A left-communist critique of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and its tendency towards reformism. Written by a group of left-communists coming out of Tucson, Arizona called The Sonoran Internationalists. They specifically reference local politics and target the local DSA chapter for critique in the text.
Intro
The following is our critique of both the Democratic Party of the United States; and more specifically the Democratic Socialists of America within them. We have prefaced this critique with (in order) a reminder of what socialists should be organizing for, the inherent flaws of reformist policy (with historical and current examples), and a defense of the need for an independent communist movement against ideas such as leftist infighting (with historical proof).
We feel it important to note that the critiques expressed here are aimed at the organizations themselves as well as the role that they actually play in the struggle between the bourgeois and the proletariat, not at the individual members of these organizations (many of whom we have personal connections with and believe are true socialists that are merely misguided in their efforts). We write this critique because we understand historically that when the proletariat allows the Communist movement to be funneled into such compromised reformist cul-de-sac; it benefits only the repression of the masses and the furtherance of the aims and existence of capital.
If you are a part of these reformist organizations or sympathetic to them, we ask only that as leftists you listen to what we have to say with an open mind and consider if the actions you take (or might potentially take) inside of them are truly productive to the movement, if they are ultimately fruitless, or if they are even harmful.
The Goal of Communist Organizing is to be Prepared for Revolution
The primary objective of the Communist movement, and therefore The Sonoran Internationalists, is to further the cause of the international proletarian revolution. This is a fact that, consciously or not, is widely betrayed by various groups in the “left.” We seek to build a regional organization that will one day become a part of an Internationalist Party of the Proletariat that can be capable of fully supporting and advising the entirety of the working class. To that end, we seek to build a precursor organization, a “Tucson Communist Party” if you will. We recognize that the revolution is the only pathway that will lead all life on earth away from the inevitable consequences of the furtherance of Capitalism. Furthermore, we recognize that the various groups portraying their non Communist ideals as such are actively harmful to the revolution.
Reformism Sustains Capitalism and Kills Proletarians
It should be obvious by now that the Democratic Party is a stalwart defender of the status quo. Whatever infographics and catchy slogans they employ, they are the party of continuing the system of global imperialism, genocide, ecocide, and class domination. They are a party of millionaire representatives funded by billionaires. It is a capitalist party that advocates passively for minor reforms. Rather than a possible avenue for achieving an anti-capitalist future, the Democratic party is just one of many ways the capitalist class divides and distracts workers away from any class politics and towards movements for useless reforms.
Their role is to convince the naive and inexperienced that their hardships aren’t a result of a global system of exploitation, but of a particularly bad group of people that they also don’t like. Every time a proletarian sees their healthcare taken, their rights repealed, their home foreclosed on, the Dems are there appealing to the victim. Yet as soon as they hold a majority, their fiery rhetoric disappears, instead talking about sensibilities and moderation. This isn’t a result of particular politicians or of the Party being temporarily misguided; it is a repeated pattern that helps reveal their ultimate motivations of maintaining class domination. This is proven again every time a truly conscious independent movement has ever organized in this country. They have always faced the same reaction from the Democrats: a crackdown on the radicals with the full force of the state, and then absorption and pacification of the moderates.
History is full of examples of social movements that attempted to reform their society for the better and did so through means both within and without the system. Through analysis of these movements as well as the material conditions of capitalism that surrounded them, we can confidently assert that reformism will not lead to any progressive outcomes in our current situation of the 21st century’s capitalist crisis. It should be clear to anyone willing to logically analyze the Capitalist system that it cannot be reformed, it cannot be tamed, it is working as it always has and will always continue to.
We understand that in this case, evidence is needed to back up these arguments, so we will provide examples both historic and current.
Historical Example: German Revolution
In the period before the First World War the ideology of social democracy was widely popular across Europe. The Social Democrats believed that the Communist revolution and transformation of society could be achieved through legal and parliamentary methods. They came to believe that the path to socialism was through the infiltration of the capitalist state and subverting it to their own ideas. This brought them popular success as well as the opportunity to acquire property of their own. The Social Democratic Party of Germany was particularly successful in this endeavor, becoming the largest political party in Germany and acquiring all the privileges that accompanied this.
There were also those who disagreed entirely with this line of reasoning. What we can generally call the “revolutionary Communist left” of Europe had a contingent in every Socialist Party in Europe, with some breaking free from their larger reformist party (such as the Bolsheviks in Russia) or remaining united for the sake of leftist unity (such as in Germany). Instead of social democracy, they argued, as the original scientific socialists did, that an international working class revolution was the only path to the abolition of class domination. In 1907 a proposal from the Revolutionary left members of the 2nd International (made up of the Socialist Organizations of Europe) passed, which called all Socialists to use their economic and political power to oppose war, and should it break out to turn that imperialist war into a revolutionary movement to bring about “the abolition of capitalist class rule”. The SPD as a member of the 2nd International also adopted this as official party policy. This policy was re-affirmed in 1912, and even as late as July 1914.
Yet because the SPD had chosen the path of reform and infiltration of the bourgeois, and as a result saw the interests of their leadership now become those of the left wing of Capital in the country, this policy of anti-war internationalism could go no further than rhetoric.
When the great imperialist war everyone had anticipated was finally upon them in 1914 the SPD had the opportunity to oppose the budget for the German Government as they had done many times before. Instead they proclaimed their loyalty to the German Empire and voted to give the State the funding necessary to wage the war. This became known as “The Great Betrayal” as the revolutionary communists of Europe saw with horror as their respective Social Democratic parties followed the SPDs example in supporting their national bourgeois and their efforts of imperialist war.
But why did the leadership of the SPD make this decision? Was it because they were evil and engaged in a grand conspiracy to warp the Communist SPD into a party of the bourgeois? No. It was in fact because under the lens of reformism, betraying the class struggle and the proletariat was the only possible course of action to preserve their party, their individual positions, and the progress they had made through state reforms. If indeed socialism was possible through the reform of the bourgeois state; better to go along with the imperialist war so that the process of reform could continue afterwards than to throw everything away. Under such a lens in which the state is the key factor in achieving socialism; the defense of the nation against the more backwards and less socialist nation of Russia was even honorable.
This is how in a few short years the socialists of Europe went from being resolute in their stance against imperialist wars that would lead to the mass slaughter of working class people for nothing more than bourgeois power struggles, to instead being in full support of this very kind of conflict. In the years to come over 17 million people would die. It was largely because of the mass poverty, famine, and loss of life all resulting from this, that class tensions would again reach a boiling point after years of pointless and brutal war.
This led to a spontaneous revolution within the German military and eventually the larger working class in 1918, now known as the Spartacist revolution. Caught in the middle of this, the leadership of the SPD was terrified as the workers and soldiers were not participating in their form of non-violent, legal, civil, electoralist politics and instead were seizing all political and economic power themselves. After all, the property that the revolutionaries began to occupy was not just owned by the aristocracy, but also by the wealthy and privileged SPD leadership.
As a result of this, the SPD chose to publicly support the movement while actually plotting its downfall in secret.
After the initial successes of the revolution, the people of Germany found themselves in a dual power situation in which two groups, the Liberals (SPD) and the revolutionaries, now competed for legitimacy. To resolve this, a vote was to be held amongst the German Left to decide the country’s new system. The choices consisted of either formalizing the spontaneous workers council system inspired by the Russian soviets, which was advocated by the radical left, or a parliamentary republic, which was advocated by the SPD and moderates.
During these tenuous months, the SPD ordered their most loyal members to infiltrate the councils one by one and bring them back from the ledge of revolutionary consciousness and action. Because of the immense and longstanding popularity of the SPD, the newly conscious workers slowly began to support the ideas of these infiltrators who represented a party they had known for so long, rather than continuing to participate in the newly formed revolutionary organizations.
One of the most pivotal moments in this stage of the counterrevolution occurred on December 19th, 1918, during the National Congress of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Councils. Where the councils voted against formalizing their own power with a permanent council system as the basis for a new constitution, handing over their newly seized power to the SPD dominated provisional government. With this, the provisional government created a plan to hold nationwide elections for a constituent national assembly. Effectively turning a spontaneous mass movement against the imperialist war and indeed all of Capitalism, and centralizing, co-opting, and largely pacifying it back into the fold of the left wing of capital.
When only the most dedicated revolutionaries remained willing to stand in the way of the bourgeois government, the SPD gave full support to the proto-fascist Freikorps (who would eventually become the militias of the Nazi movement) and allowed the wholesale slaughter of the remaining Communist revolutionaries. This would lead directly to the eventual overthrow of their own government by the fascists, ultimately digging the graves of not only the Communists, but also their future selves.
Historical Example: Chile 1970-1973
A second and more recent example of the way capital utilizes reformist policy to curb, weaken, and ultimately crush actual working class struggle is the reign of Salvador Allende’s “Popular Unity” (UP) coalition; which similarly to many modern reformist movements, branded itself as a coalition of everyone from revolutionary Communists to social democrats before selling out the workers and allowing for fascist reaction to take over the country.
Its ascension occurred primarily as a result of the rising crisis of capital, as well as bourgeois fears over the increasing militancy of the working class (who had begun independently organizing), with the bourgeois seeing nationalization of key industries as well as other welfarist policies as necessary evils to stabilize the system (The right wing parties which held the parliamentary majority even supported the nationalization of the mines). Notably, none of these reforms put production or exchange into the hands of actual proletarians; instead transferring them from individual bourgeois firms to the bourgeois state.
While these policies did increase the rate of profit and stabilize the economic and social situation (which was their primary purpose); when another crisis came (as they always do) and the rate of profit once again fell, both the bourgeois and the proletariat came into conflict with the reformist policies of the UP. Workers had at this point been autonomously seizing the means of production for themselves; from the scale of single factories, all the way to entirely worker controlled districts called cordones. The supposedly socialist state’s response to these measures (which they were previously forced to acquiesce to by a stronger more independent working class) was to accuse the workers of being members of the “labor aristocracy” and to order the ending of strikes, return of the means of production to the bourgeois, and the disarmament of the workers.
Were the working class movement more united under a non-reformist banner; it is likely that they would have been able to resist these measures. Unfortunately; years of propaganda and union support for the reformist UP meant that what resistance there was to these crackdowns was isolated and disorganized. Despite this, several local groups managed to keep their control of the means of production in spite of the best efforts of the democratic socialists; much to the chagrin of capital.
When none of the conciliatory measures proved sufficient enough to the bourgeois, who no longer believed the social democrats could contain the revolutionary proletariat, they instead backed a military coup, which ousted the UP in favor of a fascist military dictatorship. Many of the aforementioned autonomous workers’ groups attempted to resist this coup just as they had the UP; but their disarmament and fracturing by the social democrats meant that any efforts were too little too late.
Short Review of the Fundamental Reasons Reform is Harmful
In short, reformism inherently prevents the working class from building its own independent movement to overthrow capitalism, thus allowing for the consolidation of power by the bourgeois and further exploitation of the proletariat. Given that the goal of reform (known by its proponents or not) is the prolongation or improvement of Capitalism, it should be clear to communists that the reformist organizations of capital are not allies in our struggle to establish Communism, but in fact are some of our most insidious opponents.
Despite this fact, there often exists the tendency of the liberals to proclaim that they are on the same side as the Communists. That in the face of Fascism’s rise (which they directly cause), it is “dogmatism” or more commonly today “leftist infighting” to defend the independence of the Communist movement. That we should put our programs and goals aside for the defense of the current or past form of Capitalism from its increasingly worse manifestations. There are also those self described Communists who have adopted this parasitic brain worm of an idea as their own. This is to us the primary point of importance for this whole conversation, as the various “Communist” organizations of Tucson, as well as the potentially truly Communist members within them, have been deluded into forming an alliance with the bourgeoisie, and have as such become nothing more than appendages of the entire capitalist machine.
The Bolsheviks, Dogmatic Leftist Infighters
There are numerous examples of Communists collaborating with reformists and subsequently being totally defeated. As important as these examples are for revolutionary education, it is just as necessary to discuss a situation where a movement instead chose to pursue “leftist infighting” and as a result succeeded in their ultimate goals. We are speaking of course, about the Bolsheviks of the Russian Empire.
The Russian Empire was a powerful force of reactionary and absolute monarchist power for centuries, for reasons that are more complex than can be done justice here. What is important for this work is that the nature of the Russian state was heavily reliant on the suppression of all subversive political action. That is to say, anyone who argued against absolutist monarchy, from liberals to socialists. This is how the Tsarist regime maintained its power. The working class was also relatively small in proportion to the total population, as Russian Capitalism was still fairly new and underdeveloped, with only 6.5% of the total population of the Empire being working class and the vast majority of the population being peasants. These realities and the disagreements in policy that would result from them would prove to cause some of the largest divides between all those within the Russian left.
Within the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, the predominant belief was that Communism simply was not possible in Russia because it was a majority peasant country. These members instead believed that the educated bourgeois of Russia would have to take power and install liberal democracy until the majority of Russians were converted from peasants to the industrial working class. They were known as the Mensheviks and they wanted a semi-legal bourgeois revolution that would take the existing but very weak Russian Parliament and convert it into a strong bourgeois democracy like in Western Europe.
But there were also those in the party who had analyzed the history of class struggle within the Empire (especially the Russian revolution of 1905 where Soviets/workers councils were invented) and concluded that the only system that Communists should be advocating for was a Communist one. Rather than waiting for the bourgeois to build industry through capitalism, the working class could achieve this itself. After all in 1905 the capitalists and professors were not the ones to resist the monarchy; it was the small yet powerful working class. They could not compromise on the necessity for the working class to form its own independent organizations and to use them to achieve Communism; there was simply no other way.
These factions agreed on many things, that the monarchist Russian Empire had to be abolished, that religious authority was a tool of state repression, and that the working class would eventually take all power for itself and abolish all of class society. Even still, this disagreement over the nature of the future revolution was enough for those who wanted illegal and non-reformist working class revolution (the Bolsheviks) to split from the larger party. The Mensheviks aspired to be like the German SPD, organized, electorally successful, and able to achieve reforms from their government. But the crackdowns from the Russian state made any reformist activism much more dangerous and less effective than it was in Western Europe. Unions had no leverage when there were no laws guaranteeing them, and election laws would be rewritten to ensure only conservative parties had power in the Empire’s Parliament. This would help ensure illegal and revolutionary tactics remained relevant as the risks for advocating revolution were similar to those of advocating for liberal democracy. The Bolsheviks could have decided that because of this dire situation, it was best to maintain unity, as their comrades in the SPD were doing, but instead they made the conscious decision that it was their duty to advocate uncompromisingly for Communist values. If it would cost them allies in the reformist left to stand against the war, for workers councils, and for power to be immediately held by workers rather than capitalists, then so be it.
From both exile and the underground, the Bolsheviks would ceaselessly argue for years the points of the larger Revolutionary Communist Left. They were among the first and most consistent members of the Second International to argue for working class revolution during any future imperialist war. They were also the most passionate advocates of the idea that the only way to achieve Communism was for the working class to form independent workers councils, and that under absolutely no circumstances could independent working class power be undermined.
In February of 1917 when the people of Russia rose in revolution against the Tsarist monarchy, the Bolsheviks applauded this. During this time, the workers again formed independent Soviets (councils) where affairs would be decided democratically. Meanwhile, the Russian Parliament would be strengthened, and it was made up of the liberal parties, including a large section of Mensheviks. The parliament formed a separate competing power structure from the Soviets and took on the affairs of the old Russian state, including the continuation of the unpopular imperialist war. Meanwhile, the Bolsheviks had emerged from exile and the illegal underground to continue to argue as they always had, that the workers’ councils should be the only organizations to hold power. As the months went on, the Parliament was unable to crush the workers councils, thanks to their popularity and support from the organized and militant Bolsheviks. The longstanding reputation of the Bolsheviks for absolute support of the working class and its councils would continue to strengthen the bond between the party and the larger class.
So in November of that year, when the Liberal Parliament had proven itself politically bankrupt by continuing the imperialist war and doing little to stop the famines within the Empire, the people were again ready to revolt. With the Soviets continuing to operate for months at this point, and with a large group of Communist revolutionaries all this time encouraging the working class to take power for itself and establish a new system, the working class finally overthrew the Russian Parliament and proclaimed the slogan of the Bolsheviks for themselves “All Power to the Soviets!”. With this, the Russian working class had established the most successful Communist revolution in history.
The Democratic Socialists of America (Liberalism)
Although we have already talked about the Democrats, we feel it important to repeat ourselves while specifically naming the Democratic Socialists of America. They represent to us the most clearly Capitalist party that the vulgar Communist movement has allowed directly into its big tent coalition of class collaboration.
On the Tucson DSA’s website, they proclaim that “A spectre is haunting the Sonoran Desert.” Certainly, they would not have us believe that this spectre is that of reformist advocacy for the state ownership of Capital. One which asks the proletariat to expend its effort into fighting for various reforms that the Capitalist system ultimately sees as a useful distraction rather than any real threat. Their spectre is the rebuilding of the Capitalist Democratic party into an organization that workers will once again believe in.
The DSA is of course not a monolith, as the members of its various caucuses are so eager to explain; but a broad coalition of everyone from social democrats to Anarchists and Communists. What must be understood; however, is that regardless of the personal beliefs of any member, their participation in the DSA necessarily means that they all ultimately collaborate in the slaughter of the class struggle.
The Right Wing of the DSA (Future Renegades)
This is, in much the same way as the Democratic Party proper, most evident in the right wing of the DSA, which makes up the entirety of their officially elected members (and not by coincidence, which will be elaborated on later). Their program of welfare, state ownership, and imperialism (through unequal exchange, rather than the direct warfare of the right) is, (hopefully) quite obviously, not in the best interests of the working class or the process of superseding Capitalism. Similar to Chile’s UP, the right wing of the DSA has also supported the disarmament of the proletariat via gun control bills. As well as a number of other measures which seek only to parasitically use the real pressure created by the class struggle before pacifying class antagonisms and allowing for the slaughter of proletarians by the state.
The signs of their upcoming betrayal of the proletariat and the class struggle are already apparent. Their elected officials; even when the government has not yet fully done away with its own propagandistic notions of democracy as it always does during the imperialist war, bow down to the warmongering imperialism that capital demands to satiate its need for growth in both Palestine and Ukraine. It doesn’t take much reasoning to envision what course of action they will take under the third imperialist war, as they already engage in the demonization of the more repressive capitalist countries around the globe in the name of defense of our more progressive capitalist utopia, just as the SPD did.
We must however, give them credit in that they have also paid lip service to police defunding, the ending of the most atrocious results of Capitalist imperialism (such as the Palestinian genocide), and the decriminalization of certain forms of unionist labor activism; although curiously enough, these principals seem to last only until an individual is actually elected to public office. This can be seen in candidates elected to real positions of state power such as AOC and Bernie Sanders, who despite their previous messaging, eventually became little more than slightly left democrats due to the real courses of actions that the bourgeois government forced them to take. This of course happened not just because those elected officials were bad guys, but because of the essential flaws of parliamentary strategy. By their very nature, successful attempts to create change under capitalism can only be capitalistic, and as a result can only be undertaken by capitalist entities.
This is precisely the reason aforementioned that the rightmost wing of the DSA is the only faction that has seen any sort of parliamentary success. Via any faction’s introduction into the committee of the affairs of the whole bourgeois (also known as the state) its role will necessarily shift to exercise the role of their office, class domination. Certainly the further left factions may eventually see parliamentary success as the independent class movement grows, (as the bourgeois system may see it as necessary to contain and extinguish the class struggle on their own terrain), yet by the left wing of the DSA’s very participation in the system; they will eventually transform into the right wing of the DSA that they sought to replace.
This leads to another of the key points that we wish to get across to the various members of the reformist left. That their obsession with what they perceive as real change and the chasing of immediate results rather than sticking to any real revolutionary program (also known as opportunism) will effectively only lead to a reconstitution of the capitalist system. We believe that these strategies occur because of a failure to recognize two specific facts. First, that Capitalism by its very nature trends towards crisis and as such can not be improved via reform of itself. That the progressive era of capitalism occurred not because progressives were better organized but because progressivism was what best suited the needs of capital. Secondly, that the work of educating and preparing the working class for the revolution is in and of itself active work, not merely theoretical, in other words “armchair leftism.” We recommend Amadeo Bordiga’s “Activism” as a more thorough explanation of this point, but to sum it up here: In the party, which is the determinant factor in the transformation of the bourgeois crisis into a revolutionary struggle, consciousness precedes action. For when the entirety of the capitalist machine is dedicated to the disorientation and obfuscation of the revolutionary means and aims of communism, is the defense of its doctrine and program a merely theoretical task?
Locally, we can see this play out with the DSA’s focus on the public power campaign, which seeks to have the city of Tucson buy TEP, the local electric utility, from its current private owner Fortis. For “democratic socialists” this is a shockingly non socialist policy, unless of course your definition of socialism is “when the government does stuff.” Even the right wing Republican party under Trump was able to secure a large share of a private company, Intel, without so much as paying the bourgeois owners. Perhaps if the DSA truly wishes to pursue these state capitalist measures they would do well to ally with the conservatives similarly to how the SPD did in 1918. This would not even truly require a change in their messaging; which constantly focuses not on the exploitation of the profit motive itself, but rather on the fact that Fortis is run by a dirty foreign conglomerate (globalism).
Assuming the DSA is able to get public power passed, we must look at what it would actually achieve and who it ultimately benefits. Being that TEP is a natural monopoly, the trust busting measures taken towards the railroads that the American bourgeois state implemented in the late 19th century serve as a good example. Touted often by state capitalists as an example of the government working for the good of the people rather than the big businesses; it was in reality a tactically necessary concession given to ease the class tensions of the rail workers in the country, as well as to the industrial and petite bourgeois of the cities who felt that the surplus value of their production was being unfairly stolen from their workers and given to the railroad owners, rather than stolen from their workers and given to them. It is not unreasonable therefore to assume a similar course of events following the state takeover of TEP. Certainly lowered electricity costs would be greatly appreciated by the corporations like Amazon that wish to build electricity and water intensive data centers for example.
We can imagine that in response, the supporters of public power will likely be bringing up two key responses. Firstly, that while yes it would certainly support capital; it would also have a real impact on the quality of life for the proletariat in Tucson. Our response is to what degree and for what amount of time? As a commodity under the profit motive, labor will over time fall in value to that of its cost of reproduction. As such, any lowering in the cost of living in one area will lead only to the increased cost of living in another by another sector of the bourgeois, or a lowering of real wages. It is for example very easy to imagine that a lowering in cost of electricity would lead to an increase in rent as demand to live in the city increases, and while any measure by which the cost of living is increased can be resisted; all of them cannot.
The second retort we can imagine in response to this is that state capitalism is the natural highest stage of capitalism. This was after all a point espoused by Engels in “Socialism: Utopian and Scientific.” From there, the reasoning goes that for as long as the bourgeois system has any methods with which to retreat, revolution will not and cannot occur. While we do appreciate this dialectical materialist understanding of capitalism, the implication that it is the job of socialists to work towards the furtherance of capital towards its highest stage has been proven fundamentally wrong by the history of class struggle. This is a lesson we feel is best taught by the history of the European socialist revolutions of the 1910s, in which the German Social Democracy (which took this approach of defending higher stage capitalism until it was sufficiently developed) ultimately succumbed to the capitalist machine, and the Bolsheviks; who occupied a country of far more regressive capitalism succeeded (as was explained prior).
This idea also represents a misunderstanding of the societal factors that cause such reforms to take place. As briefly mentioned earlier in the section on Chile, such measures are taken by the bourgeois government not due to the pressures of social democrats themselves as it is often attributed post hoc by the capitalist media machine, but as a response to pressure from independent proletarian class antagonism and struggle. And only in order to placate the masses and curtail the real movement to abolish the present state of things. When this occurs, we will not oppose it, we will oppose only the notion that it represents any sort of socialist or pro worker shift in the capitalist system.
However, we must, as communists, ask why a supposedly socialist organization is arguing directly for the measures that have historically been employed solely to crush socialist movements; if for any reason other than the reality that they are indeed not socialist.
The Left Wing of The DSA (Future Martyrs)
This naturally leads us to the question of the left wing of DSA, which to us means solely the factions of the party that participate only to attempt to shift the organization away from reformist policy and towards a more revolutionary outlook. (As opposed to the factions whose conception of radicalism is the forming of a new bourgeois electoral party rather than the usage of the existing bourgeois electoral party, and who to us represent only a more naive version of the right wing of the DSA).
This faction often fashions itself similarly to the likes of the Spartacists, whose resistance within the structure of the SPD has been immortalized as one of the great examples of communist martyrdom. Honorable and true as their communist doctrine may have been, however, we must remember that the point of communist organizing is not to become martyrs, but to succeed in the organization of the working class for the overthrow of capitalism.
It was of course their participation in the reformist party of the SPD that led to the Spartacist’s ultimate demise. Had the seriously revolutionary aspects of the SPD broken away from its reformist faction decades prior, and pursued a platform of leftist infighting similar to the bolsheviks (rather than of unity between the class struggle and the class traitors), the German revolution may have very well turned out quite differently.
“When the time came for the armed insurrection against capitalism, however, it was seen that the only party to engage in that insurrection [The Bolsheviks] was the party that had the least experience “working among the masses” [in the left DSA’s terminology, base building] during the years of preparation, the one that more than any other had worked to preserve Marxist theory. It was then seen that those who possessed a solid theoretical training marched against the class enemy, while those who had a “glorious” patrimony of struggles shamefully choked on their own words and went over to the side of the enemy.”
- Amadeo Bordiga, Activism
We then ask the left wing of the DSA; when will the time come for you to break from the reformist section of your party? History shows to those willing to analyze it that by the time the reformists openly betray the revolutionaries, and the revolutionary working class has not yet established an independent movement, it is already too late. If it is your wish to be killed by whatever reactionary militia the democrats and republicans decide to unleash when that time comes, we can do nothing to stop you.
Conclusion
As a brief summary, reformism is a capitalistic policy that ensures the deaths of proletarians and the furtherance of capitalism. It exists primarily to destroy the class struggle and those that fight for it. There are examples historic and current that show this truth, and we have no indication that anything different will occur if it is attempted today.
In 1914, Lenin wrote the following in response to a reformist paper asking for unity among the left:
“This, however, is not unity, but a flouting of unity, a flouting of the will of the workers. This is not what the Marxist workers mean by unity. There can be no unity, federal or other, with liberal-labour politicians, with disruptors of the working-class movement, with those who defy the will of the majority. There can and must be unity among all consistent Marxists, among all those who stand for the entire Marxist body and for the uncurtailed slogans, independently of the liquidators and apart from them. Unity is a great thing and a great slogan. But what the workers’ cause needs is the unity of Marxists, not unity between Marxists, and opponents and distorters of Marxism. And we must ask everyone who talks about unity: unity with whom? With the liquidators? If so, we have nothing to do with each other.”
- Vladimir Lenin, Unity
We say all of this not because we hate you, but because we love you. We have spent years side by side with you and seen our organizations, our movements, and our comrades go down the path that leads inevitably to disaster. History shows that the path of entryism and reformism leads only to one choice for those that engage in the system of capital: turn your backs on the proletariat and the class struggle, or be killed. We believe that it is only someone that does not love you that pats you on the back so that you may continue on the wrong road.
If you should accuse us of leftist infighting; we do not deny it, for it is the ruthless criticism of all that exists that leads to the destruction of the current order. If, however, you should accuse us of being your enemies for critiquing you, and you truly are communist; we do deny that.
We understand how hard it can be to accept that all the work you’ve done to try to make the world a better place was misguided, as we too spent the better part of our lives working towards the same reformist dead ends. We do not ask that you immediately cut all ties with the reformist left so that you may join us, only that you seriously consider what we have said and make an effort to consider what part in the class struggle you truly wish to play.
If you want to get involved with us or have questions or critiques of your own, you can reach us Here.
And remember…
Socialism or Barbarism, Communism or Extinction – There is no third way!
Further reading/resources
Crisis
Behind the Crisis: Marx’s Dialectic of Value and Knowledge, Guglielmo Carchedi
Capitalism’s Economic Foundations (Part I)
And of course: Capital, Karl Marx
Bolshevik Revolution
Russia: Revolution and Counter-Revolution, 1905-1924 – A View from the Communist Left
Chile under Allende
Strange defeat: The Chilean revolution, 1973 – Pointblank!
Popular Unity vs. Class War
Germany in 1918
The German Revolution of 1918: How it All Began
The German Revolution of 1918: Revolutionary November
The Violent End of the German Revolution
Activism and The Work of Education
Activism – Amadeo Bordiga
Theses on Feuerbach, Karl Marx
Comments
Another waste of time…
Another waste of time article by the so called “ultra-left.” Check out the passages on the Bolsheviks; trying so hard to present them as genuine, infallible communists. So libcom.org needs to be a space for articles directed at the left wing of the DSA to tell them ‘reformism’ bad?
The communist left is really the left wing of social democracy, a broad tradition which includes Bolsheviks and democratic socialists further right. None of these elements provide the alternative people are looking for when they visit libcom.org. Yet it seems they are providing the most recent content on this site.
Agent of the International…
I tend to post articles which I find interesting, even if I don't necessarily agree with everything that is contained within them. It's more for the sake of archiving texts from groups or publications which might have a ephemeral presence online for a variety of reasons.
Libcom has texts with everyone ranging from Bordigist left-communists to anarchists so I think a perspective like this fits fine with that. In case one wants to know my personal persuasion, I am an ancom but I like to keep an eye on the Marxist left because I think their texts can be quite insightful even if I don't agree with them on everything. I would post more anarchist texts but there is already The Anarchist Library and I'm not sure how cross-posting articles that are already present there is taken on this site. Maybe I should do so anyway.
Agent of the International…
I tend to post articles which I find interesting, even if I don't necessarily agree with everything that is contained within them. It's more for the sake of archiving texts from groups or publications which might have a ephemeral presence online for a variety of reasons.
Libcom has texts with everyone ranging from Bordigist left-communists to anarchists so I think a perspective like this fits fine with that. In case one wants to know my personal persuasion, I am an ancom but I like to keep an eye on the Marxist left-wing or "ultra-left" because I think their texts can be quite insightful and interesting even if I don't agree with them on everything. I would post more anarchist texts but there is already The Anarchist Library and I'm not sure how cross-posting articles that are already present there is taken on this site. Maybe I should do so anyway.
I am not affiliated with the group that wrote this text. I simply posted it because I stumbled across it online and I thought it was appropriate to post here for archival purposes.
I would post more anarchist…
I wouldn’t worry about cross posting because libcom.org and the Anarchist Library are different websites. I don’t think both sites even have the same audience. Personally, I haven’t visited the Anarchist Library in a long time.
Even the aims are not exactly the same. Last time I checked, the Anarchist Library serves to host every kind of material whose author, whether an individual or group, bears the label “anarchist.” Most of those stuff clearly don’t belong on libcom.org. What belongs on libcom.org is any material that furthers the knowledge of the history or idea of libertarian socialism or communism, and if that stuff is on any other website, it should be put on here as well.
So from the Anarchist Library, we wouldn’t want stuff promoting primitivism, or mutualism, or individualism, or post left anarchy, and so on. But the different tendencies of anarchist socialism, particularly anarcho-syndicalism and anarcho-communism, would be a better fit than Bolshevik sympathizing leftcommers.
More primitivist,…
More primitivist, individualist and post left anarchy please blackrabbits123.
goff wrote: More primitivist…
lol