I have always had a great admiration for this author- and have been pouring over his
"The Great Reversal" book recently. He is one of the few who is very much a partisan
of the Chinese Revolution and believes the students in Tiananmen Square were
essentially looking for renewal of the socialist ideal at the same time. He was
firmly in favour of the protesters and opposed to the crackdown. Perhaps June 4, 1989
will go down in history as just as confusing as 1956 in Hungary.

Whatever actually happened there, we are constantly treated to June 4 as some sort of
"proof" of "Communist evil". That same week in June `89, hundreds of people were
moved down in (I believe it was) either Bolivia or Venezuela. Forgive me getting
muddled on the country it happened in, for I'm not reminded of *that* massacre on a
daily basis.

Macdonald

*****************

Some Thoughts On The Role Of Mao Zedong

William Hinton - Talk at The Socialist Scholars Conference, New York, 4/10/99

 In l995 a foreign reporter interviewed me about Mao. She sought me
out as someone who had met the man in person and openly admired  him over
the years. She asked "What about all the people he killed?  What about all
those famine deaths? And what about all the suffering and destruction of
people in the Cultural Revolution?" With these questions she lined herself
up with the current media line on Mao, the line of conventional wisdom,
which is to present him as a monster - "Mao, the Monster". The usually more
enlightened BBC reached  a new low that week with their Mao centenary
program. It made him out to be not only a monster but a monstrous lecher
far gone in orgies with teen aged girls. Such a low level of attack! It
cheapened  the BBC and  should have backfired,  but you never can tell
these days.
 The "Mao the Monster" thesis depends on two major charges. The
first makes him responsible for all the euphoria and excesses of the Great
Leap and the organization  of peoples communes, which, so the charges go,
led to a collapse of production  and finally  to famine in China. (Isn't it
indeed strange that this famine was not discovered at the time but only
extrapolated backward from censuses taken 20 years later , then spinning
the figures to put the worst interpretation  on very dubious records). I do
not mean  to say that there were no mistakes in policy, no crop failures,
and no starvation at all, but the hardships of those years  are advertised
as the greatest  famine in human history, a conclusion which I do not
accept.
 The second charge blames Mao for the extremes of violence and all
the personal tragedies that occurred during the Cultural Revolution. Must
Mao take the blame for all these phenomena?
 I think it is wrong to blame Mao in this wholesale fashion. Such
suffering as did result during both these periods arose as a consequence of
protracted political warfare. This political warfare, in turn , grew out of
the clash between two newly emerged classes - workers and bourgeoisie -
over the future direction  of China after the victory of l949. The struggle
between them was inevitable and reflected the principal political and
social contradiction  that  arose in China after  liberation. Up until l949
the principal contradiction had been between the Chinese people  on one
side and on the other  the  feudal style landlords, their offspring the
bureaucratic capitalists  and, backing them all up, the foreign
imperialists, from the thirties  onward especially  the Japanese who set
out to conquer  China by armed force. The character of the revolution
generated  by this contradiction was democratic, or as Mao termed it New
Democratic. What  then  is the New Democratic Revolution?  I have written
some clarification of this question in my book The Great Reversal. It can
be summarized as follows:
 In the l930s Chairman Mao declared  that the capitalist road was
not  open to China in the 20th Century. The Chinese revolution against
internal feudalism and external imperialism, he said, could not be a
democratic  revolution of the old type- like the British or the  French - a
revolution to open the road to capitalism, but must be a democratic
revolution of a new type, one that would open the road  to socialism. Why?
 In the first place the imperialist powers  would not allow China to
carry out any transformation  aimed  at autonomous capitalist development
if they could possibly help it. Every time any section of the Chinese
people rose up to challenge traditional rule the powers intervened, singly
or in unison, to suppress the effort by force of arms.  This predictable
response led Sun Yat-sen to ask "why don't the teachers ever allow the
pupils to learn?" He asked this because the Americans were preaching to
them about the marvels of capitalism and told them "You Chinese should
develop capitalism", but every time they tried to develop it the Americans
intervened to crush it! The answer was, of course, that the landlord class
as a whole and the compradors in business and government  served as the
main props of imperialist power in China. Hence the Americans used all
their financial and military might to support, inspire, foster and preserve
these feudal survivals and their comprador offspring..
 In the second place, Mao said, capitalism was not an option because
"socialism will not permit it." By this he meant that without allying with
and winning support from all the socialist forces in the world - first of
all the Soviet Union and second the working classes and working class
movements of Japan, Britain, The United States, France, Germany, Italy and
other countries  and the backing these provided through their own struggles
against  capitalism and imperialism, the Chinese revolution could not
possibly succeed. In the modern era, defined by Mao as an era of wars and
revolutions, in which capitalism was unquestionably dying and socialism
unquestionable prospering, such an alliance and such support would come
only as a response to a Chinese revolution of a new type - A Chinese
revolution clearing the ground for working class power and socialism and
not a Chinese revolution clearing the ground for bourgeois class power and
capitalism.
  Finally, China's independent national  bourgeoisie, the
revolutionary sector of the bourgeois class, was weak and vacillating. It
could not possible take on both the Chinese landlords and the imperialists
plus their Chinese comprador partners without fully mobilizing both the
working class and the peasantry. But mobilizing the working class meant
putting certain  limits  on managerial  powers and meeting certain working
class demands - job security, retirement pay, health care - while
mobilizing  the peasantry meant carrying out land reform. This could not be
done without confiscating the wealth of the landlord class, from which the
bourgeoisie had, in the main, arisen  and to which it still maintained
myriad ties. Furthermore, the confiscation  of property and land threatened
the foundations of all private property and caused capitalists, much as
they desired liberation from feudalism and imperialism, to vacillate . Over
and over again, the national bourgeoisie proved incapable of firm national
leadership against the people's  enemies, foreign and domestic. Leading the
Chinese democratic  revolution thus shifted by default  to the working
class, more numerous by far and older and more experienced  than the
bourgeoisie, and to the Communist Party that had established itself as
spokesman for all the oppressed.
 With the Communist Party  assuming leadership in the revolution,
mobilizing both workers and peasants by the millions and threatening to
confiscate not only all the land of the landlords but all the property of
the imperialists and their comprador and bureaucratic allies, the first
goal of the revolution could hardly be capitalism. Mao projected a new
national form, a mixed economy heavily weighted on the side of  public  and
collective ownership with joint state-private and wholly private
enterprises of  the national capitalists playing a minor supporting role.
Hence the concept of a New Democratic Revolution and a New Democratic
transitional  period and the eventual establishment of a New Democratic
State, with a mandate to carry land reform through to the end and to
nationalize the wealth (industrial, commercial and financial) monopolized
by the four great bureaucratic  families of China and, within  certain
limits, to help the national capitalists to get on their feet. The  great
victory of l949 brought all this about as projected. It resolved the old
contradiction with  feudalism and bureaucratic capitalism  backed up by
imperialism on the mainland  and brought a new contradiction to the fore -
the Chinese people versus the bourgeoisie. The character of the revolution
from that point on was socialist, even though many New Democratic  tasks
remained to be completed - tasks such as land reform in the newly liberated
areas. So the character of the political struggle had changed.

 Now Mao was not responsible for this. It was built into the fabric
of Chinese life and into the fabric of the Chinese Communist Party and into
all Chinese politics  by the existence of classes  - especially the
emerging  new classes, workers and capitalists - and by the existing
economy at  that current  stage of development. The Communist Party,
confronted by these contradictions, had developed  in two main streams -
one an open party governing  the Liberated Areas under Mao Zedong as
primary leader, and the other an underground party growing up primarily in
Guomindang dominated  cities where Liu Shaoqi was responsible, under the
overall leadership of Mao. The party stream under Mao developed into a
proletarian  headquarters and the stream  that  Liu  led became the core
of a bourgeois headquarters all within the overall umbrella of the Party
itself. That does not mean that everyone on either side was either
proletarian or bourgeois. There were many degrees of mixture and admixture.
But the two headquarters, with their contrasting  class character,
developed out of this history and these circumstances and out of the
isolation of the two stream from each other.
 The Shanghai bourgeoisie, through the student movement of the
thirties and forties contributed heavily to Liu's forces. After Deng's
reforms began, whenever anyone reached a high post the question the people
always asked was "which branch of the Shanghai Youth league did he or she
belong to.?" The big reform leaders that  Deng Xiaoping brought forward,
first Hu Yaobang, and then Zhao Ziyang, were both products of the Shanghai
Youth  League.  Of course there were many Maoists among the League members
and there were workers and left wing intellectuals  who identified with the
working class in the underground branches of the Party. But under Liu's
guidance a bourgeois headquarters emerged nevertheless.
 After victory, after the liberation of China in l949, the two
streams of the Party  merged as one organizationally but they never did
merge ideologically. Meanwhile the bourgeois stream received  constant
reinforcement  from the degeneration of once dedicated cadre under the
bombardment of silver bullets that greeted them on assuming office at all
levels, silver bullets being  the perks and privileges that society or
independent capitalists could offer a man or woman in power. Successive
rectification movements stemmed this seepage but could not close it off
entirely, nor was it easy to screen closet opportunists  from among the new
recruits to a Party suddenly empowered and in a position to allocate the
wealth of by far the largest mass of laboring people the world has ever
seen.
  Mao's proletarian  stream, in order to serve the long term
interests of the workers and peasants, had to struggle for a socialist
future and the eventual elimination of  class exploitation. That Mao truly
had the future interests of the common people in mind in struggling for
this goal is demonstrated by the crisis and stagnation now pervading  large
parts of rural China. This is leading to the proletarianization  of scores
of millions of peasants chronically underemployed  on the ubiquitous noodle
strips of soil  allocated  to them by the family  responsibility system.
 In sharp contrast, representatives of the bourgeoisie in the Party,
in order to save a future role for themselves, and to save China as a
sphere of operation  for the bourgeoisie as a class, had to struggle for,
at very least, a prolonged period of mixed economy with an ever widening
role for private entrepreneurs  leading to a capitalist  future. To weight
the dice in this direction  Deng 's government redeemed  scores of millions
of dollars worth of bonds once issued to China's independent  entrepreneurs
to compensate  for  government  expropriations, bonds on which interest had
been  paid for ten years prior  to their  cancellation  in l966.  Bond
redemptions  began around l980.
 Can Mao be blamed for the struggle, this split  over policy?
 No. This struggle was built in and inevitable. Initiative s
arising  on either  side  had to be challenged  and defeated or at least
stalemated  by the other side. The contest was bitter, protracted and
hard-fought. Tragedies and casualties on both sides were many. Extreme
friction at the interface of the struggle between the two class factions in
action contributed hugely to policy failures. No policy, from either  side,
could be applied uncontested.
 From the bourgeois side the bitterness was rooted in an inexorable
truth: in the long run, just as the peasants of old China could get along
without the landlords but the landlords could not get along without the
peasants who labored, so  the workers and peasants of revolutionary China
could get along without the  bourgeoisie, but the bourgeoisie  could not
get along without the labor of workers and peasants and the surplus value
thus created. I am not talking here about intellectuals. The working class
can  win support from and train up intellectuals devoted  to socialism just
as the bourgeoisie can win support from and train up intellectuals devoted
to capitalism.
 To blame Mao then  for the struggle that ensued and for its outcome
is unwarranted, unrealistic and unhistorical. Mao did what needed to be
done given his social base, while Liu did what he had to do given his
social base. After a decade  of conflict things came to a head in the
Cultural Revolution.  Mao won some victories  early on, but, unfortunately
could not consolidate them under the hammer blows of the Liu-Deng
counter-offensive reinforced , as it was,  by the deadweight , inertia and
survival potential of all the old customs, old habits, old beliefs and
superstitions that made any and all change difficult, not to mention such
radical changes as socialist  relations of production and a matching
socialist  superstructure demanded. Mao had the upper hand politically. He
was able to speak directly to and mobilize hundreds of millions of peasants
and workers. But Liu had the upper hand organizationally because his group,
his stream, coming from the underground, controlled , by virtue of its
existing network in l949 , the organization of the Party nationwide and had
the power to appoint, remove, promote and educate the middle level of cadre
throughout the whole country. At  the heart of Liu's educational program
lay his tract How To Be A Good Communist. This advocated self cultivation
that would, when conducted  according to his directives,  enable one not to
serve the people better, but to be an  obedient tool,  and thus win
promotion to ever higher positions in the Party.
 These philistine minions, their careers dependent on Liu, were the
shock force of the bourgeoisie in the Party, and there was a consistent
pattern to the way they operated. In every new situation, where Mao was
proposing a socialist solution, they first dragged their feet and tried to
slow down the change or disrupt it. At one time,  for instance, they
dissolved 30,000 village  farming  cooperatives  at one stroke.  But when
any movement reached a high tide and couldn't be stopped by foot dragging,
then they jumped in, active as could be, and pushed things to extremes that
were equally of not more disruptive. From Liu's headquarters there  came
always, consistently, in stage after stage of the revolution,  a move, a
shift from rightist obstruction to left, one could say,  leftist
destruction. Whether  conscious or not this was the pattern. It showed up
during land reform as illustrated in my book Fanshen. It showed up with a
vengeance during the anti-rightist  movement of l958. After  the shock
events in Hungary in the late fifties Mao suggested that there might be as
many as 4,000 rightist reactionaries  among the intellectuals  and
academics of China.  Deng Xiaoping, later  the key figure in China, took
charge of handling the rightist problem then  and did tremendous damage by
targeting  500,000!
 The same right-left swing plagued the Socialist Education Movement
in l964. Cadres at the bottom suddenly found themselves under wholesale
attack from Liu's headquarters.  In just one county alone, Xiyang in
central Shanxi, 40 village level leaders committed suicide. Before that a
similar swing showed up during the Great leap after the bourgeois forces
failed to head it off. The way they responded was to push extremes such as
blowing the  "Communist Wind," a wind of political excesses that included a
gale of gigantism. If a township was good as a single production unit, then
a whole county was even better. It included a hurricane of blind directives
- if digging one foot deep is good for the soil, digging three feet deep is
better. It included an exaggeration wind - if you harvested l00 bushels to
the acre, then I harvested 200 bushels to the acre. And a leveling and
transferring wind - if you have a tractor that the commune needs send it
over, its all for the common good. At the height of the euphoria generated
by the great crop in the making in l958, all these winds blew and fanned up
severe disruption which coupled with very bad weather in l959, '60 and '61,
led to a shortage of crops, hunger, and even starvation.
 Mao's initiatives failed temporarily but they were well conceived.
The inspiration for the Great Leap , the commune form of cooperative
federation and the industrial projects such  as  backyard  iron smelting
came from the very successful wartime industrial cooperative movement -
Indusco. After  suitable retrenchment and  reorganization China
successfully revived much of the original vision. There is a good
description of this background for the cooperatives and the commune
movement in Jack Gray's recently published book,  Rebellions and
Revolutions: The History Of Modern China.
 During the Cultural  Revolution  similar extremes  arose. After Mao
called  for power seizures from below, everybody, and especially the
capitalist roaders, formed  factional support groups to seize power.
Unprincipled  and often violent  free- for-alls ensued which no one,
neither Mao nor Liu, could control. And thus the Cultural Revolution ,
after generating  a tremendous storm, wound down without consolidating its
goals. However, in my opinion, the movement as a whole was a greet creative
departure  in history. It was not a plot, not a purge, but a mass
mobilization  whereby  people were inspired to intervene, to screen and
supervise their cadres and form new popular committees to exercise control
at the  grass roots and higher.
 The whole idea that the principal contradiction  of the times, the
class struggle between the working class and the capitalist class,
expressed itself in the Party center, and that unless it was resolved in
the interest of theworking class the socialist  revolution would founder ,
the whole idea that the method must be mobilizing the common people to
seize power from below in order to establish new representative leading
bodies, democratically  elected  organs of power - these were breakthroughs
in history summed up by the phrase "Bombard the Headquarters". They
constituted,  in my opinion, Mao's greatest contribution  to revolutionary
theory and practice, lighting the way to progress in our time. Had Mao
succeeded, I think there is no doubt we would have today a burgeoning
socialist economy and culture in China with enormous prestige among the
people. The economic advance might be slower than the current one but it
would be much more solid and much more useful as a development model for
all Third World peoples now living  in abysmal poverty and exploitation.
Where Mao was particularly prescient and saw far was in his exposure of the
capitalist road  tendency and in making the target of the  Cultural
Revolution  "Party people in authority taking the capitalist road."
 Today, after twenty years of Deng's " reforms" we can clearly  see
which way China is going and what the result will be. Surely Mao's
diagnosis still stands.  Mao's diagnosis for the whole of China's
revolution was that the capitalist road was not open to the people of
China. In a world dominated  by powerful imperialists and  multi -national
corporations with enormous strength and global reach, any Third World
country taking the capitalist road is taking a road that leads to
neo-colonization. Today, with capitalist methods, one can't build an
independent, self reliant economy and country, but only a, subsidiary
economy and country at the mercy of these huge existing, multi-national
corporations at the top of the heap that set the rules and  rule the roost.
The Deng (now Zhang)  regime is, in essence , already a comprador regime,
ready to sell out to  the highest bidder China's most precious land,
material and human resources. For immediate gain  the current power holders
will do anything, sacrifice any principal, invite in any investors, give
away huge chunks of the domestic market, sell any and all resources
including  long term use rights to the most valuable urban land, not to
mention  advertising  space on the walls of the Yangtze Gorges, which could
stand as a symbol of the whole pradigm
 Recently  around Beijing a big speculative boom in housing surfaced
and some of the best cropland  in North China was diverted to build
estates for wealthy people. The prices of these houses under construction -
they didn't call them houses, actually, they called  them villas - ran from
450,000 American dollars to 1,500,000 American dollars. So far as I know,
few if any of them were sold to anyone who wanted to live in one. In the
meantime speculators from Hongkong and other parts for the Chinese diaspora
in Southeast Asia bought a few hoping to make a bundle by selling them
again before the whole scam collapsed.

 Will China's economy emerge from this transition period
independent, self regulating and responsible to the people of China, or
will it succumb to international  market pressures, surrender one
initiative  after  another and  end up in a passive neo-colonial  position
, rocked by huge financial storms over which China has no control? I think
the latter is a serious danger and should be confronted now by those
responsible for China's future. Unfortunately I see no sign that anyone who
is in a position to do something about it takes the problem seriously.
Corruption reaches right to the top of the government and everybody is too
busy trying to get rich quick to worry about the long term result.
Thus I think Mao's original prediction, that  in a world  dominated, by
powerful imperialist states no capitalist road is open to China, will turn
out to be as true today as it was when he formulated it in the 20s of this
century. More and more people from all walks of life will come to
appreciate and honor Mao's life work, his struggle for national liberation
and his struggle for socialism. My main point, the perception that severe
class struggle was built into the modern, post liberation  history of China
, that no one, no group, no party , no faction had a free hand to apply
socialist policy, and that the tragedies and casualties on all sides
resulted from the friction at the interface between new domestic classes as
they struggled for hegemony over society, above all inside  the Communist
Party, will also , I think, stand the test of time.


-------------------------------------------
Macdonald Stainsby
Rad-Green List: Radical anti-capitalist environmental discussion.
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Leninist-International: Building bridges in the tradition of V.I. Lenin.
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In the contradiction lies the hope.
                                     --Bertholt Brecht


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