Notes on democracy - Against Sleep and Nightmare

Communist critique of the idea of "democracy" as having any sort of real level of control over one's circumstances.

Submitted by Steven. on December 15, 2009

Democratic ideology essentially contains two sort of the illusions:

  1. The idea that under all circumstance the morally superior way of making decisions is having some sort of electoral participation by the majority.
  2. The idea that the method of decision making is what distinguishes different sort of social system.

These illusions have many forms and are interrelated. Mainstream American democratic rhetoric justifies political decisions by the use of both elections and polls. It is "very democratic" in the sense that the passive choices of the majority can change the form that the American repression and exploitation take.

Worker's self-management is a more obscure form of this illusion which claims that the changes in the way a factories' decisions are made will change the form that an entire society will take. It's basic position is summarized in the sticker that calls for workers to "fire" their bosses, and apparently continue production in the same old way.

It is important for revolutionaries to oppose both versions of democratic ideology. On one hand, after a revolution there certainly won't be any reason to fixate on the process of reaching each decision. For example, one person could be assigned to decide a day's delivery schedule in a communal warehouse without oppressing the other workers – who might prefer to spend their time walking on the beach. This dispatcher would have no coercive power over the other participants in the warehouse and deciding the schedule would not give her power that she could accumulate and exchanged for other things. For their own enjoyment, the worker might on the other hand want to collectively decide the menu of a communal kitchen even it was a less efficient use of time.

On the other hand, it's important to realize that no scheme for managing society will by itself create a new society. Highly democratic, highly authoritarian and mixed schemes are now used to administer capitalism. The basic quality of this capitalism that the average person has little or no control of their daily mode of living. Wage labor dominates society. You must exchange your life to buy back your survival. Whether the average person under capitalism might somehow be able to make a large number of decisions about which records they buy, which inmates serve long sentences, what the color the street lights are, etc. is irrelevant.

The community that escapes capitalism will involve people effectively controlling their process of living. Thus the individual and collective refusal of work, commodity production, exploitation etc. This certainly will require a large amount of collective decision making and a large amount of individual decision making. The transformation cannot be reduced to a set way of making decisions or a fixed plan of action.

The different modes of living are easier to describe using Marxian terminology sometimes because it speaks in terms of social processes rather than atomized individual actions. The economy is both a way people make decisions and a way people act. You can only see the real conditions of society by looking at the conditions of daily life – how a society's mode of existence reproduces itself. This is summarized fairly well using the Marxian terms of political economy, spectacle, commodity etc.

All forms of democratic ideology appeal to a model of human behavior that implies each person is wholly separate social agent that only affects others in fixed, definable ways. This is the language of "common sense" in a world where people's senses are controlled by capitalism. It defends the right, for example, for a man to shout cat-calls at a woman who has previously been raped because that man's actions are simply "free speech" not connected to any social action.

Communist positions see a social web which is not reducible to a fixed number to definable relations. Communists do not say that without capitalism we can guarantee that humans will create a human community. It says with capitalism, humans cannot create a human community. It sees that any movement for a human community will oppose capitalist social order and social relationships all along the way. The motivating force will not come with a communist blueprint but from the process of living of proletarians creating a new social relation.

Text taken from www.prole.info

Comments

SometimeTory

12 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by SometimeTory on November 4, 2012

Hi,

You used to know me as SometimeTory on some long-forgotten board.

We (UK) are currently being asked to elect our Police Chiefs, and it struck me that anarchists would think that funny, so I remembered ASAN

Hope all is going to plan! ;)

J

Spikymike

12 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Spikymike on November 4, 2012

A useful, if limited, short addition to the communist critique of the fetishising of democracy and outdated, at best, anarchist and socialist analysis which has saught to define communism as a sequentual extension of, or amalgamation of, democracy in it's political, economic and social forms.
This is relevant to other discussions threads criticising the promotion of models such as 'Parecon' and 'Inclusive Democracy' as well as earlier concepts of 'workers sel-management' promoted by some anarcho-syndicalists and libertarian socialists such as Castoriadis.

bastarx

12 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by bastarx on November 4, 2012

Many years ago I made a pamphlet with this text, a Wildcat one and a rather poorly written introduction:

http://libcom.org/library/treasons-communism-against-democracy-pamphlet

A more recent and longer critique of democracy is Dauve's "A Contribution to the Critique of Political Autonomy":

http://libcom.org/library/a-contribution-critique-political-autonomy-gilles-dauve-2008