Wednesday, November 26, 2014
MY DEPARTURE FROM MARX- Jersey Flight
There is a historical progression. Economic systems are the result of what the ruling class can get away with. The further society develops the less the ruling class can exploit people in the name of profit. Here the word society refers to the collective consciousness of the people. At one time men were enslaved by the ruling class (this was the stage known as feudalism), but capitalism is a social consciousness beyond this stage. In the capitalist stage of development the consciousness of society has progressed beyond the stage of feudalism, that is to say, society will no longer tolerate the primitive violence of feudalism. But this resistance is a kind of instinct, which is to say, society has to get to the stage of instinct before it can transcend a stage of history.
The question regarding capitalism is whether or not society will ever be able to form an instinct against it?
There is a historical progression, but so far from leading to communism (which is an event for a distant future) the development of capitalism simply moves society in the direction of fascism. This is first and foremost a tragedy. When the powers of capitalism falter, on the basis of crises, society does not move in the direction of equality, but in the direction of control. When the ruling class stumbles it has no choice but to reaffirm its grip or lose its way of life. What emerges from capitalism is nothing less than a society of control.
The question is how many times this cycle must occur before mankind evolves an instinct against the motions of capitalism?
Will poor conditions, brought about by the exploitations of capital, really lead the masses to lasting liberation, or will this simply cause the cycle to repeat itself? Perhaps society is a series of revolutions? In other words, society has to complete a certain number of progressions around the wheel before it starts upon a new track. Only after we have gone through the cycle of capital so many times (even as mankind went through the cycle of feudalism so many times) only then can we develop an instinct to resist this primitive function. Perhaps this is due to the utility of the thing we would resist. In other words, at one point existence was feudalism and feudalism was existence, even as existence is capitalism and capitalism is existence. And we cannot transcend the thing we are! This can only occur by means of repetition, because the space required for change can only be created by repetition. One cannot transcend without space and one cannot have space without repetition. This means there are many revolutions to a cycle before there is a change.
My departure from Marx has to do with the destiny of social development under the capitalist means of production. I do not deny that capitalism is a destructive system based on exploitation. I do not deny that capitalism leads to the impoverishment of millions of people, but it is hard to accept the idea that this destructive progression will lead to a qualitative communism, when in fact, history has only produced Fascism.
My departure from Marx is based on time, which is simply a difference of calculating the progression. This means Marx was vastly ahead of his time... he spoke of a far-off, distant future, because social progression (which is a kind of social consciousness) is required on an instinctual, default-operational-level, before society as a unit, can transcend the present order. The hard fact is that evolution, which is to say, our experience of social cycles, has simply not brought us this far. But this is not all dark prediction; capitalism is a stage beyond feudalism, which means there is a chance our species will eventually transcend capitalism.
Fascism is perhaps the greatest enemy of society in that it thwarts the act of civility, leaving the prospect of unity mangled by sectarian violence. But knowing this is a powerful step in changing the course of the future. It is impossible to fight an invisible enemy. Knowing one's enemy is the key to victory. Let us expose the errors and methods of fascism with the same critical force that Marx exposed the errors and methods of capitalism. For only by understanding fascism, on such an intricate level, can we hope to begin the formation of an instinct against it.
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