This Country Needs a Few Good Communists

by: Chris Hedges, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

The witch hunts against communists in the United States were used to silence socialists, anarchists, pacifists and all those who defied the abuses of capitalism. Those "anti-Red" actions were devastating blows to the political health of the country. The communists spoke the language of class war. They understood that Wall Street, along with corporations such as British Petroleum, is the enemy. They offered a broad social vision which allowed even the non-communist left to employ a vocabulary that made sense of the destructive impulses of capitalism. But once the Communist Party, along with other radical movements, was eradicated as a social and political force, once the liberal class took government-imposed loyalty oaths and collaborated in the witch hunts for phantom communist agents, we were robbed of the ability to make sense of our struggle. We became fearful, timid and ineffectual. We lost our voice and became part of the corporate structure we should have been dismantling.

Hope in this age of bankrupt capitalism will come with the return of the language of class conflict. It does not mean we have to agree with Karl Marx, who advocated violence and whose worship of the state as a utopian mechanism led to another form of enslavement of the working class, but we have to speak in the vocabulary Marx employed. We have to grasp, as Marx did, that corporations are not concerned with the common good. They exploit, pollute, impoverish, repress, kill and lie to make money. They throw poor families out of homes, let the uninsured die, wage useless wars to make profits, poison and pollute the ecosystem, slash social assistance programs, gut public education, trash the global economy, loot the U.S. Treasury and crush all popular movements that seek justice for working men and women. They worship only money and power. And, as Marx knew, unfettered capitalism is a revolutionary force that consumes greater and greater numbers of human lives until it finally consumes itself. The nightmare in the Gulf of Mexico is the perfect metaphor for the corporate state. It is the same nightmare seen in postindustrial pockets from the old mill towns in New England to the abandoned steel mills in Ohio. It is a nightmare that Iraqis, Pakistanis and Afghans, mourning their dead, live each day.

Capitalism was once viewed in America as a system that had to be fought. But capitalism is no longer challenged. And so, even as Wall Street steals billions of taxpayer dollars and the Gulf of Mexico is turned into a toxic swamp, we do not know what to do or say. We decry the excesses of capitalism without demanding a dismantling of the corporate state. The liberal class has a misguided loyalty, illustrated by environmental groups that have refused to excoriate the Obama White House over the ecological catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico. Liberals bow before a Democratic Party that ignores them and does the bidding of corporations. The reflexive deference to the Democrats by the liberal class is the result of cowardice and fear. It is also the result of an infantile understanding of the mechanisms of power. The divide is not between Republican and Democrat. It is a divide between the corporate state and the citizen. It is a divide between capitalists and workers. And, for all the failings of the communists, they got it.

Unions, organizations formerly steeped in the doctrine of class warfare and filled with those who sought broad social and political rights for the working class, have been transformed into domesticated partners of the capitalist class. They have been reduced to simple bartering tools. The social demands of unions early in the 20th century that gave the working class weekends off, the right to strike, the eight-hour day and Social Security have been abandoned. Universities, especially in political science and economics departments, parrot the discredited ideology of unregulated capitalism and have no new ideas. Artistic expression, along with most religious worship, is largely self-absorbed narcissism. The Democratic Party and the press have become corporate servants. The loss of radicals within the labor movement, the Democratic Party, the arts, the church and the universities has obliterated one of the most important counterweights to the corporate state. And the purging of those radicals has left us unable to make sense of what is happening to us.

The fear of communism, like the fear of Islamic terrorism, has resulted in the steady suspension of civil liberties, including freedom of speech, habeas corpus and the right to organize, values the liberal class claims to support. It was the orchestration of fear that permitted the capitalist class to ram through the Taft-Hartley Act in 1948 in the name of anti-communism, the most destructive legislative blow to the working class until the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). It was fear that created the Patriot Act, extraordinary rendition, offshore penal colonies where we torture and the endless wars in the Middle East. And it was fear that was used to see us fleeced by Wall Street. If we do not stop being afraid and name our enemy we will continue toward a state of neofeudalism.

The robber barons of the late 19th century used goons and thugs to beat up workers and retain control. The corporations, employing the science of public relations, have used actors, artists, writers, scholars and filmmakers to manipulate and shape public opinion. Corporations employ the college-educated, liberal elite to saturate the culture with lies. The liberal class should have defied the emasculation of radical organizations, including the Communist Party. Instead, it was lured into the corporate embrace. It became a class of collaborators. National cohesion, because our intellectual life has become so impoverished, revolves around the empty pursuits of mass culture, brands, consumption, status and the bland uniformity of opinions disseminated by corporate-friendly courtiers. We speak and think in the empty slogans and clichés we are given. And they are given to us by the liberal class.

The "idea of the intellectual vocation," as Irving Howe pointed out in his essay "The Age of Conformity," "the idea of a life dedicated to values that cannot possibly be realized by a commercial civilization—has gradually lost its allure. And, it is this, rather than the abandonment of a particular program, which constitutes our rout." The belief that capitalism is the unassailable engine of human progress, Howe added, "is trumpeted through every medium of communication: official propaganda, institutional advertising and scholarly writings of people who, until a few years ago, were its major opponents."

"The truly powerless people are those intellectuals—the new realists—who attach themselves to the seats of power, where they surrender their freedom of expression without gaining any significance as political figures," Howe wrote. "For it is crucial to the history of the American intellectuals in the past few decades—as well as to the relationship between 'wealth' and 'intellect'—that whenever they become absorbed into the accredited institutions of society they not only lose their traditional rebelliousness but to one extent or another they cease to function as intellectuals. The institutional world needs intellectuals because they are intellectuals but it does not want them as intellectuals. It beckons to them because of what they are but it will not allow them, at least within its sphere of articulation, either to remain or entirely cease being what they are. It needs them for their knowledge, their talent, their inclinations and passions; it insists that they retain a measure of these endowments, which it means to employ for its own ends, and without which the intellectuals would be of no use to it whatever. A simplified but useful equation suggests itself: the relation of the institutional world to the intellectuals is as the relation of middlebrow culture to serious culture, the one battens on the other, absorbs and raids it with increasing frequency and skill, subsidizes and encourages it enough to make further raids possible—at times the parasite will support its victim. Surely this relationship must be one reason for the high incidence of neurosis that is supposed to prevail among intellectuals. A total estrangement from the sources of power and prestige, even a blind unreasoning rejection of every aspect of our culture, would be far healthier if only because it would permit a free discharge of aggression."

The liberal class prefers comfort to confrontation. It will not challenge the decaying structures of the corporate state. It is intolerant within its ranks of those who do. It clings pathetically to the carcass of the Obama presidency. It has been exposed as a dead force in American politics. We must find our way back to the old radicals, to the discredited Marxists, socialists and anarchists, including Dwight Macdonald and Dorothy Day. Language is our first step toward salvation. We cannot fight what we cannot describe.

This article was also published at truthdig.com.

Creative Commons License
This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





     

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Chris Hedges, is a senior fellow at The Nation Institute in New York City. He spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent in Central America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from more than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News and The New York Times, for which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years. 


Comments

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I prefer identification as

I prefer identification as equal interdisciplinary team member.



Amen! Hedges states the case

Amen!

Hedges states the case succinctly and well.

Here is the basic reason why it is impossible for genuine progressives to make a way forward through an alliance with Libertarians.

What a pity that so few will understand.



Well, the CPUSA is still

Well, the CPUSA is still alive and well. Just had its 29th National Convention. Check out its website: CPUSA.org. Here are the resolutions it adopted:

Communist Party Resolves: Jobs is the defining issue
Communist Party Resolves: Build united action against racism and for unity
Communist Party Resolves: All hands on deck for the 2010 midterm elections
Communist Party Resolves: Immigrant rights is a struggle for democracy
Communist Party Resolves: End the wars - fund human needs not militarism
Communist Party Resolves: Build the party, press and YCL



This article covers many of

This article covers many of the reasons why it's a precarious balance when trying to effect progressive change to work within organizations and power structures, as well as keep at arm's length from them.

There needs to be stronger support for "quadrant 3" of the www.PoliticalCompass.org model for Constitutional boundaries and human rights to be reality. The Libertarian Party is closer to GOP, in Q2, while few grasp how the US GOP and Dem's are more alike than alternatives in Q1. RCP (Bob Avakian's Revolutionary Communist Party) is useful to have exist as one of few voices or Q4, but coerced social left agendas can no more fit ConLaw boundaries than coerced social right agendas, too often when Dem's are behind them treated as if leftist in predator media distortions.

To enable a Q3 (left libertarian) framework of minimal government operating within legal bounds and supporting only basic infrastructure for diverse social function, the larger power paradigm and structural process need revolutionary change. Chris seems to "get that", and how treacherous manipulations are used to inhibit it from more easily becoming social and government reality.



What a joy to see such a

What a joy to see such a plain and accurate description of our society in this age of corporate-sponsored intellectual pabulum. Thank you Mr. Hedges!

Class warfare it indeed is. And it will proceed as wars always do, but only after our couch-loving "intellectuals" have made the situation infinitely worse with their cowardice, both intellectual and physical.



Of course, the Communist

Of course, the Communist movement killed about 110 million people in the 20th Century according to Prof. Rummel in Death by Government. Why would anybody want anything to do with people who had allied with Hitler in World War II, or who stole the Russian election (and the country) from the Socialist Revolutionaries in 1918?



Americans are currently

Americans are currently incapable of collective intelligence that counters inane cynical solipsism of radical individualism (aka, Libertarianism or Republicans + pot),or corporate organizing frameworks (e.g., Tea Klux Klan). Consider what the USA did as a collective: moon landing, laser, integrated circuits (computer chips), TVA, CCC, WPA, etc.). The USSR went from neo-feudalism to a challenger to the mighty USA within 3 generations (took USA over a century and a half). Collective organizing (via unions) brought the 40 hour week, living wages, public school systems, public university systems and public research centers. Private industry? Still trying to build a viable electric car as they have been for over 50 years. Still can't get it done. But we love Reagan's snake oil.



If you are truly serious

If you are truly serious about revolution against capitalism, then you're going to need all the help you can get. Using sexist terms like "emasculated" in your rhetoric will only keep you in the margins watching as history unfolds without your input. Has it ever occurred to you that capitalism is in a co-dependent relationship with militarism and misogyny? Why not a feminist revolution to expose and discredit the oppressive structures that support the foregoing?



"Why not a feminist

"Why not a feminist revolution to expose and discredit the oppressive structures..."

Feminist revolution? What a joke. Look at all the activist and powerful women among the Rethuglican and Christian extremist movements. Given the opportunity, women can be and are just as oppressive as men.



Rick, I think you confuse

Rick, I think you confuse feminism with the female gender. As you point out, women can be oppressors, but feminism (called so for apparent historical reasons) is about resisting oppression. People like Sarah Palin are not examples of feminist empowerment, just Quislings who've copped into the oppressive oldboy network.



Rather than elevating the

Rather than elevating the tenets of communism, (the very name of which scares many) how about promoting Biblical demands for justice? Not the subverted Religious Right's version,nor trying to follow all the old rules, but as the old prophets did, railing against the exploitation of the poor. There are many active Christ-followers on the Left who are willing to lay down their lives for justice for the powerless.



J.S. Clark, Thank you for

J.S. Clark, Thank you for addressing my issue. I read somewhere (and I agree) that if it weren't for opportunites generated by the feminist movement, these oppressive right wing women would still be stuck in the kitchen. Ironic, don't you think?

And by the way, I agree with the original goals of the feminist movement ala 1970's, but so called feminists of the current era still demand special treatment as though the gains that women have made since that time never happened.



Marx and Engels were

Marx and Engels were impressed by the Iroquois (Amerindian) system of governance wherein there were no 'sovereign states' nor the imaginary-line-bounded 'owned property tracts' that such states dish out. Communism was intended to be 'world-wide' so that the common global space we all share inclusion in would be acknowledged to be a 'commons'. 'Property ownership' sets up the insane situation where individual persons, corporations and states have the right to develop that property in the pursuit of their self-interest. The Amerindians found that to be crazy - 'how can you buy and sell the sky?'. BP was sold a tract of land (an Exploration and Producing tract) to develop in the pursuit of its own interest, as if that tract were 'independent' like we say that the imaginary-line-bounded nation state is 'independent'. BP's tract is not 'independent'. Neither was Pemex's Campeche tract where the Ixtoc 1 blowout pumped 30,000 barrels per day of oil into the Gulf for nine months. It is not about 'capitalism' and 'communism' but about the insanity of 'declarations of independence' that associate with property ownership.



It is also the nightmare

It is also the nightmare Countries like Niger, Congo and other exploitable but voiceless Nations - aka OUR PLANET- live every day. Alas... they are not in the media!
Apart from these slight omissions, the contribution you give, Mr. Hedge, is enlightning. too bad very few former communists in my country will be able to understand it!



As some have been busy

As some have been busy pointing fingers at this or that administration's shortcomings, I have tried to point out that ultimately the blame is with corporations and capitalism.

And now the Supreme Court lifts restrictions on corporate campaign contributions... Great.



Marx and Engels rather than

Marx and Engels rather than pushing violence analyzed the situation and realized that the capitalist classes would fight to continue their domination. The liberal revolution had put the capitalists in power and they would be loath to give it up and this would cause the conflict. After the experience of the Paris Commune and other attempts by the working class to gain power what were the alternatives? To live as wage slaves forever? One responder repeats the old 110 million people killed in socialist countries. Horse manure. If you want deaths, ask about the deaths of probably 150 million indigenous peoples in the Americas as well as millions more in Africa and Asia under the heel of capitalist imperialism.



Anon, in a response above

Anon, in a response above showed supreme ignorance. The Soviet Union never allied itself with Germany. In fact they signed a short lived non-aggression pact after other western countries refused to ally themselves with the USSR against Germany. The West hoped that Germany would destroy Bolshevism, the USSR and that would benefit the West that had tried an invasion by western troops in alliance with the counter-revolutionary White Russians in 1919 as well as blockades and other actions to isolate and destroy the USSR. It was the USSR that torn the guts out of the NAZIs at Stalingrad, Kursk, Moscow, and Leningrad and then advanced into Germany. 70% of the German armed forces were used in the East as well as the Germany. If one is going to posit history at least know a little.

The Socialist Revolutionaries were compromised and were not a force to contend with as they didn't have the courage to fight for a real revolution.



The liberal left "...clings

The liberal left "...clings pathetically to the carcass of the Obama presidency." Now this is something the Left should begin facing. The Left has reduced itself to accepting whatever the Obama administration serves to it on its barebones platter. I've argued on these forums, for years now, that Obama is a not so well disguised agent for the Republican party, a right wing Democrat in the tradition of Diane Feinstein, Bill Clinton, and Max Baucus. I've also argued that Obama's education has been most deeply influenced by the market based approach of Milton Friedman and his bunch of money-minded students who place economics (and mathematical formulations applied to market theory) above ethics and reason. These sorts of business tycoons with PhDs rate the philosophies of economists, that is, right wing economists, as the highest possible intellectual achievement for mankind. Yet the Left appears to have not made this connection. They are Jews begging Hitler for civil rights, to at least let them wear the Star and function in society. The Left has been pissed on and shit upon by the Obama presidency. At what point does the ass kissing left get it?



A Road Less Traveled, But

A Road Less Traveled, But Never Needed More.

After 50 years as a trade unionist trying to understand why on earth or national unions were failing and looking around today at where we really are in this greed based out of balance capital 1st outcome, IT MAKES NO SENSE.

This economic "system" is beyond out dated,
It's now a Total Fraud and Deception.



I like and agree with most

I like and agree with most of this essay, but I don't necessarily agree 100% with this statement; "We speak and think in the empty slogans and clichés we are given. And they are given to us by the liberal class." (though perhaps I missed his real meaning ?)
I think the word "liberal" should actually be the "corporate propagandists."



I do begin to see the point

I do begin to see the point of the use of the word liberal (the one I mentioned) in the beginning of the last paragraph ; "The liberal class prefers comfort to confrontation. It will not challenge the decaying structures of the corporate state. It is intolerant within its ranks of those who do."
I have certainly been frustrated with that myself.



This article is one of many

This article is one of many to come, I hope, to combat the very damaging distortion of the political discourse in America.

Liberal =/= Leftist

Progressive people of a working (and service) class background better realize they are being forcibly contained in their political perspectives by the label "liberal", which refer to an elite-friendly political philosophy only rarely associated (historically speaking) with the relative empowerment of working people.

Leftists aren't liberals, and liberals aren't leftists. The first are free to criticize the travesty that is the Obama administration without feeling bad for "their team"; the latter are constrained by their Dem loyalty and their dread of what would happen if "the other team" got elected.

Roosevelt is dead, folks. What remains in both major parties are corporate yes-men and demagogues.

Time to break up with the lying Dems !



The absence of criticism and

The absence of criticism and a political opposition contributed to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Forget the Reagan’s mythology. It is clear that we don’t have an opposition because the two parties are the same. They do not represent the people but corporate interests and respond to the same money providers. The most common form of opposition to capitalism we conceive is Marxism or is Socialism. But maybe what we need is a courageous leader with the gut to make deep transformations and put the country in order. Currently is a real chaos. We need to think of some opposition (party or movement) adapted to our culture and aspirations. The Democrat-Republican party has proven its incompetence to manage the country. Why, the richest and most powerful country in the earth is in such chaos. Mismanagement is the misuse of resources and the absence of intelligent and strong leadership. If this trend continues we will follow the same path p of previous empires. We do not learn from history, because we are convinced that we make and remake history.



Hard to maintain a socialist

Hard to maintain a socialist country in a capitalist dominated world. China has perhaps approached its task with more stringent self-discipline and less illusions about what it requires "to get the job done."

On Soviets in the Second WW, I concur with the corrections made by another post. Also, the Russians lost over 20 million (and I think even 50 with one count) people during their contribution to fighting the nazis.

Time for some to own up on this matter. We wouldn't have won WW II without the Soviet Union.

An interesting article.



Can`t believe that there is

Can`t believe that there is still, a communist party, made in USA,are they legal?



The elites are our Communist

The elites are our Communist Party, look at the DC area, everyone's hooked up to defense, guv'mint. Some of the classy talent we have in our Agencies would be the first to scream something innane. For example:" I got yer socialism right here Commie, when are you going to stop living off of other people? " Which proves Pavlov was right about his dogs! Soon as someone says commie, a buzz of low level static ensues, dog then drools.



THANKS FOR AN EXCELLENT AND

THANKS FOR AN EXCELLENT AND MOST TIMELY ARTICLE.



There's so much ignorance

There's so much ignorance and misinformation in the U.S. about "communists," let alone "Marxism," and which laws are still on the books, it's almost impossible to have a consistently coherent or safe discussion on the subject.

Pete Seeger has described himself as a "communist." Remember that, next time you listen to a folk music recording, in your collection at home.

Woooooooooooo!



reflections .. Song to

reflections ..

Song to listen to @

youtube.com/watch?v=4SJywUiR-gw

(though video montage is a little older, lyrics and music timely in a classic way)

picture to see @

http:// images2.fanpop.com/images/photos/7300000/Moster-Under-Your-Bed-horror-movies-7361153-500-500.jpg



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