Liu Shaoqi How to Be a Good Communist
------------------------------
VI. A Party Member's Personal Interests Must be Unconditionally Subordinated
to the Interests of the Party

Personal interests must be subordinated to the Party's interests, the
interests of the local Party organization to those of the entire Party, the
interests of the part to those of the whole, and temporary to long-term
interests. This is a Marxist-Leninist principle which must be followed by
every Communist.

A Communist must be clear about the correct relationship between personal
and Party interests.

The Communist Party is the political party of the proletariat and has no
interests of its own other than those of the emancipation of the
proletariat. The final emancipation of the proletariat will also inevitably
be the final emancipation of all mankind. Unless the proletariat emancipates
all working people and all nations - unless it emancipates mankind as a
whole - it cannot fully emancipate itself. The cause of the emancipation of
the proletariat is identical with and inseparable from the cause of the
emancipation of all working people, all oppressed nations and all mankind.
Therefore, the interests of the Communist Party are the emancipation of the
proletariat and all mankind, are communism and social progress.. When a
Party member''s personal interests are subordinated to those of the Party,
they are subordinated to the interests of the emancipation of the class and
the nation, and those of communism and social progress.

Comrade Mao Zedong has said:

At no time and in no circumstances should a Communist place his personal
interests first; he should subordinate to the interests of the nation and of
the masses. Hence selfishness, slacking, corruption, seeking the limelight
are most contemptible, while selfishness, working with all one's energy,
whole hearted devotion to public duty, and quiet hard work will command
respect.1<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#1>

The test of a Party member's loyalty to the Party, the revolution, the cause
of communism is whether or not he can subordinate his personal interests
absolutely and unconditionally to the interests of the Party whatever the
circumstances.

At all times and all questions a party member should give first
consideration to the interests of the Party as a whole and put them in the
foremost and place personal matters and interests second. The supremacy of
the Party's interests is the highest principle that must govern the thinking
and actions of the members of our Party. In accordance with this principle,
every Party member must completely identify his personal interests with
those of the Party both in his thinking and in his actions of the members of
our Party both in his thinking and in his actions. He must be able o yield
to the interests of the Party without any hesitations or reluctance and
sacrifice his personal interests what ever of the two are at variance.
Unhesitating readiness to sacrifice personal interests and even one's life,
for the Party and for the proletariat and for the emancipation of the nation
and of all mankind - this is one expression of what we usually describe as
"Party spirit", "Party sense" or "sense of organization'. It is the highest
expression of communist morality, of the principled nature of the party of
the proletariat and of the purest proletarian class consciousness.

Members of our Party should not have personal aims which are independent of
the Party interests. Their personal aims must harmonize with the Party's
interests. If the aim they set for themselves is to study Marxist-Leninist
theory, to develop their ability in work, to establish revolutionary
organizations and to lead the masses in successful revolutionary struggles -
if their aim is more is to do more for the Party - then this personal aim
harmonizes with the interests of the Party. The Party needs many such
members and cadres. Apart from this aim, Party members should have no
independent personal motives such as attaining position of fame, or playing
the individual hero; otherwise they will depart from the interests of the
Party and may even become careerists within the Party.

If a Party member thinks only of the communist interests and aims of the
Party, is really selfless and has no personal aims and considerations
divorced from those of the Party, and he ceaselessly raises the level of his
political consciousness through revolutionary practice and through the study
of Marxism-Leninism, then the following ensues.

First, he has a high communist morality. Taking a clear-cut, firm
proletarian stand, he is able to show loyalty to and love for all comrades,
all revolutionaries and working people, help them unreservedly and act
towards them as equals, and he will never allow himself to hurt a single one
of them for his own interests. He is able to feel for others, place himself
in their position and be considerate of them. On the other hand, he is able
to wage resolute struggle against the pernicious enemies of mankind and
persevere in the fight for the interests of the Party, the proletariat and
the emancipation of the nation and all mankind. "He is the first to worry
and the last to enjoy
himself".2<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#2>Whether
in the Party of among the people, he is the first to suffer hardship
and the last to enjoy comfort; he compares himself with others not with
respect to the material enjoyment but to the amount of work done for the
revolution and the spirit of hard endurance in the struggle. In times of
adversity he steps forward boldly, and in times of difficulty he does his
duty to the full. He has such revolutionary firmness and integrity that
"neither riches nor honours can corrupt him, neither poverty nor lowly
condition can make him swerve from principle, neither threats nor force can
bend 
him".3<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#3>

Second, he has the greatest revolutionary courage. Having no selfish
motives, he has nothing to fear. Having done nothing to give himself a
guilty conscience, he can lay bare and courageously correct his mistakes and
short comings, which are like "an eclipse of the sun or the
moon".4<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#4>Because
he has the courage of righteous conviction, he never fears the
truth, courageously upholds it, spreads it and fights for it. Even if it is
temporarily to his disadvantage and if, in upholding the truth, he suffers
blows of all kinds, is censured by most other people and so finds himself in
temporary (and honourable) isolation, even to the point where he may give up
his life, he will still breast the waves to uphold the truth and will never
drift with the tide.

Third, he learns how best to grasp the theory of Marxism-Leninism. He is
able to apply them in keenly observing problems and in knowing and changing
reality. Because he takes a clear-cut, firm proletarian stand and is
tempered in Marxism-Leninism, he is free from personal apprehensions and
self-interest, so that there is no impediment to his observation of things
or distortion of his understanding of the truth. He seeks the truth from the
facts, and he tests all theories and distinguishes what is true from what is
false in revolutionary practice.

Fourth, he is the most sincere, most candid and happiest of men. Because he
has no private axe to grind, nothing to conceal from the Party and nothing
he cannot tell others, he has no problems of personal gain or loss and no
personal anxieties other than for the interests of the Party and the
revolution. Even when he is working on his own without supervision and
therefore has the opportunity to do something bad, he is just as "watchful
over himself when he is
alone"5<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#5>and
does not do anything harmful. His work bears examination and he is not
afraid having it checked. He does not fear criticism and at the same time is
able to criticize others with courage and sincerity.

Fifth, he has the greatest self-respect and self-esteem. For the sake of the
Party and the revolution he can be most forbearing and tolerant towards
comrades and can suffer wrong in the general interest, even enduring
misunderstanding and humiliation without bitterness if the occasion so
demands. No personal aims lead him to flatter anyone or to desire flattery
from others. When it comes to personal matters, he knows how to conduct
himself and has no need to humble himself in order to get help from others.
He knows how to take good care of himself in the interests of the Party and
the revolution and how to strengthen both his grasp of theory and his
practical effectiveness. But when it is necessary to swallow humiliations
and bear a heavy load for some important purpose in the cause of the Party
and the revolution, he can take on the most difficult and vital tasks
without the slightest reluctance, never passing the difficulties to others.

A member of the Communist Party should possess the finest and highest human
virtues and take a clear-cut and firm Party and proletarian stand (that is,
possess Party spirit and class spirit). Ours is a fine morality precisely
because it is proletarian and communist. It is founded not on the protection
of the interests of individuals or of the exploiting few, but on those of
the great proletariat and the great mass of working people, of the cause of
the final emancipation of all mankind, and the liberation of the whole world
from the calamities of capitalism, and the building of a happy and beautiful
communist world - t is a morality founded on the Marxist-Leninist theory of
scientific communism. As we Communists see it, nothing can be more worthless
or indefensible than to sacrifice oneself in the interests of an individual
or a small minority. But it is the worthiest and most just thing in the
world to sacrifice oneself for the Party, for the proletariat, for the
emancipation of the nation and all mankind, for social progress and for the
highest interests of the overwhelming majority of the people. Indeed,
countless members of the Communist Party have looked death calmly in the
face and made the ultimate sacrifice without the slightest hesitation. Most
Communists consider it a matter of course to die for the sake of the cause,
to lay down their lives for justice, when that is necessary. This does not
stem from any revolutionary fanaticism or hunger for fame but from their
scientific understanding of social development and their deep political
consciousness. There is no morality in class society to compare with this
high communist morality. The universal morality which supposedly transcends
class is sheer deceptive nonsense and in fact a morality designed to protect
the interests of the exploiting few. Such a concept of morality is always
idealist. It is only we communists who build our morality on the scientific
basis of historical materialism and proclaim its purpose to be the
protection of the interests of the proletariat in the struggle for the
emancipation of itself and all mankind.

The Communist Party represents the general and long-range interests of the
proletariat and all mankind in their struggle for emancipation; the Party's
interests are the concentrated expression of this cause. One must never
regard the communist Party as a narrow clique, like the guild perusing the
interests of its members. Anyone who does so is no Communist.

A Party member has interests of his own, which may be inconsistent with or
even run counter to the interests of the Party in certain circumstances.
Should this happen, it is incumbent on him to sacrifice his personal
interests and unconditionally subordinate them to the interests of the
Party; under no pretence or excuse may he sacrifice the Party's interests by
clinging to his own. At all times and in all circumstances, he should fight
heart and soul for the Party's interests and for the Party's development,
regarding every success and victory won by the Party and the proletariat as
his very own. Every Party member should strive to increase his effectiveness
and ability in the service of the people. But this must be done in the fight
for the advancement, success and victory of the Party's cause, and there
must be no striving for individual development divorced from the fight to
advance the Party's cause. The facts prove that only by complete devotion in
the fight for the advancement, success and victory of the Party's cause can
a Party member heighten his effectiveness and ability and that he cannot
possibly make progress of heighten his ability in any other way. Hence a
Party member can and must completely merge his personal interests with those
of the Party.

Members of our Party are no ordinary people but the awakened vanguard
fighters of the proletariat. They must conscientiously represent the class
interests and class ideology of the proletariat. Therefore, their personal
interests must never project beyond those of the party and the proletariat.
It is all the more necessary for each cadre and leader of the Party to be a
living embodiment of the general interests of the Party and the proletariat
and to merge his personal interests completely in their general interests
and aims. In present-day China, it is the proletariat that best represents
the interests of national liberation, and therefore our Party members must
be worthy champions of the interests of the nation as a whole.

Members of our Party must subordinate personal to Party interests and are
required to sacrifice them to party interests if necessary. But this by no
means implies that our Party does not recognise, or brushes aside, the
personal interest of its members or that it wants to wipe out their
individuality. Party members do have their personal problems to attend to,
and, moreover, they should develop themselves according to their individual
inclinations and aptitudes. Therefore, so long as the interests of the Party
are not violated, a Party member can have his private and family life and
develop his individual inclinations and aptitudes. At the same time, the
Party will use every possibility to help members develop their individual
inclinations and aptitudes in conformity with its interests, furnish them
with suitable work and working conditions and commend and reward them. As
far as possible, the Party will attend to and safeguard its members'
essential interests; for example,, it will give them the opportunity to
study and to acquire an education, it will help them cope with health and
family problems and, when necessary, it will even give up some of its work
in order to preserve comrades working under the rule of reaction. But all
this has no other purpose than the overall interests of the Party. For the
fulfillment of its tasks the Party must ensure that members have the
conditions necessary for life, work and education so that they can perform
their tasks with enthusiasm and without worry. Comrades in responsible Party
positions must bear all this in mind when they deal with Party members'
problems.

To sum up, on his side, each Party member should completely submit himself
to the interests of the Party and self-sacrificingly devote himself to the
public duty. He should forego all personal aims and private considerations
which conflict with the Party's interests. He should not think of himself
all the time, make endless personal demands on the Party or blame the Party
for not promoting or rewarding him. Whatever the circumstances, he should
study hard, try to make progress, be courageous in struggle and make
ceaseless efforts to raise the level of his political consciousness and his
understanding of Marxism-Leninism, so as to be able to contribute more to
the Party and the revolution. On their side all Party organizations and
comrades in responsible positions, in dealing with the problems of Party
members, should see how they work, live and study. and enable them to work
better for the Party, ceaselessly develop themselves and raise their level
in the course of the revolutionary struggle of the proletariat. In
particular, attention should be paid to comrades who are really selfless and
who serve the people well. Only so, through combined attention and effort by
both sides can the interests of the Party be well served.
------------------------------

1.<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#1b>≴The
Roll of the Chinese Communist Party in the National War≵,
*Selected Works of Mao Zedong,* Eng. ed., FLP, Beijing, 1975, Vol. II p.
198.

2.<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#2b>See
*Yue Yang Lou Ji,* by Fan Zhongyan (989-1052) of the Song Dynasty.

3.<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#3b>From
*Mencius,* Book III, ≴Teng Wen Gong≵, Part II.

4.<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#4b>See
the
*Confucian Analects,* Book XIX , ≴Zi Zhang≵, Chapter 21. ≴The faults of
superior men are like the eclipses of the sun and the moon. When they
appear, all men see them; when he corrects them, all men look up to him.≵

5.<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/liu-shaoqi/1939/how-to-be/ch06.htm#5b>See
the Confucian ≴Doctrine of the Mean≵ in the
*Book of Rites*: ≴There is nothing more visible than what is secret, and
nothing more manifest than that which is minute. Therefore the superior man
is watchful over himself when he is alone.≵

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