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39 KiB
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772 lines
39 KiB
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-----=====Earth's Dreamlands=====-----
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(313)558-5024 {14.4} (313)558-5517
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A BBS for text file junkies
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RPGNet GM File Archive Site
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.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.
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______________________________________________________________________
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issue number 4 october 30, 1992 // ///
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//
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\\\\
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address all correspondence to mlepore@mcimail.com
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CONTENTS
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________
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#4.01 About the DISCUSSION BULLETIN ..... The D.B. Committee
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#4.02 Purpose ............................ The Industrial Union
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Party
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#4.03 Correspondence from the INDUSTRIAL
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WORKER Collective ............. MV
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#4.04 Reply to the I.W. Collective ....... M. Lepore
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#4.05 Manifesto .......................... The Convention of
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January 1905
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______________________________________________________________________
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ORGANIZED THOUGHTS is dedicated to the organization of the working
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class to establish industrial democracy. Compilation copyright 1992
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by M. Lepore. This document may be freely reproduced and distributed
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by the general public, in electronic or printed form. Please upload
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this publication to your local BBS's, and send copies to associates.
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______________________________________________________________________
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____________________________________________________________
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| |
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| "Democracy is the solved riddle of all constitutions." |
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| |
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| -- Karl Marx -- |
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| _Contribution to the Critique |
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| of Hegel's __Philosophy of Right__ _ (1843) |
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|__________________________________________________________|
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______________________________________________________________________
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#4.00 Some introductory verbiage ......... Mike Lepore
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______________________________________________________________________
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This issue includes the self-description of the DISCUSSION BULLETIN.
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The DB is a magazine which focuses on the domain of thought with which
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I identify myself, and which the DB Committee calls the "libertarian
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socialists".
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Lib-soc organizations adhere quite literally to the position, "The
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emancipation of the working class must be the work of the working
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class itself." (Marx, letter to Bebel, et al, Sept. 18, 1879), and
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therefore reject Lenin's concept of a "vanguard party" which is
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supposed to govern "for" the workers. The DB Committee describes it's
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own "political sector" with these words: "... the element Lenin had
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in mind when he wrote _Left Wing Communism: An Infantile Disorder_."
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Workers of this type are similar in the general tendency to reject the
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wage system, government nationalization of industry, "market
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socialism", and gradual reform. However, the common "libertarian
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socialist" designation doesn't imply an agreement about the goal or
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the program. This category includes some organizations which firmly
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hold that other lib-soc organizations are critically lacking the
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correct objectives or strategy. Some of them might deny that they can
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be classified with the other groups, even when stretching the point.
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The DB is a fascinating magazine where we can see these groups, which
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are similar in some ways, debate various areas of disagreement.
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Available by paper mail only, since the magazine is composed of
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photocopied letters. I give the DISCUSSION BULLETIN my highest
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possible recommendation.
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The NEW SYSTEM is the new quarterly journal of the Industrial Union
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Party, and it replaces THE SOCIALIST REPUBLIC. Same price as before
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($4 for four issues). Compared to its predecessor, the NS has a more
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modern appearance in layout and typeface. The NS carries a new IUP
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declaration, entitled PURPOSE, which is reprinted below.
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In a recent public letter, I solicited comments on the following
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points of debate:
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-- Is a stateless society possible?
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-- Can collective industrial planning take the place of the political
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state?
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-- Is the ballot a useful instrument for bringing about revolutionary
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change?
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MV, a member of the Industrial Worker Collective, contributed a
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||
reply. His letter is contained here. I have also replied to a couple
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of MV's points.
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Part of my objective in providing this publication is to get certain
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documents of historical significance into electronic form, so that
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students and writers may easily quote from them in their own essays.
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This issue contains an important paper from labor history.
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In January of 1905, members of a numbers of labor organizations met in
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Chicago to take action on a problem. It was recognized that the craft
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union structure, while uniting the workers in some ways, divides them
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in other ways. It was determined that the only solution is for all
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the workers in an industry to be members of the same union, and for
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all such unions to be departments of a single organization of the
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international working class. This strategy is called industrial
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unionism, as opposed to craft unionism. The January convention
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adopted a "manifesto", the text of which is reproduced below.
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One of the points agreed upon at the January convention was that the
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workers should reconvene in the following June "for the purpose of
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forming an economic organization of the working class." The June
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convention established the Industrial Workers of the World.
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Okay, we're almost finished.... Just a couple more announcements....
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Let's clarify the matter of the IWW having several e-mail addresses.
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The address < iww@igc.org > is for the main office in San Francisco,
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while < indwrk@web.apc.org > is for the Industrial Worker Collective,
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the group in Ottawa which publishes their newspaper, the INDUSTRIAL
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WORKER. UUCP users can reach the I.W. Collective at < web!indwrk >.
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Future issues of O.T. will report on any online projects undertaken
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by the recently computerized Wobblies.
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The New Union Party has announced that, effective January 1, 1993, the
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subscription price of its newspaper, the NEW UNIONIST, will be going
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up. Right up until we have to change our calendars, the price (new
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sub or renewal) will be $3.00 for 10 issues ($1 - student/unemployed).
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However, after we pop the champagne corks on January 1, we'll have to
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pay $5 per year (12 issues). (In my opinion, it's still a bargain.)
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New Unionist --- 621 W. Lake St, Suite 210 --- Minneapolis, MN 55408
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I Jammed Up!
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In O.T. #3 I said that this is the first presidential election since
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1892 that the Socialist Labor Party hasn't nominated a candidate.
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Correspondent Ben Perry, who happens to be the co-author (with Frank
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Girard) of the book, _The Socialist Labor Party, 1876-1991_, has
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clarified:
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> The SLP has not participated in any presidential campaigns
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> since 1976.
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Thanks for pointing out where I jammed up. I should have reported
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that the SLP has participated in every presidential election from 1892
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to 1976, but none since.
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I had also said that the SLP's decision not to nominate candidates was
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due to financial problems. Ben replied:
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> It's inability is more a lack of human resources than
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> finances, although the latter is an important consideration.
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I think it's hard to make a distinction. The difficulty is getting
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the signatures required for a place on the ballot (almost half a
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million signatures are needed in California alone). An organization
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with sufficient funds could hire people to walk the streets with the
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nominating petitions. That's what I have in mind when I view the
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denial of the ballot to small parties as a "financial" situation, but
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my description was misleading.
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______________________________________________________________________
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#4.01 About the Discussion Bulletin ..... The D.B. Committee
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______________________________________________________________________
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The Discussion Bulletin is affiliated with the Industrial Union Caucus
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in Education (IUCE). It was designed to serve as the financially and
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politically independent forum of a little-known sector of political
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thought. It places the great divide in the "left", not between
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anarchists and Marxists, but between capitalism's statist left wing of
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vanguardists and social democrats, and the real revolutionaries of our
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||
era: the non-market, anti-statist, libertarian socialists. It is
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||
organized in small groups of syndicalists, communist anarchists,
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libertarian municipalists, world socialists, socialist industrial
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unionists, council communists, and left communists.
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The perspective of these groups with their rejection of capitalism's
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wage, market, and money system, along with capitalist politics and
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unionism, constitutes the only real alternative to capitalism in both
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its market and statist phases.
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In the DB the often fiercely antagonistic groups that make up this
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sector can debate and discuss the issues that divide them, gain some
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understanding of their history and future possibilities, and begin a
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process, we hope, of at least limited cooperation.
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The pages of the DB are open to anyone in this political sector, the
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only limitation being that submissions be typewritten, single-spaced,
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and copier ready. We do no editing here. As to content, we assume
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that submissions will be relevant to the purpose of the DB and will
|
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avoid personal attacks.
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Subscription Information
|
||
|
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The Discussion Bulletin is published bimonthly. The price of a
|
||
six-issue, one year subscription:
|
||
|
||
U.S. Individual subscription $3; Library $5
|
||
|
||
Non-U.S. Surface Mail: Individual sub. $5; Library $10
|
||
Air Mail: Individual sub. $10; Library $15
|
||
|
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Discussion Bulletin
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||
P.O. Box 1564
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Grand Rapids, MI 49501 USA
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______________________________________________________________________
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#4.02 Purpose ............................. The Industrial Union
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Party
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______________________________________________________________________
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Industrial Union Party
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P.O. Box 533
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White Plains, NY 10603-1506
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P U R P O S E
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_____________
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WE are a nation of workers. Our class is the majority class. WE
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live and work under a system that has failed to reward our labors with
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a stable and safe society.
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Working class labor power is the primary force that makes our
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industries and services work. Ordinary common sense, as well as
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universal tenets of equality and justice, affirms that WE, as a class,
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have control of priorities in the planning, production, and
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distribution of all goods and services needed and wanted by our
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society.
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WE live under the rules of capitalism. The system does not
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respect society's needs. Today our necessary industries are owned and
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controlled by a minority class of private corporate owners who use our
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labor power in industries, not for the good of society, but for their
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corporate power and personal wealth. The nation's laws make this
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undemocratic arrangement legal! But WE can change the laws! WE can
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vote in a new and better way to manage our lives.
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Because the capitalist system is responsible for unemployment,
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poverty, ethnic and racial confrontations, and many other forms of our
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discontent, the system's replacement is both necessary and desirable.
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Because the profit system has brought about the needless impairment of
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our life-sustaining environment, its replacement becomes urgent.
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History shows us that social deterioration of the kind we witness
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today has ended in severe social upheavals. The story of the
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dictatorial Nazis and Soviets warn us that, unless the majority of
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citizens take control out of the hands of politicians, and lead the
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way with its own social and economic program, change itself is
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unpredictable and not always for the better. Therefore, we must
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prepare ourselves now for a positive, democratic future in which there
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will be no repetition of the social problems we now endure. The IUP
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has a plan.
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The IUP's goal is to bring together our nation's working class
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into one unified political and industrial union movement to change the
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present economic and governmental system. The new system will be
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based on industrial rather than political constituencies, owned and
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democratically governed through the industries in which we work. The
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new Industrial Government constitution will empower democratic
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decision-making to ourselves in all matters essential to building and
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maintaining a free and prosperous society.
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To accomplish our goal the IUP calls upon all workers to learn of
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the proposed new democratic industrial system, and join together in
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the workplace and the community to unite into one nation-wide union.
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Once WE are industrially and politically organized, WE will use our
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ballot to vote out the old system and begin building our new, free,
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safe and prosperous national community in harmony and peace with our
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world's neighbors.
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The time to realize our second American revolution is now. WE
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need it. Our future generations deserve it. Join us!
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______________________________________________________________________
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#4.03 Correspondence from the INDUSTRIAL
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WORKER Collective ............. MV
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______________________________________________________________________
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Thanks for OT's. I am very supportive of the focus you have
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selected, promoting unity among various groups with similar programs.
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Industrial Worker is the newspaper of the IWW and is a collective
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production of many minds and hands in many places. We here at Ottawa
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try to function as coordinators of the information flow.
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We look forward to more extensive use of conferencing and email,
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as a means of information flow among the working class, and want to
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explore cooperation with similar publishers.
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Here are some personal observations.
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LABOR PARTY POLITICS
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____________________
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In Canada we have a living experiment in labour party government.
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Recently the New Democratic Party, which grew from the 30's and is
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supported by major trade unions, gained control of provincial govts in
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Ontario, British Columbia and Saskatchewan.
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The overall effect has been a slight buffer from some of the worst
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atrocities of the fed govt's destruction of the domestic economy.
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Resistance to the corpstate program are visible, e.g. revised labour
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laws now being debated in Ont. Scabs will be outlawed, union
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certification will be easier, and unresolvable disputes will go
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quickly to binding arbitration -- some main points. Obviously these
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laws are designed by trade union interests who form the foundation of
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the NDP. There are other points where the provinces attempt to
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counter fed initiatives, but balancing these are all the compromises
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that have also been made.
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There is something to be said for the role NDP played for decades,
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as 3rd party opposition they hindered the ruling class agenda slightly
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at times.
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In 1991 when the major strikes by public service workers fizzled
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under back to work legislation, the leaders in their speeches
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emphasized defeating the govt at the polls, rather than direct action
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(which could have defeated the govt, but would also have got the
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leaders in jail, cost unions money, and shift control from the leaders
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to the rank and file.).
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In Canada, just as in other countries before, the "labour"
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government is under attack from corporate interests including media.
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Canada like the US is in a wave of discontent, the NDP could win
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federally in 93. However they will still have to deal with global
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corporate interests, and can not alter the fundamental relations
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between workers and capital. Many NDP supporters are disappointed
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along the way with compromises the govt. makes.
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I mention this because people outside canada may not hear much
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about it. American folks who are interested in labor party politics
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as a means of revolutionary change, should certainly pay attention to
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this ongoing experiment in your northern back yard. You can contact
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the NDP by writing to national party leader The Right Honourable
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Audrey McLaughlin, House of Commons Ottawa Ontario Canada K1A 0A6.
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STATELESS Society?
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__________________
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The question should rather be, can society survive the state?
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Society is an organic organism of all the people and all their
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relations with each other economic, cultural, etc. The state is
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merely an artificial construct, violently enforced, which feeds upon
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that organism of reality. By controlling some social relations the
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state prevents the organic evolution of society. The state was set up
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by the ruling class, and then modified somewhat to appease the angry
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workers. No state was never designed by workers as a method of
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controlling social relations (nor protecting borders). The workers
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have other means of doing so.
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COLLECTIVE INDUSTRIAL PLANNING
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______________________________
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Industrial planning has been done by the state in the "communist"
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countries; they seem to improve the distribution of goods, but have
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problems with production.
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True they are all hampered by outside enemies, but even if you
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postulate a world socialist state, there will always be rebellious
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forces and people trying to subvert the system and help themselves, or
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even overthrow the state. Some energy would always be required for
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state security.
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In capitalist countries industrial planning by the state has been
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limited to dabbling: trade restrictions, product safety standards,
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and specific projects such as hydroelectricity. In the 1930's "make
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work" projects were set up by the state to appease the hungry workers,
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who built roads etc.
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States are presently facilitating global trade, through the EEC,
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NAFTA, etc. But in this instance the states are merely acting as
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agent for the ruling class, placing their whole populations at risk;
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with no goals other than profit for a few; the states are abdicating
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control of national resources and economy. This is "industrial
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UN-planning" or "devo-lution," where local supply and trade, the
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domestic and organic industrial base is dismantled and dependence on
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distant suppliers is enforced.
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Thus, industrial planning for human benefit does not really exist
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in the capitalist states, and is not satisfactory when planned by the
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socialist states.
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The problem in the socialist state is that the free will of the
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individual, the capacity for creative initiative, is stifled. So
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there is no growth, just an ever deepening rigidity which does not
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answer the natural fluctuations in society.
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Human industry is organic, ever changing. Like society or a blade
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of grass, industry can't be "planned" from the top. Not if you want
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efficiency, vitality, or popular participation. Too much of what goes
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into actual production is unaccounted for in any plan: a million
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volunteer acts involving trust, familial relations, and such things as
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moral support. No top-down plan can ever take all this into account,
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but the organic growth of industry builds on this complex and strong
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foundation of human social reality.
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The Industrial Union or Anarcho-syndicalist plan for grass roots
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workers control in each workplace united by federated industrial
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unions, is the only feasible, global industrial "plan" which has ever
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been proposed in recorded history. An American judge once called the
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IWW Preamble the most scientific document he had ever seen.
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The Grand Industrial Plan allows industry to be "planned" from the
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bottom up, a living changing "plan", not a thing written on paper but
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an active process. It's like a football game, you don't plan the
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outcome, you play the game and then it comes out one way or the other.
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Only when control is in the hands of the people directly, will
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industry be found to harmonize with life -- with society, environment
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etc.
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There is a place for the "community council", not limited to the
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workplace but including its workers; this community council can
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overrule the workplace on resource allocation, polluting practices,
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etc. If you extrapolate these community councils federating, then you
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have something like, not a state but a mutual agreement. The Six
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Nations Iroquois Confederacy needed only the Great Law of Peace, which
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they could transmit orally (although it was also written). The
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community councils federation which can be global, might have a simple
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agreement pertaining to individual freedom, equality and democracy.
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ECONOMICS OF ABUNDANCE
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______________________
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The economic question has not been fully addressed by utopian
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visionaries. In order to achieve the stateless society and make the
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Grand Industrial Plan a total success, we are going to have to
|
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fundamentally alter our economic relations. I trace the root of the
|
||
problem to the point where you place a relative VALUE on goods and
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services. The alternative is SHARING, that is GIVING of free will.
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The very concept of trade, value for value, must go, it seems to me,
|
||
before you can eliminate the tendency towards capitalism.
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Such a society with its economy based not on trading but on
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giving, was possible in the past, for it was practiced by many earth
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based cultures. It is also possible now, but it was not possible in
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the recent past until about 1950. The key is abundance.
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|
||
When you have a scarcity of goods or services, that product takes
|
||
on extra value and there is no way to prevent it being traded to the
|
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highest bidder, starting the cycle of speculative profit and enforced
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||
scarcity. But when there is abundance of everything needed for a good
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||
life, it becomes possible to remove the relative scale of values, and
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do away with currency, capital, credit, and private property in the
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process.
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Many forest peoples formerly lived in abundance. Some British
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Columbia natives used to try and outdo each other in giving away
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||
things, I believe it was called potlatch. People would give away a
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||
dozen canoes at a time, furs, jewelry, utensils, everything they
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owned... The most generous, if they were also thought wise, were
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chosen as leaders. These people would throw their canoes in the fire,
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if they couldn't give them away, just to prove they didn't give a
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damn.
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||
|
||
Now technology exists to provide an abundance of all necessities,
|
||
and more besides, to all the people of the world, with a minimum of
|
||
human effort on the scale of 4 hours a week per worker. It is clearly
|
||
obvious that computer communications is the key that makes global
|
||
cooperation feasible, to unite the entire human population in a
|
||
democratic social system. Such a technological abundance is clearly
|
||
superior to that of earth based peoples, not in all ways but in the
|
||
crucial way of making possible a global united community, which was
|
||
never possible before.
|
||
|
||
Thus for the first time all humanity will begin to think as if it
|
||
were one giant brain. It is clear that wars between various factions
|
||
will never be ended until such unity of communication is established.
|
||
|
||
Industrial democracy could make this technological abundance a
|
||
reality - and still protect ecology.
|
||
|
||
Industrial democracy would not enable us to drive gas powered
|
||
autos to the mega mall, to shop for cheap shirts from Guatemala, or to
|
||
buy frozen dinner in aluminum trays in a pretty cardboard box. The
|
||
"standard" of living, that is the frantic pace of excess consumption
|
||
and waste, must go "down" in the over-developed countries -- but that
|
||
means the quality of life will go up as we start doing sensible things
|
||
like building trains and planting gardens. You won't buy tv dinners,
|
||
but you can get all the food you want for free. Meanwhile in the
|
||
"third world" the standard and quality of life would come up to meet
|
||
ours -- since they would now control their own resources and labor.
|
||
|
||
The stateless society and industrial democracy are possible, and
|
||
marvelously practical; but they require a high degree of communication
|
||
and cooperation. They remain the ideal towards which we can struggle,
|
||
the bright light at the end of this tunnel. Don't think it's so far
|
||
away. The tools are in our hands and really, what is stopping us?
|
||
Probably with 10 per cent of the population in each country
|
||
participating in a revolutionary global industrial program, we could
|
||
take over the world. ---MV
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
#4.04 Reply to the I.W. Collective ....... M. Lepore
|
||
______________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
This is a brief response, and not a complete one, to the Industrial
|
||
Worker perspective that was provided by MV.
|
||
|
||
> The problem in the socialist state is that the free will of
|
||
> the individual, the capacity for creative initiative, is
|
||
> stifled.
|
||
|
||
I'd like to make a comment on the appearance of the adjective
|
||
"socialist" in such proximity to the noun "state". Coming as I do
|
||
from a Marxist-De Leonist background, the phrase "the socialist state"
|
||
sounds to me as discordant as, for example, "the bright darkness".
|
||
|
||
It's fundamental in Marxian theory that the state is to be
|
||
discontinued as soon as the ruling class is successfully deposed. The
|
||
fact that Leninists have interpreted revolution as the opportunity to
|
||
make themselves into new rulers of coercive states may be a reflection
|
||
on Leninism, but it's no reflection on Marxism. As Marx put it -
|
||
"When class domination ends, there will be no state in the present
|
||
political sense of the word." (Conspectus on Bakunin, 1875)
|
||
|
||
Therefore, the IWW goal described above -
|
||
> grass roots workers control in each workplace united by
|
||
> federated industrial unions
|
||
is compatable with Marx's original vision -- before "Marxism" was
|
||
distorted into its opposite.
|
||
|
||
I'm not claiming that Marx was a syndicalist. The Industrial Union
|
||
concept was not conceived until the early 20th century. However, Marx
|
||
and Engels did repeatedly emphasize that, because the state is nothing
|
||
but an instrument of oppression, a true classless society would
|
||
discard this obsolete shell. "As soon as there is no longer any
|
||
social class to be held in subjection", Engels said, "... a special
|
||
repressive force, a state, is no longer necessary." In place of the
|
||
state, therefore, "... the government of persons is replaced by the
|
||
administration of things, and the conduct of the processes of
|
||
production." (_Socialism, Utopian and Scientific_, 1880)
|
||
|
||
The states which claim to be "Marxian socialist" have, indeed, imposed
|
||
regimentation, censorship, the negation of individuality - they have
|
||
even committed mass murder - and more than once. In doing so, they
|
||
have abandoned socialism, regardless of what they may choose to call
|
||
themselves.
|
||
|
||
You may wonder why I'm bothering to fight for a mere word. A word is
|
||
only a vocal cord vibration, charged with meaning only through
|
||
association. Why not let the repressive regimes keep the word
|
||
"socialism", and simply use another word for the highly democratic IU
|
||
model? For the same reason that we can't let them get away
|
||
unchallenged with terminology like "the people's democratic republic."
|
||
Since such names were selected to obscure the exploitative
|
||
characteristics of phony "socialism", therefore a disclosure of the
|
||
facts involves correction of the names.
|
||
|
||
MV continues:
|
||
> There is a place for the "community council", not limited to
|
||
> the workplace but including its workers; this community
|
||
> council can overrule the workplace on resource allocation,
|
||
> polluting practices, etc.
|
||
|
||
I agree with this concept. Worker's self-management is the best
|
||
general policy, but the community should be able to overrule the
|
||
workers' decision when necessary. Protection of the planet's
|
||
biosphere may not be the only occasion.
|
||
|
||
In fact, an adversary in a debate recently stopped me dead in my
|
||
tracks by asking a simple question which I had never considered
|
||
before. Suppose we had workers' control of industry. What if the
|
||
textile workers were to calculate that they could have the shortest
|
||
workweek by producing nothing but polyester? Couldn't this result in
|
||
everyone having nothing but polyester to wear?
|
||
|
||
This is easily answerable only if we go beyond the traditional
|
||
Industrial Union model. If and when situations arise in which the
|
||
most localized interests (real or imagined) of the workers in a
|
||
particular place, or in a particular occupation, come into conflict
|
||
with the more general good, then the industrial democracy should be
|
||
administered at the social level (municipal or global, depending on
|
||
the issue), and not at the workplace level. However, for best
|
||
results, this must be the exception. For most of the
|
||
method-A-versus-method-B decisions that are made each day in industry,
|
||
the workers should practice decentralized self-management.
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
#4.05 Manifesto .......................... The Convention of
|
||
January 1905
|
||
______________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Manifesto
|
||
Adopted Jan. 4, 1905
|
||
|
||
|
||
Social relations and groupings only reflect mechanical and
|
||
industrial conditions. The great facts of present industry are the
|
||
displacement of human skill by machines, and the increase of
|
||
capitalist power through concentration in the possession of the tools
|
||
with which wealth is produced and distributed.
|
||
|
||
Because of these facts, trade divisions among laborers and
|
||
competition among capitalists alike are disappearing. Class divisions
|
||
grow ever more fixed, and class antagonisms more sharp. Trade lines
|
||
have been swallowed up in a common servitude of all workers to the
|
||
machines which they tend. New machines, ever replacing less
|
||
productive ones, wipe out whole trades, and plunge new bodies of
|
||
workers into the ever-growing army of tradeless, hopeless unemployed.
|
||
As human beings and human skill are displaced by mechanical progress,
|
||
the capitalists need use of the workers only during that brief period
|
||
when muscles and nerves respond most intensely. The moment the
|
||
laborer no longer yields the maximum of profits, he is thrown upon the
|
||
scrap pile, to starve alongside the discarded machine. A deadline has
|
||
been drawn, and an age limit established, to cross which, in this
|
||
world of monopolized opportunities, means condemnation to industrial
|
||
death.
|
||
|
||
The worker, wholly separated from the land and the tools, with
|
||
his skill of craftmanship rendered useless, is sunk in the uniform
|
||
mass of wage slaves. He sees his power of resistance broken by craft
|
||
divisions, perpetuated from outgrown industrial stages. His wages
|
||
constantly grow less as his hours grow longer, and monopolized prices
|
||
grow higher. Shifted hither and thither by the demands of
|
||
profit-takers, the laborer's home no longer exists. In this helpless
|
||
condition, he is forced to accept whatever humiliating conditions his
|
||
master may impose. He is subjected to a physical and intellectual
|
||
examination more searching than was the chattel slave when sold from
|
||
the auction block.
|
||
|
||
Laborers are no longer classified by differences in trade
|
||
skill, but the employer assigns them according to the machines to
|
||
which they are attached. These differences, far from representing
|
||
differences in skill or interests among the laborers, are imposed by
|
||
the employers, that workers may be pitted against one another, and
|
||
spurred to greater exertion in the shop, and that all resistance to
|
||
capitalist tyranny may be weakened by artificial distinctions.
|
||
|
||
While encouraging these outgrown divisions among the workers,
|
||
the capitalists carefully adjust themselves to the new conditions.
|
||
They wipe out all differences among themselves, and present a united
|
||
front in their war upon labor. Through employers' associations, they
|
||
seek to crush, with brutal force, by the injunctions of the judiciary,
|
||
and the use of military power, all efforts at resistance. Or when the
|
||
other policy seems more profitable, they conceal their daggers beneath
|
||
the Civic Federation, and hoodwink and betray those whom they would
|
||
rule and exploit. Both methods depend for success upon the blindness
|
||
and internal dissentions of the working class. The employers' line of
|
||
battle and methods of warfare correspond to the solidarity of the
|
||
mechanical and industrial concentration, while laborers still form
|
||
their fighting organizations on lines of long-gone trade divisions.
|
||
The battles of the past emphasize this lesson. The textile workers of
|
||
Lowell, Philadelphia and Fall River; the butchers of Chicago, weakened
|
||
by the disintegrating effects of trade divisions; the machinists on
|
||
the Santa Fe, unsupported by their fellow-workers subject to the same
|
||
masters; the long-struggling miners of Colorado, hampered by lack of
|
||
unity and solidarity upon the industrial battlefield, all bear witness
|
||
to the helplessness and impotency of labor as at present organized.
|
||
|
||
This worn-out and corrupt system offers no promise of
|
||
improvement and adaptation. There is no silver lining to the clouds
|
||
of darkness and despair settling down upon the world of labor.
|
||
|
||
This system offers only a perpetual struggle for slight relief
|
||
within wage slavery. It is blind to the possibility of establishing
|
||
an industrial democracy, wherein there shall be no wage slavery, but
|
||
where the workers will own the tools which they operate, and the
|
||
product of which they alone will enjoy.
|
||
|
||
It shatters the ranks of the workers into fragments, rendering
|
||
them helpless and impotent on the industrial battlefield.
|
||
|
||
Separation of craft from craft renders industrial and financial
|
||
solidarity impossible.
|
||
|
||
Union men scab upon union men; hatred of worker for worker is
|
||
engendered, and the workers are delivered helpless and disintegrated
|
||
into the hands of the capitalists.
|
||
|
||
Craft jealousy leads to the attempt to create trade monopolies.
|
||
|
||
Prohibitive initiation fees are established, that force men to
|
||
become scabs against their will. Men whom manliness or circumstances
|
||
have driven from one trade are thereby fined when they seek to
|
||
transfer membership to the union of a new craft.
|
||
|
||
Craft divisions foster political ignorance among the workers,
|
||
thus dividing their class at the ballot box, as well as in the shop,
|
||
mine and factory.
|
||
|
||
Craft unions may be and have been used to assist employers in
|
||
the establishment of monopolies and the raising of prices. One set of
|
||
workers is thus used to make harder the conditions of life of another
|
||
body of laborers.
|
||
|
||
Craft divisions hinder the growth of class consciousness of the
|
||
workers, foster the idea of harmony of interests between employing
|
||
exploiter and employed slave. They permit the association of the
|
||
misleaders of the workers with the capitalists in the Civic
|
||
Federation, where plans are made for the perpetuation of capitalism,
|
||
and the permanent enslavement of the workers through the wage system.
|
||
|
||
Previous efforts for the betterment of the working class have
|
||
proven abortive because limited in scope and disconnected in action.
|
||
|
||
Universal economic evils afflicting the working class can be
|
||
eradicated only by a universal working class movement. Such a
|
||
movement of the working class is impossible while separate craft and
|
||
wage agreements are made, favoring the employer against other crafts
|
||
in the same industry, and while energies are wasted in fruitless
|
||
jurisdictional struggles, which serve only to further the personal
|
||
aggrandizement of union officials.
|
||
|
||
A movement to fulfill these conditions must consist of one
|
||
great industrial union embracing all industries - providing for craft
|
||
autonomy locally, industrial autonomy internationally, and working
|
||
class unity generally.
|
||
|
||
It must be founded on the class struggle, and its general
|
||
administration must be conducted in harmony with the recognition of
|
||
the irrepressible conflict between the capitalist class and the
|
||
working class.
|
||
|
||
It should be established as the economic organization of the
|
||
working class, without affiliation with any political party.
|
||
|
||
All power should rest in a collective membership.
|
||
|
||
Local, national and general administration, including union
|
||
labels, buttons, badges, transfer cards, initiation fees, and per
|
||
capita tax should be uniform throughout.
|
||
|
||
All members must hold membership in the local, national or
|
||
international union covering the industry in which they are employed,
|
||
but transfers of membership between unions, local, national or
|
||
international, should be universal.
|
||
|
||
Workingmen bringing union cards from industrial unions in
|
||
foreign countries should be freely admitted into the organization.
|
||
|
||
The general administration should issue a publication
|
||
representing the entire union and its principles, which should reach
|
||
all members in every industry at regular intervals.
|
||
|
||
A central defense fund, to which all members contribute, should
|
||
be established and maintained.
|
||
|
||
All workers, therefore, who agree with the principles herein
|
||
set forth, will meet in convention at Chicago the 27th day of June,
|
||
1905, for the purpose of forming an economic organization of the
|
||
working class along the lines marked out in this manifesto.
|
||
|
||
Representation in the convention shall be based upon the number
|
||
of workers whom the delegate represents. No delegate, however, shall
|
||
be given representation in the convention on the numerical basis of an
|
||
organization unless he has credentials - bearing the seal of his
|
||
union, local, national or international, and the signatures of the
|
||
officers thereof - authorizing him to install his union as a working
|
||
part of the proposed economic organization, in the industrial
|
||
department to which it logically belongs in the general plan of
|
||
organization. Lacking this authority, the delegate shall represent
|
||
himself as an individual.
|
||
|
||
____________________________ Line 763; end of issue number 4 _______
|
||
|
||
|