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688 lines
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This issue was meant to be finished in October. But now it's
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finally here...
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One of the things that have kept me from finishing the issue
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earlier, has been lack of contributions.
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Please, send me comments about the material - write your own
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articles about any part of Marxism you find of importance. To be
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able to continue publishing this zine, I need more people to
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write for Breakaway.
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Still... Thank you to all of you for being patient with me. I'd
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especially like to thank the following four people which have sent me
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interesting material and/or contributed to Breakaway:
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Dave Hollis, Jack Hill, M. Spellman and Steve Deakin.
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I'm also very sorry I've not yet managed to go through my backlog
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of e-mail - if any of you sent me e-mail to the address
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<vidarh@powertech.no>, and haven't received a reply, it have
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probably been lost among all the other messages. I know for a fact
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that I have more than 3Mb of mail still waiting for me on that
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address...
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Luckily I'm getting more time on my hands, so please feel free
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to write again to <vidarh@rforum.no> - I promise to answer messages
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sent to that address within a week or two...
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Vidar Hokstad
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BEGIN BREAKAWAY.004
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B R E A K A W A Y
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Debates on modern marxism
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-+*+-
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Volume #2, Issue #1
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February 1994
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=======================================================================
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CONTENTS
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(00) EDITORIAL
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(01) column: WHAT'S UP?
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Some informal notes on issues we want to tell you about
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(02) AGAIN THE MASSES AND THE LEADERS
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Article by Rosa Luxembourg, translated by Dave Hollis
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(04) column: ANNOUNCEMENTS
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Socialist Voice
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(07) column: A SEARCHLIGHT ON THE INTERNET
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About marxism in the US Army handbook and other stuff...
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(06) THE MAN
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Poem by Percy Bysshe Shelley
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(07) GENERAL INFORMATION
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How and what to submit, how to contact us, etc.
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=======================================================================
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(00) EDITORIAL
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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A new year is upon us. It's been a long time.
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Though not an eventless period... Quite the contrary.
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Unfortunately - as I've mentioned briefly before - work, computer
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science studies, and my political activities off the Internet have
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prevented me both from keeping up with my mail, and from finishing
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Breakaway #4 earlier.
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Thus, this issue is smaller than intende.
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Still it contains some quite interesting material.
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Times are changing, and we are changing with it. We are
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developing; undergoing a metamorphosis that will leave us with a
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fundamentally new outlook on the world.
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We are in the centre of the changes... We have the theoretical
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understanding to discuss, and comprehend what the emperors of
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bourgeoisie subcultures have only yet started to grasp.
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On your visits in cyberspace, have you ever been to alt.cyberpunk?
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Have you felt the tide of anti authoritarianism, peeling the fresh
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paint of capitalism, to reveal it the way it really is. Still, the
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naivete that flows throughout the system...
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...we need not preach about rebellion. Rebellion lies latent in the
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human soul. It grows whenever oppression is there to nurture it. What
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we need is to provide understanding of who the oppressors are, and how
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they can be fought.
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Often we are called old fashioned and dogmatic, even orthodox. The
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day the wanna be anarchists of alt.cyberpunk, and their likes,
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understand the fundamental error of that "logic", capitalism will meet
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the proletariat of the next century.
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When the middle class rebels find themselves in the same boat as
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the poor people they once despised; when they start using their
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knowledge of technology, their skills with computers, for fighting the
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capitalists, the ideology they today only curse on USENET, the ruling
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class should watch out.
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It is only a matter of time before these people discover that they
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are already living in the kind of world they are reading about in their
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favorite books.
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That the only real difference, apart from the technical wonders of
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the 21th century, is just that in the real world, people won't surrender
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to the capitalist imperium - in the real world, capitalist reign isn't
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eternal.
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Tomorrow, hundreds of new comrades will have discovered, that the
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dogmas, the orthodoxy, are so much more a vital characteristic of
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capitalism, than it is a characteristics of it's child; it's successor.
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The only question that remains, is: Will you welcome them, or will
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you, as the stalinists, reject them as opportunists? Will we fight with
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them, or against them?
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Vidar Hokstad
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Editor
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=======================================================================
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(01) column: WHAT'S UP?
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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- The mailing list red.talk.misc@rforum.no will be up shortly.
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(But the software is beta versions, so some bugs are bound to
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be discovered...)
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It is intended as a forum for discussion about RED FORUM and
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BREAKAWAY. Red Forum members and Breakaway subscribers are
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particularly welcome.
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To subscribe, send mail to rfic@rforum.no and request
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that we put you on the mailing-list.
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The list gatewayed bidirectonally to our local "red.talk.misc"
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newsgroup. The red.* hierarchy will be extended in the near
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future, and will be set up to mirror a lot of leftist lists.
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SysAdmins that are interested in carrying this hierarchy as
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true newsgroups can contact us at rfic@rforum.no to discuss
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it with us.
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- Preparations for a Marxism FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) are
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being made. However we do not have the time to complete such a
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big task ourselves. People that are interested in helping us out
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with the task can write to <marxism-faq@rforum.no>, and we'll
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mail you a draft of the FAQ for you to comment on.
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=======================================================================
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(02) AGAIN THE MASSES AND LEADERS
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Translated by Dave Hollis <ln_dho@pki-nbg.philips.de>
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The translation and is (C)opyright October 1994 by Dave Hollis
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ROSA LUXEMBURG AND MASS ACTION
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Dear Vidar,
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This is really the final version of the article - promise! The
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following article and the translation is also being published in the
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next issue of a magazine called New Interventions, a journal of
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Socialist Discussion and Opinion. (Published in England). Permission
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to publish the introduction was given by Ken. Further details of the
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magazine can be obtained from its editor, Ken Tarbuck. His mail
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address is: ktarbuck@gn.apc.org
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Socialist Greetings, Dave
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Introduction
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The translation of the following article, which is being published
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here for the first time in English, is one of many articles that Rosa
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Luxemburg wrote on and around the question of the 'Agadir incident'.
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This incident was sparked off by Germany's attempt to spread her
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influence over the whole of Morocco. In view of the possibilities of a
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war breaking out on this issue, the French Socialists took this incident
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as grounds for wanting an international demonstration for Socialism.
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The French requested a meeting through the International Socialist
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Bureau of the Social-Democratic organisations of those countries
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involved in this incident, France, Spain, the UK and Germany. With the
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exception of Germany, all participants were in agreement. A full time
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secretary of the SPD party executive, Hermann Molkenbuhr, informed the
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International Socialist Bureau, however, that the Germans did not want a
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conference "for the time being".
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Molkenbuhr considered the Morocco incident to be of no danger. The
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interests of the various German Steel companies, Mannesmann on the one
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side, and Krupp and Thyssen in a French mining syndicate on the other,
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would lead the capitalists to putting on the brakes soon enough.
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Furthermore, he considered that taking up the issue would lead to a
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diversion from the internal issues and therefore damage the chances of
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the SPD in the coming general election.
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As was often the case, the rank and file of the SPD was more radical
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than the leadership and saw things differently. They took up the
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question in the run up to the elections. In Berlin and in the large
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cities of Prussia the rank and file held protest meetings against the
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sending of the warships, Panther and Berlin, to Agadir.
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Rosa Luxemburg, as a member of the International Secretariat, had
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received a copy of Molkenbuhr's letter. Obviously very unhappy with its
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content, she published it on 24th July 1911 in the newspaper, Leipziger
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Volkszeitung, with a withering criticism from herself.
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The publication of the letter caused an uproar in the party,
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published in the middle of an international crisis and before the party
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executive had done anything, it brought the dissatisfaction with the
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party executive to the boil. This revelation forced the executive on
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9th August to begin the agitation on the Morocco question. It did not,
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however, pacify the membership.
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At the Jena Conference, the party executive tried to make out of a
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'Morocco' affair a 'Luxemburg' affair, accusing her of disloyalty and
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indiscretion. This attack backfired. The centrists sided with the
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'lefts' around Rosa Luxemburg and the party reform went through. Two
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new secretary posts came into being, and the post of co-chairman went to
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a prominent left centrist, Hugo Haase, who replaced the deceased Paul
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Singer.
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The article, however, is not being published for the information it
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provides us on the Agadir incident, rather because it gives us a very
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interesting insight into Rosa Luxemburg's views on the question of party
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organisation and her attitude to what has gone down in the literature as
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her views on 'spontaneity'. These views are not only of historical
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interest but also for the current debates within the labour movement,
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both nationally and internationally.
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The article also gives a small insight into the workings of the SPD.
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I suspect that it is generally unknown that the SPD was quite a
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centralised party. It was no accident, for instance, that the attempts
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by the Bolsheviks to export the Bolshevik methods of organisation,
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epitomised by the 21 Conditions for entry into the Third International,
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met with enormous resistance from those members of the CP who stemmed
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from the SPD. Their bad experiences with centralism led to the KPD, for
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a few years, being an extremely democratic party. But that is another
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story!
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In so far as time admits, in the coming months I will try to present
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various articles unknown to the English speaking public. Her writings
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in German consist of five volumes and her personal letters consist of
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six volumes. Not that is all. There is a volume of her writings that
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has yet to see the light of day. There is a reference to it in an
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international scientific journal. The volume consists of her Polish
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writings. Alas, the enquiries I have made as to when it will be
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published, indicate that there are currently no plans to do so.
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Dave Hollis
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AGAIN THE MASSES AND LEADERS
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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~ Copyright Translation Dave Hollis, October 1994.
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AGAIN THE MASSES AND LEADERS
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Leipzig, 29th August
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News is coming in from all sides about the meetings and
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demonstrations organised by our party against the foreign policy and the
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Morocco line. The popular masses are answering our appeal everywhere
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with the greatest enthusiasm, and this proves how much we have met the
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feelings and mood of the masses by giving them a political expression,
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solution and direction. Now only one opinion predominates in the whole
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of the party, that a mass action against the Morocco affair and an
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energetic agitation in the field of foreign policy was an irrefutable
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task of Social-Democracy and an urgent necessity.
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And now the question immediately posed by this: Why was this
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campaign not begun one or two months ago? The dispatch of the German
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gunboat to Agadir, with which Germany officially intervened in the
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Morocco affair, took place on the 2nd of July. Already in the first
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week of July, the protest of the French and Spanish Socialists was in
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full swing. Instead of immediately initiating at that time the
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agitation with all one's might, we are bringing up the rear and dragging
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ourselves along in the wake of events and are at least one to one and a
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half months too late. In this important case our political
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quick-wittedness has left a lot to be desired. Why?
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One will answer: The party executive has showed an unfortunate lack
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of initiative. Its call for action was not published until the 9th of
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August and therefore the meetings could first begin in the second half
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of August. To be sure, but must the party wait for the official call of
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the party executive? If today everyone in the party without exception
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sees the necessity for action against the world politics, cannot the
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local party organisations do something on their own initiative, like the
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Stuttgart comrades have done? [1] It is extraordinarily easy to put the
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blame on the party executive, who for their part may really have acted
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with a lack of determination and energy. However, a no smaller part of
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the blame is to be put on those who always expect all salvation from
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above and even in such clear and indubitable cases shy away from a
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little self-activity and personal initiative. Of course campaigns of
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the party on this scale require uniformity and unity in order to be most
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effective, which can be best bro ught about from a centre. In this
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respect, especially the example of several old centres of the party
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movement, who would rouse all the remaining local organisations, would
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certainly not miss their mark. To be sure, also the party executive, as
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leading centre, would soon see itself forced to generalise every massive
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initiative and good beginning by making itself the mouthpiece and tool
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of the will of the party, instead of, as now, the other way round, the
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party executive viewing the great and powerful party organisations as
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being just an instrument for carrying out the instructions of the party
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executive.
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It must also be said openly: only when there is a reversal of the
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present abnormal relations would life within the party first stand on a
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normal footing. It is stated in the Communist Manifesto that the
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emancipation of the working class can only be the work of the working
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class itself and it understands by the working class not a party
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executive of seven or twelve but the enlightened mass of the proletariat
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in person. Every step forward in the struggle for emancipation of the
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working class must at the same time mean a growing intellectual
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independence of its mass, its growing self-activity, self-determination
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and initiative. How should the capability of action and political
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quick- wittedness of the broad popular masses develop if the vanguard of
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these masses, the best and most enlightened sections united in the
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Social-Democratic Party organisations, exhibit for their part no
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initiative and independence as masses, on the contrary, always be at the
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ready until a command is issued from above? Discipline and unity of
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action is a vital matter for mass movements like ours.
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However, discipline in the Social-Democratic sense differs
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fundamentally from the discipline of the bourgeois armed forces. There
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it is based on the unthinking and submissive subordination of the bulk
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of the soldiers to the command of authority expressing an outside will.
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Social-Democratic discipline can only mean the subordination of every
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individual to the will and the thought of the great majority. Therefore
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Social-Democratic discipline can never mean that eight hundred thousand
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organised party members have to bow to the will and regulations of a
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central authority of a party executive but the opposite, all central
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organs of the party having to carry out the will of the eight hundred
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thousand organised social democrats. Important for the normal
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development of the political life in the party, a vital matter for the
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Social-Democracy, is therefore based on always keeping the political
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thought and the will of the mass of the party awake and active, and thus
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enabling them in increasing measure to be active. We have, of course,
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the yearly party conference as highest instance which regularly fixes
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the will of the whole party. However, it is obvious that the party
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conferences can only give general outlines of the tactics for the
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Social-Democratic struggle. The application of these guidelines in
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practice requires a constant, untiring thought, quick-wittedness and
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initiative. The decisions of the party conferences obviously do not in
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the slightest exhaust the regular tasks of the political struggle, for
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life does not stand still, and from one party conference to the other
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many things take place in heaven and earth to which the party must
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react. To want to make a party executive responsible for the whole
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enormous task of daily political vigilance and initiative on whose
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command a party organisation of almost a million passively waits, is the
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most incorrect thing there is from the standpoint of the proletarian
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class struggle. That is without doubt that reprehensible "blind
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obedience" which our opportunists definitely want to see in the
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self-evident subordination of all to the decisions of the whole party.
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One can often hear in our ranks complaints about the bureaucratism
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of our highest party authorities that is said to be killing the living
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political energy. These complaints are also totally justified. Just
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those who express them surely take little account of the fact that to a
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large extent the lamented state has its roots in the nature of things.
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Every body with daily official office work tends to fall into
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bureaucratism and routine. Besides, such high-ranking bodies naturally
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have a strongly developed feeling of responsibility that unquestionably
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has a strongly paralysing effect on initiative and determination. A
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real remedy against this bad state of affairs is only the living
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political activity of the entire party. The most ideal party executive
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of a party like the social democracy would be the one that would
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function as the most obedient, most prompt and most precise tool of the
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will of the entire party.
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However, the most ideal party executive would be able to achieve
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nothing, would involuntarily sink into bureaucratic inefficiency if the
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natural source of its energy, the will of the party, does not make
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itself felt, if critical thought, the mass of the party's own initiative
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is sleeping. In fact it is more than this. If its own energy, the
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independent intellectual life of the mass of the party, is not active
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enough, then the central authorities have the quite natural tendency to
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not only bureaucratically rust but also to get a totally wrong idea of
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their own official authority and position of power with respect to the
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party. The most recent so-called "secret decree" of our party executive
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to the party editorial staffs [2] can serve as fresh proof, an attempt
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to make decisions for the party press, which cannot be sharply enough
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rejected. However, also here it is necessary to make clear: Against
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both inefficiency and excessive illusions of power of the central
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authorities of the labour movement there is no other way except one's
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own initiative, one's own thought, and the own fresh pulsating political
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life of the broad mass of the party.
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The questions touched upon here are of more than academic interest
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in the current situation. It has been recognised from different sides
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in the party that the current state of the party executive needs to be
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improved, an extension and renewal of our highest party authorities is
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seen to be necessary. Recently our Elberfeld organ also wrote like that
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on the occasion of the Morocco debate:
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"At least one must agree with the 'Leipziger Volkszeitung' that the
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party executive should have taken the initiative for a campaign.
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"Well, we are also quite convinced after a closer examination of the
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matter that the sin of the party executive of failing to do something
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must be judged more mildly. The administrative machinery of the party
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has become so extensive that the number of members of the party
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leadership is no longer enough to fulfil all the requirements that are
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to be made on it as seems necessary. The gap left by Comrade Singer has
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not been filled; if we add to this the case that a member of the party
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executive or even two may well be outside of Berlin for the carrying out
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of party business or for agitation, a further member were to be ill, a
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fourth and fifth were on holiday - certainly nobody would want to deny
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the very busy members of the party executive that - it cannot fail to
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happen that a small minority has to decide on sudden appearing,
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important questions and that these questions would have sometimes have
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been dealt with differently if the whole of the executive had got
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together. The contradiction is also certainly to be explained by this
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dilemma that the letter of the party executive [3] is described by the
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party office as being the private opinion of the letter writer while it
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was naturally received outside as a letter of the party executive. The
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Jena party conference will have to decide a strengthening of the party
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executive. A motion has already been put on this matter by two
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constituencies - Tetlow-Beeskow and Berlin I. "
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The view expressed here of the necessity of strengthening the party
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executive is perfectly correct and the party conference must not be
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allowed to shirk from its important task in this field. If our party
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pacifies itself with the strengthening of the party executive and again
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passively expects all salvation from the "new men", as for example it
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passively waited one and a half months for the conductor's baton of the
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party executive for the unfolding of the protest action against the
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Morocco affair, it would merely mean wanting to come up with purely
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bureaucratic means against the evil of bureaucratism. No party
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executive in the world can replace the mass of the party's own energy,
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and an organisation of a million which, at a great time and in the face
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of great tasks, would want to complain that it did not have the right
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leaders would prove its own shortcomings, because it would prove it has
|
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not understood the historical essence itself of the proletarian class
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struggle that consists in the proletarian masses not needing "leaders"
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in a bourgeois sense, that they are themselves leaders.
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Leipziger Volkszeitung No. 199, 29th August 1911
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----
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[1] On 15th July 1911, a protest gathering took place in Stuttgart at
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which Karl Liebknecht was the mover of a resolution against German
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imperialism's Morocco policies, which was unanimously adopted.
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[2] On 8th August 1911 the SPD party executive wrote a confidential
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circular to the editorial boards of the party press to try to stop
|
|
them publishing criticisms of the leading trade union bodies and
|
|
articles on differences in the book printers' union that had been
|
|
caused by anti-worker decisions of their executive. The party
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membership found out about the circular through a bourgeois paper in
|
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Saxony into whose hands the circular had fallen. The contents of the
|
|
circular led to a considerable amount of displeasure in the party over
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the actions of the party executive.
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[3] Molkenbuhr's letter is meant here.
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Taken from the text, Rosa Luxemburg, Gesammelte Werke, Vol.3 Dietz,
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Berlin 1973, 4th edition.
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=======================================================================
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(04) ANNOUNCEMENTS
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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A while ago I received this annoucement... I'm sure a newer issue
|
|
should be out by now..
|
|
|
|
Ed.
|
|
|
|
----
|
|
|
|
|
|
SOCIALIST VOICE
|
|
|
|
|
|
To receive the SV by email send email to SMacSuibhne@Dit.Ie
|
|
|
|
=======================================================================
|
|
SOCIALIST VOICE Guth an Lucht Oibre
|
|
|
|
October 14th 1994 Vol. 4. No. 18 Price 20p.
|
|
=======================================================================
|
|
Published by
|
|
Connolly Books,
|
|
43 East Essex Street,
|
|
Dublin 2.
|
|
|
|
For further information, contact Eugene McCartan
|
|
at the above address.
|
|
Telephone: Dublin (01) 6711 943.
|
|
'----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
CONTENTS:
|
|
|
|
AFTER THE LOYALIST CEASEFIRE - A Progressive Agenda
|
|
AN INVITATION TO READERS
|
|
EAGARFHOCAL - EDITORIAL
|
|
FIGHT FOR JOBS NOT SINECURES
|
|
|
|
'----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
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=======================================================================
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|
(05) A SEARCHLIGHT ON THE INTERNET
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
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|
During a few massive searches of World Wide Web, using the LYCOS system
|
|
at Carnegie Mellon, I found a lot of interesting pieces of information.
|
|
|
|
Here's a few of them:
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|
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|
|
* MARX: The movie
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|
|
|
gopher://jefferson.village.virginia.edu:70/00/pubs/pmc/
|
|
issue.990/kipnis.990
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|
|
|
A movie manuscript. I haven't had the time to read it through,
|
|
but the parts I've read at least seems interesting.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* SPUNK press
|
|
|
|
http://www.cwi.nl/cwi/people/Jack.Jansen/spunk/Catalog.html
|
|
|
|
This server contains mostly anarchist material, but there's
|
|
*LOTS* of information, and parts of it should certainly be
|
|
of interest to socialists and communists as well. Worth a
|
|
look! The poem by Shelley in this issue was found here.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* CHAPTER 11.06: MARXISM-LENINISM-MAO ZEDONG THOUGHT RE-THOUGHT
|
|
|
|
gopher://umslvma.umsl.edu:70/00/LIBRARY/GOVDOCS/ARMYAHBS/AAHB9
|
|
/AAH90084
|
|
|
|
This document is a section from the US Army Area Handbook for
|
|
Asia. I've mentioned it here mostly as an interesting source of
|
|
information about how the enemy perceive Marxism.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* Russian and East European Network Information Center /
|
|
Soviet Archives Exhibit
|
|
|
|
http://sunsite.unc.edu/expo/soviet.exhibit/entrance.html
|
|
http://reenic.utexas.edu/reenic.html
|
|
|
|
Whether we like it or not, the socalled socialist regimes in
|
|
East Europe and the USSR will for years to come be associated
|
|
with the revolutionary movement.
|
|
|
|
Much of the material on these two servers are hostile to socialism,
|
|
but they provide interesting material in the form of replicas of
|
|
authentic archive material, and information about the current
|
|
development and history of the former stalinist regimes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
=======================================================================
|
|
(06) THE MAN
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Of virtuous soul commands not, nor obeys:
|
|
Power, like a desolating pestilence,
|
|
Pollutes whate'er it touches, and obedience
|
|
Bane of all genius, virtue, freedom, truth,
|
|
Makes slaves of men, and, of the human frame,
|
|
A mechanized automaton.
|
|
Percy Bysshe Shelley
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
=======================================================================
|
|
(07) GENERAL INFORMATION
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Breakaway will be published as often as we have enough material.
|
|
"Enough" is at present about 40kb of text, but this might increase
|
|
if we get enough submissions. Under any circumstances we'll try to
|
|
limit ourselves to 40kb until we reach one issue every two weeks.
|
|
(Probably won't happen in your lifetime ;-)
|
|
|
|
The format is, as you can see, pure 7-bit ASCII.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Do you:
|
|
|
|
- want to subscribe?
|
|
- have an idea?
|
|
- have a question?
|
|
- want to submit, and want to know how?
|
|
|
|
|
|
Just send us a message, preferably by e-mail, and we'll send you
|
|
appropriate information as soon as possible. To ensure that we can
|
|
reply, please include your e-mail address in the body of the message.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SOME BRIEF NOTES ON SUBMISSIONS
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
* BREAKAWAY will accept articles from people belonging to all trends
|
|
or ideologies related to marxism, or from people who are simply
|
|
interested in marxist theory or practice.
|
|
|
|
* You should limit yourself to articles between 100 and 300 lines if
|
|
possible (shorter pieces will naturally also be accepted). If you
|
|
find that difficult, try to divide your article into shorter
|
|
sections suitable for publishing over two to four issues.
|
|
|
|
* We will publish most articles or news reports we receive concerning
|
|
marxist ideology, the actions of marxist organisations, or
|
|
information of importance to the average revolutionary. Also
|
|
fiction might be accepted (contact us for more info)
|
|
|
|
* We accept anonymous submissions. However, if you choose to do so,
|
|
we would prefer if you give us a pseudonym to use as your
|
|
signature.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
How to contact Red Forum / Internationalists Committee:
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Editor : Vidar Hokstad <vidarh@rforum.no>
|
|
Contributions : Breakaway <breakaway@rforum.no>
|
|
Red Forum : RFIC <rfic@rforum.no>
|
|
Snailmail : Soerumsg. 63, N-2000 Lillestroem, NORWAY
|
|
Tel. : +47 638 170 35 (5pm to 9pm GMT)
|
|
|
|
=======================================================================
|
|
Proletarians of all countries, unite!
|
|
=======================================================================
|
|
|
|
END BREAKAWAY.004
|
|
.
|