This is a piece we?re sharing originally posted to Machete 408 by Adam Weaver. It is a
review/summation piece is being released in conjunction with a forthcoming piece by Scott
Nappolas which presents an extensive discussion of Lenin?s concept of democratic
centralism. (soon to be linked) ---- A Look At Leninism by Ron Taber. 104 pp. New York ,
New York : Aspect Foundation, 1988 ---- Where can those looking for a critical
understanding of Lenin turn? How can we better understand how the Russian Revolution begin
as the first modern anti-capitalist revolution from below with workers taking over and
running their workplaces, peasants seizing the land, and the creation of democratic
soviets (worker committees)? And then in less than a decade its devolution into the brutal
dictatorship of Stalin?
Is there a continuity between the ideas of Lenin and his particular brand of Marxism that
reshaped the Marxist movement in the 1920?s and the number of revolutionary parties that
would later achieve state power and claim the Bolshevik party and Lenin as their model and
inspiration?
Little known and barely circulated now over two decades since publication in 1988, A Look
At Lenin by Ron Taber is perhaps the only systematic and thorough critique of Leninism as
examined through the writings and work of Lenin and the Bolshevik party. For this reason
it has been a favorite of mine since I picked it up as a teenage reader of the late Love
and Rage magazine. When I came across the book I was someone struggling with and
questioning my relationship with anarchism at the time and looking in other directions
such as the Leninist tradition. While Taber?s piece did not answer many of the larger
political questions I was grappling with at the time (no matter where I?m at politically I
don?t think that itch will ever go away), it did help me think deeper about Leninism as a
tradition as well as with understanding better the problems I saw in many Leninist
inspired political organizations that I was beginning to come into contact with at the time.
What is most useful about the piece is, in the words of one review, it ?attempts to draw
explicit links from Lenin?s theory to Bolshevik practice.? Taber is well suited to take up
this task as a past leader of the Revolutionary Socialist League or RSL (1973-1989) which
emerged out of the Trotskyist milieu of the 1960?s. Over time Taber and other members of
the RSL steadily became more critical of Leninism and the Trotskyist tradition and by the
time of RSL?s dissolution on 1989 a number of members had moved over to anarchism and went
on to participate in the founding of what became the Love and Rage Revolutionary Anarchist
Federation active throughout the 1990?s. The short booklet was first published as a series
of articles in RSL?s publication The Torch and after being published in as a book went on
to be distributed by Love and Rage members.
What follows is a summation of the key points of each chapter with a healthy dose of
direct quotes. All quotes from Lenin or other source writings by Bolsheviks appear with
indentation.
?What Kind of Revolution??
The opening chapter ?What Kind of Revolution?? delves into a discussion of the character
of the revolution that the Bolsheviks intended to carry out. Less interesting than the
rest of the book, Taber develops his argument that ?It was only in early 1917, after the
February Revolution had overthrown the Tsar, that the Bolsheviks adopted the point of view
that the revolution they sought to carry out would be a socialist one. ? throughout the
entire formative period of Bolshevism as a political tendency/movement/party, it advocated
and sought to implement not a socialist revolution, but a bourgeois one.? (11)
?Party, Class and Socialist Consciousness?
Moving onto Lenin?s conception of the relationship between political organization, the
larger working class movement and revolutionary consciousness, the second chapter ?Party,
Class and Socialist Consciousness? draws largely from Lenin?s most influential piece What
Is To Be Done?
Taber underlines the importance of What Is To Be Done? as having ?represented a major
ideological assumption of Bolshevism, underpinning the Bolsheviks conception of the nature
of the party, its relationship to the working class ? [and] remained central despite the
various changes in Lenin?s/the Bolsheviks? ideas? (29)
Taber pulls this key quote from the piece by Lenin:
?We have said that there could not yet be Social-Democratic consciousness among workers.
It could only be brought to them from without. The history of all countries shows that the
working class, exclusively by its own effort, is able to develop only trade union
consciousness, i.e., the conviction that it is necessary to combine in unions, fight the
employers and strive to compel the government to pass necessary labour legislation, etc.
(Trade unionism does not exclude ?politics? altogether, as some imagine. Trade unions have
always conducted some political [but not Social-Democratic] agitation and struggle.) The
theory of Socialism, however, grew out of the philosophic, historical and economic
theories that were elaborated by the educated representatives of the propertied classes,
the intellectuals.?(29)
Taber draws the following points from this: ?If the workers are able, by themselves, to
come only to trade union consciousness, and socialist consciousness must be brought to
them from ?without,? by revolutionary intellectual/the revolutionary party, then:
1. The source, repository and guarantee of socialist consciousness are socialist
intellectuals/the revolutionary party, not the working class.
2. What ultimately matters, in terms of a socialist revolution, is that state power is
seized by the revolutionary party; the bottom line of what constitutes socialism/the
dictatorship of the proletariat is that the state is ruled by a revolutionary party.
3. In any conflict between the revolutionary party and the working class, the
revolutionary party is right, and the party has the right, even duty, to rule ?in the
name,? ?in the interests of,? the working class.? (32)
The chapter is then closed with two quotes showing the logical extension of these ideas,
the below is from Leon Trotsky:
?The party [is] entitled to assert its dictatorship even if that dictatorship temporarily
clashe[s] with the passing moods of the workers? democracy? It is necessary to create
among us the awareness of the revolutionary, historical birthright of the party. The party
is obliged to maintain its dictatorship, regardless of temporary wavering in the
spontaneous moods of the masses, regardless of the temporary vacillations even in the
working class.? (36)
?The ?Ethos? of Bolshevism?
Here Taber puts forward his criticism of the ethos or what we might today call the
internal culture of the Bolshevik Party in three aspects: the cult of the ?hards?, the
adoration of centralism especially in regards to the economy, and the willingness to use
brutal and harsh methods.
According to Taber the ethos of the Bolsheviks was defined by what he calls ?the cult of
the ?hards?? (37) in which they contrasted themselves the tough, strong, skillful, who
acted with ?iron discipline?, were more proletarian, more politically radical and had a
greater willingness to use violent tactics in comparison to the ?softness? of the
Mensheviks in working in underground and repressive conditions, who were also seen as less
radical, and more prone to political vacillation. He notes that the Bolsheviks referred to
themselves as ?the hards? and their signature dress was black leather jackets and coats.
As well the title of Lenin?s key work What Is To Be Done? was taken from a book of the
same name by Russian populist N.G. Chernyshevsky, which Taber describes as ?virtually the
bible of the young, mostly middle-class and upper-class radicals of the 1860?s who ?went
to the people? (the peasants) to bring them enlightenment and radical ideas. ? [The key
figure Rakhmetov] believes only in the cause and is totally devoted to the ?people.? Not
least, he prepares himself for the coming struggle (implicitly, a vast upheaval) by
sleeping on a bed of nails [and eating raw meat -AW] and otherwise toughening his body and
mind. The connection between Rakhmetov?s style and that of the Bolsheviks was no
accident.? (39)
The danger that Taber identifies with this culture revolves around power, as ?had
?hardness? remained a question of individual style or attitude ? a cult of ?hardness?
might not amount to much. What makes a cult of ?hardness? in political organization
potentially dangerous is the possibility that it becomes part of a state ideology.? (40) A
major weakness of this section of the chapter though is, unlike the rest of the book, we
are left to take Tabor on his word as it is presented completely without sources or
references.
Next Taber takes up the relationship to the principle of centralism and economic planning
which he asserts the Bolsheviks ?revered? beyond the immediate needs of operating
clandestinely. ?The Bolsheviks saw the capitalist factory, run on a centralized basis, as
a progressive institution, technically speaking. Lenin, for example, constantly held up
the highly centralized and hierarchical German postal system and German industry as a
whole as an example for the Russians to adopt. This, after the October Revolution Lenin
defined the creation of a highly centralized economic apparatus as a major goal of the
Soviet state.
The organization of accounting, the control of large enterprises, the transformation of
the state economic mechanism into a single huge machine, into an economic organism that
will work in such a way as to enable hundreds of millions of people to be guided by a
single plan- such was the enormous organizational problem that rested on our shoulders.
[Political Report of the Central Committee to the Extraordinary Seventh Congress of the
RCP(B), delivered March 7, 1918. Collected Works, Vol. 27 pp. 90-91] (41)
But beyond the need for centralized economic planning Tabor emphasizes Lenin and the
Bolsheviks belief in not just the necessity based on circumstances but as a matter of
principle the need for hierarchical and bureaucratic management of the economy as steps
toward socialism. ?Thus, as soon as they were able, the Bolsheviks subordinated the
factory committees to other institutions (the trade unions) and ultimately effectively did
away with them altogether. They were replaced by ?one-man management.? While this has
often been explained as motivated by necessity (the onset of the Civil War, the drastic
decline of the economy, etc.) and this is true to a degree, it was also totally consistent
with the Bolsheviks? pre-existent ideas and leanings, particularly their idolization of
centralism.? (43) This lengthy quote serves as a key evidence to his point:
?it must be said that large-scale machine industry ? which is precisely the material
source, the productive source, the foundation of socialism ? calls for absolute and strict
unity of will, which directs the joint labours of hundreds, thousands and tens of
thousands of people. The technical, economic and historic necessity of this is obvious,
and all those who have thought about socialism have always regarded it as one of the
conditions of socialism. But how can strict unity of will be ensured? By thousands
subordinating their will to the will of one.
Given ideal class-consciousness and discipline on the part of those participating in the
common work, this subordination would be something like the mild leadership of a conductor
of an orchestra. It may assume the sharp forms of a dictatorship if ideal discipline and
class consciousness are lacking. But be that as it may, unquestioning subordination to a
single will is absolutely necessary for the of processes organised on the pattern of
large-scale industry. ["The Immediate Tasks of the Soviet Government" written in
March-April 1918. Collected Works, Vol. 27, pp. 268-269] (41-42)
Finally, Taber presents his arguments on the Bolsheviks belief in the use of harsh methods
in the process of building socialism which he summarizes as: ?1) that the Bolsheviks were
overly inclined to advocate coercive/brutal methods, in general; 2) that they seemed
unaware that this might undermine the very goal they claimed to be fighting for; and, 3)
that, at least implicitly, these coercive measures would logically wind up being directed
against members, even large sectors, of the working class, whose vanguard the Bolsheviks
claimed to be.? (47)
Three examples are given which ?were written or spoken in April and May 1918 ? after the
October Revolution but before the onset of the Civil Way (which was really to get underway
in June, 1918).? (47) The final example being a speech by Lenin given at the Moscow
Soviet of Workers?, Peasants? and Red Army Deputies on April 23, 1918:
This country, which the course of history has advanced to the foremost position in the
arena of the world revolution, a country devastated and bled white, is in an extremely
grave situation and we shall be crushed is we do not counter ruin, disorganisation and
despair with the iron dictatorship of the class conscious workers. We shall be merciless
both to our enemies and to all waverers and harmful elements in our midst [emphasis added]
who dare to bring disorganization into our difficult creative work of building a new life
for the working people [Collected Works, Vol. 27, p. 233.]
Pulling these three threads together of the ?cult of hardness?, the principle of
centralization and willingness to use brutal methods Taber comes to his conclusion: ?the
main point I have been trying to establish is that there were many aspects of the style
and culture of the Bolshevik Party that pointed in the direction of state capitalism.
These were tendencies that implied the establishment of a dictatorship of a
self-proclaimed socialist elite over the workers and peasants ?in the interests of? those
classes and ?in the name of? socialism and communism. ? it is not clear to me that, even
had there been successful workers? revolutions in Western Europe, the Bolsheviks would
have reestablished real proletarian democracy, including legalizing other left tendencies.
Nor is it obvious that, given their infatuation with with centralization and ?scientific?
planning, they would have tried to set up real workers? control of the factories and the
economy as a whole.? (50-51)
While the revolution in Germany is still slow in ?coming forth,? our task is to study the
state capitalism of the Germans, to space no effort, in copying it and not shrink from
adopting dictatorial methods to hasten the copying of it. Our task is to hasten this
copying even more than Peter [Tsar Peter the Great - RT] hastened the copying of Western
Culture by barbarian Russia, and we must not hesitate to use barbarous methods in fighting
the barbarism. ["Left-wing" Childishness and the Petty Bourgeois Mentality, April 1918]
?State and Revolution?
Written during the Russian Revolution itself in the summer of 1917, The State and
Revolution is often cited as being Lenin?s most important as well as libertarian work
where he puts forward a vision of a communist society, direct worker control and the
ultimate goal of the withering away of the state. In this chapter Taber challenges these
ideas and perceptions of The State and Revolution around the points that Lenin?s vision of
the state withering away relies on first building up the state along hierarchical and
bureaucratic lines with a limited vision of workers? control.
First Taber begins with a key paradox of The State and Revolution, which is the claimed
goal of a stateless society and the key task following a revolution of building a new
state. ?The revolutionaries who claim that they are against the state, and for
eliminating the state, ? see as their central task after a revolution to build up a state
that is more solid, more centralized and more all-embracing than the old state.? (56)
?Until the higher phase of communism arrive, the socialists demand the strictest control
by society and by the state over the measure of labour and the measure of consumption?
[emphasis original]
How the transition from the newly built centralized state to the withering away of the
state is not outlined in Lenin?s vision though. Rather the elimination of the state is
simply presented as part of the ?historical process? which Taber sees as rooted in the
Hegelian notion of history as ?since the theory declares that the ?logic? of this essence,
purpose and historical direction is that the state will eventually be eliminated,
?negated,? ?transcended? via a ?dialectical? (apparently contradictory) process, this is
what will inevitably happen.? (57) But as the history of actual states where communist
parties came to power shows, this is anything but the case.
?Direct workers? control over the factories and worker? democracy are, to Lenin, stepping
stones, part of a transitional stage, towards a very abstract ?higher democracy,? what is
in fact a very centralized, hierarchical, bureaucratic, regimented ?dictatorship of the
proletariat.? ? During a revolution, the new, cooperative social relations have to begin
appearing among the workers and oppressed classes right away. The workers have to learn
now to related to each other in this new way. They learn this through reorganizing their
work situations, and through directly governing society at all levels. ? This dimension of
the socialist revolution seems to be totally lost on Lenin. The socialist revolution, in
his conception, is largely a change in form. Bust much of the content of the old society ?
bourgeois technology, bourgeois managerial techniques, hierarchical structures, factory
discipline and, I would suggest, bourgeois social relations- remains.? (64)
?Lenin?s Theory of Knowledge? Part I and Part II
The final two chapters ?take up Lenin?s conception of human knowledge and truth? (67)
nearly entirely through the text Materialism and Empirio-criticism written in 1909 where
Lenin engages a polemical argument against ?two Bolsheviks who were attracted to the ideas
of Ernst Mach and Richard Avenarius, Henri Poincare and other scientists, mathematicians
and philosophers who were the precursors of a school of philosophy called logical
positivism.? (70) The details of the debates and Lenin?s criticisms are best left reading
Taber?s own presentation, and therefore I?ll simply present the key take away point
Taber leads with his conclusions: ?I am convinced that Lenin and the Bolshevik Party as a
whole believed: 1) that there is an absolute truth (I mean by this that reality is
determined and predictable); 2) that absolute knowledge, that is, perfect knowledge of the
truth, is possible; 3) that such truth and knowledge exist in respect to human society and
history; 4) that Marxism is the knowledge of this truth and 5) that within Russia, Lenin
and the Bolsheviks were the only real Marxists.? (67)
These two quotes best support and illustrate Taber?s argument:
Materialism in general recognizes objectively real being (matter) as independent of the
consciousness, sensation, experience, etc., of humanity. Historical materialism recognizes
social being as independent of the social consciousness of humanity. In other cases
consciousness is only the reflection of being, at best an approximately true (adequate,
perfectly exact) reflection of it. From this Marxist philosophy, which is cast from a
single piece of steel, you cannot eliminate one basic premise, one essential part, without
departing from objective truth, without falling prey to a bourgeois0reactionary falsehood.
[Collected Works, Vol 14, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1986, p. 326]
If what our practice confirms is the sole, ultimate and objective truth, then from this
must follow the recognition that the only path to this truth is the path of science, which
holds the materialist point of view. [ibid, 141] ? The correspondence of this theory to
practice cannot be altered by any future circumstances, for the same simple reason that
makes it an eternal truth that Napoleon died on May 5, 1821. But inasmuch as the criterion
of practice, i.e., the course of development of all capitalist countries in the last few
decades, proves only the objective truth of Marx?s whole social and economic theory in
general, and not merely one or the other of its parts, formulations, etc., it is clear
that to talk here of the ?dogmatism? of the Marxists is to make an unpardonable concession
to bourgeois economics. The sole conclusion to be drawn from the opinion held by Marxists
that Marx?s theory is an objective truth is that by following the path of Marxian theory
we shall draw closer and closer to objective truth (without ever exhausting it); but by
following an other path we shall arrive at nothing by confusion and lies. [ibid, 143]
An important argument underpinning the book is that the ideas, internal culture and
practices of Lenin and the Bolsheviks were the antecedents if not basis of the later
political direction of the Soviet Union. Here Taber states his case in crystal clear
terms: ??Lenin allowed his philosophical preconceptions to prevent him from even
considering, let alone accepting an idea that would become a fundamental tenet of this
century?s physics. ? [W]hen a party with Lenin?s conception of philosophy and science
comes to power, it is highly likely that someone in that party will, sooner or later, try
to tell scientists what to do and how to think.? (86-87)
Conclusion
The wrap up of the piece gives a solid summary pulling all the thread of Taber?s
criticism: ?While I believe that Leninism is not entirely, 100% authoritarian, that is,
that there are some truly liberatory and democratic impulses, I believe these impulses are
far outweighed by those that point toward and imply state capitalism. Moreover, these
latter are so strong that they distort the democratic impulses themselves, rather than
merely overshadowing them. For examples, the advocacy of a classless society in The State
and Revolution is turned into its opposite by Lenin?s conception of how to achieve it,
e.g., through building a strong centralized state modeled after the German postal system.?
(92)
?I believe that of the various tendencies within Leninism that point toward state
capitalism, the most important are three:
First is the fact that although Leninism advocates the establishment of a stateless
society, it not only proposes to use the state to achieve this goal, it sees the use of
the state as the main way to accomplish this. Not least, although this state is said to be
a proletarian state, a dictatorship of the proletariat, it is to be structured, with
relatively minor exceptions, along hierarchical and bureaucratic, that is, capitalistic,
principles. Given this, is it any winder that the outcome of the Bolshevik Revolution in
1917 was not classless, stateless societies, but monstrous, class divided,
state-dominated, social systems?
The second state capitalist tendency within Leninism that I believe to be decisive is its
advocacy of coercive , ruthless methods. While some kind of armed force/coercion is
inevitable is almost any revolution, Lenin almost revels in it: the need to be ?ruthless
towards our enemies,? ?not to shrink from the most ruthless measures,? to ?shoot and shoot
and shoot some more.? Since morality lies within, is immanent in, history, that is,
morality find its fruition in the outcome of history (as Marx, following Hegel, argues),
there is no need to act morally, there is no morality, in the sphere of politics. But
outside of Marian/Hegelian (or any other comparable) metaphysics, how can moral neutralism
lead to a more moral society? It can?t and hasn?t.
The third fundamental state capitalist tendency in Leninism, and tying all three together,
is Lenin?s belief in determinism and absolute knowledge. Physical and social/historical
reality is absolute knowledge. Physical and social/historical reality is absolutely
determined, Marxism represents true knowledge of this reality (it ever increasingly
approaches this reality), the Bolshevik faction/party hold the only correct interpretation
of Marxism-these are fundamental tenets of Bolshevik thinking. And they point directly to
the establishment of a dictatorship of the party over the proletariat in the name of the
proletariat itself.? (pg 93-94)
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