Rev Left Radio - [BEST OF] The Fundamentals of Marxism: Historical Materialism, Dialectics, & Political Economy
Episode Date: April 30, 2022[Originally released Oct 2020] In this episode of our sister podcast "Red Menace", Alyson and Breht summarize and discuss the fundamental ideas, concepts, and arguments within Marxism. We want this ep...isode to stand as a resource for *everyone* interested in Marxism - from those who are brand new to the Marxist left all the way to veterans of the Left who simply want a concise refresher. If you know someone who is moving leftward but still struggling with understanding Marxism, please point them toward this episode! Outro music: 'Song 33' by Noname Support Rev Left Radio: https://www.patreon.com/RevLeftRadio
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, you are listening to Red Menace. This is a podcast where normally we go into a specific work of theory and talk about how that applies to our current situation and how us as Marxists and organizers can use that.
or alternatively, we occasionally go into current events and dive into how we can think about the
chaotic situation that we are in in the world today through the lens of Marxism. And today
we're doing something that's kind of in between those two things. We are going to be kind of trying
to make an introductory approach to Marxism for people who might need something that's not so
thoroughly grounded in one book, but more sort of a broader overview of what Marxism is and why it
matters for us today. So that's really what we're going to be focusing on. It sort of breaks the mold
of the two formats we've used in the past. But if you are interested in what we're doing,
you can find us on Twitter at The Red Menace. And then you can also find us on Patreon as well,
where we have bonus episodes that you can listen to that really get into sort of details
about, you know, some of our thought processes behind our episodes, supplementary materials,
and also Q&A questions that we go over with patrons to kind of provide more depth for what we're
talking about. So if any of that interests you, we are online and you can find that information.
But today, we are going to kind of try to make a case to you that Marxism is something that you
should be considering and understanding and then trying to provide, you know, the tools to
understand that. I think pretty much everyone, regardless of their political orientation, is aware
that we're living in extremely chaotic times right now. You know, we are at a point where there
are mainstream conversations about civil collapse in the United States. And these are thoughts that
are not just happening on sort of the radical fringes, but are being talked about by academics,
being talked about by politicians, being talked about by mainstream publications.
And it's kind of in that situation that I, you know, and I think Brett as well,
hope to suggest that Marxism has something to offer for us in this sort of time.
And hopefully we can get into what that is a little bit.
Yeah.
And just to talk about this episode, you know, we pitched this as sort of an introduction to
Marxism for people who, you know, are moving left to especially younger or newer people to
the left and they're trying to sort of, you know, find their bearings and get grounded in left
theory. But there's so much disinformation and just bad, poor understandings of Marxism out
there that it can be really hard. And then if you go on social media, you know, you're more
likely to run into some obscure sectarian debate than you are some principled outlying of the basic
principles of Marxism. And so this can be very confusing. So we want to offer this up to help people
come into Marxism and learn some of the basics of Marxism
at the same time we're also sort of summarizing things we've covered in a lot of
the theory texts that we've we've covered so far on this show
and as we were going through it we realized that it's very hard to make it
super 101 like you know the very basic terms we'd have to start talking about like
you know what is liberalism versus socialism and you know we're going to touch on
that a little bit but it's almost a little bit more advanced than a complete and
total intro but hopefully it's
it's still introductory enough and importantly, I think, a broad overview of Marxism that I think
this can be used as a tool to help those younger and newer folks come in, a tool for people to
summarize what we've talked about on this show already, and hopefully a resource that people can
use in their organizations and cadres, just to help catch people up or to remind people of
what Marxism is, et cetera. So regardless of where you fall along the spectrum of Marxism,
whether you're completely new to it or whether you're a veteran,
hopefully there's something in here that is food for thought
and something that you will find valuable in this episode.
Yeah, and I definitely think, you know,
even if it is something that you're already familiar with,
it's good to brush up on kind of these big picture parts of Marxism
and not just the details.
So hopefully that will be valuable as well.
And again, I just think we are living in a time where, you know,
it is hard to make sense of the world around us.
And one of the things that is incredible about Marxism,
in addition to being a theory of how to change the world, it also can help us explain chaotic
moments like this. And sort of a refresher on that, I think can be really grounding in a time
where we all feel particularly ungrounded by what's happening around us.
Absolutely. So the first and perhaps probably the most basic question we'll address today
is just the term socialism, communism, and capitalism, particularly in the face of lots of
different types of people, especially liberals, using the word socialism. It can be very confusing
and it can muddy the pot for a lot of people.
And a lot of people also think that socialism and communism are two different things.
So, you know, very often when I'm having a discussion with a lay person or somebody who's only sort of partially into politics, you know, you might hear things or even people that are into politics, you might hear things like, oh, I'm a socialist, but definitely not communism.
Or I can understand, you know, maybe weaving a little socialism into our capitalism, but communism is a step too far.
And what that does is betrays a fundamental ignorance about what these terms mean.
So in the very simplest terms, capitalism is obviously what we're living under now.
It's the mode of production and distribution that we all have grown up with our entire lives.
It's not just trade, right?
It's not, quote unquote, human nature.
It is a system, socioeconomic, global order.
And then socialism and communism and the Marxist sense are related in that socialism is the historical process,
the historical development from capitalism toward communism.
and although there have been states in the past that have been called a communist or even self-identified as communist,
to call them communism is sort of a misnomer because communism is a stateless, classless society.
It is the end goal of the Marxist and really a lot of the radical left political project.
And as such, we've never reached it.
There's been attempts to build socialism, which is to really to think about it in concrete terms.
It's the transition out of capitalism toward communism.
And so it's sort of that bridge.
And understanding socialism as a bridge and not a destination, I think is really the crucial thing I want to emphasize here.
Yeah, no, definitely.
And, you know, it is sort of tricky because there's the what Marxists mean when they use the term versus what the majority people mean when they use the term, right?
And it is worth recognizing that historically, socialism as a term has had a very broad meaning, which makes disentangling this stuff a little bit tricky, right?
So socialism as a concept definitely comes before the development of Marxism.
and you had a number of people who called themselves socialist who proposed a variety of different
projects, and it's really Marx who intervenes to sort of say, well, all of that may be socialism
in some sense, but the socialism that we're interested is sort of this grounded transition period,
this movement of developing communism from the conditions of capitalism, not the various
utopian projects that countless people have come up with and called socialism.
So there is a broad historical meaning to the term, and in a lot of ways what Mark
exists are trying to do is make that meaning more grounded. And I think that's a concept that
will return to time and time again in this episode. Yeah, exactly. And I just think it's really
important before we move on, just to think of socialism as a historical process and not a sort
of a list of things you check off to say, now we've gotten socialism. And I think that confusion
leads to a whole bunch of different forms of confusion that proliferate on the left and, you know,
on the liberal left and on the radical left. So I think that's an important.
thing and you'll as we talk about dialectics and historical materialism you'll come to understand throughout this episode how crucial it is to understand so much including these terms like socialism and capitalism as historically embedded processes unfolding and not as static state of affairs yeah no absolutely so do we want to go ahead and sort of dive into the nitty gritty of sort of the philosophy and political economy of what Marxism is and start to get into that yeah absolutely and for this segment we're going to ask four questions
I'll ask Allison the first two. She will ask me the latter two. And these are just basic, you know, basic, but very important. And in a lot of ways, complicated pillars of understanding Marxism. So let's go ahead and get into these questions. And the first question for you, Allison, is a question that revolves around materialism and idealism. So what do we mean by these terms materialism and idealism? And why is it that Marxism insists on materialism?
Yeah, so let's go ahead and get into this. And I'll say first, this is sort of a broad philosophical
question that we have to wrestle with and a broad question about like how we view theory. So I'm
going to try to make this as grounded as possible, but it is going to kind of get into some
philosophical terms that hopefully we can work through and will come to an understanding of as
we tease them out through examples. So if you've heard anything about Marxism, you've probably
heard the term materialism, or at least the idea that Marxists are materialists.
You know, if you've been on social media, you have probably seen Marxists argue about whether or not some concept is properly materialist or if it's an example of idealism. And these arguments often sort of take these terms for granted. So, you know, for those who don't have that context, we have to wonder what exactly is materialism and why is it so important to Marxists. So in philosophy, there are sort of several meanings to the word materialism. And Marxism overlaps with some of these meanings while also sort of providing its own.
and we need to sort of wrestle with this a little bit. So on the one hand, there's what we could
call ontological materialism. So that term ontological comes from the word ontology, which sort of
is the study of being. So it's the field of philosophy that is concerned with questions like
what sort of things exist and what sort of nature are there to things and those kind of fundamental
questions about what reality consists of. So materialism in that sense, this ontological
materialism is the idea that our world is made up of matter. It is made up of material things and that
that is the foundation of the world that we live in. So most of kind of the irreligious world today
would probably hold on to this view. So from this perspective, you know, we could say the world's
not made up of spirits or gods or unknown immaterial forces, but it's made up of matter,
molecules, atoms, concrete material that we can experience and even study and, you know, come to some
degree of understanding. So this is one sense of materialism. So this is one sense of materialism.
And Marxism generally, you know, agrees with this position of ontological materialism.
There have been historical sort of divergences from that, but for the most part, Marxism has
pushed back against ideas like religion and spirituality, insisting that the world is made up
of a material realm that we can know and study that is grounded and factual.
And again, there have been moments where Marxists have flirted with religious organizing as well,
but that is the minority experience.
So that's one sense of materialism.
the most important sense when talking about Marxism. So when Marxists talk about materialism,
they're not usually just referring to this ontological materialism. They're usually discussing historical
materialism. And so we need to get into what this idea of historical materialism is. So historical
materialism is sort of as the name would imply, a method of understanding history and the way that
societies have developed throughout history. So to put it as simply as I can, historical materialism
argues that history is driven not by ideas or changes in values and principles that develop over
time, but rather changes in the material conditions of a society. So in opposition to this idea
of historical materialism, we have this concept of idealism. And idealism kind of argues that
if we want to understand historical change, we need to understand the ideas that drive those changes.
All of this is somewhat abstract. So, you know, to kind of pin this down a little bit, I want us to
think about a specific example. So we think about a concrete example that I think will be really
familiar for our American audience at least. We can think about the American Revolution and
sort of how we as people trying to understand historical development can explain the American
Revolution. And most of us have been taught an explanation of this in school at various times.
And that explanation is largely an idealist explanation. So it kind of goes something like this.
when the colonists came to America, they began to develop their own unique cultural identity,
separate from England. And this identity was based around principles of freedom and liberty.
And when these ideas came into conflict with the tyranny and the authoritarianism of the British king,
the colonists rose up in defense of liberty and freedom. The revolution was motivated more or less
by this kind of noble belief in these great ideas. It was a conflict between freedom and tyranny,
and the Republican eventually founded, was characterized by a love for
freedom and liberty. So this is kind of the story we've been told, right? These heroic people who rose up
in defense of these heroic principles. It's about the principles and ideas that drove history forward.
Now, a Marxist wouldn't really agree with this explanation because it frames the entire conflict as
driven by ideas and happening in the realm of idealism. So in contrast, Marxists would offer an
historical materialist explanation of the revolution. And that explanation might go something like
this. And let's see if we can tease out some of these differences.
So the Marxists might say that when the colonists came to America, they sort of began to engage in forms of
commerce and trade that competed with the old monarchical structure of Britain, right?
So you have these people who start to become merchants here in America, and their interests are
competing with the interests of the king and of the old feudal society in Britain, where taxation
and the rule of a monarch is taken for granted.
So this independent merchant class begins to develop here in America, and the needs of this young class
find themselves at odds with the right of the British king to, you know, tax, regulate, and even
prohibit the free trade of goods. So under this view, the revolution began because of the
ways in which the king economically interfered with the development of this young class of merchants.
And this young class realized that they needed a new form of government that could allow the
development of loosely regulated markets so they could grow rich. So the revolution, under the
Marxist view, then, was a conflict between two economic systems, an emerging,
but still young capitalist system of trade and sort of the old remnants of monarchical feudalism.
So the republic then that was founded was built to ensure the dominance of this newly emerging class,
an economy that would be favorable to them and laws that would allow them to develop.
And this would be the more materialist explanation.
So when we're looking at this explanation, we're not looking to what great ideas and principles and beliefs drove history forward,
but what material economic changes in how a society functions,
we're pushing things forward. So this hopefully kind of gives you a broad sense of the difference
between idealism and historical materialism. Historical materialism understands change in terms of
material conditions of a society. And material conditions, this term that we're using,
refers to sort of the underlying economic realities of a society and how they are managed.
So the term not only refers to, say, factories, natural resources, the labor force, or the technology
used in beating the economic needs of a society. But it also refers to how all of these realities
are managed, how they're divided up and structured. So the material conditions of a society
don't simply refer to what kind of products are produced, what sort of work is performed,
or what sort of resources are available, but also to who profits from the sell of those products
and how they are produced, how work is divided within a society, and how ownership of resources
is managed. So when Marx has tried to understand a society, they attempt,
to analyze it from those material conditions and then explain how those conditions shape the rest of
society. So, for example, Marxists don't understand capitalism in terms of abstract ideas,
like voluntary free exchange or economic freedom to buy and sell, but rather as an arrangement
where a class of laborers sell their labor for a wage to a class of capitalists who profit
from that working class is labor. So for Marxists, if we want to understand capitalism,
we have to understand what these fundamental material conditions of capital.
So why does all this matter, though? This is, you know, again, all sort of broad, philosophical,
and somewhat heady. Why are Marxists really emphasizing this idea of materialism? And the answer to that
is that Marxists believe that materialism has really exceptional explanatory power. By looking at the
world through materialist lens, we can understand the actual forces which drive historical change,
and we can even understand how change might potentially play out in the future. And even more
importantly, Marxist belief that materialism allows us to sort of see through the propaganda we've
been fed about how our society functions. If we understand capitalism in terms of material conditions
and the way those conditions produce exploitation, for example, then we might be less persuaded
by capitalism's appeals to lofty ideas like economic freedom and liberty. By insisting that
material reality is more important than ideas, historical materialism allows us to see the way that
lofty and abstract ideas have been used to distract us from the actual violences and exploitation
of capitalism and allows us to explain why capitalism isn't really based on freedom or liberty,
but on intense forms of oppression and exploitation. So this, in the end, is a very surface-level
explanation of what historical materialism mean and what Marxists mean by materialism. But hopefully
it's kind of at least provide some clarification for people who have seen those terms,
but not really known what they mean. That's really, really well said.
It's a difficult question and you handled it expertly.
And another thing I would add to that is just thinking about the idealism of thinking about American history.
And then as you articulated so wonderfully, the Marxist, materialist view of the American Revolution.
And one of the ways we can see that the materialist view is superior is the sort of contradictions that exist within the idealistic version of American history because you're writing things down like all men are created equal while you have slaves.
and while you're actively engaged in an ongoing genocide against the native population.
Well, if you're understanding the American Revolution in the terms of idealism,
those things don't really make sense.
You have to do some turning and bending to try to make sense of them and figure out what it was,
and you might chalk it up to the hypocrisy of the individual founding fathers.
But by understanding it as an emerging class, by understanding it materially,
you can see that slavery was a process by which you brought over free labor to jumpstart capitalism
for this new class, and we can see the genocide of Native Americans as a process of
primitive accumulation, which we'll define later, a primitive accumulation by which you take over
land necessary to build up this new mode of production, capitalism. And so these things make
much more sense under that light than they do under the idealist light. And to give one more
example at the risk of being a little too philosophical, I think a lot of people at least know
the basic outlines of the debate between Hegel and Marx, even if you don't know Hegelian philosophy,
which I don't think is necessary for this example.
But basically, Hegelian dialectics was this idea that, you know,
human societies and history developed through what Hegel would refer to as the absolute spirit,
but it's really the sort of increasing clarity of the idea, capital I,
and that, you know, all the things that happened down on Earth is really subordinate to this overall
striving of, you know, sort of the realm of ideas to come to completion in the absolute spirit.
Marx, you know, famously turned that on its head, meaning that he refused to understand the development of societies throughout history as an idea unfolding or an absolute spirit, but rather by the material basis, the economic mode of production, the ways that the basic necessities of life were created and distributed in a given society.
And so what Marx did with Hegel is he kept the dialectical sort of an historical understanding of society's evolution, but added material.
realized it and rejected the idealism of Hegel. So again, that might be a little abstract for
some, but for others that might help sort of simplify and concretize this dispute, particularly
in the realm of German philosophy, which Marxism came out of. So however, whether it's
Allison or I, whatever sort of made more sense, cling on to that and dive deeper into it.
Because I think, you know, people can come to understand these concepts through different paths.
Definitely. For some people, I think the historical is a little bit easier.
The philosophical is a little bit easier to get into, but I do, I really like what you're bringing out about the way to see the sort of superiority of historical materialism as it explains these contradictions and sort of the ideas we profess and then the way that society actually behaves.
And I also think it often when we see leaders in certain societies or we see a society acting in a way that feels irrational, historical materialism can show us sort of the economic underbelly of what's happening there, right?
So one of the things that I always emphasize is that Marxism can kind of explain the rise of fascism in Europe, right?
Fascism looks like this incredible irrational thing that we all look back on and say, how could that have happened?
But when we understand the economic emergency that capitalism was finding itself in, we can see how the capitalist class was willing to kind of take these ridiculous, irrational, violent actions because the material conditions were driving it.
And, you know, time and time again, we can find all these historical examples, I think, that really show.
why it is that materialism better explains what's happening around us.
Yeah, I'm tempted to give a materialist explanation of neoliberalism, but I'm afraid that
will take us too far afield. So we'll save that for another time. But absolutely, that's an
important thing to understand. And there's lots of things that you can analyze in a much
clear way through a materialist lens. And that's the point, right? The point is to demystify
social relations, to demystify what's actually happening. And that's what science does.
Science goes into the natural world and demystifies it for us. So we don't have to think.
the wind god or the you know christ standing up in the heavens looking down on us but we can actually
understand the natural world through natural natural facts and demystified in the process what
marxism does is that same demystifying process but for societies and histories and their
evolution through that time exactly so let's go ahead and move forward the next one
um perhaps one of the biggest questions um but it revolves around dialectics and uh on rev left
radio we just did an episode um on a book called the principal contradiction in which
dialectics is really explained. So if you're really interested in dialectics and you understand
we're not going to be able to completely dive into all of its nuances in one question, I would
direct you over to that recent episode on Rev Left. But the question is, what exactly is
dialectics, Allison? Why is such an abstract concept so central for a grounded and materialist
theory of history? Awesome. Yeah. So if the last section we talked about was sort of philosophically
abstract, this is going to be even more philosophically abstract, I'm afraid. And instead of giving you a
like one-sentence definition of dialectics, I'm going to try to paint a picture of dialectics
and the development of dialectics that I think will make things hopefully a little easier to
understand, especially because most of the one-sentence summations of it, especially the attempts
at summarizing Hegel, I think, are very bad and are an incorrect understanding. So I'm going to
try to paint this broadly. So materialism is sort of the central concept to Marxism that we need
to understand. An even more difficult concept that is highly related to that materialism is the
concept of dialectics. So we're not going to give this the depth it deserves because it is a
philosophical rabbit hole that we could do hours on. But we do want to dive into the concept,
you know, because it is central. If you want more depth, like Brett said, you can check out
that Rev Left Radio episode. And also our Red Minus episode on Mao's On Contradiction kind of gets
into some of these deeper thoughts about what dialectics is, how dialectics functions. But for
now, we sort of have a little bit of work to do in unpacking this concept. So,
So dialectics as a concept, as a form of reasoning even, precedes Marxism by a very, very long time.
So in a sense, dialectics goes all the way back to sort of the philosophy of Plato.
And if you're familiar with Plato at all, Plato's philosophy, it's written as dialogues where
characters are talking with each other.
And it's usually one central character, almost always Socrates, arguing with a secondary character.
And they're going back and forth with each other.
And so this is interesting, because if we think about it, Plato doesn't just present his arguments in writing.
He doesn't just say, this is what I believe, and here's why I believe it.
But he has two characters arguing with each other.
And these characters present opposing ideas against each other.
And as they do this, each of them shapes their ideas based on the opposition of the other.
These opposing ideas are constantly moving back and forth between each other and refining the central idea that is being developed in the dialogue.
And as they are searching for arguments that contradict each other, they come to more realizations about their own position.
And by the end of each dialogue, we are usually presented with something close to a coherent idea.
But that idea hasn't been shaped just by one person's philosophical reasoning developed in their head on their own,
but by two people who often aren't engaging in a friendly manner, but in a highly oppositional and contradicting manner.
And at the end of that, an idea emerges that is the stronger for that opposite.
position. And this is sort of a very early sense of kind of an idealist view of dialectics.
So this idea would be taken into more detail by the German philosopher George Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel, who was super influential on German philosophy overall, and who analyzed the way that
contradictions between and within ideas sort of shape society. So Brett got into this a little
bit already, right? So Hegel has this idea of the geist or the spirit or the perfect form of the
idea being the driving force of European society in particular, and he's analyzing that through
this lens of contradictions and opposing forces with each other. Oftentimes, a summary that you
will hear of Hegel that I want to problentize a little bit is this idea of dialectics. As you present a
thesis, then you present an antithesis to it, they contradict each other, and from that emerges a
synthesis. This is kind of the common explanation of it. In a lot of ways, it's based on a
mistranslation of Hegel, but it kind of can help you think about this idea that contradicting
opposing forces allow us to come to new forms and new ideas. So Hegel's emphasis on dialectics
had a major influence on the German philosopher Karl Marx, who's the reason we're talking about
all this at all. And Marx studied Hegel that is really who he positioned himself in the lineage of. And
so far the concept of dialectics that we're talking about with Plato and Hegel is about ideas. It's
about abstract concepts in opposition to each other. But Marx really altered this by considering
this concept of dialectics as a part of the material forces of history. And this is the famous thing
where Marx says he flipped Hegel on his head. Now the idea is not primary, but the material reality
is primary. And again, this shouldn't be surprising given that we just talked about so much
why Marxism values material reality as a starting point. So all of this should sound a little familiar
already based on our concept of materialism. But if we give a little bit more depth, from material's
perspective, historical change is driven and history is advanced because of changes in the
material conditions of society, as we already explained. So if we think back to this American
Revolution concept as an example, we focused on the way that the revolution was drawn by two
competing forces who were in opposition to each other. So the young merchant class at the
the colony found itself opposed and its interest in contradiction to the old monarchical power
of the European state. And history thus was advanced. It was moved forward, not because the
contradicting ideas that these people had, you know, leading to a new better idea, but because
the material interests of these two classes found themselves in contradiction to each other.
And from that contradiction emerged a bloody, violent revolutionary struggle. And on the other end of that
struggle emerged a new society, a Republican, capitalist sort of nation that still exist today
and have profound influence on the world. So this is an example of how the Marxist view of dialectics
understands opposing historical and material forces as central to the development of historical change.
Thus, for a Marxist, having a proper understanding of history is not just about understanding that
material reality is primary over ideas, but it's also about understanding that history is marked
by constant change in development as a result of opposing and contradicting classes.
Marx famously in the Communist Manifesto says that the history of all two previous existing
society has been the history of class struggle. It's been the history of these contradictions
playing out. This is to say that the history of change has been the history of material classes
fighting with each other and new things emerging as a result of those ruptures. And this is the
dialectical materialist view of history.
So to make this a little bit more concrete, not only was the American Revolution a single instance
in which history was driven forward by the conflict between two classes, but all of history
is a series of these conflicts. Marx argues that the development of republicanism and democracy
throughout all of Europe, for example, that occurred during what we think of as the Enlightenment
period, was not driven by these new Enlightenment ideas of reason, equality, and truth, but again
by an emerging merchant class within Europe that had taken advantage of new navigational
technologies to grow rich from seafaring trade. And this class eventually found itself at odds with the
old aristocrats and the monarchs again, who had ruled under feudalism. And this led to a series of
wars and revolutions. These contradictions emerged and turned into material bloody realities. And these
wars and revolutions led to this class establishing republics and democracies that favored trade
paved the way for the capitalist class to emerge as the new ruling class. And history again was
moved forward. It was driven by these contradicting economic interests and conflicting forces.
And so history under the dialectical view is thus a history of change, conflict, and constantly
upended realities. Nothing stays the same for very long. No kingdom exists in isolation from another,
and the interaction of contradictory forces ensures that change is always occurring. This is the
dialectical view. So from Marxists, though, dialectics is even broader than history. It goes beyond that.
So Marx's close friend and co-author Friedrich Engels argued that dialectics is actually a matter of nature itself.
Engels argued that nature wasn't made up of a bunch of different things existing in isolation of each other,
but was rather a set of relationships between things.
And to again make this more concrete, you know, we could say like if we're thinking about how an ecologist could understand the world,
no ecologists could hope to study a tree without understanding the dirt that the tree lives in,
the rain cycle which provides water to the tree, the animals which die and decompose near the tree,
providing nutrients to the soil, and so on. For Ingalls, nature is a bunch of relationships
between things. They're all caught up with each other, and it's marked by change within those
relationships. Ingalls says that when we look at nature, we see, quote, a picture of an endless
entanglement of relations and reactions, permutations, and combinations, in which nothing remains
what, where, and as it was. But every
moves, changes, comes into being, and passes away. End quote. So nature in the Marxist view
is also marked by this sort of dialectical change. Even as species develop, we see change at play.
So Ingalls points out that Darwin's theory of evolution shows us how dialectics plays out in nature.
The species we see around today have not always existed. And in fact, they exist only because of
conflict and the need for survival as some species adapt to natural changes better than others
and are able to pass on their traits.
So contradiction, opposition, and conflict in nature,
thus also drive biological change, not just historical change.
So now you should at least have kind of a basic idea
of what the structure of dialectics is through several examples
and how it relates to history and nature.
And you might be asking yourself, like, why does this matter?
Right?
Like, this is about as abstract as Marxism can get in some ways.
If Marxism is really so grounded in the materialist view of the world,
that values concrete, you know, material reality, why does some abstract philosophical notion
like dialectics deserve our time and attention? And I think that's a very fair question.
And, you know, dialectics, in a way, and this seems contradictory, helps us have a more grounded
view of reality. It helps us understand why things develop the way they do, and it brings more
depth to our understanding of history. And if we didn't have dialectics, we wouldn't be able to
understand the sort of broader patterns of history that develop. We might be able to explain one
single society through just a material lens that doesn't have dialectics, but understanding history
as a long, drawn-out process requires a view of dialectics. So in a weird way, even though it is
this abstract, formal philosophical concept, it sharpens our more grounded concrete material analysis.
And again, this is an explanation that has not done near justice to what dialectics is, and we have a lot
more resources you can go to for understanding that, but hopefully it's kind of drawn out the structure
of it for you a little bit. So if it's a term that you've heard but you've never had an
understanding of, you can kind of begin to get an introductory concept of what it means.
Yeah, it's a very intense concept, but it's actually sort of beautiful once you understand it.
And I think pointing to Darwinian evolution via natural selection is a great way that many of us
can really comprehend dialectics in nature and then start to apply it to a Marxist analysis
or weave it into our Marxist analysis because it can become very clear.
clear how dialectics works in the evolutionary situation. You can't understand the rise and fall of
the willy mammoth, for example, without understanding the rise and fall of the Ice Age.
And then also, once you internalize this and start looking at your own life, you realize that
a lot of human beings feel as if we're separate from other human beings, from nature, and really
from ourselves. You know, it's almost like we all have split psyches where there's the us that
goes through life and experiences it, and there's the us that sits back in the mind,
reflects and comments on it as we go through it. But I think what dialectics offers me and my
own self-understanding, and this is also present in ancient philosophies like Buddhism and Taoism
and Greek philosophy, etc. is that humans are not separate from the natural world. And in fact,
the climate crisis, the ecological collapse we're facing comes from a sort of bourgeois separatism,
a metaphysical, static view of human existence and where we are. Religion plays into this, right? A lot of
religions, monotheism, for example, has underlying it this idea that humans are created by
God, something outside of Earth in the natural cycles, and put in it to have dominion over it,
which leads to a similar sort of pathology in human minds. But to really think of humans
dialectically is to understand the human organism as inseparable from the entire Earth and to really
view yourself as bubbling up out of the Earth, not something alien that is put into the Earth.
And that at least will help you get your bearings to then start applying that stuff to Marxist analysis.
But just to review quickly some of the quote unquote methodological rules or at least some
highlighting some pillars to highlight when it comes to the dialectic method and how to apply it,
just some simple shorthand ideas is that one premise of dialectics is that everything is interconnected.
Nothing stands outside of the whole.
And so if you're going to try to understand phenomena within a given system,
system, you have to understand that system in its totality and understand the relationship between
the individual thing you're studying and all of the things and relationships that surround it.
Everything is cause and everything is effect.
You know, there is not a single cause and then a single effect that you can disassociate or
sort of extract from the overall just flood of cause and effect.
Everything turns around and causes something else.
Development occurs in qualitative leaps, right?
So instead of this idea that history is this slow and steady linear march of progress,
what dialectics urges us to think is how things develop in ruptures.
So it's not that feudalism seamlessly and linearly leads to capitalism,
which seamlessly and linearly leads to socialism,
but that capitalism represents a continuity and a rupture from the former system of feudalism,
and socialism represents a continuity and a rupture from capitalism, etc.
And then the last thing is understanding the role that contradiction plays in dialectics,
which you can think about it in a really simplistic way as sort of the engine.
And I don't want to get too deep into why the thesis, antithesis, synthesis, notion is flawed.
But part of it is this idea that, you know, a phenomenon arises, another thing rises to meet it,
and through that conflict or inter-engagement, something new arises.
And that is too simplified.
It's like to try to think of the most.
moment a phenomena arises through contradiction, its opposite also arises simultaneously. It's not that
there's this lag or this giving rise to this other thing, but it's actually embedded within
itself the contradiction, you know, or the opposite of the thing. And if you were to synchronize
it into an image, it would be the yin and yang symbol, where it's the white and the black
contrasting each other, but the white has a little dot of black and the black has a little dot of
white showing the interconnectivity and the inseparability of those things. So,
Those are just some helpful ways to think, and hopefully some of that hits you nice, and to continue to point to other resources because, you know, this is fundamentally about trying to learn Marxism, so we're going to point to our other episodes where we dive deeper into these topics.
Rev. Left has an episode called Emancipation After Hegel with Todd McGowan, which talks a lot about contradiction, the Hegelian and Marxist versions, and even offers a critique of some of the more orthodox understandings of these things.
So particularly if you're interested in why Higalian thesis, antithesis, synthesis is not right.
That book really tackles that.
And then, of course, the first episode we ever did on Red Menace was socialism, scientific, and utopia,
in which angles really lays out bourgeois metaphysics and distinguishes that from dialectics and dialectical materialism,
which is really helpful to understand this stuff as well.
So if you want to learn more, I'd point to you in those two directions.
Anything else you want to say about dialectics before we move on?
Yeah, just that it really is worth diving deeper. Dialectics is super hard to wrestle with,
but it is also, I think, maybe the most rewarding concept in Marxism in some ways. Once you start
to really grasp, like, some of these core ideas, it really does change how you look at the world
around you in a really fundamental way and how you interact with that world. And I think that that
is just very rewarding. And I definitely think, you know, getting that depth for why thesis,
antithesis, synthesis, synthesis is not correct as important.
because I've seen, like, official, like, organizational pamphlets from good organizations that present
that view of dialectics. And, you know, it is worth getting past that and pushing back against it and
refining it. That concept can be somewhat useful for understanding a very formalistic meaning of it,
but ultimately, you know, for the reasons that Brett got at, it's insufficient. Also, synthesis is way
too nice of a word for how that thing actually emerges at the end of the process would be the other
concerned with it. But yeah, it's really worth diving into, and I think there's a lot of resources
available to you for that. So we can go ahead, maybe move to our next question then, which,
you know, kind of bridges the philosophical with the economic sum and has to do with this idea
of political economy. So what is the political economic outlook of Marxism? And sort of what's
the relationship between the political philosophy and the Marxist theory of history and the
philosophical underpinnings and dialectics? How do these all come together? So, yeah, big question.
I'm going to try to do a very sort of understandable, hopefully simplified version, and then I'll
take your response that we can go from there. So just kind of parse these three things out. Political
economy, historical materialism, and dialectical materialism, right? So political economy is, as it
sounds, right, an analysis that understands the economic basis of politics and their inseparability
and therefore analyzes politics and economics as sort of a single field of study. The political
economic outlook of Marxism is one in which most things, from how our daily lives are structured,
to how our government is run, to the very ideas that populate our minds, are ultimately rooted in
or confined by the mode and relations of production that dominated a given time.
Historical materialism is this basic understanding applied historically in order to understand
how societies evolve and change over time. Historical materialism is sort of the science of
Marxism. It is the claim that history is the result of material conditions rather than ideas or
the machinations of great men. Historical materialism allows for us to understand how human societies
evolved from slavery through feudalism and into capitalism and how the dominant modes of thinking
and behaving in each historical epoch were actually reflective of the underlying realities of how
human beings went about creating and distributing the necessities of life. It allows us to
understand the American Revolution, for example, not as an outgrowth of new ideas
thought up by brilliant so-called founding fathers, but rather as an historical product of
British colonialism, chattel slavery, class interests, primitive accumulation, and the burgeoning
capitalist mode of production. Now, if historical materialism is the science of how societies
evolved through history, dialectical materialism is the philosophical framework and method of
analysis employed by historical materialists operating in the concrete world. In simpler terms,
historical materialism is the science of Marxism and dialectical materialism is the philosophy of
Marxism. That might be a sort of helpful starting place to really dive in to these two concepts
and understand sort of where they differ and how they're related. Dialectics pushes us to
grasp all phenomena as intrinsically interconnected, inseparable from the things in relationships
that surround it, constantly unfolding in a historical process that has a past, present, and
future, and pushed forward by the engine of contradiction, which arises simultaneously with the
phenomenon itself. Moreover, historical materialism allows for us to turn around and understand
the historical development and arrival of dialectical materialism as a method of analysis
and mode of thinking itself. So, again, these are very sort of complex concepts, but we can
start to see how you can think of political economy as sort of the initial object of Marxist
study. You can think of historical materialism as the scientific understanding of how societies
evolved through history. And you can understand dialectical materialism as the philosophical framework
that helps us think through those other things. And that's my best way of explaining these
complicated ideas. Alison, do you have anything to add to that, to correct, to challenge anything?
No, I mean, all that I think makes sense in terms of definition. You know, I think it's
sort of interesting. This is why it's so hard to explain Marxism in a way. It's because there are all
these facets to it, right? You can read parts of Marx that are these incredible in-depth,
like economic analysis of this is how money works or this is how value works and oftentimes
have to wrestle with that. And it's hard to sometimes think, like, how does this very specific
economic analysis tie to like this broad philosophical observation about the interconnectedness
of all reality, right? It can be very, very difficult.
to understand how those things come together. And I think, you know, this idea of framing it from the
scientific component and also the sort of philosophical component can help you understand how they
work together. And it's important to recognize that like Marxism is like a coherent, self-contained
view of the world. Right. It's not a set of like collected ideas which have come together and, you know,
just sort of are randomly and eclectically bound together by Marxist choosing to believe them. But it's a worldview.
It's a comprehensive theory of reality, and that kind of is part of what binds these three things together.
You know, I hope in the future, Red Menace will get a little bit more into sort of those political, economic details.
Because we've really looked very heavily at the philosophical and the historical, scientific component of it.
But the political economic one can be a little undervalued sometimes because it's difficult, and that's where you get weird things like diagrams and marks that you have to wrestle with.
So, you know, hopefully we'll get more into that in the future.
but I think it's important to understand that all of these disparate things that can feel abstract and disconnected are part of a comprehensive view about what reality is.
Yeah. And it's also important to understand that Marxism is inherently open-ended.
You know, and Marxism is so fundamentally misunderstood by right, left, and center that it can be very hard to just start Googling this stuff and try to fight a good answer.
For example, the recent debate between Gijek and Jordan Peterson, right, it happened two years ago or something.
And then Jordan Peterson fell off the map for a while because he was really humiliated.
But what Peterson tried to do is he got famous in part by being a critic of Marxism, right?
So he rose to international fame by being one of the most cutting and biting critics of so-called, you know, neo-Marxism or cultural Marxism, et cetera.
And then when he got into that debate with Jizek, we saw firsthand how he had no fucking clue what he was talking about.
So how does somebody who doesn't understand Marxism so obviously, right?
How does that person rise to become a global combatant or, you know, a competitor, an opposition figure, intellectual dark Weber that takes on Marxism?
And that's precisely because Marxism is not simple to understand.
The people who are invested in the status quo have no real interest in understanding Marxism.
Historical materialism and dialectical materialism undermine the bourgeois order directly.
And it's much easier.
And our society allows much more room for people to be sloppy critics.
of Marxists, then they allow for Marxists to actually articulate their worldview. And this is why
once you say you're a Marxist, you're expected to know everything about history, everything about
economics. You're held to this incredibly high standard. But if you're an opponent of Marxism,
you can be the laziest, shittiest thinker. And you will be propped up as a brilliant intellectual
in our world precisely because of the sort of ideological fallout from any sort of critique of
Marxism. And even the interests that are served by muddying the water and just,
just confusing people about Marxism.
Those serve concrete interests.
And that's why I think you see this dynamic of Marxists have to know everything.
Critics of Marxists can be absolutely ignorant and still be held up as real thinkers.
And I think that that speaks volumes.
Yeah.
It's super frustrating, honestly.
So we can go ahead and go into the next one maybe, which is a question that our listeners
are probably familiar with, but that, you know, is worth sort of thinking about in the context
of what we're doing here today.
So this last question then is,
Is Marxism just one theory among others, or is it distinct in some way?
And why is it that Marx says that Marxism is a science?
And what's at stake in that claim?
Right.
So first of all, I'll point you to some other resources to keep in mind going forward.
On Rev Left, we did an episode, this ruthless criticism of all that exists with JMP,
where we talk about Marxism as a science.
We go through the criticisms of the possibility of Marxism being the science, etc.
And on another episode, Allison and I went actually on to a libertarian socialist podcast and debated the status of Marxism as a science.
And so we had two interlocutors and me and Allison were on the same side defending Marxism as a science.
And that was almost two hours long, if not longer.
So, you know, these debates are out there.
We have extra resources that you can go to.
This is a big question.
And it's actually, you know, up there with dialectics as far as a difficult thing to grasp your, to grasp and to wrap your mind around.
and it's particularly something that in my experience and the experience of others
becomes a real impediment to people claiming Marxism
because people aren't comfortable with this claim that Marxism is the science
precisely because they don't understand it and the water is so muddied around it.
So having said that, those are some external resources,
but here's my best attempt to answer that question.
And I'll start with this.
You know, Marxism arose out of and reacted to the German philosophy,
the British economics and the utopian socialism of the time.
But rather than lose themselves in metaphysical speculation,
post-hoc economic rationalizations,
or vague socialism rooted in abstract ideas and first principles,
Marx and Engels sought to apply the scientific method
to an analysis of not only societies in their evolution through history,
but to the development of the capitalist mode of production itself.
So they did not want to just be stuck in this philosophical realm of speculation,
but they wanted to actually fundamentally and concretely understand these processes.
By so doing, Marx and Engels ushered in the first ever scientific understanding of capitalism,
where it came from historically and the concrete mechanisms by which it dominates,
but also by which it undermines itself.
There is simply no better understanding of capitalism than the understanding of it laid out in Das Kapital,
in part because, unlike the political economic thinkers of their time and ours,
marks and angles refused to simply operate within its given parameters
and sort of try to make sense of it from the inside out
and instead took a meta perspective on it as a historical process
with a concrete beginning and an inevitable end.
And as a side note, you can think about,
and this helped me when I was trying to wrap my head around this stuff,
you can think about marks and angles doing for society and history
what Darwin did for evolutionary biology via natural selection.
That can help some people, especially with a science background.
and I know that helped me.
So in simple terms, and I'll repeat that,
what Darwin did for biology,
Marx and Engels did for political economy.
Namely, they historicized it
and they discovered the mechanisms and laws
by which it develops over time.
And by so doing, they separated their theory
from philosophy, from speculation, from idealism,
and from being just another set of ideas
or philosophies that people could pick and choose from.
Historical materialism, as I said before,
is the science of Marxism,
and by virtue of this science,
Marxism separates itself from all other ideas in political philosophy.
As Marx himself said, quote,
the philosophers have only hitherto interpreted the world.
The point is to change it.
This is, I think, reflective of Marx's turning away from pure philosophical speculation
and toward trying to ground his understanding in a scientific analysis.
Now, of course, enemies of Marxism on the right, center and left,
have always and will always bend themselves into pretzels trying to dethrone Marxism
from its pedestal of science, and claim that it is just another dogma or ideology among many.
And it would be true that if Marxism could be demonstrated to be non-scientific,
it would be demoted to just another interesting development of German philosophy,
as well as just another set of abstract political beliefs, alongside conservatism, liberalism, fascism, and anarchism.
Moreover, since Marxism has been and continues to be, by far the most effective weapon
that working, colonized, and oppressed people have in fighting back against the brutalities of
capitalism, colonialism, and imperialism. It is in the raw and obvious interests of defenders of the
status quo to slander and demean Marxism status as a science. And understanding based in
superstructure and ideology, we can see how these ideas and this attempt to dethrone Marxism as a
science can even happen within the realm of academia and science itself. You can think of, you know,
works by like Carl Popper, which tried to, you know, ineffectively and ultimately incorrectly,
but tried to dethrone Marxism as a science by, you know, reaching towards things like falsifiability,
etc., which we've talked about in those other episodes.
But much to the chagrin of its enemies, Marxism remains an open-ended in scientific methodology
for understanding the development of capitalism, the contradictions that exist within it,
and how to best confront it at any given moment in any given set of conditions.
With all of that said, I do not mean to argue.
that Marxism can't be held dogmatically,
that it can't be stripped of its scientific rigor
in favor of bland doctrinairism and lazy thinking.
It can and it does,
and it's easier for people to hold something dogmatically
than it is for them to think about it scientifically.
But this is true for all sciences.
There are plenty of people in all fields
who hold on to bad, discredited,
or disproven ideas within science,
and this has always been the case.
But the solution to this does not lie outside
of the scientific methodology.
It comes from within the scientific methodology.
itself, which is why the best critiques of Marxist dogmatism, revisionism, and errors actually
come from Marxism itself, not from the outside. And as dialectics reminds us, progress within a field
happens in qualitative leaps or ruptures, not in a slow and steady march of linear progress.
Darwin represented a rupture within the field of biology. Einstein represented a rupture
within the field of theoretical physics, and Marx and angles represent a rupture within the field
of social science and history.
what do you think about that alison yeah i mean i think that's a really good summary and i think the
important thing to you is sort of this self-correcting idea right marxism has the ability to be
critical of dogmatism within marxism because you're right like if you are you know familiar with
marxism at all you've probably met people who are super dogmatic about their Marxism and who use
you know especially if you're online like really just frankly cringy terms like the immortal
science of dialectical materialism or whatever uh you know you
may have seen this before, and that kind of dogmatism does exist. But that dogmatism is bad
precisely on Marxism's own terms, because Marxism is anti-dogmatic. Marxism in its understanding
of dialectics recognizes that change is a constant. We can't hold the exact same doctrinaire views
because reality is constantly in flux. It is constantly rupturing. It is constantly, you know,
changing. And holding on to the same ideas is, in fact, you know, a contradiction of Marxism itself on
certain level. So if we want to correct that dogmatism, Marxism gives us the ability to do it
internally, and that is, I think, a very valuable thing. And I think the other thing, too, is that the
attempt to demote Marxism from the, you know, status of a science to just another idea is often done
in a way that's meant to sort of look like it's being charitable to Marxism, right? So for people
who have a background in, you know, the academy, a way that this often sort of gets framed that
you might recognize is this claim that, you know, it's not that Marxism's wrong, it's that it can
just explain a few things, and we need these other external theories. We need Foucault, or we need
some other theorists in order to explain these other phenomena. And in that way, you know,
it is an attempt to undermine the explanatory power of Marxism by suggesting that materialism
isn't, in fact, a demystification of reality, but is in fact just one more explanation of reality
that might be useful for researching it in some way. So often, there can be a really benign
framing to that argument against the scientific status of Marxism. But if we lose that, we lose that
core demystification that makes materialism powerful in the first place. The idea that materialism is
not just one interpretation among many, but that it is, in fact, teaching us something about
reality, about truth that can be held onto beyond sort of relativistic notions of reality and
truth, being matters of interpretation or subjective sort of experience. So it is, I think,
very important to hold on to that scientific concept, even when those who are criticizing it
are trying to frame it as like, no, I like Marxism, but it's just limited in these ways.
We need to understand the philosophical undermining that can be happening with that move.
Yeah. And to study the history of Marxism is to study in its best strains the constant
updating expansion and challenging of Marxism within it. So two people that jump to mind as
theorists who operated within Marxism, but challenged it from within and by doing,
so expanded and updated and moved to the science forward are people like
Franz Fanon and Sylvia Federici, right? Federici and Calabin and the Witch was really
operating with historical materialist and dialectical materialist perspectives, but was
challenging this idea that capitalism was a wholly progressive move forward from feudalism
and actually showed in lots of ways how you can even think of the dawn of capitalism
as a sort of counter-revolution to some of the egalitarian impulses with
the late feudalist order.
And in the similar way, Franz Fanon, in Wretched of the Earth, he even opens the text
with saying, you know, in the colonial context, we have to stretch Marxism a bit.
And what did France Fanon do?
He applied Marxism to the colonial context, something that, you know, as somebody who was
a colonized person, France Fanon could understand in a way that Marx and angles could
never understand.
And so by operating within the tradition, by challenging it, by updating it, we can see
the open-ended scientific nature of Marxism, and we can see how it is open-ended and is constantly
developing, and the best sort of pushes for Marxism to move forward are precisely, or come
precisely from within it. And that leads us, I think, to our next question, which is the contributions
of Lenin and Mao to Marxism, because in the ways that Sylvia Federici and Franz Fanon
theorized Marxism and expanded upon it, Lenin and Mao did the same thing, but also put it into practice
in world historical ways.
So, Alison, you want to try to tackle this first,
and I'll add some more things as we go along.
Yeah, I think there's a few ways we can look at this.
On the one hand, like Linen and Mao are another example
of sort of questioning Marxism and updating it in some ways, right?
I think we can think about the ways that each of them challenges core ideas within
Marxism.
Lennon challenges Marx's idea that the revolution would be in the industrialized sort of center
of capitalism.
and Lenin says actually colonized sort of countries are in a unique position to challenge
imperialism and capitalism. So we see Lenin updating Marx's ideas there. And, you know, Marx really
emphasizes the primacy and oftentimes even like the sole function of the proletariat within a
revolutionary struggle. And Mao challenges that as well by arguing for a place for the peasantry
within a struggle as well. And so these are thinkers that both are kind of by pushing back
against Marx in a way, making Marxism stronger, and we see that sort of self-correcting thing.
But Lennon and Mao are also important because they lived in a different time than Marx, right?
And this is, I think, really central to understand.
Marx was involved in organizing.
He was part of the first international.
He saw revolutionary struggles take place around him through things like the Paris Commune,
and he saw the failures of those struggles.
But Marx didn't get to engage hands-on in a revolutionary moment in the same way that Lennon and Mao did.
And with Lenin and Mao, we see two thinkers who weren't just on the theoretical level challenging
some of the precepts of Marxism and expanding it, but lived in a revolutionary context where they
were able to put it into practice and to develop a practice of Marxism that could show us
how Marxism can actually go about changing the world.
For Lenin, in a lot of ways, that looks like this development of the concept of the party,
the way that you organize to create a new society and his critique of spontaneous.
ideas of revolution. For Mao, we can look to the concept of the mass line and the cultural revolution
and the way that you can combat the remnants of capitalist society once you've had that
revolutionary moment take place. And so in both of them, we see people who lived in a later
context than Marx, where capitalism was at, you know, more extensive contradictions, largely around
questions of colonialism and imperialism, and where that allowed them to push back against dogmatism
within Marxism, and to show that by pushing back into that, Marxism was stronger because of the
successes that both of them achieved. So while, you know, we need to study Marx and we need to think
about these concrete and also philosophical ideas that are at the core of Marx, we also need
understand the historical development of Marxism. And whether or not you think the USSR or the People's
Republic of China were positive experiments overall, you still need to understand that these are
historical moments where these ideas were put to the test that need to be studied.
Yes, absolutely. You know, as Allison said, they put Marxism into practice in their own
specific conditions. They proved its effectiveness in changing the world, and they updated the
science of Marxism via their concrete struggles in these world historical revolutions against
capitalism and imperialism. One of the interesting things, you know, Allison's mentioning
Lenin and Mao's cultural revolution, um, Mao and the Chinese communist revolution came
after, obviously, the Bolshevik revolution, Mao was watching how it played out the first
ever successful long-term proletarian revolution in Russia. And he was seeing how the bureaucracy was
taking over, how the state itself was sort of becoming separate from the people. And the Soviet
Union, after Lenin's death during Stalin's reign, had this idea that class struggle had ended
in the Soviet Union. And that is a sort of anti-dialectical way of thinking. And so Mao challenging
that anti-dialectical way of thinking
with dialectics insisted
class struggle continues under socialism
and in fact it can often intensify
the cultural revolution was one of the
strategies employed, one of the experimental
strategies employed by Mao to
counteract that movement within the socialist
and communist movement that he saw
rising in the Soviet Union. This obviously
led to a huge dispute and we can get
in, you know, in different episodes about the
Sino-Soviet split, etc. But I really
think it's a great way
to understand how, even
in an ostensibly socialist project, there's still this creeping bourgeois, metaphysical, static
understanding of things, and Mao challenged that. And he not only challenged it theoretically,
he put into practice the experiments that might fight against that tendency within the movement.
I think that's beautiful. And then the other things that don't really get talked about with
Lenin and Mao's contributions is precisely and particularly their contributions to dialectical
materialism. While it's obvious that Marx and Engels consciously understood dialectics and
dialectical materialism and we're trying to put it into practice. It really wasn't fully formalized
as a philosophy of Marxism until Lenin's materialism and imperialism in which he really
sort of does the work of laying out the logic of dialectical materialism in a really new and
exciting and deep way. And then Mao, of course, with things like on contradiction, deepened our
understanding of the role contradiction plays within dialectical materialism. So you see from Marx and
angles through Lenin and Mao, not only the putting into practice of ideas and all of the other
stuff, but also a refining and making explicit the logic of the philosophy they're using to
analyze, which is something that doesn't get talked about as much as Lenin's imperialism and Mao's
mass line, but I think are really just as important and really things that marks us today
trying to come up with strategies in our present conditions can look to and learn from.
Yeah, and I think, you know, even, like, outside of the context of, like, revolutionary struggle, like, the thing that I always come back to when I read Lenin and Mao on the more philosophical side is, like, these are important philosophical contributions more broadly that they don't get recognized for, right?
Like, when you really dive into, especially the simplicity of some of Mao's articulations of dialectics, and his intervention into, like, Western philosophical debates about empiricism versus rationalism, like, these are thinkers who are engaging in philosophical discourse that,
that just totally gets ignored by philosophy,
to the detriment of mainstream philosophy in many ways.
Definitely.
All right.
So let's go ahead and move on to our sort of final segment,
which is tackling some basic terms.
We have about five of them to just tackle
and try to give a brief, succinct,
but hopefully somewhat thoughtful and in-depth definition of these terms
to help you concretize and deepen your understanding of Marxism
and the roles that these concepts play within are,
analysis and methodology. So Allison, do you want to take the first one, which I think is
primitive accumulation? Yeah. So we can talk about this. So primitive accumulation is one of
those terms that you might hear come up in discussions of Marxism, especially on the more
theoretical or academic end of things. It's a very popular concept. And it's one that's actually
very grounded, I think, and very interesting that we can use to think about historical materialism
and the way it can demystify things. So the question of primitive accumulation within
and Marxism is perhaps no simply thought of of the question of how it was that capitalism
developed. What was it that allowed the development of capitalism, the development of the
capitalist class, and its sort of securing of power? And I think this is actually really
concrete example of demystification that we can kind of look at. So Marx, in his critique of
Adam Smith's political economy, he sort of mockingly paints sort of the capitalist explanation
from where capitalism comes from.
And his story that he tells us goes something like this.
He says, the capitalists say that you had these very hardworking men,
and they worked very hard, and they devoted their lives to accumulating wealth,
and through working harder than others and competing with people who didn't work as hard,
they were eventually able to become stronger and richer,
and to develop kind of this new society based around these principles of freedom and exchange,
and it was a result of the honest, good, sweat-of-the-brow kind of labor of some people
that was better than others.
And this is kind of, you know, like a story that we heard a little bit.
We hear about capitalists becoming capitalist because of the kind of pull yourself up by
your bootstraps mentality, especially in the United States when neoliberalism, we really
leaned into this myth of like hard work being how you get to these positions.
And the story that capitals were telling about where capitalism came from kind of played
into the same idea.
And Marxism is going to push back against this, right?
it's going to try to demystify this, because this story isn't the truth. So when we talk about
primitive accumulation and Marxism, we talk about this idea that, in fact, the emergence of
capitalism wasn't about competition or some people working harder than others. It was about
violence. It was about class struggle between different classes. And we've kind of looked a little
bit, right, talking about the American Revolution or the development of republicanism within Europe,
the way that these societies came about because of violent revolutions against feudalism.
But even beyond those revolutions, there had to be a total destruction of the sort of ways
of life that existed before capitalism. So when we sort of get into this idea of primitive
accumulation, we get into the details of how capitalism didn't come about peacefully, it didn't
come about through cooperation and voluntary exchange, it came about through coercion and
manipulation in many ways. So an example that Marx gets into that,
that many people aren't aware of is this concept of enclosure and the bloody legislation.
So under feudalism, obviously peasants didn't live what we would necessarily describe as a good
life, but there were some aspects of their life that were sort of interesting and alien to what we
see now in capitalism. So while peasants obviously worked fields on land that was controlled by
feudal lord or by some aristocrat and paid tribute out of what they were producing in that
context. There was also land that was held in common, you know, we call this the commons, where
peasants could grow their own food as well, and, you know, gain the ability to have some
level of subsistence beyond the direct exploitative relationship of serfdom. And one interesting
thing that we see happening, and Marx points to this as a very grounded example of primitive
accumulation, is during the period of time where these new republics are being formed, where
parliaments are rising up, and where we're seeing a capitalist society emerge, especially in England,
a set of laws called the enclosure laws were passed, which basically made it illegal for peasants
to farm on this land. The commons was enclosed and they lost access to it. Now, why would that
happen? What role would that play? Well, as capitalism was developing, there was sort of a need
to push people into cities so that you could have an urban workforce to work in these new
industrialized factories that were being founded. And so, in fact, in order to force people to do that,
peasant life had to be made unlivable. It had to be made impossible. And this kind of legislation was an
example of how all of that was closed off so that people would be forced to move and integrate into this
capitalist system. The development of capitalism then didn't occur as this sort of peaceful,
organic transition, and it didn't just occur as revolution against the monarchs. It also occurred
through the manipulation of the populace, the artificial construction of an urban workforce,
and really violent interventions into the ways of life that people had.
And this is one way that we can sort of begin to demystify things.
You know, other thinkers like Federici, for example, who Brett previously mentioned,
also look at the way that capitalism had to eliminate previous forms of life.
She looks at the way that, you know, women began to be enclosed within houses
so that they could do domestic labor for a male workforce.
And also the ways that slavery and colonialism were necessary processes for the establishment
for the establishment of capitalism. In order for the capital necessary for this emerging class
to function, they had to enslave massive parts of the world. They had to justify genocides. And so
the story of the emergence of capitalism that we get into with this idea of primitive accumulation
is one of violence, one of revolution, one of struggle, that demystifies the story we've been
told of hardworking people with lofty ideas. And so primitive accumulation, I think,
is one really grounded example of how demystification works, and how when we see,
start to think as materialists, we see a kind of horrifying reality of the beginning of capitalism
that we've been, in a certain sense, lied to about by those who've educated us.
Right.
Yeah.
Wonderfully said.
And one of the examples Marx gave about the enclosure process was, you know, peasants would go out
into the woods, the forests, and collect firewood to obviously, you know, warm their homes,
cook their food, et cetera.
And one of the laws that got put in a place in this primitive accumulation process was to make
that illegal. So going out and taking
wood from nature became
illegal because that allowed
peasants and dependence from the broader system.
One of the things on top
of pushing people off their land and into cities
for factory work, on top of disciplining
and enclosing women inside of households
for the maintenance of
the labor force, there's also a
devastation of communal bonds that
existed under the feudalist
order to, you know, and we
enter into this period of hyper individual
individualism where everybody's competing against everybody else on the marketplace and, you know,
gives rise to alienation and all this other stuff. So to understand that process is very important.
And particularly to understand the slavery and genocide as part and parcel with primitive accumulation,
I think is very, very clarifying and works against some idealist conceptions of American history
and really just capitalist history broadly.
Yeah, definitely.
All right. The next term, which will bleed into the one following that,
is vanguardism. You want to take that, Alison?
Yeah. So vanguardism is another term that I think is we're talking about. It hints at a debate
within Marxism. And again, if you've seen sort of leftists argue with each other,
you might hear the term used kind of as an insult or as a pejorative, right,
as an accusation that gets made against people. And it kind of carries with it this connotation
of elitism, right? Like having this elite vanguard above the working class who guides things.
And I think we can do a little bit of work sort of disentangling that and thinking through what the
Marx's notion of vanguardism is, and why that's kind of a misrepresentation. So, you know, again,
this term, it gets at an idea that sort of a leadership is necessary in the broadest sense. And then
in the Leninist sense, it gets at this idea of a professional revolutionary leadership.
So let's think about the development of this. So Marx himself, you know, was somewhat unclear about
organizational structures. If you look at Marx's work, you're not getting the kind of grounded,
like, this is how we organize a party that you get with Lenin. So drawing from Marx,
himself an idea of vanguardism is a little bit tricky. But also if we historicize Marx and
if we think about his historical situation and place him within it, it might get a little bit
easier to wrestle with. So Marx was a part of the First International, right? And the first
international was publishing things like the Communist Manifesto. And on that level at the very
least, it's very clear that Marx, through his practice as a grounded philosopher who was part of
the movement, believed that, you know, there needs to be some level of leadership guiding things. You
can't just allow the movement to develop spontaneously. Correct ideas need to be applied,
and there needs to be a leadership through organization overseeing that. And again, that idea
is underdeveloped in Marx, but it is still somewhat there. And then vanguardism really comes
into its own through Lennon. And if you want way more depth on this question, you can listen to
our episode on Lennon's What Is to Be Done, because it gets into a lot of that depth. But this is
really where we start to see sort of these ideas of vanguardism become very important. But in
Leninism, you know, Lenin suggests that it is the job of revolutionaries not to just allow the movement
to spontaneously develop in whatever direction that it needs to, but the job of revolutionaries to
steer it in a productive direction and to make sure that it develops correctly. And in order to do
this, Lenin suggests that a vanguard of professional revolutionaries is necessary. And it would be
incorrect to understand this as meaning, you know, sort of a bunch of intellectuals who stand above and
beyond the revolutionary movement of the masses and dictate it without any insight from the masses.
Because Lenin actually suggests that the job of the revolution, you know, really is to bring in
these workers and make them into professional revolutionaries. So there is a goal of pulling people
up to that level. And Mauro finds us even further with the mass line where the party vanguard
isn't above and outside of the masses, but is in constant conversation with them and taking in
their ideas and you know becoming stronger because of them so the vanguard doesn't imply
elitism necessarily it doesn't imply a lack of touch with the masses as we see it developed it
implies a huge faith that the masses can be developed into these professional leaders and the idea
that a revolution is not a spontaneous act yeah and notice how the concept of vanguardism is not a
product of armchair speculation or it doesn't come out of academia it comes out of the concrete
struggles of first the Russian and then the Chinese people fighting against and putting into practice
Marxist ideas. So they're not just sitting back thinking of fun ideas. They're actually testing
and running experiments in real time in, as JMP would call it, the laboratory of revolution
and learning these things. And then the next revolution picks up on what they learned,
discards what didn't work, carries forward, expands, and updates what did work. And that's precisely
that path from Marx to Lenin to Mao that we see. And, you know, for all of the characteristics,
about vanguardism and the vanguard party, you know, it really is not about a leader standing on top as a dictator of the people or, you know, handing down dictates to helpless, you know, people that are toiling at the bottom. But really think about vanguard parties and people in that party as servants of the people. You know, in Maoism we hear a lot of serve the people, feed the people. It's about really subordinating your own individual life.
and your own individual wants and career ambitions or whatever, submitting all of that for
the emancipation of working people, of colonized people, of oppressed people.
So it's really not a dictatorial thing.
It's a more service-oriented idea.
And, you know, critics of vanguardism, critics of the vanguard party, they proliferate,
they're everywhere.
But, you know, nobody on the left that really hates Lenin and really hates Mao, they've
just not been able to cash out their so-called critiques and superior ideas.
actual progressive revolutionary movements that challenge and overthrow capitalism. So it's very easy
to sit on the sidelines to caricature to throw tomatoes at people on the field doing the actual
work. But as Marxist, we don't value ideas in a vacuum. We value those ideas put into concrete
struggle. How far do they get to us? That does not mean that vanguardism and the party form are
the end-all be-all of revolutionary strategy. It's just that at this point in the historical
development of socialism, those things have proven objectively to be more effective than the
ideas of its critics. And so that is what we value more than abstract ideas. We value the
effectiveness and concrete struggle. And that's where these ideas come from. And that's why they're
important. And that's why they're held up by us, not as dogma, but as, you know, sort of
scientific principles that have worked in the past that may as an open-ended science need
updating and revision as we go forward and operate in new conditions under.
new, you know, sort of forces, but are still so far in our history really effective weapons
in our struggle. And that's important. And this bleeds into the next sort of idea, which is just
the party. And vanguardism and the party and the vanguard party, they're very connected.
This idea really comes out of Marx talking about the fact that the emancipation of the working
class must be the act of the working class itself. And so the next question is, okay, how does the
working class one become conscious of itself and then how does it organize to pursue its interests?
And the party is, you know, Lenin's conclusion in a lot of ways of that. And it's the party can be
understood as organized working class militants rooted fundamentally in the masses, spearheaded by
the most advanced segment of the militant proletariat and or colonized with the express purpose of
sort of centralizing and coordinating their efforts against the local and global forces of capitalism
and imperialism. And one of the things I really want to emphasize there is when I say that
the Vanguard Party is a mass party. It's rooted fundamentally in the masses, meaning there are
plenty of people who call themselves the Vanguard Party. There are plenty of little microsex and
cadres around the world who think of themselves as the Vanguard. But because they're not rooted in
the masses, that claim is meaningless. And so I think that's an important component of it. And all
of the caricaturizations by anti-communists, right, left, and center, try to
obscure this reality. They try to turn it into something evil or nefarious. And for a lot of people,
it works, particularly with Americans who have been really brainwashed by these ideas of, you know,
we're against big government and, you know, rugged individualism. And even people who explicitly
reject those notions implicitly sort of bring them on board when they start talking about authoritarianism.
Because organized, people organizing with solid leadership and being able to coordinate their efforts
means effective combating of the forces that oppress.
And anybody not invested truly and deeply in the overthrowing of those forces
are always going to try to denigrate and caricaturize this movement
because it is, and it's been proven to be the most effective route
to challenge these forces.
So those are just some of my initial thoughts.
Vanguardism and the party form really do go together in a lot of ways.
And I would just urge people to be on the lookout for constant caricaturization,
and to really think critically about what it means and more importantly than anything, to actually
put it into practice. Because once you put it into practice, a lot of the speculation falls away.
You can see how the mass line works. You can see how building the party is fundamental and
an essential part of being able to effectively combat the oppressors, the enemies, the capitalist,
the imperialist, et cetera. Yeah. And I think also when thinking about sort of those like anti-communist
caricatures of the party, it's important to think that like when we talk about the party and the
communist context. We're not talking about like a political party like we have in a bourgeois republic,
right? So people will point to the fact that under various socialist states, the communist party was
sort of the only official electoral party that existed. But it's different than sort of what you would
think about, right? So with the Democratic Party, the Democratic Party today, no matter what you and I
or the rest of the people believe, the Democratic Party doesn't care and it doesn't give a shit and we
don't have a way of influencing it, right? And you can see this for a fact because the popularity of
policies like Medicare for All or the Green New Deal is exceptionally high, but they'll never find
themselves in the platform of the Democratic Party, because the Democratic Party is a group of
bourgeois leaders who just tell you, here's our slate, vote for it. But the party that we're
talking about in a communist context is not that. It's exactly like you say, Brett, it's a mass
party grounded in the people. Democracy is expressed internally through the party, through decision
making, through voting, through allowing people to have an actual influence on what the party is and
does. And that is super different than the bourgeois parties, which we largely have no daily
interaction with, except when election time comes around and they say, here's our slate,
vote for it, you don't get a lot of say. We're talking about something that is profoundly grounded
and concretely democratic internally in how it relates to the people and the masses.
Infinitely more democratic than bourgeois parties. And in this topsy-turvy world,
things often get turned into their opposite. So, you know, the very forces of bourgeois anti-democracy
we'll call vanguardism and the party authoritarian when, you know, when you really look at it's
precisely the opposite. And that's true of so many things in our, in our culture. And that leads
well into the next term, which is ideology. What is ideology? I've said this before, I think,
on this show, but there's a sort of colloquial understanding of ideology, which is just any set of
ideas that somebody holds on to, you know, well, that's a democratic, you do have a democratic
ideology or you have a Republican ideology, et cetera. But that's not how we mean it in the Marxist
terms. In the Marxist terms, it's something more diffuse, something more subtle, something that
operates oftentimes well beyond the conscious recognition of the people who are sort of regurgitating
it. Marx says, and I think this gets at the sort of the core pillar of the Marxist idea of
ideology, Marx says it is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their
social existence that determines their consciousness. And then later, somebody who did work on
this front, Al Thusser, he said ideology represents the imaginary relationship of individuals to their
real conditions of existence, sort of pointing at the idea that ideology sort of fills the gap
between how things appear to be and how they really are. And to maintain a status quo, to maintain
the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, there has to be obscurantism. There has to be, as we've talked
about all throughout this episode already, a muddying of the water, a mystifying of social
relations, a mystifying of history in order to solidify the rule of the bourgeois ruling
class. And ideology is the mechanism by which those ideas proliferate through the people.
It manifests in our common sense. It manifests in our popular culture. It manifests in our folk
worldviews. One thing I like to talk about is you'll always hear, you'll hear people sort of
regurgitate things that they've heard, like communism goes against human nature or
Che and Fidel or sociopathic murderers who burned books and killed gay people. And then you sit
back and you're like, okay, does that come from somebody who's read a single book on what they're
talking about? Does that come from intellectual research and independent thinking? Or is that just
something that they've passively absorbed throughout their life and are regurgitating it as if
it came from their own independent critical intellectual faculties.
And that's the nefariousness, the insidiousness of ideology, is it operates as if it's common
sense, it operates as if it's the conclusion of really disciplined reasoning, but in reality
it's completely detached from concrete reality and it often is meant to obscure, not to
illuminate, not to demystify.
Another way to think about it is, you know, ideology can be seen as sort of the superstructure
of a given mode of production.
Maybe superstructure and base analysis can help you.
you understand how ideology operates. You can think of ideology as being, in a lot of ways,
sort of maybe even synonymous with the superstructure. That can be a subtle and more nuanced
debate, of course, but it points in the direction of understanding ideology in Marxist terms.
Al Thuzeir would talk about ideological state apparatuses, and he was thinking of things like
education, the media, the church, even laws, right? Things that might formally exist
outside the state or the government as such, but transmit its values.
They end up disseminating ideologies that reinforce the control of the dominant class, which under capitalism is the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie.
Some quick and easy examples.
Pledge of Allegiance in schools, right?
It seems relatively innocent.
We all did it as children.
But if you actually look at the content of what we're saying every single day, it's very ideologically infused.
And schools also operate as basically training you to be a worker.
It segments your day in the way that it will be segmented when you grow up.
And your teacher stands in to train you how to relate to your boss.
You know, ask when you can go to the bathroom.
At this time you do this, I tell you what to do, et cetera.
Prosperity gospel within American churches, right?
There's this absurd contradiction between classic Christianity, which emphasizes in the words of Jesus Christ,
the meek, the vulnerable, the innocent, and this idea of greed at all costs.
and how do you solve that contradiction through the ideology of prosperity gospel where actually
God wants you to get super, super rich.
And so we see in these subtle ways in a million more how the ideas in people's heads aren't
necessarily as bourgeois philosophers and economists would like us to think the conclusions
of self-interested and rational individuals, but are rather ideas promulgated and handed down
subtly from the underlying mode of production and the ruling class.
They become our ideas and all sudden you're in a workplace with the coworker who's just as
poor and struggling as you talking about how their boss just works harder and that's why
they earn it and unions aren't a good idea because, you know, our bosses already take care
of us, etc.
It's really insidious.
It's really nefarious.
And it's one of the bulwarks, I think, importantly, that the capitalist world order has
to maintain its order that doesn't necessarily.
rely on brute force because after feudalism, humans wanted to kind of put the absolute explicit
violent force a little out of view. And ideology is obviously a way to do that. But that's not to say
that ideology didn't obviously exist in slave societies. It's not to say that ideology didn't obviously
exist in feudalist societies. It doesn't. And it continues to exist in a capitalist society.
Part of the front that we fight on is not only the material front, but also the ideological front,
which is why shows like this exist to talk about Marxist philosophy, to educate people about a materialist understanding of history,
and to deconstruct and dismantle the ideological frameworks we've been handed down and to really think through them critically.
Yeah, and I think ideology is interesting as a concept, too, because it's one of those things where, like, really concretely,
once you start to think about the world as a materialist, you start to see these things, right?
You start to realize that these things that you have totally taken for granted,
ideas or even, yeah, common sense little phrases or idioms that we tell ourselves are all kind
of about reinforcing this specific order. And it's a very eye-opening experience once you can kind
of start to see the world through that lens. So sort of the last term that we had is one that we've
thrown around for sure on our show before. And that, you know, is a term that you will see get thrown
around as a pejorative on the left quite frequently that is worth thinking about, which is
this term revisionism and what that means. So I actually have very very,
little for this because I think it's just pretty obvious once you give a definition. I think the
basic idea when somebody calls somebody a revisionist is that it is liberalism masquerading as Marxism,
right? Or anti-Marxism dressed up in the garb of Marxism, trying to convince you that their liberal
ideas are actually ideas that come out of Marxist methodologies and Marxist analysis. Dogmatism
often masquerades as materialist analysis. That's a form of revisionism. Opportunism within our
movements is a form of revisionism. In Maoist China, he talked about the capitalist rotors,
right? People within the party trying to put the Chinese people back onto the road of liberalism
and capitalism. And we can debate whether that happened or not. But that's the idea of revisionism.
It's basically in the simplest terms, it's liberalism, or at least anti-communism or anti-Marxist
ideas, masquerading as if they are principled Marxist ideas. And it can be very nefarious inside of
movements and inside of organizations where you're really trying to struggle together to
find a proper line strategy to move forward with and people are dressing up their ingrained
liberalism, sometimes consciously, sometimes unconsciously, as if it's principled Marxist
analysis. And that can be very dangerous. Yeah. I also think one thing to really focus on is
the word revisionism, you know, invokes this idea of like revising something. And I think people get
caught up in a sort of dogmatism they see there, right, where they hear someone accused of revisionism.
and it's like, oh, you're revising some doctrine within Marxism or whatever.
And that's not really what we're getting at, right?
And I think ideology can help us understand this, right?
No matter how committed we are to the cause, we also have an ideological underpinning
in capitalism.
Like Brett said, like we are raised with this.
We learn it in school.
We learn it all the time.
And as long as that ideology is operating, even the most committed radical can still hold
on to these mistakes and these forms of liberalism that undermine the position of the
movement. And when we talk about revisionism, we're not talking about like, oh, you're like
some, you know, like you're revising marks in some way. You're throwing out the sacred doctrines
or whatever. We mean like, no, you are importing these ideologies in a way that is harmful and
will undermine what we're trying to do and what we're trying to build here. And I think it's very
important to understand that it's not a dogmatic claim. It's one that is more practical in its
orientation. I think that's an important thing to consider with it. Definitely. And we know,
and it's really important what Allison said is that ideology can continue to
exist when you, even when you're committed principled radical. And this happens to me a lot. And I think
it's a form of bourgeois individualism where there'll be times when I just genuinely, internally
get discouraged. I look out at the world. I feel like, holy shit, I'm not making an impact. We don't
have the forces necessary to do anything. Maybe it would just be better for my mental and emotional
health if I just recoil back into my personal life. And, you know, that's something within me that
I then recognize and fight against, of course. But, you know, it's so ingrained. It's so inbuilt that, you know, if you're not sort of aware at the highest levels, this shit can creep in and really start to do damage to how you live your life and your basic principles, oftentimes without you even recognizing it. So it's one thing to be angrily calling everybody else revisionist. I think it's more oftentimes beneficial for you to look within yourself and see how the revisionism and opportunism,
and ideology might manifest within yourself, and then that can give you a better understanding of how it
operates in others, how you can go about weeding it out of yourself and others. And it's a constant
battle. You don't just click in and all of a sudden you're done and you've transcended your conditioning
and your liberal brainwashing. It's a lifelong struggle. And a lot of times people grow up. They get
maybe even a little economically comfortable. And then they just let that take them over. And then
all of a sudden you'll start seeing their politics shift more and more towards liberalism. This happens right now
with like the new left where the new left you know wrote that letter a few a month or two ago
chastising the new new left and and you know saying we have to vote for Biden etc a lot of these
people were hardcore Marxist revolutionaries ready to take on the government and do a revolution
when they were in their 20s and 30s but then a lot of them found ways into academia they started
selling books they got pretty comfy in their life and they more importantly they got out of the
working and poor classes up into the middle middle upper class and their politics shift this is not
them consciously betraying their earlier selves. It's that ingrained momentum of liberal conditioning
taking over particularly when your financial situation shifts, which is why so often we see
revolutionary movements be underpinned by either the incredibly oppressed or the young,
right? People that haven't been able to find comfort in their systems or the people where the system
just doesn't allow any comfort at all. And one of the problems and one of the reasons it's so hard to
organized effectively as a radical militant left in the U.S.
It's precisely because of the super exploitation I'm conducted by imperialism and the
siphoning of relative wealth and resources back to the global north that can then be
turned around and used to pay off segments of the working class.
Often the white working class and often labor aristocracy embedded within whiteness
and embedded within the idea that, okay, my personal income is $100,000 a year.
Am I really committed to overthrowing the system because I'm pretty fucking
comfy and I would like to add a deck to my house next year, you know? So that shit does happen.
And it's something to be on the lookout within yourself as well as within others.
Definitely. Awesome. So do we want to move into sort of the last thing that we were going to look
at a little bit, which is thinking through these two other sort of fields of left-wing thought,
anarchism, and sort of social democracy? Yeah, I'll give my super quick thoughts and then I'll let you
take it. The way I see social democracy, anarchism, and Marxism, sort of interrelating is I see Marxism,
is sort of the trunk of the tree, right? Marx's critique of capitalism. It is sort of the starting
point for both anarchism and social democracy. Anarchism arose in the early debates, like
really formally, right, theoretically in the early debates between Bakunin and Marx revolving around
the state. Bakunin had a lot of shitty ideas, but then obviously there's other anarchists that
had better ideas and it was updated over time, et cetera. But I really think it's important
to understand anarchism as sort of an outgrowth of early, early market.
And then sort of a challenging of some of the core tenets of Marxism within that relatively radical revolutionary movement, which is why the two dominant strains of true revolutionary leftism in the world today are anarchism and Marxism. But they share the same roots, I would argue. And social democracy can be seen as another outgrowth of Marxism. Sometimes social democracy is slandered by anarchists as Marxism and critiqued as if critiquing social democracy is part and parcel with the critique of Marxism proper.
which is interesting and confused in its own way.
But social democracy, I think, can be understood as a dominant strain of revisionism within Marxism.
We saw it appear during the time of Marx and Engels.
When they were competing with people, we saw it in the works of Rosa competing with Bernstein, Lenin,
competing with Kotsky, within the inner disputes of the Communist Party during Mao's era, etc.
And so we still see it today, right?
People using the term socialism to just mean left liberal social democracy.
And it's really social democracy can be seen unlike anarchism as an abandonment really of the revolutionary aspect of Marxism and a mistaken belief that through the democratic institutions propped up by liberal capitalism, we can eventually build a world that Marxists and anarchists want to see, which is a world free of class and domination and exploitation.
So I see social democracy as a revisionist offshoot of Marxism, and I see anarchism as kind of growing from the same roots and then turning around and challenging each other on a few really basic disputes, which then evolve over time, right? With Lenin, you see anarchism shift to compensate and address Lenin's notions of the Vanguard Party and the really existing conditions of the Soviet Union and then, you know, anarchism shift again in relation to Maoism.
And so I think that sort of dialectical back and forth between Marxism and anarchism is always there.
But the thing I respect in anarchism is that it maintains the revolutionary edge and the refusal to compromise with bourgeois capitalism and social democracy chops that revolutionary edge off of Marxism.
Yeah, no, definitely it's similar to how I look at it.
And I was sort of framing it in my notes as sort of the way that there's agreement and disagreement, right?
So I think you get at in anarchism there is this agreement with Marxism about the need for a revolutionary orientation, right?
that is very much shared. But there's this sort of philosophical divergence that happens about what the
state is, right? So for anarchists, these concepts like the state or hierarchy are kind of
absolute, right? They're trans-historical. They extend across all history. And they are, no matter what
their particular instance might look like, they are broadly, problematic, broadly inherently
violent and have to be opposed in a certain way. Whereas Marxism has sort of a different view,
right? Like, for Marxism, hierarchy, or the state doesn't have any value in and of itself. It depends on what class it's being used in the defense of. And so hierarchy in defense of the capitalist class or the state in the defense of the capitalist class is something a Marxist would condemn, whereas a Marxist would recognize that for revolutionary organizing, you need some level of hierarchy or that a proletarian dictatorship needs a state. And so the state isn't understood as sort of this trans-historical inherently problematic concept, but it's understood in the specific,
civics of each given state in relation to sort of the class struggle. And so I think that's one way
we can see anarchism. And then with, you know, sort of social democracy, we see this total break
with Marxism on the question of revolution. And sort of an error of taking sort of this particular
view of the state too far, right? Like social democracy ends up saying, well, this particular
state could be used in this way, you know, for progressive ends. And we could infiltrate it in a certain
sense and use it and you sort of get so over-focused on the specifics of one state that you miss
the broader class focus that states play, period. And that kind of gets obstructed and obfuscated
there a little bit. So that would be one issue there. The other thing that I would say is that
anarchism, you know, there are anarchists who are largely materialists, right? And I would argue
that their version of materialism is flawed in some ways because their view of the state isn't
quite materialist. But they definitely are starting with that as a methodology. And that is how
they're approaching things. Whereas, you know, there's not so much of a coherent underlying
philosophy to a lot of social democracy in the same way. There's social Democrats who think of
themselves as Marxists in some sort of really bizarre and wit manners, but there's not the same
sort of philosophical rigor often. It's more pragmatist in its orientation. Where anarchism,
I think you do see more of the philosophical tradition. And even outside of the materialist components
of anarchism, there is a lot of theoretical depth to even those more idealist forms of it. So that's
sort of another component that I think about there in terms of differentiating them.
Yeah, I think that's great. I have nothing else in my notes. Is there anything else that you want to
touch on before we wrap this episode up? No, I don't think so. I think this is a lot for people,
so hopefully this is helpful. I mean, like, the goal is that this can be a tool for you to really
wrestle with these ideas and start to, you know, if you're new to Marxism, if you're just curious
what Marxism is, or if you have friends who are curious what it is, this can hopefully be sort of
introduction and a starting point. Obviously, you know, we're doing our best with it. It's not
going to function in and of itself without any other additional resources, but hopefully we
pointed towards some of those potential resources, and this can be useful. Yeah. And I would just
urge you if there's some things in here that you don't understand, don't ever let that
discourage you. I remember 10 years ago, I lived in the basement of a friend's house and he had a
whiteboard from one of his walls. And I remember writing, literally writing out historical
materialism and Googling it and then writing the definition and then dialectical
materialism and writing the definition and every day getting up and looking at it and trying
to think what that means and then doing more graphs and then trying to understand basin superstructure
and it took me years and years and years to understand even the level of understanding I have now
which is by no means a complete knowledge and you'll never get to a complete knowledge but
to struggle through things to be able to engage with material that over the first second
even maybe third and fourth passes, you don't fully comprehend, but you continue to still dive
and find new resources and struggle and think critically about it. That's the process of learning.
Not everything is going to snap the first time you hear it. It's a protracted process.
And I think that's an important, important to keep in mind, particularly if you hear some
of this stuff and get discouraged. I've been there. I'm still there in a lot of ways. There's
still plenty of stuff I don't understand. And so don't be too hard on yourself. Just continue to
engage, continue to think critically and continue to try to suss through different resources and come to a better and better and better understanding. That's all you can hope for as a human being. Yeah. And I mean, likewise, I've been wrestling with this for years and constantly realizing I misunderstood this thing or I had this thing wrong and being open to just growing, right? Like, we're going to get things wrong. We're going to misunderstand things. And that's part of how we become better in our grasp of things. So being, you know, generous with yourself as you wrestle with these things is very important because everyone has to go through that self-correct.
process when they're learning something like this. Absolutely. All right. So for next month,
the end of October, we will go back to current events and there will be plenty to talk about right
before the election. And so I'm excited to talk about that. And then going forward from there,
we're just kind of have to honestly see, I think, how the election plays out because it could
demand us perhaps leaving theory aside for a month or two and continually, you know, sort of analyzing
what's going on because it could get very, very chaotic.
in about a month here.
So, yeah, stay tuned for that.
Thank you to everybody who supports us on Patreon,
everybody who shares our episodes.
We really want you to take this episode
and try to give it to people
who are genuinely interested
in learning about Marxism.
That's part of the point of this.
And we hope people utilize that
and spread that around.
So thank you again for the support
and we will be back next month
to talk about this terrible empire in decay.
Enjoy.
Good night.
Oh, I have ambitions.
Dreams.
But dreams don't come cheap.
I saw a demon on my shoulder
is looking like pay.
patriarchy like scrubbing blood off the ceiling and bleach in another carpet.
How my house's going on it?
My toy and body don't embody all the life she wanted.
The baby's just 19.
I know I dream all black.
I've seen that everything immortalized and tweets all caps.
They say they found her dead.
One girl missing another.
One girl missing another.
But niggas in the bad quiet as a church mouse.
Basement studio when duty calls to get the verse out.
I guess the ego hurt now.
It's time to go to work.
Wow.
Look at him going.
He really doubts to write about me when the world is in.
smokes when his people in trees when George was begging for his mother saying he couldn't
breathe you thought to write about me one girl missing another one gold missing one girl missing
one girl missing another one yo but little did i know all my reading would be a bother is
trans women being murdered and this is all he can offer and this is all y'all receive distract you from
the convo with organizers and talking abolishing the police and this is a new world order we democratize
amazon we iron down borders this a new vanguard this a new vanguard i'm the new
vanguard.