Did the Bolsheviks really have to capture the state, destroy the worker councils and drag the Russian people through state capitalist development? I keep hearing that it was impossible for an undeveloped and backward peasant country like Russia to go to socialism/communism immediately. So were the Bolsheviks really justified in crushing the Makhno movement? What's the anarchist/libertarian communist perspective on all this, and could anyone point me to further reading material on this subject?
I think in a lot of ways this
I think in a lot of ways this is a moot point. It happened. And now no Marxist can deny that communism would be impossible.
But if we are going to talk about historical angels on the head of a pin, my view is that if primitive communism was possible, which was, then you can't argue communism was not possible later on with better developed productive forces.
I think the main problem with Leninists is not what happened 100 years ago, but their practice and theory now. In that selling papers, getting elected to union positions, join pointless front groups and telling people to vote Labour is not getting us anywhere closer to socialism.
zugzwang wrote: I keep
zugzwang
To go into the question of '(im)possibility':
The idea that this was *impossible* was first put forward by Russian revolutionaries (who thought of themselves as marxists), and they were going against an idea prevalent in the 19th century revolutionary milieu, that the Russian agrarian commune could be freed from entanglement by exploitative forces (for example usury, the Tsarist state etc.) and become the basis for a "jump" to communist society. The reason why the commune would have allowed such a jump is because there wasn't yet a fragmented capitalist peasant class, and the soil was under control of a kind of associated labour with its own decision-making institutions (which were pretty patriarchal, but not capitalist and in fact strongly resistant to being demolished in favor of parcellized private land ownership).
Actually Karl Marx corresponded with several Russian authors and activists and roughly came to agree with this idea, but also thought that the possibility of this jump was rapidly vanishing, or possibly already had, because of the real decline of the agrarian commune. Marx also thought this possibility either depended on a successful revolution in western county or countries, or the other way round, that it might set the ball rolling for revolutionary developments in the advanced countries. So in that sense Marx had a much less unilinear viewpoint than the 'marxists' who saw a capitalist path for Russia as a necessity.
If you want to read about that prehistory of the debate, you should definitely read Teodor Shanin's book Late Marx and the Russian Road, which is a really great reconstruction of the question as it existed during the 19th century. At least that is the background to the later debate, up to and after 1917, at which point there was obviously a much transformed situation, as a result of war and the failure of revolution in the west.
I think the conclusion at a later date would be the same as Steven's: the bare fact is that it just didn't happen, but this doesn't actually prove it wasn't once "possible". Fact is that the alliance of workers and peasants on which such an alternative direction would have depended, didn't hold up in practice, or was pulled apart by the direction of real events.
All in all it makes more sense to look at the concrete situation, and the aims/actions/relative strength of different class forces, instead of hanging your judgement on the hook of necessity, so to speak, which is then used in retrospect to dish out labels of 'wrong' and 'right' for political choices.
zugzwang #1 ‘I keep hearing
zugzwang #1
‘I keep hearing that it was impossible for an undeveloped and backward peasant country like Russia to go to socialism/communism immediately. ’
Well that begs the question, ‘What do you mean by immediately?’ Was the rest of Europe/the world ready to abet a socialist revolution? Obviously not.
In my house I enjoy 'free communism' for several hours a day. The problems arise only when I open my front door and greet the rest of the world.
Didn't the Bolsheviks destroy
Didn't the Bolsheviks destroy all the socialist institutions, soviets, factory committees and so on (and the Makhno movement as well)? Was it necessary to centralize production and give decision-making power over to the Bolsheviks' party, just because Russia wasn't ready for this?
On Marx and the Russian
On Marx and the Russian question in the late 70s, early 80s, I could point to this article, which does refer to Shanin, albeit critically:
http://en.internationalism.org/internationalreview/199506/1685/mature-marx-past-and-future-communism
As Spacious points out, Marx had argued that "if the Russian revolution becomes the signal for a proletarian revolution in the West, so that the two can supplement each other, then present Russian communal land ownership can serve as a point of departure for a communist development”.
The actual revolution in Russia came after several decades of capitalist development had severely dislocated the old communal forms. But still the question posed in 1917 was whether the revolution in Russia could be the first spark of the world revolution. It was not whether Russia in itself was 'ripe' for socialism, but whether capitalism as a world system had reached a stage in its evolution when communist revolution was both necessary and possible..Auldbod implies perhaps that Europe wasn't at that stage, but he doesn't explain why he thinks that.
Alf #6 ‘It was not whether
Alf #6
‘It was not whether Russia in itself was 'ripe' for socialism, but whether capitalism as a world system had reached a stage in its evolution when communist revolution was both necessary and possible. Auldbod implies perhaps that Europe wasn't at that stage, but he doesn't explain why he thinks that.’
My understanding of why there was no revolution in Europe after the WW1, is that while the means of production were advanced enough to create ‘socialism’, which I think is a necessary condition, it is not by itself a sufficient condition.
What was missing was the revolutionary consciousness by a large enough portion of the working class to generate an overthrow of capitalism and its ideological bedrock.
Capitalism, while creating the material conditions of its eventual demise will remain secure as long as its underling ideology dominates. We are in a war of ideas, which expresses itself through class struggle, and a belief in a new economic order based on need not greed.
Note: meant to write underlying though 'underling' still fits!
Thanks for clarifying that
Thanks for clarifying that Auldbod...I agree that the failure of the revolution has to be sought in the 'subjective' side, in the difficulty of the working class as a whole to grasp the necessity for revolution. But it was still the nearest we have been to an international revolution.
Quote: My understanding of
I think the SPGB best expressed this in their obituary of Lenin
If they were reluctant to struggle for even peace,(although in Germany the protests, strikes and mutinies were far more evident than on the Allies side) then a socialist revolution certainly wasn't going to be realised
Even today some over-emphasise the 1918/1919 discontent that led to social upheavals around the globe, from Berlin to Seattle but as Auldbod says...the revolutionary consciousness was lacking. And it is in this battle of ideas that we are still busy fighting.
Okay, clearly revolution was
Okay, clearly revolution was contained and never spread throughout the world; Russia's revolution with the Bolsheviks at the helm only led to party dictatorship and state capitalism. Does that still justify the course of action Lenin and the Bolsheviks took - destroying all the workers' organizations (those socialist institutions), branding the Makhno movement counter-revolutionary, concentrating decision-making in the party, and so on? Were there not alternatives to just replacing one ruling class for another? I was hoping some of you could lend support to what Chomsky has expressed (in this essay) and what the Anarchist FAQ covers in its sections on the Russian Revolution. I disagree with the Leninists and Trotskyists I've come across who insist the Bolsheviks were a force for good and all their actions just and necessary because of the circumstances.
Alf wrote: I agree that the
Alf
Communism is a great idea (today: the only idea). The problem with reaching it is a question of the internal structure of the commodity economy. A question of how our struggle to reproduce our basic means every week leads to our alienation.
Even an orangutan can seem to know we need communism, as they are very intelligent after all.
Perhaps the problem lies in some of us, the Leninists and Trotskyists and others, thinking that capturing the state and administrating it can help us. Seems doubtful a Russian revolution-styled insurrection could happen in even one country in the 21st century, much less simultaneously around the world.
Perhaps the problem is not a question of "raising" or "heightening" or "building" or "developing" consciousness and ideology, but a question of basic social activity.
OP - Not sure if you'd come
OP - Not sure if you'd come across this already, but it's far better than Chomsky: https://libcom.org/library/when-insurrections-die
Zugzwang, there were other
Zugzwang, there were other options for the Bolsheviks. Lenin's political strategy was not necessarily the only choice for them and he did face opposition within the his Party by others. From February to April when Lenin imposed his April Thesis (was this the time he threatened to resign his party position, or was that later during July Days? i forget for now) a different approach was conducted.
There was various scenarios that the Bolsheviks could have chosen rather than their take-over. They could have formed a coalition government with all the "workers" parties, i.e. the Bolsheviks, Mensheviks, SRs, which was the favoured solution of ordinary workers remain an opposition party to Kerensky to abdicate as they did before Lenin's arrival or later after the Constituent Assembly election, they could have ceded power to the to the SR majority.
I usually quote this from the What Next discussion journal.
The course although generally predetermined by the factors already referred to doesn't mean that all the events and developments were pre-destined.
Ajjohnstone’s post #13, is
Ajjohnstone’s post #13, is interesting and informative. What the Bolsheviks could have done with or without the other vanguard parties is academic. Any party or group that substitutes itself for the working class and attempts to pull the workers up by the hair will eventually stymie the goal it has set itself. That is the history of all the socialist parties.
As an aside some friends of mine recently visited Cuba. The government forbids individuals to own cattle, etc. The visitors were shocked at the poor condition of the beasts they saw in the fields. It would appear that in this case everyone’s responsibility was no one’s responsibility. This is not an argument for private property, rather one for worker’s control.