РефератыИностранный языкClClass Struggles Essay Research Paper Having declared

Class Struggles Essay Research Paper Having declared

Class Struggles Essay, Research Paper


Having declared in the opening sentence of the Manifesto that all history is the


history of class struggles, Marx adds immediately in a footnote "of written


history". For prior to the invention of writing, societies were nomadic, organized


in tribes, each tribe made of less than 100 individuals. There was hardly any


division of labor, other than sexual. The tribe would designate a chief, and


modern ethnology tells us the chief had very little power. His main function was


to defuse any conflict among tribesmen, not as a judge, he had no power to


judge, but more by using his charisma to talk people out of their quarrels. His


authority would be limited to leading the hunt and, of course, the war. That?s


all. In his essay, The Origin of Property, Family and the State, Engels


describes social life in these primitive tribes very much as something like


"anarchy". I would like to add here that modern anthropology supports


Engels? analysis. Primitive societies did not know anything that resembles


political power, let alone a state. They had no use for it. Pierre Clastres, in


his fascinating book, Society Against State, notes that the only distinctive


feature between "primitive" and "modern" societies is not


agriculture, it is not sedentary life, it is the institution of a state. A


modern society is a society that is subject to the power of a state. So called


primitive societies were not. In economic terms, nomadic tribes (which Engels


calls gens) do not accumulate a lot of goods. The only capital they use is what


people can carry on their back or on the back of an animal. Not much. Thus,


between tribes, violence is limited, there is not much to conquer and to loot,


and war is considered more like a sport, a rough athletic competition. Note that


war was a game played by all tribesmen. All valid men went to war, when called


for, there were no professionals. How did the state come about ? With


agriculture began a process of capital accumulation. In order to farm, one needs


first to clear the land. Trees have to be uprooted, fields have to be irrigated,


tilled and planted. Granaries have to be built to store grain for the year,


pending the next harvest. All this preparation and construction may take many


months, and it is hard work. So people started to think : "Why should we do


it ? When we go at war, we take prisoners, let the prisoners do the hard


work". And so, says Engels, society experienced its first division into


classes, between a class of masters and a class of slaves, between exploiters


and exploited. Of course, the society which has accumulated this capital becomes


the envy and the target of its neighbors. War is no longer a sport, it can pay,


and pay big, because if you conquer the enemy?s land that has already been


cleared and irrigated, with a year or more supply in storehouses, it is saving


you the investment and hard work. So each society had to organize some sort of


permanent defence against marauders and invaders. Each society took out of its


surplus enough food to pay for a group of people who would have no other


function than protection, i.e., a professional army. Now once the rulers had an


armed force at their disposal, the temptation was there permanently to use it


against their own people, to consolidate the rulers? power. Thus, says Engels,


there emerged a new institution, which would maintain "order" in


society, and of course an order favorable to the dominant class. This


institution is called "the state". Let me quote directly from Engels


: "In order to maintain this public power, contributions from


the state citizens are necessary — taxes. These were completely unknown to


gentile society [the so-called "primitives"]. We know more than enough


about them today ! With advancing civilization, even taxes are not sufficient ;


the state draws drafts on the future, contracts loans, state debts. Our old


Europe can tell a tale about these, too." [Engels was writing this in 1867.


What would he have to say about our modern Europe, with states plundering a full


50% of all wealth created in society and running debts equivalent to two years


of GNP !] "In possession of the public power and the right of


taxation, the officials now present themselves as organs of society standing


above society? Representatives of a power which estranges them from society,


they have to be given prestige by means of special decrees, which invest them


with a peculiar sanctity and inviolability." "The state is therefore


by no means a power imposed on society from without… Rather, it is a product


of society at a particular stage of development…" The first


point I wish to emphasise here with Marx and Engels is that the state is a human


construct ; it is not inherent to mankind, as the queen is to an ant colony or a


beehive. Human societies existed historically without a state, and there is no


reason why we could not organize ourselves again in the future without a state.


My second point is that, as Marx and Engels tell us, the state is the instrument


of oppression used to keep in check the exploited masses. Without the state,


mass exploitation would not be possible. Ideology Now,


the dominant class amounts to only a fraction of the population, sometimes as


low as 10-20%. Surely, 10% cannot exploit 90%. How come therefore this small


minority manages to stay in power ? For controlling the state is not


enough. Maintaining an army of professional warriors to keep in check citizens


who very often do not have the right to bear arms is indeed a way of enforcing


your power over society, but it is not a guarantee. An insurrection, a massive


taking to the streets, a general strike, can overthrow any government, even


supported by the military, as history has witnessed so many times. So the ruling


class always used another mean of wielding its power, it is ideology, and


understanding how ideology works may be Marx’s greatest contribution to the


study of history. Ideologies are the changing ideas, values, even feelings,


through which individuals experience their society. Ideologies present the


dominant ideas, the beliefs and values of the ruling class, as being the ideas


of society as a whole. Thus individuals, because they are thinking by using the


concepts, the words and the references of others, are prevented from grasping


how society actually functions, and they cannot even suspect that they are


exploited. Marxists thinkers, like Gramsci, Lukacs and Althusser, have expanded


greatly on Marx’s concept of ideology, and it goes further than Ayn Rand’s


sanction of the victim. For Marx, and especially for Gramsci, I would say


ideology achieves the perfect crime. A perfect crime is not when the criminal


remains unknown, it is one that nobody even suspects to be a crime, where death


is declared purely accidental, and no one will look for a criminal. For Marx,


the victims have nothing to consent to, they do not see themselves at all as


victims. Quite the reverse. They say "the master is good, he feeds me every


day, he does not beat me more often than I deserve to be." The production


of ideology is the intellectuals? job, and up until recently, intellectuals


were part of a clergy. You know the famous definition given by Marx of religion


as being the "opium of the people." Religion was perceived as a sort


of sedative of the mind. So even when people might have become conscious of


their oppression, there came the ruling class? second line of defense :


"Yes, my friend, you are right, God placed you at the bottom of society,


but it is for your own good, you will be all the happier in a later life";


"it is God?s plan for society that there exists lords and servants,


sorry, old chap, you are one of the servants, but you wouldn?t want to rebel


against God?s will, would you ?". Armed with such powerful tools as the


state police and ideology, the dominant class never gives up its power


gracefully. Why would it ? It seems it has the means to rule forever. Yet,


history shows us that changes did take place. Marx identifies two such


transformations in human history, from slavery to feudality, and from feudality


to capitalism. Revolutions So what caused these


momentous changes ? The answer is : technical innovations, which forced changes


in the production process. Marx is often interpreted as a technological


determinist on the basis of such isolated quotations as: "The windmill


gives you society with the feudal lord; the steam-mill gives you society with


the industrial capitalist." It is of course more complicated than that. But


basically, what we can say is that the dominant class? power base is the


control over certain commodities, over certain sources of wealth. But the


dominant class cannot predict, let alone control, the emergence of a new


technology. When this technology emerges, it may be in the hands of a group of


people who are not members of the dominant class. And suddenly these pioneers


generate a transformation in the means of production, in the way society is organized,


and therefore in the way society thinks, how it apprehends itself, because, says


Marx, the way we work, the function of production, what we do, influences who we


are. And the growing number of people who are involved in the new technology see


society with new eyes, they start questioning whether the power of the dominant


class is legitimate. This is exactly what happened throughout history, of


course. For instance, new inventions in the 18th century, including the steam


engine, were both a consequence and a cause of the philosophy of Enlightenment,


which exposed the arbitrary of the "divine right of Kings", and hence


of all aristocratic privileges, and led to the American and French revolutions.


It is difficult to dispute the relevance of Marx?s and Engels? analysis of


history. I concur with all they say about class struggles and the function of


ideology – prior to the Enlightenment. Quite obviously, the slave is


dispossessed, he may not own anything, he is clearly exploited. The feudal serf


is hardly in a better condition. He is tied to the land, he cannot leave it and


is sold with it. But when Marx goes on to say that workers under the capitalist


regime are dispossessed as the serfs were, I have a problem following his


reasoning. Marx believes that the new dominant class after the Industrial


Revolution is the one made up by the owners of capital, it is the bourgeoisie.


But this deduction is wrong, plain wrong. There is a logical fallacy here.


Freedom The logical fallacy is to posit that if two events occur simultaneously,


one must be the consequence of the other. This logic reminds me of one of


Husserl?s favorite anecdote : There is this guy who drinks whisky and soda,


and he gets drunk, then he takes gin and soda, and he gets drunk, then he takes


vodka and soda, and he gets drunk, and he concludes that he gets drunk on soda.


I don?t want to denigrate Marx?s vast intelligence, but he is telling us


that slave masters had political power, they exploited their slaves and they got


rich. Feudal lords had political power, they exploited their serfs and they got


rich. Capitalists are rich, therefore they must exploit their workers, right ?


Hang on. Capitalists have no political power. This surely must make a


difference. Unlike feudal lords and slave masters, capitalists cannot coerce


anybody to work for them, to consume their products, nor to finance their endeavors.


Marx feigns to ignore that with the emergence of the industrial revolution came


another revolution, which redistributed power within society. It was the


classical liberal revolution in the 18th century and it changed radically the


political and legal environment. People were free to work where they wanted, for


whomever they wanted. Marx pooh-poohs the achievement of that revolution and


what he refers to as "formal freedom." You know the argument, that


Marx will belabor in The Capital : We say the worker "agrees" to work


for the capitalist because no policemen are dragging him from his home to the


factory, but this means only that "he is compelled by social


conditions". In his treatise, ‘The Poverty of Philosophy’, Marx writes


"Indeed the individual considers as his own freedom the movement no longer


curbed or fettered by a common tie or by man, the movement of his alienated life


elements, like property, industry, religion?" And Marx adds : "In


reality, this is the perfection of his slavery and his inhumanity." This is


rather poor philosophy on Marx?s part. Freedom is "the movement no longer


curbed" by other men, freedom is freedom of property, of industry, of


religion.. There is none other. Take it away and you get Stalinism. The wealth


of kings, slave masters, feudal lords and all their lackeys, was acquired


through the exertion of violence, by way of military conquest, tax,


confiscation, enslavement.. But not necessarily the capitalists? wealth. The


capitalist makes money, indeed, and for a few of them, that money may be


numbered in billions, but he is not an exploiter. The ownership of the means of


production by itself does not make anyone an exploiter. This is where Marx got


it wrong. Making money in a trade between consenting parties is not exploiting


anyone, how could it be ? Work Marx was a believer in property


rights. It is because his work is the worker?s property that Marx may conclude


the worker is dispossessed of his remuneration. But Marx?s crude materialism


blinds his vision and prevents him from seeing that it is not work that is


remunerated, what is remunerated is work that is of service to someone, and to


someone who values this work enough to pay for it. Work by itself is


destructive. The Bible already taught us that work is a malediction.


Paradoxically, the record of Marxist states proves my point. Armies of workers


toiled literally like slaves during dozens of years, not creating any wealth,


actually destroying it. They extracted perfectly good copper mineral and crude


oil, and turned it into unusable electric wires and plastics. Many economists


calculated that if all the people in the Soviet Union had stopped working and


had been content to sell their vast commodity resources without attempting to


transform them, they would have been far better off. Work has no value by


itself. The value is in the service you render to somebody. It so happens that


in most instances you cannot be of service to somebody without performing a


certain amount of work, but Marx confuses the end and the means. If someone


could bring me clients whilst sleeping, I would pay that someone to sleep. So it


is not work that the capitalist pays, it is the service the worker is rendering.


There are people who for whatever reason are able to render a great service to a


great number of buyers, and they make bundles of money, and there are others who


have not found a way to prove their usefulness, resulting in differences of


revenues, sometimes very substantial ones. But the capitalist pays all services


exactly the fair price, or the worker, in a politically free society, would


immediately check the classified ads to see whether another employer offers a


higher price for the same service, and if that other employer cannot be found,


then it is evidence that the salary paid is exactly the fair and present value


of the service rendered. So if ca

pitalists pay fair wages, and if workers are


not exploited by their employer, who are the exploiters ? Who makes up the


dominant class today ? This question will become clear if we bear in mind there


are two ways to move goods in society, by the use of violence, which is the


political way, by trade and gifts, which is the economic way. Capitalism is the


use of trade and gifts, not the use of politics, to distribute goods in society.


All other regimes resort to violence. Marx and Engels emphasize the point


themselves. Feudalism and slavery are based on state coactive powers. The


results of their work are simply confiscated from the workers, and if they do


not like it and try to escape, policemen and soldiers will drag them back to


where they belong, so they may continue to be exploited. Now, is there not a


class today, who uses the powers of police and the army to confiscate the


results of our labor ? Is there not a class today, who resorts to political


constraint to acquire its means of living ? Those who resort to violence today


to get their revenues, as the feudal lords did three hundred years ago, are, of


course, all state employees. They do not make money in exchange for a service


people find useful enough to pay for. State employees simply collect the means


they need through the use of violence, coercion, racket, taxes (all these words


being synonymous here). They form the new ruling class. We are the oppressed. So


it is obvious, my friends, that the class struggle is not over. We are still


face to face with our exploiters, class against class, The mystery is why this


exploitation by the ruling class of state employees and their lackeys is not


obvious to everyone. How come does it last, how come the vast majority of the


population does not become conscious of the oppression it is subjected to ?


For it is true that most people in Europe do not perceive taxation as robbery


and government-imposed regulations and controls as coercion. You meet people


nowadays who would take out a gun and shoot a youth who is stealing a cassette


player from their car, and these same people allow the taxman to walk away with


50% of what they earn, every month, year after year, during their entire


lifetime. Furthermore, when you assess how much you are robbed by the taxman, it


is not just what you pay today that you should take into account, but the


compounded value of all what you have paid since the VAT you incurred on your


first ever purchase and the income tax on your first salary, plus the


opportunity cost of all the projects and desires you could not fulfill with that


money because it was taken away from you. Try to figure out what these numbers


add up to for yourself, you?ll be staggered. The Ruling Class Now


the first answer to the question of why we allow ourselves to be exploited seems


to be that the dominant class does not appear to be the wealthiest in society,


and the fact is it is not. So how come they exploit us, if they don?t make


more money than the richest amongst us ? Some people in the new ruling


class may not be rich, it is true, but neither were many slave owners or feudal


lords. Many lived no better, even were much poorer, than commoners, who were


active in trade and other businesses. It is not the amount of wealth that makes


you a member of the ruling class, but the way this wealth, however modest, is


acquired. It is not how much you earn, but how you earn it, that qualifies


exploitation. Do you make your money by political means or economical means ?


Is it earned or is it extorted ? Madonna makes 1,000 times more money than


a secretary in the European Union Brussels bureaucracy, but no one is forced to


buy Madonna records or attend her concerts. Every single penny, therefore, that


Madonna gets is given to her, often enthusiastically, by her fans. Every single


penny the EU secretary gets in salary is extorted from taxpayers. I grant you


that some people who acquire their revenues through coercion may still render a


useful service. I am sure one finds learned professors in state universities and


dedicated practitioners in state hospitals. The feudal lord too offered the


services of justice, police and defense to his serfs, the official church


provided education and social services.. The question is : there is no way to


know how much these services offered by state employees are really worth : are


they rendered in an optimal fashion ? Do they correspond to the true needs


of the people ? Because you are not free to pay for them (and often the


provision of these services is a monopoly protected by law), no one can tell how


useful the service really is, how much of this service would be needed and at


what price. More importantly, the end never justifies the means. As Albert Camus


used to say : "A political assassination is not a political act, it is an


assassination"; likewise we may say : "Robbing the rich to assist the


poor is not assistance, it is robbery". You can test by yourself how useful


a profession is by the way you would like those engaged in it to practice it.


You want an airline pilot, a hairdresser, a lawyer, a cook, a prostitute?, to


be hard working, dedicated, and creative in their job, but now think of customs


officials. If you have to pay them at all, pay them for doing nothing, you would


get better value than paying them for interfering with your affairs. This is how


useful these exploiters are to society. I must confess that, among exploiters, I


nourish a special aversion for customs officials, and if I may make a pause


here, I would like to tell you a story. It is about this tourist who is visiting


a foreign city. He notices a shop, like that of an antique dealer, and a very


odd small statue of a cat in the window. The tourist walks in and asks for a


price. "The statue is only $100, says the antique dealer, but the story


that goes with the statue is $1,000". "I don?t need the story, the


tourist shrugs, I want to bring a souvenir home, and this statue will do just


fine." "I?ll sell it to you, but believe me, warns the antique


dealer, you?ll soon come back for the story". The tourist leaves the


shop, with the statue in his pocket. As he is returning to his hotel, he notices


a cat is following him. This is unusual. He looks back again, and now four cats


are on his tails, and soon twenty cats. The tourist realizes he cannot walk into


the hotel with a herd of cats behind him, so, as he was crossing a bridge, he


throws the statue into the river. Immediately, the whole army of cats jump from


the bridge into the water and drown. Flabbergasted by what happened, the tourist


pauses for a long moment ; then he takes a sudden decision and traces his steps


back to the shop. The antique dealer wears an indulgent smile : "I see you


are already coming back for the story." "No, replies the tourist, I


would like to buy a statue of a customs official." With the transformation


of society, the face of oppression changes to reflect different circumstances.


This is why we don?t readily recognize exploitation for what it is. For


instance, in most European countries, government bureaucrats are employed for


life. It is the rule in France. When a talented young Frenchman is recruited by


a state agency, the whole French society finds itself saddled with a legal


obligation of 7 to 10 million dollars towards this new employee. This is how


much it will cost society on average to fund this person?s useless activity


from the first pay-check through retirement and until she dies. This 7 to 10


million dollars is the capital the exploited class is forced to guarantee by law


each member of the state exploiters? class. And in France, there are more than


5 millions of them, some 20% of the active population. "Drowning By


Numbers?" This figure of about 20% of the active population, by the way,


is at the high end of the proportion of feudal lords and the official clergy to


the total population during medieval times. There seems to be a natural law that


prevents the ruling class from growing above that number of 20%. Ecology offers


us many examples of such a fixed ratio between exploiters and exploited, between


the number of predators and their preys. Wolves, for instance, feed on caribous.


When the wolves population increases, they kill off too many caribous ; they


start to go hungry, the weakest starve to death, and their total population


settles back to where it was. This analogy tells us there is no difference in


nature between socialism and social-democracy. The difference is only in degree.


In the USSR, in Cuba and elsewhere, the predators exterminated their preys, at


least those who did not manage to flee the country, so the predators ended up


starving. Social-democratic states were clever enough not to scare off all the


"caribous" and keep enough of them alive, so that the ruling class


could prosper. The environment however is changing before our eyes.


Social-democratic economies are not growing as steadily as they did, and joining


the predators? class is seen as the short and safe way to make a living.


Families want their daughters to land a job at a Ministry, farmers demand


subsidies, industrialists beg for tariff protections, the elderly want higher


pensions? Every dominant class throughout history faced this demand from


outsiders to participate in the loot. At first, the exploiters found ways to


restrict entry. For instance, participation in the class of feudal lords came by


birth only. But sooner or later, the dominant class had to give in to allies?


and dependants? pressure. Athens had to integrate its meteques, its resident


aliens ; too many colonials became Roman citizens (think of the Apostle Paul) ;


in France, under Louis XV, as state coffers were emptying, the King was simply


auctioning off access to the noble ranks? The present ruling class is even


more vulnerable. It finds it impossible to restrain the number of predators, as


new entries are conferred not by birth, but by an exam. This method of selecting


predators on the basis of expertise was what the Enlightenment considered its


highest achievement : "La carri?re ouverte aux talents.." Not the


scions of ancient families, but the ablest citizens, whatever their social


origin, would rule the country. Of course, these new rulers, as they became in


charge of public education, would make sure the curriculum would favour their


own kin. You seldom see an ambassador?s son working on a factory line, and


they are not many factory worker?s sons who make it to an ambassadorship. It


is a defining characteristic of a ruling class that it perpetuates itself


through generations. The problem for the present ruling class, however, as Marx


anticipated, is again technological innovation. As the economy evolves from the


Machine Age to the Information Age, it requires better qualified people, not


illiterate factory line workers. Information Age workers are people who have the


capacity to pass all the barriers for admission into the ruling class. So the


number of predators is swelling. It is the ruling class? "internal


contradiction." Democracy Of course, this is not the only problem


the exploiting class is facing. Its other worry is that the ideology which


comforts its legitimacy, the Enlightenment philosophy, also supports the


political regime known as democracy. Democracy?s perversity is that it turns


all of us into accomplices of the violence exerted against society. We accept


this violence inasmuch as we hope to become the oppressors ourselves. In a


feudal society, it is clear who the oppressors are, and who are the victims,


because you are born into one camp or into the other, as I was mentioning


earlier. You are born a slave or a serf, and all your life, you remain an


innocent victim of your oppressors. Democratic society blurs this line between


villains and victims. It gives everyone an easy chance to take part in


oppression. Every time we cast our vote, we are signifying that we wish to take


control over part of the population, that we want to impose upon these men and


women our ideas and values and we want to extort from them the financial means


to achieve our own goals. Democracy is the system that perverts every


individual?s soul and turns every man and woman into a racketeer. With the


conjunction of democratic racketeering and an inflating ruling class, the burden


on the exploited masses is getting unbearable. Exploitation is naked and


brutish. Even ideology soon will not be able to explain away why we are


ransomed. The Big Lie Yet the ruling class? ideology has done a good


job so far, when you think of it. It made us believe that without the state,


roads would not be built, the poor would agonise in the streets, hospitals would


not be funded, and no one would write theatre plays any more? On radio and


television channels, in the newspapers, at schools and in universities, at


churches, everywhere, we are told that democracy is the only viable regime ;


that "social justice" is the common good ; that it is morally


acceptable to coerce any individual if it is for the good of the collective ;


that the end justifies the means ; that there are experts up there in


government, who are taking care of our well-being, who know better than we do


what is good for us, if only we would let them? Conservative ideologues


maintain that class struggle does not exist any longer, we are all middle-class


now? Leftist ideologues still believe in this idea that we are exploited, but


exploitation, they say, comes from the rich, from multinationals, from Wall


Street financiers and Swiss bankers… No one ever mentions that the exploiters


are the state bureaucracy and its lackeys, the military-industrial complex,


subsidised farmers and industrialists?, living off funds extorted from the


productive masses. Such blindness is amazing. On my left, you have a class of


people with guns. They run the army, the police, justice, they control the media


through broadcasting licenses, they exert censorship. All the means at their


disposal come from taxation, your revenues and savings extorted literally at gun


point. On my right, you have multinationals and small entrepreneurs, productive


workers and creators… They bring you the food you consume, they build your


houses, they connect you to telephone networks and television channels, they


supply you with clothes, they manufacture your automobiles and your computers ;


they are so afraid that you would stop buying their goods, which you can do at


any time, that they spend zillions advertising them on glossy paper and video


clips. Now, who are the exploiters ? The people with guns, right, the people who


don?t offer you anything you wish to have, or they would have no need to


confiscate your money in order to produce it, the extortionists ? Wrong.


The exploiters are the capitalists. Isn?t a feat of genius on the


ideologues? part that they have us believe the exploiters are the producers,


the creators, the providers, of the goods you enjoy to buy ? The bigger a lie,


the more faithfully it is believed. In a Fran?ois Truffaut film, there is this


schoolboy who arrives late in class. He knows the teacher won?t believe any


story about trains running late, bus accidents, and the usual excuses. So he


makes a sad face and declares : "My mother just died". The whole


school assembles immediately and offers sympathy ; no one suspects this tragic


death could be a lie. Political lies have to be so gross as to be believed.

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