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NEWS & LETTERS, March-April 2005

Readers' Views


CHINA--GLOBAL FACTORY, SOCIAL INSECURITY, INCUBATOR OF REVOLT"> CHINA--GLOBAL FACTORY, SOCIAL INSECURITY, INCUBATOR OF REVOLT

"China as global factory is incubator of future revolt" by Peter Hudis was an important and timely lead article to start off the January-February issue of NEWS & LETTERS. With all the overbearing media focus on Al Qaida and the war in Iraq, the ongoing human rights atrocities in China have virtually been ignored, even by the Left. It is incredible, given that there have been 60,000 strikes in China last year alone, that show the revolt is here and now, not just in the future. For whatever irrational reason the narrow-minded American Left failed to solidarize with Iraqi labor because of their obsession with "anti-imperialism," they also chose to ignore Chinese labor.

At the same time, the lead conveyed a sense of the mutual-aid mutual-destruction symbiotic relationship between U.S. and China in this late stage of capitalism. U.S. exports its jobs and in return China exports its commodities and surplus-labor in the form of newfound capital through prison/factory wage-slave labor.

--Hospital worker, Oakland

* * *

I really appreciated "China as global factory is incubator of future revolt." I've been thinking of China as the "global sweatshop," and that in a so-called "workers' state." A friend of mine worked in China during the construction of a coal-fired power plant. During his time there, he witnessed a public execution for what he was sure was a minor offense. Today's reality reminds me of Dunayevskaya's writing about Stalin's state capitalism of the 1930s and the visage of Hitler being the "rulers" vision of the future for us. I think it is important to study this article for a long time to come to understand China's role as the U.S.'s "silent" partner and the meaning that it has for the future of humanity.

--Construction worker, Colorado

* * *

Cheney's latest deception is that Social Security will find in the next decades a drastic reduction in the ratio of workers making contributions to workers receiving benefits. He forgot to add that if we pull away from his myopic view to a bird's-eye view of the newly restructured global-economy, the massive shift in the Social Security fund's domestic worker-ratios is due to a massive expropriation of jobs offshore to places like China, creating an avalanche of social-insecurity o

--Asian-American worker, California

* * *

Ross Perot's famous talk of a "sucking sound" as he opposed the trade agreements for taking jobs out of the U.S. really was about the sucking of all surplus value coming to the U.S. from all over the world, but especially China, to finance militarism. At the same time, the way the idea of revolution has been so thoroughly discredited in China makes it amazing that an international Luxemburg conference could be held there, where her idea of masses in control and post-revolutionary democracy was seriously discussed.

--Retiree, California

* * *

When I read in the January-February Lead that "China is not experiencing the kind of modernization of its productive forces that defined the industrial revolution in Europe, America, or Japan" and that "revolutionizing the forces of production by introducing technological innovations is not occurring in China as it did everywhere in the past," I was reminded of what Marx had stated in his last decade, when he pointed out that his analysis in CAPITAL grew out of capitalist society in Western Europe, and was not meant as a universal.

--Asian-American, Los Angeles


WOMEN IN BLACK

This is to alert like-minded women all over the world that the 13th International Conference of Women in Black will take place in Jerusalem at the end of August 2005. The conference will not deal only with the Israeli-Palestine conflict, but with the broader issues of women, war, and peace-making.

The conflict in the Middle East must be solved by both sides together, but since the Israeli army prevents us from entering each other's areas there are great difficulties in trying to plan this conference jointly which we are nevertheless committed to do. We are also determined to bring to this conference as many activist women as possible from distant regions of conflict--in Colombia, Afghanistan, Iraq, as well as several countries in Africa--to enrich us with their experiences. We have opened a communication line where we will be responding to your questions. Our address for this is wib2005@netvision.net.i. We would love to have as many as possible with us this August.

--Gila Svirsky, Jerusalem 


FROM THE ARCHIVES

Raya Dunayevskaya's critique of Stephen Bronner's collection of THE LETTERS OF ROSA LUXEMBURG was beautiful because so much of her own work on Luxemburg was encapsulated in it. It is important to let Luxemburg just speak for herself, but that doesn't happen with a mere chronological ordering of her letters. Dunayevskaya's interpretive engagement with Luxemburg's ideas reveals how great she was on freely associated workers running their lives. However the way Marx developed that concept in CAPITAL is what Luxemburg dismissed as "rococo." When Marx develops how cognition of the objective world is mediated by the abstractions that shape human relations between workers and projects freely associated labor as a new freedom that is at the same time a new self-consciousness, it is thoroughly Hegelian.

--Ron Brokmeyer, California

* * *

Dunayevskaya's essay in the January-February issue was wonderfully focused on revolution. She proposes making two divisions of the letters: one, "Heroism of Masses vs. Opportunism of Leaders"; and the other, "From Theory and Anti-War Agitation to Prison and Revolution." At first blush, that seems very little to suggest. Yet what she is doing is using less than 20 words to show the direction of Luxemburg's thought. It shows the importance of making philosophic categories.

--Franklin Dmitryev, Tennessee


BEYOND CAPITALISM

The program you are presenting in your emails on your New York classes appears extremely abstract. No one has all the time to read through a thicket of weighty material concerning "the Gotha program." What was it Karl Marx had to say about it that would make someone want to hear a presentation about it?

I understand the need to define the "day after revolution" and I can certainly agree with the idea of eliminating greed, hatred and ignorance from people's hearts. But I can't see anything in your program that makes practical sense.

--Still Interested, New York

* * *

I'm writing to you because of my interest in the classes you announced in the January-February issue on "Beyond Capitalism: Marx's Marxism as ground for an emancipatory alternative." I've been reading N&L for about two years now. It was the reprints of Raya Dunayevskaya's various writings which initially caught my attention and fueled my interest. Her grasp of Marxism is definitely impressive, but even more so is the ability to clearly demonstrate the practical relevancy of Marxism as a vital element in the overall political discussion in society today. I can see the necessity for a critical discussion that provides an alternative view, a realization beyond capitalism.

It's out of a real desire to take an active role in preparation of the liberatory philosophy of Marxist-Humanism, and to be able to achieve this objective that I endeavor to situate myself within the company of those best qualified to assist me. That is, teach me the things I need to deepen my comprehension of Marxist-Humanism. Although I'm a prisoner, presently confined in a security housing unit (SHU) at a state prison, I believe there has to be some form by means of which I can take part in this study class.

--Prisoner, California

Editor's Note: Our correspondent has been sent a class brochure, some of the readings, and an invitation to submit his comments.


FIGHT POLICE BRUTALITY

I remember April 29, 1992. The four verdicts on the police officers in Simi Valley. All not guilty, not guilty of beating Rodney King. Oh, how I hurt. Why, white America? I know they saw what we saw, it was on videotape. In 2002 an Inglewood police officer beat Donovan Jackson and another cop filed a false police report. Two trials later, two hung juries. Why, white America? They saw what we saw. It was on videotape. Then those two who were charged with excessive use of force turned to the same court system and filed reverse discrimination charges. There were two trials and they were awarded 2.4 million dollars. Why, white America? You must have seen what we did not. It was not on videotape. Now we have the news that another officer who beat Stanley Miller with a flashlight is not going to be charged. Why, white America? This was on videotape.

I want to ask the friends of NEWS & LETTERS to continue to stand up for justice. There are those of us in the African-American community who feel that Black and Brown lives mean nothing to the power structure. The revolution is on through legislation, education, economics and rightness of good people. There will be change, but don't look for it on videotape. The revolution will not be televised. The struggle continues.

--Molly Bell, Community Activist Straight out of Compton, California

* * *

On Feb. 18, what caused the death of Mandel al-Jamadi at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq was finally publicized. It was the torture technique called "Palestinian hanging," which is named for its use by the Israeli military against Palestinian prisoners. The suffocation that brought about his death from this torture is quite similar to that suffered by those crucified by Imperial Rome. So much for the "Christian" fundamentalism of the Bush administration that has been perpetrating these crimes.

--Activist, Chicago


QUEER LIBERATION

The piece by the student human rights activist on the recent Southern Human Rights Organizers Conference (January-February 2005 N&L) was a refreshing, unabashedly revolutionary article. I appreciated him saying the class struggle is the universal and most significant power relationship under capitalism, and yet saying that LGBT gets short shrift. He has a double criticism, saying LGBT is important both to have a more unified movement and for its own sake. He's not afraid to say we need theory. A lot of radical youth are radical only on the practical, political side, not on philosophy.

--Brown Douglas, Memphis


RESCUING HELEN MACFARLANE FROM OBSCURITY

You will be interested to see the impact that the new book you featured in your January-February issue had on a member of the Scottish Parliament. Here is the tribute that Tommy Sheridan, a Socialist Party member of Parliament, made as a motion there on February 21: "That the Parliament notes the forthcoming launch of the book, HELEN MACFARLANE: A FEMINIST, REVOLUTIONARY JOURNALIST AND PHILOSOPHER IN MID-NINETEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND; welcomes the fact that this radical Scotswoman will at last be rescued from obscurity and given her place of importance in 19th century politics and political movements; further notes that it was Helen Macfarlane, under the alias Howard Morton, who first translated the seminal pamphlet, The COMMUNIST MANIFESTO, into English … and played an active role in promoting the politics of revolution and equality throughout her life; and believes that the Scottish Parliament Information Centre should order several copies of her book and that libraries across Scotland should be encouraged to do likewise."

A few days later a writer for THE SCOTSMAN, picking up on the story, ended his column pointing out that in her translation, the original famous opening sentence was not "A spectre is haunting Europe--the spectre of communism" but "A frightful hobgoblin stalks throughout Europe. We are haunted by a ghost, the ghost of Communism." He added, "Maybe not quite as catchy, but it does have a ring of Tam O'Shanter about it."

--Hobgoblin supporter, London

* *

That the history of women like Helen Macfarlane has been hidden has contributed to feminists turning away from Marxism. Women who are both Marxists and explicitly feminists are avoided by those Marxists who think they are divisive issues. Feminists just keep repeating the assertion that Marx had nothing to say on women.

What was important to me was that while both of the articles on Macfarlane in the January-February issue mention that she was also an Hegelian, that wasn't developed. It remains a task to be done. It would illuminate Dunayevskaya's point that women are not only hidden from history, but from philosophy.

--Feminist lecturer, San Francisco

* * *

Bravo on the January-February issue that began the new bimonthly. I haven't read the pages all through yet, but the material on Macfarlane makes it an exciting experience. Anne Jaclard's book review was very good in tying the political tendencies and economic theories of the 1830s, '40s and '50s to those of today. That was very important.

--Dan, Springfield

* * *

Highlighting Dave Black's statement that his book was "necessarily and unashamedly a Biography of an Idea" put the finger on what was so impressive about his research--that an appreciation for what she was had to be dug out entirely from what ideas she wrote, given how little was known about her life and how completely she had disappeared so early in that life. Black's book is a remarkable achievement for us.

--Marxist-humanist, Chicago


DIALECTICS OF BLACK FREEDOM STRUGGLES

Marxist-Humanists honor Black History Month by struggling, which includes the struggle on the level of ideas about liberation. When you read the essay by Khalfani Khaldun in the January-February issue you see his struggle in several ways. He is in a fight for his life and his right to speak, against prison authorities keeping him behind bars long after he was supposed to have been released. Against the forces arrayed against him, he has founded a study group which investigates revolutionary ideas. His essay thus becomes something of a summary of the discussions he and his comrades have had on two books published by News and Letters Committees, DIALECTICS OF BLACK FREEDOM STRUGGLES and AMERICAN CIVILIZATION ON TRIAL. He describes News and Letters Committees as "taking the struggle to the next level, where the process of dialectical stages of development takes place." I believe this can easily refer to the struggles of opposites that Hegel called dialectics and which Marx called the class struggle, revolution in permanence, and other names. Discussing real struggles in this context constitutes actual solidarity.

--Prison abolitionist, Illinois

* * *

Where Khaldun analyzes the contradicted history of American so-called democracy, he is correct that "New Afrikans, then and now (that is, at the writing of the Declaration of Independence and under George W. Bush) are still viewed as chattel property of the state." On the other hand, the dialectic in AMERICAN CIVILIZATION ON TRIAL traces a development that is really two developments: the maturing of the Black mass struggle and the greater masking of oppression as time goes by. For example, the appearance of the now forgotten one and a quarter million Black populists is an important moment which was briefly a development which arose in response to the rise of monopoly capitalism. Of that forgotten one and a quarter million Black populists, Dunayevskaya says they anticipated the rise of American imperialism in a way that the populist intellectuals such as the muckrakers did not. I see Khaldun's essay as an attempt, among other things, to clarify the agents which mask racist, alienated relationships.

--Jim Mills, Chicago

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Khaldun's essay shows the diversity of voices that are attracted to the pull of the idea of Marxist-Humanism when it is presented historically and concretely as in the two pamphlets he reviews.

--Activist/Intellectual, California

* * *

The point of contention Khaldun mentions is not clear to me. It appears to refer to the question of Garvey. Much of what he says is not in disagreement with AMERICAN CIVILIZATION ON TRIAL in the section on Garvey that talks about nationalism. That is where Dunayevskaya works out a precise position that it is a question of an oppressed nationality. She relates it to Lenin on the National Question, saying what is decisive is that it brings forth revolt from the masses of people. That chapter was key in the pamphlet and I think Khaldun honed in on it.

--Environmental justice activist, Memphis


REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS

One reproductive rights group, NARAL Pro-Choice America, has begun an appeal to anti-choice people to join a campaign to prevent unwanted pregnancies through better access to birth control, and thus to reduce the need for abortion. Although this sounds good--and better birth control was the women's movement's original demand along with the right to abortion--the appeal seems to be a cynical ploy. For reasons including their desire to subjugate women, anti-choice groups are not going to work with pro-choice ones and are not going to promote birth control. NARAL must know this. It appears to be doing this in an attempt to gain support from the so-called "middle" who won't take a stand, but who, we are supposed to have learned from W's re-election, share his "values." In short NARAL is attempting to look like the Right. This indicates the abandonment of arguing the logic of its own cause, a capitulation to the Right which will inevitably lead to defeat.

--Anne Jaclard, New York


FEELING A DRAFT

I know the politicians are saying the Bush administration is not going to attempt to reinstate the draft, but they are still in a quagmire in Iraq and I read that a professor at the Air War College said the Army is "near the breaking point." All four services were reported to have missed their enlistment quotas last year. And now I've heard that Bush has given the Selective Service System a set of "readiness goals" to be implemented by March 31. It includes a stipulation that the System would have to be ready to be fully operational within 75 days. I don't know about anyone else, but I am definitely feeling a draft. I expect that opposition to what seems to me a real possibility for an attempt to reinstate the draft will be heard loud and clear in the protests to be held the weekend of March 19-20, the second anniversary of the war on Iraq.

--Anti-war activist, Illinois


HEALTH CARE CRISIS

All of us in the health care world know that the U.S. can boast about having the most modern health care facilities in the world But the most recent statistics have made it abundantly clear that while some U.S. citizens have access to them, a staggering 44 million people (17% of the population) have no health care at all because of the crippling costs of insurance. Many others discover their insurance doesn't provide full coverage just when they need it most. One third of all personal bankruptcies are the result of health care bills. Despite a massive 14% of gross domestic production (GDP) being spent on health care, the U.S. ranks 37 out of 191 countries in terms of the health of its citizens. That is the lowest ranking for any industrial country. Nobody needs statistics to understand this in human terms. It is a crisis.

--Nurse, Britain


OSCAR TEST

While I applaud with others that the Oscars are finally recognizing Black actors, their total house is still not in order. The new format for awarding Oscars in technical categories brought the nominees on stage together as the winner was announced. With the possible exception of costume design, most of the categories' nominees were a sea of white men. It seems like affirmative action, in hiring and nominating, is much more necessary than many in this country would like to think.

--Mary Jo Grey, Illinois


LABOR MOVEMENT, 2005

I'm disconcerted to hear labor advocates these days even bringing up, much less relying on, the "good intentions" of "good employers." The generic justification in the back of every employer's mind these days is "we have to compete with China." Can you imagine an amicable agreement of "good intentions" between a migrant Chinese worker who owns nothing more than his hands and the clothes on his back and ruthless Chinese industrialists who have the backing not only of world capital but a state discipline machinery created back under Mao? The same "good intentions" of employee-employer agreement is the rationale now being used in France as they too roll back the clock to get rid of their mandatory 35-hour workweek. Western "democracy" is looking more and more like Maoist re-education camps these days.

--Non-amicable worker, California


The Hobgoblin, A journal of Marxist-Humanism

Marx RELOADED: Special Issue on Marx's CAPITAL Includes writings by Raya Dunayevskaya on Marx's CAPITAL Published by London Corresponding Committee to order


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