Workers Vanguard No. 1023
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3 May 2013
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TROTSKY
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LENIN
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Proletarian Revolution: Answer to Capitalist Decay
(Quote of the Week)
The austerity and massive unemployment racking the southern tier
of the European Union are hallmarks of the ongoing world economic crisis. In
contrast to Eduard Bernstein, who projected that socialism would peacefully
evolve from the bourgeois order, and other revisionists who predicted a final
capitalist collapse, revolutionary Marxists understand that not even the most
severe crisis is sufficient in itself to sweep this system away. Rather, as Leon
Trotsky wrote, only proletarian revolution can lift humanity from capitalist
decay.
The Bernsteinians outlined two perspectives: one, unreal, allegedly
orthodox “Marxist,” according to which in the long run, under the influence of
the internal contradictions of capitalism, its mechanical collapse was supposed
to take place; and the second, “realistic,” according to which a gradual
evolution from capitalism to socialism was to be accomplished. Antithetical as
these two schemas may be at first glance, they are nevertheless united by a
common trait: the absence of the revolutionary factor. While they disavowed the
caricature of the automatic collapse of capitalism attributed to them, the
Marxists demonstrated that, under the influence of the sharpening class
struggle, the proletariat would carry through the revolution long before the
objective contradictions of capitalism could lead to its automatic
collapse....
The most important component of the theory of collapse was the
theory of pauperization. The Marxists contended, with some prudence, that the
sharpening of social contradictions need not signify unconditionally an absolute
drop in the standard of living of the masses. But in reality, it is precisely
this latter process which is unfolding. Wherein could the collapse of capitalism
express itself more acutely than in chronic unemployment and the destruction of
social insurance, that is, the refusal of the social order to feed its own
slaves?
The opportunistic brakes in the working class have proved to be
powerful enough to grant the elemental forces of outlived capitalism additional
decades of life. As a result, it is not the idyll of the peaceful transformation
of capitalism into socialism which has taken place, but a state of affairs
infinitely closer to social decay....
Reformism will be unable to shift the historical responsibility
from itself. By paralyzing and curbing the revolutionary energy of the
proletariat, the international Social Democracy invests the process of the
capitalist collapse with the blindest, most unbridled, catastrophic, and bloody
forms.
Of course, one cannot speak of a realization of the revisionist
caricature of Marxism except conditionally, in applying it to some given
historical period. The way out of decaying capitalism, however, will be found,
even if after a great delay, not upon the road of the automatic collapse but
upon the revolutionary road.
—Leon Trotsky, “The Only Road” (14 September 1932), reprinted in
The Struggle Against Fascism in Germany (1971)
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