02 November, 2011
Countercurrents.org

This is a transcript of a recent talk given by Raymond Lotta at Occupy
Wall Street, New York City

The Occupy Wall Street movement is a great and momentous event. It is
a fresh wind of resistance. We're protesting multiple outrages of this
system, not just one. Occupy Wall Street is throwing up big questions
about the source of these outrages and how to bring about a radically
different and better world. And it's created space for us to talk
about all this! So I'm really happy to be here with you

My brief here is titled “Are the Corporations and Banks Corrupting the
System, or is the Problem the System of Capitalism.”

Of course, people are right to be outraged by what the corporations
and banks do.

*Look at what BP did in the Gulf of Mexico last year: it was
responsible for the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history.

*People are right to be outraged by the banks which profited off
financial operations that resulted in millions being evicted from
their homes. And when Goldman-Sachs smelled the rot of subprime
lending, they moved into food commodity futures--contributing to the
rise in global food prices and greater hunger and starvation for
millions in the Third World.

*You know, Steve Jobs recently died, and he's being eulogized for his
“pursuit of the dream of perfectionism.” But there would be no Steve
Jobs, there would be no Apple--without a global network of
exploitation. I'm talking about a corporate supply chain managed from
the Silicon Valley. I'm talking about contract manufacturers like
Foxconn that assemble the iPhone and iPad in China--at factories where
people are forced to work 60 hours a week, where they are poisoned by
hazardous chemicals, denied basic rights, and where several workers in
desperation committed suicide.

Corporations and Banks: Part of Something Bigger

But, you know, if we hate what the corporations and banks are doing,
and we want to stop it, we have to look at what they are part of.
They're part of something bigger than themselves, a system of
capitalism that operates according to certain dynamics.

Think about this: particular corporations and banks don't exist
forever: they're bought and sold. They merge, like JP Morgan and
Chase, or Texaco and Chevron. They go bankrupt as a result of
competition and crisis, like Lehman Brothers. They move in and out of
different product lines, like what happened to IBM and the PC, or
Apple moving into Google territory.

A transnational corporation or bank, with huge global assets, embodies
the economic system we live under. Transnational corporations are
units for the production and accumulation of profit , like Toyota or
Exxon-Mobil assembling cars or drilling for oil. In the case of banks,
they're units for maximizing financial profits from far-flung
operations. A corporation is an instrument for the organized
exploitation of wage labor . It is an instrument through which markets
are penetrated and cornered, through which resources are grabbed, like
the oil companies going into the Arctic. These corporations and banks
are instruments --but not the only instrument-- of ownership and
control by the capitalist class.

The point I'm making is that these corporations and banks are
pieces--and not the only pieces--on a global chessboard of
capitalist-imperialism. And this chessboard, this brutal playing
field, operates according to certain rules of the game. It's like
basketball or soccer: there are rules of the game. If a basketball
player kicked the ball like a soccer player to get it down-court, the
whole game would break down. Let's look at those rules:

Capitalism Operates According to Certain Rules



RULE #1: Everything is a commodity and everything must be done for
profit . Everything under capitalism is produced in order to be
exchanged, to be sold. Things have to be useful to be sold. But what's
actually produced, and how it's produced, is measured and motivated by
profit: whether it's housing, computers, medicine, energy, whatever.
And profit comes from the exploitation of billions of human beings on
this planet.

Criminally, under capitalism, the environment--like the rainforest in
Ecuador where Texaco drilled for oil--is something to be seized and
plundered for profit.

RULE #2 : Capitalist production is privately owned and driven forward
by the commandment “expand or die.” Exxon-Mobil and Royal Dutch Shell,
or Credit Suisse and JP Morgan Chase are fighting each other for
market share. They are driven to extend investments and cheapen costs,
not mainly due to personal greed, but because if they don't expand and
keep accumulating profit and more profit for their war chests, if they
don't more ruthlessly exploit labor on a world scale, they won't stay
alive--they'll go under or be gobbled up.

Competition runs through this whole system. It's beat or be beaten.
When BP was cleaning up the oil spill, you didn't see other oil
companies coming to share expertise and oceanographic equipment. No,
these other companies wanted to take advantage of the situation--Shell
and Exxon-Mobil were reportedly “licking their chops” at the
possibility of gobbling up BP. This “expand or die” compulsion leads
to bigger and more powerful units of capital.

RULE #3: Is the drive for global control and dominance . Capitalism is
a worldwide system. There's a great divide in the world between the
imperialist and oppressed countries. On this global playing field
corporations and banks compete for global influence and control, like
the oil corporations going off the coast of West Africa or Nigeria.
But the most intense form of rivalry is between contending world
powers for strategic position and advantage--over regions, markets,
and resources. This has led to wars of conquest, like what the U.S.
did in the Philippines, or the French in Algeria, or the U.S. invasion
of Iraq. And this drive for global control and domination led two
world wars.

So these are the three rules of the game: profit based on the
exploitation of labor; expand or die; and the drive for global
dominance. And whether we are talking about a corporation or a bank,
they are guided by these three rules--and both play essential and
functional roles in this system of capitalist production, a system of
worldwide exploitation.

Bob Avakian in BAsics gives this vivid definition of capitalism-imperialism:

“Imperialism means huge monopolies and financial institutions
controlling the economies and the political systems--and the lives of
people--not just in one country but all over the world. Imperialism
means parasitic exploiters who oppress hundreds of millions of people
and condemn them to untold misery; parasitic financiers who can cause
millions to starve just by pressing a computer key and thereby
shifting vast amounts of wealth from one place to another. Imperialism
means war--war to put down the resistance and rebellion of the
oppressed, and war between rival imperialist states--it means the
leaders of these states can condemn humanity to unbelievable
devastation, perhaps even total annihilation, with the push of a
button.

“Imperialism is capitalism at the stage where its basic contradictions
have been raised to tremendously explosive levels. But imperialism
also means that there will be revolution--the oppressed rising up to
overthrow their exploiters and tormentors--and that this revolution
will be a worldwide struggle to sweep away the global monster,
imperialism.”

Capitalism and the State



Those three economic laws that I've laid out are at the root of the
capitalist-imperialist system. But the preservation and extension of
this system requires a state power. You see, capital is private and
competing. But the capitalists of a given country--like the U.S. or
France or Russia or Germany--they have common interests. The state
power in France acts to safeguard the common strategic interests of
French capital--and so too in Japan or Russia.

The capitalist class dominates the economy. It controls the major
means of production--land, raw materials and other resources,
technology, and physical structures, like factories). The government
is a key part of a state power that is controlled by the capitalist
class, no matter who is president. But this state plays a special role
in society. It's not acting in the interests of this or that
corporation or bank. It acts to protect and expand the economic system
and to keep the whole society functioning as a capitalist society.
What are the key things the state does?

*It holds a monopoly on the legitimate use of force. It deploys the
police and courts and prisons to suppress any resistance from below.
We saw in the 1960s how the government moved to crush the Black
Panther Party. Here in NYC, the police arrest antiwar demonstrators,
they moved against Occupy Wall Street demonstrators on the Brooklyn
Bridge, and each year they stop and frisk hundreds of thousands of
Black and Latino youth--as part of exercising social control over a
marginalized and potentially rebellious section of the population.

*The state taxes and spends to create infrastructure. It provides a
central banking system. It sets laws for the exploitation of labor
power. It funds education and social programs to maintain the labor
force and social stability. It subsidizes strategic industries, like
nuclear power. It negotiates treaties and agreements with other
powers. All this serves the interests of capital.

* The U.S. imperialist state acts to safeguard a global empire. It
builds up a huge military machine of death and destruction, and has
established over 700 bases in over 100 countries to enforce political
conditions that are favorable to investment and to suppress resistance
in other parts of the world.

*The state acts to legitimize the system. It holds elections which
serve to put a stamp of “popular approval” on the policies of the
capitalist ruling class. You know...the idea of “consent of the
governed.” There is a common misconception that the voting system in
the U.S. is basically good but that the corporations and banks have
more money to influence things. Well, yes, they throw their money
around. But the basic truth is this: you don't control the system
through elections...the system controls you through elections ! The
agendas and choices are set by the ruling class.

The U.S. government and state power have functioned consistently, from
the time of the founding of the Republic and the Constitution, to
serve the expansion and consolidation of a national market. The U.S.
government and state power have functioned consistently to protect a
property rights system based on the control of producing wealth by a
small capitalist class that exploits wage laborers.

This state power has functioned consistently to serve the rise and
extension of a global empire that rests on exploitation, plunder, and
war: from the theft of land from Mexico to the annexation of Puerto
Rico and the occupation of the Philippines to Vietnam to Iraq to
Afghanistan.

I've talked about this expand-or-die dynamic of capitalism. You have a
situation where huge banks and corporations are each and all seeking
to gain advantage and position… each and all chasing after profit
opportunities, investing as though there were no limit. Under
capitalism, there's no society-wide planning or coordination. There's
anarchy of social production, which leads to crisis. And when the
system goes into deep economic crisis, the state acts to protect the
system from collapse. This is what FDR did during the New Deal.

When economic crisis hit in 2008-09 the state under Obama acted to
bail out and shore up the banks--not because these banks had “special
influence.” The bailout was designed to prevent a huge breakdown of
the system and to protect the financial institutions that are key to
the dominant position of the U.S. in the world economy.

This was a bailout of the capitalist system. They're doing that at a
terrible cost to humanity, at great cost to not only the poor and
exploited in this society but to broader sections of people. And at
great cost to the ecology of the planet.

Now people have to choose between rent and healthcare...and that's a
choice that no one should have to make. And young people don't know if
they're going to have any kind of future worthy of human beings.

I started by posing question: are corporations and banks corrupting
the system, or is the problem the system of capitalism? My answer is
that capitalism-imperialism is the problem--and we need a revolution
to create a new system fit for humanity. And if you want to find out
about how a socialist society would actually function, you need to
check out the Constitution for the New Socialist Republic in North
America . http://revcom.us/socialistconstitution/index.html

Raymond Lotta is the author of America in Decline and Maoist Economics
and the Revolutionary Road to Communism . He is a contributing writer
to Revolution newspaper, www.revcom.us

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