Archive for the ‘Socialism’ Category

Task for 21st Century Socialism Lies in Grasping Basics of Democracy, Autocracy, Capitalism – NewsClick

Democracy exists if and when a community organises its self-governance around the full participation, on an equal basis, of all the members of the community. Its other, autocracy, exists when a community organises (or allows) its governance by an individual or subgroup of that community, a ruler. Universal suffrage is clearly a step toward at least formal democracy because voters elect leaders. How real this formal democracy is, depends on the inclusivity of the population voting and the concrete reality of voters equal influence on the elections outcome.

Residential communities in many parts of the modern world operate in formal democracies. However, they usually allow individuals with high levels of income and wealth to use these means to influence others in their voting, whereas individuals with low levels of income and wealth can and usually do wield less influence. The capitalist economic system generates precisely that unequal distribution of income and wealth that creates and sustains a wide gap between formal and real democracy in the world today. That gap in turn reinforces capitalism.

Workplace communities are those collections of interacting individuals comprising enterprises: factories, offices, and stores. In societies where capitalism prevails, enterprises are very rarely organised democratically. Instead, they are autocratic.

Inside most workplace communities in todays world, an individual or small subgroup within the workplace community, a ruling group, governs the workplace community. An owner, an owning family, a partnership of owners, or a board of directors elected by major shareholders comprises the ruler in capitalist enterprises. Their autocratic governance reinforces and is reinforced by the unequal distributions of income and wealth that they generate.

The democratic impulses that were provoked and suppressed in turn by monarchical autocracies occasionally matured into social movements. These movements were sometimes able to alter relations between the ruler and the ruled, but usually succeeded only to a limited degree and temporarily. Eventually, some of these social movements gathered enough strength to dislodge those rulers and end autocracies in residential communities. Kingdoms, czarisms, and oligarchies were then overthrown as a result of this. In their places, revolutionaries often established representative (parliamentary) democracies.

Democratic impulses, similarly provoked and suppressed inside workplace autocracies, have not yet matured into social movements that are strong and focused enough to overthrow autocracy inside workplaces. Social movements did develop far enough to form labour unions and labour-based political parties, and to win greater diversity of race and gender among workplace participants. Unions utilised collective bargaining to alter the terms of the relations between employers and employees. Labour-based political parties used suffrage to yield laws that also changed the terms of the employer-employee relationship.

Yet labour unions and labour/socialist parties rarely targetedlet alone achievedtransforming workplace autocracies into workplace democracies. Even at moments in history when labour unions and Left parties coalesced to build impressive social powersuch as the New Deal of the 1930s in the United States or social democracy in 20th-century Europethey could not or did not move to end the social prevalence and dominance of capitalisms autocratic enterprises. No revolution occurred in the sense of a transition beyond the capitalist organisation of enterprises and its autocratic division of participants into an employee majority and a governing employer minority.

Autocracies inside workplaces have endured in both private and state enterprises. In private enterprises, the rulers have often been individuals, partners, or corporate boards of directors: all persons with no positions within any state apparatus. Alternatively, rulers have also often been state officials positioned inside state enterprises (owned and operated by the state) in ways parallel to the positions of private corporate boards of directors. In such cases, the label socialist applied to such state enterprises might refer to some aspects that differentiated them from private capitalist corporations. But such socialist enterprises were not different in their autocratic internal organisation.

Over the millennia, democratic impulses were occasionally able to establish democratically governed workplaces in some places and during certain times. In them, all members of the workplace community had equal voting power to determine what, how, and where the enterprise produced and what was done with the enterprises product. We shall call these democratically governed workplaces worker cooperatives (as they sometimes named themselves).

Across the many centuries when slavery, feudalism, and capitalism were the chief sorts of economic systems, worker cooperatives were marginal forms of workplace organisation. The conditions, objective and subjective, were absent for worker cooperatives to become the socially prevalent forms of workplace organisation.

However, their scattered presences kept alive the notion that democratised workplaces were a possible alternative to the socially prevalent autocratic enterprises. Critics of autocratic workplaces often supplemented their opposition to them with advocacy for worker cooperatives.

Marxisms criticisms of capitalism in the century after Marxs death might have led it to advocacy for worker cooperatives. Instead, Marxisms anti-capitalism focused on pinpointing which agents could accomplish a transition from capitalism to socialism. There were two key agents considered: first, the working class, and second, the state.

The consensus that emerged was simple. The working class as societys majority would seize the state. This might happen via voting, or it might require a revolution. Either way, once state power was won by an organised working class, it would use that power to make the transition from a capitalist to a socialist economic system.

That consensus led both socialism and Marxism eventually to an excessive focus on the state and all it might do to negate, overwhelm, and displace capitalism and its baleful social effects. Government regulations of enterprises, government ownership and operation of enterprises, and government control of the market: these became the various definitions of what socialists would do once they had state power. As history shows, that is what most socialists and Marxists did in fact do when they acquired state power.

What happened was another historic example of a movement for basic social change mistaking one step taken toward its social goal for the achievement of that goal itself. Socialisms including and since the 1917 Soviet revolution increasingly defined and declared their state-regulated and controlled workplaces to be socialism. That socialism, however, included an enduring autocratic organisation of the workplace.

Developing socialism thus became the continuous refinement and shaping of the governments great influence on the economy toward approved social goals. Socialism might even advocate giving its working classes greater civil liberties and freedoms.

What Marxism and socialism had lost sight of was the internal organisation of workplaces. Those stopped being seen as sites of profound class struggles once socialism was proclaimed. The need to transform the organisation of enterprises internal relations of production from autocratic to democratic dropped from most socialists focus.

Thus, the Soviet Union, China, Sweden, and other socialist variants experimented with differing kinds and degrees of state interventions in the economy. For example, Sweden chiefly regulated private enterprises with autocratic internal structures. In contrast, the Soviets took over, owned, and operated state enterprises with autocratic internal structures.

China now experiments with a combination of both Swedish and Soviet socialisms to produce its socialism with Chinese characteristics. Chinese socialism operates with autocratic organisations inside both its private and state enterprises.

If we define capitalism in terms of the employer-employee internal structure of its enterpriseswhat Marx termed their social relations of productionmost socialisms to date have not yet accomplished transitions beyond capitalism. To do that, they would have to change the prevalent internal organisation of their enterprises to democratic worker cooperatives. Indeed, that has now become the task for 21st-century socialism.

Richard D. Wolff is professor of economics emeritus at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and a visiting professor in the Graduate Program in International Affairs of the New School University, in New York.

Source:Independent Media Institute

Credit Line:This article was produced byEconomy for All, a project of the Independent Media Institute.

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Task for 21st Century Socialism Lies in Grasping Basics of Democracy, Autocracy, Capitalism - NewsClick

Norm Macdonald refused to pander to powerful socialist planners – Washington Times

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

The whole problem with socialism is that its like sharing a banana with a gorilla. You never get a bite of the banana. And you will probably get mauled anyway.

Young, socialist sensation Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez got herself elected to Congress on the rosiest of promises about how the government can solve all your problems. Just give her all your money.

In gangster movies, this is called robbery. In politics, its called governing. This is why Miss Ocasio-Cortez and all the other socialist central planners are drawn to the government in the first place.

Who can blame them, really? Thats where all the money is. I mean, that is why criminals rob banks and not bathrooms.

Likewise, socialist central planners are drawn to government because that is where all the money flows and all the power resides.

But to keep the whole thing going, you have to con the people into thinking it is working for them. This is why socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders an old and experienced man goes to such lengths to hide his own high living, private jet travel, and multiple dachas. After all, the lavish lifestyle of socialist luminaries such as Adolf Hitler does not sit well with the American electorate struggling to pay all the bills.

Miss Ocasio-Cortez is young and unwise. So she flaunts it.

So thrilled she was to be included in a swanky Manhattan fashion party with the uber-rich that she ordered up a tailored dress that gripped her back end the way she wants to grip all the money you earned last week. You have to almost admire her for her honesty and stupidity for flaunting how socialism really works.

Under socialism, central planners like her go to $30,000-ticket parties with rich and powerful people while schlubs like you get to sit at home and watch on your crappy television.

She gets the whole banana. You get nothing. But, as always with socialism, there is the big lie.

In Miss Ocasio-Cortezs case, she was wearing it on the booty end of her expensive fashion dress. Tax the rich, she had scrawled in red ink in a font that was described as that of the Chick-fil-a logo. Apparently, in perfect keeping with socialist kleptocracy, Miss Ocasio-Cortez stole the design from a California street artist named The Velvet Bandit.

Yet, all freedom-loving Americans know what to do when you hear a politician scream, Tax the rich! Grab your wallet and run!

But it is not just all the money that socialist central planners demand. They want a monopoly on everything, including all the speech and all the comedians.

Take the recently departed Norm Macdonald, who ended life in a tie with cancer earlier this week. The crazy Left and hopelessly unfunny despised him. Partly because he was truly funny, and they are not. But mainly because he refused to go along with their grand, central planned visions.

One of the funniest clips going around is where Mr. Macdonald went on The View twenty years ago and casually suggested that the Clintons had murdered Vince Foster. Because he refused to stop talking about it, one of the hysterical ladies got up and physically tried muzzling him by covering his mouth with her hand.

Barbara Walters, who was old even then, squawked like a flustered hen who had been rousted from her nest while trying to lay an egg.

Mr. Macdonald famously got fired from Saturday Night Live because he insisted on telling jokes about OJ Simpson killing his wife even though the Juice was big golfing buddies with the head honcho at NBC.

So, they fired him.

Mr. Macdonald was hardly some kind of conservative. He told wildly offensive jokes about 9/11 and mercilessly lampooned 1996 Republican presidential nominee Robert Dole.

Mr. Macdonalds crime was his refusal to pander. He seemed to love most when his comedy routine bombed because it was another opportunity for him to refuse to bow to the audience. He reveled in the awkwardness and the powerlessness of the mob to stop him.

Similarly, he refused to pander to the socialist central planners who control Hollywood and the media.

After the January 6 riot in the Capitol, Mr. Macdonald tweeted out a picture of protesters wandering through the building in a tidy line, careful to keep within the cordoned walkways.

I loved when the violent terrorists made sure to respect the velvet ropes in Statuary Hall, he wrote.

Mr. Macdonald spent a great deal of time wondering about a powerful God but was no preacher or politician. He was just wise enough to despise mortals here on earth clamoring for so much power over other mortals lives.

Charles Hurt is the opinion editor at the Washington Times.

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Norm Macdonald refused to pander to powerful socialist planners - Washington Times

Howard Beckett is now helping lead the socialist fightback in Labour – The Canary

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A new coalition of trade unions and other groups is taking up the fight for socialism in the Labour Party. Set against the backdrop of Keir Starmers ongoing purge of the left, the group is looking to build the resistance. And on Saturday 18 September, Unite the Union assistant general secretary Howard Beckett will take the lead in launching the groups manifesto.

Labour Left for Socialism (LL4S) formally launched in August 2021. Its a coalition of trade unions and other groups. LL4S came out of the Dont Leave, Organise movement. Its aims are broad. They include:

The groups supporting LL4S include:

LL4S said in its August statement that Labour is not effectively opposing the Tories. In fact, it said that on some issues the party has echoed the government. LL4S also called out the ongoing purge. It said:

the democracy of our own party is under threat. A growing number of local parties have been taken over by unelected officials; the Forde inquiry report has not been published; many members who have spoken out have been suspended or expelled; proscriptions have been introduced against socialist groups; Jeremy Corbyn remains without the Labour whip. As a result, over one hundred thousand members have resigned from the party over the last year.

We will not stand idly by and allow this to continue. We are, therefore, coming together in solidarity not only with the people who are being so gravely disadvantaged by this government but against the purge of the left, which is key for the Leadership to achieve its aim of reversing the socialist policies brought in under Corbyn and to make the Party a safe place for capitalism.

Now, LL4S is taking things a step further.

Read on...

On 18 September, LL4S will hold a virtual meeting. Called Building the Resistance, it will take place on Zoom from 11am. You can register here. LL4S said in a press release that its:

launching a manifesto setting out an agenda of unified defiance on major issues affecting all sectors of the labour movement. It is also backing calls for delegates at party conference in Brighton later this month to reject Keir Starmers ally David Evans as general secretary.

LL4S continued:

speakers at the online launch on September 18 will include Andrew Scattergood (FBU) on workers rights, Ekua Bayunu (Labour Black Socialists) on the fight against racism, Chris Saltmarsh (Labour for a Green New Deal) on the climate crisis and Matt Wrack (FBU General Secretary on Public Services.

Barry Gardiner MP will also speak about the campaign for his private members bill to outlaw fire and rehire, which has its second reading in parliament on 22 September.

Beckett will chair the event. LL4S noted that this is in a personal capacity.

Beckett said in a press release:

This is the start of something for the whole of our movement, the result of months of work by members of left groups and unions working together to confront attacks from the Tory government and also from Labours right wing.

With the ferocious ratcheting up of suspensions and expulsions in recent weeks, its clear that delegates to Labour Party conference in Brighton next week need to follow the lead of Unite the Union and vote down Evans as party general secretary.

The right have got away with a full-scale assault on the left of the party, to rid it of socialism, to become a party of the establishment, because the left has not been united. Now we are putting down a marker that we are united and we are not going anywhere. We are calling on all socialists in the party to come together around common goals and join us in setting in motion the process of left mobilisation.

Whats also interesting about LL4S is that the Labour Party has proscribed (i.e. banned) one of its signatories. It outlawed membership or support of Socialist Appeal back in July. At the time, Dylan Cope from the group told The Canary:

Were certainly going to fight this purge. I think the whole left needs to come together and resist this by all means

This is now what appears to be happening. But with Socialist Appeal involved with LL4S, whats unclear is whether or not being a member of LL4S will incur disciplinary action from Labour. The party has form on this. Recently, it threatened to expel prominent member and activist Graham Bash. This was for signing an open letter from a proscribed group, Labour Against the Witchhunt. Labours action against Bash was despite him signing the letter around 18 months prior to the partys banning of the group.

It appears LL4S has thought of this, though. Because it says on its website that:

Signatories demonstrate their support for the principles in the statement, not each others organisations.

But whether this is good enough for Labour not to try and expel people associated with LL4S remains to be seen.

The new group seems to be picking up where Corbyn left off. It also represents another attempt to operate an organised fightback against Starmer and Evans ongoing purge. The left-wing of the Labour Party will surely be watching closely to see where this group goes next.

Featured image via Labour Left for Socialism and Going Underground YouTube

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Howard Beckett is now helping lead the socialist fightback in Labour - The Canary

Letter to the editor | Beating the socialist drum | Readers Forum | tribdem.com – TribDem.com

In his Sept. 1 column, James Edwards beats the socialist drum when describing our Democratic presidents agenda.

He even now goes so far as to infer that socialism is another way of saying communism. The usual hard right arguments he uses to somehow support this claim are:

Open borders spreading COVID, stopping the pipeline, defunding the police, the federal government taking control of elections, etc.

There is no evidence that COVID is spreading from the border, yet Republican governors in some states are doing everything they can to fight mask and vaccine mandates.

The defunding the police rally cry by Republicans is basically noise and simply untrue.

The Keystone pipeline, with only 8% being completed, would carry heavy tar sands oil that would be an environmental disaster and is not a factor in current oil prices.

Most importantly, Edwards attempt to assert that Democrats are trying to gain control of our once-free elections is ridiculous. Many red-state legislatures have been working overtime to successfully pass voter suppression bills directed at Democratic voters.

His argument is that this will lead to stacking of the Supreme Court. Just last week, the Republican-stacked Supreme Court failed to act against the absurd Texas abortion bill, which is restricting womens reproductive rights in that state.

This type of bill will soon move toother states.

All of this is summed up as a choice between big government or freedom.

Edwards should attempt to explain his views about freedom to the women of our country.

Tom Stewart

Windber

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Letter to the editor | Beating the socialist drum | Readers Forum | tribdem.com - TribDem.com

Newt Gingrich: GOP will win in 2022 by targeting Democrats as ‘big government socialists’ – Washington Times

NEWSMAKER INTERVIEW:

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said Wednesday that Republicans cant afford to blow a once-in-a-generation campaign opportunity to tag all congressional Democrats as big government socialists by supporting President Bidens $3.5 trillion social welfare spending package.

To have an issue of this size involving $3 trillion in spending and about $3 trillion in taxes, and to have every single Democrat having voted lockstep in favor of it, gives you a weight of argument unlike anything Ive seen in recent years, Mr. Gingrich said in an interview with The Washington Times.

Polling conducted for the conservative American Majority project is clear and devastating for Democrats if Republicans define them as big-government socialists, he said.

Republican pollster John McLaughlin has found that Americans generally favor free market capitalism over big-government socialism by a margin of 59% to 16%. Among swing voters, that margin increases to 82% to 18%.

A strong majority of those swing voters already believe that Democrats $3.5 trillion spending bill defines the party as big-government socialists, the polling showed.

Given that view, Mr. Gingrich said, Republicans need to develop a new way of talking about the issue. He said Republicans cant allow some Democrats who voted for the package in August to portray themselves as moderates.

Every single Democrat in the House and Senate voted for what is literally Bernie Sanders bill, he said. Bernie Sanders, for Petes sake, is an open and avowed socialist. Its not slandering him to say that hes a socialist. So youre in a position where you can literally pin every single Democrat running for reelection against that reality.

The National Republican Senatorial Committee criticized Democrats on Wednesday for barreling through an additional $3.5 trillion (more like $5.5 trillion) in reckless spending in order to completely remake the U.S. economy into a socialist utopia.

Will Senate Democrats like Maggie Hassan [of New Hampshire], Mark Kelly [of Arizona], Raphael Warnock [of Georgia], Catherine Cortez Masto [of Nevada] and Michael Bennet [of Colorado] finally speak out against their partys inflation-inducing spending, or will they continue to turn a blind eye to the negative impacts their far-Left policies have on American families? the NRSC said.

A spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee said the spending proposals in the package are popular.

Democrats will deliver on highly popular, once-in-a-generation investments in infrastructure, access to child care and health care, and energy independence for the American people, said DCCC spokesman Chris Taylor.

Americans agree: The uber-wealthy and corporations should pay their fair share to support these investments in Americas future.

Meanwhile, House Republicans are stuck shifting from one half-baked message to the next because [House Minority Leader Kevin] McCarthy and his extremist circus have zero ideas and even less moral integrity to campaign on, he said.

In August, all House and Senate Democrats supported moving ahead with the framework of the spending package. The House is heading toward a final vote after several days of a Ways and Means Committee markup this week.

Never has our government wasted so much to kill so many American jobs, drive prices even higher and hook a whole new generation of the poor on government dependency, Rep. Kevin Brady, Texas Republican, said during the committees sessions.

Coming out of a pandemic, the last thing Americans need are higher prices, fewer jobs and the largest expansion of our welfare state in our lifetimes, he said.

Mr. Biden met Wednesday with Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, who are resisting the total price tag.

Some Democrats also have expressed concern that the massive spending plan would make some incumbents vulnerable.

Democratic consultant Douglas Schoen has said pursuing the $3.5 trillion proposal will end up being a lose-lose situation for Democrats in the 2022 midterms.

Writing in The Hill, Mr. Schoen compared the situation to the 1994 and 2010 midterms, when Democrats lost heavily because of voters perceptions that they had overreached.

The conservative Club for Growth announced Monday that it would run TV ads in 10 House districts, including that of Rep. Adam Kinzinger, Illinois Republican, focusing on out-of-control spending, inflation, and the $3 trillion tax increase proposed by Biden and the Democrats.

The ads will run for one week starting Thursday, the first phase of a $2 million campaign opposing the Democrats plan.

The Club for Growth said the ads will run in nine districts held by persuadable Democrats and by Mr. Kinzinger, citing his numerous occasions of supporting Mr. Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, California Democrat, on spending.

Washington is out of touch with America, said Club for Growth President David McIntosh. Democrats and even some Republicans need to realize that their constituents will roundly reject the out-of-control spending and $3 trillion increase in taxes.

The Democrats targeted in the ad are Reps. Stephanie Murphy of Florida, Carolyn Bourdeaux of Georgia, Jared Golden of Maine, Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey, Susie Lee of Nevada, Abigail Spanberger of Virginia, and Vicente Gonzalez, Henry Cuellar and Filemon Vela, all of Texas.

Mr. Gingrich said the $3.5 trillion package is a gold mine of campaign ammunition for Republicans in 2022.

The next phase is just having to sit down and work through all of the things in the bill that prove that its a dramatic expansion of government into your life, he said. You begin to have sort of a cradle-to-grave government power over your life.

Democrats votes for the package have given Republicans the opportunity of a lifetime to brand the Democratic Party so it becomes a minority for a generation or more, Mr. Gingrich wrote in a separate commentary at Gingrich360.com.

The test is now on the Republican side and in the conservative movement to see if they can rise to the opportunity, he said.

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Newt Gingrich: GOP will win in 2022 by targeting Democrats as 'big government socialists' - Washington Times