|
|
Workers Vanguard No. 935
|
24 April 2009
|
|
|
TROTSKY
|
LENIN
|
Lenin on the Dictatorship of the Bourgeoisie
(Quote of the Week)
V.I. Lenin, the leader of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution that
brought the working class of Russia to power, explained how bourgeois democracy
serves as a mask for the capitalist class’ bloody dictatorship, enforced by its
courts, cops and military forces. At the founding congress of the Third
(Communist) International, Lenin presented theses defending Soviet rule against
the reformist leaders of the Second International, most of whom had sided with
their own bourgeoisies in the imperialist slaughter of World War I.
The bourgeoisie and their agents in the workers’ organisations are
making desperate attempts to find ideological and political arguments in defence
of the rule of the exploiters. Condemnation of dictatorship and defence of
democracy are particularly prominent among these arguments….
Firstly, this argument employs the concepts of “democracy in
general” and “dictatorship in general,” without posing the question of the class
concerned. This non-class or above-class presentation, which supposedly is
popular, is an outright travesty of the basic tenet of socialism, namely, its
theory of class struggle, which socialists who have sided with the bourgeoisie
recognise in words but disregard in practice. For in no civilised capitalist
country does “democracy in general” exist; all that exists is bourgeois
democracy, and it is not a question of “dictatorship in general,” but of the
dictatorship of the oppressed class, i.e., the proletariat, over its oppressors
and exploiters, i.e., the bourgeoisie, in order to overcome the resistance
offered by the exploiters in their fight to maintain their domination....
The Paris Commune...showed very clearly the historically
conventional nature and limited value of the bourgeois parliamentary system and
bourgeois democracy.... It was Marx who best appraised the historical
significance of the Commune. In his analysis, he revealed the exploiting nature
of bourgeois democracy and the bourgeois parliamentary system under which the
oppressed classes enjoy the right to decide once in several years which
representative of the propertied classes shall “represent and suppress” (ver-
und zertreten) the people in parliament....
The significance of the Commune, furthermore, lies in the fact that
it endeavoured to crush, to smash to its very foundations, the bourgeois state
apparatus, the bureaucratic, judicial, military and police machine, and to
replace it by a self-governing, mass workers’ organisation in which there was no
division between legislative and executive power.
—V.I. Lenin, “Theses and Report on Bourgeois Democracy and the
Dictatorship of the Proletariat” (March 1919)
**********
|
No comments:
Post a Comment