vrijdag 16 oktober 2009

Anti-imperialist united front 2

Here I reproduce significant parts of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism - A POPULAR OUTLINE”, by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin,[1] It is my choice, but I stimulate to read the WHOLE book, to judge if my comments are correct. It would be IDEALISM when I use just limited chosen quotes to prove my analysis. So I give the big parts of the texts where the quotes come out of, so the reader can judge if my analyse is correct.(I highlight in italic fat quotes that I used for my own conclusions...That is to say, my attempt to make an actual analyse of imperialism as a base for an anti imperialist strategy, I wrote about in my former article.( you can read it here)
“In another advanced country of modern capitalism, the United States of America, the growth of the concentration of production is still greater. Here statistics single out industry in the narrow sense of the word and classify enterprises according to the value of their annual output. In 1904 large-scale enterprises with an output valued at one million dollars and over, numbered 1,900 (out of 216,180, i.e., 0.9 per cent). These employed 1,400,000 workers (out of 5,500,000, i.e., 25.6 per cent) and the value of their output amounted to $5,600,000,000 (out of $14,800,000,000, i.e., 38 per cent). Five years later, in 1909, the corresponding figures were: 3,060 enterprises (out of 268,491, i.e., 1.1 per cent) employing 2,000,000 workers (out of 6,600,000, i.e., 30.5 per cent) with an output valued at $9,000,000,000 (out of $20,700,000,000, i.e., 43.8 per cent).[2]
Almost half the total production of all the enterprises of the country was carried on by one-hundredth part of these enterprises! These 3,000 giant enterprises embrace 258 branches of industry. From this it can be seen that at a certain stage of its development concentration itself, as it were, leads straight to monopoly, for a score or so of giant enterprises can easily arrive at an agreement, and on the other hand, the hindrance to competition, the tendency towards monopoly, arises from the huge size of the enterprises. This transformation of competition into monopoly is one of the most important—if not the most important—phenomena of modern capitalist economy, and we must deal with it in greater detail. But first we must clear up one possible misunderstanding.
American statistics speak of 3,000 giant enterprises in 250 branches of industry, as if there were only a dozen enterprises of the largest scale for each branch of industry.
But this is not the case. Not in every branch of industry are there large-scale enterprises; and moreover, a very important feature of capitalism in its highest stage of development is so-called combination of production, that is to say, the grouping in a single enterprise of different branches of industry, which either represent the consecutive stages in the processing of raw materials (for example, the smelting of iron ore into pig-iron, the conversion of pig-iron into steel, and then, perhaps, the manufacture of steel goods)—or are auxiliary to one another (for example, the utilisation of scrap, or of by-products, the manufacture of packing materials, etc.).
“Combination,” writes Hilferding, “levels out the fluctuations of trade and therefore assures to the combined enterprises a more stable rate of profit. Secondly, combination has the effect of eliminating trade. Thirdly, it has the effect of rendering possible technical improvements, and, consequently, the acquisition of super-profits over and above those obtained by the ‘pure’ (i.e., non-combined) enterprises. Fourthly, it strengthens the position of the combined enterprises relative to the ‘pure’ enterprises, strengthens them in the competitive struggle in periods of serious depression, when the fall in prices of raw materials does not keep pace with the fall in prices of manufactured goods.”[3]
The German bourgeois economist, Heymann, who has written a book especially on “mixed”, that is, combined, enterprises in the German iron industry, says: “Pure enterprises perish, they are crushed between the high price of raw material and the low price of the finished product.” Thus we get the following picture: “There remain, on the one hand, the big coal companies, producing millions of tons yearly, strongly organised in their coal syndicate, and on the other, the big steel plants, closely allied to the coal mines, having their own steel syndicate. These giant enterprises, producing 400,000 tons of steel per annum, with a tremendous output of ore and coal and producing finished steel goods, employing 10,000 workers quartered in company houses, and sometimes owning their own railways and ports, are the typical representatives of the German iron and steel industry. And concentration goes on further and further. Individual enterprises are becoming larger and larger. An ever-increasing number of enterprises in one, or in several different industries, join together in giant enterprises, backed up and directed by half a dozen big Berlin banks. In relation to the German mining industry, the truth of the teachings of Karl Marx on concentration is definitely proved; true, this applies to a country where industry is protected by tariffs and freight rates. The German mining industry is ripe for expropriation.”[4][5]

You can read here that the monopolies that Lenin described where not only bigger “fusioned” enterprises of where at the end there exist only several big enterprises that produce the products that were earlier produced by many smaller enterprises. The forming of monopolies meant also an integration of enterprises producing raw materials, or refining ram materials or producing intermediary products (stream upward) and logistic enterprises with the end-product producing enterprises. In fact Lenin uses the word “monopoly”, NOT to describe a bigger form of enterprise but in the way that “competition is transformed into monopoly”
So originally the enterprise sell raw materials to enterprises that produce intermediary products, which itself sell those to the enterprise that used those intermediary products as resources for the production of the end-product. The prises of those raw material sold, intermediary products sold and the end-product sold reflected the value of those respective products (the work-time used for its production). Because then the theoretical TOTAL “free competition” was more approached than competition is in the stage of imperialism.
In a monopoly where those different production-lines are integrated in one “combination” those prises disappear. They become (mostly decided based on speculation) fixed prises, in fact the registration of the income of one “department” and as a cost for the next “department”. Or as Lenin quoted Hilferding: “Combination has the effect of eliminating trade.”
So the commodity-production that existed between the different enterprises that produced commodities in the different stage of the end-commodity disappears IN the combination that is integrating these enterprises in ONE monopoly. So such a monopoly is “ripe for expropriation”...; as socialist plan-economy will also be no longer commodity-production. (Capitalism – of which imperialism is the highest possible stage - is the highest possible development of commodity-production)
Further.

“.... instead of being a transitory phenomenon, the cartels have become one of the foundations of economic life. They are winning one field of industry after another, primarily, the raw materials industry. At the beginning of the nineties the cartel system had already acquired-in the organisation of the coke syndicate on the model of which the coal syndicate was later formed—a cartel technique which has hardly been improved on. For the first time the great boom at the close of the nineteenth century and the crisis of 1900-03 occurred entirely—in the mining and iron industries at least—under the aegis of the cartels. And while at that time it appeared to be something novel, now the general public takes it for granted that large spheres of economic life have been, as a general rule, removed from the realm of free competition.”[6]
Thus, the principal stages in the history of monopolies are the following: (1) 1860-70, the highest stage, the apex of development of free competition; monopoly is in the barely discernible, embryonic stage. (2) After the crisis of 1873, a lengthy period of development of cartels; but they are still the exception. They are not yet durable. They are still a transitory phenomenon. (3) The boom at the end of the nineteenth century and the crisis of 1900-03. Cartels become one of the foundations of the whole of economic life. Capitalism has been transformed into imperialism.
Cartels come to an agreement on the terms of sale, dates of payment, etc. They divide the markets among themselves. They fix the quantity of goods to be produced. They fix prices. They divide the profits among the various enterprises, etc.”[7]

It was the free competition that made that the prises reflected the values of the products (in theoretical total free competition the value of the product IS the price). This is an important characteristic of commodity-production. So when free competition is vanishing in imperialism, imperialism is no longer real commodity-production and the monopoly-prices are no longer a reflection of the value of the product (at least IN a integrated and globalised production-chain of « linked monopolies » - what Lenin called « combination ») ....and imperialism is becoming ripe for socialism. The prices used along the whole production-line are often the result of speculation or as a measure to distribute (in advance) already the surplus-value over the group of capitalist controlling (so “owning”) collectively the whole production-line (or “combination” or “cartel”)
Further.

“Competition becomes transformed into monopoly. The result is immense progress in the socialisation of production. In particular, the process of technical invention and improvement becomes socialised.
This is something quite different from the old free competition between manufacturers, scattered and out of touch with one another, and producing for an unknown market. Concentration has reached the point at which it is possible to make an approximate estimate of all sources of raw materials (for example, the iron ore deposits) of a country and even, as we shall see, of several countries, or of the whole world. Not only are such estimates made, but these sources are captured by gigantic monopolist associations. An approximate estimate of the capacity of markets is also made, and the associations “divide” them up amongst themselves by agreement. Skilled labour is monopolised, the best engineers are engaged; the means of transport are captured—railways in America, shipping companies in Europe and America. Capitalism in its imperialist stage leads directly to the most comprehensive socialisation of production; it, so to speak, drags the capitalists, against their will and consciousness, into some sort of a new social order, a transitional one from complete free competition to complete socialisation.
Production becomes social, but appropriation remains private. The social means of production remain the private property of a few. The general framework of formally recognised free competition remains, and the yoke of a few monopolists on the rest of the population becomes a hundred times heavier, more burdensome and intolerable.
The German economist, Kestner, has written a book especially devoted to “the struggle between the cartels and outsiders”, i.e., the capitalists outside the cartels. He entitled his work Compulsory Organisation, although, in order to present capitalism in its true light, he should, of course, have written about compulsory submission to monopolist associations. It is instructive to glance at least at the list of the methods the monopolist associations resort to in the present-day, the latest, the civilised struggle for “organisation”: (1) stopping supplies of raw materials ... “one of the most important methods of compelling adherence to the cartel”); (2) stopping the supply of labour by means of “alliances” (i.e., of agreements between the capitalists and the trade unions by which the latter permit their members to work only in cartelised enterprises); (3) stopping deliveries; (4) closing trade outlets; (5) agreements with the buyers, by which the latter undertake to trade only with the cartels; (6) systematic price cutting (to ruin “outside” firms, i.e., those which refuse to submit to the monopolists. Millions are spent in order to sell goods for a certain time below their cost price; there were instances when the price of petrol was thus reduced from 40 to 22 marks, i.e., almost by half!); (7) stopping credits; (8) boycott.
Here we no longer have competition between small and large, between technically developed and backward enterprises. We see here the monopolists throttling those who do not submit to them, to their yoke, to their dictation. This is how this process is reflected in the mind of a bourgeois economist:
“Even in the purely economic sphere,” writes Kestner, “a certain change is taking place from commercial activity in the old sense of the word towards organisational-speculative activity. The greatest success no longer goes to the merchant whose technical and commercial experience enables him best of all to estimate the needs of the buyer, and who is able to discover and, so to speak, ‘awaken’ a latent demand; it goes to the speculative genius [?!] who knows how to estimate, or even only to sense in advance, the organisational development and the possibilities of certain connections between individual enterprises and the banks. . . .”
Translated into ordinary human language this means that the development of capitalism has arrived at a stage when, although commodity production still “reigns” and continues to be regarded as the basis of economic life, it has in reality been undermined and the bulk of the profits go to the “geniuses” of financial manipulation. At the basis of these manipulations and swindles lies socialised production; but the immense progress of mankind, which achieved this socialisation, goes to benefit . . . the speculators. We shall see later how “on these grounds” reactionary, petty-bourgeois critics of capitalist imperialism dream of going back to “free”, “peaceful”, and “honest” competition.
“The prolonged raising of prices which results from the formation of cartels,” says Kestner, “has hitherto been observed only in respect of the most important means of production, particularly coal, iron and potassium, but never in respect of manufactured goods. Similarly, the increase in profits resulting from this raising of prices has been limited only to the industries which produce means of production. To this observation we must add that the industries which process raw materials (and not semi-manufactures) not only secure advantages from the cartel formation in the shape of high profits, to the detriment of the finished goods industry, but have also secured a dominating position over the latter, which did not exist under free competition.”[8][9]

Free competition for the fixing of the prices is replaced by.... speculation, something we see by the evolution of the prices of agricultural products or natural resources (oil, al kind of metals, minerals, etc). As capitalism is the highest form of commodity-production, imperialism is still commodity-production. But INSIDE a cartel, a combination, an integrated and globalised production-line (collectively owned by a group of capitalist by the way of banks and holdings) you can almost speak no more of “commodity-production”; the working of the law of value is diminishing.
Further.

“The statement that cartels can abolish crises is a fable spread by bourgeois economists who at all costs desire to place capitalism in a favourable light. On the contrary, the monopoly created in certain branches of industry increases and intensifies the anarchy inherent in capitalist production as a whole. The disparity between the development of agriculture and that of industry, which is characteristic of capitalism in general, is increased. The privileged position of the most highly cartelised, so-called heavy industry, especially coal and iron, causes “a still greater lack of co-ordination” in other branches of industry—as Jeidels, the author of one of the best works on “the relationship of the German big banks to industry”, admits.[10]
“The more developed an economic system is,” writes Liefmann, an unblushing apologist of capitalism, “the more it resorts to risky enterprises, or enterprises in other countries, to those which need a great deal of time to develop, or finally, to those which are only of local importance.”[11]The increased risk is connected in the long run with a prodigious increase of capital, which, as it were, overflows the brim, flows abroad, etc. At the same time the extremely rapid rate of technical progress gives rise to increasing elements of disparity between the various spheres of national economy, to anarchy and crises.” “[12]

As a whole imperialism is still the highest form of commodity-production and the prices of the end-product sold to a purchase powered demand are a reflection of the value of that end-product being the sum of all incorporated peaces of labour-time along the integrated and globalised production-line (the socialisation of the production). When the end-product is finally sold the surplus-value is realised (although that surplus-value was already advanced along the total production-line by « price-fixing » and price-forming by speculation.
Although the free competition is disappearing, capitalist competition remains and is each moment reappearing (between departments in one monopoly, or between monopolies) the competition has often the form of how to organise the highest possible exploitation level and so to realise (or rather “advance”) the highest possible surplus-value than the other department IN the same monopoly.
The chaotic character of capitalist production is neither “disappearing” in the imperialist stage of capitalism and neither are crises, Lenin states here. That chaotic character of the production and so economic crises can only be finished by installing socialist plan-economy that is no more commodity-production but production in function of the real NEEDS.
Further.

“ II. BANKS AND THEIR NEW ROLE
(...)
These simple figures show perhaps better than lengthy disquisitions how the concentration of capital and the growth of bank turnover are radically changing the significance of the banks. Scattered capitalists are transformed into a single collective capitalist. When carrying the current accounts of a few capitalists, a bank, as it were, transacts a purely technical and exclusively auxiliary operation. When, however, this operation grows to enormous dimensions we find that a handful of monopolists subordinate to their will all the operations, both commercial and industrial, of the whole of capitalist society; for they are enabled-by means of their banking connections, their current accounts and other financial operations—first, to ascertain exactly the financial position of the various capitalists, then to control them, to influence them by restricting or enlarging, facilitating or hindering credits, and finally to entirely determine their fate, determine their income, deprive them of capital, or permit them to increase their capital rapidly and to enormous dimensions, etc. (...)

The banking system “possesses, indeed, the form of universal book-keeping and distribution of means of production on a social scale, but solely the form”, wrote Marx in Capital half a century ago (Russ. trans., Vol. III, part II, p. 144). The figures we have quoted on the growth of bank capital, on the increase in the number of the branches and offices of the biggest banks, the increase in the number of their accounts, etc., present a concrete picture of this “universal book-keeping” of the whole capitalist class; and not only of the capitalists, for the banks collect, even though temporarily, all kinds of money revenues—of small businessmen, office clerks, and of a tiny upper stratum of the working class. “Universal distribution of means of production”—that, from the formal aspect, is what grows out of the modern banks, which, numbering some three to six of the biggest in France, and six to eight in Germany, control millions and millions. In substance, however, the distribution of means of production is not at all “universal”, but private, i.e., it conforms to the interests of big capital, and primarily, of huge, monopoly capital, which operates under conditions in which the masses live in want, in which the whole development of agriculture hopelessly lags behind the development of industry, while within industry itself the “heavy industries” exact tribute from all other branches of industry. (...)

The boundaries between the banks and the savings-banks “become more and more obliterated”. The Chambers of Commerce of Bochum and Erfurt, for example, demand that savings-banks be “prohibited” from engaging in “purely” banking business, such as discounting bills; they demand the limitation of the “banking” operations of the post-office.[13] The banking magnates seem to be afraid that state monopoly will steal upon them from an unexpected quarter. It goes without saying, however, that this fear is no more than an expression of the rivalry, so to speak, between two department managers in the same office; for, on the one hand, the millions entrusted to the savings-banks are in the final analysis actually controlled by these very same bank capital magnates, while, on the other hand, state monopoly in capitalist society is merely a means of increasing and guaranteeing the income of millionaires in some branch of industry who are on the verge of bankruptcy. (...)”[14]

The ownership over the means of production centralised in those monopolies and combination of monopolies is more and more becoming “collective”. So a group of capitalists with their capitals in banks and holdings has the ownership (in relative importance of the capital invested) of the monopolies and combination of monopolies. Earlier capitalists were individual persons, little groups of persons or families. They had only the ownership of a part of a production-line, were the production is now integrated from raw material to the distribution (and selling) of the end-product.
Further.

“III. FINANCE CAPITAL AND THE FINANCIAL OLIGARCHY
(...)
Paramount importance attaches to the “holding system”, already briefly referred to above. The German economist, Heymann, probably the first to call attention to this matter, describes the essence of it in this way:
“The head of the concern controls the principal company (literally: the “mother company”); the latter reigns over the subsidiary companies (“daughter companies”) which in their turn control still other subsidiaries (“grandchild companies”), etc. In this way, it is possible with a comparatively small capital to dominate immense spheres of production. Indeed, if holding 50 per cent of the capital is always sufficient to control a company, the head of the concern needs only one million to control eight million in the second subsidiaries. And if this ‘interlocking’ is extended, it is possible with one million to control sixteen million, thirty-two million, etc.”[15]
As a matter of fact, experience shows that it is sufficient to own 40 per cent of the shares of a company in order to direct its affairs,[16] since in practice a certain number of small, scattered shareholders find it impossible to attend general meetings, etc. The “democratisation” of the ownership of shares, from which the bourgeois sophists and opportunist so-called “Social-Democrats” expect (or say that they expect) the “democratisation of capital”, the strengthening of the role and significance of small scale production, etc., is, in fact, one of the ways of increasing the power of the financial oligarchy. Incidentally, this is why, in the more advanced, or in the older and more “experienced” capitalist countries, the law allows the issue of shares of smaller denomination. .(... )
But the “holding system” not only serves enormously to increase the power of the monopolists; it also enables them to resort with impunity to all sorts of shady and dirty tricks to cheat the public, because formally the directors of the “mother company” are not legally responsible for the “daughter company”, which is supposed to be “independent”, and through the medium of which they can “pull off” anything. “ “[17]

So here is analysed how that more collective ownership of the means of productions is organised.
Further.


“This typical example of balance-sheet jugglery, quite common in joint-stock companies, explains why their Boards of Directors are willing to undertake risky transactions with a far lighter heart than individual businessmen. Modern methods of drawing up balance-sheets not only make it possible to conceal doubtful undertakings from the ordinary shareholder, but also allow the people most concerned to escape the consequence of unsuccessful speculation by selling their shares in time when the individual businessman risks his own skin in everything he does.(... )
“The balance-sheets of many joint-stock companies put us in mind of the palimpsests of the Middle Ages from which the visible inscription had first to be erased in order to discover beneath it another inscription giving the real meaning of the document.
[Palimpsests are parchment documents from which the original inscription has been erased and another inscription imposed.]
“The simplest and, therefore, most common procedure for making balance-sheets indecipherable is to divide a single business into several parts by setting up ‘daughter companies’—or by annexing them. The advantages of this system for various purposes—legal and illegal—are so evident that big companies which do not employ it are quite the exception.”[18]
As an example of a huge monopolist company that extensively employs this system, the author quotes the famous General Electric Company (the A.E.G., to which I shall refer again later on). In 1912, it was calculated that this company held shares in 175 to 200 other companies, dominating them, of course, and thus controlling a total capital of about 1,500 million marks.[19][20]

So where “official” a combination is “divided” in different (monopoly-)enterprises with a “divided” ownership, in the reality the ownership over a combination of monopolies (following to each other in the course of the production) is “collective” by a group of capitalist instead of individual capitalists.
Further.

“IV. EXPORT OF CAPITAL

Typical of the old capitalism, when free competition held undivided sway, was the export of goods. Typical of the latest stage of capitalism, when monopolies rule, is the export of capital.
Capitalism is commodity production at its highest stage of development, when labour-power itself becomes a commodity. The growth of internal exchange, and, particularly, of international exchange, is a characteristic feature of capitalism. The uneven and spasmodic development of individual enterprises, individual branches of industry and individual countries is inevitable under the capitalist system. England became a capitalist country before any other, and by the middle of the nineteenth century, having adopted free trade, claimed to be the “workshop of the world”, the supplier of manufactured goods to all countries, which in exchange were to keep her provided with raw materials. But in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, this monopoly was already undermined; for other countries, sheltering themselves with “protective” tariffs, developed into independent capitalist states. On the threshold of the twentieth century we see the formation of a new type of monopoly: firstly, monopolist associations of capitalists in all capitalistically developed countries; secondly, the monopolist position of a few very rich countries, in which the accumulation of capital has reached gigantic proportions. An enormous “surplus of capital” has arisen in the advanced countries.
It goes without saying that if capitalism could develop agriculture, which today is everywhere lagging terribly behind industry, if it could raise the living standards of the masses, who in spite of the amazing technical progress are everywhere still half-starved and poverty-stricken, there could be no question of a surplus of capital. This “argument” is very often advanced by the petty-bourgeois critics of capitalism. But if capitalism did these things it would not be capitalism; for both uneven development and a semi-starvation level of existence of the masses are fundamental and inevitable conditions and constitute premises of this mode of production. As long as capitalism remains what it is, surplus capital will be utilised not for the purpose of raising the standard of living of the masses in a given country, for this would mean a decline in profits for the capitalists, but for the purpose of increasing profits by exporting capital abroad to the backward countries. In these backward countries profits are usually high, for capital is scarce, the price of land is relatively low, wages are low, raw materials are cheap. The export of capital is made possible by a number of backward countries having already been drawn into world capitalist intercourse; main railways have either been or are being built in those countries, elementary conditions for industrial development have been created, etc. The need to export capital arises from the fact that in a few countries capitalism has become “overripe” and (owing to the backward state of agriculture and the poverty of the masses) capital cannot find a field for “profitable” investment. “[21]

So the export of capital, a characteristic of imperialism is also a characteristic of its chaotic character.
Further.

“V. DIVISION OF THE WORLD AMONG CAPITALIST ASSOCIATIONS
Monopolist capitalist associations, cartels, syndicates and trusts first divided the home market among themselves and obtained more or less complete possession of the industry of their own country. But under capitalism the home market is inevitably bound up with the foreign market. Capitalism long ago created a world market. As the export of capital increased, and as the foreign and colonial connections and “spheres of influence” of the big monopolist associations expanded in all ways, things “naturally” gravitated towards an international agreement among these associations, and towards the formation of international cartels.
This is a new stage of world concentration of capital and production, incomparably higher than the preceding stages. (...)
The difficulty of competing against this trust, actually a single world-wide trust controlling a capital of several thousand million, with “branches”, agencies, representatives, connections, etc., in every corner of the world, is self-evident. But the division of the world between two powerful trusts does not preclude redivision if the relation of forces changes as a result of uneven development, war, bankruptcy, etc.
An instructive example of an attempt at such a redivision, of the struggle for redivision, is provided by the oil industry.
“The world oil market,” wrote Jeidels in 1905, “is even today still divided between two great financial groups—Rockefeller’s American Standard Oil Co., and Rothschild and Nobel, the controlling interests of the Russian oilfields in Baku. The two groups are closely connected. But for several years five enemies have been threatening their monopoly”[22] : (1) the exhaustion of the American oilfields; (2) the competition of the firm of Mantashev of Baku; (3) the Austrian oilfields; (4) the Rumanian oilfields; (5) the overseas oilfields, particularly in the Dutch colonies (the extremely rich firms, Samuel, and Shell, also connected with British capital). The three last groups are connected with the big German banks, headed by the huge Deutsche Bank. These banks independently and systematically developed the oil industry in Rumania, for example, in order to have a foothold of their “own”. In 1907, the foreign capital invested in the Rumanian oil industry was estimated at 185 million francs, of which 74 million was German capital.[23]
A struggle began for the “division of the world”, as, in fact, it is called in economic literature. On the one hand, the Rockefeller “oil trust” wanted to lay its hands on everything; it formed a “daughter company” right in Holland, and bought up oilfields in the Dutch Indies, in order to strike at its principal enemy, the Anglo-Dutch Shell trust. On the other hand, the Deutsche Bank and the other German banks aimed at “retaining” Rumania “for themselves” and at uniting her with Russia against Rockefeller. The latter possessed far more capital and an excellent system of oil transportation and distribution. The struggle had to end, and did end in 1907, with the utter defeat of the Deutsche Bank, which was confronted with the alternative: either to liquidate its “oil interests” and lose millions, or submit. It chose to submit, and concluded a very disadvantageous agreement with the “oil trust”. The Deutsche Bank agreed “not to attempt anything which might injure American interests”. Provision was made, however, for the annulment of the agreement in the event of Germany establishing a state oil monopoly.

Then the “comedy of oil” began. One of the German finance kings, von Gwinner, a director of the Deutsche Bank, through his private secretary, Stauss, launched a campaign for a state oil monopoly. The gigantic machine of the huge German bank and all its wide “connections” were set in motion. The press bubbled over with “patriotic” indignation against the “yoke” of the American trust, and, on March 15, 1911, the Reichstag, by an almost unanimous vote, adopted a motion asking the government to introduce a bill for the establishment of an oil monopoly. The government seized upon this “popular” idea, and the game of the Deutsche Bank, which hoped to cheat its American counterpart and improve its business by a state monopoly, appeared to have been won. The German oil magnates already saw visions of enormous profits, which would not be less than those of the Russian sugar refiners.... But, firstly, the big German banks quarrelled among themselves over the division of the spoils. The Disconto-Gesellschaft exposed the covetous aims of the Deutsche Bank; secondly, the government took fright at the prospect of a struggle with Rockefeller, for it was very doubtful whether Germany could be sure of obtaining oil from other sources (the Rumanian output was small); thirdly, just at that time the 1913 credits of a thousand million marks were voted for Germany’s war preparations. The oil monopoly project was postponed. The Rockefeller “oil trust” came out of the struggle, for the time being, victorious.

The Berlin review, Die Bank, wrote in this connection that Germany could fight the oil trust only by establishing an electricity monopoly and by converting water-power into cheap electricity. “But,” the author added, “the electricity monopoly will come when the producers need it, that is to say, when the next great crash in the electrical industry is imminent, and when the gigantic, expensive power stations now being put up at great cost everywhere by private electrical concerns, which are already obtaining certain franchises from towns, from states, etc., can no longer work at a profit. Water-power will then have to be used. But it will be impossible to convert it into cheap electricity at state expense; it will also have to be handed over to a ‘private monopoly controlled by the state’, because private industry has already concluded a number of contracts and has stipulated for heavy compensation.... So it was with the nitrate monopoly, so it is with the oil monopoly, so it will be with the electric power monopoly. It is time our state socialists, who allow themselves to be blinded by a beautiful principle, understood, at last, that in Germany the monopolies have never pursued the aim, nor have they had the result, of benefiting the consumer, or even of handing over to the state part of the promoter’s profits; they have served only to facilitate, at the expense of the state, the recovery of private industries which were on the verge of bankruptcy.[24]
Such are the valuable admissions which the German bourgeois economists are forced to make. We see plainly here how private and state monopolies are interwoven in the epoch of finance capital; how both are but separate links in the imperialist struggle between the big monopolists for the division of the world. (..).
Extremely instructive also is the story of the formation of the International Rail Cartel. The first attempt of the British, Belgian and German rail manufacturers to form such a cartel was made as early as 1884, during a severe industrial depression. The manufacturers agreed not to compete with one another in the home markets of the countries involved, and they divided the foreign markets in the following quotas: Great Britain, 66 per cent; Germany, 27 per cent; Belgium, 7 per cent. India was reserved entirely for Great Britain. Joint war was declared against a British firm which remained outside the cartel, the cost of which was met by a percentage levy on all sales. But in 1886 the cartel collapsed when two British firms retired from it. It is characteristic that agreement could not be achieved during subsequent boom periods.
At the beginning of 1904, the German steel syndicate was formed. In November 1904, the International Rail Cartel was revived, with the following quotas: Britain, 53.5 per cent; Germany, 28.83 per cent; Belgium, 17.67 per cent. France came in later and received 4.8 per cent, 5.8 per cent and 6.4 per cent in the first, second and third year respectively, over and above the 100 per cent limit, i.e., out of a total of 104.8 per cent, etc. In 1905, the United States Steel Corporation entered the cartel; then Austria and Spain. “At the present time,” wrote Vogelstein in 1910, “the division of the world is complete, and the big consumers, primarily the state railways—since the world has been parcelled out without consideration for their interests—can now dwell like the poet in the heavens of Jupiter.”[25]

Let me also mention the International Zinc Syndicate which was established in 1909 and which precisely apportioned output among five groups of factories: German, Belgian, French, Spanish and British; and also the International Dynamite Trust, which, Liefmann says, is “quite a modern, close alliance of all the German explosives manufacturers who, with the French and American dynamite manufacturers, organised in a similar manner, have divided the whole world among themselves, so to speak”.[26] (...).

The epoch of the latest stage of capitalism shows us that certain relations between capitalist associations grow up, based on the economic division of the world; while parallel to and in connection with it, certain relations grow up between political alliances, between states, on the basis of the territorial division of the world, of the struggle for colonies, of the “struggle for spheres of influence”. “[27]

So here is explained that it is misleading to speak about “national “capitalism, and about capitalists that have a nationality.(capitalism and capitalists in the stage of imperialism)
Also is explained the way that nationalisation and privatisation followed on each other, but never change something to capitalist ownership of means of productions.
Further.
“VI. DIVISION OF THE WORLD AMONG THE GREAT POWERS

...... Even the capitalist colonial policy of previous stages of capitalism is essentially different from the colonial policy of finance capital.
The principal feature of the latest stage of capitalism is the domination of monopolist associations of big employers. These monopolies are most firmly established when all the sources of raw materials are captured by one group, and we have seen with what zeal the international capitalist associations exert every effort to deprive their rivals of all opportunity of competing, to buy up, for example, ironfields, oilfields, etc. Colonial possession alone gives the monopolies complete guarantee against all contingencies in the struggle against competitors, including the case of the adversary wanting to be protected by a law establishing a state monopoly. The more capitalism is developed, the more strongly the shortage of raw materials is felt, the more intense the competition and the hunt for sources of raw materials throughout the whole world, the more desperate the struggle for the acquisition of colonies
(...).
Finance capital is interested not only in the already discovered sources of raw materials but also in potential sources, because present-day technical development is extremely rapid, and land which is useless today may be improved tomorrow if new methods are devised (to this end a big bank can equip a special expedition of engineers, agricultural experts, etc.), and if large amounts of capital are invested. This also applies to prospecting for minerals, to new methods of processing up and utilising raw materials, etc., etc. Hence, the inevitable striving of finance capital to enlarge its spheres of influence and even its actual territory. In the same way that the trusts capitalise their property at two or three times its value, taking into account its “potential” (and not actual) profits and the further results of monopoly, so finance capital in general strives to seize the largest possible amount of land of all kinds in all places, and by every means, taking into account potential sources of raw materials and fearing to be left behind in the fierce struggle for the last remnants of independent territory, or for the repartition of those territories that have been already divided. (..).
The interests pursued in exporting capital also give an impetus to the conquest of colonies, for in the colonial market it is easier to employ monopoly methods (and sometimes they are the only methods that can be employed) to eliminate competition, to ensure supplies, to secure the necessary “connections”, etc.
The non-economic superstructure which grows up on the basis of finance capital, its politics and its ideology, stimulates the striving for colonial conquest. “Finance capital does not want liberty, it wants domination,” as Hilferding very truly says. And a French bourgeois writer, developing and supplementing, as it were, the ideas of Cecil Rhodes quoted above[28], writes that social causes should be added to the economic causes of modern colonial policy: “Owing to the growing complexities of life and the difficulties which weigh not only on the masses of the workers, but also on the middle classes, ‘impatience, irritation and hatred are accumulating in all the countries of the old civilisation and are becoming a menace to public order; the energy which is being hurled out of the definite class channel must be given employment abroad in order to avert an explosion at home’.”[29]

Since we are speaking of colonial policy in the epoch of capitalist imperialism, it must be observed that finance capital and its foreign policy, which is the struggle of the great powers for the economic and political division of the world, give rise to a number of transitional forms of state dependence. Not only are the two main groups of countries, those owning colonies, and the colonies themselves, but also the diverse forms of dependent countries which, politically, are formally independent, but in fact, are enmeshed in the net of financial and diplomatic dependence, typical of this epoch. We have already referred to one form of dependence—the semi-colony. An example of another is provided by Argentina.

“South America, and especially Argentina,” writes Schulze-Gaevernitz in his work on British imperialism, “is so dependent financially on London that it ought to be described as almost a British commercial colony.”[30] Basing himself on the reports of the Austro-Hungarian Consul at Buenos Aires for 1909, Schilder estimated the amount of British capital invested in Argentina at 8,750 million francs. It is not difficult to imagine what strong connections British finance capital (and its faithful “friend”, diplomacy) thereby acquires with the Argentine bourgeoisie, with the circles that control the whole of that country’s economic and political life.

A somewhat different form of financial and diplomatic dependence, accompanied by political independence, is presented by Portugal. Portugal is an independent sovereign state, but actually, for more than two hundred years, since the war of the Spanish Succession (1701-14), it has been a British protectorate. Great Britain has protected Portugal and her colonies in order to fortify her own positions in the fight against her rivals, Spain and France. In return Great Britain has received commercial privileges, preferential conditions for importing goods and especially capital into Portugal and the Portuguese colonies, the right to use the ports and islands of Portugal, her telegraph cables, etc., etc.[31] Relations of this kind have always existed between big and little states, but in the epoch of capitalist imperialism they become a general system, they form part of the sum total of “divide the world” relations and become links in the chain of operations of world finance capital. (....)”[32]

Colonialism is not disappearing but still used by imperialism. Whole regions in the world with its population are placed under colonial production-relations. Contradictions are increasing in the imperialist centres. War is used to control those contradictions, war is used as a form of competition and for renewed division of the world, and war is used to impose colonial production-relations.
Further.

“VII. IMPERIALISM AS A SPECIAL STAGE OF CAPITALISM

We must now try to sum up, to draw together the threads of what has been said above on the subject of imperialism. Imperialism emerged as the development and direct continuation of the fundamental characteristics of capitalism in general. But capitalism only became capitalist imperialism at a definite and very high stage of its development, when certain of its fundamental characteristics began to change into their opposites, when the features of the epoch of transition from capitalism to a higher social and economic system had taken shape and revealed themselves in all spheres. Economically, the main thing in this process is the displacement of capitalist free competition by capitalist monopoly. Free competition is the basic feature of capitalism, and of commodity production generally; monopoly is the exact opposite of free competition, but we have seen the latter being transformed into monopoly before our eyes, creating large-scale industry and forcing out small industry, replacing large-scale by still larger-scale industry, and carrying concentration of production and capital to the point where out of it has grown and is growing monopoly: cartels, syndicates and trusts, and merging with them, the capital of a dozen or so banks, which manipulate thousands of millions. At the same time the monopolies, which have grown out of free competition, do not eliminate the latter, but exist above it and alongside it, and thereby give rise to a number of very acute, intense antagonisms, frictions and conflicts. Monopoly is the transition from capitalism to a higher system.
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. Such a definition would include what is most important, for, on the one hand, finance capital is the bank capital of a few very big monopolist banks, merged with the capital of the monopolist associations of industrialists; and, on the other hand, the division of the world is the transition from a colonial policy which has extended without hindrance to territories unseized by any capitalist power, to a colonial policy of monopolist possession of the territory of the world, which has been completely divided up. (...)”[33]

There is no higher form of capitalism possible as imperialism. Imperialism is the ultimate stage of capitalism.
Further.

“X. THE PLACE OF IMPERIALISM IN HISTORY
We have seen that in its economic essence imperialism is monopoly capitalism. This in itself determines its place in history, for monopoly that grows out of the soil of free competition, and precisely out of free competition, is the transition from the capitalist system to a higher socio-economic order. We must take special note of the four principal types of monopoly, or principal manifestations of monopoly capitalism, which are characteristic of the epoch we are examining.
Firstly, monopoly arose out of the concentration of production at a very high stage. This refers to the monopolist capitalist associations, cartels, syndicatess, and trusts. We have seen the important part these play in present-day economic life. At the beginning of the twentieth century, monopolies had acquired complete supremacy in the advanced countries, and although the first steps towards the formation of the cartels were taken by countries enjoying the protection of high tariffs (Germany, America), Great Britain, with her system of free trade, revealed the same basic phenomenon, only a little later, namely, the birth of monopoly out of the concentration of production.
Secondly, monopolies have stimulated the seizure of the most important sources of raw materials, especially for the basic and most highly cartelised industries in capitalist society: the coal and iron industries. The monopoly of the most important sources of raw materials has enormously increased the power of big capital, and has sharpened the antagonism between cartelised and non-cartelised industry.
Thirdly, monopoly has sprung from the banks. The banks have developed from modest middleman enterprises into the monopolists of finance capital. Some three to five of the biggest banks in each of the foremost capitalist countries have achieved the “personal link-up” between industrial and bank capital, and have concentrated in their hands the control of thousands upon thousands of millions which form the greater part of the capital and income of entire countries. A financial oligarchy, which throws a close network of dependence relationships over all the economic and political institutions of present-day bourgeois society without exception—such is the most striking manifestation of this monopoly.
Fourthly, monopoly has grown out of colonial policy. To the numerous “old” motives of colonial policy, finance capital has added the struggle for the sources of raw materials, for the export of capital, for spheres of influence, i.e., for spheres for profitable deals, concessions, monopoly profits and so on, economic territory in general. When the colonies of the European powers,for instance, comprised only one-tenth of the territory of Africa(as was the case in 1876), colonial policy was able to develop—by methods other than those of monopoly—by the “free grabbing” of territories, so to speak. But when nine-tenths of Africa had been seized (by 1900), when the whole world had been divided up,there was inevitably ushered in the era of monopoly possession of colonies and, consequently, of particularly intense struggle for the division and the redivision of the world.
The extent to which monopolist capital has intensified all the contradictions of capitalism is generally known. It is sufficient to mention the high cost of living and the tyranny of the cartels. This intensification of contradictions constitutes the most powerful driving force of the transitional period of history, which began from the time of the final victory of world finance capital.
Monopolies, oligarchy, the striving for domination and not for freedom, the exploitation of an increasing number of small or weak nations by a handful of the richest or most powerful nations—all these have given birth to those distinctive characteristics of imperialism which compel us to define it as parasitic or decaying capitalism. More and more prominently there emerges, as one of the tendencies of imperialism, the creation of the “rentier state”, the usurer state, in which the bourgeoisie to an ever-increasing degree lives on the proceeds of capital exports and by “clipping coupons”. It would be a mistake to believe that this tendency to decay precludes the rapid growth of capitalism. It does not. In the epoch of imperialism, certain branches of industry, certain strata of the bourgeoisie and certain countries betray, to a greater or lesser degree, now one and now another of these tendencies. On the whole, capitalism is growing far more rapidly than before; but this growth is not only becoming more and more uneven in general, its unevenness also manifests itself, in particular, in the decay of the countries which are richest in capital (Britain).
In regard to the rapidity of Germany’s economic development, Riesser, the author of the book on the big German banks, states: “The progress of the preceding period (1848-70), which had not been exactly slow, compares with the rapidity with which the whole of Germany’s national economy, and with it German banking, progressed during this period (1870-1905) in about the same way as the speed of the mail coach in the good old days compares with the speed of the present-day automobile ... which is whizzing past so fast that it endangers not only innocent pedestrians in its path, but also the occupants of the car.” In its turn, this finance capital which has grown with such extraordinary rapidity is not unwilling, precisely because it has grown so quickly, to pass on to a more “tranquil” possession of colonies which have to be seized—and not only by peaceful methods—from richer nations. In the United States, economic development in the last decades has been even more rapid than in Germany, and for this very reason, the parasitic features of modern American capitalism have stood out with particular prominence. On the other hand, a comparison of, say, the republican American bourgeoisie with the monarchist Japanese or German bourgeoisie shows that the most pronounced political distinction diminishes to an extreme degree in the epoch of imperialism—not because it is unimportant in general, but because in all these cases we are talking about a bourgeoisie which has definite features of parasitism.
The receipt of high monopoly profits by the capitalists in one of the numerous branches of industry, in one of the numerous countries, etc., makes it economically possible for them to bribe certain sections of the workers, and for a time a fairly considerable minority of them, and win them to the side of the bourgeoisie of a given industry or given nation against all the others. The intensification of antagonisms between imperialist nations for the division of the world increases this urge. And so there is created that bond between imperialism and opportunism, which revealed itself first and most clearly in Great Britain, owing to the fact that certain features of imperialist development were observable there much earlier than in other countries. Some writers, L. Martov, for example, are prone to wave aside the connection between imperialism and opportunism in the working-class movement—a particularly glaring fact at the present time—by resorting to “official optimism” (à la Kautsky and Huysmans) like the following: the cause of the opponents of capitalism would be hopeless if it were progressive capitalism that led to the increase of opportunism, or, if it were the best-paid workers who were inclined towards opportunism, etc. We must have no illusions about “optimism” of this kind. It is optimism in respect of opportunism; it is optimism which serves to conceal opportunism. As a matter of fact the extraordinary rapidity and the particularly revolting character of the development of opportunism is by no means a guarantee that its victory will be durable: the rapid growth of a painful abscess on a healthy body can only cause it to burst more quickly and thus relieve the body of it. The most dangerous of all in this respect are those who do not wish to understand that the fight against imperialism is a sham and humbug unless it is inseparably bound up with the fight against opportunism.
From all that has been said in this book on the economic essence of imperialism, it follows that we must define it as capitalism in transition, or, more precisely, as moribund capitalism. It is very instructive in this respect to note that bourgeois economists, in describing modern capitalism, frequently employ catchwords and phrases like “interlocking”, “absence of isolation”, etc.; “in conformity with their functions and course of development”, banks are “not purely private business enterprises: they are more and more outgrowing the sphere of purely private business regulation”. And this very Riesser, whose words I have just quoted, declares with all seriousness that the “prophecy” of the Marxists concerning “socialisation” has “not come true”!
What then does this catchword “interlocking” express? It merely expresses the most striking feature of the process going on before our eyes. It shows that the observer counts the separate trees, but cannot see the wood. It slavishly copies the superficial, the fortuitous, the chaotic. It reveals the observer as one who is overwhelmed by the mass of raw material and is utterly incapable of appreciating its meaning and importance. Ownership of shares, the relations between owners of private property “interlock in a haphazard way”. But underlying this interlocking, its very base, are the changing social relations of production. When a big enterprise assumes gigantic proportions, and, on the basis of an exact computation of mass data, organises according to plan the supply of primary raw materials to the extent of two-thirds, or three-fourths, of all that is necessary for tens of millions of people; when the raw materials are transported in a systematic and organised manner to the most suitable places of production, sometimes situated hundreds or thousands of miles from each other; when a single centre directs all the consecutive stages of processing the material right up to the manufacture of numerous varieties of finished articles; when these products are distributed according to a single plan among tens and hundreds of millions of consumers (the marketing of oil in America and Germany by the American oil trust)—then it becomes evident that we have socialisation of production, and not mere “interlocking”, that private economic and private property relations constitute a shell which no longer fits its contents, a shell which must inevitably decay if its removal is artificially delayed, a shell which may remain in a state of decay for a fairly long period (if, at the worst, the cure of the opportunist abscess is protracted), but which will inevitably be removed.
The enthusiastic admirer of German imperialism, Schulze-Gaevernitz, exclaims:

“Once the supreme management of the German banks has been entrusted to the hands of a dozen persons, their activity is even today more significant for the public good than that of the majority of the Ministers of State. .. . (The “interlocking” of bankers, ministers, magnates of industry and rentiers is here conveniently forgotten.) If we imagine the development of those tendencies we have noted carried to their logical conclusion we will have: the money capital of the nation united in the banks; the banks themselves combined into cartels; the investment capital of the nation cast in the shape of securities. Then the forecast of that genius Saint-Simon will be fulfilled: ‘The present anarchy of production, which corresponds to the fact that economic relations are developing without uniform regulation, must make way for organisation in production. Production will no longer be directed by isolated manufacturers, independent of each other and ignorant of man’s economic needs; that will be done by a certain public institution. A central committee of management, being able to survey the large field of social economy from a more elevated point of view, will regulate it for the benefit of the whole of society, will put the means of production into suitable hands, and above all will take care that there be constant harmony between production and consumption. Institutions already exist which have assumed as part of their functions a certain organisation of economic labour, the banks.’ We are still a long way from the fulfilment of Saint-Simon’s forecast, but we are on the way towards it: Marxism, different from what Marx imagined, but different only in form.”[34]
A crushing “refutation” of Marx indeed, which retreats a step from Marx’s precise, scientific analysis to Saint-Simon’s guess-work, the guess-work of a genius, but guess-work all the same.”[35]

Before I will try to make, or where I suggest an actual analyse of imperialism, I first will make some remarks on the last point of Lenin: “The most dangerous of all in this respect are those who do not wish to understand that the fight against imperialism is a sham and humbug unless it is inseparably bound up with the fight against opportunism.” (I do this in the next article)


[1]. Written: January-June, 1916. First published in mid-1917 in pamphlet form, Petrograd. Published according to the manuscript and verified with the text of the pamphlet. Source: Lenins Selected Works, Progress Publishers, 1963, Moscow, Volume 1, pp. 667766. Transcription\Markup: Tim Delaney & Kevin Goins (2008) Public Domain: Lenin Internet Archive 2005, “Marxists Internet Archive”.
[2]. Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1912, p. 202 —Lenin
[3]. Finance Capital, Russ. ed., pp. 286-87 —Lenin
[4]. Hans Gideon Heymann, Die gemischten Werke im deutschen Grosseiseugewerbe, Stuttgart, 1904, (S. 256, 278). —Lenin
[5]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism - A POPULAR OUTLINE”, by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin.
[6].Th. Vogelstein, “Die finanzielle Organisation der kapitalistischen Industrie und die Monopolbildungen” in Grundriss der Sozialökonomik, VI. Abt., Tubingen, 1914. Cf., also by the same author: Organisationsformen der Eisenindustrie und Textilindustrie in England und Amerika, Bd. 1, Lpz., 1910. —Lenin
[7]. Out of ““Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[8]. Dr. Fritz Kestner, Der Organisationszwang. Eine Untersuchung über die Kämpfe zwischen Kartellen und Aussenseitern, Berlin, 1912, S. 254 —Lenin
[9]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[10]. Jeidels, Das Verhältnis der deutschen Grossbanken zur Industrie mit besonderer Berüchsichtigung der Eisenindustrie, Leipzig, 1905, S. 271 —Lenin
[11]. Liefmann, Beteiligungs- und Finanzierungsgesellschaften, S, 434. —Lenin
[12]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[13]. Statistics of the National Monetary Commission, quotedin Die Bank, 1913, S 811. —Lenin
[14]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[15]. Hans Gideon Fleymann, Die gemischten Werke im deutschen Grosseisengewerbe Stuttgart, 1904, S. 268-69. —Lenin
[16]. Liefmann, Beteiligungsgesellschaften, etc., S. 258 of the first edition. —Lenin
[17]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[18]. L. Eschwege, “Tochtergesellschaften” in Die Bank, 1914, S.545 —Lenin
[19]. Kurt Heinig, “Der Weg des Elecktrotrusts” in Die Neue Zeit, 1912, 30. S. 484 —Lenin
[20]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[21]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[22]. Jeidels, op. cit., S. 192-93. —Lenin
[23]. Diouritch, op. cit., pp. 245-46. —Lenin
[24]. Die Bank, 1912, 1, S. 1036; 1912, 2, S. 629; 1913, 1, S. 388. —Lenin
[25]. Vogelstein, Organisationsformen, S. 100. —Lenin
[26]. Liefmann, Kartelle und Trusts, 2. A., S. 161. —Lenin
[27]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[28]. See pp. 256–57 of this volume.—Ed
[29]. Wahl, La France aux colonies quoted by Henri Russier, Le Partage de l’Océanie, Paris, 1905, p. 165. —Lenin
[30]. Schulze-Gaevernitz, Britischer Imperialismus und englischer Freihandel zu Beginn des 20-ten Jahrhunderts, Leipzig, 1906, S. 318. Sartorius v. Waltershausen says the same in Das volkswirtschaftliche System der Kapitalanlage im Auslande, Berlin, 1907, S. 46. —Lenin
[31]. Schilder, op. cit., Vol. I, S. 160-61. —Lenin
[32]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[33]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”
[34]. Grundriss der Sozialökonomik, S. 146. —Lenin
[35]. Out of “Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism....”

zondag 4 oktober 2009

Anti-imperialist united front 1

I stop temporarily the analysis of revisionism and its development in de international communist movement.
I think that for the development of an real anti-imperialist ideology in the working class living in imperialist centers and for the theorizing of the spontaneous anti-imperialist ideology of all forms of objective resistance at imperialism (however not always subjectively or consciously reasoned or
theorized) it is urgent that there will be an analyse of actual imperialism. And that actual and concrete analyse will be the base of the development of the strategy, say the program that the real vanguard of the working class will make by agitation, propaganda and discussion the strategy, the program of the WHOLE working class for their revolutionary struggle against imperialism (the last possible stage of capitalism)

In a speech in Great Britain, Dyab Abu Jahjah sketched the actual situation of the anti-imperialist resistance in the Arab region. He explained that the organisations that organized most people, and were able to resist to the attacks of the Zionist armed troops of « Israel » and could actual force those troops to a retreat, WITHOUT reaching the imperialist or Zionist objective of their attacks, and with somehow an anti-imperialist ideology, were organisations with a « sectarian line ».
My question to Dyab was: «Do you have a sight on what the so-called vanguard in the region is doing: Popular Front of Palestine? Communist party of Lebanon? How are they trying to get a respected vanguard position at the moment that the most respected vanguard position is at this moment at those “anti-imperialist acting and mass-mobilising organisations but remaining on a sectarian line? »
His answer was short: «These organisations you named are moribund and have nothing to do with being a vanguard. »

And indeed when I read some texts (those in French, because most is in Arab, for me unable to read) of the communist party of Lebanon and when I read the program (dated from 1993) of the PFLP, my opinion is that those organisations are at least « contaminated » with opportunism. They have opportunist conceptions about Marxist analysis. Opportunism appears therefore also in their analyses themselves.
I will comment and analyse the program of the PFLP later on, but now just some points
At one hand the PFLP (while saying that it is an marxist organisation and a vanguard organisation) is developing narrow nationalism and gives as such not a real vanguard contribution in analyse to the OBJECTIVE (in deeds and practice antiimperialist but not consciously) anti-imperialist resistance in the region:

The PFLP is guided by historical and dialectical materialism; the progressive aspects of the intellectual and cultural heritage of the Palestinian people and their glorious traditions of struggle; and the progressive aspects of the intellectual and cultural heritage of the Arab nation and all humanity.
The PFLP is considered a progressive vanguard organization of the Palestinian working class. It struggles along with the other leftist Palstinian organizations to build a working class party which recruits this class to shoulder its historical role in liberating the Palestinian masses from national and class enslavement. Included in its ranks are the elements of the peasants, toilers, intellectuals and national bourgeois who are most progressive, determined and ready to give sacrifices, as well as all who aspire to national independence, progress, democracy and socialism.
The PFLP struggles to accomplish the transitional aims of repatriation, self-determination and an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital. It adheres to its strategic aim of establishing a democratic state on all the Palestinian soil. Its final aim is to establish democratic socialism in Palestine.
[1]
At the other hand the PFLP recognises FORMAL, the need of an pan-arabic nationalist (over the borders drawn by the colonisator and therefor OBJECTIVELY) anti-imperialist organisation but it gives no real ideological and analysing contribution to that, and so leaving the place to the development to panarabic oriented nationalist organisation who are in PRACTICE anti-imperialist but ideological rather “religious” (as the principles of the islam are the unifying nationalist culture).

The same opportunism I remarked in the KKE (communist party of Greece) and the Workers Party of Belgium.
About the Workers Party of Belgium I analysed already a lot (as you can see beginning here). About the KKE I now just want to give some points (and do the overall analyse of the KKE later on).
The KKE say that it is a real communist party based on Marxist analyses but to my opinion in their programme, the KKE develops to my opinion rather narrow nationalism (accepting the frontiers of a “nation”, drawn by imperialism and colonialism):

«KKE, a profoundly patriotic party, is the genuine and worthy inheritor of the national, democratic and revolutionary traditions of the Greek people. It fights against every manifestation of fascism, nationalism, chauvinism and racism. It defends the rights of minorities and migrants.
Throughout its history, KKE has linked the struggle for socialism with the struggle for national independence and democracy, for a Greece independent of imperialist economic, political and military organisations. It refuted the theory of Greece as a “poor relative”. It proved that the Greek people can rely first of all on its own material and intellectual forces. Communists were in the front ranks during the heroic years of EAM and the National Resistance and in the fight of the Democratic Army. »
(…)
« KKE has proven to be a consistent and steadfast defender of the culture of the Greek people. » …
« KKE Programme presents, along general lines, its overall strategy for socialism and the main tasks of the class struggle.
[2] »
In her analyse of the actual world and the actual imperialism, the KKE is pretending that you can « isolate » a Greek capitalism. This is the main argument for their program of revolution IN the boundaries of the Greek nation:
« Greek capitalism is in the last stage of its development, i.e. at its state monopoly level. In our country, the material conditions exist for the socialist transformation. This can be seen in the level of development of Greek capitalism and in its contradictions.
Greece is in an intermediate and dependent position in the world imperialist system. There are historic reasons for this: the slow and difficult beginning of capitalism in Greece, which took place under the direct economic, political and military involvement of powerful capitalist states and under conditions of dependence on foreign capital. Monopoly capitalism appeared in Greece later than in the developed capitalist countries, and after the international imperialist system had already been created, with the result that it rested on a relatively low material and technical base. In the post-dictatorship years, state monopoly capitalism developed further, dependence on foreign monopoly capital and international imperialism grew. During recent decades, particularly during the 1980s, Greece became more organically adapted to the imperialist system within the framework of the European Community (now the European Union) and NATO, through its participation in international inter-state agreements. »

Summarized one can say that those organisations (who declared to be « the vanguard ») make NOT a concrete analyse (based on dialectical and historical materialism) of the actual imperialist stage of capitalism today. So they can never come to a real formulation of the tasks of the revolutionary forces in the world (of which they pretend to be a part of)
Not noticing this opportunism and so not beat it led for the Workers Party of Belgium to the installing of a REVISIONIST leadership that led the former communist party to a REFORMIST party. The same dynamics happen to the KEN (ml) (Kommunistische Eenheidsbeweging Nederland - Marxist-Leninistisch - communist united movement of the Netherlands - Marxist-Leninist) they became the reformist party: Socialist Party-SP (of the Netherlands)
About this I wrote already a lot. (You can follow that
analyse starting here with this overview-article)
At the same time there exist forces in the world, that organise struggle against imperialism and who based their effective resistance against imperialism on (as I see it) programs or strategy, that is not the result of real Marxist analyse, but based on historical experiences of colonial production relations of imperialism installed by force over them.
When you are looking at the regions in the world, were imperialism is using armed intervention, war and violent repression, the
organisations that are the « vanguard » in the practice of organising the most violent attacks AGAINST these aspects of imperialism, in the practice of organising masses in resistance against these aspects of imperialism, those organisations are often NOT self declared communist organisations.
There that anti-imperialist ideology is often a form of nationalism. The progressive aspect of that nationalism is that that « nation » is NOT a country bordered by artificial frontiers that were drawn by colonial powers dividing larger popular masses that lived under equal colonial production relations and putting them against each other as « competitors ». It is a nationalism that is UNIFYING large popular masses in the same fight against the colonial aspects of imperialism.
But I think by them there is a lack of scientific
analyse of the actual world, of the actual situation of imperialism, which should lead to strategically, political and organisational conclusions to fight most effectively against imperialism.
Their nationalism is sometimes based on some historical and cultural conceptions formulated sometimes in religious terms.

The self declared communist, revolutionary or Marxist organisations are often basing their strategically, political and organisational points on a Marxist-sounding analyse that is made in a very GENERALISING way, using QUOTES of Marx or Lenin. But in their anti-imperialist and revolutionary strategy they are often ACCEPTING as a fact, the ARTIFICIAL borders (drawn by imperialism or colonialism) and countries IN those borders. Those borders are a result of imperialist competition dividing the world in zones of influences.
In fact those « communist »
organisations are developing a nationalism that is MORE NARROW than the nationalism I mentioned above, because they accept a former colony, bordered by artificial colonial drawn frontiers, being a « nation » were IN the revolution has to be organised.
So are they weakening real imperialist resistance in advance!

They have all on their bookshelves the book of Lenin « Imperialism, the highest stage of capitalism », but they never studied it well.
But now I think it is the moment of discussion with the real vanguard
organisations « in the field » to develop a real anti-imperialist line. Perhaps out of such a discussion, some new real communist organisations (being the organised vanguard of the working class) can (re-)appear.
I want to make my contribution in this development of an anti-imperialist line and worked out a first analysis that can be submitted to discussion.

The different points treated (As I think to be important) are:
- The capitalist production system functioning concrete in the finals stage of imperialism, the aspect of a socialising of the production
- Competition is not vanishing by further monopoly-forming, but each time reappearing and sometimes aggravating into war situations. It is the FREE competition that is replaced by monopoly.
- The forming and the realising of surplus value, the materialising of the level of exploitation
- The ownership of the means of production (and the production itself, the production technology, the means of distribution of the production) under the final stage of imperialism (itself the ultimate stage of capitalism)
- The question of the concrete capitalist state conform to the level of development of capitalism
- Imperialism sits in a fundamental crisis of overcapacity. Imperialism can only undergo the crisis, putting the weight of the crisis by the working class and the people that live under colonialist production relations installed by imperialism and searching all kinds of temporarily « solutions » which are protecting the further existence of imperialism.
- The working class and her tasks
- The tasks of the vanguard of the working-class
I begin with a (renewed) study of « Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism », written by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin.[3].(In a next article)


[1] PFLP 5th National Congress February 1993, Published on Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (http://www.pflp.ps/english)
[2] program of the KKE, May 1996.
[3] Written: January-June, 1916. First published in mid-1917 in pamphlet form, Petrograd. Published according to the manuscript and verified with the text of the pamphlet. Source: Lenins Selected Works, Progress Publishers, 1963, Moscow, Volume 1, pp. 667766. Transcription\Markup: Tim Delaney & Kevin Goins (2008) Public Domain: Lenin Internet Archive 2005, “Marxists Internet Archive”.

woensdag 12 augustus 2009

Communist or opportunist conceptions about Socialism 5

Ik las het boekje van Peter Mertens, “Op Mensenmaat, stof voor een socialisme zonder blauwe plekken” (EPO vzw,2009) en analyseerde de essentie ervan. Omdat die essentie niet veel inhield, greep ik terug naar vroegere analyses die Peter Mertens maakte. Uiteindelijk werd het een dokument dat min of meer een eerste samenvatting is van wat ik hier op mijn weblog reeds schreef.
Het werd een brochuurtje, dat u hier (in pdf-format) kunt downloaden:

De PVDA onder leiding van Peter Mertens:
Marxisme of revisionisme?
Revolutionaire partij of reformistische partij?
Communistische partij of “zoals de BWP voor 1894, toen zij nog echt socialistische principes had
(8e congres PVDA, februari 2008)?

I started my analysis, in English, about revisionism here with « Revisionism, the bourgeoisie inside the communist movement. (1) ». The title of that series of articles was inspired by the following quote of Ludo Martens, effective leading the Workers Party of Belgium until 1995:"After socialism is been destroyed in the Soviet union en the explosion of the country of Lenin, all communists has to understand that revisionism is the most dangerous ideological enemy of Marxism-Leninism. It’s beyond any doubt that revisionism represents the bourgeoisie inside the communist movement[1]"
I started then a concrete analysis of
the developments in the Workers Party of Belgium. In fact I began with this in a second series of articles, « About revisionism » (with the first one beginning here).
I started then with an analysis of a text (that you can read here, in french) that Boudewijn Deckers wrote. (You can read this beginning with this article) Boudewijn Deckers was after Ludo Martens the highest cadre in the WPB and before that in AMADA (Alle Macht Aan De Arbeiders -All Power to the Workers)
REMARK: I see Ludo Martens as the protagonist of the revolutionary and real Marxist line in the WPB.
For me, Boudewijn Decker has become the protagonist of the revisionist line that developed inside the WPB.

I gave then (starting here) an example of how revisionism works and how revisionists ABUSE Marxism or the scientific socialism and spread IDEALISM and METAPHISICS under Marxist phraseology.
I used therefore the text of the Chinese economists of the CCP, I spoke about in my email (read here) to Boudewijn Deckers, leading cadre of the WPB. The text itself you can read here. To give (only) an example of the manner of arguing of revisionists I give some quotes out of this text.
I began then (starting here) to analyze the development of revisionism in the CCP with the concrete example of Deng Xiaoping.
I interrupted (temporarily) the analysis of the texts of Deng Xiaoping, because I wanted first to work on reactions I got from some militants of the WPB. For them the line from the 8th congress in 2008 conforms to the line on the 5th congress in 1995. (You can here read an overview of the reactions of those comrades of earlier days)
I had also a little discussion about revolutionary line for a communist party with a member of Free Road Socialist Organization (USA). (You can read about my reaction on an article on his weblog and his answers on my reactions here on his own weblog)
But now I had then to analyse the congres documents of the 5th congres of the WPB in 1995. After that congress, out of all the voted congress documents, a book was edited and published: « Party of the Revolution ». (you can read here in a regularly updated file the progress of a translation in English of at least the most significant parts
In “Fighting opportunism to beat revisionism 4” I started with an analyse of those congresdocuments.

In some occasions Peter Mertens (the actual president of the WPB) stated that the “WPB is a real communist party” (you can read this beginning here:Communist or opportunist conceptions about Socialism 1”)
But conform the conclusions of her OWN second, third, fourth and fifth WPB-congress, one can say that the WPB has with Peter Mertens, a president who is anticommunist, idealist and metaphysical instead of dialectical and materialist and has a bourgeois class position.
So I analysed (beginning here) the lies of Peter Mertens (president since 2008 of the WPB) . I came to the lie of Peter Mertens: « We have no model, no example to follow, of socialism»
Preparing that article, I was looking for the concrete conceptions of Peter Mertens about what socialism is or will be, I read parts of his booklet (written for a use in the electioncampaign in 2009)[2]. I then worked out a summary of all the analyse I made on this weblog and made a document of it (but it is in dutch):

De PVDA onder leiding van Peter Mertens:
Marxisme of revisionisme?
Revolutionaire partij of reformistische partij?

You can download it here.
Finished this I will continue now my analyse of the lies of Peter Mertens further in the next article.



[1] "About certain aspects of the struggle against revisionism", Ludo Martens in Marxistische Studies no 29, march 1996, (see www.marx.be), a discussion report on the International Seminar in Janashakti, India organised by the PCI(ML)

[2] Peter Mertens, “Op Mensenmaat, stof voor een socialisme zonder blauwe plekken” (EPO vzw,2009)

vrijdag 10 juli 2009

Communist or opportunist conceptions about Socialism 4

After I analysed (beginning here) the first lie of Peter Mertens (president since 2008 of the WPB) « I am (we are) no longer Stalinist », I started here to analyse the second lie « I am (we are) no longer Maoist ». I am now continuing that analyse…..
Based on a opportunist « Maoist » line, that was not countered and beaten on the fifth congres of the WPB in 1995, but in fact VOTED and ACCEPTED (apparently also by me, as I was delegate on that congress…) a important opportunist conception developed in the WPB: « Today the results in elections are forming a judgement about the working of the WPB as a revolutionary communist party » (you can read here more about this)
This is NOT a Marxist or dialectical materialist obtained conclusion but a CONCEPTION, an IDEA of which some cadres and members of the WPB were convinced ALREADY in ADVANCE or as they thought « that was proven by the direct practical experience » (= empirism).
This IDEA, this CONCEPTION became the so-called « conclusion » of a « Marxist analyse » in which is « referred » (in a subjective way of picking quotes) to the work of Lenin « Left-Wing Communism: an Infantile Disorder».
When you use this non-Marxist method of analysing, THINKING that you are correctly applying scientific socialism (as a lot of former comrades, still member of the WPB are doing, I think), then your are an OPPORTUNIST, to my opinion.
When you are CONSCIOUSLY applying this method of analysing, to defeat the revolutionary line of a communist party, and you are yourself still CADRE of that communist party, then you are a REVISIONIST, analysing out of a BOURGEOIS class point of view.
Herwig Lerouge, a national cadre, and part of the National Leadership, since the founding of AMADA (Alle Macht Aan De Arbeiders -All Power To The Workers- in 1970) and the founding of the WPB (the Workers Party of Belgium - Partij Van De Arbeid - PVDA- in 1979), has the doubtful « honour » of the first use of this opportunist conception in a « Marxist » analyse.
In Marxist Studies 27/1995 (see on marx.be), he wrote:

« During the …. European elections in June 1994, the WPB doubled her score … This result is also (…) a result of the amelioration of the organisational work in the party … At the same time this result proves that the party still disposes of a lot of potential possibilities …
The campaign for the law-giving elections of May 1995 had to allow to proceed further with the rectification of the party work. From by the start of the election campaign of May 1995 we have linked our election results with the rectification of the mistakes in the work of the leading organs of our party …. The election campaign is a campaign to rectify the party. The rectification will last longer than the election campaign, but we have to put the objectives in function of the 4% that we should have to obtain. »

And yet Herwig is criticising a cadre in this same article who dared to say: « Election-results are never a barometer for the work of the party » !!
The opportunist conception (« results in the election ARE a barometer of how a revolutionary party is working » is then IMPOSED to the whole party by the Resolution of 1999 of the Central Committee, were it says:

"It is not normal that we stagnate today, after thirty years of permanent presence on the scene, after what was probably the best election campaign of our history. That is the reason that we have to say that the elections are a big political defeat for the party, in which mistakes are expressed that we are carrying along already for years.
Al points of balance out of the elections are already in « Party of the revolution »
. "

This opportunist statement or conception is one of the most important points on which a CONSCIOUS development of revisionism has occurred in the WPB.
This point off view « elections gives a judgement about the working of the party as a revolutionary communist party » was taken in 1995 and in 1999 AFTER what was judged as « a bad election result ».
In 2003, an election campaign was STARTED in fact OU OF this point of view. The way in which the WPB was ORGANISED to participate at the elections and in which she POLITICALLY participate at the elections was BASED on this point of view. The whole leadership agreed on this: as well as Nadine Rosa Rosso, as Boudewijn Deckers, as Peter Mertens, as Jo Cottenier, as Herwig Lerouge….
I don’t know if there were many protest-reports BEFORE the beginning of the election-campaign that were internally sent from lower levels to the national leadership when political motivation texts about the coming election campaign were discussed on every level.
I know that a report from me (and from the whole base-group in which I was organised), made BEFORE the start of the election-campaign, in which I (we) protested against the way the party was participating at the election, HAS NEVER BEEN ANSWERED. And ORALLY, cadres said, that my behaviour was disloyal and I had just to participate at the election campaign without further discussion. (this is already exhaustively reported -but in Dutch - on this web log. Once I will translate it all)

The IDEA of many possible voters that would vote ant capitalist and anti imperialist
The IDEA was (so the CONCEPTION about what was fact or truth, was) that there was a strong ant capitalist mentality in the (Belgian) population (or at least among them that had a right to VOTE). And also that out of this anti-capitalist mentality there was a strong popular (so in fact anti-imperialist) resistance against the war in Iraq. And it was thought that the profile of the WPB (and of her partner in the « anti war movement », the Arabic European League(AEL) of Dyab Abu Jahjah) was very popular certainly among the third generation of the Arabic migrants (who had the Belgian nationality AND the right to vote). This popularity should result in enough votes to result in « revolutionary delegates in the parliament ». This was politically translated in the list RESIST composed by members and sympathisers of the WPB and of members and sympathisers of the AEL, with on top: Dyab Abu Jahjah.

REMARK: I am speaking here about the opportunism of the WPB, NOT that of the AEL, which was NOT profiling herself as a Marxist or communist organisation. The AEL is a radical organisation struggling for, and demanding for (not begging for!) a total equality in rights in Europe for all European citizens with an Arabic or Islamic background. I agreed, and am still agreeing about the comparison of Dyab Abu Jahjah with Malcolm X!

Self-installed leadership of WPB:« Electoral debacle is the fault of Nadine»
Whenever the result was NOT enough to get at least one delegate and the election result (number of votes) was judged as « very bad » or as a « debacle », the origin of this was laid by a wrong « leftist » working of the party. This « leftism » should be the reason that there was not an investigation to the real political point of view of « the masses » (so the Belgian voters or « new » Belgian with a right to vote) and not having based on the election campaign on THAT point of view. A « correct applying of the mass line » should have led to a kind of « left reformist populism » that should have more chance to attract votes!
So the « critic » of the « new » self-installed and NOT elected party leadership[1] to Nadine was that Nadine (who was leading the party as secretary general) not had consequently taken as base, the Resolution of 1999.
In Solidair of 7 September 2005 (you can find this in the Solidair archive on the website) the National cadres of the WPB are saying:

« We have finished the discussion with the whole party. In June we brought together 344 representatives together on our provincial congresses. The participants on the congresses represented our 1.972 members and were selected by their specific sections. The meaning of the congresses was to make a year balance, but also to look to the perspectives for the next year…
Thanks to the provincial congresses the whole party has given a mission to the national leadership. »

That « mission » was:

« The WPB will be the consequent defender of the disability pension.[2] Just as we will be the party of the « kiwi model[3] ». we will also react on all problems with which workers are confronted. We will give to those the biggest possible attention. »

But the most important breakthrough of opportunist conceptions in the WPB happened by involving the whole party by the making of the balance of the elections of the 18th of May 2003 as if it was a balance about the whole working of the WPB as a revolutionary party.

The balance of the WPB-leadership of the elections on the 18th of May 2003, in Solidair 38 of the 8th of October 2003
First remark: the emphasising in fat-italic is by me.
Second remark: there was a unanimity in the leadership about this balance, so between Nadine Rosa Rosso, still secretary general and Peter Mertens, Boudewijn Deckers and Co who expelled Nadine in December 2003.

« the party has a dubious attitude towards elections. At one hand the party from top to base is in each election campaign, active for hundred percent. But at the other hand the party has no strategy to get delegates been elected. The only exception was the campaign for the communal elections of 2000, for which we worked out for almost a year a strategy to get five delegates. In that we succeeded.
In 1985 the whole party was active to have Kris Merckx elected as parliamentary delegate for the province of Antwerp….It was Maggy Doumen who got elected and in the provincial council. And that succeeded again in 1987.

We have drought the wrong lessons out of it in the document « The WPB and the participation at the elections », that we worked out in 1991. The objective to have delegates elected became totally secondary. The election campaigns were since then first of all campaigns to inform the people about our programme, to win new collaborators and to ameliorate our score in the elections.
Because we did not thought about the possibility to get real delegates elected and not were working out a strategy to achieve this, we have negated real chances….
Without well thought strategy, based on figures and facts and on our strong points and above all on a analyse of the strategy of the other parties it is not possible for the party leadership to fix correct objectives.

For the elections of 2003 the party leadership is changed of point of view in just several months. In June 2002 we still thought that it was practically impossible to have a delegate elected in the parliamentary elections of May 2003. But under pressure of what was happening - the war, our party-doctors in Bagdad, the dynamic of the workers and unionists on the list MARIA- there was suddenly that objective to have in one stroke three delegates.

We want to break definitively with that way of leadership. All responsible party cadres got the order to develop al necessary elements for a successful election strategy….
We are convinced that if we regularly consult our members, like our new statutes demand, we can finish our strategy and make it effective…
A big number of party members and friends sent many critics and proposals to the leadership about the elections of the 18th of May. They have been put together during the summer an classified by some members of the Central Committee.
Altogether hundreds of pages, rich of concrete facts. The text is submitted to the responsible party cadres who have to work out proposals for the campaign against the government and the employers….
During the election campaign we for ourselves had put the accent on the resistance against the war in Iraq, that had begun two months before the start of the elections….
Roger Van Maelen (WPB-member): « But during the elections there came an end to the war, and whole that part of the campaign collapsed. But even then the party kept on busy with the war, meanwhile the people were already discussing about a lot of other things: unemployment, social security, pensions… »
Afterwards, a lot of members as Roger Van Maelen, wrote us that we had to profile us on de daily problems of the people like the fear to lose your job (look at what was happening ad Ford), the expensive medicines , the pensions….or mobility, or housing. We have to think about how we can put and use all those different themes together the same time.
At the same time we have learn to listen better to know precisely which problem we have to handle first among all those themes.
Different members insist on to work on very concrete things and above all…. Staying working on it until we realise our objective. Take for example medical care. « We cannot stay on hammering only on « free medical care » we have to work on concrete points, one problem after one another »…
Our doctor Dirk Van Duppen conclude already in august that patients with high cholesterol, paid to much for there medication….
By tying himself on this case, Dirk Van Duppen realised a first victory in the battle for cheap medecines. The prices of the cholesterol medication will lower with a half.

Today docter Dirk Van Duppen is working with people of different horizons at a proposal of law for cheaper medication, based on the system that gave in New Zealand the best medication at the lowest price. To win that battle, a long ongoing campaign is needed.

There is a petition been worked out.
Before we begin with all kinds of campaigns and proposals, we will take enough time to make a « tree of problems», as it is mentioned in handbooks about investigations….
On this we will base the points of struggle on which we will put the accent. Based on those results we also realise the program with which we go to the elections in June next year, for the regional and European elections. »

This balance forms then the starting point of « involving of all members » (REMARK: « being member of the WPB » had a totally other meaning than in 2003, as you will see later) in the realisation of the « ACTION-program » of the WPB, in 2004. In 2006, that program became the « ELECTION-program » of the « NEW » WPB (a « renewal that started in 2004 »,dixit Peter Mertens). Where in the ACTION-program was stated that the real objective of the WPB was revolution and the installing of socialism as first step to communism, in the ELECTION-program was said « defending socialism » existing in countries …elsewhere in the world.
The article in Solidair, here below, speaks about « balance of the elections ». This balance about the elections you could read here above.

REMARK: At the realising of that balance, Nadine Rosa Rosso, is still involved as Secretary General. Also the inquiry, where Jan Hasaers speaks about, is still realised under leadership of Nadine Rosa Rosso. The USE of the results of this inquiry, from februari 2004, with which is made first a « ACTION-program » and later on a « ELECTION-program » is done without Nadine, she was then expelled….

On Solidair.org,Wednesday 26 November 2003:

« The WPB about the enquiry « Let hear your voice[4] », that just has been started…
Jan Hasaers.
« The inquiry is a result of the balance that we made about the last elections(…) Many party members are judging (…. )that we should far more be concerned about the daily problems of the people
Based on this critic we made a list of the fiftieen à twenty problems that seemed to us to be the most important problems.(…) we asked the people what for them are the three most important themes, out of the list that we propose.
They can add themselves other themes. At the other hand, we ask what is for each of those themes THE main problem….

Who can participate with the inquiry?

Jan Hasaers. "We have asked this first at our members, during the youngest general meetings….we present the inquiry also to those members who could not come to those meetings. A lot of them want to let fill in the inquiry also by their colleagues or neighbours. We present it also to our sympathisers, to the people with whom we are cooperating often, like the collaborators of 11.11.11[5] or other organisations. ..»

The balance about the elections of 18 May 2003 was made by the leadership of the WPB, based on « numerous critics and proposals » of party members and sympathisers. The leadership of the WPB declared that she got DIRECTLY « HUNDREDS » of notes and reports. They were NOT the result of a good working of democratic centralism, that is determined by the working of the ORGANISATION-structure of a communist party. Hereby will a certain level of leadership works on and discuses about the reports of organisation-levels just under it. Afterwards the reports, WITH the analyse and comments of that certain leadership-level will be centralised on the national leadership-level. The analyses, guidelines and answers by the national leadership on the reports will then go the opposite direction until it will come to the base level.
Now, every member had just to accept the statement of the WPB-leadership: « The biggest part of those reports had mostly identical remarks, critics and proposals » what were than identical to the conclusions of the leadership in her balance of the ELECTIONS…
All those conclusions were NOT yet confirmed by a congress. One of those conclusions of the leadership of that moment was to go on with the enquiry « Let hear your voice ». The party members have not give the green light for this on a congress. By the way… the NEW LEADERSHIP of the WPB is installed in 2004, NOT by voting on a congress, but installed by herself, after internal problems coming forth out of …….elections.
To give it a « democratic » aspect, the cadres are speaking on 7 October 2005 about « provincial congresses that gave a mission » to the self-installed leadership of 2004.
There was a balance of the elections made by a faction inside the leadership of the WPB, end 2003.
There was decided to a « RENEWAL of the party » in 2004 (dixit Peter Mertens)
One of the conclusions was: making a program with which in the first place could be scored in the elections and that finally should result in chosen delegates.

1995:Party of the Revolution; 2004: Party of reforms. « Confirmation » in 2008
The party would NO MORE first of all be directed to prepare the revolution (active working on the growth of mass movements and class struggle, as well in numbers as in consciousness), EVEN when this was once the collective decision of ALL MEMBERS on the fifth congress in1995! Until then every member could discuss and decide by his base group that could sent minimal two delegates to a congress, or by the working of democratic centralism. But in 2001, on the second session of the seventh congress there were voted new statutes, with two possible memberships: a decisive membership and a consultative membership. Where the « old » statutes were conform with the Leninist principles (re-confirmed of the 5th congress) it was apparently not noticed by the delegates on the seventh congress in 2001 that the « new » proposed (and voted) statutes were OPPOSED to those principles.

These new statutory situation has been used for a manipulation by a faction in the leadership.

A big expansion of new CONSULTATIVE members[6] resulted in a majority of consultative members over the number of decisive members on « general meetings of members[7] » . On those general meetings of members was then decided (« majority against minority ») for what has to be in the new ACTION-program. Also the choices made by « 5000 ordinary Belgians » (dixit Peter Mertens) were more important than the choices that would be made by the real DECISIVE party-members. The DECISIVE members were those persons who were once convinced to become member of a revolutionary communist party. It was just « majority against minority ». The possible choices then, were also restricted. It was the leadership who made the list of possible choices, in the form of that PREPARED « inquiry » . The inquiry that had to lead to the ACTION-program (the later ELECTION-program) was in fact a prepared list of multiple choices.
The first result was: a working as a that of a reformist party, first of all directed on having good results in elections.
The second result:: a reformist program that has to lead to a good score in elections.
The two results that were already achieved in 2004, formed « the mission » (so retroactively….) that the provincial congresses were allowed to give to a, in 2004 self-installed, leadership.
So the inquiry get its « imposed » objective, « given by the balance of the elections ».
This « renewed » working was then just confirmed on the 8th congress in February 2008.

So we can conclude that the « renewed » WPB finds her origins in the text of chapter III, part 3 of « Party of the Revolution ». That text was, as I proved, a « Maoist » opportunist text. (read about this, here)
So when Peter Mertens is pretending « We are no longer Maoists », he is lying: he (and the actual WPB is STILL Maoist, it is at this moment a party that is based on « Maoist » opportunism. It was against that « Maoist » opportunism that Ludo Martens was just fighting!
In the next article I will analyse another lie of Peter Mertens: « We have no model, no example to follow, of socialism»



[1] In fact the most important accusation out of the six accusations to Nadine Rosa Rosso of that « new » self installed and NOT elected leadership end 2003-beginning 2004. That six accusations were the reason of her being expelled by that « temporal commission that had to handle the internal ’ electoral ’ crisis » - that temporal commission that installed herself as the new leadership!

[2] what is called in dutch « brugpensioen » is in fact a kind of disability pension, paid for a part by contribution of the employerz and a part by the fund of unemployment. It has NOT an old age pension.

[3] That is a system (that exist in New Zealand - so « kiwi-model ») of public tender at the big farma-monopolies for the medicines that will be subsidied by the government for the users/patients.

[4] voice and vote is both « stem ». So it is also « let hear your vote »…. Allusion to elections.

[5] 11.11.11 is an organisation in which the most third world ngo’s of Belgium are represented.

[6] A consultative member has not to agree and to defend the revolutionary program of the WPB. Consultative members are mostly recruited among collaborators during….elections.

[7] « General meetings of members », often in public rooms, are against all rules of conspiracy of the Leninist party-principles.

woensdag 1 juli 2009

Communist or opportunist conceptions about Socialism 3

After I analysed (beginning here) the first lie of Peter Mertens (president since 2008 of the WPB) « I am (we are) no longer Stalinist », I started here to analyse the second lie « I am (we are) no longer Maoist ».
I came now to the famous Resolution of 1999.

« Of: Central Committee 7th august 1999

To: Until the level of the delegates of the provincial congress
Part. nr: 1770.899
Resolution of the Central Committee about the election campaign

1. It is not normal that we are stagnating today, after thirty year of permanent presence on the domain, ten years after the climax of the anticommunist campaign, after the most important movements of mass struggle that Belgium was knowing out of his history, after that we were militating in all the movements of struggle and after what was perhaps the best election campaign out of our own history. Therefore we have to conclude that the elections formed a big political defeat for the party, were mistakes emerged that we were carry along already many years.
2. All the conclusions that we can make, analysing the elections, are already in « Party of the revolution ». We have to analyse why we were not capable to rectify and even not to assimilate what a Congress has decided, based on the centralising of many reports and notes. That is posing the problem of the ideological struggle for the real unifying through the implementation of the decisions in the concrete practice.
3. Are the causes of this defeat first of all intern or extern? Is the most important mistake made by the party of is the problem, the level of consciousness of the masses? « The result has nothing to do with the mistakes of the party, but it expresses the actual political level of the masses»
4. We are the most important target of all bourgeois, petty bourgeois and opportunist powers. To the outside, it is in our interest to underline the following: the unified party of capital is struggling against the unified party of the workers.
5. But intern and on the level of the cadres we have to say that our intern mistakes are the most important, because with these same enemies, after all our political activities of the past four years, we had normally had doing better. Franco D’Orazio: « the defeat of the WPB is serious. With all members that you have, this result means that you have a serious problem.»
6. Saying that our bad result has nothing to do with the mistakes of the party, is putting his head in the sand, is sectarism, bureacratism, justifying the lack of capacity to bring forward a simple revolutionary understandable message. Not going to the base of things, in the analyse of our mistakes, is the biggest danger. Since the 5th congress, years have been passing by and we have little rectified….»

The whole resolution is parting of the idea: « When a communist party is participating in elections, than the election - result, makes a conclusion about the working of the party and her members IN GENERAL ». So a bad result in the election, for example less votes than the elections before, is saying: « the party is working badly »……and a better result, and perhaps chosen delegates say: « the party, and her members are working in a good way. » So having good elections results will decide about the correct functioning of the revolutionary communist party! The objective, having as much votes (or chosen delegates) that is possible, decides about the political line, the organisation criteria and the guidelines for each member.
But these conclusions, about which is said: « They are already all in ’ Party of the revolution’ » are only to justify with a specific PART of « Party of the revolution » ……namely

Chapter III, part 3, « fighting bureacratism, strengthen the bounds with the masses»
.(See my partial translation of that book, and so also of that chapter here)
Perhaps you are saying: « Nico you are seeing ghosts! » OK, I will prove this statement.

In 2003 the WPB participated again in an election. In the analyse of the results, the leadership of the WPB spoke about « a debacle ». I resulted in an « intern crisis-situation ». The whole history I will analyse later. But there was a resolution made by the leadership of the WPB (in fact of a kind of interim-leadership - installed by themselves and NOT elected on a congress) in 2004: « Resolution about the former general secretary Nadine Rosa-Rosso and the former cadre-responsible Luk Vervaet, 5th of April 2004 »
In this Resolution is written:

« In March 1999 the Central Committee accepted a resolution against leftism, also against her[1] conceptions. The Resolution of June 1999 is making up the balance of the past election-campaign.
Point 1 says: « We have to say that the elections were a big political defeat for the party, in which we see mistakes that we are carry along already many years. »
Point 2 says: « We have to study again « Party of the Revolution », chapter III, part 3: fighting bureacratism, strengthen the bounds with the masses.
Probably are all big points of balance about the elections already in this. »

And then in a note by this paragraph « We are quoting here the original version of this point like it was distributed to the members of the CC, just after the CC of June 1999. In the version distributed to all party-members the phrase pointing at « Party of the Revolution, chapter III, part 3 » was replaced by a phrase pointing at « Party of the Revolution »in general .»
So there was in 1999 a cadre (influenced by opportunism) who made a project-resolution that has to be discussed before distributing to the whole party. The CC
criticised not the global line of this project-resolution, they just make the remark: « We have to say that we are basing ourselves on the whole of congress-documents and not jus on one document out of a whole. » And so only that phrase was changed (that proved that the whole resolution was indeed based on ONLY chapter III, part 3).
And that resolution had to be assimilated by all the members
.

Further in Resolution of 1999 is said: « It is adventurism and activism to intervene in the riots (mend is the riots of the young migrants, Nico) when we have no line to enter the environments of the young migrants, . » this statement in line with chapter III, part 3 of « Party of the Revolution » is in CONTRADICTION with another document of that same 5th congress were it said:

« Practice is the starting point and is staying in the central attention of the activity of the party. We lack often initiative, that can mobilise the masses, that lames the cadres by endless discussions about « the line ».
We can endless discuss with some petty bourgeois about « the criminality among young migrants » and even work out « a line about this ». But to what lead this? What is the use of all this? To which practice does it lead? It is better to
organise activists who accept to work under young migrants, to bring them an alternative for drugs and little criminality and give them formation about the relation between drugs, capitalism and repression ()
Which attitude do we have against what the bourgeoisie calls « the riots oft the young immigrants »? Of course we accuse the filthy reactions in the media. But that is what every petty bourgeois can do. The communists throw themselves in the practice and in the struggle, at the side of the most oppressed masses. Our most important just has to be, to help them to
organise themselves for to struggle, offer resistance, to let the world know about their situation and their points of view, and to get a socialist consciousness. Our most important task is not "work out the line" to give an answer to petty bourgeois, but at the other hand to work out a policy for the practice among the oppressed. The spontaneous reactions of some members and cadres are coloured by prejudges. »

This is jut one example (I will perhaps, when there should be discussion further analyse the Resolution of 1999) that led to my conclusion that the political line of Resolution of 1999 is that of « Maoist » opportunism coming out of the 5th congress documents; and is in contradiction with the revolutionary line, ALSO in the documents of the 5th congress.
In the next article I will explain how the whole « renewal » of the WPB that was « beginning in 2004 » is based on this « Maoist » Resolution of 1999.

I want just give her an ALTERNATIVE analyse about the elections of 1999, a more consequent communist and Marxist analyse, that of Ludo Martens, who is apparently not followed by the rest of the leadership of the WPB…..

In Solidair nr. 24 16 June 1999. Ludo Martens: We dont strive after easy victories.
A short speech of Ludo Martens in Brussels on a WPB-meeting
« In 1979, by the founding of the WPB, Kabila was here. He was sought by the police of Mobuto and had to hide himself.
In Zaire it was impossible for him to let the massed know of his program. He had n
ot any possibility to mobilise the masses for his just cause. He had no public that he could convince. Mobutu and his mates had all the state power in their hands and their blind violence caused hundred of thousands of deaths. At the same time they worked with a devilish demagogy. Those elements are going together.
This is a characteristic of fascism. Hitler had Goebbels. Several months before the war, in 1939, he still organised with his Nazi-party a « peace-congress ».
Today we see how the whole imperialist world gets more and more characteristics of fascism.
With blind violence Yugoslavia has been bombed, and is presented to us as a humanitarian intervention to save the peace.
Imperialism is breaking today with all rules of the international justice. Nine year ago they attacked Iraq, in name of the international justice.
Who could imagine, twenty years ago, that the NATO, against al rules of international justice would start a most barbaric war of aggression in the heart of Europe?
The Congolese people have made innumerable sacrifices, under the 32 years of Mobutu-dictatorship, to choose finally to chase that individual with the weapons.
But before it was so far, they have seen pass al kinds of liars and demagogues. You cannot predict when the people have enough of all those lies and violence of the bourgeoisie. Those who strive for easy victories find what they want in the bourgeois parties and are doing just that what the bourgeoisie is asking them to do.
Just by the beginning Agalev
[2] has taken that road and today that party is a speaking-tube of the big bourgeoisie and of imperialism. Hopefully they get into the government. Everybody will see that in no way they dare to attack the fundaments of this unjust society, of capitalism and imperialism.
The WPB has led an outstanding campaign. In that spirit we have to go yet more to the masses, place ourselves on their level and convince them of the necessity to organise themselves and to fight. We have to have confidence in the fact that the masses one day will have enough experience to see the criminal nature of the economic system that is exploiting and suffocating the world. »

Ok, now to the next article.



[1] Pointing at Nadine Rosa Rosso, Secretary General (replacing the president of the WPB, Ludo Martens who was almost full-time working in Congo) of the WPB from 1995 until end 2003-begin 2004 when she was expelled out of the WPB. (Nico)

[2] Agalev - Anders GAan LEVen, ‘to live in an alternative way’ is the ecologist party in the Dutch-spoken part of Belgium.( Nico)