Saturday, July 10, 2021

What Is Socialism?

What Is Socialism?

July 11, 2021

 

It has become fashionable in rightwing American politics to say that Democrats are socialists. The misguided worthies who say such things contend that any public policy or policy proposal that benefits the people rather than just the economic elite are socialists. To them the major accomplishments of the federal government in the last ninety years, Social Security and Medicare, are socialist. They are after all programs that keep millions of senior citizens like me in health care and out of poverty. To the ever farther right rightwing of American politics they are therefore entirely unwarranted and represent the worst public policies we have ever had. They are, these people say, socialist and therefore really, really bad.

There’s one thing I don’t hear from these folks when they denounce the Democrats and their policies as socialist. I don’t hear any discussion of what the word socialism actually means. I get the sense that the people who throw that word around don’t care and probably don’t know what it means. All they care about is that a great many Americans, not understanding the word themselves, think it is necessarily a bad thing and are afraid of it. The offer no constructive critique of the term. Instead they use it as a verbal Molotov cocktail looking to provoke not reasoned understanding but only the emotions of hatred and fear. Well, the term socialism actually has a history that goes back at least to the mid-nineteenth century. Over the decades since then the meaning of the term has evolved so that today it doesn’t mean what it meant when Karl Marx developed the conception in the 1840s. If we want to understand the term we need to look briefly at that history, then look at how it is used today in societies that embrace it rather than reject it. Perhaps unfortunately, we must start with Karl Marx.

Marx used the term socialism, though perhaps not in the way you might have expected him to have done. Marx developed a theory of what he called dialectical materialism. In this theory only the material, that is, the physical, is real. The spiritual plays no role in Marx’s theory. He expressly denied its reality. Yet material reality for Marx was not static. It had its own dynamic. The material develops through history according to a pattern Marx called dialectic. For Marx the ownership of the means of production determined everything about human society and culture. He lived in a time when the economies of most of the nations of western Europe, including Marx’s homeland Germany and his adopted home the United Kingdom, were radically capitalist. For Marx that meant that the means of production, in his world primarily factories, were owned by a relatively small class of capitalists. Nearly everyone else was a member of what Marx called the proletariat, the working class, the people who earned meager wages working in those factories often in very unsafe conditions for the economic benefit of the capitalists. He was not, by the way, wrong about that, though he was wrong about many other things including his denial of the reality of the spiritual. The economic dynamic of mid-nineteenth century western Europe was indeed one of essentially unfettered capitalism. The lives of the members of the proletariat were indeed awfully grim.

The capitalists had come to their position of dominance, Marx said, through the workings of dialectical materialism. Capitalism overtook and displaced the prior economic order of feudalism. The way a rising class displaced another was for Marx far from necessarily peaceful. Marxism is a theory for revolution. Marx could point to various violent aspects of English history and to the French Revolution of the late eighteenth century as revolutions of the rising capitalist class against what was left  of medieval feudalism. The process of one class violently displacing another was for Marx perpetual, or at least perpetual until it reached its supposedly inevitable conclusion, about which more anon.

Marx thought that in his time the processes of dialectical materialism were moving inexorably toward the proletariat replacing the capitalists as the owners of the means of production and therefore as the ruling class ruling in its interests rather than in the interests of the capitalists. Ownership of the means of production would pass, probably violently, from the capitalists to the proletariat, to the working people who had been essentially wage slaves of the capitalists.

Though his theory is popularly known as Communism, Marx called the revolution by which the proletariat would overthrow the capitalists not a communist revolution but a socialist one. The victorious proletariat would create an economic and political order called socialism. There would still be a state, a government, but it would be a government by and for the proletariat not the capitalists. Ownership of the means of production would in theory pass to the working class and as a practical matter would belong to and be run by the government of the proletariat.

The function of the socialist state was to make itself superfluous so that it would, in a famous phrase, wither away. For Marx the only reason there was a state structure at all was because of the existence of different classes in a society with each class representing a particular relationship to the means of production. The function of a socialist state was for Marx the elimination of classes. Everyone would in a sense be a proletarian, yet because there would be no classes no one would be called that any more. For Marx, if there were only one class in a society there would be no need for a state, for a government. The role of governments before the creation of a classless society was to maintain the dominance of the dominant class over the other classes, in capitalism the dominance of the capitalists over the proletariat. If there were only one class the concept class would lose its meaning and there would be a classless society. The state would therefore disappear. It would wither away.

Once it had withered away the process of dialectical materialism would have reached its culmination and would itself cease to function. Marx called this classless society without state structures communism. That term is widely misunderstood among us. To most Americans it means the vicious totalitarian regime of the Soviet Union or of Maoist China. The only legal political party in the Soviet Union (there was only one in theory because there would be only one class or at least that state was there to represent only one class) called itself the Communist Party. Yet the Soviet communists never claimed to have created a communist society. Rather, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union reigned over what it called a socialist society. In Marxism socialism is the transitional stage between capitalism and communism. It is the stage in which all classes other than the proletariat would be engineered out of existence. That process would not necessarily be peaceful. The formerly dominant class of capitalists could be expected to fight back. Yet they had to be eliminated if the classless society of communism were ever to come into being. The Communist Party of the Soviet Union always maintained that it ruled a socialist country moving toward communism, not that it had already created a communist, classless society.

The original idea of socialism was therefore that it was that transitional stage between capitalism and communism. The whole idea of Marxism however arose out of very real worldly conditions rather than out of abstract theory. It arose because of the extreme poverty and political powerlessness of working people, that is, of most people in the capitalist countries of the mid-nineteenth century in western Europe. It’s whole underlying purpose was to improve the lives of working people by taking power from the capitalists and giving it to the workers.

Unfortunately, the whole idea of socialism became tainted by what the Russian Communists did with it after they overthrew the Provisional Government that had replaced the monarchy in 1917. The great, unavoidable flaw in dialectical materialism is that individual people have no intrinsic moral value. Individuals don’t matter, only class matters. The Bolsheviks, as the Russian Communists were then called, established a reign of terror intended to secure their control over the Russian Empire and eliminate all opposition. Lenin created an institution he called the Cheka (from the Russian words for extraordinary committee, that would eventually evolve into the KGB).They conveniently ignored the fact that Marxism didn’t really apply to Russia even in theory because in 1917 most of the people of Russia were peasants not proletarians. Peasants don’t fit well into Marxist theory. So the Russian Communists essentially turned the country’s peasants into proletarians by forcing them to give up their land, animals, and farm machinery to and to enter into collective farms where they worked land that belonged to them only theoretically in the sense that it supposedly belonged to everyone. A great many Russian and Ukrainian peasants killed their animals and destroyed their farm implements rather than turn them over to some collective farm as the Communist state demanded that they do. In the early 1930s Stalin, who had by then amassed essentially unlimited personal power in obvious violation of Marxist theory, created a famine in which millions died especially in Ukraine, which had the country’s best farmland and had once been called the breadbasket of Europe. The Ukrainians call the famine the Holodomor, and it remains a cause of hatred toward the Russians to this day. In Marxist theory and in Soviet practice those people who starved to death didn’t matter. Only the creation of a classless society mattered, the creation of a classless society looking in those years like nothing more than Russian terror.[1]

Leninist/Stalinist totalitarianism discredited the term socialism nearly completely. Few of the socialists of western Europe wanted to recreate the horror of Leninism or Stalinism. After World War I some of them, including the Social Democratic Party of Germany, attempted to bring off a socialist revolution through a coup based on the Soviet model, but none of them succeeded. Yet the name of that German socialist party is a clue to where west European socialism was headed. Those German socialists called themselves democrats. The Nazis brutally suppressed them in the 1930s, but after World War II something rather surprising happened. The SPD, the Social Democratic Party of Germany, became one of the two major political parties of the new Federal Republic of Germany, as west Germany was called. East Germany, called the German Democratic Republic though it wasn’t democratic at all, had a Soviet style totalitarianism imposed on it, and the west German Social Democrats wanted nothing of the sort. For example, when President Kennedy gave his famous speech in west Berlin in which he said “Ich bin ein Berliner (which isn’t quite proper German for what he meant, but never mind) the mayor of West Berlin who stood there with him and who fully embraced democratic values was a man named Willi Brandt. Brandt was a German Social Democrat, a member of the SPD. He later became Chancellor of west Germany, and neither he nor any other members of his party wanted to do or did anything to weaken the democratic form of government that was developing in west Germany in the aftermath of the Nazi catastrophe.

By the 1960s at the latest west European socialism had become something very different from the Marxist socialism of a century earlier. West European socialists had become democrats. They may still have traced their roots back to Marx, but they functioned in most western European countries as the more liberal of the two major political parties. The Labour Party of Great Britain is one of those parties. In West Germany the SPD was and is more liberal or progressive than the other major German political party, the CDU, the Christian Democratic Union. The SPD represents to interests of working people more than the CDU does, but it does so with a true commitment to democratic principles. The same can be said about the Labour Party in Britain and its relationship to the Tories.

The SPD has had some success in enacting progressive social programs in Germany, certainly more success than any party has had in the United States. The social democratic parties of Scandinavia have had more success with those programs than anyone. I recently saw this quote online from an unnamed woman identified as Swedish:

 

I live in Sweden. We have social security, affordable health care, strict gun laws, 5 weeks paid annual leave, 1 year + maternity/paternity leave, etc. A stay at the hospital costs $10. Prescription drugs have an annual cap of $250 U.S. dollars. Oh, and we are not communist. We live in a social democracy, and our freedoms are not inhibited.

 

That’s what socialism is today. It is a type of democratic politics that seeks to make life better for everyone in society not just for the wealthy few. Today in the United States socialists advocate policies like expanding Medicare to cover everyone. They want working conditions for everyone to facilitate life not just profits for owners. They want everyone to be safe in their own country even if that means reasonable gun control laws, with it does, without confiscating people’s guns, which it does not. Socialists care for and about the people not just for a tiny economic elite.

In Marxist socialism the means of production don’t belong to private owners be they individuals or corporations. In theory they belong to the people. In practice they belong to the state. A Marxist socialist regime would confiscate virtually every business of whatever sort from private owners, typically without compensation. The whole point of socialism in the Marxist system is to transfer ownership from private owners to public ownership. You’ll still see this aspect of Marxism in many contemporary definitions of socialism.

We must clearly understand that today’s socialists at least in Europe and the United States do not advocate public ownership of business. A social administration in the United States would confiscate no one’s business. It would instead regulate economic activity to ensure that such activity was pursued more responsibly than it is today. A socialist government would govern in the interest of the people. It would not be swayed by paid lobbyists for big business the way it so frequently is today. It would establish and enforce meaningful standards for worker safety and compensation. It would regulate for environmental goals as well. It would do all it could to reduce or eliminate global warming rather than deny its existence the way so many Republicans insist that we do today.

As these measures were put in place the owners of businesses big and small would protest loudly. Socialist regulation would probably reduce the profits of some and perhaps many businesses. The socialists would say that’s just how it has to be in order for the economy to function in the interest of the many rather than in the interest of an economically elite few. There would be a significant reduction in the income gap between wealthy owners and executives of businesses and those businesses’ workers. Many large businesses could  make up much of that loss by paying upper management reasonable compensation rather than the wildly disproportionate way that they so often do now. There would be no Jeff Bezos under a socialist government. The super rich would no longer be able to avoid paying taxes by using loopholes or gaps in a tax code that was written to benefit them as they do now. Like everything else the tax law would be restructured so that it was fair to everyone and not exclusively benefit the rich the way it does now. Socialism today does not advocate the confiscation of private property, not even from the likes of Jeff Bezos. It means instead a reordering of governmental priorities so that the people come first. The prospect of that occurring should alarm no one other perhaps than the super rich. A socialist government would not put their interests first. It would put the true interests of the people first.

Of course many of the programs socialists advocate cost money. They cost tax dollars. In this country we could get those dollars if we put tax rates for the rich not back to what they were under Eisenhower, when they were astronomically high, but to what they were before Reagan implemented the neo-conservative mania for slashing tax rates for the wealthy, something experience abundantly shows benefits only the wealthy whose taxes are cut. We could get more money if we would reduce the amount we spend on the military to a reasonable level. Of course the wealthy object. Of course Americans who have swallowed the neo-conservative ideology of benefiting the rich and pretending that doing so benefits everyone object. That’s their right. They’re wrong, but our freedoms mean nothing if we don’t have the right to be wrong.

There is no reason for anyone to fear socialism. Socialism, unlike Reagan-nomics, benefits everyone not only a few. So the next time you hear someone attack some socially beneficial program as socialist  please remember. Socialists today are democrats. We believe in democratic forms of government not authoritarian and certainly not totalitarian ones. We don’t want to take away anyone’s constitutional rights. If anything we want to expand those rights. We do not advocate violence. Many of us, your humble author here among them, are strongly committed to the principles of nonviolence. Hurling a word at people and programs in an attempt not to facilitate dialogue but to frighten us into unthinking reactions contributes nothing to national wellbeing. The neo-cons probably won’t stop hurling it. The rest of us must just speak the truth and not live in fear of a term that really isn’t frightening today at all. May it be so.



[1] Stalin wasn’t a Russian. He was a Georgian, but he functioned as a Russian and was seen by the Russians as one of theirs. The people Georgia still considered him one of theirs when I was there in 1968. Stalin had disappeared from all of the Soviet Union except in Georgia, where his picture was everywhere and where we were taken to the Stalin museum in the town of Gori where Stalin was from.

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