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Introduction
The present work began life as a draft introduction to the American edition
of Reason in Revolt that is to be published this autumn. Starting out
from the idea that most Americans have been prejudiced against Marxism as an
alien ("foreign") ideology, I started to explain that the history of
the United States contains a great revolutionary tradition, beginning with the
War of Independence that set up the USA in the first place.
However, on delving more deeply into the subject, it became clear that it was
much too extensive to be satisfactorily contained in the Introduction to a book.
I therefore cast it aside and wrote another one, the content of which was mainly
of a scientific character.
Later on I showed a copy of the original draft to an American friend, who
suggested that, suitably expanded, it could be published as a pamphlet, and he
very kindly furnished me with some interesting additional information. As a
result, I felt obliged to introduce some more material on matters such as the
American Revolution, the Civil War and the history of trade unionism in the USA.
The subject is fascinating, and unfortunately very poorly known in Europe,
where it has become a fashionable (and quite erroneous) idea that the USA, as
the bastion of world imperialism (which Gore Vidal, the greatest living American
writer, describes as "the Empire"), never produced anything of
interest to socialists and revolutionaries. Actually, the reverse is true, as I
hope I have shown in this long essay.
Part of my intention was to combat the kind of senseless anti-Americanism
that one encounters all too frequently in left circles. Marxists are
internationalists and do not take up a negative stance in relation to the people
of any country. We stand for the unity of all working people against oppression
and exploitation. What we oppose is not Americans, but American capitalism and
American imperialism.
The American people and above all the American working class have a great
revolutionary tradition. On the basis of great historical events they are
destined to rediscover these traditions and to stand once more in the front line
of the revolution, as they did in 1776 and 1860. The future of the entire world
depends ultimately on this perspective. And although today it may seem very far
off, it is not so incredible as one might think. Let us recall that before 1917
tsarist Russia was the bastion of world reaction, as the USA is today. Many
people were convinced that the idea of socialist revolution in Russia was a
crazy delusion on the part of Lenin and Trotsky. Yes, they were completely
convinced, and completely wrong.
The rapacious greed of the big corporations and the ambitions of the ruling
elite of "the Empire" are dragging the USA into one adventure after
another. New nightmares can flow from such adventures. Fifty thousand young
Americans were killed in the quagmire of Vietnam. The aggressive policies of the
Bush White House threaten many more casualties, American and others. Sooner or
later this will impact back on the USA, producing a general reaction against a
system that could produce such monstrosities. The mass demonstration in Seattle
served notice on the establishment that the youth of America will not be
prepared to remain silent forever.
Because it was already becoming very long, I was obliged reluctantly to break
off before the subject matter had been dealt with in the necessary depth. We
must certainly return to it in the future. In the meanwhile, I hope that it will
serve to correct some of the prejudices of non-American leftists about America,
and at least some of the prejudices of Americans concerning Marxism. Even if I
have not succeeded in this intention, I hope that at least people will begin to
think more seriously about these matters - on both sides.
The USA and the world
The terrible events of September 11, 2001 marked a turning point in the
history of the United States and the whole world. Overnight, it became
impossible for ordinary US citizens to imagine that what was happening in the
outside world was no concern of theirs. A general sense of insecurity and
apprehension seized the national psychology. Suddenly, the world became a
hostile and dangerous place. Ever since September 11, Americans have been trying
to make sense of the kind of world that could produce such horrors.
Many people have been asking themselves: what have we done that there should
be such hatred against us? Of course, ordinary Americans have done nothing to
deserve this kind of thing. And we regard it as a criminal act to kill innocent
civilians - of whatever nation - to make a political point. What is not in
doubt, however, is that the actions of the United States in the world - its
government, its big corporations and its armed forces - have aroused feelings of
deep antipathy and resentment, and it would be as well for Americans to try to
understand why this is so.
For much of its history, isolationism has played a central role in the
politics of the USA. But the fact is that in the modern world no country, no
matter how big and powerful, can cut adrift from the rest of the world.
Nowadays, the most decisive phenomenon of our times is precisely this: the
crushing domination of the world market. It is often known by the latest
buzzword, globalization. But in fact it is not new. Already over 150 years ago
in that most contemporary of all works, The Communist Manifesto, Marx and
Engels predicted that the capitalist system, beginning as a series of national
states, would create a world market.
The participation of the USA in world economy and world politics has grown
almost continuously for the last century. All attempts to pull America into a
state of self-imposed isolation have failed, and will inevitably fail, as George
W. Bush has found out very quickly. The United States has inherited the role
that was previously held by Great Britain - that of the world's policeman. But
whereas Britain's dominant role in the world took place at a time when the
capitalist system was still in its ascending phase, America now finds itself
ruling over a world that is mortally sick. The sickness is the product of the
fact that capitalism on a world scale is in a state of irreversible decline.
This expresses itself in a series of convulsions that are increasingly of a
violent character. The terrible cataclysm of September 11 was only one
manifestation of this.
Anti-Americanism is, unfortunately, widespread. I say unfortunately because
the present writer holds no ill feelings towards the people of the USA or any
other country. As a Marxist, I am opposed to nationalism and chauvinist
attitudes that sow hatred and conflicts between different peoples. But that does
not mean that one can condone the actions of particular governments, companies
and armed forces that are pursuing actions that are harmful to the rest of the
world. It just means that it is wrong to confuse the ruling class of any country
with the workers and poor people of that country.
The phenomenon of anti-Americanism is strongest in poor countries in Asia,
Latin America and the Middle East. The reasons for this are related to the
exploitation of the resources of these countries by voracious US multinational
corporations, backed by the US military and the CIA, leading to the
impoverishment of their people, the destruction of the environment, the
destabilization of their currencies, their economies, and even their
governments. Such actions are not designed to promote love and respect for the
USA in the world at large.
A couple of years ago The Economist concluded that the prices of raw
materials were at their lowest level for 150 years - that is, since records
began. The super-exploitation of what is known as the Third World by rapacious
corporations is what causes a backlash in Africa, Asia and Latin America which
may sometimes take the form of a rejection of all things American, but which is
at bottom an expression of anti-imperialism. The best way to put an end to the
poverty and starvation in the Third World is to fight for the expropriation of
the big corporations that are the enemies of working people everywhere -
beginning with the workers of the USA, as we shall show.
Europe and America
Anti-Americanism is not confined to poor countries. Some Europeans have
somewhat negative attitudes to America. They resent the subordinate role they
have been compelled to accept on the world stage, and they fear the consequences
of the colossal economic and military domination of the transatlantic giant.
Behind the polite façade of diplomacy between the "allies" lies an
uneasy and contradictory relationship, which manifests itself in periodic trade
conflicts and diplomatic rows.
On a different level, many Europeans resent what they see as the intrusion of
an alien culture, brash and commercialized, which threatens to devalue and
undermine their cultural identity. Behind the cultural resentments of the
European intellectuals lies a deep-seated feeling of inferiority that seeks to
hide behind a kind of cultural snobbishness. This feeling has a material basis,
and in fact reflects the real state of affairs.
It is a simple fact that the history of the last hundred years is the history
of the decline of Europe and the rise of the USA. As the Russian Revolutionary
Leon Trotsky predicted, the Mediterranean (which in the Latin tongue signifies
"the center of the world") has become an unimportant lake. The center
of world history has passed first to the Atlantic and finally to the Pacific -
two mighty oceans, straddled by a colossus - the United States. The real
relationship between Europe and America is summed up by the relationship between
George W. Bush and Tony Blair. It is the relationship of the master and his
lackey. And like a good English lackey, Mr. Blair does his level best to imitate
the style and manners of his master, notwithstanding which, no one in his right
mind can mistake the real relation between the two.
The airs of superiority that until recently were adopted by members of the
British Establishment with regard to the values and culture of America are
particularly comical. They resemble the airs and graces of the penniless English
aristocrats in the 19th century in the presence of the wealthy bourgeois
upstarts, a phenomenon well documented in the novels of Jane Austen and others.
These airs and graces, of course, did not stop them from marrying off their
daughters to the sons of the upstart money-grubbers at the earliest opportunity.
The negative attitude of Europeans towards American culture is the product of
a misunderstanding. They are thinking of the made in the USA
"cultural exports" that flood the markets of the world with bad music
that makes you deaf, overpriced "designer clothes" produced by slave
labor in the Third World that makes you indignant and cholesterol-clogged fast
food produced by slave labor in the high street that makes you obese. It is the
kind of cheap and nasty commercialism that is the hallmark of capitalism in the
period of its senile decay. That such monstrosities produce a feeling of
revulsion in all thinking and feeling human beings is perfectly natural.
However, the concept of culture, above all in the modern world, is far
broader than pop music, Coca-Cola and McDonald's. It also includes such things
as computers, the Internet, and many other aspects of science and technology. On
this level, it is impossible to deny the impressive achievements of the USA.
Moreover, it is precisely these scientific advances that are laying the
foundations for an unprecedented cultural revolution, once they are correctly
harnessed by a planned socialist economy on a world scale.
The present writer has no time for crude anti-Americanism. I am profoundly
convinced that the colossal potential of the United States is destined to play a
decisive role in the future socialist world order. But it must also be admitted
that at the present moment in world history, the role of the USA on a world
scale does not reflect its real potential for good, but only the rapacious greed
of the big multinational companies that own America and control its actions in
their own selfish interests. This author is a fervent admirer of the real
America, and an implacable opponent of the other America, the America of the big
banks and monopolies, the enemy of freedom and progress everywhere.
An 'un-American idea'?
In order to understand the ideas of Marxism, it is first necessary to
approach them without prejudice. This is difficult, because until now, the great
majority of Americans have only heard of Marxism in connection with that
monstrous caricature that was Stalinist Russia. Marxism ("communism")
is therefore associated in the minds of many people with an alien regime, a
totalitarian state where the lives of men and women are dominated by an
all-powerful bureaucracy, and where individual initiative and freedom are
stifled and negated. The collapse of the USSR apparently proves the inadequacy
of socialism, and the superiority of the free market economy. What more needs to
be said?
Well, there is a great deal more to be said. The monstrous bureaucratic
regime of the USSR had nothing to do with the ideas of Marx and Lenin, who
advocated a democratic socialist society, where men and women would be free to
determine their own lives, in a way that they do not do in the USA or any other
country today. This subject was very well explained in a marvelous book written
by my friend and life-long comrade Ted Grant (Russia, from Revolution to
Counter-Revolution).
The fall of Stalinism in Russia did not signify the failure of socialism, but
only a bureaucratic caricature thereof. It certainly did not signify the end of
Marxism, which today is more relevant than ever before. It is my contention that
only Marxism, with its scientific methodology, can furnish us with the necessary
analytical tools whereby we can understand the processes that are unfolding on a
world scale - and in the USA.
Whatever one thinks about Marxism, it has clearly had an enormous impact on
the whole course of human history Today it is impossible for any man or woman to
claim to be properly educated, unless they have taken the trouble to understand
at least the basic ideas of Marxism. This goes as much for those who are opposed
to socialism as those who are for it.
A serious barrier that confronts the American reader who approaches Marxism
is the thought that this is a foreign import that has no place in the history,
culture and traditions of the United States. Although the infamous House
Un-American Activities Committee and the late Senator Joseph McCarthy are now
bad memories of the past, yet the psychological legacy remains, that
"communism and revolution are not for us".
Actually, this is a serious misunderstanding of American history, which is
not difficult to dispel. In fact, communism has far more ancient roots in
America than capitalism. The latter has only existed for less than two
centuries. But long before the first Europeans set foot on the soil of the New
World (as they called it), Native Americans had been living in a communist
society for thousands of years.
The Native Americans did not understand private property (at least, not in
our modern sense of the word). The state and money did not exist. There were
neither police nor prisons. The idea of wage labor and capital was so alien to
them that they could never be properly integrated in the new capitalist society
that destroyed their old way of life, expropriated their ancestral common lands
and reduced them to an appalling state of misery and degradation - all in the
name of Christian civilization.
This new way of life called capitalism, with its greed, absence of
solidarity, and morality of the jungle - was really an alien system, imported
from foreign lands. It can be argued - quite correctly - that this is precisely
what made possible the opening up of America, the colossal development of
industry, agriculture, science and technology that have made the USA into the
greatest economic power the world has ever seen. And since Marxism maintains
that the key to all human progress lies in the development of the productive
sources, this represented progress on a gigantic scale.
Indeed, that is true. But there has been a price to pay for the progress that
results from the anarchy of capitalism and the blind play of market forces. With
the passing of time, an increasing number of people - not necessarily socialists
- are becoming aware of the threat posed to the human species by the systematic
destruction of the environment - the air we breathe, the water we drink, the
food we eat. This apprehension is not lessened, but rather increased, by the
remarkable progress of science and technology, which have advanced far more
rapidly in the USA than in any other country in the world.
Before the white man came, America was a land of unspoiled prairies, pristine
forests and crystalline cascades and lakes. It was a land in which men and women
could breathe freely. To the original inhabitants of America, the land was
sacred and nature was respected. But the big companies that now dominate America
have no concern for the environment - our common heritage. All is reduced to a
question of profit for a few (a concept the Native Americans would have found
incomprehensible). The advent of genetically modified crops undoubtedly contains
the potential for important advances, but under the present system poses a
deadly threat to the future of humanity.
There was a time when films about the "Wild West" inevitably
presented Native Americans as bloodthirsty savages, and the white men as the
bearers of civilization, destined to take over their lands and consign them to
reservations where they would learn the benefits of Christian charity. Nowadays,
this is no longer considered acceptable. Native Americans are presented in a
more positive light. Yet in practice, the average American knows little about
their culture and way of life.
Actually, the man who did more than anyone else to write about the society
and civilization of these peoples was the great American anthropologist, Lewis
Henry Morgan. His famous book Ancient Society represented a revolutionary new
departure in the study of anthropology and ancient history. He gave the first
scientific explanation of the gens or clan as the basic unit of human society in
prehistory:
"The simplest and lowest form of the council was that of the gens. It
was a democratic assembly because every adult male and female member had a voice
upon all questions brought before it. It elected and deposed its sachem and
chiefs, it elected Keepers of the Faith, it condoned or avenged the murder of a
gentilis, and it adopted persons into the gens. […]
"All the members of an Iroquois gens were personally free, and they were
bound to defend each other's freedom; they were equal in privileges and in
personal rights, the sachem and chiefs claiming no superiority, and they were a
brotherhood bound together by ties of kin. Liberty, equality and fraternity,
though never formulated, were cardinal principles of the gens." (Ancient
Society, p. 85.)
And again:
"A powerful popular element pervaded the whole organization
and influenced its action. It is seen in the right of the gentes to elect and
depose their sachems and chiefs, in the right of the people to be heard in
council through orators of their own selection, and in the voluntary system in
the military service. In this and the next succeeding ethnical period democratic
principles were the vital element of gentile society." (Ancient Society,
p. 144.)
Morgan's work was read with great interest by Marx and Engels and played an
important role in developing their ideas about ancient societies. Morgan's
writings about the Iroquois and other tribes were absolutely central to Engels'
book The Origins of the Family, State and Private Property - one of the
seminal works of Marxism. This, in turn, was the basis of Lenin's celebrated
book The State and Revolution, which was written in 1917 and presents the
genuine Leninist model of a socialist democracy, in which the old oppressive
bureaucratic state would be dissolved and replaced by a direct democracy, based
on:
- Free elections with right of recall of all officials.
- No official to receive a wage higher than that of a skilled worker.
- No standing army, but the armed people.
- Gradually, all the tasks of running the state to be done by
everybody in turn (when everybody is a bureaucrat, nobody is a bureaucrat).
It is quite ironic that the source of some of the most basic writings of
Marxism turns out to be - the United States. It is even more ironic that the
democratic constitution that Lenin and Trotsky introduced into the young Soviet
Republic after November 1917 had its roots in the writings of Lewis Morgan and
is, in essence, a return to the old communist order of the Native Americans,
though obviously on the higher foundations made possible by modern industry,
science and technology. So, in a way, one could argue that it was Russia that
imported an old American idea, and not vice-versa!
Forgotten aspects of American history
The Pilgrim Fathers in the 17th century began the task of taming the great
American wilderness, displaying indomitable courage in the most difficult
conditions. Who were they? They were political refugees fleeing from an
oppressive regime in Britain. This regime was the result of the
counter-revolution that took place after the death of Oliver Cromwell, when the
English bourgeoisie compromised with reaction and invited Charles the Second
back from France.
We must remember that at that time politics and religion were inextricably
linked. Each different Church or sect represented not only differing
interpretations of the Gospels, but a definite strand of political opinion, and,
in the last analysis, the standpoint of a definite class or sub-class in
society. Thus, the Catholics represented open feudal reaction, and the
Episcopalians were a disguised version of the same. The Presbyterians
represented the wealthy merchants of the City of London, inclined to compromise
with the monarchy. The Independents, typified by Cromwell, represented the more
radical wing of the petty bourgeoisie, and so on.
On the extreme left wing there was a mass of sects, ranging from
revolutionary democrats to communists: Fifth Monarchy men, Anabaptists, Quakers,
and other were based in the lower levels of the petty bourgeoisie, the artisans
and semi-proletarians, the fish-wives and apprentices - in short, the masses.
The Levellers and particularly the Diggers openly questioned the right to hold
private property even at this time. In all these groups we see a fierce
attachment to democracy, a hatred for the rich and powerful (whom they regarded
as the agents of Satan and the "sons of Belial") and an equally fierce
attachment to equality. This was the spirit that inspired the English revolution
of the 17th century.
The revolutionary masses believed that they would establish the kingdom of
God on this earth. We now know that this was an illusion. The level of
historical development at that time was not ripe for the establishment of a
classless society. The real function of the English (and later the American)
Civil War was to clear the decks for the development of capitalism. But this
would never have been possible without the active involvement of the masses, who
were inspired by a very different vision.
Having come to power by basing himself on the revolutionary semi-proletarian
masses, Cromwell brutally suppressed the left wing, and thus prepared the way
for the return of the hated monarchy and its attendant bishops. The remnants of
the Puritan left wing found themselves subjected to civil and religious
persecution. That is why the Pilgrim Fathers went to America to found
communities based not only on religious freedom but also on principles of strict
equality and democracy. As de Tocqueville points out: "Puritanism was not
merely a religious doctrine, but it corresponded in many points with the most
absolute democratic and republican theories." (de Tocqueville, Democracy
in America, p. 35.)
The Pilgrim Fathers organized their communities on extremely democratic and
equalitarian lines: "In Connecticut the electoral body consisted, from its
origin, of the whole number of citizens; and this is readily to be understood,
when we recollect that this people enjoyed an almost perfect equality of
fortune, and a still greater uniformity of opinions. In Connecticut, at this
period, all the executive functionaries were elected, including the Governor of
the State. The citizens above the age of sixteen were obliged to bear arms; they
formed a national militia, which appointed its own officers, and was to hold
itself at all times in readiness to march for the defense of the country."
(Ibid., pp. 37-8.)
This model of popular democracy is not very different to the one implemented
by the revolutionary people of Paris in the Commune of 1870, which in turn gave
Marx the idea of what a workers' democracy (the "dictatorship of the
proletariat") would look like. It was the model that Lenin cited in his
book The State and Revolution, which formed the basis of the original
soviet democracy of 1917 in Russia, before it was overthrown by the Stalinist
political counterrevolution. But this historical parallel, for some reason, has
never occurred to the official historians of the USA!
To these ladies and gentlemen the Pilgrim Fathers were only religious people,
seeking the freedom to worship their god in their own way. Of course, this is
partly true, but it does not convey the whole truth. These people were
courageous revolutionaries fleeing from religious and political
persecution in the Old World. They were very advanced in many ways. For example,
they introduced compulsory public education, which they naturally justified in
religious terms:
"It being one chief project of the old deluder Satan to keep men from
the knowledge of the Scriptures […] by persuading from the use of tongues,
that learning may not be buried in the grave of our fathers, in the church and
commonwealth, the Lord assisting our endeavors […]" and so on.
But if we look at the substance and not the religious form, this was an
extremely advanced and enlightened reform. Schools were established in every
village and town and the inhabitants were obliged to support them under pain of
heavy fines. The municipal authorities were bound to enforce attendance at
school and to impose fines on parents who failed to do so. It was at least two
centuries before similar laws were passed in Europe.
These people practiced their own version of republican democracy at a time -
let us not forget - when America was still under British rule and therefore
formally a monarchy. They established a kind of regime of double power in which
a republic and a citizen's democracy, complete with a people's militia, the
election of all officials, and a general assembly of all the people, existed in
every town and village. And this was at a time when Absolute Monarchies ruled
the roost in all Europe and trampled the people's rights in the dust.
Revolution and the USA
"[W]hat country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not
warned from time to time that [the] people preserve the spirit of resistance?
Let them take arms...The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time,
with the blood of patriots and tyrants". (Thomas Jefferson, letter to
Col. William S. Smith, 1787.)
"This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit
it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government, they can exercise
their constitutional right of amending it, or their revolutionary right to
dismember or overthrow it." (Abraham Lincoln - 4 April 1861.)
Nowadays, the public in the USA is taught to fear and hate revolutions. Like
communism, they are regarded as un-American, something alien and a threat from
without. In actual fact, America has always been nourished by foreign
revolutions - even from its very beginnings. However, the above quotations show
clearly that revolution is an idea that is far from foreign to the native soil
of the USA, which owes its very existence to a revolution. When the American
colonists raised the flag of revolt against the English crown, this was a very
revolutionary act. It was this that served as the source of inspiration for the
French Revolution that broke out just over a decade later. Thus, the flame of
revolution in Europe was first kindled in America.
A revolution necessarily means the eruption of the masses onto the arena of
politics and can only succeed in its objectives to the degree that it involves
the mass of "ordinary people" in activity. The American Revolution was
no exception to this rule. Although the official histories emphasize (and
over-emphasize) the role of men like George Washington, what really guaranteed
the success of the revolution was the active involvement of the masses - the
artisans, carpenters, apprentices, the small farmers and trappers and the
elements lower middle class, lawyers and journalists inspired with revolutionary
ideas, who spurred them on to action.
The class basis of the American Revolution was well understood by the British
colonialists. General Thomas Gage who was head of the British troops in America
wrote in worried tones to the King's Secretary of State on December 21, 1765:
"The Plan of the People of Property has been to raise the lower Classes
to prevent the execution of the Law […] with the view to terrify and frighten
the people of England into a Repeal of the Act. And the Merchants, having
Countermanded the Goods they had written for unless it was repealed, they make
no Doubt that many Trading Towns and principal Merchants in London will assist
them to accomplish their Ends.
"The Lawyers are the Source from whence the Clamors have flowed in every
Province. In this Province, nothing Publick is transacted without them, and it
is to be wished that even the Bench was free from blame. The whole body of
Merchants in general, Assembly Men, Magistrates, etc., have been united in this
Plan of Riots, and without the influence and Instigation of these the inferior
People would have been very quiet. Very great Pains were taken to rouse them
before they stirred. The Sailors are the only People who may be properly Stiled
Mob, are entirely at the Command of the Merchants who employ them."
These lines undoubtedly contain an error. It is always a characteristic of
the police (or military) mentality that it attributes strikes, disturbances and
revolutions to the work of "agitators" who are so inconsiderate as to
stir up the masses, who would otherwise continue meekly to submit to the yoke.
Agitators there were, of course, and very talented ones, such as Sam Adams. But
to imagine that they could have such a dramatic effect on the masses, unless the
latter were already prepared to hear their revolutionary message, is a
self-evident stupidity. The relatively small number of revolutionary agitators
organized in illegal societies like The Sons of Liberty, only succeeded because
the people were already preparing to move, motivated by their own experience. It
is always the way.
The official histories of the Revolution, as always, play down the role of
the masses and concentrate on the upper strata - the wealthy Boston merchants
and feudal landowners like Washington, who were pursuing their own interests, as
general Gage understood quite well. But in order to succeed in their struggle
with the colonial administration, they were compelled to rely on the masses, who
did all the fighting. It was the workmen in the towns who organized in the Sons
of Liberty, wrecked the houses of the hated stamp agents and threw their
furniture onto the streets and burned them. It was they who tarred and feathered
informers. It was they who translated the speeches of the leaders into action.
Later on it was the small farmers and trappers who played the decisive role in
the military defeat of the English army of occupation.
The fact is that the American Revolution would never have succeeded unless
the masses had intervened in a decisive way. It is a matter of record that the
wealthy American merchants who had set the ball rolling with their clash with
the City of London on questions of trade and taxation soon recoiled from the
Revolution when they saw that the poor people were getting active and taking
matters into their own hands. The merchants were terrified that the masses would
"go too far" and therefore attempted to reach a compromise with the
enemy. In the moment of truth the rich American "patriots" had much
more in common with their class brothers in England than with the working class
and poor farmers of their own country.
The class struggle and the American Revolution
Even in the moment of its birth, America was faced with the crying
contradiction between rich and poor - that is, with the class question.
From the very beginning there has been a contradiction between the theory and
practice of American democracy, an immense gulf between words and deeds. While
the people were fighting for the Rights of Man, the merchants and landowners of
America were really only concerned with the Rights of the Rich. Governor Morris
expressed the feelings of the rich when he wrote: "The heads of mobility
grow dangerous to the gentry and how to keep them down is the question." It
has been the question for the American ruling class ever since.
As early as 1772 - before the outbreak of hostilities with England - that
great American revolutionary Sam Adams wrote in The Boston Gazette:
"Is it not High Time for the People of this Country, explicitly to
declare whether they will be Freemen or Slaves […] Let us [...] calmly look
around us to consider what is best to be done […] Let it be the topic of
conversation in every social Club. Let every Town assemble. Let Associations and
Combinations be everywhere set up to consult and recover our just Rights."
What is this but a call for the setting up of what the Russians were later to
call soviets (which in the Russian language signifies
"committee" or "council")? The American revolutionaries set
up something that approximates to soviets - that is, revolutionary committees -
over one hundred years before the Russian workers thought of it. They
established their Liberty clubs and Committees of Correspondence, which kept the
revolutionary fighting groups in contact with one another.
Having aroused the masses to fight against Britain, it was not easy to get
them to accept the rule of a privileged oligarchy after the redcoats had left.
In New Hampshire a mob of several hundred men marched to the legislature with
clubs, stones and guns to demand relief: "Print money and lower the
taxes" was their slogan. There were serious uprisings in Massachusetts
against the high taxes that fell disproportionately on the poor. They
particularly targeted the courts where moneylenders would secure eviction orders
against poor farmers who had fallen into debt. In the New York Picket of
September 11, 1786 we read:
"On Tuesday the 29th [of August] … the day appointed by law for the
sitting of the Court of Common Pleas […] there assembled in the town from
different parts of the county four or five hundred people some of whom were
armed with muskets, the others with bludgeons, with the professed intention to
prevent the courts from proceeding to business […]."
This movement culminated in what was known as Shays' uprising - an armed
insurrection led by Daniel Shays, a former officer in the revolutionary army.
About 1,000 men armed with muskets, swords and clubs, succeeded in closing the
courts for several months. Leo Huberman writes:
"The upper classes throughout the country were thoroughly frightened at
this armed uprising of the poor people. There was no money in the treasury to
pay the state troops, so a number of rich people contributed enough to do so.
Shays and his followers headed for Springfield, where there was a public
storehouse containing 7,000 muskets and 13,000 barrels of gunpowder, stoves,
camp kettles and saddles. They were stopped by the state troops, a few shots
were fired, and the mob dispersed." (Leo Huberman, We the People, p.
94.)
The true significance of Shays' rebellion can only be understood in class
terms. Later general Knox wrote to George Washington to explain the dangerous
character of the ideas of the insurgents. In particular, Knox said that the
rebels believed that "the property of the United States has been protected
from […] Britain by the joint efforts of all and therefore ought to be the
common property of all." (My emphasis, AW.)
Such incidents as this have occurred in every revolution in history. When the
masses feel that the power that they have fought and died for is slipping from
their hands, they try desperately to seize the initiative again. But the class
nature of the American Revolution of the 18th century was objectively bourgeois.
It could not go beyond the limits prescribed by the capitalist mode of
production. Consequently, the attempt of Shays to do so was condemned in advance
to failure, as the similar attempt of the English Levellers and the Left Wing of
the Puritans was condemned to defeat over a century earlier in England.
The challenge thrown down by Shays must have terrified the oligarchy that was
quietly concentrating political and economic power into its own hands. They
understood the need to create a strong state power immediately as a bulwark
against the masses. At the same time they were under the pressure of the masses.
When the 55 delegates met in 1787 to revise the Articles of Confederation, not
one of them was from the working class or the class of small farmers. The class
that had done all the fighting and dying in the Revolution was rigorously
excluded from the decision-making process. The men who drafted the American
constitution were all moneylenders, merchants, manufacturers, bondholders or
slaveholders.
Some people have drawn a parallel between this phase of the American
Revolution and the Thermidorean counterrevolution in France, that is to say, the
beginnings of a conservative reaction against the egalitarian spirit of the
Revolution in its flood-tide. In the sense that it marked the inevitable stage
of stabilization when the men of money, the big landowners and wealthy merchants
grabbed power out of the hands of the plebeian radical wing, this is a fair
comparison. Gradually, the voice of the radical elements was drowned out by the
men of property. The fierce debates that raged over the Constitution were the
parting shots of this class conflict.
The discussions dragged on for months. The disputed questions were numerous:
should large states have more say in the national government than small states?
Should black slaves be counted as white people? And so on. But there was one
question upon which they all agreed: that those with little or no property
should not have too much power. In the end, the Constitution of the United
States was only approved after bitter argument and even then was only approved
by a narrow vote, as these figures show:
| |
For |
Against |
| New York |
30 |
27 |
New Hampshire
|
57 |
47 |
| Massachusetts |
187 |
168 |
| Virginia |
89 |
79 |
The ideals expressed in the Constitution were extremely revolutionary for
their day, starting with the opening words: "We hold these truths to be
self- evident: that all men are created equal." This proclamation of
equality was like a revolutionary manifesto. In the text of the famous
Declaration, however, there was a significant change. In earlier documents the
"inalienable rights" of Man were usually stated to be "life,
liberty and property." The last point was of particular interest to
the wealthy merchants and landlords who now stood at the head of the Republic.
However, Thomas Jefferson substituted for this the phrase: "life, liberty and
the pursuit of happiness," leaving out any reference to property.
This was clearly a significant change the represented the pressure of the
lower classes. In fact, the revolutionary government took measures that violated
the sacred rights of property when it confiscated the estates of the pro-English
landowners - the Tories. The estates were then broken up and sold to small
farmers. The American Republic at its birth was a revolutionary power that owed
its existence to the workers and small farmers and was, at least in the
beginning, under their pressure. Later, as the lava of Revolution cooled, the
big landowning and merchant interests prevailed. But in the beginning, the
American Revolution was a beacon of hope to the entire world.
The international significance of the American Revolution was far greater
than what most people realize today. The connection between the American and
French Revolutions was very close. That great American revolutionary Thomas
Paine lived in France and developed the most radical ideas. The proclamation of The
Rights of Man was a most revolutionary idea for its time. People like Thomas
Paine were the most advanced revolutionary democrats of their day. The ideas of
liberty, equality and fraternity that they advocated shook the ruling classes of
all Europe.
What is even less understood is the impact these revolutionary ideas from
America had on the infant workers' movement in Britain. Tom Paine's writings
were passed from hand to hand in underground workers' groups known as
corresponding societies. Nowadays, the British establishment likes to parade its
democratic credentials. But this is a blatant lie. The British ruling class
fought tooth and nail against democracy. They opposed every attempt to establish
the right to vote. This was conquered in struggle by the British working class,
which paid a heavy price in martyrs, with imprisonment, deportation and even
death as its reward.
In those dark days when the working class of Britain was struggling to win
the most elementary rights, when the trade unions were illegalized by Pitt's
notorious Combination Acts, the flame of freedom was kept alight, not only by
the example of revolutionary France, but by the revolutionary democratic ideas
of Thomas Paine, who for generations was the hero of British workers.
Rich and poor
The conquest of independence for the American colonies, although it was a
great step forward, did not mark the final victory of democracy in America.
Power was in the hands of a wealthy oligarchy: "The most serious problem
inherited from the Revolution was its failure to carry out its declaration of
the equality of all men. We have pointed out that half-consciously the leaders
of the Revolutionary period confined the application of equality to those men
whom they recognized as parties to the social contract and members of the
political community. Even among them equality was never rigorously asserted.
Property qualifications for voting and unequal representation of sections in the
state legislature gave distinct advantages to the wealthier men and the
wealthier areas. Literacy tests as the years passed were substituted for
property tests as a more defensible means for disfranchising the poor, but with
almost the same effect. Those inequalities have persisted to the present day,
operating now primarily to give white men an advantage over Negroes, and rural
areas an advantage over urban areas at the ballot." (Dan Lacy, The
Meaning of the American Revolution, pp. 282-3.)
The conquest of formal democracy and the proclamation of the Rights of Man
did not prevent the concentration of economic and political power into a few
hands. The position of the working class did not improve but worsened, as shown
by the following Appeal to the Working People of Manayuk to the Public,
published in Pennsylvanian, August 28, 1833:
"We are obliged by our employers to labor at this season of the year,
from 5 o'clock in the morning until sunset, being fourteen hours and a half,
with an intermission of half an hour for breakfast, and an hour for dinner,
leaving thirteen hours of hard labor, at an unhealthy employment, where we never
feel a refreshing breeze to cool us, overheated and suffocated as we are, and
where we never behold the sun but through a window, and an atmosphere thick with
the dust and small particles of cotton, which we are constantly inhaling to the
destruction of our health, our appetite and strength.
"Often we feel ourselves so weak as to be scarcely able to perform our
work, on account of the over-strained time we are obliged to labor through the
long and sultry days of summer, in the impure and unwholesome air of the
factories, and the little rest we receive during the night not being sufficient
to recruit our exhausted physical energies, we return to our labor in the
morning, as weary as when we left it; but nevertheless work we must , worn down
and debilitated as we are, or our families would soon be in a starving
condition, for our wages are barely sufficient to supply us with the necessaries
of life. We cannot provide against sickness or difficulties of any kind, by
laying by a single dollar, for our present wants consume the little we receive
and when we are confined to a bed of sickness any length of time, we are plunged
into the deepest distress, which often terminates in total ruin, poverty, and
pauperism.
"Our expenses are perhaps greater than most other working people,
because it requires the wages of all the family who are able to work (save only
one small girl to take care of the house and provide meals) to furnish absolute
wants, consequently the females have no time either to make their own dresses or
those of the children, but have of course to apply to trades for every article
that is wanted." (J. Kuczynski, A Short History of Labor Conditions
under Industrial Capitalism, vol.2, p. 25.)
The condition of women workers was underlined in a report by the National
Trades' Union Convention in September, 1834:
"Mr. Douglass observed that in
the single village of Lowell, there were about 4,000 females of various ages,
now dragging out a life of slavery and wretchedness. It is enough to make one's
heart ache, said he, to behold these degraded females, as they pass out of the
factory - to mark their wan countenances - their woe-stricken appearance. These
establishments are the present abode of wretchedness, disease and misery; and
are inevitably calculated to perpetuate them - if not to destroy liberty
itself."
Another report states:
"It has been shown that the number of females
employed in opposition to male labor, throughout the United States, exceeds
140,000 who labor on an average from 14 to 15 hours per day, without that pure
air and wholesome exercise which are necessary to health, and confinement with
the consequent excess of toil, which checks the growth of the body, destroying
in effect the natural powers of mind, and not infrequently distorting the
limbs."
Even more ghastly was the position of children:
"If children must be
doomed to those deadly prisons," said the New Haven delegates to the above
mentioned convention, "let the law at least protect them against excessive
toil and shed a few rays of light upon their darkened intellect. Workingmen!
Bitter must be that bread which your little children earn in pain and tears,
toiling by day, sleeping by night, sinking under oppression, consumption and
decrepitude, into an early grave, knowing no life but this, and knowing of this
only misery."
The class struggle has accompanied the American Republic ever since it was
born. In 1778, when the ink was scarcely dry on the Declaration of Independence,
journeymen printers of New York City combined to demand an increase in wages.
The first strike of wage earners took place in Philadelphia as early as 1786
when the printers fought for a weekly minimum wage. The first general strike,
that is, the first strike of a considerable number of workers in a large number
of trades in one big strike movement, took place in 1827, again in Philadelphia.
In this period, many trade unions were formed and there were numerous strikes.
The bosses ferociously resisted the right of workers to organize in unions
and go out on strike. In 1806 members of the Philadelphia Journeymen Cordwainers
were tried for criminal conspiracy after a strike for higher wages. The charges
were (1) combination to raise wages and (2) combination to injure others.
Bankrupted as a result, the union disbanded. This was not an isolated case.
Wherever possible the employers brought in scab labor to break strikes and
appealed to the courts to declare trade unions illegal. Far from trade union
organization being recognized as a democratic right, the unions were dragged
through the courts and prosecuted for "conspiracy in restraint of
trade" - a phrase copied from English common law. For decades, strikes,
boycotts and other forms of working class struggle were subject to legal action
on the grounds of "conspiracy".
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