Capital and Democracy
The relevance of the
text published below cannot be a question for all those
who want to overcome the present
weakness
of the workers’ movement, the loss of
direction and the atomization of the working class. “Demand the impossible!” – shouted
the slogan from the wall in May
1968, admitting that the communist
world community turned from the programme of the struggle into an utopian
fog for the masses of
our class.
If the community is an utopia then the lack of community is
reality. Having been tossed on the ocean of democracy, the proletariat put
in at Robinson’s island.
In contrast to the former leftist
rubbish which turned liberal
(nowadays there’s an overproduction of such), we don’t regard this
as a phenomenon which force us to change or abandon the revolutionary programme. It belongs
into the advancing of capitalism,
and it does absolutely
not abolish those contradictions
which prepare the outbreak of the communist
revolution.
Marx shed light to the economic foundation of the
capitalist society’s everyday reproduction:
“Thus, what we called the constant
value which appeared as a presupposition
in the case of the individual
capital is nothing but the presupposition
of capital by capital, i.e. the fact that the different capitals in the different branches
of industry posit
one another reciprocally as presupposition
and condition. Each of them regarded for itself can be resolved
into dead labour which, as
value, has become
independent vis-a-vis living labour.”
Marx: The Grundrisse. Notebook V. [Circuit
and Turnover of Capital].
The dead labour’s independence
and its dominance over living
productive activity – this
necrophilia of capital – yields the
present disgusting relationship
between individuals and the loathsome ideology which adheres
to it: the practice and the theory of bourgeois
democracy.
“In the money
relation, in the developed system of exchange (and this
semblance seduces the democrats),
the ties of personal dependence … are in fact exploded, ripped up…;
and individuals seem independent (this is an
independence which is at bottom merely
an illusion and it is more correctly called indifference), free to
collide with one another and to engage in exchange within this freedom; but they appear thus
only for someone who abstracts
from the conditions,
the conditions
of existence within which
these individuals enter into contact…”
Marx: The Grundrisse. Notebook I. The Chapter on Money (Part Two).
That is the key to the understanding of democracy. Democracy is the pseudo-community
based on the illusory independence of the commodity-owner. So,
contrary to the common bourgeois
interpretation, it is not the
political form mostly associated
with the ancient Greek city-states and some
modern societies, but “the behaviour of humans,
the organisation
of those who have lost their original organic unity with the community”
(Camatte). Because
of that, this kind of existence of atomized individuals
is a characteristic of all class societies, which is
maintained by the purulent everyday rotation of commodity production.
Democracy assumes different forms
according to the forms of productive
labour and the extension
of commodity production. Ancient democracy was
an inner affair of the ruling class, because
only the free citizens were
commodity-owners (namely owners of the land, the slaves and their products).
In modern bourgeois democracy
everybody is a commodity-owner, and
the key commodity for the bourgeoisie
– labour force – is
put on the market by the working class. Hence, democracy is
total now.
The bourgeois state
power has given an official form to
the relation between commodity-owners.
The parliamentary form is the
political expression of the impersonal
power of capital (of the rule of dead labour).
Capital needs state
power because it has so secure itself
against the revolt of the proletarians, it
has to force them to sell their labour force to
capital in order to obtain the means
of their existence. The functioning
of the parliament develops according
to the varying balance of forces
between the different capitals and
according to the interests of the aggregate capital. It’s a dynamic form which is
able to adapt itself to the changing
economic conditions. The state can support
the development of national capital by customs duties
and allowances. In the parliament,
the various factions of capital dispute
with each other according to their interests.
The political parties – i. e. the parties of the bourgeoisie,
including the social democratic
parties –, have never represented more than the alternatives of the development of capital, that means, the interests of some
groups of the ruling class. The
democratic (parliamentary) principle was
the guarantee, that the political management would not
separate from the interests of aggregate
capital. Such politics
which led to the slowing down of
capital’s development, failed – in
the next elections at the latest. At the same
time, democracy and suffrage are
means to persuade
the bearers of living labour to participate in the operating of capital on the
political level as well. Since the
human barrier – the resistance of the living against
the dead – is the biggest obstacle
for capital’s development. So, the
political process always
has to be directed in such a way to avoid the revolt of the proletariat.
During the elections, the working
class
declares which capitalist sphere’s dominance is
the most acceptable for it. The
working class
acts here totally as a part of capital, and its choice is
a part of capital’s self-management. The worker involved in politics by means
of the suffrage, becomes a part of capital’s
pseudo-community. He/she internalizes
the democratic behaviour.
Among the Carpathians, in this
little brothel, but also in other parts of the world, a lot of members of the working class feel and see
the total evacuation of local politics.
But only a few of them move from here towards
a conscious
communism. Some weep for the former
phases
of capitalist order, others place trust
in the international development, which “modernizes the backward regions”.
In the reality, the thing is that
capital has outgrown the frames of nation-state,
and the politics in Hungary cannot
do anything else than licking the ass of the
international giant companies, because natural gas
doesn’t grow on Hortobágy
and one cannot produce “our car” from the apple of Nyírség. European integration took place because the movement of capital (including variable
capital: labour force) had to be intensified, the centralization of capital had to be
accelerated. Capital destroyed the
national boundaries, so there’s
scarcely any difference between the
various managements of capital (the programmes of the political parties) because
it is global capital which rules directly. Politics
serve this
global capital. Those exploited who
expect something good from this process (liberals
and social democrats) or think that it was
avoidable within capitalism (conservatives,
fascists), don’t understand
neither the functioning of capital nor the present
stage of capitalism’s
development. They are the puppets of
capital – they can shake hands with each other.
There is also
another reason for politics’ evacuation. (In order to avoid misunderstandings,
we remark that politics have always been the means
for managing the alienated relationships, so, in
this sense, it couldn’t have been emptied for the
proletariat because it has always
been empty. If we are still speaking about the evacuation of politics, we mean by this
the fact that capital needs the
mediation of the state less and less for
the organization of its
reproduction, and if it does need it
– in the case of a war, for example
– then it can use this mediation practically without any problem.) As far as
capital provided for the working class only the possibility of biological reproduction (this way also
reproducing socially the destitute wage-worker), capitalism
could be kept in motion only by means
of direct and permanent police terror. But capital went beyond this phase,
and today it is enough for it to
keep the batons in store. Enormous
mass
of products comes pouring onto the working class which serve
directly the capitalized human being’s
needs: culture, entertainment, sex-industry,
alcohol, Internet, world press, Coca-Cola, bicycle with 24 gears… And the advertisement-industry
which supports
the whole. The rubbish for
the production of which the working class drudges
in the factories and offices, comes
from the opposite direction when it
has left the workplace. And the
working class
is swept
away by the flood of commodities. “Capital constitutes itself
as material community and there are
no more politics since it is
capital itself which organizes men as slaves.”
(Camatte)
When
capital comes to a deep crisis, then
it seems
to break with the democratic principle. During the crisis, a huge mass of constant
capital loses
its value and is not able to function further as capital, to produce surplus value by absorbing
variable capital. So the crisis of constant
capital is also
the crisis
of variable capital, which manifests itself
in the fall of (real) wages and massive
unemployment. Capitalism is not able to handle such
crises
with the usual reconciliation of
interests
between capitals (parliamentarism)
and the reconciliation of interests between capital and the working class (trade
unionism). In such
cases,
the strongest
representative of capital undertakes the task
of capitalism’s
re-structuring, for capital’s survival.
The main elements of this are the destruction
of those capitals which have lost
their value and the destruction of
the unnecessary
labour-force – open or hidden war. Capital uses
terrorist means
against the proletariat not only
because, facing the crisis, it
attacks capital, but also because
capital has to get rid of the labour-force which is
needless
for it. Facing this phenomenon, the
leftists
shout: “Capitalism betrays
democracy! Capital is capable to sacrifice democracy for its
own interests!”
Some go so far that they try to
prove theoretically that capitalism
can never be democratic. In contrast
to this, it is
extremely important to emphasize
that the “anti-democratism”
of capital during the crises is an
absolutely democratic phenomenon.
The case is
exactly that it tries to maintain
the commodity-owner individuals, the
private property. Capital is obliged
to infringe the political rights
proclaimed by capital itself (free
press,
assembly
and speech) if they hinder the process of
capital’s reproduction (production,
circulation or both), and democracy between the people is
the first precondition for this reproduction.
Revolutionary
situation is
the peak of capitalism’s crisis. If a part of the working class refuses the
further participation in the market as
an owner of labour-force, and tries to hinder the movement of commodities using strike and sabotage,
tries to maintain its life by looting, and it attacks the ruling class and its
state violently, then the real
negation of democracy steps on the scene
with these acts.
Against it, all components of democracy start
to act with unified force. The last
reserve of capital, the only massive
force which it can now set in motion
against the communist proletariat, is
the democratic part of the working class: the police, the army and each worker who is still
capable to exist within capital (see, for example, the role of the social-democratic workers
in the crushing of the proletarian
revolution in Germany after World War I). The role of these
elements of the working class is not merely that they can be put into armed action
against the communists, but
even more, that they continue to keep capital in motion, that they produce day
by day the negation of human community, that they
enclose the revolution in a ghetto.
The revolutionaries who want
to fight consistently against
capitalism, cannot make any compromise with democracy. Democracy is
the form of existence of those who have been alienated from human community, “of
those who have lost their original organic unity with the community”
(Camatte). Therefore the communist revolution which means
the creation of human community cannot be victorious
without the total destruction of this way of existence.
Barricade Collective, 2006.
Jacques Camatte
The Democratic Mystification
The
proletariat's assault on
the citadels of capital only has a chance of success on
condition that the proletarian revolutionary movement finishes with
democracy once and for all. Democracy is
the last refuge of all disavowals
and betrayals, because it is
the first hope of those who believe in purifying and re-invigorating the
current movement which is rotten to
its core.
I
5.1. The
General historical phenomenon
“Social
life is essentially practical. All mysteries which misled
theory into mysticism find their rational solution
in human practice and in the comprehension
of this practice.”
(Marx,
Eighth thesis
on Feuerbach)
1.1.
Broadly speaking, one can define
democracy as the behaviour
of humans, the organisation of those
who have lost their original organic
unity with the community. Thus it
exists
during the whole period which separates primitive communism
from scientific communism.
5.1.2.
Democracy was born from the moment
that there was a division between men and the allocation of possession.
That is to say,
it arose with private property,
individuals and the class division of society,
with the formation of the state. It
follows that it becomes increasingly
pure as private property becomes more general and as
classes appear more distinctly
in society.
5.1.3. It
presupposes a common good which is
divided-up. Limited democracy in ancient society
presupposed
the existence of the ager publicus
and slaves who were not men. In modern society
this common good is more universal
( touches a
greater number of men ). It is
also more abstract
and illusory :
the homeland.
5.1.4.
Democracy in no way excludes
authority, dictatorship and thus the State. On the contrary, it needs the State as
a foundation. Who can guarantee the allocation, who can regulate the relations between individuals
and between them and the common good, if not the State ?
In fully
developed capitalist society the State also
presents
itself as
the guardian of redistribution from
two different angles :
it prevents the proletariat from
nibbling away the surplus-value and it guarantees
the distribution of this surplus value as
profit, interest, rent etc., among
the different capitalist spheres.
5.1.5.
Democracy thus implies the existence
of individuals, classes and the State; with the result
that it is simultaneously a mode of government, a mode of domination by
one class,
and a mechanism of union and conciliation.
Actually,
in the beginning the economic processes
divided men ( process of expropriation ) who had been united in the
primitive community. Ancient social
relations were destroyed. Gold became a real power replacing the
authority of the community. Men were opposed
to each other because of material
antagonisms
that could break up society and make
it impossible.
Democracy appeared to be a means of
reconciling opposites, as the
most suitable
political form to unite what was
divided. It represented conciliation
between the old community and the new society.
The mystifying form lay in the
apparent reconstruction of a lost unity. Mystification
was progressive.
In our
day, at the opposite pole of history, the economic process has led
to the socialisation of
production and men. Politics, on the
contrary, tends to divide them, to
maintain them as simple surfaces of exchange for capital. The communist form becomes
more and more powerful within the old capitalist
world. Democracy seems like a conciliation between
the past, still
acting on our actual present, and
the future -- communist society. Mystification
is reactionary.
5.1.6. It
is often said
that the seeds
( or some
even say the forms ) of democracy are to be found in the origins of the life of our species, in primitive communism.
However it is a misunderstanding to see
the manifestation of the seeds of
a higher form appearing sporadically
in an inferior form. This
"democracy" appeared in very specific
circumstances.
Once these had ended, there was a return to the former mode of organisation. For example :
military democracy at its beginnings. The election of the leader took place at a
particular time and for specific tasks. Once
these were accomplished, the leader was
reabsorbed into the community. The
democracy which appeared temporarily was
reabsorbed. It was the same
for those forms
of capital which Marx called ante-deluvian. Usury was
the archaic form of money-capital which could appear in ancient societies.
But its existence
was always
precarious, because society
defended itself against its solvent effects
and banished it. It was only when man became a commodity,
that capital could develop on a safe
foundation, and could no longer be reabsorbed.
Democracy can only really appear from the moment when men have been completely
divided, and the umbilical cord linking them with the community has been cut; that is,
when there are individuals.
Communism can sometimes manifest
itself in this
society, but it is always
reabsorbed. It will only be able to
really develop from the moment when the material community has been destroyed.
5.1.7. The
democratic phenomenon appears with
clarity in two historical periods : at
the time of the dissolution of the primitive community in Greece; and at
the time of the dissolution of feudal society
in western Europe. It is incontestable,
that during this second period the phenomenon appeared with greater
intensity, because men had really been reduced to the status of
individuals and the ancient social relations
could no longer unite them. The bourgeois
revolution always appears as the setting in motion of the masses. From
which arises
the bourgeois problem :
how to unify them and fix them within new social
forms. Hence, the
institutional mania and the outburst of right in bourgeois
society. The bourgeois revolution is
a social revolution with a political
soul.
During the
communist revolution, the masses will have already been organised by capitalist
society. They will not seek new forms
of organization but will structure a
new collective being, the human community. This
appears clearly when the class acts in time as
an historical being, when it constitutes
itself as
party.
It has been said
a number of times in the communist movement that the revolution is not a problem of forms
of organisation.
For capitalist society, on the contrary, everything is an organisational
question. At the beginning of its development, this
appears as
the search for good institutions;
at the end as the search for the best
structures
to enclose men in the prisons of capital : fascism. At both extremes,
democracy is at the heart of this search : first
political democracy, then social
democracy.
5.1.8. Mystification is
not a phenomenon planned by the members
of the ruling class, a hoax that they perpetrate. If so it would be enough to have a simple adequate propaganda to eradicate it from men's minds.
In fact it acts in the depths of the social
structure, within social relations :
“A social relation of production appears as something existing
apart from individual human beings,
and the distinctive relations into which they enter in the course of production in society
appear as the specific
properties of a thing -- it is this
perverted appearance, this prosaically real, and by no means
imaginary, mystification that is characteristic
of all social forms of labour positing exchange-value.”
( Marx – ‘Contribution to the Critique of Political
Economy’, Collected Works Vol 29 p.289 )
It is thus
necessary
to explain in what ways reality is mystifying
and how this simple
mystification at the beginning, becomes
greater and greater and reaches its maximum with capitalism.
5.1.9.
Originally, the human community was subject to the dictatorship
of nature. It had to fight against
it to survive. The dictatorship was
direct and the community in its
totality was subjected
it.
With the
development of class society,
the state presents itself
as representing
the community and pretends to embody
man's struggle
against nature. However, given the
weakness
of development of the productive forces,
nature's dictatorship is
always effective. It is indirect and mediated by the state and weighs
especially on the most underpriviliged strata. When the state
defines man, it takes the man of the dominant class as the substratum
of its definition. Mystification is
complete.
5.1.10.
Under capitalism, there is a first
period when, although the bourgeoisie
has taken power, capital only
dominates formally. Many remainders of previous
social formations persist, hindering capital's
domination over the whole of society.
This is
the epoch of political democracy when there is
the apology of individual liberty and free competition. The bourgeoisie presents this as a means
of liberation for men. However this
is a mystification
because:
“In free
competition, it is capital that is set
free, not the individuals.”
( Marx ‘Grundrisse’,
Collected Works V. 29 p. 38 )
“Hence...the
absurdity of regarding free
competition as the ultimate
development of human freedom, and the negation of free competition as equivalent to the negation of individual freedom
and of social production based upon individual freedom. It is merely the kind of free development possible on
the limited basis of the domination of capital. This type of individual freedom is
therefore, at the same time, the most sweeping
abolition of all individual freedom and the complete subjugation
of individuality to social conditions which assume the form of objective powers, indeed of overpowering objects -- objects
independent of the individuals
relating to one another. To bring out the essence of free competition is
the only rational answer to its glorification by the prophets
of the middle class and to its
anathematising
by the socialists.”
( Marx ‘Grundrisse’,
Collected Works V. 29 p. 40 )
5.1.11.
“Democracy
and parliamentarianism are indispensable
for the bourgeoisie after its victory by force and terror because the bourgeoisie
want to rule a society divided into
classes.”
( ‘Battaglia communista’ no.
18, 1951 )
It
required conciliation to be able to dominate for it was
impossible
that domination should endure solely through terror. After its conquest
of power by violence and terror, the proletariat does
not need democracy, not because classes disappear
from one day to the next, but because
there must no longer be any masking or mystification.
Dictatorship is
required to prevent any return of the opposing
class.
Moreover, the accession of the proletariat to the State,
is its
own negation as a class, as well as
the negation of the other classes. It is the beginning of the unification of the species,
of the formation of the community. To demand democracy would imply the need for
conciliation between classes and
that would amount to doubting that communism
is the solution
to all antagonisms, that it is
the reconciliation of man with himself.
5.1.12.
With capital, the economic movement is
no longer separate from the social movement. The union took place with the
purchase and sale
of labour power, but it led to the submission of men to capital. Capital constitutes
itself as
material community and there are no more politics
since it is
capital itself which organises men as
slaves.
Until this historical
stage there was
a more or less
clear separation between production
and distribution. Political
democracy could be envisaged as a means
of distributing products more equitably. But when the material community is achieved, production and distribution
are indissolubly
linked. The imperatives of
circulation thus condition distribution. However circulation is no longer something
completely external to production but is,
for capital, an essential moment of its
total process.
It is thus
capital itself which conditions distribution.
All men
fulfill a function for capital which fundamentally presupposes their
existence. In relation to their
execution of this function, men
receive a certain distribution of
products through the intermediary of
a wage. We have a social democracy.
Incomes policy is a means
of achieving it.
5.1.13. In
the period of the formal domination of capital ( political
democracy ) democracy is not a
form of organisation
opposed as
such to capital, it is a mechanism
used by the capitalist class to attain domination over society.
During this period all the organisational
forms included in this struggle
achieved this same
result. That is
why the proletariat can also
can for a certain time intervene on this
terrain. On the other hand, oppositions can also
occur within the same class,
between the industrial and financial
bourgeoisies,
for example. Parliament is therefore
an arena where these various interests clash.
The proletariat can use parliament as a platform to denounce the democratic mystification and can use
universal suffrage
as a means
to organise
the class.
When
capital arrived at its real domination,
and constituted itself as a
material community, the question was resolved :
it seized the State. The conquest of the state
from inside no longer poses itself because
it is no more than :
“a formality , the haut goût
of popular existence, a ceremonial.
The estates
element is the sanctioned, legal lie of constitutional
states,
the lie that the state is the people's
interest, or that the people is the interest
of the state.”
( Marx,
‘Contribution to the Critique of Hegels
Philosophy of Law’, Collected
Works V. 3 p. 65 – the word people is substituted for nation to match the French translation cited in the original )
5.1.14.
The democratic state represents the
illusion of control over society by man ( that
man can direct the economic phenomenon ). It proclaims man sovereign.
The fascist
State is the realisation of this
mystification ( in
this sense it can appear as
its negation ). Man is not sovereign.
At the same time, this is in
fact, the real acknowledged form of the capitalist
state : the absolute
domination of capital. Social unity cannot exist
with a divorce between theory and practice. Theory said : man is sovereign;
practice affirmed : it is
capital. Only insofar as the latter had not come to dominate society absolutely,
was there possibility of imbalance. In the fascist state reality subjugates the idea to make a real idea of it. In the
democratic state the idea subjugates
reality to make an imaginary reality of it. The democracy of capital's slaves suppresses mystification
the better to achieve it. The democrats
wish to highlight it when they
believe it can reconcile the proletariat with capital.
Society
having found the being of its oppression ( which abolishes the duality, the reality/thought imbalance ),
it is necessary to oppose
to it the liberatory being which represents the
human community : the communist
party.
5.1.15.
Hence most nineteenth century theorists were statists. They
thought that they could resolve
the social facts at the level of the state.
They were mediatists.
Only they
did not understand that the
proletariat not only had to destroy
the old state machine, but also had to put another in its
place. Many socialists
believed that it was possible to
conquer the state from inside and the anarchists believed that one could abolish it from one day to the next.
Twentieth
century theorists are corporatists because
they think that it is only a matter
of organising
production and of humanising
it to resolve all problems. They are immediatists. This is an
indirect proof of the theory of the proletariat. To say
that it is necessary to
reconcile the proletariat with the economic movement, is
to recognise
that a solution can only emerge on
this terrain .
This immediatism arises from the fact that communist
society is
forever strengthening inside capitalism
itself. It is
not a question of reconciling the
two, but of destroying the power of
capital, its organised strength , the
capitalist State, which maintains private monopoly when all economic mechanisms tend
to make it disappear. The communist solution
is mediate. Reality seems to
evade the state, it is necessary to highlight it and, at the same time, to indicate the need for another transitory state : the dictatorship
of the proletariat.
5.1.16.
The development towards social democracy was
discounted from the start :
“While the
power of money is not the relation
of things and men, social relations
have to be organised
politically and religiously.”
( Marx )
Marx always denounced the swindle
of politics and laid bare the real relations :
“Therefore
it is a natural necessity ,
the essential
human properties however estranged they may seem
to be, and interest that hold the
members of civil society together; civil , not political life is their real tie.”
( ‘The Holy Family’, Collected Works Vol. 4 p. 120 )
“Precisely the slavery
of civil society is in appearance the greatest
freedom because it is in appearance the fully developed independence of
the individual, who considers as his own freedom the uncurbed movement, no longer bound
by a common bond or man, of the estranged
elements of his
life, such as
property, industry, religion, etc.,
whereas actually this is his fully developed slavery
and inhumanity. Law has here taken
the place of privilege.”
(‘The Holy
Family’, Collected Works Vol. 4 p.
116)
The question of democracy only remains
in another form as the false opposition
between competition and monopoly. The material community integrates the two. With fascism (= social
democracy), democracy and dictatorship
are also integrated. It is a means
for overcoming anarchy.
“Anarchy is the law of civil society
emancipated from diverse privileges, and the anarchy of civil society
is the basis of the modern public system, just
as the public system in its
turn its the
guarantee of that anarchy. To the same
extent that the two are opposed
to each other they also determine
each other.”
(‘The Holy
Family’, Collected Works Vol. 4 p.
117)
5.1.17.
Now that the bourgeois class, which
led the revolution which allowed the development of capital, has disappeared,
and been replaced by the capitalist
class
which lives on capital and its valorization process, capitals
domination has been assured
( fascism )
and because of this there is
no longer a need for a political conciliation, since
it is superfluous, but for an economic conciliation ( corporatism, doctrine of needs
etc. ), and it is the middle
classes which are adepts
of democracy. Only the more capitalism
grows, the more the illusion of being able to share
management with capital vanishes. All that remains
is the demand for a social democracy with political pretensions :
democratic planning, full employment etc.. However by creating social security,
while trying to maintain the full employment that it claims, capitalist
society achieves the social
democracy in question :
that of slaves
to capital.
With the
development of the new middle classes the
demand for democracy takes on a
tinge -- only -- of communism.
5.1.18.
What has been written above deals with the European/North American area and has no validity for the countries
where the Asiatic mode of production
for a long time predominated ( Asia,
Africa ) or where it still
dominates ( e.g. India ).
In these countries, the individual has
not been produced. Private property could appear but it could not autonomise itself; it is
the same for the individual. This is
related to the geo-social conditions of these
countries and explains the impossibility of capital developing itself there, as
long as it has
not constituted itself as
community. To put it another way, it is
only when it has reached this stage
that capitalism will be able to
replace the ancient community and thus
conquer immense zones. Only, in these
countries, men cannot behave as in the West.
Political democracy is necessarily
avoided. One can have, at most, only
social democracy.
This is why
in those countries most
racked by the implantation of capitalism
we have a double phenomenon : a conciliation
between the real movement and the ancient community, and another with the
future community : communism. Hence the difficulty in dealing with these
societies.
In other
words, a whole immense section
of humanity will not know the democratic mystification
as it is
known in the West. This is a positive fact for the coming revolution.
With
regard to Russia,
we have an intermediate case. We can
note with what difficulty capitalism
was established there. It needed a proletarian revolution.
There too, western political
democracy did not have a basis for development and we may note that it cannot
flourish there. As in the contemporary West,
we will have social democracy.
Unfortunately over there also, the
counter-revolution brought poison in
the form of proletarian democracy and, for many, the involution of the
revolution is to be sought for in the non-realisation of democracy.
The
communist revolution will begin
again, by recognising
these facts
and granting them their full importance. The proletariat will reconstitute itself
as class and thus
as party, in this way superseding the cramped limits
of all class
societies.
The human species will finally be unified and form a single being.
5.1.19.
All historical forms of democracy corresponded
to stages
of development where production was
limited. The various revolutions which followed one another were partial revolutions. Economic progress was
unable to take place, and to advance, without the exploitation of a class occuring. We may note that since
antiquity revolutions have
contributed to the emancipation of an increasing
section of humanity. From which arose the idea that we are moving towards perfect democracy, a democracy gathering together
all men. As a result many are in a hurry to make the equation : socialism = democracy. It is
true that it is possible to
say, that with the communist revolution and the dictatorship
of the proletariat, a greater section
of humanity than before enters the
domain of this ideal demoracy; and that by generalising the proletarian condition to the whole
of society, the proletariat abolishes classes and achieves
democracy ( the 'Communist
Manifesto' stated
that the revolution is the conquest of democracy ). However it is necessary to add, that this
passage
to the limit, this generalisation,
is at the same
time the destruction of democracy. Because at the same time, the human mass does not
remain constituted with the status of
a simple sum
of individuals, all equivalents in right if not in fact. That can only be a
reality for a very short moment of
history, due to forced equalisation.
Humanity will constitute itself in a collective being, the Gemeinwesen. This
is born outside
the democratic phenomenon, and it is
the proletariat constituted as party which transmits this to
society. When one passes on to future society,
there is a qualitative change, and
not merely a quantitative one. For democracy is
“the anti-marxist
rule of this powerless
quantity, for all eternity, to become quality”. To demand democracy for post-revolutionary society
is to demand impotence. In addition,
the communist revolution is no longer a partial revolution. With it, progressive
emancipation finishes, and radical emancipation is
achieved. Here again there is a
qualitative leap.
5.1.20.
Democracy is based on a dualism,
and is the means to surmount
it. Thus it resolves the dualism
between spirit and matter, which is equivalent to that between great men and mass,
through delegation of powers; that
between citizen and man, through the ballot paper and universal suffrage.
In fact under the pretext of the accession to reality of total being, there is a delegation of the sovereignty
of man to the state. Man divests himself of his
human power.
The separation of powers
requires their unity and this is
always done by violation of a constitution. This
violation is founded on a divorce
between situation in fact and situation in right. The passage
from one to the other being assured by violence.
The
democratic principle in reality is
only the acceptance of a given fact : the scission of reality, the dualism
linked to class
society.
5.1.21.
Often some wish
to oppose democracy in general, an
empty concept, to a form of democracy which would be the key to human
emancipation. Now what is a fact,
whose characteristic is
not only in contradiction with its
general concept, but must be its negation ? In
reality theorising
a particular democracy ( proletarian democracy
for example ) still evades the quantitative leap. Indeed, either the
democratic form in question really
contradicts the general concept of
democracy, and thus is really something
else ( why,
then, call it democracy ? ), or it is
compatible with this concept, and
there can only be a contradiction of a quantitative nature ( for example
that it includes a greater number of
men ), and, because of this, it does
not go beyond the limits of the
concept, even if it tends to push them back.
This thesis often appears
in the form : proletarian democracy is not bourgeois
democracy, and one will talk of direct democracy to show
that while the second needs a break, a duality ( delegation of powers ), the first
denies this.
The future society is thus
defined as being the realisation of
direct democracy.
This is only
a negative negation of bourgeois society, and not its
positive negation. It still wants
to define communism as a mode of organisation that would be more adequate to various human manifestations. But communism
is the affirmation of a being, the
true Gemeinwesen
of man. Direct democracy appears to
be a means for achieving communism. However communism
does not need such
a mediation. It is
not a question of having or of
doing, but of being.
Commentaries,
critical remarks
Writing “The
Democratic Mystification”, Camatte didn’t intend to create an independent article but
a chapter of his essay
entitled “The Communist Revolution”
– that’s the reason for the way of numbering the paragraphs. (The whole work ultimately wasn’t finished.)
We publish below our remarks for the different paragraphs
– in the spirit of the communist programme’s further clarification.
Barricade
Collective
5.1.3 Homeland (as a common property which in the reality is divided-up between the capitals of the given country) appears
as a precondition for capitalist democracy as
long as the productive forces of the given capitalist
state are dominated by national
capital. In the present phase of capitalism,
it is international capital which
dominates, so
the concept of homeland is increasingly ideological, and the nationalist fractions
of local small capital lean on it.
It’s enough to refer to the
activities of the Eastern European (Slovakian, Hungarian, Polish) populist forces…
5.1.5 One can read the
history of “gold’s becoming a real power” in Jonathan Willams’ “The History of Money”. The communist
description of this power’s
social and economic development can
be read in Marx’ “Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy”.
5.1.8 Nature appears as a
dictator, as a hostile power above the people when class society and private property have already been established,
and man has been alienated from
other people as well as from natural environment. Hence we cannot speak about the dictatorship
of nature in primate communism,
because nature is a part of the community.
5.1.10 The excellent article of the Internationalist Communist
Group, entitled “Against the Myth of
the Democratic Rights and Liberties” gives
us a useful
help to see clearly, how democracy’s myth and reality works
in capitalism. We cite some longer passages
from this text.
“In the sphere
of circulation of goods, there are
no classes; everybody is
a citizen, everybody appears as buyer and seller
of goods, equal, free and owner.
Even when we buy or sell our own
manpower, we are in the paradise of
human rights and liberties. Each one is
aiming at his own private interests in
the reign of equality, liberty and private property.
Liberty: because the buyer and
the seller of goods (including manpower) do not obey to any other rule
than to their own free will.
Equality: because
in the world of merchandise, everybody is
a buyer and a seller, and everybody
gets a value to the value contained
in the goods he is selling,
exchanging equivalent against
equivalent.
Property: because
each one appears, in the world of
exchange, as an owner of his merchandise and he can only dispose of what belongs
to him.
As free and equal owners, all citizens contract relationships giving rise
to a natural brotherhood, which is
the lawful reflect that guarantees
liberties, equality and the
identical possibility
for each man to own goods. Any
buying or selling of merchandise is the result
of a free will contract between men who, because
of the merchandise, are owners,
free, equal and like brothers.”
So, this kind of “liberation” of people is nothing else
than the gradual self-fulfillment of
capital’s democratic dictatorship through the expansion
of commodity production.
After the reign of glamours,. let’s
see the real process.
“The seller of working
force is a worker, whether he
believes in god or in democracy. In
the factory he is nobody's equal, he is
free of nothing, owner of nothing, not even of whet he manipulates. If he wants,
the worker can imagine that his
citizenship is
only interrupted, that his qualities, liberties
and properties have been left in the
cloakroom and that he will get them back when he gets
out. But he is completely wrong. In
his eight (or more) hours of work, he consumes raw material and machines
to produce usage values that remain property of the capital and in the
other sixteen hours, during his
holidays, he consumes
food, beer, football or television
to produce another usage value: his working force, which will be used only in valorizing the capital. Outside of the mystical
and ephemeral paradise of
circulation and of free elections,
the worker remains a worker, whether
he likes it or not; even when he
fucks (whether by pleasure or to grow a family) he is
only working force and valorization of the Capital. As
such, he is
neither equal, nor free, nor citizen, nor owner at any moment of his life. He is
only a salaried slave. Even before he tries
to organize himself to defend his worker's
interests,
he has already all equality,
property and liberty against him.”
“The true liberty, property and fraternity of democracy implies therefore a
permanent situation of
anti-proletarian violence. Repression is
one of the indispensable elements
of imposition, reproduction and
extension of democracy. A long time
ago, Marx used to denounce the sacred trinity “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity” as equivalent to “Infantry, Cavalry, Artillery”. Even
more, the paradise of pure democracy
– where no one would complain of these
liberty, equality, property, fraternity – implies a higher level of realization of democracy, which
also implies
the full use of the terroristic
machine of the democratic state with
its various
forms. For that, for example, there
is no organic change between the
liberal and the fascist form of the state,
but only a process of purification of the state
in its tendency to reach the inaccessible
democracy.”
5.1.11 The critique of this
point can be found in the remark to the 5.1.15 point.
5.1.13 When the bourgeoisie
achieves the political dominance in
the bourgeois revolution, the masses of the proletariat fight often yet on the far-left
of the bourgeoisie. The process in
which the elements of the
proletariat rupture with the bourgeoisie
can also be seen
in the disintegration of the
bourgeois parliament’s radical fraction. (See, for example, how the
communist movement around Babeuf came into contradiction with the forces of bourgeois
revolution. “Only the rich experiences
which he gained during the French revolution – and, above all, the experiences of the Jacobin dictatorship
– made it possible
for Babeuf to make the next decisive step
on the way of the forming of his
revolutionary-communistic
world-view. But communism – contrary
to the statements of Albert Mathiez – wasn’t merely an “external façade” for Babeuf before the revolution, because
already in this period, the plans of the fundamental transformation
of the society stood in the centre of his
thoughts.” (V. Dalin))
But in the process of rupture and becoming communist, the proletarian elements
recognized not only that they cannot make common cause
with the party of the radical bourgeoisie,
but also that they must reject its
system
of institutions
– democratic parliament –, too. Hence, the proletariat can never use neither democracy, nor the parliament. The social-democratic and Bolshevik
visions
about their temporal usefulness must be swept
away. When Camatte wrote his
text, he hadn’t yet finished with
these visions totally, hence the tacticist political schemes of Lenin can be found in the essay.
5.1.15 The proletariat cannot enter into the state,
it can only destroy it. The communist revolution does
not create a new system of institutions – it creates
the world human community. Because
of this, the dictatorship of the proletariat doesn’t
mean a new (even transitional) state power. If the proletariat tries to seize
the state power – whatever be the meaning of this
–, in the reality, it becomes an
enemy of communism. The practice of
bolshevism
has shown
the counter-revolutionary nature of the flirting with the state power.
5.1.17 What is called
here ‘middle class’ by Camatte, is the sum
of those groups
which operate the extensive social-economic functions
of that state which is present
in the here examined phase of
capitalism. In the reality, these do not constitute
a class,
but they are a part of capital’s
management apparatus. Camatte says about the extension
of the state’s
social functions, that it takes
on a tinge of communism. This is a
totally false, social-democratic interpretation of communism, which points
towards Djilas…
5.1.19 It is false when Camatte calls the dictatorship
of the proletariat “an ideal democracy”. He borrows
the false scheme
which was outlined by Marx in “The
Critique of the Gotha Programme”.
According to this, by the generalization the proletarian condition to the whole of society, on the “first
stage of communist society”,
the “law of inequality” dominates –
because of the differences in individual abilities
and capacities –, and – after the
abolition of the division of labour –, when “labor has
become not only a means of life but
life's prime want… only then then can the narrow horizon of bourgeois right be crossed in its
entirety and society inscribe on its
banners: From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs!”
But the dictatorship of the
proletariat – as Camatte
correctly says
– is the destruction
of democracy. And this means the immediate abolition of all bourgeois rights
– so, communism
has no different phases –,
hence the unified human activity for the satisfaction of human needs
arises
at the same time as the communist
world community. Moreover, such a justification of the citate
from the Communist Manifesto (with which we also
absolutely disagree)
supports
the survival of that false conception in the movement, against which the whole writing is
directed. This dogmatism, this
unacceptable uncritical Marx-apology leads
to the fact that some movement
militants are unable to go beyond
the false theses of Marx from 1848, and they conserve the contemporary weaknesses of
the movement.
But the community from which the workers is isolated is
a community of quite different reality and scope
than the political community. The community from which his
own labor separates
him is life
itself, physical
and spiritual life, human morality,
human activity, human enjoyment, human nature. Human nature is
the true community of men. Just as the
disasterous isolation from this
nature is disproportionately
more far-reaching, unbearable, terrible and contradictory than the isolation from the political community, so too the transcending
of this isolation
and even a partial reaction, a rebellion
against it, is
so much greater, just as the
man is
greater than the citizen and human life than political life.
Marx: Critical Notes on the Article: "The King
of Prussia
and Social Reform. By a Prussian"