| January 1970. Poster issued following the December-January worker revolt
in Poland. Reprinted in Public Secrets: Collected Skirmishes of Ken Knabb. No
copyright.
The text, which I dont know how to make more legible without making the image
prohibitively large, reads as follows:
BUREAUCRATIC COMIX
Box: The uprising in Poland is only the most recent gesture
in the developing struggle against modern capitalism. But like other revolutionary
moments, from Hungary 1956 to France 1968, it exposes the ideological falsifications of
those who claim to speak for that movement, from the pseudo-socialist East to the
bureaucrats of the Spectacle of Opposition. . . .
Child: It often happens that the excesses of a
revolt are precisely its most revealing moments when everything becomes
transparent, tangible, within everybodys grasp. But it is also precisely these
theoretico-practical advances which are obscured by the ideologues of the
Left.
Newspaper clipping: Then things began to move rapidly.
The windows of the Communist party building were smashed. A group of youngsters climbed up
the walls and into the building and began to throw out furniture, paper and other things,
while people down in the street clapped their hands. When a very expensive table in
jacaranda wood was thrown out of the window, everybody shouted with joy.
Tom Hayden: The people wouldnt have had to go so far if
the rulers hadnt been such pigs. Otherwise, we could have continued our
nice manipulative opposition. (Dont forget to vote for community
control of alienation!)
Box: What a pity. Precisely because the insurgents in Poland,
as in Watts, temporarily avoided such false-consciousness, they manifested a critique in
acts of the commodity itself, demystifying that famous fetishism
described by Marx over a century ago.
Child: The looting of furs and champagne by the Polish
celebrants is no more an example of their attraction to the Western way of
life or bourgeois revisionist degeneracy than the looting of Watts was
proof of the essential integration of blacks into the American system.
Another child: These actions should instead be considered as
positive signs of the new social order now possible: To each according to his own
desires in this case, still the false desires and needs produced
by the commodity system.*
Footnote: *On the game in Watts, see the pamphlet The Decline and Fall of the Spectacle-Commodity Economy by
the Situationist International.
Box: The alienation of the worker in his product means
not only that his labor becomes an object, an external existence, but that it exists
outside him, independently, as something alien to him, and that it becomes a power on its
own confronting him. It means that the life which he has conferred on the object confronts
him as something hostile and alien. . . . A commodity is therefore a mysterious thing . .
. because the relation of the producers to the sum total of their own labor is presented
to them as a social relation existing not between themselves, but between the products of
their labor. (MARX)
Side box: MEANWHILE . . .
Gangster 1: Christ! Another spontaneous struggle where the
people are acting on their own and for themselves. Where does that leave
us Movement leaders?
Gangster 2: You can see why we have to push sacrificial
militantism: armies of activists ready to sacrifice themselves to our ideology
(= dogma). Any ideas for a good slogan?
Gangster 3: I like Forget your life, serve the
people!
Gangster 4: How about Revolutionary suicide!?
Box: REVOLUTION CEASES TO BE AS SOON AS IT DEMANDS
SELF-SACRIFICE (France, May 1968).
Box: Picture of Mao above a huge crowd, labeled
PORTRAIT OF ALIENATION and followed by this quote: Their lives are so
squalid that the majority can only live as a caricature of the Master. . . . To the
sacrifice of the dispossessed, who through his work exchanges his real life for an
apparent one, the proprietor replies by appearing to sacrifice his nature as
proprietor and exploiter; he excludes himself mythically, he puts himself at the service
of everyone and of myth. . . . Renouncing common life, he is the poor man amidst illusory
wealth, he who sacrifices himself for everyone while other people only sacrifice
themselves for their own sake, for the sake of their survival. The more powerful he is,
the more spectacular his sacrifice. He becomes the living reference point of the whole of
illusory life. (Raoul Vaneigem, The Totality for Kids [= Basic Banalities #8])
Child: A critique of the commodity in a state-capitalist
society becomes directly a critique of bureaucratic class rule itself. The official truth
of the bureaucracy that it does not exist as a separate class is exposed as
a lie by the events themselves. The rulers and their Movement counterparts attempt to
divert the radical critique of all hierarchical power into false choices between
good and bad bureaucrats. . . .
Newspaper clipping: The local Communist party
leadership hung a white flag from a window of the top floor and left the building with
their hands up. The house was set on fire and party officials were seized by about 3,000
shipyard workers who had marched in from the harbor.
Eldridge Cleaver: Poland is a pig state, unlike North Korea,
etc., where the rulers (whose ranks we aspire to join) are so kind as to serve the
(survival) needs of the people they exploit.
Jerry Rubin: Like Bernardine [Dohrn] says,* there are good
leaders and bad ones. Good ones are defined as those who are able to manipulate people
into freely following them. Me? Shucks, Im a non-leader!
Footnote: *See the Tribe, December 18-25.
Side box: The more far-seeing regimes attempt to recuperate
(take under their wing, deflect into partial solutions) the struggle for proletarian
power. . . .
Castro: Under our tactful rule (as similarly in Yugoslavia
and Algeria) the people are free to make all the decisions that change nothing. The
factory and farm councils are allowed to participate within the state-controlled
framework of alienated labor. Viva self-management!
Child: Stinking pig of a bureaucrat!
Another child: Proletarian revolution must recognize its
tactics as self-management at every level of the struggle; and its goal as the
management of all aspects of life by the workers councils!
Child: In the development of the proletarian critique of
bureaucratic state-capitalism, the greatest danger will be to stop half-way. Thus, Kuron
and Modzelewskis important Open Letter to Polish Communist Party Members,
as with recent anti-bureaucratic formulations in China,* attempts to reconcile the power
of workers councils with a return to true Leninism.
Footnote: *Not to be confused with the Cultural
Revolution, that spectacular pseudo-revolt produced by courtesy of the Chinese
ruling class.
Lenin: The Stalinist class societies are only a natural (if
excessive) development from the original Bolshevik seizure of totalitarian state power in
1917. My famous vanguard party theory of organization led to the greatest
single defeat of the classical revolutionary movement: the power of the party over
the masses, ruling in the name of the proletariat.
Trotsky: The real truth of Leninism was revealed
when we slaughtered the Kronstadt soviet and the anarcho-communist peasants of the Ukraine
in 1921. Yet fifty years later our faithful followers continue the alienating hierarchy
within their organizations, and the corresponding manipulative practice
leading the masses. They only reinforce (by presenting a false form
of opposition) the capitalist system which still reigns everywhere.
Child: So far, the movements in the Third World have only
tried to emulate the Bolshevik coup; and the Movement in the U.S. can only worship these
underdeveloped imitations of revolutionary failure.
Voice off: Ho lives!
Box: One anti-imperialist star:
Ho Chi Minh: Yes, kids, heres ol Uncle Ho back
from the grave! And you can be sure Id support the Polish regimes actions just
like I did the Russian interventions in Hungary and Czechoslovakia. Im not exactly a
stranger to crushing autonomous popular revolts myself, you know. (Cf. the 1945 Saigon
insurrection and the peasant uprising in 1956.) But youve got to support me anyway,
sucker: Im Third World, remember?
Pogo: The real struggle is still for All power to the
soviets (workers councils) but this time without the Bolshevik afterthoughts.
This power (outlined in Spain 1936 and Hungary 1956) must not be mediated by anyone representing
the people; the councils will federate with each other by means of strictly mandated,
immediately revocable delegates. The total democracy of the councils (whose first project
will be the abolition of work) will be the effective end of all hierarchical power.
Lady worm: . . . and of the commodity economy, too!
Child: In the end, it is only through the refusal of
ideology, of sacrifice, of representation all the rotten leftovers from the old
world that we will be able to annihilate everything that stands in the way of our
desires, and live without dead time!
Mother: Practice must seek its theory!
Box: For the Power of the Councils, P.O. Box 1044, Berkeley,
94704 |