Rev Left Radio - [BEST OF] What Is To Be Done? Understanding Communist Strategy
Episode Date: May 27, 2025ORIGINALLY RELEASED Oct 23, 2023 UPSTREAM INTERVIEW W/ BREHT AND ALYSON: What Is To Be Done? This is the question so profoundly posed by the Russian Revolutionary and Bolshevik leader, Vladimir Len...in, in his landmark text of the same name. Although it was written well over a century ago, this text, the questions it asked, and the paths forward that it provided, are just as relevant today as they were a hundred years ago. And just as urgent. What roles do spontaneity and disciplined organization have in leftist movements? Can we focus simply on economic reform, or do our actions need a larger political framework to structure, guide, and propel them? Why does it feel like even though so many of us are motivated to work towards structural change, that things continue to get worse? Why does it seem like potential revolutionary struggles in the West always seem to stall and fail to move from a singular moment to a protracted movement? These are old and familiar questions — a lot of ink has been spilled and speeches made exploring them — and in this Conversation, we’ve brought on two guests who've not only thought about these questions in depth, but who have some pretty compelling answers that draw from revolutionary theory and practice in both their personal lives and from the deep well of wisdom bequeathed by theorists Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Mao. Breht O’Shea is the host of the podcast Revolutionary Left Radio and a co-host of Guerrilla History. He’s been on the show multiple times so you may already be familiar with his voice. Alyson Escalate, who has also been on the show, is the co-host, along with Breht, of Red Menace, a podcast that explains and analyzes revolutionary theory and then applies its lessons to our contemporary conditions. Further Resources: Red Menace – What Is To Be Done? - V.I. Lenin Revolutionary Left Radio – Politics in Command: Analyzing the Error of Economism Red Menace – The Wretched of the Earth - Frantz Fanon: On Violence and Spontaneity Red Menace – Understanding Settler Colonialism in Israel and the United States Revolutionary Left Radio on Instagram Upstream – Buddhism and Marxism with Breht O'Shea (In Conversation) Upstream – Trans Liberation and Solidarity with Alyson Escalante (In Conversation) Upstream – Revolutionary Leftism with Breht O'Shea (In Conversation)
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When we're trying to
When we're trying to not get tenants evicted,
when we're giving mutual aid,
when we're feeding, giving school supplies
to kids in our community, that's great.
but it's literally playing defense.
We're trying to cover up or deal with some of the problems of living in capitalism.
We're not taking the fight to anybody at all.
If you're on the ground feeding people in your community, salute to you.
If you're on the ground fighting for tenants' rights and getting deposits back and taking on slum wards,
salute to you.
If you're in your local factory helping form a union and leading a union struggle,
good for you.
You know, you are the sort of seed bed out of which a vanguard party can possibly grow.
but we're just saying we're not there yet.
And that's the fundamental task
because the crises are going to keep coming
and they're going to get bigger
and they're going to compound.
But if we're not organized,
those crises will rack us,
they'll scatter us,
they'll leave us scrambling to play mere defense
and we'll never be able to go on the offensive.
And so the task of every communist
in the United States right now
is to begin working toward
a real vanguard party.
You're listening to Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
A podcast of Documented
documentaries and conversations that invites you to unlearn everything you thought you knew about
economics. I'm Della Duncan. And I'm Robert Raymond. What is to be done? This is the question
profoundly posed by the Russian revolutionary and Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin in his landmark text
of the same name. Although it was written well over a century ago, this text, the questions it
and the paths forward that it provided are just as relevant today as they were 100 years ago.
What roles do spontaneity and disciplined organization have in leftist movements?
Can we focus simply on economic reform, or do our actions need a larger political framework
to structure, guide, and propel them?
Why does it feel like even though so many of us are motivated to work toward structural change,
the things seem to continue to get worse.
Why does it seem like potential revolutionary struggles in the West always stall?
And that they always seem to fail to move from a singular moment to a protracted movement.
These are old and familiar questions.
A lot of ink has been spilled and speeches made exploring them.
And in this conversation, we've brought on two guests
who've not only thought about these questions in depth,
but who have some pretty compelling answers.
that draw from revolutionary theory and practice in both their personal lives,
as well as from the deep well of wisdom bequeathed from theorists like Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Mao.
Brett O'Shea is the host of the podcast's Revolutionary Left Radio and co-host of Gorilla History.
He's been on the show multiple times, so you may already be familiar with his voice.
Alison Escalante, who's also been on the show, is the co-host along with Brella.
of Red Menace, a podcast that explains and analyzes revolutionary theory and then applies
its lessons to our contemporary conditions. We're really excited to share this conversation with
you. And before we do, we want to say a huge thank you to everyone who's responded to our
call for help after we lost our grant funding this year. It really means the world to us to know
that you all are out there and that you have our backs. So many folks shared our call for help
reached out to us personally and became monthly donors. We truly feel the love and are so grateful
to you all. Now that this is entirely listener funded, it's not hyperbole to say that we truly
could not do this without you. And if you haven't already, and if you can, and if you're in a place
where you can afford to do so, and if it's important for you to help us keep upstream sustainable,
please consider going to upstreampodcast.org forward slash support to make a recurring monthly
or one-time donation. Also, if you can, please go to Apple Podcasts and rate, subscribe, and leave
us a review there. You can also go to Spotify now and leave us a review there too. This really
helps us get in front of more eyes and into more ears. We don't have a marketing budget for
upstream, so we really do rely on listeners like you to help grow our audience and spread the word. Thank
you. And finally, after much thought and discussion, Robert and I have decided in 2020,
we're finally going to start a Patreon for Upstream.
You've probably noticed that this episode is going to be released on one of our off weeks,
and that's because we're getting into the new habit of a bonus episode.
In 2024, we'll continue to offer our bi-weekly episodes for free,
but we'll also be releasing at least one, if not two, extra episodes every month.
Episodes just like this one, but which will be available exclusively for Patreon subscribers.
If you're already a recurring donor, we'll make it as easy.
as possible for you to simply switch over to Patreon. But don't worry about this yet. You don't have to do
anything for now. We'll make another announcement at the end of the year and send out some emails
to let you know how you can easily transfer your subscription over to Patreon. Okay, thank you for
bearing with us for all of those announcements. And now here's Robert in conversation with Brett O'Shea
and Alison Escalante.
Brett, Allison, it is such a pleasure to have you both back on the show.
I really can't convey just how important Red Menace's work has been to my introduction
to and sort of further refining and understanding of so many of the important leftist
and Marxist texts that you guys explore.
And so you've both been guests on Upstream separately, but it's really cool to have you both on in this context is Red Menace.
And, you know, I'm going to try really hard not to get lost and just sit back and act like I'm listening to an episode of Red Menace as opposed to hosting this interview.
But, yeah, I'm really excited about it, obviously.
And I'm wondering if to start maybe, yeah, if you could just both introduce yourselves for folks who may not have heard any of the past episodes that we've done with you or may not be familiar with you.
your work? Sure. Yeah, I'll start off. First off, saying that I'm sure I speak for Allison as well,
that we really appreciate everything that Epstream does your voice, the podcast itself, but also
your voice on social media, the way you stay principled, and your really wonderful way of sort of
taking highlights from various shows and getting it out to people in a way that is very focused
on political education. It's admirable, and I think both of our shows share a sort of similar
spirit in that sense. So hats off to all of you. And I also want to acknowledge that we're
recording the day after historic events happening in Palestine, the Palestinian resistance and its
long history have many examples of things we're going to touch on or talk about today and really
helps highlight the importance at the very least of an organized and militant party apparatus
connected to the masses. Now, the settler colonial situation is unique in that a national
liberation struggle, which unites colonized people across political differences to fight on
behalf of liberation is a sort of prerequisite to having a socialist revolution proper, although
Palestinian history also shows that there isn't merely a rigid, stagist approach to these sorts of
things, but there's actually a long history of sort of dialectical unity and tension between
different factions of the national liberation struggle, including explicitly communist
revolutionary ones, as well as more Islamic-oriented nationalist ones. But if you want to
learn more about that, you can check out some of the episodes I just re-uploaded on Revileft
radio as well as Red Menace's three-part episode on France Fanon's Wretched of the Earth.
But I just thought that it was such an important historical event. It was worth putting that
up front. But as for me, yeah, I host, you know, Rev Left Radio as well as Red Menace with
Allison and a third podcast called Gorilla History with my friends, Henry and Adnan, where just every
different show sort of focuses on different things. Rev. Left is the big catch-all approach
where we try to cover as many topics and have as many voices on as possible to sort of bring
people in to these conversations and then with Red Menace and Grilla History, it sort of funnels
down into a little bit more advanced, you know, theoretical and historical analysis for those
who want to go even deeper. And that's sort of the approach of this entire project and it's three
arms. I'm also a father of three lifelong living in the working class. And from the birth of my
political consciousness, even before I had words to articulate it, I was always on the side of
working people because they were literally all of my friends and family. They were everyone that
I knew. And so that was the sort of starting position of my politics once my political consciousness
sort of dawned in my late teens. And so, yep, that's just, that's basically me, Alison.
Yeah, thanks, Brett. A couple things as well up top. Again, yeah, thank you, Robbie, for this episode
having us on here. I think this is a really cool discussion that we're going to have. So I'm just
very glad for the opportunity to go and discuss this. And I also want to echo what Brett said.
I think it would be a mistake not to mention what is happening in Palestine and just make sure to
express our absolute and unwavering solidarity with resistance to Israeli settler colonialism,
which is occurring now. A very historic moment that is happening that I hope people are paying
attention to. A lot of the theory that we've discussed on Red Menace in the past is playing
out in practice right now. And I think there's a lot to be learned from analyzing that,
paying attention to it. And I just hope people are watching what is going on and are continuing
to stand in solidarity. Broadly on an introduction, I am Allison. I am Brett's co-host
on Red Minnis, which is one of the many podcasts and the broader Rev Left Radio family,
Red Minus, kind of the concept starting out was going to be that we were going to take
various works of revolutionary theory, break them down, do some summary work, and then do some
Q&A discussion back and forth on them. The show's evolved over time into a couple of different
things. We've touched on some decidedly non-revolutionary works by reading some reactionary
theory and discussing it from a critical Marxist perspective. And we've also dived into
current events discussion in many cases, having previously discussed conflicts happening in Palestine
and the struggle for liberation there as well, as well as broad theoretical discussions about
anti-colonialism and decolonization. But yeah, I'm super excited to be here. I think there are some
really important questions that we're going to dive into here today that tie into the question that
is the title of one of the books that we're discussing, what is to be done, which is a pressing question
right now, right? We are in a strange time globally in terms of politics. There are unprecedented
in uprisings and wars happening.
And domestically in the U.S., we're seeing a labor wave that is really interesting.
And the question of what we as Marxists ought to do about that is super relevant.
So I'm very excited to be here.
And I think this episode will hopefully have some really good discussion.
Yeah.
Thank you so much, Allison.
I'm really looking forward to getting into the conversation as well.
And before we do, I also just want to echo what you both said.
I completely agree.
I think it's so important for us to recognize that, you know, the time that we're speaking,
the really, really significant decolonial, anti-colonial uprising happening in Palestine
right now, you know, a militant armed struggle from the Palestinians against the apartheid state
of Israel. And yeah, I think we'd definitely be remiss if we did not acknowledge that.
Obviously, we're not a current affairs news show or anything like that, so it's a little bit
harder for us to always touch on these things. So I think it's really important to acknowledge
it and maybe, you know, weave any analysis in and out of our conversation today if it feels
relevant. And, you know, maybe we might even do an extra bonus episode if we have the time and
we find the right guest to explore this issue soon. If not soon, definitely have plans to do that
more explicitly sometime in the future. And I think that before we hit record, Allison was mentioning
how the next episode of Red Menace might be a current events analysis.
episode where you discuss this latest armed uprising in Palestine. And so maybe our listeners can
check that out if it's available at some point this month. And just to respond also to what Brett
was mentioning about Franz Fanon and the episode on Red Menace, where you all spent three episodes
exploring the wretched of the earth. Fanon's really important text, your episode was actually my
introduction to that text and I've since purchased the text and I've started reading it. And so I just
want to shout you both out again for introducing me to such an important text as well as, you know,
I'm currently reading George Jackson's Blood in My Eye, which is a really, really important text,
which I believe Brett on Rev Left Radio, you explored that as well in two parts. And so listening to
that as a compliment while reading the book has been really, really helpful in
gaining more perspective and hearing your analysis around a lot of the topics covered in that
text, which are not unrelated to Phenon and this idea of colonization and fascism and imperialism.
And so I think lots and lots of connections between different texts and different red menace
episodes and red left episodes. So just really want to appreciate you too for all the really
important work that you're doing and helping us all grapple with a lot of these sometimes complex
issues and introducing us to these really, really important texts and concepts. So yeah,
we're going to be discussing kind of a wide variety of topics today and drawing from a few
different important texts. But like you mentioned, Allison, the most significant text that
will probably be weaving in throughout the conversation is Lenin's What is to Be Done. And, of
course, the excellent Red Menace episode from back in 2019, which explored this text as well.
So before we dive into sort of the context of the text, I was wondering if you could both maybe
just give us a brief background on the text and like the context within which it was written.
And, you know, maybe if you want to, like sort of how you came across the text and sort of first
discovered it.
Yeah.
So I can go ahead and take a stab at this to start off.
So what is to be done is, in my opinion, one of the more difficult linen text to read and
the context is part of that.
it's so historically, like, ingrained in this very specific moment. So hopefully we can provide
a little bit of the background where the text comes from. So what is to be done was written by
Lenin in 1901, partially in 1902 when it was published. It's a name that refers to a famous
revolutionary novel, What is to be done? And broadly, this text is a little bit strange to
unpack. I think when most people dive into it, the first thing that they realize is there's a lot
of references to a lot of different factions in the socialist movement in Europe and Russia. A lot of
references to a lot of different figures, and it can be hard without a broader historical context
to know what to do with it. Broadly, the text is a critique of communism, and it is a critique of
a school of thought and kind of a movement within European socialism that was following
Bernstein, who was a thinker and political leader within the German Social Democratic Party.
And Bernstein, you know, started off fairly orthodox as a Marxist and began to drift from
Marxist ideas over time. And broadly comes to be seen as the head of a sort of non-revolutionary
trend within the socialist movement and within the German socialist movement in particular,
where the focus was less on organizing towards revolution or organizing a party to achieve
revolution and more in focusing on the immediate labor demands that workers had and built into
this kind of trend that Lenin names economism is the idea that focusing on those immediate demands,
really just engaging in the economic struggle and not expanding beyond that should be the job of
Marxists and in some way can contribute to sort of a broader socialist movement in the long term.
And so really what Lenin is railing against here is this Bernsteinist idea that is popular.
And Lenin is going to, throughout the text, get into arguments between different newspapers
within the socialist movement.
He's going to get into discussions of criticism versus non-criticism, how a party ought to be
organized.
but broadly I think it's important to understand that that's the kind of theoretical line
that is being struggled against here. And what Lenin wants to do is offer a view of
communist organizing and Marxist organizing that is in opposition to Bernstein's view into that
economist view. And all of the theoretical development that happens here is it just out of nowhere.
It's very specifically contrasted with this economist movement, this reformist movement that is
occurring, that is moving away from these fundamental ideas of Marxism about revolution
and more towards a focus on immediate demands.
So that can hopefully provide a little bit of the historical background here.
Again, we'll get into the theoretical depth of that.
But that can help set the stage.
And it's worth thinking this is a fairly early text for Lenin, right?
In 1901, this is prior to the 1905 revolution and to the February and October
revolutions.
This is a text that did a lot to shape what would become Bolshevik politics within Russia.
It really became a defining text for distinguishing the Bolshevian.
position later on from the Menshevik position and from other socialist positions.
So there's a lot of work here that's really kind of historical demarcation of what made the Leninist
perspective distinct. Yeah, and the only thing I would add to that, I mean, Allison really covered
all the basics of the general context and background conditions in which this was written. But
what we do have sitting as we are in 2023 is the realization that some of these ideas advanced by
Lenin in this text, what is to be done, were actually tested.
in the real world historical arena of revolution a mere 15 to 16 years after he wrote this text
and were proven in that hot house of revolutionary ferment to be the line that won out,
to be the historical victor compared to these other forms of socialism, you know,
these bourgeois intellectuals and opportunists who were distorting socialism or confusing people
about what socialism is, which is something, you know, of course, we still deal with today.
But, you know, some of these core concepts like communism, like,
the need for a vanguard party. These are interesting theoretical abstract conceptions,
but we also get the benefit of seeing them put into practice and succeeding. So, you know,
you really have to understand that for Marxist-Leninists in particular, and of course, Maoists as
well, you know, abstract theory is one thing, but we take very seriously how these ideas are
actually tested in real-world revolutionary situations. And we have a sort of scientific approach,
you know, in the simplest terms of historically what has worked and what hasn't. If you have a
theory and you implement that theory, you're running an experiment, you know, does it turn out that
you advance the ball for the working class in a revolutionary direction or do these other strains
went out? And I think what we've seen since this text and since the Bolshevik revolution,
at least in my perspective, and I, of course, am coming from a Marxist-Leninist perspective,
is that this is a superior mode of organizing and a superior methodology and approach that is more
effective than everything else that was on offer at that time. And to this day, still on offer in a
lot of ways. And so that's what makes this text really important for ongoing movements whose ultimate
aim is the overthrow of capitalism and imperialism. Yeah. Thank you both so much. And so you mentioned
Economism, loosely, the idea that our struggles in the economic sphere will spontaneously bring
about socialism, that fighting for trade unions or building things like worker co-ops, or just
reforms of minimum wages, for example, should be where we focus our energy. The economists
argued that this should be the whole scope of the proletarian movement. And so that strategy
is juxtaposed with the more Marxist-Leninist approach
of understanding that there also needs to be a battle on the political front,
not just through the ballot box, but on the streets as well,
what Mao, I believe, referred to as politics in command.
And I think this perspective stresses the importance of revolutionary theory
and class consciousness.
And so I'm wondering if you two can unpack these two tendencies.
So, economism and what we can think of,
more as like the revolutionary vanguardism, maybe also situating them in the historical context
that Lenin wrote about them and then also illustrating some maybe contemporary examples that might
help concretize these different strategies. Sure. Yeah, I'll start off this one and I'll kind of lay down
on the table some of the basic definitions and orientation to the concepts and then maybe Allison and I
can go back and forth and maybe toss out some examples and maybe some historical context. But the
main thing that needs to be said about historical context is this stuff is just as true in our own
time as it was in his so the things that we're going to talk about although you know this book was
written in um you know 1901 and it seems like it's so far removed from situations we're dealing with
today because the theory is so on point and because the struggles are so similar and because we're
still in a global capitalist context these things really are applicable in the here and now although
the forms in which they manifest might take slightly different expression just keep that in mind
But, you know, economism, it really does take many forms.
You mentioned some of them.
There's, you know, a co-op movement, which says that, you know, if we can get enough businesses to turn into democratically run co-ops, you know, there's sort of a quantitative into a qualitative jump that could naturally spontaneously occur if enough of the economy is co-opted and democratically run, that then that can somehow usher us in to socialism.
So here you don't see any emphasis on a need for a political party.
a communist party their social democratic reformism you know let's let's heighten the minimum wage let's
make it a little easier for people to unionize you know maybe we have some welfare policies that help
families or working people etc those are all well and good and we'll get into that later on i think
but here fundamentally it's still this emphasis on merely economic reforms and not a challenge to
the overall system and this takes on many more forms um maybe some that we can get into in a little bit
But I found Josh Malfaward Paul, who I've had on the show, and we actually did an episode called In Politics and Command. He wrote a book in Politics on In Politics and Command in the era of economism. And he really helps us think through what economism is. And he talks about a subjective and an objective instance of economism. So these are really two major ways in which, at least from his perspective, economism manifests. The subjective way he says is that this idea that workers will spontaneously develop revolutionary.
consciousness through class struggle, through trade union struggle, right, particularly in these
unions and people who see these trade unions as the primary site of organizing for socialists
and communism. The idea here is that, you know, being in a union, you develop a trade union
consciousness. You as workers understand there's a contradiction between your desires and the
desires of the boss and you take a more militant confrontation approach to management to the
bosses, you unify with all your other workers and you, you know, you sort of squat up and go to
class war with them, but fundamentally over increasing your pay, increasing your working
conditions, et cetera. And now this idea that if you just keep doing that long enough,
that the workers themselves will all of a sudden develop an anti-capitalist revolutionary
politic that says, oh, now because we've been struggling with our bosses, we understand also the
need to take on global capitalism and imperialism, right, fight colonialism and fascism, and those
things just don't happen. Trade union consciousness, this step below revolutionary consciousness,
can be developed organically and spontaneously just through the class struggle that occurs
within unions, but that's the limitation of the consciousness. In order to develop a truly
revolutionary consciousness, you need something, as Lenin says, from without, outside of the
merely economic struggle. And I'll get to that.
in the second. So that's the subjective idea, right, that workers will spontaneously develop
revolutionary conscious through trade union class struggle. That's not true, Lenin is saying. And then
for JMP, he talks about the objective instance of economism. And this is a sort of broader
within Marxist tradition idea that is an economistic error, which is, you know, what we can call
economic determinism, or the idea that you sometimes hear amongst orthodox Marxists,
that merely developing the forces of production to their furthest extent possible will somehow
you know transition us into socialism naturally that all you need to do is to develop to the
highest degree possible the forces of production and there's some magic moment in which that
threshold is reached and we shift over into socialism kind of like the co-op idea right if you build
enough co-ops in the economy maybe they become a majority of the economy and that in and of
itself will produce a sort of socialist revolution and a shift in the mode of production.
And we know that these things are not true. And Lenin is really going to point that out and make
that incredibly clear throughout this text. Now, you have an entire question later in this
outline regarding what the Vanguard Party is. So I'm not going to say too much about it right
here and now, only to say that the Revolutionary Vanguard Party is Lenin's answer to the problem
of economism. If Economism over-stresses the role
of class struggle within capitalism and a merely economic struggle between bosses and workers,
the revolutionary vanguard party puts politics in command and transcends that error, right?
It's not that these struggles within the economic realm and between bosses and workers are. Of course,
they are. They're essential. But left to themselves, in and of themselves, they're insufficient
to get to a real revolutionary confrontation with capitalism. So, you know, the Vanguard party,
again is put up as a corrective as the answer to the error of economism, which Lennon saw in his day
and which we see in our day. So Lennon argues that understanding politics broadly, especially
revolutionary politics, it really requires us to understand all of society, right? As communists
today, we understand that we have to wrestle with many different issues and topics, not just
workers in their economic struggles with their employers. So Lennon says, quote,
class political consciousness can be brought to the workers only from without that is only from outside the economic struggle from outside the sphere of relations between workers and employers the sphere from which alone it is possible to obtain this knowledge is the sphere of relationships of all classes and strata to the state and the government the sphere of the interrelations between all classes and that can be kind of a you know a high conceptual quote that you might not immediately understand but i'll bring it down to our level
the modern day and give you some examples of struggles that communists should take seriously
that are not merely the economic struggle between workers and their employers, right?
Police brutality, structural racism, ecological collapse, pollution, climate change itself,
anti-fascist and anti-bigot, anti-racist struggles, the essential need of internationalism,
indigenous struggles, a myriad of other social problems, even the homelessness crisis,
you might immediately think, oh, that's a, that's an issue about.
you know workers not having jobs or whatever but also it falls outside the spectrum of traditional
trade union struggle right when do you hear union struggles talk about needing to solve the homelessness
crisis this is a crisis a social crisis that is a product of capitalism but occurs outside of
the rather narrow trade union struggle another obvious example is anti-war efforts right to be against
war now historically unions and working class people have had a in american history at least a
back and forth record on exactly this, right? You remember the, what was it called the hard hat
rebellion after the Vietnam War where working class guys and hard hats descended upon
anti-war student protesters and like brutally attacked and beat them? So there's an interesting
contradiction. The reproductive and domestic labor issues of women in particular, issues
of immigration, refugees, etc. All of these issues are incredibly important social topics and
issues that a communist movement needs to wrestle with and address, ideally through a communist
party, that fall outside of the merely economicistic trends of workers versus their bosses.
And so as communists, we need a total vision of the present and future covering the full
spectrum of problems and issues and contradictions within our society, many of which,
again, exist outside the merely economic struggle between workers and bosses. So that is just
a modern day example of certain issues that we take seriously as socialist and communist and
Marxists that exist outside that realm that necessitate something like a vanguard revolutionary
party, which can, along with the struggle between workers and employers, also address in a myriad
of ways, these other issues that relate to that issue, of course, and relate more broadly to capitalism
and imperialism, but are not merely captured in the trade union struggle. So that would be my
opening salvo for that question. Yeah, I'll try to build on that a little bit. So a couple things.
I think on the theoretical level, one thing that I think is always important to stress with this text,
because I think it's possible to read this text in an ultra-left way that could be an error,
is that Lennon's not saying the economic struggle doesn't matter, right?
So I think it's important to throw that up front.
This is like a crucial part of this text that I think, like, left communist tendencies tend to really misread.
Lenin draws on Ingalls' concept of struggle, specifically as divisible between economic, political, and theoretical struggle.
and each of those sites of struggles is relevant for Lenin. They are each important. So the issue with
Economism isn't the idea the economic struggle matters or the idea that Marxists ought to be
involved in that struggle, right? I actually really like how you framed it earlier, Robbie,
with the kind of framing of like, it's a question of scope. Economism makes this false claim
that the full scope of the proletarian movement should be constrained to the economic struggle,
and that's kind of where that issue starts to come up. The economic struggle has an important place,
historically Marxist movements, including the Bolsheviks, have been involved in the economic
struggle in incredible ways. One of the reasons that the Bolsheviks were able to respond to
the February Revolution so profoundly was because of presence that they already had on factory
floors within Petrograd, right? There's no question about the fact that that struggle still
matters. So it's a matter of containing the scope there, and then ignoring the way that
economic struggle relies on the political and theoretical struggle. So there's a couple of things that
have been brought up here. And again, I don't want to, like, overlap with later questions too much.
But the question of spontaneity, I think, is worth touching on just a tiny bit more.
It really is a question of, can the economic struggle spontaneously turn into something more, right?
And what Lennon is pointing out is that, no, it can't.
This concept of trade union consciousness as the highest level of consciousness that economic
struggle can achieve on its own, I think it's something that we really see play out, right?
It is super important that labor unions within the United States in our modern context,
win pretty big demands and often can pull out some pretty sizable strikes.
We are seeing some really interesting stuff happening now with Sag Afterra with the UAW.
But one thing that I think we always see again and again is that at the end of the day,
the leadership of these labor unions often always does betray the more extreme demands that come up within them
and always, you know, tries to take a more moderate position within bourgeois politics on the whole.
And that is indicative, I think, of that maximum level of consciousness that can come from there.
And again, it's not to say these unions don't matter or that they're not a place that Marxist should be.
But the question is, can these unions themselves turn it in something more?
And this is where the theoretical and the political comes in.
Theoretically, right, Marxism asserts that the consciousness of the workers is something that has to be raised up explicitly.
And part of that is organizing.
Workers do come to realizations about their collective power through struggle.
But to understand that that power can win more than just immediate demands for their union
and can rather actually transform society, take something else external, which can be added into it,
which is that theoretical and political aspect of the struggle. So again, I think it's a scope
question in a lot of ways, and it's not losing sight of the fact that the economic struggle
is a part of a broader trio of struggles. I think if we want to talk about like contemporary
issues with economism today, in the United States at least, we can definitely see economist errors
that pop up all over organizing, right? There are many union.
organizational approaches that while they do correctly identify the rank and file of the union as
an important place for organizing, don't try to move beyond that to connect those rank and files
to a revolutionary organization or party in Lenin's formulation that can explicitly build consciousness
along Marxist lines. I think a lot of the iterations of the solidarity economy and cooperatives,
as we've already discussed, can be a little problematic in this front too. I think a lot about
Richard Wolfe's articulations about cooperative economies, where Richard Wolfe in a lot of ways,
I think exemplifies this idea of the cooperative economy can kind of out-compete the capitalist
economy, and this I think is very much like still this economist error. There's no theoretical
or political critique of markets broadly that that competition would occur in, right? You lose all
this theoretical and political context because of that economist focus. And then in more small-scale
organizing of the various left groups, I think, you know, and this is self-critical in many ways.
I've been involved in this type of organizing, this turn towards a type of mutual aid organizing
that really is just focused on meeting the immediate needs of people, often without actual
politicization occurring on top of that, can definitely be an instance of economism that we see,
you know, organizations struggle with falling into a lot in our current moment.
I think one other thing that I want to add, too, that Brett got at is, again, the point of the
vanguard party for London. And the point of avoiding
economism is to recognize that the political and the theoretical struggle matter too.
And one of the other ways in the U.S. that I think we often fail at this is with
recognizing the relationship between struggles for national liberation, which are a political
struggle in relation to the economic struggle, right? If we only focus on
economism, we ignore national liberation questions that matter here in the United States
and intersect with issues of settler colonialism, issues of the legacy of slavery, and
ignoring those things can cause us to actually fall into working class movements that can develop
kind of chauvinist ideas about national liberation, about colonialism, and communism can then have
these broader theoretical problems that kind of play out from it. So when we're really thinking about
what it means to combat communism, it means to put the economic struggle in its place to contextualize
it in relationship to the other two forms of struggle, and we'll get to this in more detail later,
to have an organization, i.e. the vanguard party, which can lead that struggle on all three fronts.
So you kind of some additional thoughts there, but I do think it's important to always emphasize.
We don't want to fall into the left calm error of saying there's no place for economic struggle.
There is. It's how that struggle is situated that really matters from Lennon's perspective.
Yeah, thank you so much. Really couldn't agree more with both of your responses.
And just to touch on a couple things. Yeah, like this idea of,
of mutual aid without the complementary political education is something that I do see a lot. And
it's really, it's kind of troubling, you know, like if you're simply basing your politics on wage
workers passing around little scraps of what they have to each other while billionaires are
kind of laughing their way to the bank and you're not infusing that with political education,
then it really just stays limited to passing small amounts of money around and letting
the state and the capitalist class off the hook for providing a lot of these services in the first
place. And I also really resonated with the comment about Richard Wolfe. I mean, he's been on the show
several times and we love him and he does such a great job of popularizing Marxism. And yes,
at the same time, I do think that both Della and I have in like firsthand experience, experiencing
how the co-op movement cannot simply on its own sort of outcompete and become the dominant
model. And we'll get into that in a little bit when I talk a little bit more about our experience
going to the Mondragon region and exploring the Mondragon Corporation a little bit. But before that,
I've been thinking a lot about how so much of the solidarity economy, which is a space within
which upstream really first grew out from, like how much of that space exists in this
economicism mindset, that if we just build enough worker cooperatives, for example, eventually
they'll spontaneously replace the capitalist system, that political liberation will come
through largely ignoring the state and building our own structures alongside it, or if engaging
with the state strictly in sort of an electoral way. But yeah, I mean, it's broadly this idea
of building the new in the shell of the old versus the Marxist position that political liberation
can only come after we overthrow and seize the state. And this is really, you know, a century's old debate, of course, starting in the 19th century between Marx and the anarchist Mikhail Bakunin. But I'm wondering if you could talk about these two different revolutionary strategies. They seem to loosely map onto the vanguardism versus capitalism tension, maybe not completely. And I'm also curious, like, do they have to be in opposition to one another?
Yeah, I can go ahead and take a kind of starting idea at this. It's a little bit tricky. There's two levels on which I think it's worth thinking about this. So at the risk of over-complicating this conversation, I think another dynamic that is useful for thinking about the solidarity economy question is also the concept of scientific versus utopian socialism, right? And this is a concept that Ingalls develops very clearly. And for me, when we look at the solidarity economy concept, obviously I think you're correct. There's these like very strong overlaps with an
ideas of organizing and almost pre-figureative politics. But I'm also reminded with the solidarity
economy to a certain degree of some of the utopian socialist movements that Ingalls talks about,
right? And specifically, like, Fourier's focus on cooperative economic development really does
kind of show that even within sort of bourgeois utopian socialism, which is, you know,
kind of a complicated concept to unpack. We can get into that text if we want to. But broadly,
you had these thinkers who wanted to kind of construct this socialist society from the ground up.
They came up with this utopian ideal and tried to implement it in a way that looks very similar
to the solidarity economy. And I think what we get by thinking through the scientific versus
utopian dichotomy within Marxism is another point of critique that can be relevant here,
which is that the solidarity economy to me, I think one of the issues that it kind of misses
is that capitalism has already produced a certain social form.
forces and dynamics that are actually important and useful for socialism, right?
So one of the important things that Ingalls points out is that capitalism has actually
done an exceptional job already of socializing labor.
Like labor compared to pre-capital society is highly socialized.
Specialization has led to the ability, or the lack of specialization has led to the ability
for us to take labor that had to be performed on an artisanal scale, move it to an industrial
scale. And one of the utopian or one of the scientific socialist insights that Ingalls and
Marx put forward is that what we're trying to do isn't build a new society from the ground up.
What we're trying to do is find these contradictions within capitalism that are already in
favor of socialized labor and socialized production and liberate them from the contradictory
elements of private ownership and private property. And so for the Marxist perspective,
that means seizing existing infrastructure to a certain degree. That means seizing existing
industrial infrastructure in particular and being able to put it under the control of the masses
through a revolutionary movement. And I think, again, in the solidarity economy approach,
you have this more kind of ground up, let's build our own competing alternative set of relations,
which misses that scientific insight, that capitalism has already built that for us. It's a question
of vying for and competing for control of it, which is a revolutionary struggle. So I do think
that perspective can be useful as well. And then I think, yeah, there is the more
anarchist versus Marxist approach that is worth thinking about. I think the solidarity economy idea is
very, very appealing because it does, as you got at, allow us to kind of ignore the question of the
state a little bit, right? It lets us get around whether or not we need to directly contest with the
state and say, actually, we can kind of do our own thing that will eventually develop into a socialist
economy. And you get different articulations of what that will lead to in the long term. I've heard
people who support this idea saying that will eventually force a revolutionary clash with the
capital estate, right? Eventually that will happen. Or it will out-compete it because it's a better,
more rational economic system. But in either of these cases, it's really trying to push the
question of confrontation with state power down the line in a way that I think is problematic.
Again, I think it's important to emphasize this doesn't mean that workers' cooperatives don't have a
place, right? They can be useful. And actually, they can be a place for Marxists to learn about the
organization of labor in ways that we might not get to do otherwise, even within union organizing,
to learn about the organization of production. That can be super valuable for Marxist movements.
But what the Marxist perspective insists is that they in and of themselves are not going to create
a revolutionary rupture. That revolutionary rupture has to be pursued through political
struggle. Again, this takes the form of the Vanguard Party. So there's this question of,
are these ideas inherently in opposition? Well, the practice of them is not strictly speaking
in opposition. I don't think that you need to say Marxists should have no involvement whatsoever in
cooperative economic building and cooperative approaches to production. But I do think it is important
again for Marxists to say that is not the full scope. And also, we are going to insist that we could
never just build socialism from the ground up as an alternative to capitalism. Capitalism has
created the conditions for its own abolition and we want to liberate those conditions. That's the
scientific thesis at the core of Marxism. And that requires a revolutionary struggle with a
revolutionary party leading the way. So kind of some broad thoughts there. But I do
think the utopian versus scientific distinction can also be useful for seeing why Marxists insist
that we can't just put off the question of contesting state power and vying for existing
infrastructure. Those are actually central to Marxist theory. Yeah, really important stuff. I just
have a couple thoughts. Allison mentioned the difference between utopian and scientific, or the
text, you know, socialism, utopian and scientific by angles, which we've covered on red menace,
and some of the contradictions and some of the ways in which capitalism sort of lays the groundwork
naturally for the transition out of itself and towards a socialism and eventually communism. And one of
those contradictions is, of course, social production, right? You need an army of workers to
produce a product and individual appropriation, whether literally in the form of one CEO or a small
board of shareholders or whatever, you have this already existing contradiction within capitalism,
which is that people make this stuff, right, in order for Walmart to sell a product or any
any firm whatsoever to sell any sort of product, good or service. It's going to require a bunch
of people, not only in the here and now, not only the people that clock into your firm and go and
produce value for your company, but also historically, all the wealth, all the technology,
all the advancement we've made has come from countless generations of human beings,
most of whom will never know their faces or their names, contributing to create the situation
we're at today, literally all of humanity, through all of human history, working to build the
modern world and civilization we have today and then we have a small tiny group of elites at the
very top not unlike feudalism which you know extract and usurp all of that wealth claim it to be
theirs all that capital all the productive forces all the means of production claim it for
themselves and then sell it back to us as if it's not already ours if this is not already the
legacy of humanity of which we are equal parts you know as just as much human as the CEO and so
literally individual appropriation of social production. And that is a contradiction that creates
an equality that we're seeing today, that creates a whole bunch of issues, externalities,
because if you are the individual appropriator, you're out to make a profit and you don't
really care about the good of the communities that the working people live in. You don't care
about the broader world and the ecological sustainability. You are there to make profits for
yourself or your shareholders point blank if you had social control over production you would
immediately and right away you know involve human beings who have to live in these communities
who have to raise families in this world on this planet who have concerns outside of the
very narrow realm of how much profit can we make this quarter and so you know that's a contradiction
whose fallout we live in the wake of right now and is continuing to create problems for
human civilization and will continue to create those problems until that contradiction is
solved so that's just that's one thought the other thought is the importance of the vanguard
party of again we're going to get more into this as this conversation goes on but you can kind
to think about it as you know this overarching structure where every individual struggle can
be included right you could have a vanguard party and one arm of it is dedicated to and this
has happened in you know communist history socialist history to going into union
unions going into flat factory floors making a union more militant fighting for a sort of communist or socialist political education within a union etc you could have another arm that is dedicated to literally street fighting fascists when they go on the march right you could have another arm dedicated to political education educating workers and people more broadly about revolutionary theory you of course with the vanguard party you're already having a political party competing in the political arena which
a mere trade union can't do. You know, you already have that. So really think of the vanguard
party as this broader sort of meta apparatus that can take into account all of these
individual struggles and find a place for them under its umbrella, right? As opposed to
destroying that umbrella and picking one or two of these things and saying that's the only
thing that we need to pay attention to and that's going to get us to socialism. It never has
and it never will. The difference between Marx and Bakunin and more broadly Marxist and anarchists,
there are many differences of course anarchists are immediately going to go and going to reject the idea of a vanguard party and they're also going to a priori reject the seizure of state power based on their commitments as anarchist it's literally you know sort of definitional to be an anarchist is to be against the state a priori and then to want nothing to do with it as far as controlling it but you know and later works by lenin and of course going back to marks and angles and through the marxist tradition itself we've come to understand that the state is a product of
class society, that the state rises historically when societies are split into classes, whether
that's ancient slave societies like ancient Roman Greece, whether that's medieval monarchical feudal
societies, like, you know, all through the thousand years of European history, the dark
ages, the medieval, the Renaissance, right, kings and queens and peasants and serfs, or that's modern
day capitalism. The state exists in these conditions because it arises from more prerequisite
conditions, which is the division of human society into classes. And so we understand that if we want
to ultimately transcend capitalism and head towards communism, during that transition, we're still
going to be in class society. We're in class society right now. We're not going to wake up tomorrow
and two, three, four millennia of class society just evaporates. No, the transition out of capitalism
and towards communism called socialism is still class society. Society is still riven into classes
But the socialist transition takes that into account. And you have a seizure of state power by the revolutionary working class forces that then take over the society consciously steering it in the direction of communism. And of course, communism is a global state of affairs. Nobody's ever individually achieved communism. The states that we call communist states are communist because they adhere to Marxist theory, but are socialist and material practice. Right. We've not escaped class society. And we're not
going to likely do it in a matter of a couple years or one or two revolution spread throughout
the globe. It's going to be a long-term sort of transition out of class society, which has
dominated human civilization again for millennia. So understanding where the state comes from
and understanding its roots in class society really helps make sense of the Marxist approach
to the state and why we do not, like the anarchists do, reject seizing state power as an a-priority
principle. And then, you know, no hate to our anarchist brothers and sisters. You know, this is just
good faith disagreement. But we can look back over the history of revolutionary anti-capitalist
struggles. And we can ask ourselves, who has taken this fight furthest? Who has challenged capitalism
and imperialism on a global scale? And the anarchists have done some beautiful things. They fought
some beautiful battles. They have a beautiful tradition. But they're almost always going to be
relocated to a locality or a specific territory and have never been able to display
whatsoever that they are able to take on capitalism and imperialism on the global stage.
Marxism, for all of its flaws and mistakes and errors, has at least been able to do that.
So historically and scientifically, we can say that this Marxist-Leninist approach has been
thus far historically more successful in an objective way than anarchist attempts to remake society
and transcend capitalism. And so if you're choosing between the two tendencies, I think that is at
very least a relevant factor to take into account. Yeah. Thank you so much. You can't see me,
but I'm nodding vigorously along with you. I think that you're doing both a really great job
of taking these somewhat heady and sometimes complicated and complex ideas and really
explaining them in a way that makes a lot of sense. So I really, really appreciate that. And I know
that we promised an episode on Upstream a little while back exploring anarchism more
specifically. And we'll still get to that. So any of our anarchist listeners, we haven't
forgot about you. We're going to get to that eventually. So I've been listening to Mike Duncan's
Revolutions podcast, specifically the last season of the podcast, which is no longer a podcast.
it ended with this season on the Russian Revolution.
And, you know, at times I was hate listening to it.
He's, you know, very much kind of a centrist liberal.
And sometimes his disdain for Lenin is palpable.
And, you know, I bring it up because he did this classic thing early on, which we have sort of
been touching on, where he presented the claim that Lenin and the Bolsheviks were explicitly
not interested in improving working conditions in the short term and that there were
simply wedded to this larger abstract idea of revolution. And I think that's like really
paraphrasing what he said. And I don't think it's, you know, it's not just Mike Duncan. This is a
narrative. This is a line. Yeah, I mean, I think we can all agree on from just the little that we've
discussed it so far that this is absolute bullshit. Not only were the Bolsheviks fighting for an
eight hour day like specifically as a key part of their platform, but they also did a lot of
parliamentary work. And actually, like you mentioned, Allison, they were in the factories.
And so I'm going to go ahead and read a quote by Lenin.
It's not too long, but it'll take me a couple of minutes to get through it.
And then I'd love it if we could sort of reflect on it.
So the quote is, reformist tactics are the least likely to secure real reforms.
The most effective way to secure real reforms is to pursue the tactics of the revolutionary class struggle.
Actually, reforms are won as a result of the revolutionary class struggle, as a result of its independence
mass force and steadfastness.
Reforms are always false and ambiguous.
They are really only in proportion to the intensity of the class struggle.
By merging our slogans with those of the reformist bourgeoisie,
we weaken the cause of revolution and, consequently, the cause of reform as well,
because we thereby diminish the independence, fortitude, and strength of the revolutionary classes.
And so I'm wondering if, yeah, if you could both.
reflect on that quote and maybe just kind of help set the record straight in terms of Lenin's
thoughts on the need for that, the need for real actual reforms that improve people's lives
right now and the larger revolutionary strategies that the Bolsheviks were advancing. And I think
this can also be applied to a lot of current discourse where, you know, a lot of the times
revolutionary communists are thought of as just existing in this theoretical realm and being
detached from like the on the ground experience so yeah yeah i can start this one off now i think
alison has actually listened to that that full podcast and i have not so i can't address that
directly perhaps alison can but i'll i'll definitely address the the lennon quote and how we should
think about reformism now lennon the quote started off with him saying reformist tactics are the
least likely to secure real reforms and i think that's so crucial to understand it i'll give you
some examples from, you know, modern American history that will help you understand that. But the
most effective way, he goes on to say, to secure real reforms is to pursue the tactics of the
revolutionary class struggle. One reason why this is the case, why merely reformist approaches
to capitalism can't secure the very reforms they are advancing while revolutionary struggle can
is that reform within the capitalist system is always subject to dismantling and recall by the
dictatorship of capital because when you have capitalism you're still leaving in charge the capitalist
ruling class and they're still going to dominate the economic and political and social sphere
given their overall power and the mode of production that is currently instantiated so if you're
trying to reform this system your reforms let's say your reform of social security or medicare
making sure that elderly folks don't live on the streets for example is constantly under attack
undermined. Now, those programs happen to have immense support across the political spectrum. And
Republican voters tend to be older people who really want to hold on to those things. And so,
you know, in that one instance, they've had some real difficulty in recalling those programs. And
they'll often, in today's world, they'll pretend like they, that's never been a part of their
agenda. But it absolutely has. And even Joe Biden throughout his career, the Democrat, has
oftentimes throughout his career, advanced this idea of cutting Social Security. So,
even the party that is ostensibly, and we all know this is not true, but which likes to present itself as more a working class party than the Republicans are still, you know, are still a function of the dictatorship of the bourgeois Z and are still interested in ultimately, first and foremost emphasizing the interests of the ruling class, which they are often apart and which their donor classes are made up of. So, you know, this idea that these reforms are always subject to dismantling, we can look at our own history. Now look at what happened in the gilded era, right? The gilded
of these robber barons late 1800s massive inequality massive poverty the shift to the progressive
era ultimately culminating in the great depression world war two and out of that came the new
deal right now we've talked about this on rev left radio there's lots to say about the new deal
lots of errors and mistakes but it was and it gave rise too for at least white middle
class Americans, the highest quality of life that the average working class, white middle
class American at least, has got to experience and of course had broader impacts throughout
society. Now, that gave rise to the very period of American history where that reactionaries
today will often point to when they say things like make America great again or America
used to be great what happened to it. They'll point to something like the 50s, right?
They'll point to the early 60s. And that is precisely the time when the new deal.
was at its strongest. There was a complete bipartisan consensus more or less around it. And of course,
the New Deal reforms came about through bottom up struggles, through explicitly communist and socialist
movements, through trade union struggles, and importantly, by external pressure from the Soviet
Union, which had risen. And then you had the Cuban and the Chinese revolutions as well,
through the, you know, the 50s and 60s that put external pressure on Western capitalist governments
to reform their systems to help work.
class people, lest they have a Bolshevik-style revolution on their hands. So it's a little bit
ironic that the people who are the most dedicated to anti-communism in American history today
point back to this time largely created by these bottom-up internal and external socialist,
communist trade union movements, creating the economic possibility for this period, this golden
age that white reactionaries will look back on today and point to as what they want to recreate.
But of course, they don't want to do it through the economic policies of the New Deal,
They want to do it through the reviving of cultural norms of the 50s.
If we can revive the cultural norms, not the economic ones, but the cultural norms of the 50s,
maybe we can get back to prosperity.
It's laughable.
But that's a slight digression.
The main point here is that even the New Deal was clawed back.
What is neoliberalism?
What is the Reagan and Thatcher, quote unquote, counter-revolution?
If not, the bosses dismantling as much as they fucking could, the New Deal order.
its premises and its manifestations, right? What is Reagan, if not the giver of an ideological narrative
to this attack on the New Deal, to this counter-revolution from the ruling class, right? What
Reagan did was give it ideological coherence. He formed a narrative out of it that really helped push
it further. And then what did Clinton do? He made it a bipartisan consensus. So we see this
long process of the New Deal going into effect, really helping American workers, the goal
an age of unionization where a guy could go down to the local factory and make enough money to
afford a home, a car, support his family, his wife could stay at home, his kids could go to his
school, right? Like that whole era of American life has been clawed back and we're living in the wake
of 40 years of the neoliberal counter assault on precisely that. So again, a perfect example of
really well-meaning and good reforms that were always subject to being dismantled and were
systematically dismantled by this new era we call neoliberalism.
You can look at the NHS in the UK, constantly under attack by the forces of the Tory political
movement by the right wing political party in the UK, constantly trying to defund it so it works
shittier so they can point at it and say, look, it sucks, let's just dismantle it and privatize
it.
You know, Roe v. Wade, this is a, this is a, not an economic struggle, but a human rights struggle,
you know, bodily autonomy for women that we was common sense law for, you know, half a century
and has already has been stripped back even against the will of huge majorities of American people, right?
This fundamental human right that we took for granted has been stripped away by the forces of reaction.
And so if you want to, and these are just a couple examples, we can go on forever talking about this stuff.
But the basic idea here is, you know, if you want to secure these reforms, they have to come with a revolutionary militant struggle.
that is willing to defend them in perpetuity and of course in the in the imposition of socialism
these would be just completely embedded in the system there is you know once once you have a
socialist party in power you you have the power finally to prevent the ruling class bourgeoisie
from clawing back those reform because you have political power which stands above and can
subordinate their economic power and without that political power without the state apparatus to
discipline and subordinate those factions of the of the american population or the economy you will
have their dictatorship of capital clawback any and all reforms especially when you have a
crisis of profit which we saw in the 1970s right a falling rate of profit and this realization that
if we were going to explode our profit margins again we have to dismantle these welfare programs
we have to dismantle these unions right unions are what give working class people under capitalism
a seat at the table of power, and that was unacceptable to the ruling class. And so they really
did a number on us. And we're just getting back to our feet after 40 years of being absolutely
pummeled by this counter-revolution. So I think that's a great way to highlight at least one
aspect of what Lenin is saying here. And so the last thing I'll say before I handed over to Allison
is that, again, this does not mean that we should not participate in these reform movements. In fact,
we can and often have, you know, these radical elements of society been the leaders that got these reforms to happen in the first place, you know, whether you look at the New Deal, you look at the NHS, you look at social democracies in Northern Europe, which a lot of social democrats point to and say that's what we want. All of those things were undergirded by socialist, anarchist, communist, radical worker movements forcing the hand of the ruling class. And so, you know, far from saying we shouldn't do these reforms or that we don't care.
about working people's conditions right now. We just want revolution. No, we lead these reforms. We
articulate the necessity of them. We make them common sense amongst the people, but we never
tire of pointing out the fact that these reforms, if we really want to secure them in perpetuity
for our kids and our kids' kids, we have to continue the confrontation with the dictatorship
of capital and we have to center the revolutionary struggle. It's not over until it's over. And so,
lead the reforms, support the reforms, articulate the need for the reforms, make the people
understand and embrace these reforms, and then remind them that these are always subject to
recall unless we take this thing further and continue to fight the counter-revolution and the
bourgeois elites. So, yeah. Just going to pop in real quick before you respond, Alison, I mentioned
I'm reading Blood in My Eye by George Jackson, and I just pulled up a really relevant quote,
I think that I'd like to just share real quick. Also, because, you know, Brett, you mentioned very
explicitly that these advances during the New Deal era were really only limited to quite a small
slice of the population, mostly white, quote, middle class men, right? And so there is a big question
as to, you know, the breadth of these sort of reforms and how broad they are distributed in the first
place. And I think George Jackson does a really great job of questioning the welfare
state, as we know it, whether it really was a welfare state in many ways. And so this quote goes,
even the old left promotes the lie that valid concessions have been made by the ruling class,
as if deceptively better working conditions and illusory wage increases were Marxism. A true
Marxist revolution abolishes the wage system. The true welfare state could be the final and highest
stage of social development, where the world and the state are won.
where the material and psychological needs of the masses have been met
and political regimes have ceased to exist.
The New Deal and the resulting military industrial complex
as welfare statism,
I swear I'll strangle the next idiot who repeats that line.
Classic Jackson.
Yeah, he's so, I love reading the book.
He's so inflammatory.
You almost feel like you're committing a crime by reading the book.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, definitely.
But I just wanted to share that because it was on my mind and you mentioned the New Deal reforms.
But yeah, please, Alison, I'd love it if you could respond and share your thoughts as well.
Yeah, a couple things.
So I think building off of that quote, thinking about the New Deal in context, it is important to emphasize, right?
Like, the claim isn't that the New Deal was like a socialist reform, right?
But the important thing is that the New Deal, even as a bourgeois reform was forced, right?
And I think, you know, Brett got at this.
There were these grassroots movements.
And I think, let's go beyond that.
there was a communist party in the United States that was large, right?
That was sizable.
That was organizing.
That was building the beginnings of power.
That was organizing in industrial context, was organizing in cultural output, was organizing
in agricultural context as well.
And we can see that that movement, that that communism in the United States was large
enough to force government action in multiple ways, right?
To a certain extent, the New Deal is inseparable from the red scares, which also
occurred, right? Both of these are bourgeois responses to that development. And even if the New Deal
is limited, I think the point is that it gets at this idea that Lenin is saying, which is not just
about securing long-term reforms, but also, if you're going to get any reforms in the first place,
you're going to get them by forcing their fucking hand, right? And that's precisely what we see here.
Yeah, so I think the important thing to really emphasize on this front is that, you know, from the
Leninist perspective, reforms are one through forcing the hand. And one other thing that I think is really
important here that Brett was starting to get at and that I think you got it as well, Robert,
is that reforms need to be won through political independence as well. This is in that
Lenin quote that was part of the original question, right? Where Lenin is saying that while we can
fight for reforms, we shouldn't join our slogans together with the bourgeois slogans and the
bourgeois reformists. And I think this is really important. The risk of reformism, if we are not
careful is that we can actually end up strengthening the bourgeois elements that are trying to
repair capitalism, trying to prove that there is a more kind of like just or humane capitalism
in some way. And the antidote to that risk is political independence. When socialists talk about
reforms, we always do it not by backing up the bourgeois parties that call for more limited
reforms, but by criticizing them, criticizing the limitations of their reforms and creating
these external forms of struggle that force those reforms in the first place.
So I do think the question of political independence is very important to emphasize here.
And this is obviously very important in the question of the United States, right?
One of the larger self-described socialist organizations in the U.S., the DSA,
has like this core question that they have of how do they relate to the Democratic Party, right?
This is a question that is like of central importance.
And I think Lenin emphasizes here, independence from Boucho-Political organizations is a crucial part
of why the revolutionary struggle can succeed.
Cool.
Yeah.
Thank you so much, Alison.
So I'm wondering if you can talk about spontaneous versus conscious action
and maybe especially drawing on any recent movements,
like I'm thinking about Occupy specifically or the George Floyd uprisings of 2020
to help illustrate the difference of like spontaneity and conscious action.
This, I believe, unconsciously held assumption among many that spontaneous protests will
lead to transformation. And I think this was also clear with, you know, the protests against the
overturning of Roe, where we saw that nothing really material ended up coming out of those.
And so I can definitely relate to this. And I'm sure many listening can that, like, you go to these
protests and you get really invigorated and you get really inspired. And then you leave the
protest. Everyone goes home and nothing changes. And you're left thinking.
thinking, you know, well, now what, right? Like, what next? And so I think that's one of the
errors of the spontaneous approach that we've been sort of alluding to throughout this
conversation. So I'm wondering if maybe, yeah, if either of you want to sort of reflect on that
and, you know, give us your thoughts on that. Yeah, I'll discuss the sum. I think I am exactly
the right age to be one of those people in the socials movement for whom the Occupy movement
was kind of a wake-up moment, right? A lot of my politicization, my starting to look at the
world through a socialist lens, I think, came from what was happening with Occupy when it
happened. I was very interested in it, very focused on it. And so that is a movement that I think
like a lot of us I've spent a lot of time critically reflecting on. And I think the spontaneity
is like a really good example of that. One of the really interesting things about Occupy in
retrospect is that it kind of had this aversion to politics in a way that is super strange for what
was a political movement ostensibly. And I think we could see that in a couple of ways. One of
like the big things about Occupy was that it tried to articulate itself in kind of the most
broadest amorphous populist terms, right? So the 99% versus the 1% framing, which can have some
value. There are real tensions and political differences that exist there. But one of the things that
I think even at the time people hammered Occupy for super correctly in that in retrospect we can
see is a big issue, is this like reluctance to make clear demands, right? To actually articulate a
political position. If you went to the Occupy parks where they were happening, you would have
these open-mic discussions of what people want, but there was never any attempt to clarify them
into a coherent political line or theoretical line. And this really does get back to this idea of
spontaneity, right? That if we got the 99% together, we talked it out, we discussed it,
we built consensus, somehow that in and of itself would be enough. And it obviously wasn't the Occupy
movement. You know, we often talk about it fizzling out. I don't think that's like quite a correct
description. In many ways, it was crushed, right? It was at the Los Angeles Park,
the night LAPD shut it down, and it was absolutely crushed by the state. And part of the
issue is that I think that the Occupy Movement, with its spontaneity, didn't even think about
what are we going to do if the state decides to come for us, right? There was this avoidance of the
question. I think with the George Floyd uprisings, we saw this similar thing where the George Floyd
uprisings are really unlike anything in my lifetime that I've ever seen, the scope of them, how
large they were across the United States, the intensity, the burning down of a police precinct,
Trump having to go into a bunker, right? Like, the intensity of those uprisings was insane. And it's
easy to look at that, to look at that rage, that organic anger that is moving people into the
streets and think that that is enough. And clearly it wasn't, right? At the end of those
uprisings, some modest reforms in some cities were won around police. But even then, many of those
have been undone. And so to me, there's this very obvious reality that if you are a socialist
who's been involved in politics over the last decade or so, you've seen time and time again
the failures of spontaneity and organicism and how they do not lead to something more.
I think really importantly, too, we need to emphasize the fact that the bourgeois Z knows this.
I think the, you know, bourgeois parties are distinctly aware of the fact that protests,
well, they can present these short-term challenges that they'll feel the need to crush
in and of themselves lack inherent, inherent theoretical and political content in many cases,
and that means that they can be usurped and taking control of very easily.
We saw how quickly Democrats responded to the George Floyd politics by insisting on a bourgeois
political line in response to it, by insisting that police abolition become actually police reform
or community policing these changes, because there is this political gap that exists in protests
on their own that needs to be filled.
And unfortunately, because the political elements in the United States that are organized
to fill that are the bourgeois elements, we see co-option and counterinsurgency be able to
respond to these things extremely effectively.
And I think that points at what Lenin is getting at here, which is that when these protests
happen, ideally we need a fucking party to be able to interject that political content,
that theoretical content, and to take these uprisings and connect them to a broader struggle.
It's important to be able to show that the uprisings against police brutality are part of broader political struggles that only can be united through a vanguard party.
They're inseparable from national liberation struggles in the United States, a history of slavery, policing, and economic conditions that shaped American capitalist foundations within this country.
But absent a party to actually secure that, to show that, and to build some sort of long-term movement out of it, the bourgeois political parties will always insert their own political consequences.
unfortunately. So it's not just a question of whether or not spontaneity and organic change can occur
out of these things. Clearly they can't. And by abandoning explicit politicization, we allow our enemies
to be the ones to provide that political context. And I think that is what is so dangerous.
One of the responses that I heard to a lot of Marxists during the George Floyd uprisings was to be like,
now is not the time to interject Marxist theory into these questions. And it's no, now is precisely the time,
right? Because if we don't do it, it's going to be bourgeois politics that are inserted into it. This, too, is a site of ideological struggle, and we have to engage in that. And it is our responsibility to do that. People often see this as kind of a paternalism from Marxism. But the claim that Lenin's really making in the Banguard party is we have the correct fucking theory, guys, and we have a responsibility to insist on that and to push that theory as a means of unifying these different struggles into a revolutionary movement.
Yeah, absolutely. Just to real quick comment before you respond, Brett, one of the ways that these movements are co-opted by bourgeois politics, like specifically in the George Floyd uprising, policymakers like, you know, Stacey Abrams, for example, we're constantly talking about how we need to move this movement off the streets and into the electoral realm, right? And so that's just one example. But yeah, Brett, go ahead.
Yeah, no, absolutely. And that's what happens with spontaneity. You get opportunism. You get co-option.
right you get eclecticism you get tailism i mean i remember being an occupy i'm almost 35 years old
so occupy was also very crucial for me i'm only here in omaha so we didn't have a huge occupy
movement but we certainly had a big one i mean especially relative for omaha i remember
you know like looking back at a long marching line and not being able to see the end of it
walking around downtown omaha at this time but i also remember standing right next to a ron paul
libertarian right and that's a sort of political contradiction from the jump
that you just have this spontaneous uprising,
then people can fill in whatever their political vision is
can make it make sense for them and their vision of what they want.
So the person I was walking, they're an occupier,
they're right next to me, marching, shouting, holding up signs.
They wanted economic libertarianism.
You know, they wanted the Ron Paul revolution,
not to say anything about the democratic sort of liberals
and just the hodgepodge of heterodox, weird ideas you have
when you put a thousand or 10,000 Americans together.
like you're just going to be crazy ideas and just you know there's no way to find any traction or any
unity you can let everybody speak it doesn't solve any problems you know and so we can clearly see
the limitations of that in the occupy movement and what also happens with spontaneity is because
there's no organization there's no spear point that can set out a list of demands that can
escalate in a strategic way that can call on other arms of its organization to do something right like
Let's say, imagine there was a Vanguard National Party, Black Panther Party, a communist party of some sort during the Black Lives Matter movements that could articulate a given set of demands, right, that perhaps had pulled with some major unions in the United States who could go on some sort of strategic strike in order to escalate in order to get those demands met, right?
You can begin to see how having a national vanguard party would be able to take the very real anger and frustration of the people that lead to these spontaneous revolts and then give it a direction, give it a sharp point that can actually lead somewhere.
But in lieu of that, we see exactly what happens.
As I said, opportunism.
So all of a sudden, these people start rising that come out of fucking nowhere, that have no connection with any community or organization.
and start claiming that they're the leader of Black Lives Matter.
And no, you know what?
I've actually started an LLC called Black Lives Matter Incorporated.
And you can give your money to us.
And all of a sudden, they're living in million-dollar houses, right?
Why black people are still being brutalized by police are still subject to the carceral state.
You know, black and brown and poor white people are still being pushed into the homelessness crisis.
Nothing was solved.
There was real revolutionary energy there.
And, you know, I'm sure people listening and both of you participated in it to various
extents. I participated in it, incredibly militant, the clashes in the street with the SWAT team here
in Omaha. It was very intense. And so there was this amazing revolutionary energy that was just sort
of dissipated because it couldn't do anything else. That's as far as it could get. And of course,
you go in and you start asking people their political opinions. They're going to have a whole,
just like an Occupy, a whole slate of random opinions coming from a whole slate of different
political backgrounds that can absolutely not cohere with one another to form anything like
a meaningful organizational movement that can carry this revolutionary energy into real material
gains for, you know, black people in particular, but for the working class and oppressed people
more generally. And also it gives rise to tailism. So what happens is you have these spontaneous
uprisings and then these left-wing organizations say, let's just join them. Let's basically get
liquidated and absorbed by them. Our job is revolution.
is to just go and support these protests and that also leads nowhere you're tailing spontaneity right you're going to you're going to share the same fate as spontaneity and so you know again this is not an in either or thing just like with trade unions there it's important these spontaneous uprisings are amazing they show without a shadow of a doubt real discontent amongst oppressed and working people and they show the real revolutionary potential of people with no overseers with no
strategic organization still taking to the street still chasing cops out of out of departments you
know still burning police departments to the goddamn ground but here's another thing that happens with
spontaneity because there's no coherency because there's no demands because there's no way to
discipline anybody within the movement it also then attracts vagrants and opportunists and just people
who want to fuck shit up for the sake of fucking shit up and what does that lead to it leads to you know
people doing things that have nothing to do
with the struggle for black equality
and then you have right wing and corporate centrist media
pointing to those people and saying
this is anarchy, this is chaos.
What we need right now is law and order
and while they may have had a good point in the beginning,
now it's going too far.
Now they're just fucking shit up.
They're destroying things for no reason.
Here's a video of some guy getting knocked out
in the middle of the street.
These are animals.
Let's do law and order.
And what we saw after Black Lives Matter
is both the Democrats and the Republicans
take different rhetorical strategies, but in practice, they were both ahead of bipartisan
consensus that we need to reintroduce law and order. And this is precisely another consequence
of mere spontaneity with no ties to a discipline, centralized, and importantly,
national organization. Because every little city, every little county can have their own
little left-wing sect, right? Engaging in mutual aid and doing protest. But there's nothing
to link them together. And I think inherent in the idea of a vanguard process,
party is a national party, a party that represents the movement across the entire country, which is
also the prerequisite for internationalism, right? If you want to have an organization that is
connected to other communist parties and organizations around the world, having a national
party that speaks for the communist movement here in the United States is incredibly helpful,
as opposed to having 37 tiny microsex, right, that all claim to speak for the American
Marxist socialist movement or for the working class or whatever. And that's just incoherence.
There's nothing to work with there. There's really no foundations for any sustainable
internationalism as well. So, you know, these are some of the thoughts that I have when talking
about these questions. And these are some examples that we've all, everybody listening to this
has lived through and seen for themselves. Just look at it. This is objective reality.
We can analyze it and learn its lessons. And that's precisely what Lenin was doing back then.
And that's precisely what we're trying to do right now. Yeah. One more point. Oh, yeah. Go ahead.
It's just to say this as well with the spontane.
I think Allison touched on this.
Strong capitalist states can absolutely weather spontaneous uprisings.
Look at France.
Every goddamn other week, they are burning shit, throwing trash cans, huge amounts of people into the street.
And some of those aren't even merely spontaneous.
Some of those tend to sometimes have some leadership, right?
Maybe it's just the unions or a conglomeration of various organizations, et cetera.
But is the French state ever really challenged in a way that, like, they could lose,
control and that working class people could take over the state apparatus, it doesn't even
come close. And sometimes those protests will explode for months on end. And the French police
state, they can go in there, they can make sure they don't get too out of control, they can
corral them, they can sort of keep them boxed in, let them run out all their energy, and then
it's back to business as usual. And France is much more militant just as a baseline cultural value
than the United States. I think it goes back to the nature of our founding revolutions. But even
in the French situation, there is no real attempt on the state. And there's really no fear
amongst the French ruling class that anything like the yellow vests or any of these other
movements are going to come anywhere near challenging their hold on state power. And I think
we have an obligation to learn from that. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Thank you, Brett. And I'm actually
going to read a quote of yours, just to tie up this sort of conversation around spontaneity
and then move us into more explicitly talking about the Vanguard Party, which we've
talked about quite a bit, but there are some gaps that either of you may want to fill. But
this quote comes from the Red Menace episode, and it, for me, just felt like really, really
spot on. So you say tendencies obsessed with horizontalism and spontaneity. Lenin argues that,
quote, this is a quote within a quote, this is Lenin, great revolutionaries are degraded to the level
of an amateur among amateurs, end quote. And then you go on to say, which is why in Occupy, for
example, one could walk into a meeting and a freshman at the local college who's never organized
a day in his life would have just as much say in how the movement should progress as a 40-year-old
veteran organizer with decades of experience. This is not a strength. It's a weakness. And in
opposition to this, Lenin argues that our focus should be to exalt the amateur to the level
of revolutionary, to train, educate, and give experience to people, to raise them up.
And for that sort of systemic cultivation of training of revolutionary leaders, one needs a party.
And so, yeah, I'd love to move into sort of more explicitly this concept of the Vanguard party.
It's, you know, one of the key points that Lenin underscores is that there must be an organization
already in place when revolutionary rupture occurs.
And so it's been argued, and I would say very much correctly, that the reason that the Russian
Revolution of 1917 was successful in going as far as it did was because the Bolsheviks had already
spent decades building a party, both in more legal parliamentary ways, but significantly in what was
illegal under the Tsarist regime, and organizing in the streets among workers. And so a couple of
quotes here, and then I'm going to ask you to sort of unpack this idea of the Vanguard party
a little bit more explicitly. So a quote from Marx, to conquer political power.
has therefore become the duty of the working classes. And Lenin also wrote, without an organization,
the working class is nothing. So I'd love it if you could both reflect on that and maybe just, yeah,
give us a 101 and anything that we've missed so far, because we have discussed it a little bit on the
Vanguard party. And yeah, just for folks who may not be super familiar. Sure. Yeah, I'll start this one.
Now you mentioned the idea that the Bolsheviks had spent decades building a party, and that's really
crucial because you can't build a party in the middle of a crisis, right? You can't build a party
in the middle of the Black Lives Matter uprising. It has to already be there in order to take
advantage of that revolutionary uprising and its energy and to give it structure and focus and
direction. So, you know, of course, the task of communists in the United States today is precisely
to build this national party so that we have it ready for the crises that are absolutely
already on the way some of which are already here some of which we've already weathered without a
communist party and we see exactly where that leads so that's just one thought the other thing is
what is a vanguard party well in the simplest terms it's a centralized disciplined organized
even hierarchical national party and it's centralized because it's you you have leadership you have
roles and now these leaders and this is where a lot of confusion comes in this idea that
You know, our critics will say, oh, you're not even of the working class. You want to subordinate the working class to a small elite. You know, you're just replacing one, one terrible elite with another elite that, you know, doesn't care about working people or just wants to be authoritarian and dictate to working people what they can and can't do. But the truth is, in every communist party that's existed, the leadership arises not as something imposed on the working class from without, but often involved in those struggles, whether the individual is from the proletarian prime.
or the petty bourgeoisie or whatever they are involved in this movement and their leadership
role comes not from their careerist finagling and scheming and plotting to subordinate
everybody else for their own ambitious you know control of power but people rise in in good
communist parties based on the mutual respect that they earn from their comrades in the party
the experience that they have the work that they've put in and you know i always look at a
figure like Fred Hampton. You know, Fred Hampton rose through the ranks of the Black Panther
Party, not as some alien from outside the black community, right, coming in saying, I have a bunch of
ideas, you should listen to me, not by plotting and scheming and destroying his enemies so that he
could get to the top. He rose to prominence precisely because of his credibility, because of
his work, because the people, the masses in his community genuinely loved and uplifted him.
you know and that i think in a healthy communist political party that is how leaders arise now there's
another element to this and we talked about this in the red menace episode okay you want working
people to be a part of this party but a lot of working people and all the duties that come with
being a communist partisan within a communist party a lot of these working people have to work all
day what are you going to do about working class people who have to go work eight 10 12 hours shifts
every single day and don't have time for all this organizing.
Well, that's precisely where the Vanguard party has another advantage, because the Vanguard
party is able to collect funds and basically take money from the entire organization in order
to pay full-time what Lenin calls professional revolutionaries.
So the party apparatus is able to fund a cadre of really advanced organizers, train them
on how to be even better organizers, give them full-throated political education,
and then allow them not to have to go squander their waking lives in a factory,
but can actually put all of their time and energy into building the party, into organizing, into education.
So this is a critical advantage that the Vanguard Party has over lots of other, you know,
anti-capitalist and socialist forms of organization.
And it's proven itself to work many, many times.
So the disciplined aspect is also incredibly crucial.
the line struggles that happen within an organization right democratic centralism we all have our different ideas what democratic centralism allows for is robust vigorous debate between party members right we have a time where we democratically debate our different lines and our different ideas then the party as a whole votes or however decides what the correct line is and then you subordinate your personal preferences to the greater good so maybe you disagree with the party on this or this or
that thing. But it's not about what you personally believe. It's not about advancing your ideas at the
expense of other people's ideas. You have vigorous debate and then a line wins out and then if you are
a disciplined comrade in a party, you accept that line. Now, of course, there are limits, right? I mean,
you could have a party that is deforming and degenerating and then that necessitates certain splits or
purges or whatever. But in a healthy, robust party, a feature or phenomena like democratic socialism can
actually operate. Now what happens when you just have spontaneity? Well, let's go back to Occupy.
You have a bunch of people snapping their fingers. Every person raised their hands and then they get
a talk for 15 minutes on their ideas and then somebody else snaps their fingers and they get a
talk for nothing ever happens, right? Nothing ever actually gets done. No decisions are made is people
venting and that might be therapeutic, but it's not how you challenge capitalism and it's certainly
not going to lead to a revolution. So there's lots of other things to say about this. One book that
jumps to mind is a in dubious battle. I don't know if anybody's ever heard of it, but it's a really
interesting novel approach, literally in novel form, of the early communist party and how they would
do precisely this, how they would fund professional revolutionaries to travel the country and go
into places where workers were discontent or trying to strike or trying to fight back, help supply them
with any funds that they might need, with backup that they might need, help educate some of the
less advanced workers about what needs to be done, help formulate a strategy, and then carry out
that strategy alongside them, right? You don't just leave and then let them go to war and hope it
works out. You know, you are in these processes. You are in these struggles. And that is also how
you build up mass support because the party is not some alien thing outside the working class
imposing itself on it. It is a part of the masses. It's a part of the working class. It
fights alongside working class people for better working class lives and ultimately for revolution.
That's how you build up camaraderie. That's how you build up solidarity. You know that people have
your back. And if you're going to do crazy political actions like go on strike or confront the police
in the street or engage in illegal anti-fascist action, it's also really nice to have an entire party
having your back. Oh, you need a lawyer. We got you. You know? Oh, you need bailed out of jail.
We have funds for that. This is really taking the fight to.
a higher level, a more organized level, a national level, and being able to solve precisely
the problems that we see destroy spontaneous movement after spontaneous movement, after spontaneous
movement.
This is the solution.
Now, does it have its own set of problems?
Absolutely.
Does it have its own contradictions that are generated within a party?
Absolutely.
Can parties fuck up and completely take completely wrong lines?
Can they alienate themselves from the masses?
Absolutely.
But to get to that point, I'd rather have to deal with those higher level issues
and navigate them than never even get to the point where we have the chance to navigate
such issues. And I think that's what's really important. But yeah, Alison.
Yeah, there's a lot there that I think is really exceptional. I don't have too much to add,
but I think I will touch on one theoretical component from what is to be done that I think is really
important for wrestling with. And I think addresses some of the criticism of the Vanguard party
that we get from non-Marxist perspectives. I think when we do like Marxism 101,
One of the things that often it's easy to fall into is just pretend like there's just a black
white. There's the proletariat and there's the bourgeoisie. And that's it. There's no other
classes. There's no distinctions within those classes, et cetera. And one of the things that Lenin really
addresses in this text is that's not true, right? There are different classes beyond that. There's
a lymph and proletariat, but also within the bouchozy, there's a small and a large bouchozy or the
petty bouchozy versus the large bouchozy. And in different contexts, these different classes will play
different roles. And I think one of the things that's really fascinating in this text
is that Lenin insists that the Vanguard Party is the party through which all progressive
classes can be united under the proletarian class, right? And so what is interesting is we have
this open question all the time politics. What do we do with the intellectuals? What do we do
with the petty bourgeois figures? What do we do with, you know, the big talking point in the
United States is the professional managerial class, right, has gotten a lot of attention as a term.
And one of the things that London tells us is the party is the point where when these classes have progressive interests, those can be unified and subordinated to proletarian interests and proletarian struggles.
So the party's crucial for being able to pool progressive forces beyond just the proletariat immediately into a political struggle.
And this isn't cross-class collaboration, right, which is what it sounds like it's risking, because other classes by coming into the party are subordinated to proletarian interests, ideally.
And I think this is really important.
So one of the criticisms that you hear of the Vanguard Party and that you hear of this text in
particular, right? This is kind of one of the anarchist criticisms of what is to be done is that
Lenin is saying, oh, the working class is helpless on its own and it needs to be rescued by
the intellectual class, right? That is this kind of cynical way of reading this text. And I think
one of the things that's important about the Vanguard Party is that the Vanguard Party isn't
subordinating the working class to the intellectual class. It is actually bridging a gap between
them, right? The intellectuals within society often are completely devoid from the mass politics
of the proletariat, and likewise, if we keep that devoid, the proletariat gets caught in what Lenin
calls trade union consciousness. But the party becomes a point through which workers can be
raised to the levels of intellectuals through the process of becoming a professional revolutionary,
as you got to Brett, and intellectuals can become subordinated to the movement of the proletariat,
right? And I think this is really crucial. The intellectual classic,
exist. You're not just going to get rid of it. I would argue they tried to do that in
Cambodia, and it did not go very well. But it has to be dealt with in some way. And the party
is how you can do that. And the party is how intellectuals can set aside the individualism that
often marks their petty bourgeois class position and choose to stand in solidarity with this
broader movement. And precisely in our heroes, we see that, right? What was Marx? What was
Angles? What was Lenin? They were intellectuals. They were of this class background who
subordinated themselves to the broader revolutionary movement. And the party is the way that that can
happen. So it's not that the party is how the intellectuals put the pearls down and keep them under
control, right? This is kind of in 1984 George Orwell's cynical view of how a party structure
functions. But rather, it's a way that the intellectuals can be held accountable to the proletariat
and that the proletariat can gain intellectual theoretical training to become revolutionaries in the
Marxist sense, which means to have that correct theoretical line. And so I think it's very
important to note that the party is a process of subordination to bourgeois class power
that pools in other class elements as well. And that is a really crucial part of why it's
able to unite multiple struggles all under the banner of proletarian struggle and revolution.
Yeah, thank you so much. And I think just to sort of wrap up our conversation on the solidarity
economy and move on before we wrap up our conversation today, I just wanted to say, you know,
the point isn't that the solidarity economy organizations aren't necessary and important.
They absolutely are. I think the practice of exercising our atrophied muscles of collectivism
and prefiguring the world that we want to see are essential components of transformation.
And to your point, too, Brett, I think a lot of the time these spaces can provide a very
important therapeutic component. But my critique is that these initiatives will not be enough
to transform our world on their own, and that they need to be coupled with a revolutionary
political movement that can contend with the capitalist state in a way that pure
economicism alone, as we have hammered home, I think throughout this entire conversation,
does and cannot. And I'd go even further to suggest that solidarity economy models alone
aren't inherently revolutionary, and they don't necessarily organically or spontaneously
engender a revolutionary class consciousness. And the ones that do, that influence is always brought
in explicitly from a parallel revolutionary framework. And I discovered this myself most
potently when I traveled to Mondragon, Spain, along with Della, you know, home of the
Mondragon Corporation, which is the largest network of worker co-ops in the world. And we actually
spoke with a lot of co-op members who told us that they didn't see what they were doing as being
part of anything political, that it was just a job. And that's explicitly a conscious part of
the Mondragon model. Like they stay out of politics, you know, with both the capital and lowercase
P. And, you know, we've watched as Mondragon has lost its way in many ways. You know, they brought
on an exploited labor force in the third world that aren't part of the cooperative, for example.
And the pay ratio between the lower and higher end worker salaries continues to increase. And,
you know, essentially they've just fallen prey to certain kind of
compromise with the capitalist system, you know, certain kind of opportunism maybe. And Della and I
did a whole two-part documentary series on this, on worker cooperative specifically. And in the
second part, we really, without knowing that we were getting into this terrain, because we were
quite early on in our journey of, you know, understanding Marxism and all of the kind of stuff we've
been talking about today. But we did sort of organically on our own come to this realization that, like,
okay, without explicit politics, Mondragon is kind of doomed, you know, in many ways.
And so, yeah, I mean, if anybody wants to sort of dive deeper into that conversation specifically
about our experience with Mondragon, check out our worker co-op episode.
But, you know, I also get this feeling, it's not just Mondragon, like a lot of the times
when I hear about solidarity economy spaces and many instances, you know, there are incredible
benefits, but also very real and sometimes debilitating limitations and challenges that these
initiatives face when they bump up against the very tight guardrails put up by the capitalist state.
So, yeah, I just wanted to share that anecdote and that observation before we moved on.
And I want to sort of wrap up by really zooming out and coming back to this question of the
Vanguard party and this question of rupture. You know, I think despite conditions being as
catastrophic as they are right now, insurrectionary rupture hardly seems like it's really in the
realm of possibilities anytime in the near future in the United States. Despite the significant
and increasingly radical labor actions we're seeing this summer, it almost feels like the revolutionary
rupture is going to come from some external force like climate collapse or, you know, nuclear war or
something like that. And I'm wondering what you think, like if you see any examples of revolutionary
parties in the United States that might be able to guide us through something like that.
I'm wondering if you have anything to say about any potential vanguard parties or, you know,
current or historical or, yeah, any contemporary examples internationally, just to give us a little
bit of an idea of what's out there right now and what has worked historically, if we can, like,
tie that to the present.
Yeah, so a couple thoughts on this.
I think one of the difficult things is that often in the context of the United States, it does
feel like we have very little to start from, right? I think, like you said, like, the idea of the
rupture feels so far off, and often we fall back on this idea of maybe some external thing is
going to force it for us, right? So, like you mentioned, climate change, war, something like that.
And I think the fact that we have to fall back on those kind of, like, very depressingly fatalistic
thoughts like that really tells you how far behind we are in some way. And I think one thing to say
upfront is that those external forces will not provide us with a rupture, right? Because
the unfortunate reality is that capitalism is very good at adapting to these things.
Brett and I got into this a little bit with climate leviathan while the text we worked with,
but there are many horrific ways that capitalism can survive climate change,
even if it creates some forms of rupture, right?
And so there is not an organic rupture that I think can clearly exist and happen there.
And as Brett got at earlier, right, one of the realities that I think we need to face is that
if you're trying to build the party in the time of crisis, you're already too late, right?
that has to be a foundation
which is laid ahead of time. So I think this
question of does that exist in the United States today
is a good question and
is one that is going to be super controversial.
My position is no, I don't think
that there is a Vanguard party in the United States.
I think there are people trying to build it in various
different contexts. I think there are a number of
organizations that want to be that, but I also think
most of those organizations are honest enough
to not pretend they are a Vanguard party, right?
To not make that claim. I don't think anyone has
risen to that level within
contemporary U.S. socialist politics, and even within, you know, the last several decades,
it's been tricky. I think the Black Panthers that you point to are an important group
historically for the struggle in the United States for national liberation. But even the Black
Panthers, as important as they were, kind of had a level of political eclecticism that is still
kind of at odds with the way that the Vanguard party is theorized by Lenin here. So it's not clear to me
that there is anything quite like a Vanguard party in the United States, which means that the task
becomes like very, very clear in my mind from the perspective that Lennon puts here,
which is that the construction of such a party becomes the necessary thing that we need
to do. The answer of what is to be done for us was the same answer of what is to be done in
the time that Lennon wrote it. A party is necessary. It has to be built. And since we're, you know,
coming up on the end of this episode, I'm not going to get too much into the many countless
debates about how we build that, right? But that that is the task. It's something that
hopefully all Marxists can agree on. I would really hope that's a foundational
premise we can come together on. So internationally, I think there are organizations that I take
inspiration from, obviously, from the perspective that I come from the Communist Party of the Philippines,
Communist Party of India Maoist, these various ongoing movements that are fighting revolutionary
warfare right now and are putting themselves internationally in solidarity with other movements
for revolution who are speaking out in solidarity of Palestinian revolutionary struggle right now.
these are the groups that I look to as hopeful sites of struggle that we can see that have
integrated a real connection to the masses in terms of their theory of what the party is.
But for us here in the United States, I think we're at a very foundational step,
and I think that one of, again, really the core things that we need to agree on is that
we don't have a party and that getting one is a prerequisite for Marxist politics to really
mean something in the context of the United States.
It's kind of just a brief opening there, but those are broadly my thoughts on the question.
Yeah. Thank you. And Brett? Yeah, definitely. I was going to, you know, earlier we were talking about mutual aid and some of these sort of things that organizations do that aren't really ideal, but they're, you know, they're like the bottom of the barrel things that maybe we can only do. And a lot of that happens because it's the product of being small and local. When you are just a small little organization within one community, you know, within one city, there's only so much you can possibly do. You know, I've organized in many different organizations here in Omaha.
them have reached anything like a big enough apparatus to do, you know, really go on the
offense.
Maybe that's the way to put it, to go on the offensive instead of constantly playing
defense.
When we're trying to not get tenants evicted, when we're giving mutual aid, when we're feeding
giving school supplies to kids in our community, that's great, but it's literally playing
defense.
We're trying to, you know, cover up or deal with some of the problems of living in capitalism.
We're not taking the fight to anybody at all.
And capitalism can sit around all day long and let us.
do our little food drives and get deposits back for tenants.
And those things are beautiful things.
I've literally seen, you know, families have their school year changed.
Poor families, immigrant families here in Omaha have their acute, immediate lives sort of
made better by these programs.
But it's a product of being small and local.
And so for me, I totally agree with everything Allison said.
And, you know, sometimes people get a little pissy with us.
And we say there's no Vanguard party at the moment.
There just isn't.
I'm sorry.
And I think we should all be humble and face that reality.
Maybe you think your organization could be that, but for me, there's like a, there is a basic standard you have to meet.
And that is, is it a national scaled party?
And some, maybe some parties can approach or even meet that standard.
And the other one is, does it have genuine mass support?
And almost no political parties in the United States amongst the communists have real mass support in the way that, you know, Chinese communist, Cuban communists, you know, Bolshevik communists were able to get.
and were actually the prerequisite to making them successful, right?
Without that mass support, Bay of Pigs and Cuba could have gone very different,
but it was precisely regular Cubans who were fully on board with the revolution standing up and beating that back.
You know, what would it happen to the Chinese communist fighting the Chinese nationalist after they defeated Japanese imperialism
if there wasn't millions of Chinese people who had the back of the Communist Party?
And same with the Bolsheviks in Russia and all the socialist parties that were a part of the U.S.
SSR. So is your party national and scale? And does it genuinely have mass support? Those are two standards that once you hit both of those, then we can begin talking about the possibility of whether or not you are a vanguard party. But at the moment, no organization in the United States quite meets that standard. But of course, you know, to build a big party like that, there's these kernels and these seeds that have to exist before that. And of course, before a big national party with mass support, you're going to have a bunch of little parties.
that are trying to do organization, trying to link up, and you have some organizations that have
multiple chapters. You know, you have the PSL, you have the DSA. Regardless of what you think of the
lines of those organizations, they'll have chapters in different cities, much like the Black Panther
Party did, right? Did it ever quite rise to a national party, like the Bolsheviks or like the
Chinese communists? It just quite hasn't risen there. Maybe the Communist Party USA in its absolute
peak and heyday basically met that or was very close to meeting that standard.
I think you can make a good argument that they did meet that standard, at least for a time.
But that eventually, you know, fell to various forms of revisionism.
And we see what we have today.
And again, this is no shade to anybody.
We're not shitting on anybody.
We're in the same boat as you.
We're your comrades, too.
We want a vanguard party.
You know, we applaud and tip our hats.
Anybody doing any organizational work.
If you're on the ground feeding people in your community, salute to you.
If you're on the ground fighting for tenants rights and getting deposits back and taking on slum wards, salute to you.
If you're in your local facts,
helping form a union and leading a union struggle good for you you know you are the sort of seed
bed out of which a vanguard party can possibly grow so we're not you know shitting on anybody
but we're just saying we're not there yet and that's the fundamental task because the crises are
going to keep coming but if we and they're going to get bigger and they're going to compound but
if we're not organized those crises will rack us they'll scatter us they'll leave us scrambling
to play mere defense and we'll never be able to go on the offensive and so the task of
communist in the United States right now is to begin working toward a real vanguard party. Easier said
than done. It comes with a whole slate of issues that we have to solve. And I'm not pretending this is an
easy thing or we can just snap our fingers and make it happen. But it has to happen. And one of the
things that has to happen is that communists in the United States in particular overcome their
hyper individualism. And we see this hyper individualism manifest in treating, as Mao would say,
non-antagonistic contradictions as antagonistic. Oh, you're a Marxist Leninist, and that person's a Marxist-Leninist Maoist. You guys are going to war on Twitter. We don't even have a party. We have no mass support whatsoever, but you think you need to carry out these line struggles on Twitter.com. And that's somehow going to facilitate the rise of a mass movement or a vanguard party or that you're holding it down for any sort of official Communist Party line. And that's just not the case. And a lot of people get into organizations.
and they want to be the smartest person in the room.
They want to be correct more than they want to be effective.
And that can literally just one person in an organization who is like that or a small
group of people who are like that in an organization can ruin that organization.
And so that's, I think, again, where this idea of the Vanguard Party's notion of discipline comes
in, of subordinating your individual career goals, your individual aspirations and ambitions,
the idea that you have all the correct ideas in your head and everybody else is a
dirty revisionist who just doesn't understand Marxism, these are sort of narcissistic traits that
will eat an organization from the inside out. And I think it behooves us to begin to develop
the sort of discipline that's a prerequisite to building a vanguard party along with all the
other prerequisites we have to meet in order to build that. So that's just the situation we're
in. That's the objective reality. And again, it's our duty to build this party. And of course,
I hope in some tiny, humble way that our projects of political education are at least
pushing things in this general direction. Organizing is even better, but sometimes
organizations prerequisite is political education. And one of the things that's made me
most happy about me and Allison's work is hearing organizations come to us and say that we've
used your stuff in our political education processes within our organization. We're using your
stuff to help build up revolutionary theory within our
our organization. And, you know, for me, that's one of the highest praises that we can get,
that we're actually providing something useful, not merely for individuals who consider themselves
Marxist, but for organizations, which will go on to create the bedrock for a possible
Vanguard party.
You've been listening to an upstream conversation with Brett O'Shea and Alice.
Escalante, co-hosts of the podcast Red Menace.
Brett is also the host of Revolutionary Left Radio and co-host of guerrilla history.
Please check the show notes for links to any of the resources mentioned in this episode.
Upstream theme music was composed by Robert.
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You know, I'm going to be able to be.