Volume 13, No. 44, 31 October 2014



In this Issue:

*        <http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=4543#redpen> Second radical
phase of SA`s transition: Where is class analysis? The SACP moves to give
content to policy change
*        <http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=4543#one> Technological
revolution and the communications industry

 


 

 


Red Alert

Second radical phase of SA`s transition: Where is class analysis? 

The SACP moves to give content to policy change



 

 

By Alex Mashilo 

 

On Tuesday 30 October 2014, the South African Communist Party (SACP)
launched the first discussion document on intensifying the National
Democratic Revolution in through advancing a 'second, more radical phase of
transition'. The call for a second radical phase of South Africa's (SA's)
democratic transition, dating back to 2012, was first put forward by South
Africa's governing party, the African National Congress (ANC). It was
adopted as a shared perspective by its alliance partners, the SACP, Congress
of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu) and SA National Civics Organisation. 

 

The ANC-led Alliance is at the forefront of an array of mass democratic
movement formations, together with which it forms the national liberation
movement that defeated the apartheid regime in 1994 to lay the foundation
for the development of democracy in SA, and continues to enjoy an
overwhelming support. The Alliance remains the best organised expression to
move SA forward.

 

SACP General Secretary, Comrade Blade Nzimande, and First Deputy General
Secretary, Comrade Jeremy Cronin, addressed the launch, which took place in
Cape Town. The 40 page document, titled 'GOING TO THE ROOT: A radical second
phase of the National Democratic Revolution - its context, content, and our
strategic tasks', presents extensive class analysis (which is what is
missing in the National Development Plan's diagnostic) on the persisting
triple crisis of high levels of inequality, unemployment and poverty in SA.

 

But class analysis is a complex process than simply commentating on
surface-level happenings taking place between or within the working class
and the capitalist class or other strata. Discussing 'historical
materialism', Frederick Engels had this to say in his seminal work,
'Socialism: Utopian and Scientific':   

 

'The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the
production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the
exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in
every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is
distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon
what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged.
>From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and
political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's
better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes
of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in the philosophy,
but in the economics of each particular epoch.'

 

This is but only one aspect of the dimensions of the class analysis from the
standpoint of which the SACP presents the context and develops the very
first contribution on the basic content and our strategic tasks for the
second, more radical phase of SA's democratic revolutionary transition. 

 

As usual, the Party doesn't, however, make any siren announcement that the
analysis it presents is a class analysis. The Party moves off from the
surface and the effects - the triple crisis of inequality, unemployment and
poverty - deeper into the essence, their causes and driving forces - these
are all to be found in the economic base, the social and trade relationships
and the politics that have therein historically developed. When deep there
you might not find it if you limit you look at the surface only. You might
in fact as well start looking for a class analysis on class analysis. This
is what happened at the launch when one of our colleagues asked: "Where is
class analysis?" in the document. 

 

The Party's approach is consistent with the great revolutionary
theoretician, Karl Marx, who developed the most profound and fundamental
critique of political economy, Capital, which was never overtaken by any
since the first of its three volumes was published 147 years ago in 1867. 

 

Marx applied the philosophy of materialism and its historical and
dialectical pillars combined - the very method of class analysis employed by
the SACP in its discussion document - without making any noise about this
scientific enquiry into realty rather than in that philosophy itself (taking
our cue from Engels, above). Like the SACP in its paper, Marx actually wrote
less about the method, but applied it both extensively and consistently. He
produced volumes of work many years ago but his analysis remains universally
valid to the general movement of society.  

 

Interestingly, he produced eleven 'Theses On Feuerbach'.

 

"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the
point is to change it", reads the last Thesis!

 

Dear Umsebenzi Online readers, let us engage. But at the end of the day what
we seek to achieve is revolutionary change - the second, more radical phase
of SA's democratic transition. In line with the political theory of the
SACP, this must complete with a culmination in the indispensable basis for
an advance to socialism.  

 

We are therefore pleased to present to you in the form of links, the 'SACP
introductory statement at the public launch of a discussion document on the
second radical phase of SA's democratic transition',

 

http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=4540#sthash.yZT9XpBb.dpuf;

 

And the main paper, 'GOING TO THE ROOT: A radical second phase of the
National Democratic Revolution -its context, content, and our strategic
task' in a PDF format,

 

http://www.sacp.org.za/pubs/buakomanis/2014/vol8-2.pdf.

 

The SACP expects to produce the second edition of the paper by April 2015
for further discussion at its Special National Congress to be held during
that month, taking into consideration all contributions to be received. 

 

Alex Mashilo is SACP Spokesperson, writing in personal capacity.  

 

 

Technological revolution and the communications industry

 

By Comrade Solly Mapaila

 

The communications industry has restructured almost fundamentally in the
last 2-3 decades. This has occurred through a technological revolution,
including the transcending of new technologies both in economic production
and the household. 

 

The evolution of computers through a robust process of product development
and increased software applications used in end-user computers, for example
desktops, laptops, tablets and the 'computerisation of cell phones' (i.e.
the development of smart phones), have given impetus to the restructuring. 

 

Increased flexibility to the ever growing software applications, the
development of internet, and a robust growth in social networking and
multi-media platforms, continue not only to restructure the avenues of
information disbursement and exchange, but the structures of both production
and employment. 

 

All communications sectors are affected, including the print media. 

 

As people shift their decisions on information sources and news, and
increasingly find a reliable alternative and content in publishing what they
like or find necessary to share using mobile phones, emails, online
platforms, etc., newspapers and magazines are experiencing new challenges to
circulation - a decline in demand and therefore volume (some are themselves
shifting online from print). This is the direction we will intensify.

 

There are increasing questions about whether the figures that are being
claimed on newspaper circulations to be still high in some respects are a
true reflection of reality. 

 

In addition, there are newspapers that survive, and not by a small measure,
on public sector advertising. Without this they will definitely face major
problems. The Sunday Times falls in this category. In fact it could as well
be that it is public sector advertising that sells more than the news
content being pushed. Multi-million of public resources in Rand value terms
are monthly spent by the public sector through advertising. Surely this
helps to keep such papers afloat.

 

Let alone their hostile content, this backs several questions. 

 

Why is the state not establishing its own, or at least a public, print
platform, or explore other alternatives to take advantage of its own
advertising in the remaining print media space? Alternatively, why is the
state not considering the demand for its and public sector advertising as a
strategic lever of power to achieve transformation, this not only in terms
of ownership and control, but also better conditions for workers in the
media, and, of course, fair, accurate, balanced and objective reporting? 

 

We must take these and other transformational, albeit vexing, questions
seriously and press ahead with change to benefit the people as a whole, the
workers and poor in majority. This is one of the important considerations
for the second radical phase of our democratic transition.

 

Progressive trade unionism and restructuring 

 

It is critical for the progressive union movement organising in the
communication industry to constantly study restructuring as should be the
case across all sectors. Restructuring has serious implications not only for
employment, but deriving from it, trade union organising as well. With
changes in employment structures, shifts and declining levels of the
workforce, there simultaneously occurs serious organising and bargaining
questions for consideration by the labour movement.  

 

Let us go easy, for now. Who still remembers letter writing? Just think
about what emails, instant messaging and social media platforms have done to
it. What about the structure and levels of employment in postal services?
And then the enormous efficiency with which interactive communication
occurs? 

 

Just in passing - there are implications for education as well especially
among young people. Writing skills, spelling and grammar are all facing a
decline in social interaction. With the rise of short message services (SMS)
and instant messaging a new abbreviated language is rising. 

 

Back to our track field. 

 

As the old, traditional communication industry was and continues to be
negated and the new one develops many workers were and continue to be
retrenched from jobs in the traditional communication sector. The workforce
that was previously employed both by the SA Post Office and Telkom, for
instance, has been cut down "radically". A few months ago Telkom was
contemplating further reductions in thousands of workers - all for profit
maximisation linked with previous partial privatisation and full
commercialisation. 

 

In addition, what will happen in the postal services sector after the
current strike at SA Post Office remains to be seen. 

 

Letter writing between individuals is virtually extinct as we highlight
above. Despite increasingly shifting to emails to replace letters,
corporations still communicate to consumers through letters, for example in
terms of monthly account statements based on the problematic financial
retail and credit driven consumption - which among others we seek to
confront through our Financial Sector Campaign.  Municipalities? Likewise.
Of course postal services also involve many other goods than letters only.
UNISA for example is one of, if not the largest, client of the SA Post
Office. 

 

Unlike the SACP that supports workers in the struggle for better conditions,
including pay, decision-makers in both the private and public sector who are
interested in profit might be exploring a shift from the SA Post Office to
the private postal services (which have by far deepened labour exploitation
through labour brokers) in response to the strike and future strikes in
future. Thanks the SA Post Office is comparatively affordable, the only main
"barrier" perhaps still holding them back. 

 

But there are also these other privately self-centred fellows, the
tenderpreneurs. Who knows whether they are busy lobbying UNISA - which
stopped students from directly collecting reading materials at the
university in favour of postal services - to shift from the SA Post Office
to feed their private accumulation interests?       

 

Traditional landline, mobile phones, and progressive trade unionism 

The mobile phone sector has introduced new structures and relationships of
employment compared to the traditional landline sector. Jobs that were, and
remain, important in the landline sector have been cut off in the mobile
phone sector due to the differences in the structure of production,
including signal transmission, distribution and related maintenance. 

 

As neoliberal restructuring entrenched, both at the SA Post Office and
Telkom a phenomenon of labour brokers has taken root (worse in private
postal services as we state above). The progressive trade union movement,
with the full support of the SACP, has been fighting against this phenomenon
which we want to abolish.

 

This just struggle against the 'proletarian slave traders' must be
intensified in the communication industry as a whole as well. Private mobile
phone and broadband service providers with large corporations being dominant
(MTN, Vodacom, Cell C, Virgin, Nashua, etc.) are using labour brokers too.
They must not be left to run away with the blood of the workers on their
hands.           

 

The progressive trade union movement will have to look at its own organising
and collective bargaining strategies on a constant basis and keep pace with
the times. The mobile phone sector for example has many small and outsourced
outlets which are largely unorganised and not involved in collective
bargaining. This needs greater attention. 

 

There is a difference between organising small shops that are dispersed and
big corporate entities with large centres of production, trade and retail.
The articulation of collective bargaining towards the realisation and
practical elaboration of centralised sectoral and industry bargaining to
strengthen workers power will equally require an increased effort, new
strategies and tactics.

 

Analogue to digital migration and terrestrial television 

 

This process is both extensively and intensely contested to the extent that
our country was held back from advancing. Analogue to digital migration will
not only improve the quality of visuals and audio - at the heart of the
contest are the forces of private capital accumulation competing for the
billions in Rand value terms which will come with state subsidy to millions
of households for the Set Top Boxes (STBs) required to decode the signal.
Currently there is monopoly in the host of the digital platform which is
used for pay television. The forces involved in this would not like to lose
the monopoly. The digital space also provides increased capacity to host far
more television stations than analogue. 

 

All of these and the entire value chain which includes forward- and
back-ward linkages, up- and down-stream activities, starting in the
manufacture of electronic components, software and related "intellectual
property" rights, assembly of the STBs, the logistics involved, installation
and maintenance, the production of shows and studio equipment, etc., amount
to billions and overtime trillions and more in Rand value terms. These are
not only contested by the established sections of local capital in alliance
with various factions of the tenderpreneuring strata, but transnational
corporations as well, and, on their behalf, also through the trade and
foreign policies of their "home" countries.  

 

As the working class we need to intervene in this space urgently and
dislodge the corporate capture of this process for the benefit of society as
a whole! 

 

Conclusion

 

In their analysis of class struggle, Karl Marx and Frederick Engels in
Manifesto of the Communist Party (1848) find that under capitalism the
development of production technology makes workers' livelihood more and more
precarious; improvement in production technology under capitalism, adds Marx
in Capital, is not employed to ease the toil of the workers, but to deepen
their exploitation and engage in price competition to feed private capital
accumulation.    

This leads to collisions between individual workers and employers, which,
more and more assume the character of collisions between the two classes.
Workers establish trade unions to engage in this struggle and keep up the
rate of wages. But then while they do achieve victories, these become only
for a time:

 

The real fruit of their battles lies, not in the immediate result, but in
the ever expanding union of the workers. This union is helped on by the
improved means of communication that are created by modern industry, and
that place the workers of different localities in contact with one another.
It was just this contact that was needed to centralise the numerous local
struggles, all of the same character, into one national struggle between
classes. But every class struggle is a political struggle. And that union,
to attain which the burghers of the Middle Ages, with their miserable
highways, required centuries, the modern proletarian, thanks to railways,
achieve in a few years." (Marx & Engels, 1848)

 

As we have showed above, modern industry has revolutionised the means of
communication by adding more platforms, some of which we highlight above.
This advantages the working class far more than at the time of Marx and
Engels but in the direction they have pointed out. 

 

Let us intensify unity and the struggle against exploitation. Let use the
latest means of communication to be in touch with one another, directly,
without relying on the intermediary mainstream media which generally
exercises despotic censorship by large proportions against revolutionary
working class content. At the same time, we must intensify the struggle
against the very same suppression and the struggle against the exploitative
logic of restructuring in the communication industry and across the entire
sphere of economic activity.  

 

Comrade Solly Mapaila is SACP Second Deputy General Secretary   

 

 

 

 

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