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	<title>unity &#8211; The Red Clarion</title>
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	<description>The peoples hear our revolution&#039;s clarion call!</description>
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	<title>unity &#8211; The Red Clarion</title>
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		<title>Report on the Lake Quonnipaug Conference</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-09-21-report-on-the-lake-quonnipaug-conference/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Cincinnati Community Aid and Praxis (CCAP)]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 21 Sep 2024 14:20:06 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[International Communism and Social Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[North America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[On-the-Ground Reports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Struggle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CCAP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[party building]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[struggle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[unity]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=3673</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Cincinatti Community Aid and Praxis delivers a report on their attendance at the Lake Quonnipaug Conference and the establishment of the All-Empire Worker's League.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>On September 7th, the Connecticut Radical Reading Group (CTRRG) hosted a conference which was attended by two delegates from Cincinnati Community Aid and Praxis (CCAP). The purpose of this conference was to build connections between the attending organizations, share our lessons and analyses, and struggle constructively with one another. In addition, the conference aimed to establish a second order organization, or Worker’s League, which would unite those organizations in attendance should they agree to its founding.</p>



<p>Attendance at the conference was split between two groups, voting members and non-voting members. Voting members consisted of those organizations which met the criteria outlined in the convention proposal: have a defined democratic structure, have a nominal commitment to Marxism-Leninism, and have at least five full and active members. Non-voting members were made up of organizations which either did not meet one or more of the criteria or did not grant its delegates the power to enter into preliminary agreements. Among the non-voting members were a number of observer organizations.</p>



<p>Outside of CCAP and CTRRG, the conference was attended by representatives from the Kansas Socialist Book Club (KSBC), Red Help Austin TX, the Atlantic Regional Communist Party (ARCP), the Shenandoah Valley cadre, Unity of Fields (formerly PAL Action US), the People’s University of Amherst (PUA), and Ocean State Student and Worker Alliance (OSSWA), among a few other unaffiliated individuals. Additionally, representatives from the Chunka Luta Network (CLN) and Red Sails were present online for a short while. Of these attendees, only CCAP, CTRRG, and the ARCP qualified as voting members, while Unity of Fields, OSSWA, and the PUA were in attendance solely as observers.</p>



<p>The conference opened with a <a href="https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-09-16-an-overview-of-the-movement-in-its-current-state/">“State of the Movement” address</a> written and delivered by the CTRRG, which laid out the background for this conference and why it was deemed necessary. The piece assessed the conditions of our current historical moment, and concluded that no Communist Party exists nor has a legitimate Communist Party ever existed on this continent. Therefore, they posit, it is our role to build one. The piece explored the histories of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the Communist Party of China, which were formed through the unification of and struggle between different Marxist organizations and study groups. The principal method by which this happened was the formation of Leagues which unified small, local organizations into “organizations of organizations.” The League form existed as a step up from the local organization and a step below a party. Therefore, the intent of this conference was to struggle over this idea with other capable, principled Marxists and to establish such a League if the struggle led in that direction.</p>



<p>After the initial address, individual organizations were given the opportunity to present reports of their own. Reports were prepared and delivered by the Shenandoah Valley cadre, CCAP, the ARCP, Red Help, and KSBC. Each report explored the conditions of the struggle in each of their localities and centered on specific lessons each organization had learned from their experience organizing. The Shenandoah cadre shared the lessons they learned from a recent split in their organization, CCAP shared its plans for a cadre development program, the ARCP described organizing conditions in Canada and the tensions between settlers and the Indigenous, Red Help discussed their recent expulsion from CPUSA, and KSBC presented their plans for expansion and the process of their education program as well. Each report was followed by a period of discussion whereby people in attendance asked clarifying questions, critiqued elements of the report, and contributed any other relevant experience or information to the topic at hand.</p>



<p>Following the reports, discussion turned to the formation of a Worker’s League. It was during this time that OSSWA raised criticisms that they had developed of the idea of a League and shared their conception of the vanguard party. It was the opinion of these attendees that the reconstitution of the Communist Party should follow the example set by the Peruvian Communist Party using the strategy of concentric construction and clandestine organization. Debate ensued around the applicability of such a strategy to the conditions of the North American Empire, the efficacy of clandestine organizing as an ideological versus a tactical concern, and the method by which mass organizing relates to party building. Ultimately, the voting members agreed to move forward with the formation of the League, with the promise that they would interrogate the strategy of concentric construction and conduct an analysis of its applicability to our current conditions.</p>



<p>Of the three voting members present, CCAP and the CTRRG voted to establish the League. The ARCP, citing labor shortage in their current work, deferred their entry into the League until a later date. Additionally, a number of the observer organizations professed an interest in joining the League as either candidate or member organizations upon reporting back to their respective cadres.</p>



<p>At a special session of the General Body held on September 17th, CCAP voted to ratify the League charter and join as full members.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Analysis</strong></h2>



<p>What is a League and why did the conference set out to establish one?</p>



<p>The Lake Quonnipaug Conference came as a step in the strategy for party building as outlined by the prospectus of the Unity–Struggle–Unity Press organization, which is a strategy that we at CCAP have also arrived at and have chosen to adopt. This strategy, as demonstrated by the founding of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and of the Communist Party of China, is characterized not by the direct growth of one individual organization that becomes the vanguard, but the establishment of unity between existing organizations and the formation of “organizations of organizations.” A League is such an organization, a second-order organization of which the membership consists not of individuals but of other primary, local, organizations. A League is not a party, however it is still an advancement in organizational complexity and capability over a primary organization, and lays the groundwork for the development of further unity and the eventual establishment of a party.</p>



<p>The purpose of the All-Empire Worker’s League is two-fold. On the one hand, it establishes unity between a number of existing primary organizations on the basis of a shared commitment to Marxism and a shared strategy for party building. It establishes a meaningful and lasting connection between such organizations whereby they are in active, formalized relation and communication with one another to coordinate efforts, struggle ideologically, and provide strategic resources between them. On the other hand, it serves as a living example of the strategy it is following. Ultimately, the party would be founded through the unity between a number of Leagues, therefore it is our aim to inspire others to create unity between principled Marxist formations in their own localities and form Leagues of their own. The All-Empire Worker’s League thus serves as an example that such a strategy is viable and provides a model for others to follow.</p>



<p>Our delegates felt that the conference itself was extremely successful, not only because it managed to achieve its stated aims. Possibly the most important and most valuable part of the conference was the connection made between the groups present. Many of these groups did not have formal communications with one another prior to the conference. Many had not even heard of one another. However, what we found was a collection of the most principled, most revolutionary, most dedicated comrades from all around the country who we established meaningful and lasting connections with. The conference served as a place for principled struggle, for sharing organizing tactics and strategies, for educating one another on our specific conditions and efforts, and for learning from the varied experiences of our newfound comrades.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Conclusion</strong></h2>



<p>All the proceedings from the conference including meeting minutes, copies of organization reports, and the Worker’s League charter will be published in full in the Red Clarion. We recommend that any and all comrades who are curious about the conference go and review the materials when they become available. Additionally, we recommend that interested organizations review the League charter and consider applying to join, or consider an effort to establish a League of their own with organizations in their specific locality.</p>



<p>Any questions about the League, the conference, or CCAP’s role in it, please reach out to us through Unity–Struggle–Unity, our <a href="https://www.instagram.com/cincycap/">Instagram</a>, or our email: cincycap@protonmail.com.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>An Overview of the Movement in its Current State</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-09-16-an-overview-of-the-movement-in-its-current-state/</link>
					<comments>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2024-09-16-an-overview-of-the-movement-in-its-current-state/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Connecticut Radical Reading Group (CTRRG)]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Sep 2024 15:42:27 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[International Communism and Social Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[North America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[On-the-Ground Reports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[All-Empire Worker's League]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lake Quonnipaug Conference]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[party building]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[U.S. Empire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[unity]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=3643</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[History is with us. The time is right. We propose today nothing short of casting the very metal from which the social revolution will be forged!]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p><em>Statement from the Editors: On September 7th, 2024, delegates from several local organizations, as well as individual observers and observers from nascent organizations, met at the Lake Quonnipaug Conference in Connecticut with the intention of forming a worker&#8217;s league. This is the keynote speech given at the conference by a delegate from the Connecticut Radical Reading Group (CTRRG). After a day of discussions, the majority of attendees agreed with forming the league, beginning with the adoption of a league charter. The purpose of the formation is one of building unity, to connect the advanced masses across regions into a higher level of cooperation, particularly with a focus on the development of member organizations through mutual support. More details will be published as this new All-Empire Worker&#8217;s League is constructed.</em></p>



<p>The Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party, which would give birth to the Bolshevik faction and ultimately the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the science of Marxism-Leninism, held its founding conference in 1898 in the city of Minsk. The Communist Party of China was founded on July 1, 1921. In both cases, the parties were created out of the union of study circles as their principal element. The unification of these study circles into militant revolutionary parties was a necessary step on the road to social revolution. No such solid history undergirds the so-called “parties” in the U.S. and Canada today. Here and now, on September 7th of 2024, fully 126 years after the founding of the R.S.D.L.P. and 103 after the founding of the CPC, the date in the most powerful capitalist empire in the world might as well be 1897.</p>



<p>Not only did the U.S.-Canadian movement never establish a solid foundation — thanks, in part, to the ComIntern’s merger of the CPA and SPA in the early 20th century and the failure to establish an organizational safeguard against the latent reformism and opportunism that already plagued those formations — we have a century of false starts and the wreckage they created to deal with. At the heart of what we can call the American errors are 1) the failure to establish national liberation of the Black nation and captive Indigenous nations as a special stage in the U.S. revolution due to the settler-colonial relations, and 2) the failure to establish gender liberation as a bedrock principle of Communist organization. I can confidently state that, had those issues been properly addressed by the overwhelmingly white petit-bourgeois leaders of the early CPUSA — had the party not sidelined and then expelled Harry Haywood and the other so-called “Black nationalists,” every other error would have been, if not avoided, at least avoidable.</p>



<p>The list of secondary and subsidiary errors made by the movement in the U.S. over the course of the 20th century is too long to enumerate today. <strong>Now</strong>, we must assess the current conditions and put forward a program and plan that takes these conditions into account. What are these conditions?</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>I. Rightism Predominates</strong></h2>



<p>The overwhelming tendency on the U.S.-Canadian left has historically been and continues to be the predominance of rightist deviations from Marxism-Leninism. This has manifested as opportunism — the adoption of politically popular but non-Communist positions to maintain personal power and popularity — as revisionism — the “revising” of Marxism to remove its revolutionary content — as tailism — the adoption of positions which are <strong>already</strong> no longer relevant to the masses and their consciousness because they appear to be “safe” — and as simple reformism. The reason for these deviations is manifestly a desire to preserve the system of capitalist exploitation because the corrupt leadership of these formations does not in fact <strong>desire</strong> a world in which the benefits of national oppression have been eliminated. If the choice, they reckon, is between being socialist but eliminating whiteness, or being capitalist but nice, they proclaim: “Let me be capitalist – but let me be <strong>white</strong>.”</p>



<p>In other words, the movement has never progressed in any meaningful sense beyond the social chauvinism of the Second International.</p>



<p>To protect their social chauvinist lines, the U.S. and Canadian formations have adopted a perversion of democratic centralism. They <strong>cannot</strong> admit full democratic participation within their parties because to do so would be to invite real revolutionaries in and jeopardize their century-long legacy of tailism and legal Marxism. Over time, as leadership became insulated from democratic pressure, they parroted the justification of “professional revolutionaries” to give themselves unassailable perquisites, such that leadership in one of these parties comes with stipends, apartments, and paychecks. Every word ever written by Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin, or the founders of the CPC, can be perverted once the living legacy is gone. <strong>These parties have adopted the political slogans, but emptied them of meaning and now they spout them to justify the inverse policies of the historical revolutionaries.</strong> They are, in a very real sense, traitors to the cause of revolution.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>II. Leftism is the Natural Response</strong></h2>



<p>The predominance of rightism in the movement throws up its own dialectical shadow: ultra-leftism. When it is impossible to participate in a party with a revolutionary line, and where the existing parties pervert and corrupt the revolutionary line into a reformist one, committed revolutionaries are prone to leftist errors. These are made <strong>as a result of the predominant rightist errors</strong>, and sometimes even made <strong>knowingly, as a corrective.</strong> But it is not the ultraleftist deviation that currently threatens the integrity of the movement. The ultraleftists could be brought back into the revolutionary fold of correct theory and practice if (and only if) the rightist deviation were defeated.</p>



<p>The most pervasive version of this ultra-leftist response is what we have jokingly called “anarcho-maoism” in the past. This is a form of extreme misreading combined with doctrinaire book worship of Mao Zedong while excluding the historical context of his works (for instance, the fact that the Communist Party of China was already iron-strong compared to the limp-noodle parties of the modern West) and to essentially read him as an anarchist. Anarcho-maoism focuses almost entirely on “doing the work,” and utterly rejects all attempts to produce and agree upon correct revolutionary theory as “philosophizing.” Anarcho-maoism advocates narrow, local work to connect with the masses <strong>above and beyond the work of organizing a functioning party.</strong> This is a dangerous deviation, because it deprives us of both the theoretical and practical basis upon which to build up the Communist Party.</p>



<p><strong>Without revolutionary theory, there can be no revolutionary movement.&nbsp;</strong></p>



<p><strong>Without the Communist Party, there would have been no new China.</strong></p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>III. The First Weapon of the Proletariat is Organization</strong></h2>



<p>All across the left, the mistaken call goes up: “just do the work.” Many sources tell us not to worry about the party-form, that we don’t need it yet or that it will arise “naturally” as we connect with the masses. This is a holdover or expression of the same anarcho-maoist ideology which we criticized above. It may also manifest as a type of Third Worldism in which the job of overthrowing the empire is shrugged off from its historical subject, the U.S.-Canadian proletariat, and thrust upon those who are already the most oppressed by the imperial machine, the Third World proletariat. These are two different types of ultra-left capitulationism, two different ways of ignoring the world-historic task set out before us, and ultimately feed back into the rightist belief that the United States capitalist empire is too powerful to be overthrown; the rightists and segments of the ultra-left both ask us to adopt a “holding pattern” until the day that American capitalism falters and a new horizon comes into view.</p>



<p>Other ultra-left sects demand immediate application of terror tactics, the formation of combat organizations, open revolt against the enemy state. This, too, is incorrect. Even in the conditions of a fully-formed party as in Russia, combat organizations of socialists were often used by the Tsarist secret police, the Okhrana, to crack down on socialists, to jail them, to hang them. The use of terror split the socialists from the masses, who were not prepared for it, and isolated these lone terrorists; stranded and alone, they were unable to spark a mass movement.</p>



<p>If our weapons are not, at this stage, arms (guns, bombs, bullets) nor survival programs (food, shelter, showers), then what are they? <strong>The chief weapon of the proletarian class is organization.</strong> Although our enemy is already organized and supplied with both its main force (the state in the form of police and the armed forces) and its auxiliaries (paramilitary settler-garrison societies like the Oathkeepers), the strength of our enemy does not lie in its organization, but rather in its command of the productive property, capital, and political power. To challenge the concentrated power of the capitalists, which is everywhere funneled down from the glass and steel towers into the battering ram of the police on the street, we must be capable of exerting concentrated proletarian power.</p>



<p>Revolutionary capacity — proletarian class power — is a <strong>special characteristic </strong>of an organization that is organized <strong>in a certain way </strong>and which possesses an authentic connection with the masses and which develops and adheres to the correct revolutionary theory. The power of the proletariat is expressed in these two simple truisms:</p>



<ol class="wp-block-list has-medium-font-size">
<li>The proletariat is the necessary workforce for all social production and,</li>



<li>The proletariat is the fundamental basis, the social foundation, of all capitalist society.</li>
</ol>



<p>One proletarian alone cannot access the strength implicit in either of these statements. One proletarian cannot alone convince the class to resist the capitalists&#8217; blandishments and lies. So long as the class remains disorganized, this power is <strong>latent, sleeping</strong>. Only once the class has become organized in a highly disciplined form according to true democratic principles and along Marxist-Leninist lines can it exert its class power. What is the vehicle for this organization? <strong>It is the revolutionary political party.</strong></p>



<p><strong></strong>Will it be built spontaneously? <strong>No. </strong>Only through dedicated study, hard struggle, and long hours of labor will it come into being. The first task of every cell of the Party-to-be must be the production of new, militant, revolutionaries. That is one reason why Unity–Struggle–Unity is working with RedSails on a schema for a series of political education courses.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>IV. A Party of a New Kind? No! A Party of the Correct Kind</strong></h2>



<p>We have already acknowledged that we lack this vehicle above, that there is no militant, disciplined, revolutionary political party currently organized on the correct lines that would enable the revolutionary class to exert its class-power here in the U.S. or Canada.&nbsp;</p>



<p>What are the hallmarks of the vanguard party? In both Tsarist Russia and the Qing Empire, the Communist Parties were formed from the unification of study circles and struggle leagues: local, <strong>primary</strong> organizations that operated on the ground. We must study the party-formation period of these two organizations to learn the “secrets” of what came before. In Russia, where incorrect socialist theories made the formation of the party difficult, one of the preconditions of party formation was the demolition of those theories to pave the way for the R.S.D.L.P.</p>



<p>As Comrade Stalin wrote in the Short Course History of the CPSU (Bolsheviks), (and here, comrades, I apologize, as I will quote at length):</p>



<p><em>In a number of his writings during this period Lenin criticized the methods of political struggle employed by the principal Narodnik group, the &#8220;Narodnaya Volya,&#8221; and later by the successors of the Narodniks, the Socialist-Revolutionaries—especially the tactics of individual terrorism. Lenin considered these tactics harmful to the revolutionary movement, for they substituted the struggle of individual heroes for the struggle of the masses. They signified a lack of confidence in the revolutionary movement of the people.</em></p>



<p><em>In the book, </em>What the &#8220;Friends of the People&#8221; Are<em>, Lenin outlined the main tasks of the Russian Marxists. In his opinion, the first duty of the Russian Marxists was to weld the disunited Marxist circles into a united Socialist workers&#8217; party. He further pointed out that it would be the working class of Russia, in alliance with the peasantry, that would overthrow the tsarist autocracy, after which the Russian proletariat, in alliance with the labouring and exploited masses, would, along with the proletariat of other countries, take the straight road of open political struggle to the victorious Communist revolution.</em></p>



<p><em>…</em></p>



<p><em>Of immense significance, too, was Lenin&#8217;s struggle against &#8220;legal Marxism.&#8221; It usually happens with big social movements in history that transient &#8220;fellow-travelers&#8221; fasten on them. The &#8220;legal Marxists,&#8221; as they were called, were such fellow-travelers. Marxism began to spread widely throughout Russia; and so we found bourgeois intellectuals decking themselves out in a Marxist garb. They published their articles in newspapers and periodicals that were legal, that is, allowed by the tsarist government. That is why they came to be called &#8220;legal Marxists.&#8221;</em></p>



<p><em>After their own fashion, they too fought Narodism. But they tried to make use of this fight and of the banner of Marxism in order to subordinate and adapt the working-class movement to the interests of bourgeois society, to the interests of the bourgeoisie. They cut out the very core of Marxism, namely, the doctrine of the proletarian revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat. One prominent legal Marxist, Peter Struve, extolled the bourgeoisie, and instead of calling for a revolutionary struggle against capitalism, urged that &#8220;we acknowledge our lack of culture and go to capitalism for schooling.&#8221;</em></p>



<p><em>In the fight against the Narodniks Lenin considered it permissible to come to a temporary agreement with the &#8220;legal Marxists&#8221; in order to use them against the Narodniks, as, for example, for the joint publication of a collection of articles directed against the Narodniks. At the same time, however, Lenin was unsparing in his criticism of the &#8220;legal Marxists&#8221; and exposed their liberal bourgeois nature.</em></p>



<p><em>…</em></p>



<p><em>In 1898 several of the Leagues of Struggle—those of St. Petersburg, Moscow, Kiev and Ekaterinoslav—together with the Bund made the first attempt to unite and form a Social-Democratic party. For this purpose they summoned the First Congress of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party (R.S.D.L.P.), which was held in Minsk in March 1898.</em></p>



<p><em>The First Congress of the R.S.D.L.P. was attended by only nine persons. Lenin was not present because at that time he was living in exile in Siberia. The Central Committee of the Party elected at the congress was very soon arrested. The Manifesto published in the name of the congress was in many respects unsatisfactory. It evaded the question of the conquest of political power by the proletariat, it made no mention of the hegemony of the proletariat, and said nothing about the allies of the proletariat in its struggle against tsardom and the bourgeoisie.</em></p>



<p><em>In its decisions and in its Manifesto the congress announced the formation of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party.</em></p>



<p><em>It is this formal act, which played a great revolutionary propagandist role, that constituted the significance of the First Congress of the R.S.D.L.P.</em></p>



<p><em>But although the First Congress had been held, in reality no Marxist Social-Democratic Party was as yet formed in Russia. The congress did not succeed in uniting the separate Marxist circles and organizations and welding them together organizationally. There was still no common line of action in the work of the local organizations, nor was there a party program, party rules or a single leading centre.</em></p>



<p><em>For this and for a number of other reasons, the ideological confusion in the local organizations began to increase, and this created favourable ground for the growth within the working-class movement of the opportunist trend known as &#8220;Economism.&#8221;</em></p>



<p><em>It required several years of intense effort on the part of Lenin and of Iskra (Spark), the newspaper he founded, before this confusion could be overcome, the opportunist vacillations put an end to, and the way prepared for the formation of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party.</em></p>



<p>In contrast, the Communist Party of China faced a relatively easier road to consolidation. The incorrect tactics, theory, and practice of the 19th century had already been exposed globally by the foundation of the Bolsheviks and the triumphs of October by the time the labor struggles intensified in China. <strong>There were no major competing socialist formations for the Communists of China to sweep away. </strong>Instead, Li Dazhou, a Chinese peasant born in 1889 who became the librarian and professor of Peking University in 1917 and who had fought for national liberation of the Chinese people, founded a study circle in Beijing that would become the core of the party. He also began to publish a Marxist newspaper designed to unify the budding Marxists in the country.</p>



<p>As a result of the leadership of Li Dazhou’s study group during the May Fourth Movement protesting the continued national humiliation of China under the Versailles treaty, Li’s protest against the Paris Peace Conference of 1919, etc. he became one of the leading lights of Marxism in China. Along with Chen Duxiu, Li built up the basic organizations that would unify to become the Communist Party of China.</p>



<p><strong>Both the R.S.D.L.P. and the Communist Party of China were constructed not out of whole cloth; not conjured into being by the dictate of a central organ, but through the diligent creation and unification of local, </strong><strong><em>primary</em></strong><strong>, organizations.</strong></p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>V. But What is the Party of the Correct Type?</strong></h2>



<p>Let us look at the structure of the CPSU and the CPC, the debates around their forms and formations, to understand the structure of a Marxist-Leninist party, for we will not find it incarnated in the so-called “parties” of the United States or Canada.</p>



<p>The split between the Menshevik and Bolshevik factions in the R.S.D.L.P., which led directly to the foundation of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, was precipitated around the question of “Paragraph 1” of the party rules draft presented by Julius Martov for the second party congress, held in 1903. This concerned membership in the party and what was required to be a member. Martov’s draft became the party rules for the Mensheviks; Lenin’s, for the Bolsheviks.</p>



<p>Martov’s draft reads: “A member of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party is one who, accepting its programme, works actively to accomplish its aims under the control and direction of the organs of the Party.” Comrade Lenin took issue with this formulation, correctly stating that this was “only an <strong>empty phrase</strong>. That Party members must work under the control and direction of the <strong>organs</strong> of the Party goes without saying; <strong>it cannot be otherwise</strong>, and only those talk about it who love to talk without saying anything… can the <strong>organs of the Party</strong> exercise <strong>actual</strong> direction over Party members who <strong>do not belong </strong>to any of the <strong>Party organizations</strong>?” Comrade Lenin’s reformulation was that members must <strong>belong to a Party organization.</strong></p>



<p>And what does Comrade Lenin say about the Party at large? In <em>One Step Forward, Two Steps Back</em>, he writes “The word ‘organisation’ is commonly employed in two senses, a broad and a narrow one. In the narrow sense it signifies an individual nucleus of a collective of people with at least a minimum degree of coherent form. In the broad sense it signifies the sum of such nuclei united into a whole…. the Party is an organisation, <strong>should</strong> be an organisation (in the broad sense of the word); at the same time, the Party should consist of a whole number of diversified organisations (in the narrow sense of the word).” He says, “The Party should be a sum (and not the mere arithmetical sum, but a complex) of <strong>organisations</strong>.”</p>



<p>At the same time, the Bolsheviks had to struggle mightily against the “circle principle,” the idea that individual party organizations had “rights” of their own. The party is more than just a sum of organizations, an organization of organizations, but a unity divided into cells. Comrade Lenin and the Bolsheviks also struggled over what democratic centralism meant. In 1906, Comrade Lenin published <em>Freedom to Criticise and Unity of Action </em>in which he strictly defined democratic centralism’s relation to criticism. This is critical, because <strong>criticism and self-criticism is the chief weapon of struggle within the Party </strong>(which we will see when we turn to Comrade Mao’s <em>On Correcting Mistaken Ideas In The Party </em>and other writings): “The principle of democratic centralism and autonomy for local Party organisations implies the universal and full <strong>freedom to criticise</strong>, so long as this does not disturb the unity of <strong>a definite action</strong>; it rules out <strong>all</strong> criticism which disrupts or makes difficult the <strong>unity</strong> of an action decided on by the Party.”</p>



<p>In our context, a <strong>primary organization</strong> is therefore the cellular network of Marxists working in any given region, enterprise, or locality and performing real work to develop its membership in political understanding of Marxism-Leninism as well as developing connections with the masses and elevating their consciousness. In essence, the organically-forming local Marxist organizations already engaged in real Marxist work, from ongoing logistics and survival mass-oriented programs to political education and cadre-building, are the <strong>basic stuff</strong> of which the Party will and must be made. In other words, the organizations that have sent delegates to this very conference are the building blocks of the Party-to-be. We will hear reports of work later today in order to more fully understand and communicate the conditions in each region that is represented here.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>VI. Class Consciousness is Rising</strong></h2>



<p>What else typifies our current moment in the heart of the U.S.-Canadian capitalist block? The tide of class consciousness has reached a lifelong high. Why is this? To put it very simply indeed, we have come to the end of a long period of capitalist-imperialist stabilization in which Western capital was relatively more powerful and secure than it had been and we are entering — or have entered, with the outbreak of war in Ukraine and Palestine — a period of instability and crisis.</p>



<p>Beginning in 1991 with the forceful disintegration of the U.S.S.R. and the reopening of one sixth of the surface of the earth to Western capital and the depredations of its markets, the instability of the imperial centers in Washington, London, and Berlin was more or less ameliorated. This doesn’t mean there weren’t a series of crises within the Western block; the crash of 2008 and the Eurozone debt crisis of 2009 are stand out examples of the periodic capitalist crises evidenced even during this period of stabilization. However, the periodic crises did not throw the Western capitalist block into a sustained depression. The Western capitalists were able to crawl out of the occasional and intermittent holes into which they stumbled by virtue of the overall character of stabilization.</p>



<p>This period lasted roughly thirty years, between 1991 and 2019. In 2020, the COVID crisis erupted across the world and stabilization can be said to have come to a close. As the Western block began to decompensate, other signals of this shift in the overall character of capitalism emerged: the 2020 June Uprisings in the U.S., the 2022 invasion of Ukraine to prevent the joining of that country into the NATO block, the 2023 invasion of Palestine in response to the heroic October 7 strikes, etc. Civil unrest within the core of the capitalist block has become endemic, and periods of calm are relatively fewer and shorter between. Labor struggles have become more acute, and several major strikes have either been broken by the U.S. government or capitulated through their leadership. Standards of living are decreasing in the imperial core. Despite the muttering of bourgeois mouthpieces, actual wages have fallen sharply. The median household income in 2019 was roughly $69,000/year. At the current rate of inflation between 2019 and 2024, that would have had to rise to $85,000/year to maintain its equivalent purchasing power. In actuality, the median household income in the first quarter of 2024 is roughly $59,000/year. That is a <strong>fall of 14%.</strong></p>



<p><strong></strong><strong>The imperialist contract, the promise of superprofits in exchange for class peace, has broken down.</strong></p>



<p>National consciousness is also rising. It is, in fact, national liberation that will provide the wedge that will split apart the capitalist block and put an end to the Western capitalist empire. Every time class consciousness rises and then recedes, it reaches a higher resting state and the next explosion of consciousness carries the high-water mark further and faster, leading to progressively more intense bursts of class-activity. <strong>The U.S.-Canadian proletariat is not yet aware of itself as a class-in-itself, but this awareness is growing. </strong>As the awareness of American imperialism becomes more widespread, the basic features of class are becoming more and more widely known. As the system of imperialist spoils and the distribution of imperialist superprofits breaks down, the working classes of the capitalist empire are beginning to rise, to look around them, and to realize their actual position vis-a-vis the ruling classes. Each failed rising creates a new population of activists who are aware, who are becoming more well-versed in organizing techniques and tactics, and who have seen the state repress their movement. <strong>There is a straight line through the sixteen years between Occupy and the 2024 Student Intifada.</strong></p>



<p><strong></strong>It is now our task to harness that rising tide. The Communists must stand at the forefront of all progressive movements, and there is nothing more world-progressive than attacks on U.S. empire across the world. <strong>At this time, resistance against the imperial genocide of Palestine, backed by the U.S. colonialists for the security and profit of the zionist state, is the forefront of the class struggle. </strong>It is recognized as the forefront of the global class struggle across the world. <strong>This is our proving ground.</strong></p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>VII. Building Capacity, Building the Party</strong></h2>



<p>It is now our duty, then, to build the basic blocks of the Party-to-be so they can be united in an inter-circle struggle. Today we are taking the first tentative steps toward unification.&nbsp; It may be that, like the first Congress of the RSDLP, we fail to achieve our lofty goals today. We have set our sights high. Yet, even should we fall short, the fires we light today will help us clearly see the way forward.&nbsp;</p>



<p>In order to settle theoretical issues once and for all, we must have an organization capable of democratically debating them and testing them against the world through manifest practical action. That organization is none other than the Communist Party — I don’t say reborn or reforged, because the Communist Party in the U.S. Empire has always been compromised, going all the way back to its foundation. Let us say a <em>real</em> Communist Party of a type that has not been seen in the U.S.-Canadian block before.</p>



<p>The road to the militant party is long, but we are embarking on that journey today. We must create organizations capable of reproducing Communist cadre. We must pool our resources together, use the technological advances that unlock our capacity to work across regions, across cities, across the continent. We must labor diligently toward the day we can confront the enemy state.</p>



<p>History is with us. The time is right. It is the tidal force of history that brought all of us here today to embark on this great project. It is my suggestion — and to be clear, not mine alone, but developed with the other theoreticians at Unity–Struggle–Unity and the members of the Connecticut Radical Reading Group — that we must first unite in an organization of organizations, continue working toward a loose effective unity across the entire empire, then, when we have brought together those circles, to unify them such that they are no longer a federation of organizations but a single, powerful, militant, revolutionary political Party that can challenge the enemy state on every field: economic, political, military.</p>



<p>We propose today nothing short of casting the very metal from which the social revolution will be forged!</p>
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		<title>Marxists Must Unite!</title>
		<link>https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/2023-09-05-bulletin-marxists-must-unite/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Cde. J. Katsfoter]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Sep 2023 21:10:31 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[All Content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bulletin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[International Communism and Social Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marxist-Leninists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marxists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[U.S. Empire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Unification]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[unity]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://clarion.unity-struggle-unity.org/?p=2450</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[What is the soul of Marxism? The soul of Marxism is proletarian revolution.]]></description>
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<p>Although far from all our readers are Marxists, we must take a moment to address those who are by occasionally publishing bulletins like this one. Our hope is not to detract from the reporting that you have come to trust us to deliver, but to add immeasurably to it by offering tangible ways in which the injustices between these pages can be thwarted.</p>



<p>To those who are not: we urge you to undertake the study of Marxism, to join a group of Marxists and learn. Although we all can see and feel the monstrous inequalities and evils of the present-day U.S. state and the capitalists who run it through their puppet-politicians, it’s not enough to see and feel the truth! We must not only feel it in our bones, but know it, learn how to combat it, how to overthrow it, and what must be done not only to relieve the present miseries, but also how to set society on a new basis; how, in other words, to achieve the freedom and liberation of all human beings on Earth from the decaying chains of capitalism, colonialism, of feudalism, of racism, sexism, and of all the bonds made by one man to enslave and ensnare another. Marxism is the science of freedom.</p>



<p>What is the soul of Marxism? The soul of Marxism is proletarian revolution. It is the revolution of the class of workers, the producers who make everything, whose labor, whose blood is in every commodity that is exchanged today. Those who deny, degrade, or dismember the revolution can’t be counted as Marxists. These deniers, these liquidators of revolution, are in command of every major “Marxist” organization in the United States Empire. Marx’s formation of the maximal program, which he wrote for the Workers Party of France, has been abandoned, but we will repeat it so its tocsin can sound loud and clear, an alarm that should echo through the ranks of the Communists in North America:</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>Considering,</p>



<p>That the emancipation of the productive class is that of all human beings without distinction of sex or race;</p>



<p>That the producers can be free only when they are in possession of the means of production;</p>



<p>That there are only two forms under which the means of production can belong to them:</p>



<ol class="wp-block-list">
<li>The individual form which has never existed in a general state and which is increasingly eliminated by industrial progress;</li>



<li>The collective form the material and intellectual elements of which are constituted by the very development of capitalist society;</li>
</ol>



<p>Considering,</p>



<p>That this collective appropriation can arise only from the revolutionary action of the productive class – or proletariat – organized in a distinct political party;</p>



<p>That such an organization must be pursued by all the means the proletariat has at its disposal, including universal suffrage, which thus will be transformed from the instrument of deception that it has been until now into an instrument of emancipation;</p>



<p>The French socialist workers, in adopting as the aim of their efforts the political and economic expropriation of the capitalist class and the return to the community of all the means of production, have decided, as a means for organization and struggle, to enter the elections with the following [minimal] demands…</p>
</blockquote>



<p>But do we have a distinct party of the proletariat? No!</p>



<p>Our movement has fractured. It has been divided by great nation chauvinism. It has decayed under the repeated attacks of the bourgeoisie and their reactionary vanguard in the form of their intelligence agencies. They have fostered disunity, division, and backbiting — and it doesn’t take much to get socialists to fight one another! We must unite, yes, but we must unite around <em>principles</em>.</p>



<p>The largest of the old revisionist parties in the US, the Communist Party of the U.S.A. (CPUSA), explicitly renounces revolutionary action while claiming to embrace it. Their leadership condemns violence. But what violence? Their co-chair, Joe Sims, wrote in 2019 that “Power comes not from the barrel of a gun.” Ah! The CPUSA condemns <em>revolutionary violence</em>. As to how it will answer the violence of the capitalist class, this is left to the much vaguer “united action of workers and people in struggle.” Their party program calls revolution “a profoundly democratic process” that rejects “violent action” and will make it “politically impossible for the former ruling class to use political or military means to return to power.” This is nothing short of the liquidation of revolution under the slogan of revolution!</p>



<p>The Trotskyist fragment of the World Workers Party, the so-called Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), which now bills itself as Marxist-Leninist, is another sect. Hypersecurity and the asphyxiating rules that the Western parties call “democratic centralism” are used to prevent chapters from speaking to one another and to ensure an entrenched leadership of a single, central family retains power in that org — at all costs.</p>



<p>The Freedom Road Socialist Organization’s (FRSO) program uses the word revolution, and they appear to mean <em>actual revolution </em>when they say it; but their <em>program </em>of revolutionary action is to “build[] a united front against the monopoly capitalist class.” Admittedly, the FRSO acknowledges that it is <em>not </em>a revolutionary party but merely a “socialist organization.” This self-awareness is good! But without a firm commitment to revolutionary <em>action</em>, the slogan of revolution rings hollow.</p>



<p>The CP Canada suffers from the same commandism, anti-democratic trends, and false adherence to a lie of “democratic centralism” when what they mean is centralist commandism. Witness the convention of 2022, in which the party leadership violated their own constitution to protect leadership, expel delegates, and ensure that the same circle of leaders retained control of the heights of the party apparatus.</p>



<p>The fact is, a century of distortion and revisionism under the watchful eye of the U.S. Empire’s “letter agencies” — the CIA, FBI, and NSA — and their companions in Canada have produced a woeful dearth of Marxist education. The workers&#8217; schools have been shut down. Revolutionaries were purged from the CPUSA shortly before it was dissolved in 1944. For this reason, most people who consider themselves Marxists in North America have never actually grappled with the core texts, ideas, organizational forms, goals, tactics, or history of Marxism to any degree.</p>



<p>Worse, a century of accruing material wealth and being diverted down the dark roads of great nation chauvinism and personal advancement mean that the leaders of each of these parties have a vested interest in maintaining their leadership roles. They are in control of vast resources: they pay themselves salaries through shell companies, they collect dues, and they serve as a captive opposition to the bourgeois state: a honey-pot into which the naïve but resolute often fall.</p>



<p>Those who have and who maintain the revolutionary line, who adhere to the necessity of a transitional period where the proletarian class becomes the ruling class and where the old enemies of humanity are suppressed and politically disenfranchised, <em>must band together</em>.</p>



<p>This bulletin is a CALL FOR UNITY.</p>



<p>If you are among the camp of true Marxists, no matter what organization you belong to, Unity–Struggle–Unity is asking for <em>you</em> to come forward and be counted.</p>



<p>Among every revolutionary, pseudo-revolutionary, and revisionist organization in North America, there are real Marxists, real Communists. There is a backwards, reactionary strata; there is an intermediate, confused or vacillating strata; there is a Communist strata. That Communist strata must begin the process of uniting across all organizations, among all groups.</p>



<p>We at USU Press will play our part in that unification. We implore you to reach out — to write letters, to send an email, to get in contact with our Press Organization, and to begin the discussion that our movement urgently needs: the isolation of liquidators and the unification of Marxists, which is the first step in the march toward revolution and liberation.</p>
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