Slandering of the workers' movement will not be permitted

December 3, 2015, over 20 Guangzhou and Foshan labor activists were apprehended by police, launching a crackdown that has as of the latest updates put 4 activists under arrest and closed down several prominent labor organizations in the Pearl River Delta. This piece by labor activist 工弩 is one of the first critiques the limits of the labor movement response thus far to the crackdown and demands a more thoughtful, organized response by worker activists, beginning with the voicing of a clear labor movement position in the current fight.

Submitted by Anonymous on January 15, 2016

Translated by Solidarity with Chinese Workers from 不许抹黑工人运动!理直气壮捍卫尊严! by 工弩 on ilabour.net. For more on the December 3 crackdown and solidarity efforts, see “Solidarity with Chinese Workers”, and the Facebook page “Free Chinese labour activists now 馬上釋放中國勞權人士”.

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I don’t know how many of us still remember, exactly one year ago, when ten or more Henan construction workers were fighting for wage arrears and against the police’s random arrests. A worker mother defending herself was brutally killed by the police, who stamped on her hair and broke her neck by twisting her head. It wasn’t until half a month later that this event was exposed to the public, which shocked the entire nation. An appeal letter from labor activists collected 2000 signatures in one month, and rights-defense lawyers also stepped in. What’s worth noticing is these efforts neither won any justice in the courtroom nor won the support of mainstream public opinion. Instead, what ensued was the darkest “court hearing”, the increasingly large scale public smearing in public discourse from the Wumao Party 1 lapdogs between February and May this year, and a group of people turning the truth upside down (they even pulled out the “rights-defense” card to mobilize police nationwide to sign a petition demanding the release of the murdering cops). The female worker Zhou Xiuyun beaten to death by the police was slandered as a “shrew” who “assaulted the officers”! The violence of public opinion is even more brutal than the act of killing.

Yet only a year after the brutal killing of woman worker Zhou, another unprecedented repression and smearing of worker protest is gaining momentum in public opinion nationwide. Since December 3rd, more than 20 staff members and workers from labor NGOs in Guangdong province have been secretly taken away by the police. According to the latest news, five labor NGO staff (He Xiaobo, Zhu Xiaomei, Zeng Feiyang, Deng Xiaoming, Peng Jiayong) are now under criminal detention, and two others have lost all contact (Meng Han and Tang Jian, former labor NGO staff)2 . Under the “national condition” of constant tyrannical rule maintaining the capitalist sweatshop, in the last five or six years a labor movement has hatched among the millions of migrant workers clustered in Guangdong. Although the Guangdong workers’ movement is the only relatively organized workers’ movement in the country, it is still in its initial phases. The labor NGO’s that have been around for 10 plus years and were actually all along very cautious in playing the role of the Guangdong newborn labor movement’s frontline force, are now unexpectedly suffering the most severe repression in their history, repression that is for the first time threatening their basic right to exist.

But what is deeply worrying is that three out of four activists (Zhu, Zeng, Deng) are being charged on the suspicion of “inciting crowds to disrupt social order”, when all they have done in the last few years is to provide guidance to numerous collective actions by workers—from jewelry factory workers to hospital nurses and security guards, from university campus cleaners to shoe factory workers; they helped innumerable workers obtain collective bargaining and their rightful dues. Regardless of whether it was a strike, workers’ assembly, collective petition or any other kind of collective workers’ action, or whether they put in efforts to allow these actions to become organized, this clearly does not amount to “inciting crowds to disrupt social order”. The only purpose of this kind of criminal charge is to scare people by exaggerating, the most base and shameful form of smearing and slander! It is like the workers who showed their support have said, if the government has the guts, then let them try and arrest all the workers who go on strike in this country, and we’ll see if they can arrest everyone! No worker who has any fighting consciousness will stand for this kind of repression. No slandering of the workers’ movement will be permitted!

If the sinister tendency in the Shanxi February to May case of the cops’ murder of Zhou Xiuyun, the woman worker demanding her wage arrears, indicated the trampling upon of the legitimacy of individual labor rights defense; and the noxious attack on the Shenzhen Qingsheng factory collective labor rights defense in July suggested the vilification of the legitimacy of collective rights defense; then the suppression and smearing of organizations that have a long history of supporting workers’ since December 3rd indicates the authorities’ fundamental rejection and slandering of the workers movement, the beginning of a major political offensive. In other words, the real heavy defamation and repression are yet to come.

When dark clouds press down and a storm is imminent, what are we as a part of a nascent workers’ movement to do? What are the future prospects? Frankly speaking, we have no way of preventing painstaking conflict, even if we stay silent and never mention those comrades who have on so many occasions helped workers in struggle, we will still hardly avoid liquidations, arrests or imprisonment. We are in no way unfamiliar with the violence and repression against striking workers, the smearing and slandering. In other words, we cannot avoid some people running into greater trouble, and suffering sacrifices like being jailed. In order to resist repression, to resist the mean and shameless accusations thrown at workers collection actions, and to defend the most basic decencies of workers’ rights to collective action and organization, we (including the author of this text) must stay calm and mentally prepared.

But recognizing that sacrifices are unavoidable is different from saying we have to actively seek the risk of becoming martyrs. We mustn’t doggedly rush, be reckless and act blindly. What is urgently needed at the moment is to begin clearly thinking things over, to use a workers’ movement discourse to motivate solidarity among the working masses, to boldly use the Communist party’s glorious worker movement tradition to fight back against smearing and slander, and above all to let workers communities all over the country know that we all belong to the same class, that our struggle to protect our rights must be united, and that we must all in one voice demand the release or the arrested worker activists and protect the survival of labor organizations.

What we have seen emerge the last two days is a new kind of labor activism: going to construction sites and industrial areas to encourage workers to write a sentence or two demanding the release of arrested NGO workers, having them sign it, take a photo and mail it. This kind of petitioning inspires the fighting spirit. This form of struggling via petition attempts to surpass the feeble logic of “labor circle opinion statements”—the latter is still full of fears about the “development in a fierce and disorderly direction” that the labor movement is taking, while all these numerous workers did was to write on a piece of paper a simple and direct demand: “Release the detained labor activists”.

But we still have to shout out, and remind and warn active workers to take note: the nationwide petition by labor circles early this year was signed by nearly 2000 people but changed nothing! Yesterday we saw active workers make a call to collect 10,000 worker signatures nationwide, to let the government hear popular will. But considering the intensity of the life and death class struggle, we highly doubt that simple petitioning will be of much use!

So let’s consider what the working class’ resistance should look like? Is writing a few sentences and signing your name the thing to do? If workers have the determination and courage to collect 10,000 signatures across the country, why not demonstrate the voices of the thousands of workers shouting out against repression and smearing in a more confident and direct manner, encouraging workers to collectively call out, letting those in power know that workers’ power isn’t limited to letting them hear public opinion.

But making a step like that will take more than a few days. Workers will have to be cool-headed and realistic: many years of experience in the workers’ movement (including in the experience of Zeng Feiyang and Zhu Xiaomei, the worker activists currently under detention, and the experience of other worker activists who are currently waiting before taking action) have shown that every serious practical struggle starts with a small number of activists who must spend at least some time educating, uniting and organizing workers before they can mobilize and resist repression. When dealing with severe repression that includes secret arrests and labor activists being thrown into detention, we are in a completely defensive position, resisting repression and arbitrary arrests, resisting criminal charges and slander. What we need to do is to strive for collective answers. We need to practically (not merely in rhetoric) work together to push away this extremely unreasonable repression in order to defend the honor of every collective action by workers. We ought to be completely confident in our cause of winning over the masses.

We must be extremely careful: compared to smearing the murdered Zhou Xiuyun, or even compared to throwing a few labor NGO workers into jail, smearing the workers’ movement is even more insidious. Because even though Xiuyun died, there will still be workers who demand their wages; even though labor activists were locked up, there will still be strikes and other forms of collective rights defense; but smearing the workers’ movement and charging those directing and helping the movement with “inciting crowds to disrupt social order” implies that from now on whenever the workers movement in this country shows even the slightest hint of organization, people may be thrown into jail. Though in truth, the workers movement becoming organized is inevitable; there are many self-initiated workers’ organizations that are not the product of a small number of agitators and cannot be easily suppressed.

What is crucial is that we active workers raise the bright flag of a strong working class position in public discourse, firmly curbing repression and slandering, defending the right of labor organizations to exist and defending the dignity of the workers’ movement. We need first of all to stick closely to these topics, confidently voicing the collective aspirations of workers all over the country, in particular launching a series of a few hundred pieces of multi-level, multifaceted articles refuting repression and slandering, developing the workers’ movement discourse in order to supply educational resources and theoretical weapons to rapidly win over the masses’ support for this self-defensive struggle. The workers who are currently petitioning must decide: will they continue to one-by-one request every worker they meet write a few sentences demanding the activists’ release, or will they proceed by gathering the public opinion under a rational, powerful and orderly declaration, and with the support for this discourse win over the masses to reveal their collective opinion at the right time?

Our greatest fear is this: that in light of the unprecedented activity of the government’s Five Cent lapdogs online and offline as the party’s SS shock-troops, the inevitable advent of pervasive carpet-bomb style slander is likely to far surpass the slander campaign during Zhou Xiuyun’s homicide case (when even CCTV’s Focus Report and Xinhua news would participate in the misrepresentation and slandering of workers). We must resolutely mobilize the public opinion of the masses and energetically prepare to mobilize a self-defense counterattack, only then can we prevail in the face of this completely absurd and lunatic ultra-rightist public discourse shit-storm attempting to slander, defeat and subvert the workers’ movement.

This is an unprecedentedly vicious class struggle. We simply cannot sit and wait, leaving things to luck. Let’s stop fantasizing and get ready to fight. Worker friends who have the determination and courage to organize a nationwide petition for 10,000 workers’ signatures, change direction and try to get these workers to come together! If in the future workers’ actions and workers’ right to organize will be repressed, slandered, insulted and forced in to an intolerable condition, we workers will have no choice but to take action to protect our right to action.

We are now only at the beginning. Fellow workers and comrades, we must be more clearheaded, steadfast and calm to be ready for the real fight. To prepare for the real fight, we must first send out a call of resistance, arousing greater numbers of worker brothers and sisters:

Slandering of the Labor Movement Will Not Be Permitted!

We Defend Our Dignity with Righteous Confidence!

  • 1The 5 Cent Party: internet commentators who are supposedly paid 5 cents per (malicious or otherwise) comment that follows the party line.
  • 2Update: As of January 9, 4 of these activists– Zeng Feiyang, Zhu Xiaomei, He Xiaobo, and Meng Han–have officially been put under arrest. Peng Jiayong and Deng Xiaoming have been released and escorted back to their homes, while Tang Jian remains out of contact.

Comments

Sleeper

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Sleeper on January 15, 2016

So workers all over the world should express disgust with the Chinese government.

And then we should show our delight with these Chinese workers and their international class struggle

:-)

jojo

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by jojo on January 18, 2016

Hi Sleeper. Why shouldn't workers all over the world show their disgust with all the bourgeois governments which rule everywhere? Why just pick on China? Aren't you disgusted with the British government and all its austerity and with the British government opposition too, with all its phoney socialism? Ditto the USA and everywhere else.

Anyway, it isn't a question of showing disgust, but of doing something about it. Capitalism has to go.

Fredo Corvo

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Fredo Corvo on January 19, 2016

You can’t petition the Lord with prayer” (The Doors, 1969)

(Translation of an article published originally in Dutch language at arbeidersstemmen (workers' voices) )

In the article " What solidarity with workers 'struggles in China? " we informed the readers of our blog arbeiderstemmen about the police action against some NGOs that are committed to workers' rights and about the debate on the solidarity campaign with the Guangdong Six. In these discussions we have posted some critical comments (see Comment to article ). Via Libcom we receive messages from a solidarity campaign in China that uses petitions. The earlier criticism of the aims of the struggle remains fully applicable to the use of petitions. Nevertheless the specific way in which petitions are deployed deserves our attention because in spite of the substantial weaknesses in China a dynamic of growing consciousness, struggle and independent 'spontaneous' organization is developping.

In a recent individual contribution we are told:

What we have seen emerge the last two days is a new kind of labor activism: going to construction sites and industrial areas to encourage workers to write a sentence or two demanding the release of arrested NGO workers, having them sign it, take a photo and mail it. This kind of petitioning inspires the fighting spirit. This form of struggling via petition attempts to surpass the feeble logic of “labor circle opinion statements”—the latter is still full of fears about the “development in a fierce and disorderly direction” that the labor movement is taking, while all these numerous workers did was to write on a piece of paper a simple and direct demand: “Release the detained labor activists

.

Petitioning in general is not a way of struggle that is favorable to the interests of the working class. In most cases the text of the petition has been formulated on beforehand by a small group. These kind of petitions are addressed to the state or one of its agencies, in rare cases to a company. These petitions enforce illusions within the working class that an individual act (which signing a pre-formulated petition essentially is) could have results, that the state or capital would be inclined to change its behavior when confronted with individual prayers of believers in its Almighty Goodness. The individual workers that are confronted with a question to sign a petition are asked to act like a docile citizen at the voting booth or obeying party member voting during a congress.

The petitioning taking place in the Pearl River Delta in China is only slightly different from this, but the differences are interesting.
First of all petitioning takes place at construction sites, i.e. amongst a sector of workers at work, used to move from employer to employer to find better wages or working conditions or simply because the building site has been finished.

Workers are invited to write a sentence or two, giving room for an activity of thought and reflexion in stead of just signing (or not). In this way a rich arsenal of opinions is prepared for discussion amongst workers on the work place. And indeed … Instead of finding themselves dispersed at home, at their work place they can discuss immediately the situation, linking the state repression of activists to employers speeding up work, questions of wages, rising inflation, developing unemployment etc.

This need of a process of growing consciousness in the working class is clearly recognized in the text:

What is urgently needed at the moment is to begin clearly thinking things over, to use a workers’ movement discourse to motivate solidarity among the working masses.

And:

(…) every serious practical struggle starts with a small number of activists who must spend at least some time educating, uniting and organizing workers before they can mobilize and resist repression.

In this process small groups will emerge, and already have emerged, who can play a decisive roll in growing class awareness if they can make up the lessons from past struggles in China and all over the world. The text shows difficulties in understanding that already for 100 years trade unionism in all its forms has become totally obsolete for workers struggle. During World War I all unions came under pressure by the state to stop class struggle in favour of participation in imperialist war. Most surrendered, and the ones that didn’t were crushed by the state. The only way workers could successfully defend their immediate class interests, was in open struggle, assembling in mass meetings where they could discuss, speak out freely hidden in de mass of their colleagues, discussing the best way to extend their struggle to other professions, industries and regions. In these struggle general assemblies revocable committees were chose, at a lager scale unified in councils of soviets, eventually confronting successfully the repression by the state, as in Russia. These new forms of organization showed first in Russia in 1905 where all unions and workers parties were repressed by the state. Just like now in China many Russian workers believed they would be able to conquer civil rights of bourgeois society to have free elections for parliament, the liberty to unite in labour organizations and to organize in workers parties. But by unleashing World War I capitalism had changed conditions for suppression of all workers struggle and its organizations in all countries. What once had been workers organizations turned into state obeying slavedrivers of capital. This was not only true for Czarist Russia, but as well for Russia after the February Revolution of 1917 and within 3 years after the Bolsheviks taking power in October 1917 as well. In Germany the workers had to form exactly the same struggling general assemblies and workers councils to end the war, only to find the once proletarian trade unions and parliamentary workers parties to have become their enemy.

It already is and will be the same in China.

The conclusion from this is that only during periods of open struggle these relatively new mass organizations of workers (assemblies, committees, councils) can resist state repression. If they try to resist after struggle, they will be crushed by the state, or they transform themselves into an appendix of the state, mostly by becoming trade or industrial unions. Only small groups of workers can be formed (in counties like China in utmost secrecy) to learn the lessons of past struggle by linking to the history of working class.

Apart form this question of unionism and what is a workers movement, I see another major confusion in the text, that is the so-called Communist Party of China which nearly from its foundation is as much a State Capitalist as its Russian Mother-party. I doubt if many workers still have illusions about this party. It is only by its immense repression of the Chinese population that it hardly can believed that its power will crumble apart before that of millions of workers fighting for their own class aims. But it will.

Further reading:
The workers' councils in the theory of the Dutch-German communist left - Philippe Bourrinet

Sleeper

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Sleeper on January 22, 2016

Hi jojo

of course that is understood but this is about China and the class struggle that develops as they try to introduce capitalism.

jojo

Hi Sleeper. Why shouldn't workers all over the world show their disgust with all the bourgeois governments which rule everywhere? Why just pick on China? Aren't you disgusted with the British government and all its austerity and with the British government opposition too, with all its phoney socialism? Ditto the USA and everywhere else.

Anyway, it isn't a question of showing disgust, but of doing something about it. Capitalism has to go.

jojo

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by jojo on January 23, 2016

"...as they try to introduce capitalism..." Sleeper, you amaze me. If they're trying to introduce capitalism into China now, then what d'you think they've got at the present time? Feudalism, some weird Orientalism, or - dare I say it - communism?

You must read the final paragraph in the article above again, a few times. What they have in China is a fiercely imposed State Capitalism: fully mature and fully fledged.

Sleeper

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Sleeper on January 23, 2016

jojo

"...as they try to introduce capitalism..." Sleeper, you amaze me. If they're trying to introduce capitalism into China now, then what d'you think they've got at the present time? Feudalism, some weird Orientalism, or - dare I say it - communism?

You must read the final paragraph in the article above again, a few times. What they have in China is a fiercely imposed State Capitalism: fully mature and fully fledged.

Hi again jojo. No I don't think China is socialist or communist. I also don't think it's capitalist. Authoritarian certainly, a state yes. But you must explain what you mean by 'State Capitalism'

jojo

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by jojo on January 24, 2016

State capitalism is when the state organises and tries to control the financial, stock exchanges, banking systems, money supply, jobs market, health and education systems, and all the other bourgeois nonsense for its own purposes and profit. (Something like that!)

But more to the point I think you need to explain what kind of economic infrastructure you think is at work in China, if it isn't communist, socialist, or capitalist. Authoritarian isn't an economic system. I don't know whether anarchism is an economic system or not as I'm not sure what anarchism actually is.

Real proper communism wouldn't be an economic system because there wouldn't be an economy under communism, where production would be directly for consumption, not for buying and selling, and would be carefully planned. Some anarchists seem to go along with this while others who post on this website appear to think anarchism will be a kind of free-for-all capitalism which mysteriously is able to satisfy everyone's needs, which of course it can never do.

Sleeper

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Sleeper on January 24, 2016

You do realise capitalism and capitalists are also against the idea of a state. They want everything in private hands, in the hands of rich individuals, a tiny %, who can control the market through their wealth.

Of course anyone with sense realises that capitalism is totally flawed and has had to be rescued over and over again the more it develops. As a human experiment in how we can live better it has failed miserably. Now we have the capitalists trying to defend their disgusting privilege as their economic model disintegrates in front of us all.

As always I'll be honest and I don't know what economic system China or the chinese communist party is following. My guess is that it is playing the long game, understanding Marx, and waiting for capitalism to disintegrate completely.

jojo

State capitalism is when the state organises and tries to control the financial, stock exchanges, banking systems, money supply, jobs market, health and education systems, and all the other bourgeois nonsense for its own purposes and profit. (Something like that!)

But more to the point I think you need to explain what kind of economic infrastructure you think is at work in China, if it isn't communist, socialist, or capitalist. Authoritarian isn't an economic system. I don't know whether anarchism is an economic system or not as I'm not sure what anarchism actually is.

Real proper communism wouldn't be an economic system because there wouldn't be an economy under communism, where production would be directly for consumption, not for buying and selling, and would be carefully planned. Some anarchists seem to go along with this while others who post on this website appear to think anarchism will be a kind of free-for-all capitalism which mysteriously is able to satisfy everyone's needs, which of course it can never do.

Khawaga

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Khawaga on January 24, 2016

Sleeper

You do realise capitalism and capitalists are also against the idea of a state. They want everything in private hands, in the hands of rich individuals, a tiny %, who can control the market through their wealth.

That statement is rather naiive. For most capitalists what they want is minimal intervention by the state, at least when it comes to protecting private property rights. Most capitalists want police and military.Only the hard core an-caps really want to get rid of the state.

My guess is that it is playing the long game, understanding Marx, and waiting for capitalism to disintegrate completely.

Seriously?

Sleeper

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Sleeper on January 24, 2016

Khawaga

Sleeper

You do realise capitalism and capitalists are also against the idea of a state. They want everything in private hands, in the hands of rich individuals, a tiny %, who can control the market through their wealth.

That statement is rather naiive. For most capitalists what they want is minimal intervention by the state, at least when it comes to protecting private property rights. Most capitalists want police and military.Only the hard core an-caps really want to get rid of the state.

My guess is that it is playing the long game, understanding Marx, and waiting for capitalism to disintegrate completely.

Seriously?

Hello there Khawaga. Capitalists have been forced to maintain the state in various forms because capitalism doesn't work. Capitalists want private police forces and private paramilitary armies to protect themselves from us.

Do you have a better analysis of what's happening in China?

Sleeper

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Sleeper on January 24, 2016

Welcome to the discussion Steven, so you think China is capitalist?

Steven.

Yeah, China is definitely not capitalist…

Khawaga

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Khawaga on January 24, 2016

Capitalists have been forced to maintain the state in various forms because capitalism doesn't work. Capitalists want private police forces and private paramilitary armies to protect themselves from us.

Do they? All of them? Adam Smith and all the early political economists, indeed almost all economists but for some of the most rabid Austrians always advocate for the existence of some state precisely because that will actually make sure that capitalism, as a system based on everyone treating each other as owners of private property (including labour-power), will survive.

What is the evidence for your claim? Also, what do you understand capitalism to be? What is the basis of that system? How is it reproduced?

Sleeper

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Sleeper on January 24, 2016

Capitalism is private ownership of the means of production by the ruling class, and exploitation and extraction of the surplus value created by the working class.

Now, again, do you care to explain your analysis of what's happening in China?

Fleur

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Fleur on January 24, 2016

Sleeper:

Now, again, do you care to explain your analysis of what's happening in China?

this ->

Capitalism is private ownership of the means of production by the ruling class, and exploitation and extraction of the surplus value created by the working class.

Even if you take the view that the state owning and controlling the means of production is some kind of communism, in China only 30% of industry & service sectors of the economy is state owned and is a percentage which has been steadily declining.

http://blogs.worldbank.org/eastasiapacific/state-owned-enterprises-in-china-how-big-are-they

Khawaga

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Khawaga on January 24, 2016

Now, again, do you care to explain your analysis of what's happening in China?

Capitalism is happening in China. It has been happening for quite some time now. At the moment there is an intensification of primitive accumulation in rural areas. In any case, I wouldn't call what you have offered an "analysis" but more of an empty claim based on jargon.

Sleeper

8 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Sleeper on January 28, 2016

Ok maybe we can create more of an analysis by putting a date on some events. When exactly do you consider China to have become capitalist?

Khawaga

Now, again, do you care to explain your analysis of what's happening in China?

Capitalism is happening in China. It has been happening for quite some time now. At the moment there is an intensification of primitive accumulation in rural areas. In any case, I wouldn't call what you have offered an "analysis" but more of an empty claim based on jargon.