybdis or the tacit “alignment” with the Republicans against Keynesian measures that would actually work by the "revolutionary" left (although, again, for entirely different reasons), as demonstrated by the deafening silence coming from the "revolutionaries”!

I write this letter out of my great respect and appreciation for ATC.

George Fish

This was a revised version of an earlier draft I’d sent to this socialist bimonthly—most notably revised from the original in that I’d excised some language that Against the Current Managing Editor and Editorial Board Member David Finkel had vehemently objected to. For in the original I’d talked of persons on the left not understanding what it was like to be unemployed because many of them were among the “smug employed” and the “smug retired.” Finkel also drew my attention to the article by Jack Rasmus, on which I commented in the revised letter. Those were the two notable changes made, and made specifically to answer Finkel’s objections; and so I sent off the revised letter to Against the Current for re-consideration. Despite Finkel’s nastily reproachful tone, I’d been professional enough to take his objections into consideration, and revise accordingly. I expected no problems with the revised letter, even though personal relations with him were strained, had been for some time, and in the fall of 2010 Finkel personally instigated proceedings that led to my expulsion from Solidarity, the socialist grouplet (only 200-some members nationally) that publishes Against the Current as a ‘broader” left magazine. In fact, many’s the time I’d previously published in Against the Current, frequently with Finkel’s previous encouragement and approval. (It should be mentioned here that David Finkel is also a listed Sponsor of the New Politics hard-copy journal.)

What I got instead from Against the Current was this below, directly from Finkel:

My final note to you, last week, very explicitly stated that “…you don’t need to send us any more ‘letters to the editor’ or proposals for articles, and in fact you can stop sending messages here on anything whatsoever. If there is any part of the above that is not clear, please re-read as many times as necessary.” There is no way to make the point clearer. We will not acknowledge or respond to any further communications from you.

There it is, ladies and gentlemen, friends and comrades! Just like Lucifer, I’ve now been cast into the pit of hell by Almighty God himself, in the form of a Managing Editor of a small, and to most people, highly obscure, magazine of the left with which I’d been associated with before; and had even been told by Finkel himself that I could submit proposed articles and letters to Against the Current even after I’d been expelled from Solidarity.

What’s particularly interesting, I think, in all this is not any objection to “offensive” language (which had been excised, anyway, in my revision) on the part of Against the Current, but the fact that, like much of the left today, it doesn’t really want to talk about “Jobs for All” new WPA-style programs. New Politics online has been the only notable (and to me, honorable) exception, having first published my awkwardly-titled "Open Programmatic Proposal to the Broad U.S. Left for Directly Dealing with the Present Unemployment Crisis" that called for such a new WPA, which was ably seconded on New Politics online by Brian King; further, also on New Politics online, radical historian Jesse Lemisch posted three articles in support of a WPA-like proposal for unemployed cultural and intellectual workers. (Two of Lemisch’s articles are linked above in the letter, as are King’s and my articles).

That “Jobs for All” programs and the left’s failure to adequately address the unemployment crisis because new-WPA proposals are seen as either inherently “reformist,” or conversely, other elements of the left don’t want to destroy “unity” by going beyond what Obama’s proposed, seems to me what’ at the ideological crux of Against the Current’s refusal, not language that had since been removed. That was seen to be the ideological issue involved by Brian King and three other friends and comrades of mine, who sent me the following remarks on my original draft, and whose words of support had been passed on to Finkel. They wrote, from a variety of political orientations, as seen below.

Greg King, member of CCDS, shop steward, SEIU Local 888, Boston city workers:

George, the Left hasn't been completely silent on the unemployment issue. They probably haven't devoted anywhere near as much time and energy to the crisis as it deserves. Discussing & pushing for solutions such as your WPA proposal would be a very good thing to do. Sometimes there is too much posturing and abstract theorizing, not enough attention to the real problems of real people.

Also, I didn't think your letter was that offensive. I thought it was well-argued and frank.


Harold Karabell, former left activist in Indianapolis, now living in St. Louis, Missouri:

In addition to infrastructure work, my own city could use a few thousand trees in various neighborhoods.

So perhaps it's time to revive the CCC as well!

Brian King, comrade from Seattle, long-time activist, contributor to New Politics:

I'm not surprised that ATC refused to publish your letter. For the record, I thought it was very good, and, for you, remarkably restrained. [I admit to sometimes getting carried away with harsh language—GF] My experience with all these guys (ATC, CCDS, DSA, Monthly Review, Nation) is that they are very uncomfortable with the idea of Jobs for All and the idea of building a movement for a new WPA. Actually, as far as I know, the only person of national prominence who supports us is Robert Reich, Clinton's old Secretary of Labor.

Why don't "Socialist" groups and journals want to support "Jobs for All"? That's a tough one, but it's gotta have something to do with how they see their own group interests and the maintenance of their institutions. They must figure that it's much cooler to promote some pie-in-the-sky version of an ethereal state of affairs called "socialism" than to get jobs for all, gain a lot of control over labor markets, but leave capitalism still functioning. I also think a lot of these so-called "socialists" don't much like the idea of being involved with a lot of politically incorrect schlubs, like me and you. If your gonna build a mass movement, you're gonna have to learn to get along with a lot of working people without left pedigrees.


and Phil Davis, former member of Solidarity, unemployed recent college graduate:

I think Dave should publish your letter regardless of whether or not he agrees with it. He could perhaps publish it and then write a rebuttal explaining why he disagrees with you. Instead, he chooses not to publish it at all. This is sad and unfortunate and yes it is censorship…you are correct.

Yes, I agree with you that "Jobs for All" is the slogan we should be fighting for. As someone who is unemployed, I believe that's a very, very important demand. I think Finkel should publish your letter regardless of whether or not he personally agrees with it. He could always write some type of rebuttal explaining why he disagrees with it, but I guess he won't even be doing that.


Refusal to even discuss “Jobs for All” programs compounded by censorship. Those are the political issues at the heart of Against the Current’s vehement refusal to print my Letter to the Editors, nor even allow the issue to be raised, even in a miniscule journal of the U.S. left where, given the mood of the U.S.’s also-miniscule left as a whole, both the letter itself and the issues it addresses would soon be forgotten. If anyone on the left ever wonders why, in this time of continuing deep economic recession, there exists this historical anomaly of the great bulk of the 99% not identifying with the left, nor wishing to get involved, even in amorphous Occupy movements, we need look no further than this incident for at least partial explanations.