As these words are being written, the G20 meeting is taking place in the world’s second major banking city (London), and US president Barack Obama has arrived with a retinue not seen since an imperial king visited his dominions in the hinterlands, to impress upon the rabble the power and splendor of Empire.
But, as always, looks can be deceiving, for the true princes wear no diadems, and sport no trains. They are the princes of Capital, and as Marx has aptly observed, they occupy the ‘commanding heights’ of economic power, and thus, the political leaders meet to kiss their rings, in private and in silence.
But, for the last 5 months or so, those ‘commanding heights’ don’t seem so commanding any more.
As banks crumble overnight, and as long-term businesses and firms dissolve; as foreclosures gather speed, and unemployment rises like a thermometer in hell, capital’s place hasn’t seemed this insecure in several lifetimes.
If we lived in a world ruled by logic and reason, it would appear that this should be the time of left ascendancy, when socialist ideas stormed the barricades of capital, sending their stone idols crashing to the earth.
Yet, this is hardly our reality.
Why, we wonder?
It seems to me that some fundamentals need recounting here, as they’ve been no doubt through days of your panel and workshop meetings.
Capital is like a vampire; it has many faces and many lives.
In the last several decades, we’ve seen the erection of so-called think tanks, the well-capitalized repositories of court scholars, whose jobs it is to defend capitalist ideas and promote all manner of retrograde, anti-social and indeed, repressive ideas. Because of their wealth and influence, they have ready access to the mikes of media, and are thus able to amplify their volume and influence, and achieve the status of ubiquitous expert — on all matters, big and small. Such figures such as these proved pivotal in the 2001 and 2002 selling of the Iraq War, and their voices peppered the aural universe like wallpaper, with claims that now seem quite ridiculous: "Americans will be greeted like liberators": "They’ll toss flowers at our feet": "A garden of democracy will spring from our efforts", and the like.
Now, of course, this was bull-manure, but the point is, it doesn’t matter. They’re back. Many are out of government, yet thanks to billions socked into the think tanks, they are a kind of shadow government, who still are able to bum rush the mike, now as think-tankers, immune from failure, for they have lifetime sinecures from capital.
Not surprisingly, there is no left counterpoint (as far as I know).
In part, I think, because the left doesn’t possess the right’s resources, or alternatively, such resources aren’t utilized in this fashion.
Thus, at a time when capital has come under serious question, few are the voices primed to offer any mass alternative, or if present, (as in this conference) how does it reach a mass audience? Or does it?
We just saw a general election several months ago in which one party repeatedly tried to accuse the other of being "socialist." Of course, to a forum such as this, that’s hardly a slur; but didn’t you wish that the candidate really was a socialist?
Of course, if he were, he could hardly have enjoyed the corporate largesse that made his candidacy possible (not to mention the support of the party apparatus).
But, ultimately, it matters little what’s at top, as long as folks at the bottom are mobilized and organized and militant in defense of their class and social interests.
In a nutshell, there is no alternative to social movements.
People should be crowding the streets in protest of the present economic situation, when bankers get hundreds of billions in public monies, and people get foreclosure notices, as well as lay-off slips, amid the terror of homelessness.
But, as [Freidrich] Engels opined in the introduction to Marx’s The Civil War in France (1871), "[T]he state is nothing else than a machine for the oppression of one class by another, and indeed no less so in the democratic republic than in the monarchy" (26).
In the Communist Manifesto,(150 anniversary edition (1998:Kerr Publ.) Marx reminds us that "The executive of the modern state is but a committee for managing…the whole bourgeoisie" (14-15). That is, a democratic state is but an instrument of the bourgeoisie – nothing more, nothing less.
Seen from this light, why should they not squander public wealth for private ends? Are they not tools of private wealth and influence?
Social movements, movements of the masses of the people, break those links by forcing them to serve public needs with public resources – and to at least give a better show of serving their interests.
We live in an era where wars are waged in the name of democracy, yet few institutions are as profoundly undemocratic as financial ones.
The wealthy, in fact, the architects of economic ruin and failure, are [seen as] inherently worthy of multi-billion dollar bailouts – while the poor and unemployed deserve, at best, our sympathy; and at worst; our contempt.
Those ways of thinking taint and poison our consciousness, and influence not only our thinking, but foreclose avenues of alternative resolutions.
All around us, in the failing businesses, the joblessness, and the foreclosures which gave rise to homelessness, are proofs of capitalism’s crises, which are growing as we speak.
This is the essence of the business cycle – boom and bust; bust and boom. Wars in defense of corporate greed and industrial acquisition.
More for the millionaires and billionaires – nothing for the many.
What social condition could be better for our purposes?
What more is needed to show that the present status quo is a recipe for more failure?
This is a great opportunity that may not come again for generations – let us not waste it.
Let us organize our movements with an eye towards the seriousness of the hour.
For we live in an hour not seen since the 1930s, in a time when politicians owe their offices to the very forces of speculative capitalism that wrought this epic disaster, and thus are loath to go against their paymasters, even in a time of crisis.
The epicenters of this economic earthquake are in New York and London, where the mortgage-trading scams originated and matured into new ways of creating great wealth.
And in the capitals of both economic empires, the elected leaders, American President Barack Obama, and British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, fear the claim that they are socialists, and are thus hesitant to exert more than symbolic dominance over the banks that have demonstrated their inability to manage their own assets, not to mention the wealth of nations.
Now is the time to organize, to expand our movements, to protest in our strength and our diversity, for if history teaches us anything, if the left fails to organize, the right will do so.
I don’t say this lightly, but as a result of my reading of a set of lectures delivered by the brilliant Marxist historian and revolutionary organizer, C.L.R. James, in Trinidad, during the summer of 1960. These were collected years later in Modern Politics (1973). James, speaking to Trinidad Public Library’s Adult Education Program, discussed the pivotal turning point facing Germany in 1931-32. It was a period, he explained, in which the future of Europe would be decided. Here now, a direct quote from James:
The German Communists got instruction from
Moscow to let Hitler come into power. These things
are very difficult to say to an audience that is not
familiar with the material and cannot go to town
tomorrow morning and buy books. I have brought
here my own book, written in 1937. I have 52 pages
(the Chairman will corroborate) on Germany in those
days, and the title of the chapter is, "After Hitler
Our Turn." That was the slogan of the German
Communist Party in Germany from 1930 -1931 right
up to the time that Hitler came into power in 1933.
Let him come in. He will be a failure, and then we will
make the revolution.
They were the specific instructions of Stalin [p.58]
My point here?
If the Left fails to organize, the Right will do so.
We are all at a critical turning point in American and world history.
What happens next may depend on our efforts.
Thank You!
Ona Move! Long Live John Africa!
From Death Row, this is Mumia Abu-Jamal
************************************************
The U.S. Supreme Court recently rejected Mumia Abu-Jamal’s appeal for a new trial based on racism in jury selection. The U.S Supreme Court has not yet decided whether it will further consider the Philadelphia DA’s appeal of the 2001/2008 rulings of two lower courts, which ruled that Abu-Jamal deserves a new sentencing hearing if the death penalty is to be re-instated. If the U.S. Supreme Court rules in favor of the DA, Abu-Jamal could be executed without a new sentencing hearing.
In response, Abu-Jamal’s lead attorney Robert R. Bryan will be filing a "petition for re-hearing" at the U.S. Supreme Court. Emergency meetings have been held in several cities to coordinate grassroots response, and over 3,000 people have signed an online petition <http://www.petitiononline.com/supreme/> in an effort coordinated by anti-death penalty activists.
On Friday April 24 and 25, 2009 events were held in more than a dozen cities to organize and to celebrate the release of Mumia’s new book with City Lights, JAILHOUSE LAWYERS. More info here:www.citylights.com <http://www.citylights.com/>
Watch Angela Y. Davis speaking at the Oakland event on April 24, 2009
http://www.zmag.org/zvideo/3128
Listen to Mumia’s response to the Supreme Court decision in an interview with Noelle Hanrahan of Prison Radio.
http://www.prisonradio.org/mumia_interview_4_6_09.htm
Contact the White House to protest the unjust ruling
www.whitehouse.gov/CONTACT
Emergency Rally | 4pm, Friday May 8th | 163 W. 125th St. in Harlem
http://www.freemumia.com/may8.html
Ongoing updates:
http://www.freemumia.com/
DEMAND A NEW TRIAL | FREE MUMIA!