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Rosa Luxemburg's Shock Doctrine
by Ron Jacobs
Naomi Kleins 2007 release Shock Doctrine addressed in a rather mild way the dependence of the capitalist economy on cataclysmic events for its progress. These events displace millions and cause personal hardship for an even greater number while they ensure capitalisms survival.
A century ago, there was another woman who took this observation further and devoted her life to ending capitalism. Her name was Rosa Luxemburg.
She was a Polish woman who dedicated her life to socialist revolution and was murdered by the 1919 social democratic government of Germany for her uncompromising belief in that revolution.
Haymarket Books of Chicago recently released a new edition of two
of her most well-known essays under the title The Essential Rosa
Luxemburg. The volume is edited by University of Vermont literature
professor Helen Scott and includes several pages of introduction by
Scott. Her historical summaries preceding the two pamphlets reprinted
here not only provide the reader with insight into the historical
moment the pieces were written, they also provide a brief biography of
Luxemburg and relate her political arguments to todays circumstances.
The book includes two of Luxemburgs essays: Reform or Revolution and
The Mass Strike.
While both are historically interesting, it
is the first essay in the book that holds particular relevance for
todays world. In particular, Luxembourgs discussion regarding
capitalism and democracy speaks to the world we live in today. As
residents of the nation that never stops proclaiming itself as the most
democratic in the world, it is important to heed Luxemburgs remarks
concerning the nature of democratic forms and true democracy. As
Washington exported its version of democracy throughout the world in
the wake of World War Two, the populations of many third world nations
discovered that this democracy was nothing more than an election
designed to pave the way for imperial exploitation and US domination.
There was no democracy for those not part of the ruling elites. That is
capitalist democracy and thats what Washington brings to other nations
in the name of freedom.
Furthermore, Luxemburg argues that when
even those democratic forms run contrary to the interests of the
capitalist elite, they too are disposed of. Third world nations ruled
by military /CIA coups, like Chile and Greece, know this only too well.
Yet, even here in the US those forms are being undone. Under the guise
of homeland security, many of the freedoms guaranteed in US democracy
have been dissolved. Many others disappeared under the guise of a war
on drugs.
Indeed, even the US electoral process was usurped in 2000
under the guise of protecting the supposed minority rights of George
Bush and those that voted for him in Florida. As for liberalism, once
it no longer serves the purposes of capitalism, it is discarded. The
history of the US and Britain over the past thirty years certainly
proves thisa history where even liberals are conservatives (as in
Blair and Clinton) and todays liberal candidates modify their
statements to please the most right wing commentators and networks.
Another
topic addressed by Luxemburg and quite relevant to today is the use of
credit to expand the working classs purchasing power. In her essay
Reform or Revolution, which is written as an argument against the
social democratic reformist Bernstein, Luxemburg mocks his
characterization of credit as an adaptation of capitalism.
In
reality, she argues, credit is not just an adaptation, but reproduces
all the fundamental antagonisms of capitalism. Indeed, she writes, it
accentuates those antagonisms. Todays reader need look no further than
the current economic meltdown that began in the housing market because
banks and their agencies advanced credit to people they knew would not
be able to complete the agreements they signed for proof of Luxemburgs
statement.
To top it all off, there is imperial war. Luxemburg
was clearer on the role this form of mass murder plays in facilitates
the expansion of capitalism than anything else. She knew and wrote
plenty about how war is essential to capitalist development. Imperial
war, she wrote, shows capitalism in all its hideous nakedness.
This
bloody nakedness is not only essential to capitalist development, but
the latter depends on it. Indeed, it is the most cataclysmic and
radical of all capitalist shocks. As I write, the current regime in
Washington is stepping up its mobilization for war on Iran, while its
liberal opponents in the Democratic party give words of support for
this endeavor to gain control of the grease that runs the engines of
capitaloil.
Meanwhile, US imperialisms other wars for energy
continues to drag on, in part because the opposition to those wars is
confused and powerless. Like the war of Luxemburgs time, the current
drive towards greater war is primarily about profit. It is unfortunate
(to say the least) that we have yet to learn the lessons Luxemburg and
her contemporaries understood a hundred years ago about such wars,
especially since the weapons used today are even deadlier than those of
the first great war. Equally unfortunate is the fact that those opposed
to imperialist war have to learn the lessons of the incredible movement
against such wars all over again.
Ron Jacobs is author of The
Way the Wind Blew: a history of the Weather Underground, which is just
republished by Verso. Jacobs' essay on Big Bill Broonzy is featured in
CounterPunch's collection on music, art and sex, Serpents in the
Garden. His first novel, Short Order Frame Up, is published by Mainstay
Press. He can be reached at: rjacobs3625@charter.net
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