[The author is a Supreme Court lawyer, a human rights activist. Currently
fighting the case of Kobad Ghandy.]

http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=310310940006&ref=nf

<http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=310310940006&ref=nf> New Wave:
>From Singur, via Nandigram to Lalgarh: Zig Zag of Maoist Train and the
Paradox of Development -Rajesh Tyagi/ 24 October 2009

After opposing the industrialisation in Singur and Nandigram on the premise
that the same is outrageous, inhuman and not ‘people oriented’, Maoists find
themselves in an apparent dilemma to raise the issue of under-development in
Lalgarh, the very next day.

Their illusion of an alternative path of development under capitalism with
humanitarian considerations, leads the Maoists directly to the lap of
reformism, as this means nothing but craving for a humanitarian face for
capitalism. Fighting for this ‘soft’ capitalism, with humanitarian
attributes, of course with arms in hands, the Maoists reveal themselves as
‘armed reformists’ or ‘reformist militants’ of a new type, but in essence
the armed defenders of the same old capitalism.

Do you want to destroy capitalism? ‘No, not at all! We rather want to see
the capitalism grow, as that is the only road to socialism. Our program is
to liberate capitalism of the shackles of feudalism and Imperialism’! Maoist
retorts. Thus, a ‘Capitalist road to Socialism’, this is what the program of
‘new democracy’ means in essence to our Maoist!

This essentially reformist perspective of Maoists, is completely in
consonance with the politics of petty-bourgeois peasantry, their actual
social base, which though pulverised under the advance of capitalism, yet
craves only for a ‘human’ face of capitalism and not for abolition of the
bourgeois property relations, as a whole, as it itself, as a class, rests
upon such relations. Maoists, the historical representatives of
peasantry-the rural petty producers- thus do not and cannot overstep this
limit.

But then the real difficulty presents itself in practice. As capitalism
‘grows’ it invariably grows through appropriation of petty producer, pushing
it to the camp of the proletariat. Maoist is however not ready to swallow
this bitter pill of capitalism and opposes the appropriation, e.g. in Singur
and Nandigram. They defend the petty owner of land against this ‘inhuman’
appropriation and thus oppose the capitalist growth, with arms in hand. But
then in the next breath they stake their leadership to Lalgarh movement
which poses the question of ‘under-development’, demanding extension of
capitalist development, the factories, schools, hospitals etc. etc on their
virgin territory.

Thus, aiming for proliferation of ‘capitalism’ in their fancied program of
‘new democracy’, instead of its destruction, Maoists take offensive against
the growth of capitalism, its penetration onto the virgin lands like Singur
and Nandigram, while simultaneously they demand capitalist development in
the underdeveloped regions like Lalgarh.

The paradox of ‘development’ for Maoists is that they are not sure if they
are ‘for’ or ‘against’ the capitalist development as a whole. It is because
they rest upon the intermediary class-the peasantry-standing with two faces:
one towards the bourgeois and other towards the proletariat.

In fact, this paradox of development can only be explained in terms of
inbuilt mechanics of capitalism leading to an ‘uneven and combined growth’,
but then the resolution would lie not in ‘proliferation of capitalism’ but
essentially in its destruction. But for Maoists ‘capitalism’ is sacrosanct,
as they have learnt by rote from Mao himself, that proletariat cannot
overturn capitalism in backward countries and has to pass through a ‘new
democracy’ where capitalism has to be preserved, at any cost. The task for
Maoists thus lies in liberating capitalism of its ills and not in liberating
the working classes from capitalism itself. In their view, bourgeois not
being a good manager of capitalism, destiny has assigned this task of
management and cure of capitalism to Maoists. They, thus come forward not as
hostile enemies of capitalism, but with their claim as better managers of
capitalism. Capitalism under the management of Maoist Bonaparte, the red
bureaucracy, is the real essence of ‘new democracy’.

The difficulty of Maoists lies in their flawed perspective of Stalinist ‘two
stage theory’, which stops short of aiming for destruction of capitalism.
This suicidal formula has already derailed the mature revolutions in China,
Spain, India, Iran, Iraq and more recently in Nepal. In the name of ‘new
democratic stage’ Maoists refuse to aim for destruction of capitalism,
rather advocate its ‘proliferation’ during the new democratic period. This
is what was professed by the 1940 pamphlet of Mao-tse-Tung, ‘On New
Democracy’. In their view national capitalism has not lost its progressive
vigour as a whole. While sections of national capitalism retain a
progressive role, in their opinion, it is only imperialism and the comprador
capitalism tagged to it which is reactionary. This way, Maoists attempt to
segregate the feudal reaction on the one hand and comprador capitalism on
the other, from the ‘national capitalism’ as targets of their ‘peoples war’,
and thereby create illusions for progressive role of capitalism. They
de-compose world capitalism, to get fragments of ‘national’ and ‘comprador’
capitalism and ‘feudalism’ separated from each other, in their laboratory of
‘new democracy’. By not targeting capitalism as a whole, and by sparing its
‘national’ sections, the Maoists not only betray the class whose red banner
they hold, but themselves land into a dilemma.

‘Capitalism today, Socialism tomorrow’, is their battle cry, where
‘tomorrow’ is never to present itself to the proletariat!

This very limited political program of Maoists, especially in the age of
grown-up Imperialism, instantly becomes a premise of apparently
self-contradictory ideas, leading to nowhere, but into a trap of capitalism.
Politically disoriented cadres, turned away from a political program against
capitalism, are then left in a lurch, cheerleading for ‘armed’ actions of
militants, kidnappings and beheadings etc. etc.

So far as advocacy of Maoists for National capitalism, against Imperialism,
is concerned, the same is through and through reactionary. Imperialism has
not appeared from vacuum, it has grown out of their cherished ‘national
capitalism’. Maoists conveniently forget that National capitalism is nothing
but pre-monopoly stage of world capitalism, which has gone far back in
history, paving the way for Imperialism, the monopoly capitalism, which has
since subjugated all forms of economy, national as well as foreign. National
capitalism has been substituted by Imperialism in advanced countries, while
in peripheral countries it has adapted to Imperialism. National capitalism
is thus not progressive from any angle, in comparison to monopoly
capitalism-the Imperialism, as our Maoists think, but it is vice-versa.
Lenin in his debate against P.Kievsky has been categorically clear on this
point:

.....But this Kievsky argument is wrong. Imperialism is as much our “mortal”
enemy as is capitalism. That is so. No Marxist will forget, however, that
capitalism is progressive compared with feudalism, and that imperialism is
progressive compared with pre-monopoly capitalism. Hence, it is not every
struggle against imperialism that we should support. We will not support a
struggle of the reactionary classes against imperialism; we will not support
an uprising of the reactionary classes against imperialism and capitalism.
(A Caricature of Marxism and Imperialist Economism; Chapter 5. “Monism And
Dualism”).

Working and toiling people suffer under capitalism, not only from its
non-development, like in Lalgarh, but from its development too, e.g. Singur
and Nandigram. The sufferings of people are thus caused by the dynamics of
capitalist regime itself, and not by its growth or undergrowth. Maoists
refuse to see this and harp upon the non-issues, in a petty bourgeois
populist way. They beat about the bush, leaning upon this or that side of
capitalism, and prevent the toiling people from realising that their
liberation consists in destruction of capitalism and not in limited
reformist program of support or opposition to its advance.

The whole viewpoint of Maoists, revolves around the pivot of intermediary
classes and their ideas, chiefly the rural peasantry, while bypassing the
industrial working class, the only class standing in opposition to
capitalism. The mass following, Maoists claim to have got behind them, is
the fallout of their debased policy, where they not only choose backward
rural regions as their operating ground, but here also appeal directly to
politically most backward sections, e.g. tribals, living in pre-capitalist
conditions. These politically backward sections are the best audience for
de-classed ideas, at least till the time the most advanced sections of the
working class do not organise themselves under a revolutionary proletarian
leadership, to lead in turn this backward mass against capitalism and on the
road to a proletarian overturn. The absence of political consolidation of
the working class in India, however, provides and would continue to provide,
a very convenient breeding ground for all sorts of petty bourgeois ideas and
organisations, including that of the Maoists.

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