Receive my revolutionary greeting comrades and patriots 

 

VC can you please send us even the remaining chapters of Rosa Luxemburg,
they can be very helpful in our movement in terms of giving direction to
negative tendencies that is trying to kill our organisation, such as
opportunism, careerism and so forth. 

 

Even in Polokwane it was an issue, many wards ANC lost the due to this
sickness, Rudolf Phala even wrote about this, that the Ruling party
attracts careerism, opportunitism and so forth...

 

Comrade Domza please send 

 

AMANDLA..!!!

 

 

Samuel Somcuba

 

'the only things that stand between a person and what they want in life
are the will to try it, and faith to believe its possible"

 

________________________________

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dominic Tweedie
Sent: 01 October 2009 02:30 PM
To: YCLSA EOM Forum
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Local Class Alliance [CU751]

 


 
<http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_D4UK2kWf5ik/SsSchsl02GI/AAAAAAAABbM/GrCJP5bp5
Nk/s1600-h/EbenezerHowardThreeMagnets.jpg> 

[CU for Friday, 2 October 2009]

The politics of class alliance at national level are well understood and
well executed in South Africa in terms of the National Democratic
Revolution
<http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum/web/national-democratic-
revolution-console>  (NDR) policy developed during the last nine
decades, which led to the democratic breakthrough of 1994 and which
remains the dominant framework of South African politics, having been
refreshed at Polokwane in 2007. At national level, the interests of the
working class continue to be well articulated through the South African
Communist Party (SACP), and the trade union movement whose largest
centre is COSATU. 

The petty bourgeoisie, on the other hand, has no dedicated political
expression at national level, and nor has the peasantry. They are
compelled to rely on others. This is in spite of the large size of these
segments of the population in South Africa. It is a consequence the
"sack-of-potatoes" nature of both of these two classes, the rural
petty-bourgeoisie who are the peasants, and the urban peasants, who are
the petty-bourgeois. 

Both classes are made up of individualists, who aspire to live
autonomously, with everything of their own. The working class must
represent the interests of these (mostly very poor) sections of the
population at national level, while the established bourgeoisie would
wish to exploit them as political foot-soldiers for capitalism, and also
to exploit them directly, in the predatory way that the big bourgeoisie
likes to feed off the small bourgeoisie, which Rosa Luxemburg described
so well in Chapter 2 of "Reform or Revolution?
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1900/reform-revolution/index.
htm> " (linked below).

At local level, the situation is reversed. In South Africa, the
organised working class has hardly any formal presence at, in
particular, electoral ward level. Here the petty-bourgeois
individualists are working on home ground and at the same scale as their
own business operations. COSATU Locals and Socialist Forums are in the
shade, if they exist at all. The SACP generates cadres, and organises
and assists the masses, including the ANC, in many different ways, but
it does not stand candidates in elections.

In terms of theory, too, there is very little that would serve as
ideological guidance to the working class, locally. Whereas the
petty-bourgeoisie has an abundance of material and history to rely on,
some of which is linked below. The town is the birthplace of the
bourgeoisie and the natural territory of the petty-bourgeoisie, and the
municipality is the "executive committee" of the local bourgeoisie. Not
only is it their instrument, but it is their regenerator, whose job it
is to reproduce bourgeois relations at local level and to bring forth
new generations of bourgeois-minded councillors and bureaucrats.

In the past, one effective working-class tactic was to confront this
concentration of local bourgeois strength with an organised workers'
democratic power. In Russia, this took the form of the "soviet". The
first one, as Vladimir Shubin
<http://africanactivist.msu.edu/video.php?objectid=5>  relates, was set
up in the textile manufacturing centre of Ivanovo
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivanovo> , in 1905. Another tactic,
problematic though it has been, is the setting up of producer and
consumer co-operatives. This discussion will have to develop both of
these perspectives in due course.

For today, our CU job is to review some of the debate in the literature
of petty-bourgeois development. Let it be understood that it is not the
aim of the working class to drive any other class to early extinction.
In the spirit of the same "18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1852/18th-brumaire/index.htm
> " wherein Karl Marx described the peasantry, though sympathetically,
as a "sack of potatoes", because they could not unite, the working class
must lead the weaker classes and make provision for them in terms that
will satisfy them. For the classic peasantry, this meant giving them
land and a market for their produce. For the petty bourgeoisie, it is
the freedom to do business, and the guarantee, against the predatory
monopolists, of a market. We, as the proletariat, also need these
classes as allies against the monopoly bourgeoisie. Therefore, as
partisans of the working class, we should read these works with a
serious interest.

Housing by People
<http://yclsa-eom-forum.googlegroups.com/web/1503%2C+Housing+by+People%2
C+C1%2C+C6%2C+Who+Decides%2C+Turner.doc?hl=en&gda=-kJ15nQAAAAFjQ6FFq8vKu
wi7yizXsX1_KIka77lHkVwTxhqgZ9g09x8AV9R8GfbyynxPODKU-sQy1id3x8cInJTS_Ccdr
zs0WB9P8W3Z_Kkr7uLRS4DprnCy8f58nL8bUvXB44>  (click this link for an
MS-Word download, which includes diagrams that do not come through on
the web page), by John Charlewood Turner, is a discussion of housing,
from a partly-idealised but well-educated point of view, of where
decisive power should lie, who should act, and how these
responsibilities should be divided up. It can serve us as a small link
to the great, beautiful and necessary field of study called urbanism, of
which very little emerges into the general public realm. Urbanism is a
site of ideological struggle. It is also a labyrinth, in which it is
easy to get lost.

"Barking dogs and building bridges" is Lauren Royston's subtle and
patient destruction of the simplistic bourgeois platitudes of Hernando
de Soto. Glen Mills' 2006 Business Day article "Thinking out of the
matchbox" briefly summarises the general situation in South African
housing, which has not changed in the mean time. There is still no
public discussion of design, except at the "Top billing" level of
snobbery and eclecticism, or at the level of the most banal, hopeless
utilitarianism, in the press. [Click the links below]

How will things change? The communists must strive to reproduce, in
every locality, the same well-expressed and solid class alliance which
has up to now underpinned the NDR at the national level. This means
providing for both the petty-bourgeoisie/peasantry, and the working
class. Both must be able to see a clear way forward, in alliance with
each other, at local level, where, at present, it is working-class
organisation that is lacking.

[Graphic: Ebenezer Howard's "Three Magnets", from "Garden Cities of
To-morrow", 1902]

Click on these links:

Housing by People, C1, C6, Who Decides?, John Turner
<http://amadlandawonye.wikispaces.com/1976,+Turner,+Housing+by+People>
(7901 words)

Barking dogs, building bridges, Lauren Royston
<http://amadlandawonye.wikispaces.com/2004,+Royston,+Barking+dogs+and+bu
ilding+bridges>  (5469 words)

Thinking out of the matchbox, Glen Mills, Business Day
<http://amadlandawonye.wikispaces.com/Thinking+out+of+the+matchbox,+Glen
+Mills,+Business+Day>  (1199 words)

Reform or Revolution, Chapters 2, 7, 9 & 10, Luxemburg
<http://amadlandawonye.wikispaces.com/1908,+Luxemburg,+Reform+or+Revolut
ion,+compilation+of+C2,+7,+9+and+10>  (10250 words)

 

-- 
Blog at: http://domza.blogspot.com/
Communist University web site at: http://amadlandawonye.wikispaces.com/
Subscribe for free e-mail updates at:
http://groups.google.com/group/Communist-University/ 
Library of documents (CU "CD") at: http://cu.domza.net/
[email protected]



Please Note: This email and its contents are subject to our email legal notice 
which can be viewed at http://www.sars.gov.za/Email_Disclaimer.pdf 

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to