Peter,
thank you so much for posting this article. I really resonate with what Michael 
Lebowitz is saying here. 

He says:
 Why is it that after so many defeats so many still cannot see what Marx 
grasped in the nineteenth century – that capital has the tendency to produce a 
working class which views the existence of capital as necessary? ‘The advance 
of capitalist production,’ he stressed, ‘develops a working class which by 
education, tradition and habit looks upon the requirements of this mode of 
production as self-evident natural laws.’

This is so true. Many radicals get frustrated that others can't see what they 
see. I have been there myself. Why do working class vote for Tories? 
Incomprehensible I thought. But according to Lebowitz (and Marx) it makes 
sense. And by mode of production lets understand hierarchical relationships, so 
that it includes ICT, and all patriarchal relationships based on power and 
money.

Lebowitz again:
It begins, in short, by grasping the ‘key link’ of human development and 
practice that Marx consistently stressed. Revolutionary democracy recognizes 
that every activity in which people engage forms them. (My emphasis) Thus, 
there are two products of every activity – the changing of circumstance or 
things and the human product.

What's the significance of recognizing this process of producing people 
explicitly? First, it helps us to understand why changes must occur in all 
spheres – every moment that people act within old relations is a process of 
reproducing old ideas and attitudes. Working under hierarchical relations, 
functioning without the ability to make decisions in the workplace and society, 
focusing upon self-interest rather than upon solidarity within society – these 
activities produce people on a daily basis; it is the reproduction of the 
conservatism of everyday life.

This is what I was trying to say in the discussion with you and Michel, we have 
to take into account where these forces converge in the individual because that 
is where the 'alternative logic' that Michel talks about, arises. But what I 
didn't see is that what gives rise to this 'alternative logic', is the 
possibility of different practice, different activity, what Leibowitz calls 
below 'new spaces in which people can develop their powers...'

“Recognizing this second side also directs us to focus upon the introduction of 
concrete measures which explicitly take into account the effect of those 
measures upon human development. Thus, for every step two questions must be 
asked: (1) how does this change circumstances and (2) how does this help to 
produce revolutionary subjects and increase their capacities?”[5]

Of course, it must struggle to capture the existing state from capital so that 
state can serve the needs of the working-class rather than capital. However, it 
also must “promote by all means possible new democratic institutions, new 
spaces in which people can develop their powers through their protagonism.” 

You questioned Lebowitz use of term working class. To me the 'working class', 
is all those who never actually have a chance to think outside the box, who are 
captured by the logic of capitalism to sell their labour in whatever form, or 
who accept inequality as a natural state of affairs. I know these terms are 
very imprecise but I find the hair splitting arguments between old timers a 
real waste. Lebowitz is really addressing the question you raised about the 
'socio-cultural processes' needed to accomplish a politico-economic transition.

I will write more when I have finished Lebowitz article which I am in process 
of reading and would heartily recommend
http://monthlyreview.org/2014/03/01/proposing-path-socialism-two-papers-hugo-chavez/

Excerpt:  This is a society centred on a conscious exchange of activity for 
communal needs and communal purposes. It is a society of new, rich human beings 
who develop in the course of producing with others and for others; these are 
people for whom the desire to possess and the associated need for money (the 
real need that capitalism produces, Marx noted) wither away. We are describing 
a new world in which we have our individual needs, needs for our own “all-round 
development,” but where we are not driven by material incentives to act. It is 
a world in which our activity is its own reward (and is, indeed, “life’s prime 
want”) because we affirm ourselves as conscious social beings through that 
activity, a world in which we produce use-values for others and produce 
ourselves as part of the human family.

How is this accomplished?

Anna




> On 2 Aug 2015, at 09:45, Peter Waterman <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> http://www.socialistproject.ca/bullet/1149.php#continue
> _______________________________________________
> NetworkedLabour mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.contrast.org/mailman/listinfo/networkedlabour

_______________________________________________
P2P Foundation - Mailing list

Blog - http://www.blog.p2pfoundation.net
Wiki - http://www.p2pfoundation.net

Show some love and help us maintain and update our knowledge commons by making 
a donation. Thank you for your support.
https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/donation

https://lists.ourproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/p2p-foundation

Reply via email to