In his latest blog post
(http://www.feralscholar.org/blog/index.php/2011/06/19/why-i-wont-vote-and-you-shouldnt-either/),
Stan Goff calls people not to vote in 2012.  He argues that defensive
voting for the Democrats, although partly justified, hasn't stopped
the worsening of conditions for working people.  Stan implies that, by
not voting, people should be able to reduce their political loses, if
not turn them into gains.  (Although, at a point, Stan rejects this
mode of analysis as utilitarian.  But I'm hereby giving readers
permission to broaden their notion of what is good for working people
in order to transcend any narrow utilitarianism.)

Stan argues that now is the right time to switch from defensive voting
for the DP to not voting.  How does Stan know this?  Because if by now
people have not become sufficiently disappointed with the lousy
political performance of their defensive voting strategy, then they
never will.  An additional argument that Stan brandishes is that the
system is fundamentally rigged and the only chance people have to
advance their interest is by shifting the battleground outside of the
electoral process.  Sabotaging the elections is thus the proper
course.  (Of course, Stan's argument is much richer and expansive that
my little capsule here, but I will limit my comments to this part
alone.)

I will say here that Stan's latter argument is essentially correct.
The US legal and political system -- as it exists -- imposes serious
constraints on the independent political activity of working people,
and the space for working people to reform the system without a
serious disruption is rather narrow (although not inexistent).  As it
is, the legal and political system is unacceptable and, if working
people are to preserve and assert our humanity, then this system has
to go.

However, this latter argument doesn't necessarily settle that the time
to switch from defensive voting for the DP to not voting or some other
strategy (e.g. voting offensively for our own candidate) is now.
Again, Stan's argument boils down to asserting that the time is now,
because he, Stan, has realized that the time is now.

I've argued before, in an essay that needs some updating and
tightening but whose main points retain most of their validity
(http://www.swans.com/library/art11/jhuato01.html), that the relevant
criterion to decide on strategic matters of the political struggle is
not the opinion of a few individuals, but the actual practical
political motion of masses of working people.

If one judges people by their deeds, rather than by what they may
opine or say occasionally, it is apparent that people, or at least the
most politically active segment of the US working people, are not yet
convinced that without or outside of the DP they will be able to
reduce their political losses (or increase their gains).  It's, of
course, a chicken and egg situation.  They look around and they don't
see a lot of their neighbors and co-workers jumping ship, so they are
not eager to be first.  And by so doing, they perpetuate the problem.
So, how can this vicious cycle be broken?

When I encounter situations like this in life, I tend to fall back on
my understanding of Hegelian and Marxian dialectics.  It seems to me
that leaps in the quality of an organic process have to be preceded by
a prolonged, very patient process of accumulation of small
quantitative changes.  By definition, in and by themselves,
quantitative changes do not alter the quality of the process.  The
quality remains.  But those gradual changes prepare the sudden
alteration in quality.  In this case, I envision a lot of propaganda,
agitation, organization, and local struggles preceding a
national-scale mass movement capable of:

(1) forcing the structures of the DP to adapt to the demands of the
mass movement (kind of like Wisconsin but national), or
(2) bypassing the structures of the DP, because they fail to adapt to
the demands of the mass movement, or
(3) emerging as an outright, direct insurrection against the
structures of the DP, because those structures antagonize the
political motion of those masses.

I imagine something like the mass eruptions in Tunisia or Egypt,
except that at a US scale.  I don't think we can miss the signature of
events of that kind.

Under conditions that fall short of this mass eruption, not voting is
not likely to work.  I believe that not voting will fail to impose
conditions on the two party system.  I don't think the two party
system will have much of a problem dealing with such a challenge.  It
is true that, if we don't shift the battleground, if we accept the
conditions that the system imposes on us, then we'll be terribly
constrained and our advances will look like the Sisiphean torture --
pushing a boulder uphill only to see it roll down repeatedly once we
momentarily exhaust ourselves.  But we cannot just will conditions
that don't exist.

Frankly, I do not see how we can resolve this problem on pure
ideological or superficially political grounds.  It is precisely
through the Sisiphean torture of an immense preparatory work that we
make ourselves capable of helping an eventual mass eruption become a
more coherent, politically conscious force.
The more we entertain those get-politically-rich-quick schemes, the
more we postpone or fail to undertake that preparatory work.  I say
this with all due respect to Stan, but also with the frank critical
attitude that any serious reflection deserves.

But, what if Stan's proposal is *precisely* the spark that could lead
to the kind of mass political explosion described above?  IMO, that is
a remote possibility.  Very remote.  Other fortuitous circumstances
would have to coincide with it and compound it.  However, a remote
possibility is not an impossibility.  So, I am willing to cut Stan
some slack.  I think it was Woody Allen who said that 80% of success
is showing up -- 80% of political success is daring to experiment.
Since Stan is so eager to jump the gun -- so eager to substitute his
own personal example for the masses in political motion, and since I
don't think his individual exercise in vote sabotage can do us much
harm at this point, I will do my part to amplify its positive impact.
As far as I'm concerned, Stan can "go ahead" and try his approach in
2012.  I say this without a hint of cynicism.  I'll respect his
actions and wish him the best.  Moreover, again, I will help him
publicize his actions and expand its impact.  Let's hope much good
comes out of it.

Meanwhile, Stan and everybody else need to do more basic organizing
work.  This is not exclusive of what Stan is proposing.  I mean, not
entirely exclusive.  Ideally, to use the old terms, our strategy
should capitalize on our propaganda (emphasis on the commonality of
interests of working people, broadly defined) and our tactics should
capitalize on our agitation (a campaign against the concrete miseries
of the crisis, wars, etc.).  At this point, clearly, the radical left
does not have a unified and coherent strategy.  But people start where
they may.

I'll finish with a few words on the latter.  Picking up on some of the
ideas I threw out in my essay on the Democrats and listening to others
who know better, I believe that the greatest promise lies, not in
national struggles (where, IMO, one way or another, we'll be operating
within the strictures imposed by the system), but in smaller scale
local battles.  Let's go local.  Let's work seriously to take over
PTAs, unions, municipal governments -- entities charged with managing
resources for specific public purposes, even if those resources are
meager and shrinking.  Let's go after them.  If we think we can change
the system within our lifetimes, then this certainly will feel like
small change.  What I envision is taking over a town and turning it
around.  To the extent possible, converting that town into a small,
democratically managed, proto-socialist island.  Let's show the world
and ourselves how the left can help people manage (and manage well)
their public affairs at a local level.  Let's go wherever the fruit
hangs lowest.  That is the kind of work that, sooner than we think,
will ripen things at the national level.  When things come to a head
then, we will know that the time to switch away from the Democrats has
arrived.

Comradely,

Julio Huato
Brooklyn, NY
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