http://socialistworker.org/2009/02/16/return-of-marx

The return of Marx
The ideas of Karl Marx--that class society creates great wealth for the few at 
the expense of the many--ring truer every day. Brian Jones examines Marx's 
revolutionary ideas in this first of three articles.

February 16, 2009

IN THE last 150 years of U.S. history, you can't point to a generation whose 
most active, radical layers have not been drawn to the ideas of Karl Marx.


Series: Marx is back 
Read Brian Jones' three-part series of articles on Karl Marx and his 
contribution to the socialist tradition.

Part 1: The return of Marx

Part 2: Marx becomes a Marxist

Part 3: Marx's vision of socialism


This was true of the abolitionist movement (Marxist immigrants even fought with 
the Northern Army in the Civil War), the early pioneers of our labor movement, 
the hundreds of thousands (if not millions) who passed through Socialist and 
Communist Parties in the first half of the 20th century, and of the many 
thousands who joined the Black Panther Party and other parties that declared 
themselves against capitalism and in favor of socialism in the late 1960s and 
early 1970s.

Millions of people around the world have sought, from the Marxist tradition, a 
way to win a different kind of society free of poverty, oppression and war. 
That rather hopeful premise--that a different kind of world is actually 
possible--goes a long way toward explaining how it could be that the only book 
that can compete (in terms of paid sales) with the Bible is the Communist 
Manifesto.


What you can do 
Brian Jones is among the speakers at a series of Marx is Back forums in New 
York City and New Jersey. Come to a meeting to discuss these ideas and the 
struggle to change the world. For full details on all the meetings, see the 
Marx is Back Speaking Tour Web page.

New York University
Wednesday, March 11, 7 p.m.
E-mail [email protected] for information.

CUNY Grad Center
Thursday, March 12, 4:30 p.m.
E-mail [email protected] for information.

Baruch College
Tuesday, March 17, 7 p.m.
E-mail [email protected] for information.

City College of New York
Thursday, March 19, 7 p.m.
E-mail [email protected] for information.

The Diversity Center of Queens
Wednesday, March 25, 7 p.m.
E-mail [email protected] for information.


It was that project--the fight for a better world--that motivated Marx. At his 
funeral, Marx's lifelong collaborator and closest friend, Frederick Engels, 
said of him: "Marx was before all else a revolutionist. His real mission in 
life was to contribute, in one way or another, to the overthrow of capitalist 
society and of the state institutions which it had brought into 
being...Fighting was his element. And he fought with a passion, a tenacity and 
a success such as few could rival."

But when you try to go out and learn something about Marx, you will quickly 
discover that it is precisely this tenacious revolutionism that is discarded by 
mainstream treatments of him. "Marx had good ideas," they want you to believe, 
"but don't try to put them into practice." Or, as another twist on the same 
idea: "He was good at analyzing the problems of capitalism, but obviously wrong 
about the solution."

Time magazine recently published a feature article, "Rethinking Marx" 
(interestingly, it was available only in Britain), with essentially the same 
thesis:

  Marx's utopian predictions about revolution and the triumph of socialism were 
dead wrong; indeed, many of the policies carried out in his name in the 20th 
century brought misery to millions in countries ranging from Russia to China, 
and including large chunks of Africa.

  Yet...if you leave aside the prophetic, prescriptive parts of Marx's 
writings, there's a trenchant diagnosis of the underlying problems of a market 
economy that is surprisingly relevant even today...He was moved by glaring 
inequalities between rich and poor that are more topical than ever today... 


Columnist: Brian Jones 
 Brian Jones is a teacher, actor and activist in New York City. His commentary 
and writing have been featured on GritTV, SleptOn.com and the International 
Socialist Review. Jones has also lent his voice to several audiobooks, 
including Noam Chomsky's Hegemony or Survival, Howard Zinn and Anthony Arnove's 
Voices of a People's History of the United States and Zinn's one-man play Marx 
in Soho (forthcoming from Haymarket Books).


In short, Marx painted a picture of the capitalism's excesses, but forget 
trying to replace it. Replacing capitalism, Time magazine warns, leads straight 
to Stalin's prison labor camps. Time wants us to "leave aside the prescriptive 
parts," which is like going to the doctor for a diagnosis, but not for a cure.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

MARX HAD a peculiar problem: People formed groups under his name--but Marx 
actually had fundamental disagreements with their ideas. "I, at least," Marx 
was fond of joking, "am not a Marxist...God save me from my friends!"

In hindsight, it's not too hard to see that figures like Stalin and Mao were 
precisely the sort Marx had in mind.

So what were Marx's real ideas?

Let's start with what Marx actually said about capitalism--the diagnosis. Of 
course, the occasion for Time magazine's feature article--and this talk--is the 
current global economic crisis.

The free market, touted as the best way to run the world, is currently in free 
fall. Not only is the market apparently "broken" as an instrument for spreading 
wealth, it seems apparent to millions (if not billions at this point) that it 
was never intended to spread wealth in the first place.

New York Gov. David Paterson is making cuts in education and health care to 
fill a budget hole (for 2009-2010) of about $15 billion. He's planning to cut 
funding for Head Start, Medicare and food stamps, for example.

Meanwhile, total Wall Street bonuses for 2008 ended up totaling $18.4 billion. 
Merrill Lynch alone handed out $4 billion in bonuses to top executives before 
going belly up. We could easily spend a whole evening imagining the miracles we 
could work if that kind of money were directed to social needs.

People who were hailed for decades as geniuses and heroes, are today exposed as 
frauds, liars and thieves. But none of the gurus of free-market capitalism were 
praised to the heavens like Alan Greenspan. Greenspan was the former head of 
the Federal Reserve, and he was one of those who supported getting rid of the 
regulations on Wall Street so that the free market could work its magic.

In his recent congressional testimony, though, he admitted that he found a 
"flaw" in his free-market model.

  REP. HENRY WAXMAN: In other words, you found that your view of the world, 
your ideology, was not right, it was not working?

  ALAN GREENSPAN: That is--precisely. No, that's precisely the reason I was 
shocked, because I had been going for 40 years or more with very considerable 
evidence that it was working exceptionally well. 

This should be called "The Madoff Defense": Your honor, with all due respect, 
my house of cards did stand for almost 40 years.

Yes, Greenspan found a flaw. Shocking.

Now, it turns out that about 160 years ago, Marx also found a flaw with 
capitalism. The flaw is related to what makes capitalism so dynamic in the 
first place, which is the fact that

  [t]he bourgeoisie cannot exist without constantly revolutionizing the 
instruments of production, and thereby the relations of production, and with 
them the whole relations of society...All fixed, fast-frozen relations...are 
swept away...before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air... 

Capitalism is driven forward by relentless competition, and in an incredibly 
short time (historically speaking), this new system has generated an immense 
output of wealth:

  The bourgeoisie, during its rule of scarce one hundred years, has created 
more massive and more colossal productive forces than have all preceding 
generations together...machinery, application of chemistry to industry and 
agriculture, steam-navigation, railways, electric telegraphs, clearing of whole 
continents for cultivation...what earlier century had even a presentiment that 
such productive forces slumbered in the lap of social labor? 

But the flaw is that all of production is unplanned. So the system has released 
this relentless innovative energy, but it's out of human control, and every so 
many years, there's a crisis.

  Modern bourgeois society...a society that has conjured up such gigantic means 
of production and of exchange, is like the sorcerer who is no longer able to 
control the powers of the nether world whom he has called up by his spells...It 
is enough to mention the commercial crises that by their periodical return put 
the existence of the entire bourgeois society on trial, each time more 
threateningly... 

There was a time, long ago, when people starved because there was not enough 
food. Food was under-produced. Along comes capitalism, and people starve 
because there's too much food!

There's also too many cars, too many TVs, too many basketballs...capitalism's 
competitive production for profit, means there's too many of everything, and 
inevitably therefore, a crisis.

  In these crises, there breaks out an epidemic that, in all earlier epochs, 
would have seemed an absurdity--the epidemic of overproduction. Society 
suddenly finds itself put back into a state of momentary barbarism; it appears 
as if a famine, a universal war of devastation, had cut off the supply of every 
means of subsistence; industry and commerce seem to be destroyed; and why? 
Because there is too much civilization, too much means of subsistence, too much 
industry, too much commerce. 

And to what do we owe the honor of our current economic catastrophe? Too many 
houses!

Not too many houses to house people. Not too many for the millions of homeless. 
Only too many to be sold at a profit. So houses must sit empty, people must be 
thrown out of work (2 million people were laid off in just the last four 
months), stores, factories and offices must be closed, it seems that a 
"universal war of devastation" is taking place--all so that the free market can 
repair itself.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

BUT EVEN without this flaw, even without overproduction, in "ordinary" times, 
even in a boom, great wealth and great poverty are two sides of the same 
capitalist coin.

How did rich people become rich, anyway? Are they rich because they're so 
thrifty? Are they just more hardworking? No, it's not just that some happen to 
be rich and others by chance are poor. Under capitalism, people are rich 
because others are poor. They're rich because they exploit our labor--but it's 
not obvious how that happens.

In ancient Egypt, if you were a slave, they said to you, "Good morning, you're 
going to build that pyramid over there until you die. And no, we're not going 
to give you anything in return. Get started." If you were a peasant in the 
Middle Ages, the king would send a tax collector who would say, "Oh, what a 
wonderful crop you've grown! We'll take half. Good job."

It's obvious that they're stealing from you in those systems. In capitalism, 
however, it's not as obvious.

Capitalists buy and then sell things to make a profit. But it's not just a 
question of marking up the price in between. You couldn't build a whole society 
on just marking up everything. All the markups would cancel each other out. 
Wealth has to be created somehow.

The capitalists buy a lot of things--raw materials, machinery, buildings and 
labor. Then they turn around and sell a product, hopefully for more than they 
paid for all of those ingredients. The trick is that one of those ingredients 
is different from the others, one of them is special: labor.

As Paul D'Amato put it in The Meaning of Marxism:

  It is, Marx noted, a "good piece of luck" that labor's use is greater than 
"what the capitalist pays for that use." The value of labor power--that is, 
wages--is less than the value of output that this labor can produce. Put 
another way, workers produce enough value to cover the cost of their wages...in 
just part of the working day. The labor performed for the rest of the working 
day does not have to be paid for--it is "surplus labor," which produces 
"surplus value," and therefore when the product is sold, this unpaid portion 
goes into the pocket of the capitalists. 

That our wages are calculated as an hourly payment hides the fact that for part 
of every working day, the boss is actually getting something for nothing. 
Ultimately, that's why capitalism creates such disparities of wealth--it's a 
system where a few people exploit the labor of many.

For a moment, though, leave aside the exploitation. Leave aside the endemic 
poverty, leave aside the cyclical crises. There remains the fact that 
capitalism perverts human nature. Marx called this perversion "alienation."

What does this mean? Keep in mind that creative, social labor is what makes us 
human in the first place--work, in other words. Under capitalism, however, we 
don't have any real control over our work. So the very thing that makes us 
human, is the thing this system takes from us. In Marx's words:

  What constitutes the alienation of labor?

  Firstly, the fact that labor is external to the worker--i.e., does not belong 
to his essential being; that he, therefore, does not confirm himself in his 
work, but denies himself, feels miserable and not happy, does not develop free 
mental and physical energy, but mortifies his flesh and ruins his mind. Hence, 
the worker feels himself only when he is not working; when he is working, he 
does not feel himself. He is at home when he is not working, and not at home 
when he is working. His labor is, therefore, not voluntary but forced, it is 
forced labor. It is, therefore, not the satisfaction of a need but a mere means 
to satisfy needs outside itself. Its alien character is clearly demonstrated by 
the fact that as soon as no physical or other compulsion exists, it is shunned 
like the plague. 

Imagine a bird that hates to fly, or a fish that loathes nothing more than 
swimming, and you have an idea of just what kind of alienated creatures we are, 
living under a system that makes us hate working.

That's a super-brief sketch of what Marx had to say about capitalism's crises, 
about surplus value and about alienation.

NEXT: How Marx became a Marxist


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke