MIM(Prisons) is a cell of revolutionaries serving the oppressed masses inside U.$. prisons, guided by the communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
Under Lock & Key is a news service written by and for prisoners with a focus on what is going on behind bars throughout the United States. Under Lock & Key is available to U.S. prisoners for free through MIM(Prisons)'s Free Political Literature to Prisoners Program, by writing:
MIM(Prisons) PO Box 40799 San Francisco, CA 94140.
This year has been filled with misinformation, in the media that has
been strategically broadcasted to mislead, antagonize and keep people
divided. It is beyond my comprehension to understand how people reason
with themselves to vote for people to office as their representatives
without analysis of what is really going on. All year long the media
broadcasts visible contradictions in everything these representatives
say and do, yet no one questions or holds these representatives
accountable for their actions and inactions.
Movement after movement has arose in opposition to inactions or
actions of government officials, but to what end? or means? These
movements proclaim this and that end or means but without any analysis
of what is really taking place. I see no method for resolving these
contradictions to any prosperous end through any known movement. Our
movement (MIM(Prisons) and associates) are included in my analysis
because of recent dissonance. The Spring 2020 ULK No. 70
publication attempts to demystify MIM’s failures, but has either
forgotten or not published Mao Zedong’s cataloged weaknesses exhibited
by themselves or the lumpen-proletarians as revolutionary soldiers. The
following should be published as strong talking points for future
issues:
The military viewpoint – A tendency to regard fighting as the
only task of the army, avoidance of such political tasks as educating
and organizing the mass of the people, arming ’em and helping ’em to
establish their own political power. Without this fight/politikal work
the whole fight is lost and its meaning and the revolutionary a reason
for existence.
Extreme democracy – Aversion to discipline, each commander and
soldier going their own way in a carefree manner.
Absolute equalitarianism – A demand that everyone be treated
alike regardless of circumstances; meanwhile no one is created
equal.
Subjectivism – Holding opinions and criticisms without a
realistic examination of the facts and without regard for politikal
principle, basing opinions on random talk and wishful thinking; focusing
criticism on minor issues, petty defects and personal quirks. All of
these only lead to mutual suspicion and unprincipled quarreling between
people.
Individualism – Vindictiveness, cliquism, the mercenary
viewpoint; holding oneself responsible to individual leaders rather than
to the revolution as a whole; Hedonism – an urgent desire for personal
comfort and pleasure, longing to leave the hard life of struggle and
find some softer spot.
The idea of roving insurgents
Adventurism – Acting blindly regardless of conditions and the
state of mind of one’s forces; Slack discipline on the one hand but
corporal punishment and the execution of deserters on the other,
attempting to enforce rather than to inspire loyalty to cause.
These are the tenents we need to analyze and play on to prevent any
challenges to our rule before the revolution begins and count on ’em to
disrupt the revolution once it begins!
First of all I would like to say that I truly admire the work that
you all are doing. Even though I am somewhat new to the cause, I know
that I am definitely headed in the right direction. At this point, I
don’t feel qualified to contribute any articles that would be worth
publication. There is so much that I would like to learn from you so
that I will be in a better position to write for ULK. I am a
teacher and a writer at heart and I definitely plan on providing you
with work contributions in the future. In the meantime, I will offer a
few comments on an article found in ULK 56. The article is titled
“Building
Unity Through Talk”, by Soso of MIM(Prisons).
Being incarcerated for over 13 years, I have seen what hatred and
division does to prisoners. What I love about MIM(Prisons) is the fact
that you all not only encourage peace & unity among prisoners, but
you also labor to help them to see the bigger picture of what’s going on
“behind the scenes.” Oppressed nations are frustrated and they don’t
realize why they are so upset. MIM(Prisons) helps us to see that the
real problem is found in the overarching imperialist system rooted in
capitalism, not each other.
The article speaks about contradictions with the enemy and
contradictions among the people, and it goes on to describe the best way
to deal with both. “When we run into problems with people who should be
our allies,” the article states, “we need to start from [the] desire for
unity.” If oppressed nations would stop and take a moment to see that
the system is designed to bring disunity among the people, and that this
is really a divide-and-conquer strategy used by the bourgeoisie to
ensure their continued ability to exploit the proletariat, only then
will we see how important maintaining unity is when it comes to
revolutionary struggle.
As a bisexual man in prison, I see other oppressed nations attacking
the LGBTQ community (verbally and physically) as if we are the enemy.
But as this article rightly points out, the marginalization of queer and
trans folk is actually characteristic of imperialist oppressors and the
patriarchy. The more oppressed nations are able to see that there are
certain mindsets that are counterproductive to revolutionary struggle,
the more they will be able to channel their energies in a positive
direction that will lead to true change. I believe the greatest strength
of MIM(Prisons) lies in its push for unity, peace, growth,
internationalism, and independence (otherwise known as the five
principles of the United Front for Peace in Prisons).
I can’t help but to notice that this country is slowly moving in a
more socialist direction, and I believe that is because people are
starting to become disillusioned with the imperialist agenda. Unity and
education is the key to keeping the momentum going, and anything that
undermines that unity needs to be identified and exposed for what it is
(which I believe MIM(Prisons) does a good job at). Thank you for the
work that you do and I look forward to studying and struggling with you
all.
MIM(Prisons) responds: This comrade demonstrates that it
doesn’t take special training to contribute articles that are
worthwhile. By analyzing the conditions where ey is at, ey offers some
universal observations around the topic of unity.
While we certainly hope the efforts of building public opinion for
socialism are paying off, we think it’s unlikely that this country is
actually moving in a socialist direction economically, as this author
states above. With the coronavirus having an undeniable impact on
capitalism’s status quo, it is a good opportunity to continue pushing
for socialist change.
History shows us that to put an end to capitalism we will need a
revolution. It won’t be a slow move towards socialism, but rather a
violent revolution to overthrow capitalism. The capitalists won’t give
up without a fight!
One thing we want to clarify about this article is who is the
proletariat and who is exploited, because this is a very common point of
confusion especially among our new subscribers. Where this author is
discussing oppressed nations in prison succumbing to divide-and-conquer
tactics, and helping oppressed nations realize capitalism’s main
interests is in exploiting the proletariat, we want to clarify who is
the proletariat. For the most part the oppressed nations within U.$.
borders are not exploited and not proletarian. Many people in oppressed
nations belong to the lumpen (that’s who is locked up in prison and
hustling on the streets), labor aristocracy, and even the bourgeoisie.
Some migrants are in the proletarian class, and some people are in the
semi-proletariat. For the most part people in oppressed nations in U.S.
borders are not proletarian and are not economically exploited.
We have a lot of study materials about different classes and their
roles in capitalism and imperialism. Simply send us a work-trade and a
request and we’ll get something out to you about it!
We also look forward to continuing to develop with our newer
comrades! We’re inspired by letters like this every day.
Greetings to all my brothers and sisters on lock-down and on the outside
fighting the struggle against oppression everywhere. This is from your
hardcore revolutionary brotha in South Georgia. With great respect and
love. I want to share this information with you in the hopes of you
doing the same.
Education is better than incarceration! Something we can all
support!
I’ve learned in the hardest way possible that in the United $nakes of
Amerikkka every felony conviction – no matter what the judge officially
assigns in months or years – results, quite literally, in a life
sentence. As a strong proponent of decarceration, I am encouraged by the
efforts toward sentencing reform which will get some people out of
prison sooner. But I am painfully aware that release from prison will
present new challenges for those individuals whose futures have been
made permanently fragile by their status as convicted criminals.
The lifetime consequences of a criminal conviction are evident in the
diminished social status and in the devastation of poor communities and
communities of blacks that have been hyper-policed, hyper-prosecuted and
hyper-punished for decades.
Individuals from these communities are punished not only by virtue of
the time they actually spend in prison, on probation, or in an
alternative program, but because of the additional punishments that are
inflicted for a lifetime. The consequences of a felony conviction
include periods of voter disenfranchisement, travel restrictions,
restricted access to public housing, restrictions of federal educational
benefits, barriers to certifications and licensure of certain
professions, and an irreversible stigma that permeates every aspect of
life.
For those who spend time in prison, release is stressful even under the
best of circumstances. People are released with a small stipend that
barely covers the cost of living for a day or two. Without adequate
assistance, many understandably fail to find meaningful employment,
build healthy relationships and integrate successfully into a community.
Having been released to a militaristic system of supervision that
provides few services, imposes conditions that almost guarantee – and
often expects – failure, many parolees end up right back in prison. I
have been down that road, and I make no excuses. Those who do manage to
successfully stay out remain stigmatized by the requirement that they
continue to identify themselves on legal documents, job and school
applications, and in numerous other places as a person who has a
criminal conviction, no matter how long ago the original crime occurred.
These types of punitive responses to people who have made serious
mistakes – but have already repaid their debts to society – do nothing
to solve the problems. Like unemployment, which leads to crime, and
hinders rather than promotes rehabilitation and successful integration
into the community, it is difficult to understand why there would be any
policy in place that would make it more difficult for people to come
home from prison and do the right thing. I’m assuming the perspective of
the mainstream in that doing the right thing means, at the very least,
becoming self-supporting and living within the boundaries of the law. It
has been argued that many of the barriers that are in place to restrict
convicted people from certain jobs, from public housing, etc. are there
to protect the public. However, the stronger arguments demonstrate that
such barriers are purely punitive and that in being punitive to
individuals we are actually causing further damage to society.
Unsurprisingly, there is now strong evidence to show that by failing to
provide convicted individuals with the tools needed to succeed once they
leave the criminal justice system, growing incarceration has
significantly increased poverty in the United $tates.
Among the most absurd punitive policies making it difficult to succeed
after conviction are policies that restrict access to higher education.
I say absurd because, at this point, even those on the most conservative
side of the public dialogue about prison reform agree that “prisoners
should be provided free education in order to reduce crime and
recidivism.” This is a direct quote from former Speaker of the House
Newt Gingrich during a meeting of Right on Crime in Washington, DC a few
years ago.
At the same time that living-wage employment has required higher skill
levels, education – particularly higher education – has increasingly
become the most under-appreciated, underused and under-supported tool
offered inside correctional facilities. This has happened despite the
numerous studies proving that education is the most reliable predictor
of reduced criminal recidivism. Educational attainment, besides being a
worthy goal in itself, also increases one’s prospects for securing
meaningful employment, enabling individuals to support themselves and
their families. While country-wide 43.3% of formerly incarcerated
individuals are likely to return to prison within three years of
release, the likelihood drops to 5.6% for recipients of a bachelor’s
degree.
Despite this data, the growing trend is to create post-conviction
barriers for individuals who are attempting to apply to college. The
Center for Community Alternatives found that nearly 60% of colleges and
universities country-wide screen students for criminal records during
the application process. In some cases, applicants are asked whether
they’ve ever been arrested – even if the arrest did not lead to a
conviction. Institutions that request this information often do so
without appreciation for how a criminal record may or may not impact a
particular student’s ability to successfully engage in the educational
process.
For incarcerated individuals who desire to access higher learning
opportunities, yet another barrier exists: they are ineligible for
federal Pell Grants. Established by the late Senator Claiborne Pell, the
grants allowed people – including those inside correctional facilities –
who could not afford college to access post-secondary education.
Incarcerated students were made ineligible for Pell Grants in 1994 under
the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, a contradiction of
Senator Pell’s legacy of helping ensure that everyone could attend
college. After eligibility was removed, the number of higher education
programs in prisons dropped from 350 to 8 country-wide.
For more than 40 years, the goal of the Pell Grant program has been to
provide need-based assistance to students to promote access to higher
education. Funding flows directly to the educational institution, and
eligibility for aid has been based on student need and expected family
contributions. Pell Grants are available to anyone who qualifies; thus,
removing the barrier to eligibility for incarcerated persons does not
diminish the opportunity of any other eligible students who are
motivated to pursue higher education.
As an incarcerated Black man, my incarceration does not define me, but
people with criminal convictions live among us daily. It is up to you to
decide how best to create systems and policies that promote public
safety. Making it difficult for people to access opportunities and
contribute to society is contrary to that goal, and contrary to the
economic health of this country. Help support policy change to eliminate
the 1994 ban on Pell Grant eligibility for incarcerated persons and
re-establish the opportunity for otherwise eligible people in prison to
obtain college financial aid through Pell Grants for post-secondary
education programs.
Straight from the “belly of the beast” on lock-down at Wilcox State
Prison. The struggle continues and I fight on. One of the hardest who
has ever done it. Power to the people.
PTT of MIM(Prisons) responds: It should be clear, from the
evidence this comrade cites, that the criminal injustice system is not
interested in rehabilitation or helping prisoners succeed on the
streets. The restrictions on Pell Grants demonstrates just the opposite:
prisons are a tool of social control of certain (e.g. oppressed-nation)
populations, which are disproportionately targeted for imprisonment.
Getting Pell Grants reinstated for people with convictions would help
reduce recidivism, as shown in this article. And that would certainly be
a good thing for the internal semi-colonies, which are
disproportionately affected by the oppression that comes from split
families and the many other traumas of imprisonment.
At the same time, college education, for people of any nation, is
controlled by the U.$. government, and thus does not teach a liberatory
education curriculum. There’s no degree you can earn in the United
$tates, or any country, that’s going to teach you how to liberate the
majority of the world’s people from the effects of capitalist
imperialism. It simply is just not allowed to exist, and it definitely
won’t be paid for by taxpayer dollars.
All self-betterment, including college education, has its positive
effects. If our goal is to end oppression worldwide and forever, we need
to also build our own independent institutions that can educate people
in what matters for the planet. And we don’t need federal funding to do
this. We can start by creating more study groups behind bars, including
the mail-based study groups supported by MIM(Prisons). We can expand
these educational institutions to include comrades on the streets and
provide ongoing education for releasees. When we control these programs
we can ensure they persist and aren’t at the whims of government
funding.
Our own educational programs are no substitute for a college degree when
it comes to an individual’s earnings. GED programs and college classes
are important opportunities for releasees, which can increase their
abilities to contribute to liberatory projects. We don’t have the
resources to substitute for these institutions yet, and we can help our
comrades use these educational opportunities. Therefore our work around
prisoner education supports the re-instatement of Pell Grants, while
building independent education programs for prisoners and releasees that
are grounded in the needs of oppressed people worldwide.
Individual gain is not our end goal in any education project. We don’t
win unless we all win.
Continuity and Rupture: Philosophy in Maoist Terrain J.
Moufawad-Paul Zero Books 2016
Abbreviations JMP = J. Moufawad-Paul
CPC = Communist Party of China MZT = Mao Zedong
Thought MLM = Marxism-Leninism-Maoism ML =
Marxism-Leninism MIM = Maoist Internationalist Movement PCP = Communist Party of Peru RCP,USA or
RCP=U$A = Revolutionary Communist Party, USA RIM(MIM)
= Revolutionary Internationalist Movement that later became the Maoist
Internationalist Movement RIM(RCP) or RIM =
Revolutionary Internationalist Movement that was a sort of international
led in practice by the RCP CoRIM = Committee for RIM, the
leadership of the international RIM, primarily run by the RCP AWTW = A World To Win, magazine published by the CoRIM GPCR = Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution PPW =
Protracted People’s War ICM = International Communist
Movement, or the collection of communist organizations across the world
This book purports to be a philosophical exposition into the terrain of
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, a science that has been forged in revolutionary
practice. And as it’s title aptly describes, it focuses on the
dialectical relationship between continuity and rupture in the
development of humyn knowledge through the scientific method. A method
which can be applied to society just as it can to oceans or plants. The
author counters those who deny this.
Continuity and Rupture is a useful book for understanding the how
and why behind how Maoism came to be. But we recommend reading the book
with this review to get an alternate history of Maoism in the First
World, as well as some strong caveats on the political line presented as
Maoism in this book. The biggest issue we will take up in this review is
the uncritical presentation of the RCP=U$A-led Revolutionary
Internationalist Movement (RIM). The development of Maoism within
occupied turtle island can be seen to have started with the Black
Panther Party for Self-Defense (BPP), but to really be consolidated as
“Maoism-qua-Maoism” by the Maoist Internationalist Movement (MIM)
beginning in 1983. MIM’s development of Maoism was explicitly a
criticism of and rejection of RCP=U$A politics. It is problematic that
this book leaves the RCP=U$A in the position of the prominent Maoist
organization in this country as Maoism was being consolidated as an
ideology, when that organization struggled against Maoism the whole time
and only claimed the label for a period when it served to maintain their
influence within the RIM.
In addition to providing a counter-narrative, albeit North
America-centric, we will address a number of points where JMP emself
seems to lean towards positions of the RCP=U$A and away from the Maoist
position.
Maoism as Maoism Rupture
Much of this book deals with the distinguishing of Maoism from Mao
Zedong Thought. What distinguishes a ‘Thought’ from an ‘ism’ is that a
‘Thought’ is applying revolutionary science to local conditions and
drawing specific conclusions. When a ‘Thought’ develops understanding
that is universally applicable to communists everywhere, that is beyond
the previous level of scientific understanding of how to build
socialism, it becomes an ‘ism’.
Applying the concept of ‘continuity and rupture’ to historical
materialism, the author makes the somewhat controversial assertion that
the rupture that established Maoism as a new theoretical stage occurred
in 1993. This is controversial because the term “Maoism” existed and was
used to describe movements long before then. Our own movement took up
the name the “Maoist Internationalist Movement” in 1984. Though the
author points out that it is quite common for a scientific term to
emerge before its concept is developed.(p.18) The author succinctly
distinguishes the earlier and later uses of Maoism:
“Maoism, then, is not simply an addition to Marxism-Leninism (as it was
generally understood prior to 1988 under the rubric of Mao Zedong
Thought), but a theoretical development of the science that sums up its
continuity in the formula Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.”(p.23)
Before this time, the author argues that “Maoism” was a word to describe
those who looked to China for leadership, and recognized the revisionism
of the Soviet Union. It was the historical overlap of these two
phenomenon that made this such a heady time for communists. They were
simultaneously experiencing the fall of the first great socialist
experience, while watching a second great revolution critique that
downfall and surpass it by learning from it. As JMP argues, it is these
great events that allowed the theory of historical materialism to
develop and be synthesized by those who lived through and attempted to
build on them.
JMP goes on to say that the GPCR itself was not enough to forge Maoism
as Maoism, but it was the People’s War in Peru that made this a
possibility. It is unclear why the Peruvians would be in a unique
situation compared to other revolutionary movements of their time. For
any of us to move forward, and incorporate the lessons of what China
did, we would have to come to some conclusions about what Maoism is. We
have no reason to believe that MIM founders relied on the PCP to come to
the same major conclusions on what the correct lessons were. We see MIM
actively struggling to defend the main points of Maoism in its struggles
with the RCP=U$A before and after founding MIM. And many others grasped
the significance of both the GPCR and the coup in China in which the
capitalist roaders took power, which are central to distinguishing
Maoism as a new stage and to distinguishing those who understand it.
“And though, in 1981, these same Peruvian revolutionaries began to think
of the possibility of Maoism (in a document entitled Towards Maoism), it
was not until they had reached the apex of their revolutionary movement
that they declared the ‘universal validity’ of Maoism as a ‘third stage’
of revolutionary science. Hence the supposedly controversial claim that
Maoism did not exist before 1988: it did not exist as a properly
coherent theoretical terrain.”(p.xviii)
At times it seems JMP is arguing that a stage can only be summed up
after moving on to the next stage. For instance ey argues that Leninism
was only summed up by the Chinese Maoists, and now Maoism was only
summed up by the Communist Party of Peru (PCP). Or at the very least it
can’t be summed up without the practical application in a protracted
revolutionary struggle that at least approaches taking state power.
“The overall point, here, is that revolutionary theory develops through
class revolution, specifically through world-historical revolution, and
that there have only been three world-historical communist
revolutions.”(p16) and “…the Chinese Revolution was the first
Marxist-Leninist revolution because the Communist Party of China under
Mao was operationalizing (and theorizing) Leninism.”(p29) and so “The
new theoretical terrain emerges when this struggle passes beyond the
limits of the previous terrain and begins to produce a new stage of
struggles according to its assessment, synthesis, and decision of
universality.”(p30)
This gets to shaky ground when JMP argues that the apex of the PCP
struggle was achieved prior to establishing socialism in Peru but still
asserting that new theoretical terrain can only emerge when the struggle
begins to produce a new stage of struggle. The PCP certainly contributed
significantly to the ICM in both the practical fight in Peru and the
ideological exposition and defense of Maoism in the global movement. But
we do not see the PCP as having produced a new stage of struggle, past
the limits of the previous terrain. The practice that revealed the
validity of Mao’s theories was that of the Chinese people, not the
Peruvians.
JMP admits, “Obviously there are other interpretations of Maoism that do
not declare fidelity to this historical narrative”.(p.2) And ey later
cites MIM as one example of this. We provide our historical narrative in
this review. But one of the reasons given by JMP for choosing the
RIM(RCP) story over MIM is that MIM is made up of “organizations based
at the centers of capitalism, specifically the U.$.”(p.47-48), while
going on to say that MIM would not disagree with the PCP conception of
Maoism as a new ism. Calling an idea “white” or “First Worldist” can be
a shortcut for explaining ideological differences, but JMP is not
drawing ideological differences here. This line of thought is a
divergence from the scientific method ey prevents throughout this book.
JMP on MIM
JMP’s coverage of MIM Thought in this book is limited to one footnote.
As mentioned above, it is a footnote where ey seems to acknowledge MIM
as one of the exceptions, one of the other examples of Maoism as Maoism
and not just Mao Zedong Thought, that was separate from the RIM(RCP). Ey
acknowledges MIM’s rejection of the RIM “experience,” as we explain
briefly below. Ey correctly goes on to say that MIM’s Maoism would not
disagree with the PCP Maoism adopted by the RIM.
What we take issue with in this footnote is JMP’s branding of MIM
Thought as “Maoism Third-Worldism.” This term was coined in the Sunrise
Statement published in 2007, after the original MIM had collapsed, 24
years after its founding. For our part, MIM(Prisons) rejected the term
Maoism Third-Worldism, while generally allying ideologically with those
taking it up. We, agreeing with JMP, said that there could be no higher
stage of revolutionary science without a practice that surpasses
socialist China during the GPCR. We asserted that the question of
exploiter vs. exploited countries was just basic Marxist economics, and
not new theory. And we warned our comrades of ceding the terrain of
Maoism to the revisionists.
A Counter-Narrative
Below we have produced a timeline of events related to both the use of
the term “Maoism” and the ideological development of the MIM and the
PCP. Later we will go deeper into some of the ways MIM addressed things
that JMP leaves as open questions for the movement.
We are not claiming that the below represents all the Maoist forces,
rather we are putting MIM history into the context of the history that
JMP upholds as defining Maoism for us. We also start with some notes
from China on the formulation of Maoism as a higher stage of
revolutionary science. In one PCP document online(1) the authors say
that they were waiting for the Chinese to declare and define Maoism, but
once the coup took place in 1976, then the Peruvians saw it as their
task to take on.(2)
The point of all of this is not to say “we were the first,” or to fight
over what year Maoism was established as we know it today. It is to
challenge a narrative that puts the RIM and the RCP=U$A at the center of
this development, when both organizations were dripping with
revisionism. That’s not to imply that all parties in the RIM were
revisionists. But it is clear that the PCP put out all the documents
listed below and struggled to get the RIM to accept their line on
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism over many years. JMP does not state that the RIM
improved on the existing definition coming from the PCP, but that RIM
forced its meaning by adopting the statement. From here, we don’t see
the great importance of that adoption. What is clear, is that the
development of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism in occupied Turtle Island took
the form of a rejection of and struggle against the RCP=U$A, and the RIM
that it led.
Another date worth mentioning is 1956, which is when the bourgeoisie
within the party took the USSR down the capitalist road to the point of
causing a rift in the ICM. This provided the conditions that allowed for
the lessons that defined Maoism as a higher level of understanding of
how to proceed towards communism. MIM founders said you cannot talk
about Maoism prior to this event. And in 1956, the Chinese, led by Mao,
began addressing the question of the bourgeoisie within the party that
develops under the dictatorship of the proletariat. This is at the core
of what Maoism teaches us about pushing socialism to new, higher levels
than we’ve reached so far.
By 1969, the CPC was still using the term Mao Zedong Thought
for reasons of internal political struggle, yet they were applying the
principles of MZT externally, implying that it had universal application
and was really an ‘ism.’
A U.$.-centered Timeline of ‘Maoism’
1938 - Chen Boda and others began pushing the study of Mao’s writings(3)
1945 - VII Congress agreed that the CPC was guided by
Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought(3)
1948 - Wu Yuzhang used “Maoism” in a draft speech instead of MZT - Mao
said ridiculous(3)
1955 - Mao again opposed “Maoism” adoption among intellectual
conference(3)
1956 - Kruschev denounces Stalin, Mao’s critique of bourgeoisie in CPSU
and theory of productive forces begins, addressing questions that Lenin
never faced (MIM said can’t talk about Maoism before this)(3)
1966 - Lin Biao says Mao has elevated Marxism-Leninism to a new stage(3)
launching of Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution (GPCR) in China
Gonzalo’s Red Faction within PCP took up Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong
Thought(4)
1969 - 9th Party Congress in China - difference between MZT and Maoism a
formality, as Deng and Liu Shaoqi resisted “Maoism” as a new stage, the
CPC began applying MZT to global situations/outside China(3)
1969 - PCP took up Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought, with
reconstitution under leadership of Gonzalo(4)
1976 - PCP denounced coup in China and declared “To be a Marxist is to
adhere to Marxism-Leninism-Mao Tse-tung Thought.”, later indicating that
they were waiting for Maoists in China to declare “Maoism” before
this(2)
1979 - PCP: “Uphold, defend, and apply Marxism-Leninsm-Mao Zedong
Thought!”(4)
1980 - PCP launched People’s War with slogan “Uphold, defend, and apply
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, principally Maoism!” - only ones defending
Maoism as such(4)
1980 - RCP, USA get 13 communist parties to sign statement upholding
Marxism-Leninism
MIM predecessor RADACADS is working/struggling with RCP,USA over
questions of Maoism (dates unknown, pre-1983)
1981 - PCP: “Towards Maoism!”(4)
1982 - PCP “took Maoism as an integral part and superior development of
the ideology of the international proletariat”(4)
1983 - RIM(MIM) founded as Maoist group in response to RCP,USA failure
to take up or uphold Maoism, founding document “Manifesto on the
International Situation and Revolution” discusses Mao, the GPCR and the
Third World War(5)
1983 - RCP went to PCP with ML statement from 1980 and PCP rejected it
because it failed to uphold Maoism.(2)
RCP was agnostic over who better Mao or Lenin w/ RIM(MIM), upholding
theory of productive forces and did not understand that a new
bourgeoisie formed within the Chinese CP(7)
1984 - RIM(RCP) founded among groups RCP brought together in 1980, this
time upholding Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought(2)
1984 - RIM(MIM) became MIM, stating “RCP consciously stole the RIM name
for its international mutual aid society”
by this time MIM was distributing pamphlets on the guerilla war in
Peru
1986 - PCP responds to RIM founding statement on MLMZT and becomes a
participant(6)
MIM puts out a theory piece on the PCP that addresses Gonzalo’s line
on the militarization of the party, while it is agnostic on this line it
calls out RCP,USA leader Avakian for rejecting it as well as rejecting
the lessons of the GPCR as universal (MIM Theory 2 (old school))
1987 - “MIM made the question of the non-revolutionary, bourgeoisified
white working class a dividing line question in practice for U.S.-based
Maoists.” and began distributing J. Sakai and H.W. Edwards books(7)
MIM releases
“Third
Draft of Criticism of the RCP” exposing RCP revisionism and stating
that “the RCP has yet to concretely show what it is that is concretely
happening in China in our own lifetimes.”
1988 - JMP claims Maoism begins to exist here, this is the year the PCP
released their Fundamental Documents with the most in-depth definition
of Maoism in relation to philosophy, political economy and scientific
socialism
1990 - “MIM formed a Central Committee with supervisory powers over the
various branches and empowered by the membership to run the day-to-day
work such as the party’s monthly newspaper MIM Notes” and put out
What is MIM? and most of the content therein
1990 or 1991 - line on non-revolutionary labor aristocracy majority
appears as 3rd Cardinal Principle in MIM Notes
1992 - Gonzalo captured
MIM concludes that RCP,USA is revisionist party(7)
1993 - RIM releases statement upholding Marxism-Leninism-Maoism (AWTW
#20 1995), correcting 1984 statement as being “incomplete”, recognizes
bourgeoisie within party
1996 - RCP,USA first public response to MIM via CoRIM/AWTW
1997 - MIM response to RCP,USA - continue to condemn their seeing
question of ending armed struggle as a “two line struggle”, their
putting campaign to save Gonzalo over People’s War, criticize the
international in general, and recognize that CoRIM is RCP,USA(8)
2002 - MIM declared 3rd Cardinal Principle applies to Third World
comrades as well
2006 - cell of remaining original MIM Comrades disbands/website &
MIM Notes cease
2007 - MIM(Prisons) forms
sunrise statement released – declaring Maoism Third Worldism a new
theoretical development (orgs separate from MIM/MIM(Prisons))
The Revolutionary Internationalist Movement
Stalin and Mao both justified the dissolution of the Third International
(Comintern) by stating a Comintern was only appropriate for simpler
times. (9) The history of the Chinese revolution and its relationship to
the USSR proved the correctness of Stalin’s decision to dissolve the
Comintern in recognition of the uneven development of nations in their
path towards socialism and the need for each nation to forge that path
for themselves. Neither of them get into the details of what makes the
relationships between countries so much more complicated by the 1940s.
However, we can insert the ideas of theorists like Walter Rodney and
Samir Amin to explain that most countries are actually underdeveloped to
enable the development of the imperialist economies as one good reason.
The question of the role of European countries vs. colonial countries
was one of great concern to the Bolsheviks leading up to and throughout
their time in power. And while their ideas varied at different times,
ultimately the theories of Lenin and Stalin around nation proved correct
and important to the colonial countries. Trotsky, meanwhile, continued
to look to Europe, and was so stuck on a revolution happening in Europe
right away that he gave up on his own revolution in Russia. This idea
remains with Trotsky’s followers today and meshes well with the national
chauvinism of the oppressor nations.
Given the above, we must question whether the idea of a communist
international fits into Maoism today. JMP actually states “that it is
false internationalism to establish an international communist
party.”(p.239) Yet ey upholds the RIM experience, that MIM saw as an
incorrect practice. The USSR dominated the Third International as a
large socialist entity with state power. The RIM was dominated by the
RCP=U$A by virtue of its resources from being in an exploiter country.
While both power dynamics proved undesirable, the USSR had certainly
earned their leadership role. At the same time the influence and power
of the Comintern was much greater than the RIM.
As MIM began to reach outside of U.$. borders it came to define
itself as
“the collection of existing or emerging Maoist internationalist parties
in the English-speaking imperialist countries and their English-speaking
internal semi-colonies, as well as the existing or emerging Maoist
Internationalist parties in Belgium, France and Quebec and the existing
or emerging Spanish-speaking Maoist Internationalist parties of Aztlán,
Puerto Rico and other territories of the U.$. Empire.”
While we currently have no parties in our movement, we still do not
claim to provide organizational leadership outside of imperialist
countries. That is not to say MIM does not involve itself in struggles
in the Third World, as was clear in its work in combating the Committee
of the RIM’s (CoRIM) efforts to slander the People’s War in Peru.
If the RIM were a group of parties coming together to define Maoism,
that might be a fine project. But the truth is that the Communist Party
of Peru (PCP) had already defined Maoism and had to push the rest of the
RIM to accept it. With the capture of the PCP leadership, the CoRIM went
on to promote the idea that there was a two-line struggle over peace
negotiations within the PCP, and that Gonzalo had authored a peace
letter. Not only is the idea of disarming the communist party the
literal definition of revisionism, there is probably no party to date
that has made this more clear than the PCP of the 1980s. For years MIM
published articles exposing this wrecking work, led by the RCP=U$A, as
working right into the hand of the CIA/Fujimori regime.
Putting that atrocious activity aside for a moment, JMP’s treatment of
the RIM as a monolithic whole acts as a way to sneak in the obviously
revisionist RCP=U$A. RCP revisionism is spelled out clearly in the
original MIM comrades’ writings from its very founding to its very last
days. Even many former RIMers have critiqued the RCP’s role in
hindsight, though this was not until after the RCP had openly rejected
Maoism again. JMP alludes to the RCP=U$A and the Communist Party of
Nepal (Maoist) as examples of Maoists gone revisionists. Yet both of
these organizations were criticized as Trostkyist prior to the RIM
statement on Maoism.(10) Certainly revisionism will emerge from the
genuinely Maoist movement, but these examples just serve to include
revisionists in the genuine ICM.
Just as the RCP=U$A used its resources to have undue influence in the
ICM, the PCP’s real street cred served to legitimize the RCP=U$A on its
home turf once the PCP joined the RIM. While the RCP=U$A long ago
removed itself from the milieu of “Maoism” and its influence has waned
greatly (the RIM having faded away), this action by the PCP had lasting
negative impacts on the development of Maoism and revolution in the
United $tates.
Defining Maoism
To identify Maoism as a new stage, JMP identifies several universally
applicable advances on Marxism-Leninism. Ey distinguishes between those
elements that primarily define Maoism, and elements of revolutionary
theory that, while advances of Maoism, are not universal aspects
applicable in every context.
“Maoism is universally applicable because: class struggle continues
under the dictatorship of the proletariat (socialism is a class
society), the revolutionary party must also become a mass party and
renew itself by being held to account by those it claims to represent
(the mass-line), the struggle between the revolutionary and revisionist
political lines will happen within the revolutionary party itself, and
that the strategy of people’s war rather than unqualified insurrection
is the strategy for making revolution. To these insights we can add: a
further elaboration of the theory of base-superstructure where it is
understood that, while the economic base might be determinate in the
last instance, it is also true that this last instance might never
arrive (a point made by Althusser, following Marx and Engels) and thus
we can conceive of instances where the superstructure may determine
and/or obstruct the base; the theory of New Democratic Revolution, which
applies universally to the particular instances of global peripheries
(universal in the sense that it applies to every so-called ‘third-world’
context) and explains, for the first time in history, how regions that
are not capitalist by themselves and yet are still locked within a
system of capitalist exploitation (that is, regions that are the victims
of imperialism) can make socialism; and a further anti-colonial
development of ‘the national question’…”(p15)
MIM’s founding documents in 1983 contain the first three points, as
they voiced support for PPW in Peru. So it seems that MIM had grasped
the universal points of Maoism as defined by JMP before 1988.
“Maoism, which has been promoted as a new theoretical stage of
revolutionary communism, is not primarily defined by the theory of New
Democracy since a new stage of communism should exhibit universal
aspects that are applicable in every particular context.”(p248)
We agree with many of JMP’s universals about Maoism. But we would argue
that points like New Democracy do not need to apply universally to all
contexts to be universally true. The universality of a political line is
found in its correctness for the phenomenon to which it applies.
Imperialism is a contradiction of imperialists versus oppressed nations.
Just as there is no imperialism without national oppression, there is no
imperialism where New Democracy does not apply.
Our difference from JMP on this may also stem from eir different
understanding of what New Democracy is. Ey repeatedly stresses that New
Democracy is necessary to develop the productive forces within a
semi-feudal country as a prerequisite to socialism. On the contrary, New
Democracy was an answer to and rejection of the old line that leaned
heavily on the Theory of Productive Forces. This line was common among
the Bolsheviks, and never really fully grappled with until the Chinese
did so.
“Revolutionary movements at the center of global capitalism (that is,
movements that manifest within completed capitalist modes of production)
will not pursue New Democracy since the problem New Democracy is meant
to address has nothing to do with the capitalist mode of production
where the economic infrastructure necessary for building socialism
already exists.” JMP goes so far as to say, “…the fact that there is no
significant peasantry or a national bourgeoisie with some sort
of”revolutionary quality” at the centers of capitalism means that the
entire possibility of New Democracy in these regions is patently
absurd.”(p.244)
It is certainly true that the French, for example, do not need to wage a
New Democratic struggle. Yet, it is a surprising line to see from
someone living within occupied Turtle Island, where the national
question of the internal semi-colonies is so prominent. The New
Democratic revolution in China was all about uniting the nation against
foreign occupation to regain the sovereignty of their territory and the
self-determination of China. It is the semi-colonial character, rather
than the semi-feudal, that is warranting a New Democratic revolution.
Mao did not mention the development of the productive forces in eir
essay “On New Democracy.” Ey does talk about developing capitalism, but
not as a prerequisite for socialism. Rather it is speaking to the
national ambitions of the bourgeois forces at the time. In that essay ey
alludes to the conditions of the development of capitalism in China
allowing for the May 4th Movement to develop as it did in 1919. And ey
is clear that the era of New Democracy only emerged with the October
Revolution that marked the establishment of the first dictatorship of
the proletariat. This was because the contradictions within imperialism
as well as the subjective development of the first socialist state,
meant that bourgeois revolution had become impotent and irrelevant.
JMP’s idea that the productive forces are not developed enough today
just isn’t true. What happened is they were developed off the sweat and
blood of the oppressed nations and put in the exploiter countries to
benefit others. Certainly the question of economic development after
liberation for the under-developed nations is one of importance. But the
Chinese proved that this internal economic development does not need to
preclude the march towards socialism. Mao butted heads with Stalin on
this very question within China, and Mao was proven correct.
In occupied Turtle Island, it is MIM line that plebiscites must be held
within the internal semi-colonies to determine the path they take after
revolution, and that such plebiscites require full independence to be a
true representation of the will of each nation.(11) Such a New
Democratic stage would be even more abbreviated here, again because it
will be a political question and not an economic one.
Strategy of Protracted People’s War
JMP places a lot of emphasis on strategy. A party is not Maoist, ey
argues, if that party is not engaged in the strategy of making
revolution. This is a fair point when we consider the importance of
tying theory with practice. Sitting behind a book or computer or desk
and theorizing about revolution does not make for a revolutionary party.
But we would replace “strategy” with “practice” in eir argument. We can
disagree on the best strategy, which should come from our political
line. But whatever line and strategy we adopt must still be put into
practice. Results come only from actions, and we can only test our
analysis by putting it into practice and witnessing the results.
When JMP argues that the strategy of Protracted People’s War (PPW) is
universal, we counter that this is only true in the sense that we can
describe New Democracy as universal. Elements of PPW are certainly
universal, but we have no peasantry nor a proletariat of significant
size in imperialist countries in which to base this PPW. “Here also is a
theoretical gauge for those organizations who would now name themselves
Maoist: if they are not actively attempting to pursue revolution, to
strategize a method based on their particular contexts for overcoming
capitalism, then it does not appear as if the name, due to its concept,
should logically apply.”(p180)
Of course we agree with JMPs focus on criticizing reformism and
spontaneous insurrection via union organizing. But ey does not address
those of us who see socialism most likely being imposed from the outside
in this country. If revolution breaks out at the weakest links first,
won’t it break out in the heart of imperialism last? And at that point,
how will revolution occur in a country of former exploiters and
oppressors surrounded by a socialist world? There is work to be done in
the First World to combat and undermine imperialism, and prepare the
people of those countries for socialism the best we can. MIM also said
from its very beginning that armed struggle becomes a reality within the
United $tates as it becomes militarily over-extended. But the form that
such a revolution will take is far less clear than what we can
generalize from history for the Third World periphery.
To the extent that there is a two-line struggle within Maoism around the
question of the universality of PPW, there is a two-line struggle around
revolutionary strategy in the First World. JMP poses the debate as one
of insurrection vs. PPW. But in searching out positions in this debate
we did not see anyone claiming Maoism and also arguing that insurrection
is somehow more appropriate for the First World. Those who have objected
to the JMP/PCP line on PPW seem to lack any acknowledgement of the
different class structures within the imperialist core countries. They
might mention conditions not being ripe, but the implication is that
they will ripen and there is a mass base to take up the struggle. For
MIM, this is a question of cardinal principles that distinguishes
Maoists from others. To try to talk about PPW in the First World while
not having a materialist understanding of the class structure is a
backwards approach.
We can argue that both New Democracy and Protracted People’s War are
certainly important parts of Maoism, but are also continuities with
Leninism. In other words, the development of these concepts by Mao and
the Chinese people would not necessarily warrant the consolidation of a
new “ism”, a new stage of revolutionary science. It is MIM’s first 2
cardinal principles, which defined our movement since 1983, that really
distinguish Maoism as a rupture from previous practice in building
socialism.
Class and the Party of a New Type
While we disagree with JMP on the class composition of the First World,
eir discussions of class in relation to the vanguard party we found
quite useful. Working in a very wealthy and privileged country, we often
encounter people who are unsure of their role and right to lead. We also
encounter many oppressed nationals who don’t trust white people, and
wimmin who don’t trust men. In other words, we encounter identity
politics. Chapter 3 was a well-done and sobering response to such takes.
JMP addresses the question of how an outsider could provide the
proletariat with the truth,
“How can this party be aware of proletarian politics if it comes from
outside? Because this is the politics derived from a scientific
assessment of history and society that permits us to understand the
meaning of”proletariat” as a social class. It is also a politics that,
in its clearest expression, has learned from the history of class
struggle, particularly the two great world-historical revolutions in
Russia and China, and so can bring the memory of revolution to those who
have been taught to forget.”(p.122)
Ey addresses the contradiction of the more privileged being the first to
make the analysis of one’s society that is necessary to build a vanguard
party: “If the most oppressed and exploited remained incapable of making
the same analyses then counter-revolution would remain a significant
danger.” (p.119)
“the party of the new type is that party, then, that keeps leadership
structures, and thus the unity of theory and practice, but understands
such leadership as one that will also be led by the masses, seeks to
transform everyone in society into leaders, and thus has its”top-down”
aspect balanced by a “bottom-up” conception of organization.” (p.202)
Where We Are In the History of Theory
In JMP’s timeline and understanding of the relationship between theory
and practice, we are currently in a stage of distinguishing Maoism, and
elucidating its meaning. The lines have been drawn, but are still poorly
understood as Maoism has not risen to prominence since the fall of
Chinese socialism. Though it remains one of the most active bases of
anti-imperialist practice, and certainly the most active within the
broader collection of those identifying as communists. As we have stated
before, JMP agrees that to go beyond Maoism theoretically requires a
practice that goes beyond China. In our founding documents, MIM(Prisons)
applied this criticism to things like “The New Synthesis,” “Maoism Third
Worldism” and later “Leading Light Communism.”
JMP presents our current state in an inspirational way, saying that
other radical theories (for example, Foucault’s) filled the space as
Marxism-Leninism was in retreat, but that those theories have now shown
their short-comings, while Maoism is being consolidated and maturing.
On the constructive side of this development, JMP proposes that Maoism,
unlike Marxism-Leninism, has the capacity to address the issues that
these other theories tried to address, and obviously do it better. This
is one place where the lack of discussion around MIM Thought really
jumps out. We don’t know how much and what MIM writings JMP has read,
but ey has read some. MIM Thought provided communists with a new
framework around gender that offers explanations to so much of the
milieu around that topic that often trips people up.
MIM Thought Ahead of the Curve
While MIM Thought’s most important tenant is the raising of the labor
aristocracy in the imperialist metropole question to a dividing line
question, this line is very much a continuity with Marxism dating back
to Marx and Engels themselves. In contrast, MIM’s gender line is only
present in tiny breadcrumbs in the past. And in reading
“Clarity
on what gender is” by MC5, you can see it addressing some of the
very things Foucault addressed in eir The History of Sexuality.
MC5 echoes (or perhaps accepts) Foucault’s history that says sex,
through sexuality, ceased being about controlling labor power (or
biopower as Foucault called it) and became a self-affirming value of the
bourgeoisie in the 20th century. This timeline might correspond to when
we see the popularization of the gender aristocracy among the general
populace of the imperialist metropole – which has today spread even
further throughout the world through the U.$.-dominated superstructure
(culture). MIM, like Foucault, addressed the lack of revolutionary
content of the so-called “sexual revolution.” MIM even finds health
status to be central to gender today, something Foucault discussed in
the modern bourgeois thinking around sex and biology related to the
vigor and hegemony of their class.
MIM, however, poses some materialist explanations for the evolution of
gender through history, unlike Foucault, who only tells us how the ideas
around sex evolved within different institutions of power over time. And
unlike most “Marxist” attempts at discussing gender and sex, MIM very
intentionally looked for what gender was, independent of class and
nation. MIM addresses issues of alimony, high paid prostitution,
celebrity rape cases, patriarchy within homosexual relationships and
other hot-button issues in the realm of gender in the contemporary
imperialist society. In doing so they always clearly distinguished their
line from that of the Liberals, post-modernists, and class
reductionists.
So when JMP makes a call for Maoism to address oppression related to
sex, race, disability, etc, we wonder why ey poses this as if it is a
task that is yet to be begun. We believe MIM Thought has provided much
insight and guidance in these realms already that should be enough to
counter almost any of the talking points from the alt-right to the
post-modern radicals.
Applying MLM/MIM Thought
And so we end with some ideas of where our ideological struggle must
continue today. We must continue to distinguish ourselves along lines of
the fundamentals of Maoism and the application of MIM Thought to our
current conditions simultaneously. We must draw hard lines between us
and the revisionists, while offering better explanations than the
Liberals and post-modernists. In doing so, we will court the scientific
thinkers who abstain from bourgeois politics with disgust. And by
employing the mass line to continuously improve our understanding and
analysis, we can mobilize all who stand against oppression in these
imperialist countries.
Unabashedly, the goal of the Maoist Internationalist Movement is to
eliminate capitalism and imperialism. We aim to replace these economic
systems with socialism, and then communism, to end all oppression of
people by other people. In our study of humyn history we see Maoist
China as the most advanced social experience to date toward this goal,
and we draw on our study of Maoism (shorthand for
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism) to build our strategy. Maoism is a
universally-applicable science of social change, which has its
effectiveness proven in practice.
Our study of history shows the necessity of armed struggle to take power
from the bourgeoisie, to build a world without oppression. Yet we’re not
presently in a period of social upheaval that we would call a
revolutionary scenario, which is why we discourage people from
initiating armed struggle at this time. While we prepare for that
inevitable reality, the Maoist Internationalist Movement (MIM) works on
our dual strategy of 1) building independent institutions of the
oppressed to seize state power, and 2) building public opinion against
imperialism.
This is all in preparation for when the United $tates’s military power
becomes sufficiently overextended, and nations oppressed by Amerikkka
start striking significant blows against Amerika’s domination over their
land and livelihoods. When the United $tates enters this period of
social upheaval, we will be equipped to draw on the public opinion and
independent institutions we’re building now. The point is to get started
now so we’re ready to help a revolution in this country be successful,
with results in favor of the most oppressed people in the world. Our
institutions in themselves will not cause the transition to socialism,
because the bourgeoisie will not allow us to carry out a quiet coup on
their power.
Independent institutions of the oppressed are designed to simultaneously
meet the peoples’ present needs, while organizing against imperialism.
When coupled with political education in building public opinion for
socialism, these institutions help to advance our movement toward
communism. People can see in practice what it would look like (and that
it’s possible) to meet the social needs that the government is failing
on. And people learn how to work collectively.
Maybe this is obvious, but independent institutions don’t have ties to
the power structure that we are fighting to dismantle. Our goal is the
full liberation of ALL people, not just some people, and not just our
people. To do that we need to have true independence, so we can say what
needs to be said, and do what needs to be done, without one arm tied
behind our backs.
Defining who are “the oppressed,” who our institutions are in service
of, is extremely important. While many institutions are happy to just
serve any oppressed group, in the MIM we want to make the transition to
communism as swift and efficient as possible. We take instruction on
this question from our class analysis, and particularly our class
analysis on the labor aristocracy and lumpen.
We recognize that the vast majority of so-called “workers” in the First
World are actually a bought-off class of net exploiters. They are
relatively comfortable with the existence of imperialism, and our
independent institutions don’t aim to serve that class’s interests. Most
people don’t want to hear that they are net exploiters, and that
actually
they
are in the top 13% globally.(1) It stops them from crying about
being in the “bottom 99%” and self-righteously working for a minimum
wage that is
three
times higher than what it would be in an equal global distribution of
wealth.(2) Representing the interests of the international
proletariat makes MIM(Prisons) an unpopular organization among the vast
majority of the population in the United $tates.
In contrast, in our class analysis we see the oppressed-nation lumpen as
the most likely group to favor a proletarian internationalist revolution
in this country. When the Maoist Internationalist Party – Amerika
disbanded into a cell structure in 2005, MIM(Prisons) was established
specifically to organize among the lumpen population. There are many,
many areas of life that need Maoist leadership and independent
institutions – many that can even be built around the coinciding
interests of people in the First World and Third World, like
revolutionary ecology — and MIM(Prisons) focuses on the needs and
education of the imprisoned oppressed-nation lumpen.
BPP STP
The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense (BPP) had a prolific set of
Serve the People programs and independent institutions. The BPP
coincided with the tail-end of the New Afrikan proletariat’s existence,
and focused its organizing among proletarian and lumpen New Afrikans.
In its independent institutions, the BPP served tens of thousand of kids
breakfast across the United $tates, accompanied by political education
during the meals. The BPP ran other services such as “clothing
distribution, classes on politics and economics, free medical clinics,
lessons on self-defense and first aid, transportation for family members
to upstate prisons, an emergency-response ambulance program, drug and
alcohol rehabilitation, and testing for sickle-cell disease.”(3)
In addition to providing necessary services for New Afrikans, the BPP’s
Serve the People programs also built public opinion for socialism by
showing what a world could be like with people working together to meet
humyn needs. We often hear myths about humyn nature, that people are
“too selfish” or “too greedy” or “don’t care enough” to ever have a
socialist economy, let alone participate in a single campaign. Yet BPP
programs showed that selfishness, greed, and apathy are values of the
capitalist-imperialist economic system we live under; not inherent to
humyn nature. And the education programs built people’s consciousness
around how the economic structures of imperialism and capitalism are
related to the seemingly-insurmountable problems in their lives.
Coupling that with Maoist theory and practice, the BPP provided an
ideology for how to overcome these economic systems, further building
public opinion in favor of a transition to socialism.
The Black Panther Party did all this without government funding. Yet
they did accept hefty donations from white leftists, especially during
the Free Huey campaign to get Huey Newton released from jail in 1967-70.
This lack of self-reliance had a big negative impact on the organization
when the white leftists stopped donating.(4) The experience of the BPP
shows extensive positive examples of how oppressed-nation organizations
can build institutions to contribute to the liberation of one’s people.
It teaches another lesson on independence, which is to never rely on
your oppressor-nation allies to fund your liberation.
Other Outside Orgs
Whenever we connect with an organization that does work that’s related
to ours, that gets government funding or is linked to a bigger
organization like a university, they say the same thing. They are really
excited about our work, because they know how important our line is, and
they have seen first-hand the limitations in their own work. When we ask
why they can’t say or do something similar to what we say, it goes back
to a funding source or an authority they’re operating under.
These institutions of the oppressed aren’t wrong for organizing this
way. They are doing great work and reaching audiences we can’t reach in
our current capacity. Yet they aren’t reaching them with the stuff
that’s going to bring an end of oppression in the grand scheme of
things.
MIM(Prisons) chooses to do the most effective thing, which in our case
requires total independence. If everyone who saw the importance of our
line actually worked to promote it, it would inevitably increase our
capacity to also reach the people these dependent organizations are
currently reaching, and with a program to transform the deep-rooted
causes of the problems they’re working to change.
An example of limitations imposed by funding sources was explained in a
2012
interview MIM(Prisons) did with a comrade in United Playaz (UP). UP
is a “San Francisco-based violence prevention and youth development
organization,” staffed and run by many former prisoners. It is work that
is desperately needed, and UP has a huge positive impact on the lives of
the people it works with.
“If it’s up to us, we’re gonna go hard, and really fight for peace.
But because we’re fund[ed] by DCYF [San Francisco’s Department of
Children, Youth, & Their Families], they limit our movement. We
can’t even participate, or like rally. If there’s a Occupy rally right
now, we can’t go, cuz our organization are prevented from doing things
like that. And I think that’s important, that we’re out there with the
rest of the people that are trying to fight for change. Every year we do
a Silence the Violence Peace March. That’s okay, you know, Martin Luther
King, marches like that, we’re okay to do that. But when it’s like
budgets, and crime, and about prison, you know, rally to try to bring
those those things down, we can’t really participate. …
“What’s going on outside the youth can affect them in the future if
things don’t change. And why wait til those kids get old and take em to
expose them to march and fight for your rights? You know I love to take
these young adults to a movement like that, cuz that gives em knowledge
of life, that there’s more than just hanging out on the street. But
unfortunately we’re not allowed to participate in that kind of
movement.”(5)
ULK-based Institutions
Under Lock & Key (and the new newsletter that’s coming
January 2020)(6) is a media institution of the oppressed, with a mission
to serve two classes: 1) the oppressed-nation lumpen in the First World,
which our class analysis says is the most likely class in imperialist
society to be favorable to the long hard struggle to communism; and 2)
the Third World proletariat, which is the revolutionary class with the
least to lose in imperialist society. All the articles and line in
ULK revolve around this mission.
The pages of ULK, and behind the scenes in MIM(Prisons)’s work,
have developed many other institutions of the oppressed. Regular readers
of ULK will be familiar with the
United
Front for Peace in Prisons (UFPP) and the accompanying
5
Points of Unity.(7, 8) The UFPP can’t in any way be canceled by
prison admin or stopped because of budget cuts. In fact, the impetus for
the UFPP being formed was because prison staff were actively creating
disunity among the prisoner population. We had to create our own
independent networks and agreements for creating peace, because peace
efforts were being actively thwarted by staff. We have to build “Unity
From the Inside Out.”
United Struggle from Within (USW) is the MIM(Prisons)-led mass
organization for prisoners and former prisoners, and another example of
an institution that has developed and organizes within the pages of
Under Lock & Key. USW is a way people can plug into
anti-imperialist organizing from behind bars, leading campaigns, handing
out fliers, putting out art, participating in petitions and struggles.
USW cells have independent institutions locally, including study groups,
libraries, food and hygiene pools, jailhouse lawyer services, and other
forms of support. Through ULK, USW can share experiences and
knowledge to further build the anti-imperialist movement behind bars.
USW and UFPP organizing comes with its own set of challenges. Organizers
are moved and isolated all the time. Repressive attacks and false
disciplinary cases are also carried out by prison staff on our comrades.
Censorship of mail impacts our ability to organize, with some states or
institutions fully banning ULK or mail from MIM(Prisons). It
means we hold no illusions that anyone else can or will do this work for
us, and we take that on, with all the sacrifices and challenges that
come with it.
Some comrades choose to work within larger organizations, or with prison
staff, to get a bigger platform for their organizing. Like any alliance,
a big consideration is if one can actually do the work that needs to be
done within that alliance, because most likely these alliances will
require you to water down your political line. Everyone will assess
their own conditions to see what they can do to be most effective in the
facility where they’re held. The method we use to do this in
MIM(Prisons) projects is
analyzing
the principal contradiction in a situation, and upholding
MIM(Prisons)’s 6 main points.(9)
Other Prisoner-led Projects
Within ULK we also regularly report on independent institutions
that didn’t originate in our circles, which serve the interests of the
oppressed-nation lumpen in the First World. There are many hardships
that prisoners can organize around inside, to build independent
institutions (communication channels, organizational connections) and
public opinion in favor of socialism.
One example is the organization Men Against Sexism (MAS), which existed
in the Washington state prison system in the 1970s. Men Against Sexism
worked to protect new, and otherwise vulnerable, prisoners from sexual
assault and other forms of gender oppression that prisoners were doing
to each other. It was a different time back then, and these guys were
celling together so they could organize better, and collecting donations
from outside to purchase cells from other prisoners to house people who
needed protection from the typical prison bullshit.
MAS
eliminated sexual assault in the Washington state system.(10)
Imagine if you came together with other people in your facility to enact
your own prisoner rape elimination campaign. What difference would that
make for you and the people around you?
“Like prison groups today LADS focused on combating oppression and
providing education for the imprisoned Chican@, and LADS also left us
with some good examples to learn from. They created several serve the
people programs in the pinta, for one they created a committee that
worked with new prisoners, what we may call ‘first termers’ here in
pintas in Califas. This was important because a new prisoner or ‘fish’
may be easy prey for some predator in prison. In this way youngsters
were given revolutionary clecha once they entered the pinta by LADS
‘O.G.’s.’ LADS was comprised of prison vets who were politicized. Within
LADS were many sub-committees such as the Committee to Assist Young
People (CAYP), as well as a security committee called the Zapatistas.
The LADS were anti-dope and combated drug use or sales in the pinta.
They were not trying to poison the imprisoned Raza, rather they were
trying to build the Raza.”(11)
Protecting newcomers, sexual assault, and drugs are only some of the
issues that prisoners have to take care of themselves. There are no
petitions we can send you, and there’s no one to appeal to to resolve
these problems. Like
our
comrade at Telford Unit in Texas reported in ULK 59,
“My brothers in here have fallen victim to K2, which is highly
addictive. They don’t even care about the struggle. The only thing on
their minds is getting high and that sas. I mean this K2 shit is like
crack but worse. You have guys selling all their commissary, radios,
fans, etc. just to get high. And all these pigs do is sit back and
watch; this shit is crazy. But for the few of us who are K2-free I’m
trying to get together a group to help me with the struggle.”(12)
Nowadays conditions are a lot different in prisons than they were in the
1960s and 70s. Still, it’s possible to build independent institutions to
meet prisoners’ needs. Bigger organizing happens in even worse
conditions than the United $tates. There’s no perfect set of conditions
that need to be present in order to make a difference. It’s a matter of
choosing to do it ourselves. We want to report on and support these
prisoner-led serve the people programs in ULK. So get to work,
and send us your updates!
Educational Institutions and Public Opinion
ULK is a big part of how we build public opinion in favor of
socialism, and in studying different movements and organizations, we saw
that many failures are based in a lack of education and empowerment
among the masses in society, or the organization’s membership. Depth of
political consciousness (and, related, correctness of political line) is
arguably the number one reason why movements fail. Depth of analysis
isn’t about flashcards and pop quizzes. It’s about “How to think, not
what to think.”
We’ve taken this to heart in our emphasis on educational programs. We
run a number of different correspondence study groups, including a
University of Maoist Thought for our advanced comrades. We run a Free
Political Books for Prisoners Program, which isn’t just about books,
it’s about books in service of our mission of liberating everyone,
including the Third World proletariat, from imperialism. We don’t do
general book distribution because we want to liberate more than just
individuals’ minds. With our comrades’ help, we develop study packs and
distribute literature and study packs to prisoner-led study groups on
the inside. We are really offering every format of political education
we can through the mail, because this is such an important task in our
work.
Besides the written word, there are many other channels for building
public opinion. POOR Magazine and
the Poor News Network (PNN) are independent institutions using events,
rallies, and street theater in combination with the internet, radio, and
videos to build public opinion in favor of oppressed-nation and lumpen
struggles in the United $nakes. POOR Magazine runs a liberation school
for children, and many, many other programs. POOR Magazine is funded
independently from its own participants, events, and a donation program
for individuals via Community Reparations. PNN goes hard on its line
against capitalism, imperialism, and settlerism even with some funding
from “reparators,” which is the real measurement of independence.(13)
One radio program on the
Poor News Network that especially builds public opinion for national
liberation struggles and socialist revolution is
Free
Aztlán. Free Aztlán airs weekly and covers current issues concerning
Raza and Chican@ communities. It has interviews, poetry, music, and even
readings from the book Chican@ Power and the Struggle for Aztlán
for people who don’t or can’t have a physical copy to reference. That
PNN is willing to air a program like Free Aztlán says a lot about PNN,
and we look forward to this program being a staple in our independent
education institutions moving forward!(14)
Building public opinion isn’t just about sharing information and
exposing people to ideas. Applying our study to our conditions, we can
help educate others in developing their own desire for socialism. It’s
an exercise in “Each One, Teach One.” This was explained in
our
book review of Condemned by Bomani Shakur:
“The first theme addressed in ‘Condemned’ is the author’s ideological
transformation. MIM(Prisons)‘s primary task at this point in the
struggle is building public opinion and institutions of the oppressed
for socialist revolution, so affecting others’ political consciousness
is something we work on a lot. On the first day of the [Lucasville]
uprising, Bomani was hoping the state would come in to end the chaos.
But ‘standing there as dead bodies were dumped onto the yard (while
those in authority stood back and did nothing), and then experience the
shock of witnessing Dennis’ death [another prisoner who was murdered in
the same cell as the author], awakened something in me.’ Bomani’s
persynal experiences, plus politicization on the pod and thru books, are
what led em to pick up the struggle against injustice.”(15)
We can’t predict exactly what events, what books, or what conversations
will spark the revolutionary fire in people. Everyone has their own
unique journey into this work. Building independent institutions is one
huge way we nourish and support that spark: empowering ourselves and
others to do things to change our actual present conditions, while we
build toward a socialist future.
As the vanguard of the countless oppressed people struggling from
behind the walls of Babylon, I feel personally accountable to voice my
opinion in terms of the revolution. Revolution deals with revolving, or
a turning over, of your mental concept. In other words, it begins in the
mind. In Pedagogy of the Oppressed Paulo Freire says, “almost
always,” during the initial stage of the struggle, the oppressed,
instead of striving for liberation, tend themselves to become
oppressors, or sub-oppressors. Their ideal is to be men, but for them,
“to be men is to be oppressors.”
Imperialism is violence in its natural state. The lumpen being
conquered and mentally colonized has adopted a psyche of Western
individualism and shuns Afrikan collectivism. So when we speak of
“gangster”, it is all actually nauseating mimicry and pseudo-gangsterism
at best, it is still a Greco-Roman phenomenon.
Mafia is an acronym developed around 1859 about an Italian criminal
society referred to as “Camorra.” Guiseppe Mazzini was an Italian
revolutionary and director of the Illuminati, whose last name “Mazzini”
gives us the first letter of the acronym MAFIA. One may be compelled to
learn how did the New Afrikan become so proficient in a culture so
foreign to our historical traditions? The answer can be identified as a
result of intense psychological operations. Mao said “when the
revolution fails, its the fault of the vanguard party.” “True
revolutionaries are guided by great feelings of love” according to Che
Guevara. The true definition of love is doing the right thing to and for
one another.
The New Afrikan community suffers from spiritual penury and
prostrates at the altar of the oppressor, expecting some form of remedy
for our malady. There is a statement in the Twi language of Ghana “It is
not wrong to go back for that which you have forgotten.” Fellow comrades
we must realize the depths of our untapped potentials.
Then on a personal note, i’m from the Southside of Chicago and I
watched last night on A&E a documentary about a young sister from
the very neighborhood I reside in, and it was truly disturbing. This is
not to cast any aspersions on anyone, because I was at one point lost to
myself, which personally to me is an even graver fate than being locked
up. Even though innocent of said charge, I am still responsible for the
deplorable and wretched conditions pervading the New Afrikan community
all across the United Snakes. A willing participant in a
self-destructive lifestyle, with selfish ambitions motivated by the
illusion of capitalist gain, while helping annihilate my own people
through chemical warfare.
The revolution fails because people always talk yet never do that of
which they speak, because they suffer from cognitive dissonance. I’ve
learned to say little and do much. Most of the comrades focus on outer
factors, but yet never take stock of their own internal mind state. We
are in a war and we are fighting for our very lives and all the lives
who will move forward in our righteous struggle. We are trying to out
“man” “the man” because cultural imperialism doesn’t simply state the
existence of tribes, it reinforces and divides them. All the serious
comrades need to ask themselves a question “Are you helping to win or
are you contributing to a loss?” There are only two positions. It’s time
to shit or get off the pot!
MIM(Prisons) adds: Building on what this comrade writes, we ask
our readers, what can we do to build this revolution that begins in the
mind? We offer educational materials, study groups through the mail, and
support for prison-based study groups. But that’s just support work. The
real education work is happening behind bars. By building a grievance
campaign and spreading the word about that work, comrades are educating
while also offering an example of organizing work. That’s just one
example. Our work ranges from cultural (art, poetry, theater, music) to
direct organizing (building peace between lumpen organizations, leading
campaigns, fighting abuse), and always with an element of educating. We
need creative minds coming up with new ways to build this revolution.
While we frequently discuss gender oppression in the pages of Under
Lock & Key, most readers will notice a primary focus on national
oppression. This is intentional, as we see the resolution of the
national contradiction as the most successful path to ending all
oppression at this stage. But for any of our readers who like our focus
on nationalism, and have not taken the time to read
MIM
Theory 2/3: Gender and Revolutionary Feminism, i recommend you
take a look. It is in MT2/3 that MIM really dissected the
difference between class, nation and gender and justified its focus on
nation. Don’t just focus on nation because it’s more important to you
subjectively, understand why it is the top priority by reading MT
2/3.
All USW comrades should be working their way to the level 2 introductory
study program offered by MIM(Prisons). We start level 1 studying the
basics of scientific thinking. In level 2, we move on to study
Fundamental
Political Line of the Maoist Internationalist Ministry of
Prisons, which gives a good overview of the 3 strands of
oppression: class, nation and gender, and how they interact. This issue
of Under Lock & Key is intended to supplement that
theoretical material with some application to prison organizing and
contemporary current events. (Let us know if you want to sign up for the
study group.)
Academic Individualism vs. Revolutionary Science
Bourgeois individualism looks at race, class and gender as identities,
which are seen as natural categories that exist within each individual.
While proponents of identity politics generally recognize these concepts
have evolved over time, they generally do not explain how or why.
Dialectical materialists understand nation, class and gender as
dualities that evolved as humyn society developed. Under capitalism, the
class structure is defined by bourgeoisie exploiting proletarians. Class
looked different under feudalism or primitive communist societies. One
of the things Marx spent a lot of time doing is explaining how and why
class evolved the way it did. Engels also gave us an analysis of the
evolution of gender in The Origin of the Family, Private Property,
and the State.
One self-described “Marxist-Feminist critique of Intersectionality
Theory” points out that “theories of an ‘interlocking matrix of
oppressions,’ simply create a list of naturalized identities, abstracted
from their material and historical context.”(1) They do not provide a
framework for understanding how to overthrow the systems that are
imposing oppression on people, because they do not explain their causes.
This “Marxist” critic, however, falls into the class reductionist camp
that believes all oppression is rooted in class.
The MIM line is not class reductionist, rather we reduce oppression to
three main strands: nation, gender and class. This is still too limited
for the identity politics crowd. But when we dive into other types of
oppression that might be separate from nation, class and gender, we find
that they always come back to one of those categories. And this clarity
on the main strands of oppression allows us to develop a path to
success, by building on the historical experience of others who have
paved the way for our model.
While MIM is often associated with the class analysis of the First World
labor aristocracy, this was nothing really new. What MIM did that still
sets it apart from others, that we know of, is develop the first
revolutionary theory on sexual privilege. The class-reductionism of the
writer cited above is demonstrated in eir statement, “to be a ‘woman’
means to produce and reproduce a set of social relations through our
labor, or self-activity.”(2) MIM said that is class, but there is still
something separate called gender. While class is how humyns
relate in the production process, gender is how humyns relate in
non-productive/leisure time. And while biological reproductive ability
has historically shaped the divide between oppressor and oppressed in
the realm of gender, we put the material basis today in health
status.(3) This understanding is what allows us to see that things like
age, disability, sexual preference and trans/cis gender status all fall
in the gender strand of oppression.
Using “Feminism” to Bomb Nations
Militarism and imperialist invasion are antithetical to feminism. Yet
the imperialists successfully use propaganda that they wrap in
pseudo-feminism to promote the invasion of Third World countries again
and again. Sorting out the strands of oppression is key to consistent
anti-imperialism.
In MT 2/3, MIM condemned the pseudo-feminists by saying that
“supporting women who go to the courts with rape charges is white
supremacy.”(4) A recent Human Rights Watch report discussing alleged
widespread rape in the Democratic Peoples’ Republic of Korea (DPRK) is
getting lots of traction in the Amerikkkan/Briti$h press.(5) This
campaign to demonize the DPRK is just like the campaign to imprison New
Afrikans, with potentially nuclear consequences. We have two leading
imperialist nations who committed genocide against an oppressed nation
touting information that is effectively pro-war propaganda for another
invasion and mass slaughter of that oppressed nation.
If it is true that rape is as widespread in the DPRK as in the United
$tates and Great Britain, then we also must ask what the situation of
wimmin would have been in the DPRK today if it were not for the
imperialist war and blockade on that country. In the 1950s, Korea was on
a very similar path as China. Socialism in China did more for wimmin’s
liberation than bourgeois feminists ever have. They increased wimmin’s
participation in government, surpassing the United $tates, rapidly
improved infant mortality rates, with Shanghai surpassing the rate of
New York, and eliminated the use of wimmin’s bodies in advertising and
pornography.(6)
An activist who is focused solely on ending rape will not see this. Of
course, a healthy dose of white nationalism helps one ignore the mass
slaughter of men, wimmin and children in the name of wimmin’s
liberation. So the strands do interact.
Distracted Senate Hearings
Recently, Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh went through a hearing
before his appointment to assess accusations of sexual assault from his
past. This was a spectacle, with the sexual content making it
tantalizing to the public, rather than political content. Yes, the
debate is about a lifetime appointment to a very high-powered position,
that will affect the path of U.$. law. But there was no question of U.$.
law favoring an end to war, oppression or the exploitation of the
world’s majority. Those who rallied against Kavanaugh were mostly caught
up in Democratic Party politics, not actual feminism.
A quarter century ago, MIM was also disgusted by the hearings for
Clarence Thomas to be appointed a Supreme Court Justice, that were
dominated by questions about his sexual harassment of Anita Hill. Yet,
this was an event that became quite divisive within MIM and eventually
led to a consolidation of our movement’s materialist gender line.(7) It
was the intersection of nation with this display of gender oppression
that made that case different from the Kavanaugh one, because Thomas and
Hill are both New Afrikan. The minority line in this struggle was deemed
the “pro-paternialism position.”
The minority position was that MIM should stand with Anita Hill
because she was the victim/oppressed. The line that won out was that
Anita Hill was a petty-bourgeois cis-female in the First World, and was
not helpless or at risk of starvation if she did not work for Clarence
Thomas. While all MIM members would quickly jump on revisionists and
pork-chop nationalists, paternalism led those holding the minority
position to accept pseudo-feminism as something communists should stand
by, because they pitied the female who faced situations like this.
Similarly today, with the Kavanaugh appointment, we should not let
our subjective feelings about his treatment of wimmin confuse us into
thinking those rallying against him represent feminism overall.
Bourgeois theories and identity politics
The paternalistic line brings us back to identity politics. A politic
that says right and wrong can be determined by one’s gender, “race” or
other identity. The paternalist line will say things like only wimmin
can be raped or New Afrikans can’t “racially” oppress other people. In
its extreme forms it justifies any action of members of the oppressed
group.
Another form of identity politics is overdeterminism. The
overdeterministic
position is defined in our glossary as, “The idea that social
processes are all connected and that all of the aspects of society cause
each other, with none as the most important.”(8) The overdeterminist
will say “all oppressions are important so just work on your own. A
parallel in anti-racism is that white people should get in touch with
themselves first and work on their own racism.”(9) Again this is all
working from the framework of bourgeois individualism, which disempowers
people from transforming the system.
There is a paralyzing effect of the bourgeois theories that try to
persynalize struggles, and frame them in the question of “what’s in it
for me?” Communists have little concern for self when it comes to
political questions. To be a communist is to give oneself to the people,
and to struggle for that which will bring about a better future for all
people the fastest. While humyn knowledge can never be purely objective,
it is by applying
the
scientific method that we can be most objective and reach our goals
the quickest.(10)
Today’s principal contradiction, here in the United $tates, is the
national contradiction – meaning that between oppressed nations and
oppressor nations. MIM(Prisons) provides some very provocative questions
as to secondary contractions, their influence on or by and in
conjunction to the current principal contradiction. Class, gender and
nation are all interrelated.(1) Many times, while organizing our efforts
and contemplating potential solutions to the principal contradiction, we
overlook the secondary and tertiary ones. Such narrow-mindedness
oftentimes leads to difficulties, hampering efforts toward resolution.
Other times it makes resolving the principal, effectively, impossible.
Analogous to penal institutions making it possible to punish a citizenry
but impossible to better it due to the irreconcilable contraction
between retributive punishment and rehabilitation. This is why reforms
consistently fail and prisons persist as a social cancer.
In regards to intersecting strands of oppression, prisons are
illustrative of more than pitfalls of narrow-mindedness (i.e. reform of
one aspect while leaving the rest intact). Prisons also provide numerous
examples of oppression combinations. Interactions of nation and gender
oppression are some of the most evident. Penal institutions are
inherently nationally oppressive, because they are social control
mechanisms allowing capitalism to address its excluded masses. Since the
United $tates is patriarchal in practice, prisons over-exaggerate this
masculine outlook, creating an ultra-aggressive, chauvinistic
subculture.
Intersection occurs oft times when a female staff member is present.
Other than the few brave people, most wimmin in prison are regarded as
“damsels in distress.” Generally speaking (at least in Colorado prisons)
a male will accompany a female; though, most males make no effort to do
this for other men. Capitalism’s undercurrent to such “chivalrous
actions” is rooted in wimmin being the weaker, more helpless and
vulnerable gender. In prison, machismo culture such is the chauvinist’s
belief. While many wimmin aid in their inequality by accepting,
encouraging, or simply not protesting such “chivalry,” brave,
independent wimmin experience a form of ostracism – they are derided, an
effort to enjoin their conformity. At the same time men are being
chivalrous, they sexually objectify females, further demeaning them,
reinforcing their second-class status under machismo specifically and,
capitalistic patriarchy generally.
Furthermore, there is also the ever-present nation bias
(e.g. hyper-sexualizing Latina females, white females should only
fraternize with whites). As prisons are “snapshots” of general society,
the contradictions – their intersecting and interacting – hold useful
material for revolutionary-minded persyns.
Intersection of different oppression strands (as shown above)
demonstrates that the resolution of one does not automatically mean
resolution of others. For instance, should machismo in prison dissolve,
the national oppression will still remain and vice versa. Prisons are an
encapsulation of society, meaning, their abolishment will not
necessarily translate to class, nation, gender contradiction resolutions
throughout society. Although, it is a very good, versatile place to
start. Penal institutions are more of an observation laboratory where
the effects and affects of contradiction co-mingling manifest. A place
to watch, document, analyze, formulate and possibly initiate theory and
practice. There is no better way to comprehend oppression than to
witness it in action. Nor is there any better way of combating the many
oppressions than from the front lines.
The Dangerous Class and Revolutionary Theory J. Sakai
Kersplebedeb Publishing, 2017 Available for $24.95 (USD) +
shipping/handling from: kersplebedeb
CP 63560, CCCP Van Horne Montreal, Quebec Canada H3W 3H8
The bulk of this double book is looking at the limited and contradictory
writings of Marx/Engels and Mao on the subject of the lumpen with
greater historical context. MIM(Prisons) and others have analyzed their
scattered quotes on the subject.(1) But Sakai’s effort here is focused
on background research to understand what Marx, Engels and Mao were
seeing and why they were saying what they were saying. In doing so,
Sakai provides great practical insight into a topic that is central to
our work; the full complexities of which have only begun to unfold.
Size and Significance
In the opening of the “Dangerous Class”, Sakai states that
“lumpen/proletarians are constantly being made in larger and larger
numbers”.(p.3) This follows a discussion of criminalized zones like the
ghetto, rez or favela. This is a curious conclusion, as the ghettos and
barrios of the United $tates are largely being dispersed rather than
expanding. Certainly the rez is not expanding. Sakai does not provide
numbers to substantiate these “larger and larger” lumpen populations
today.
In our paper,
Who
is the Lumpen in the United $tates? we do run some census numbers
that indicate an increase in the U.$. lumpen population from 1.5% of the
total population in 1960 to over 10% in 2010. However, other methods led
us to about 4% of the U.$. population today if you only look at
oppressed nation lumpen, and 6 or 7% if you include whites.(1) This
latter number is interestingly similar to what Marx estimated for
revolutionary France (around 1850)(p.66), what Sakai estimates for
Britain around 1800(p.112), and what Mao estimated for pre-revolutionary
China.(p.119) Is 6% the magic number that indicates capitalism in
crisis? The historical numbers for the United $tates (and elsewhere) are
worthy of further investigation.
1800 London
lumpen (Sakai)
lumpen + destitute semi-proletariat (Colquhoun)
source
6%
16%
(pp.111-112)
1850s France (Marx)
lumpen
lumpen + destitute semi-proletariat
source
6%
13%
(p.66)
2010 United $tates (MIM(Prisons))
First Nations lumpen
New Afrikan lumpen
Raza lumpen
Raza lumpen + semi-proletariat
source
30%
20%
5%
15%
(1)
Alliances and Line
Certainly, at 6% or more, the lumpen is a significant force, but a force
for what? In asking that question, we must frame the discussion with a
Marxist analysis of capitalism as a contradiction between bourgeoisie
and proletariat. There’s really just two sides here. So the question is
which side do the lumpen fall on. The answer is: It depends.
One inspiring thing we learn in this book is that the lumpen made up the
majority of the guerrillas led by Mao’s Chinese Communist Party at
various times before liberation.(p.122) This shows us that the lumpen
are potentially an important revolutionary force. However, that road was
not smooth. On the contrary it was quite bloody, involving temporary
alliances, sabotage and purges.(pp.201-210)
Sakai’s first book spends more time on the French revolution and the
obvious role the lumpen played on the side of repression. Marx’s
writings on these events at times treated the Bonaparte state as a
lumpen state, independent of the capitalist class. This actually echoes
some of Sakai’s writing on fascism and the role of the declassed. But as
Sakai recognizes in this book, there was nothing about the Bonaparte
government that was anti-capitalist, even if it challenged the existing
capitalist class. In other words, the mobilized lumpen, have played a
deciding role in revolutionary times, but that role is either led by
bourgeois or proletarian ideology. And the outcome will be capitalism or
socialism.
Defining the Lumpen, Again
Interestingly, Sakai does not address the First World class structure
and how that impacts the lumpen in those countries. Our paper, Who is
the Lumpen in the United $tates? explicitly addresses this question
of the First World lumpen as distinct from the lumpen-proletariat. While
MIM changed its line from the 1980s when it talked about significant
proletariats within the internal semi-colonies of the United $tates,
this author has not seen Sakai change eir line on this, which might
explain eir discussion of a lumpen-proletariat here. Sakai’s line
becomes most problematic in eir grouping of imperialist-country
mercenaries in the “lumpen”. Ey curiously switches from
“lumpen/proletariat” when discussing China, to “lumpen” when discussing
imperialist-country mercenaries, but never draws a line saying these are
very different things. In discussions with the editor, Sakai says the
stick up kid and the cop aren’t the same kind of lumpen.(p.132) Sure, we
understand the analogy that cops are the biggest gang on the streets.
But state employees making 5 or 6-digit incomes with full bennies do not
fit our definition of lumpen being excluded from the capitalist economy,
forced to find its own ways of skimming resources from that economy. The
contradiction the state faces in funding its cops and soldiers to
repress growing resistance is different from the contradiction it faces
with the lumpen on the street threatening to undermine the state’s
authority.
Sakai dismisses the idea that the line demarking lumpen is the line of
illegal vs. legal. In fact, the more established and lucrative the
illegal operation of a lumpen org is, the more likely it is to be a
partner with the imperialist state. That just makes sense.
The inclusion of cops and mercenaries in the lumpen fits with Sakai’s
approach to the lumpen as a catchall non-class. We do agree that the
lumpen is a much more diverse class, lacking the common life experience
and relationship to the world that the proletariat can unite around. But
what’s the use of talking about a group of people that includes Amerikan
cops and Filipino garbage pickers? Our definitions must guide us towards
models that reflect reality close enough that, when we act on the
understanding the model gives us, things work out as the model predicts
more often than not. Or more often than any other models. This is why,
in our work on the First World lumpen in the United $tates, we excluded
white people from the model by default. We did this despite knowing many
white lumpen individuals who are comrades and don’t fit the model.
How about L.O.s in the U.$.?
The analysis of the First World lumpen in this collection is a reprint
of Sakai’s 1976 essay on the Blackstone Rangers in Chicago. Sakai had
referred to L.O.s becoming fascist organizations in New Afrikan
communities in a previous work, and this seems to be eir basis for this
claim.
While the essay condemns the Blackstone Rangers for being pliant tools
of the Amerikan state, Sakai does differentiate the young foot soldiers
(the majority of the org) from the Main 21 leadership. In fact, the only
difference between the recruiting base for the Rangers and the Black
Panthers seems to have been that the Rangers were focused on men.
Anyway, what Sakai’s case study demonstrates is the ability for the
state to use lumpen gangs for its own ends by buying off the leadership.
There is no reason to believe that if Jeff Fort had seen eye-to-eye with
the Black Panthers politically that the youth who followed him would not
have followed him down that road.
Essentially, what we can take from all this is that the lumpen is a
wavering class. Meaning that we must understand the conditions of a
given time and place to better understand their role. And as Sakai
implies, they have the potential to play a much more devastating and
reactionary role when conditions really start to deteriorate in the
heart of the empire.
Relating this to our practice, Sakai discusses the need for
revolutionaries to move in the realm of the illegal underground. This
doesn’t mean the underground economy is a location for great proletarian
struggle. It can contain some of the most egregious dehumanizing aspects
of the capitalist system. But it also serves as a crack in that very
system.
As comrades pointed out in
our
survey of drug use and trade in U.$. prisons, the presence of drugs
is accompanied by an absence of unity and struggle among the oppressed
masses. Meanwhile effective organizing against drug use is greatly
hampered by threats of violence from the money interests of lumpen
organizations and state employees.(2) The drug trade brings out the
individualist/parasitic tendencies of the lumpen. Our aim is to counter
that with the collective self-interest of the lumpen. It is that
self-interest that pushes oppressed nation youth to “gang up” in the
first place, in a system that is stacked against them.
The revolutionary/anti-imperialist movement must be active and
aggressive in allying with the First World lumpen today. We must be
among the lumpen masses so that as contradictions heighten, oppressed
nation youth have already been exposed to the benefits of collective
organizing for self-determination. The national contradiction in
occupied Turtle Island remains strong, and we are confident that the
lumpen masses will choose a developed revolutionary movement over the
reactionary state. Some of the bourgeois elements among the lumpen
organizations will side with the oppressor, and with their backing can
play a dominant role for some times and places. We must be a counter to
this.
While Mao faced much different conditions than we face in the United
$tates today, the story of alliances and betrayals during the Chinese
revolution that Sakai weaves is probably a useful guide to what we might
expect. Ey spends one chapter analyzing the Futian Incident,
where “over 90 percent of the cadres in the southwestern Jiangxi area
were killed, detained, or stopped work.”(p.205) The whole 20th Army,
which had evolved from the lumpen gang, Three Dots Society, was
liquidated in this incident. It marked a turning point and led to a
shift in the approach to the lumpen in the guerilla areas. While in
earlier years, looting of the wealthy was more accepted within the ranks
of guerrilla units, the focus on changing class attitudes became much
greater.(p.208) This reflected the shift in the balance of forces; the
development of contradictions.
Sakai concludes that the mass inclusion of lumpen forces in the
guerrilla wars by the military leaders Mao Zedong and Chu Teh was a
strategic success. That the lumpen played a decisive role, not just in
battle, but in transforming themselves and society. We might view the
Futian Incident, and other lesser internal struggles resulting
in death penalties meted out, as inevitable growing pains of this
lumpen/peasant guerilla war. Mao liked to quote Prussian general Carl
von Clausewitz, in saying that war is different from all other humyn
activity.
For now we are in a pre-war period in the United $tates, where the
contradictions between the oppressed and oppressors are mostly fought
out in the legal realms of public opinion battles, mass organizing and
building institutions of the oppressed. Through these activities we
demonstrate another way; an alternative to trying to get rich,
disregarding others’ lives, senseless violence, short-term highs and
addiction. We demonstrate the power of the collective and the need for
self-determination of all oppressed peoples. And we look to the First
World lumpen to play a major role in this transformation of ourselves
and society.
Is China an Imperialist Country? considerations and evidence by N.B.
Turner, et al. Kersplebedeb, 2015
Available for $17 +
shipping/handling
from: kersplebedeb CP
63560, CCCP Van Horne Montreal, Quebec Canada H3W 3H8
This article began as a book review of Is China an Imperialist
Country?. However, I was spurred to complete this review after
witnessing a surge in pro-China posts and sentiment on the /r/communism
subreddit, an online forum that MIM(Prisons) participates in. It is
strange to us that this question is gaining traction in a communist
forum. How could anyone be confused between such opposite economic
systems? Yet, this is not the first time that this question has been
asked about a capitalist country; the Soviet Union being the first.
Mao Zedong warned that China would likely become a social fascist state
if the revisionists seized power in their country as they had in the
Soviet Union after Stalin’s death. While the question of whether the
revisionists have seized power in China was settled for Maoists decades
ago, other self-proclaimed “communists” still refer to China as
socialist, or a “deformed workers’ state,” even as the imperialists have
largely recognized that China has taken up capitalism.
In this book, N.B. Turner does address the revisionists who believe
China is still a socialist country in a footnote.(1) Ey notes that most
of them base their position on the strength of State-Owned Enterprises
(SOEs) in China. This is a common argument we’ve seen as well. And the
obvious refutation is: socialism is not defined as a state-run economy,
at least not by Marxists. SOEs in China operate based on a profit
motive. China now boasts 319 billionaires, second only to the United
$tates, while beggars walk the streets clinging to passerbys. How could
it be that a country that had kicked the imperialists out, removed the
capitalists and landlords from power, and enacted full employment came
to this? And how could these conditions still be on the socialist road
to communism?
Recent conditions did not come out of nowhere. By the 1980s, Beijing
Review was boasting about the existence of millionaires in China,
promoting the concept of wage differentials.(2) There are two bourgeois
rights that allow for exploitation: the right to private property and
the right to pay according to work. While the defenders of Deng Xiaoping
argue that private property does not exist in China today, thus
“proving” its socialist nature, they give a nod to Deng’s policies on
wage differentials; something struggled against strongly during the Mao
era.
Turner quotes Lenin from Imperialism: The Highest Stage of
Capitalism: “If it were necessary to give the briefest possible
definition of imperialism we should have to say that imperialism is the
monopoly stage of capitalism.”(3) And what are most SOEs but monopolies?
Is China a Socialist Country?
The question of Chinese socialism is a question our movement came to
terms with in its very beginning. MIM took up the anti-revisionist line,
as stated in the first cardinal
principal:
“MIM holds that after the proletariat seizes power in socialist
revolution, the potential exists for capitalist restoration under the
leadership of a new bourgeoisie within the communist party itself. In
the case of the USSR, the bourgeoisie seized power after the death of
Stalin in 1953; in China, it was after Mao’s death and the overthrow of
the ‘Gang of Four’ in 1976.”
We’ll get more into why we believe this below. For now we must stress
that this is the point where we split from those claiming to be
communists who say China is a socialist country. It is also a point
where we have great unity with Turner’s book.
Who Thinks China is Socialist?
Those who believe China is socialist allude to a conspiracy to paint
China as a capitalist country by the Western media and by white people.
This is an odd claim, as we have spent most of our time struggling over
Chinese history explaining that China is no longer communist, and that
what happened during the socialist period of 1949 - 1976 is what we
uphold. We see some racist undertones in the condemnations of what
happened in that period in China. It seems those holding the above
position are taking a valid critique for one period in China and just
mechanically applying it to Western commentators who point out the
obvious. We think it is instructive that “by 1978, when Deng Xiaoping
changed course, the whole Western establishment lined up in support. The
experts quickly concluded, over Chinese protests, that the new course
represented reform ‘capitalist style.’”(4) The imperialists do not
support socialism and pretend that it is capitalism, rather they saw
Deng’s “reforms” for what they were.
TeleSur is one party that takes a position today upholding China as an
ally of the oppressed nations. TeleSur is a TV station based in
Venezuela, and funded by Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Cuba, Uruguay and
Nicaragua. Venezuela is another state capitalist country that presents
itself as “socialist”, so it has a self-interest in stroking China’s
image in this regard. One recent opinion piece described China as
“committed to socialism and Marxism.” It acknowledges problems of
inequality in Chinese society are a product of the “economic reforms.”
Yet the author relies on citations on economic success and profitability
as indications that China is still on the socialist road.(5)
As students of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, we recognize
that socialism is defined by class struggle. In fairness, the TeleSur
opinion piece acknowledges this and claims that class struggle continues
in China today. But the reality that the state sometimes imprisons its
billionaires does not change the fact that this once socialist society,
which guaranteed basic needs to all, now has billionaires. Billionaires
can only exist by exploiting people; a lot! Fifty years ago China had
eliminated the influence of open capitalists on the economy, while
allowing those who allied with the national interest to continue to earn
income from their investments. In other words they were being phased
out. Some major changes had to take place to get to where China is today
with 319 billionaires.
Fidel Castro is cited as upholding today’s President of China, Xi
Jinping, as one of the “most capable revolutionary leaders.” Castro also
alluded to China as a counterbalance to U.$. imperialism for the Third
World. China being a counter-balance to the United $tates does not make
it socialist or even non-imperialist. China has been upholding its
non-interventionist line for decades to gain the trust of the world. But
it is outgrowing its ability to do that, as it admits in its own
military white papers described by Turner.(6) This is one indication
that it is in fact an imperialist country, with a need to export finance
capital and dump overproduced commodities in foreign markets.
“The Myth of Chinese Capitalism”
Another oft-cited article by proponents of a socialist China in 2017 is
“The Myth of Chinese Capitalism” by Jeff Brown.(7) Curiously, Brown
volunteers the information that China’s Gini coefficient, a measure of a
country’s internal inequality between rich and poor, went from 0.16 in
1978 to 0.37 in 2015 (similar to the United $tates’ 0.41). Brown offers
no explanation as to how this stark increase in inequality could occur
in what ey calls a socialist country. In fact, Brown offers little
analysis of the political economy of China, preferring to quote Deng
Xiaoping and the Chinese Constitution as proof of China’s socialist
character, followed by stats on the success of Chinese corporations in
making profits in the capitalist economic system.
Brown claims that Deng’s policies were just re-branded policies of the
Mao era. A mere months after the counter-revolutionary coup in China in
1976, the China Study Group wrote,
“The line put forward by the Chinese Communist Party and the Peking
Review before the purge and that put forward by the CCP and the
Peking Review after the purge are completely different and
opposite lines. Superficially they may appear similar because the new
leaders use many of the same words and slogans that were used before in
order to facilitate the changeover. But they have torn the heart out of
the slogans, made them into hollow words and are exposing more clearly
with every new issue the true nature of their line.”(8)
Yet, 40 years later, fans of China would have us believe that empty
rhetoric about “Marxism applied to Chinese conditions” are a reason to
take interest in the economic policies of Xi Jinping.
Brown seems to think the debate is whether China is economically
successful or not according to bourgeois standards. As such ey offers
the following tidbits:
“A number of [SOEs] are selling a portion of their ownership to the
public, by listing shares on Chinese stock markets, keeping the vast
majority of ownership in government hands, usually up to a 70%
government-30% stock split. This sort of shareholder accountability has
improved the performance of China’s SOEs, which is Baba Beijing’s
goal.”
“[O]ther SOEs are being consolidated to become planet conquering
giants”
“How profitable are China’s government owned corporations? Last year,
China’s 12 biggest SOEs on the Global 500 list made a combined total
profit of US$201 billion.”
So selling stocks, massive profits and giant corporations conquering the
world are the “socialist” principles being celebrated by Brown, and
those who cite em.
The Coup of 1976
What all these apologists for Chinese capitalism ignore is the fact that
there was a coup in China in 1976 that involved a seizure of state
apparati, a seizure of the media (as alluded to above) and the
imprisonment of high officials in the Maoist camp (the so-called “Gang
of Four”).(9) People in the resistance were executed for organizing and
distributing literature.(10) There were arrests and executions across
the country, in seemingly large numbers. Throughout 1977 a mass purge of
the party may have removed as many as a third of its members.(11) The
armed struggle and repression in 1976 seems to have involved more
violence than the Cultural Revolution, but this is swept under the rug
by pro-capitalists. In addition, the violence in both cases was largely
committed by the capitalist-roaders. While a violent counterrevolution
was not necessary to restore capitalism in the Soviet Union, it did
occur in China following Mao Zedong’s death.
At the time of Mao’s death, Deng was the primary target of criticism for
not recognizing the bourgeoisie in the Party. Hua Guofeng, who jailed
the Gang of Four and seized chairmanship after Mao’s death, continued
this criticism of Deng at first, only to restore all his powers less
than sixteen months after they were removed by the Maoist
government.(12)
The Western media regularly demonizes China for its records on humyn
rights and free speech. Yet, this is not without reason. By the 1978
Constitution, the so-called CCP had removed the four measures of
democracy guaranteed to the people in the 1975 Constitution: “Speaking
out freely, airing views fully, holding great debates and writing big
character posters are new forms of carrying on socialist revolution
created by the masses of the people. The state shall ensure to the
masses the right to use these forms.”(13)
This anti-democratic trend has continued over the last forty years, from
jail sentences for big character posters in the 1980s and the Tianamen
Square massacre in 1989 to the imprisonment of bloggers in the 2010s.
While supporters of Xi Jinping have celebrated his recent call for more
Marxism in schools, The Wall Street Journal reports that this is
not in the spirit of Mao:
“Students at Sun Yat-sen University in southern China arrived this year
to find new instructions affixed to classroom walls telling them not to
criticize party leadership; their professors were advised to do the
same… An associate professor at an elite Beijing university said he was
told he was rejected for promotion because of social-media posts that
were critical of China’s political system. ‘Now I don’t speak much
online,’ he said.”(14)
Scramble for Africa
What about abroad? Is China a friend of the oppressed? Turner points out
that China’s Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Africa is significant,
though a tiny piece of China’s overall FDI. First we must ask, why is
China engaged in FDI in the first place? Lenin’s third of five points
defining imperialism is, “The export of capital, which has become
extremely important, as distinguished from the export of
commodities.”(15) A couple chapters before talking about Africa, Turner
shows that China has the fastest growing FDI of any imperialist or
“sub-imperialist” country starting around 2005.(16) Even the SOEs are
involved in this investment, accounting for 87% of China’s FDI in Latin
America.(17) This drive to export capital, which repatriates profits to
China, is a key characteristic of an imperialist country.
In 2010, China invited South Africa to join the BRICS group (Brazil,
Russia, India, China, and now South Africa) of imperialist/aspiring
imperialist countries. This was a strategic decision by China, as South
Africa was chosen over many larger economies. “In 2007… the Industrial
and Commercial Bank of China (now the world’s largest company) bought a
multi-billion-dollar stake in the South African Standard Bank, which has
an extensive branch network across the continent.” Shoprite is another
South African corporation that spans the continent, which China has
invested in. In Zambia, almost all the products in Shoprite are Chinese
or South African.(18)
The other side of this equation indicating the role of China in Africa
is the resistance. “Chinese nationals have become the number one
kidnapping target for terrorist and rebel groups in Africa, and Chinese
facilities are valuable targets of sabotage.” China is also working with
the likes of Amerikan mercenary Erik Prince to avoid direct military
intervention abroad. “In 2006, a Zambian minister wept when she saw the
environment in which workers toiled at the Chinese-owned Collum Coal
Mine. Four years later, eleven employees were shot at the site while
protesting working conditions.”(19) While China’s influence is seen as
positive by a majority of people in many African countries,(20) this is
largely due to historical support given to African nations struggling
for self-determination. The examples above demonstrate the
irreconcilable contradiction developing within Chinese imperialism with
its client nations.
“Market Socialism”
Chinese President Xi Jinping talks often of the importance of “Marxism”
to China, of “socialism with Chinese characteristics” and of “market
socialism.” Xi’s defenders in communist subreddits cite Lenin and the
New Economic Policy (NEP) of the Soviet Union to peg our position as
anti-Lenin. There’s a reason we call ourselves Maoists, and not
Leninists. The battle against the theory of the productive forces, and
the form it took in the mass mobilization of the Great Proletarian
Cultural Revolution is core to how we define Maoism as a higher stage of
revolutionary science than Leninism. The Bolsheviks tended toward
upholding the theory of the productive forces, though you can find
plenty in Lenin’s to oppose it as well. Regardless, Lenin believed in
learning from history. We’d say Maoists are the real Leninists.
Lenin’s NEP came in the post-war years, a few years after the
proletariat seized power in Russia. The argument was that capitalist
markets and investment were needed to get the economic ball rolling
again. But China in 1978 was in no such situation. It was rising on a
quarter century of economic growth and radical reorganization of the
economy that unleashed productive forces that were the envy of the rest
of the underdeveloped nations. Imposing capitalist market economics on
China’s socialist economy in 1978 was moving backwards. And while
economic growth continued and arguably increased, social indicators like
unemployment, the condition of wimmin, mental health and crime all
worsened significantly.
The line of the theory of the productive forces is openly embraced by
some Dengists
defending “market socialism.” One of the most in-depth defenses of China
as communist appearing on /r/communism reads:
“Deng Xiaoping and his faction had to address the deeper Marxist
problem: that the transition from a rural/peasant political economy to
modern industrial socialism was difficult, if not impossible, without
the intervening stage of industrial capitalism… First, Chinese market
socialism is a method of resolving the primary contradiction facing
socialist construction in China: backwards productive forces.”(21)
So, our self-described communist detractors openly embrace the lines of
Deng Xiaoping and Liu Shaoqi, thereby rejecting the Maoist line and the
Cultural Revolution.
Resilience to Crisis
During the revolution, China was no stranger to economic crisis. From
the time the war against Japan began in 1937 to victory in 1949, goods
that cost 1 yuan had risen to the price of 8,500,000,000,000 yuan!(22)
Controlling inflation was an immediate task of the Chinese Communist
Party after seizing state power. “On June 10, 1949 the Stock Exchange –
that centre of crime located in downtown Shanghai – was ordered to close
down and 238 leading speculators were arrested and indicted.”(23)
Shanghai Stock Exchange was re-established again in 1990. It is
currently the 5th largest exchange, but was 2nd for a brief frenzy prior
to the 2008 global crash.(24)
The eclectic U.$.-based Troskyite organization Workers
World Party (WW) used the 2008 crisis to argue that China was more
socialist than capitalist.(25) The export-dependent economy of China
took a strong blow in 2008. WW points to the subsequent investment in
construction as being a major offset to unemployment. They conclude
that, “The socialist component of the economic foundation is dominant at
the present.” Yet they see the leadership of Xi Jinping as further
opening up China to imperialist manipulation, unlike other groups
discussed above.
Turner addresses the “ghost cities” built in recent years in China as
examples of the anarchy of production under capitalism. Sure they were
state planned, but they were not planned to meet humyn need, hence they
remain largely empty years after construction. To call this socialism,
one must call The New Deal in the United $tates socialism.
Marx explained why crisis was inevitable under capitalism, and why it
would only get worse with time as accumulation grew, distribution became
more uneven, and overproduction occurred more quickly. Socialism
eliminates these contradictions, with time. It does so by eliminating
the anarchy of production as well as speculation. After closing the
Stock Exchange the communists eliminated all other currencies, replacing
them with one state-controlled currency, the Renminbi, or the people’s
currency. Prices for goods as well as foreign currencies were set by the
state. They focused on developing and regulating production to keep the
balance of goods and money, rather than producing more currency, as the
capitalist countries do.(26)
When the value of your stock market triples and then gets cut back to
its original price in the span of a few years, you do not have a
socialist-run economy.(27) To go further, when you have a stock market,
you do not have a socialist economy.
Turner addresses the recent crisis and China’s resiliency, pointing out
that it recently started from a point of zero debt, internally and
externally, thanks to financial policy during the socialist era.(28)
China paid off all external debt by 1964.(29) This has allowed China to
expand its credit/debt load in recent decades to degrees that the other
imperialist countries no longer have the capacity to do. This includes
investing in building whole cities that sit empty.(30)
What is Socialism?
So, if socialism isn’t increasing profits and growing GDP with
state-owned enterprises, what the heck is it? The Great Proletarian
Cultural Revolution (GPCR) was the pinnacle of socialist achievement;
that is another one of MIM’s three main points. No one has argued that
the Cultural Revolution has continued or was revived post-1976. In fact,
the Dengists consistently deny that there are any capitalists in the
party to criticize, as they claim “market socialism” denies the
capitalists any power over the economy. This is the exact line that got
Deng kicked out of the CCP before Mao died. Without class struggle, we
do not have socialism, until all classes have been abolished in humyn
society. Class struggle is about the transformation of society into new
forms of organization that can someday lead us to a communist future.
“A fundamental axiom of Maoist thought is that public ownership is only
a technical condition for solving the problems of Chinese society. In a
deeper sense, the goal of Chinese socialism involves vast changes in
human nature, in the way people relate to each other, to their work, and
to society. The struggle to change material conditions, even in the most
immediate sense, requires the struggle to change people, just as the
struggle to change people depends on the ability to change the
conditions under which men live and work. Mao differs from the Russians,
and Liu Shao-chi’s group, in believing that these changes are
simultaneous, not sequential. Concrete goals and human goals are
separable only on paper – in practice they are the same. Once the basic
essentials of food, clothing, and shelter for all have been achieved, it
is not necessary to wait for higher productivity levels to be reached
before attempting socialist ways of life.” (31)
Yet the Dengists defend the “economic reforms” (read:
counter-revolution) after Mao’s death as necessary for expanding
production, as a prerequisite to building socialism.
“The fact that China is a socialist society makes it necessary to
isolate and discuss carefully the processes at work in the three
different forms of ownership: state, communal, and cooperative.”(32)
The Dengists talk much of state ownership, but what of communes and
cooperatives? Well, they were dismantled in the privatization of the
1980s. Dengists cry that there is no private land ownership in China,
and that is a sign that the people own the land. It was. In the 1950s
land was redistributed to peasants, which they later pooled into
cooperatives, unleashing the productive forces of the peasantry. Over
time this collective ownership was accepted as public ownership, and
with Deng’s “reforms” each peasant got a renewable right to use small
plots for a limited number of years. The commune was broken up and the
immediate effects on agriculture and the environment were negative.(33)
Strategic Implications
Overall Turner does a good job upholding the line on what is socialism
and what is not. This book serves as a very accessible report on why
China is an imperialist country based in Leninist theory. The one place
we take issue with Turner is in a discussion of some of the strategic
implications of this in the introduction. Ey makes an argument against
those who would support forces fighting U.$. imperialism, even when they
are backed by other imperialist powers. One immediately thinks of
Russia’s support for Syria, which foiled the Amerikan plans for regime
change against the Assad government. Turner writes, “Lenin and the
Bolshevik Party… argued for ‘revolutionary defeatism’ toward all
imperialist and reactionary powers as the only stance for
revolutionaries.”(34) But what is this “and reactionary powers” that
Turner throws in? In the article, “The Defeat of One’s Own Government in
the Imperialist War,” by “imperialist war” Lenin meant inter-imperialist
war, not an imperialist invasion of a country in the periphery.
In that article Lenin praised the line that “During a reactionary war a
revolutionary class cannot but desire the defeat of its government.” He
writes, “that in all imperialist countries the proletariat must
now desire the defeat of its own government.” While Lenin emphasizes
all here, in response to Turner, we’d emphasize
imperialist. Elsewhere Lenin specifies “belligerent countries”
as the target of this line. So while it is clear that Lenin was not
referring to Syria being invaded by the United $tates as a time that the
proletariat must call for defeat of the government of their country, it
seems that Turner is saying this.
We agree with other strategic conclusions of this book. China seems to
be moving towards consolidating its sphere of influence, which could
lead to consolidation of the world into two blocks once again. While
this is a dangerous situation, with the threat of nuclear war, it is
also a situation that has proven to create opportunities for the
proletariat. Overall, the development and change of the current system
works in the favor of the proletariat of the oppressed nations; time is
on our side. As China tries to maintain its image as a “socialist”
benefactor, the United $tates will feel more pressure to make
concessions to the oppressed and hold back its own imperialist
arrogance.
In 1986, Henry
Park hoped that the CCP would repudiate Marxism soon, writing, “It
is far better for the CCP to denounce Marx (and Mao) as a dead dog than
for the CCP to discredit socialism with the double-talk required to
defend its capitalist social revolution.”(35) Still hasn’t happened, and
it’s not just the ignorant Amerikan who is fooled. Those buying into the
40-year Chinese charade contribute to the continued discrediting of
socialism, especially as this “socialist” country becomes more
aggressive in international affairs.
[We recommend Is China an Imperialist Country? as the best
resource we know on this topic. As for the question of Chinese socialism
being overthrown, please refer to the references below. We highly
recommend The Chinese Road to Socialism for an explanation of
what socialism looks like and why the GPCR was the furthest advancement
of socialism so far.]