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вор в законе
5th May 2009, 18:49
Communism on rise in recession-hit Japan


By Roland Buerk
BBC News, Tokyo

The protesters gathered in a park in the shadow of corporate headquarter skyscrapers, a short walk from Ginza, Tokyo's most upscale shopping district.

Hundreds strong, they included workers already laid off as the global downturn battered Japan's economy, and those who feared they might be next.

The demonstrators set off on a march towards Japan's Diet building - or parliament - carrying red flags.

"I support the Communist Party because it's the one that thinks about workers first," said one man. "We're demonstrating to get better rights for the temporary workers," said another. "The Communist Party is the only party that gets really serious about problems like this."

Fists in the air

Lined up on a set of steps near the Diet, wearing suits, red sashes and beaming smiles were officials from the Japanese Communist Party.
They joined the protesters chanting and raising their fists in the air.
The Communist Party has always had a surprisingly large role in Japan, the world's second biggest economy.

But while it had been fading towards irrelevance, now as the recession bites it is on the rise again. The party already has more than 400,000 members and people are joining at the rate of 1,000 a month.

In comparison, the membership of the Liberal Democratic Party, the largest member of the governing coalition, is twice the size. But its numbers are declining.

"Many people are beginning to think: 'Is Japanese capitalism OK as it is?'" said Akira Kasai, a Communist member of the Diet's House of Representatives.

"Living standards are going down. The gap between rich and poor is growing."

Lost generation

Communist ideology has been spread in Japan in unusual ways.
There was a book, Kanikosen - The Crab Factory Ship, which raced back up the bestsellers' lists.

A classic tale of proletarian fishermen uniting to rise up against their bosses, it had been almost forgotten since it was written in 1929.
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45721000/jpg/_45721215_demonstratorsintokyo.jpg

The Communist Party has always had a surprisingly large role in Japan

Publishers have also produced a manga, or comic, version of Das Kapital, Karl Marx's treatise on how capitalism would collapse under the weight of its own contradictions.

One new Communist Party member we met in a restaurant found out about Marxism on the internet. "I got interested in Karl Marx a few years ago," she said."In capitalism now we are controlled by the capitalists, or capital. But I think in communism society we can think about whole of the society and decide our economic activities in democratic way."

The woman, 34, did not want to be identified for fear her employers, whom she claimed disapproved of the Communists, would find out.
But she had told her family.

"My parents were very surprised that I joined the party," she said. "They are not supporters of the Communist Party. They don't understand correctly, I think."

The woman said she was a member of a "lost generation" - people who came into the employment market during Japan's long stagnation in the 1990s and could not find proper jobs.

As the economy picked up at the start of this century, employers picked graduates untainted by years of drifting.

Job insecurity

Now Japan's economy, which relies for growth on sales abroad of cars, electronics and machinery, is struggling again.

Exports have fallen by nearly half compared to a year ago, and industrial production has dived.

The traditional Japanese dream of a job for life has been further undermined by reforms of the labour market in 2004 that allowed manufacturers to take on temporary workers.


http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45721000/jpg/_45721217_akirakasai.jpg
The first stage is to solve problems of labour and living standards according to people's demandhttp://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/img/v3/end_quote_rb.gif -Akira Kasai, Communist politician

About a third of the workforce is now on short-term contracts and their jobs are the most threatened.

Communist members of parliament make much of their efforts to get workers a better deal by holding talks with company managers.
Unions are helping some to take their employers to court claiming wrongful dismissal.

Not even the Communists themselves expect to win power soon.
But they won nearly five million votes in the last election for the more powerful lower house of the Diet, and that was before the downturn.
They are hoping to do better when the Japanese next go to the polls later this year.

"Of course the final goal is a socialist, communist society in Japan, overcoming capitalism," said Akira Kasai.

"But before that we are taking a step-by-step approach. The first stage is to solve problems of labour and living standards according to people's demand."



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8027397.stm

вор в законе
5th May 2009, 18:53
Hammer and sickle's revival in land of the rising sun


Updated at 4:29pm on 5 May 2009

As the Japanese economy falters, the father of communism, Karl Marx, is enjoying a revival.

Publishers have produced a manga, or comic, version of Das Kapital, Karl Marx's treatise on how capitalism would collapse under the weight of its own contradictions.

In the political arena, the Communist Party of Japan says it's attracting about a thousand new members every month - and more than 1 million people are reading the party's newspaper.

"I support the Communist Party because it's the one that thinks about workers first," said one man on a recent march for better rights for temporary workers.

The party has always had a surprisingly large role in Japan, the world's second biggest economy. But while it had been fading towards irrelevance, as the recession bites it is on the rise again. The party has more than 400,000 members and people are joining at the rate of 1,000 a month.
In comparison, the membership of the Liberal Democratic Party, the largest member of the governing coalition, is twice the size. But its numbers are declining.

"Many people are beginning to think: 'Is Japanese capitalism okay as it is?'" said Akira Kasai, a Communist member of the Diet's House of Representatives. "Living standards are going down. The gap between rich and poor is growing."

Communist ideology has been spread in Japan in unusual ways.
A book, Kanikosen - The Crab Factory Ship, has raced back up the bestsellers' lists. It's a tale of fishermen uniting to rise up against their bosses, but had been almost forgotten since it was written in 1929.
Some new followers discovered Communism on the internet.

"I got interested in Karl Marx a few years ago," one 34-year-old woman, who did not want to be named for fear her employers would find out, said.
"In capitalism now we are controlled by the capitalists, or capital. But I think in a communist society we can think about whole of the society and decide our economic activities in a democratic way."

Japan's economy, which relies for growth on sales abroad of cars, electronics and machinery, is struggling. Exports have fallen by nearly half compared to a year ago, and industrial production has dived.The traditional Japanese dream of a job for life has been further undermined by reforms of the labour market in 2004 that allowed manufacturers to take on temporary workers.

About a third of the workforce is now on short-term contracts and their jobs are the most threatened.

Communist members of parliament make much of their efforts to get workers a better deal by holding talks with company managers.
The Communist Party won nearly 5 million votes in the last election for the lower house of the Diet, held before the downturn.

They are hoping to do better when the Japanese next go to the polls later this year.
"Of course the final goal is a socialist, communist society in Japan, overcoming capitalism," said Mr Kasai.

"But before that we are taking a step-by-step approach. The first stage is to solve problems of labour and living standards according to people's demand."


http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/stories/2009/05/05/1245af6c7003


Copyright © 2009 Radio New Zealand

http://f.hatena.ne.jp/images/fotolife/t/tipitu/20081203/20081203225656.jpg

Pogue
5th May 2009, 19:08
Although its great people are challenging capitalism and becoming active in left wing politics, I am saddened by the fact its down such a dead end route as social democracy, or 'Eurocommunism' (although this term seems inappropriate as its Japan). This will just pacify people and keep them respectable, and how long is it until this party is fully absorbed into capitalism, when it, like all social democratic parties, comprimises its politics for power and acceptance in the bourgeois circles of power that is electoral politics or 'democracy' as they (the powers that be) so cutely refer to it. I'd rather find out workers were being attracted to revolutionary groups and ideas, because clearly anti-capitalist feeling is there but is unfortunately being channelled the wrong way.

вор в законе
5th May 2009, 19:23
While I agree with you in overall, it also shows that the "radicals" and the "true revolutionaries" have zero influence to the working class.

cyu
5th May 2009, 20:51
while it had been fading towards irrelevance

it had been almost forgotten since it was written in 1929

Not even the Communists themselves expect to win power soon.


Ah, what kind of "unbiased" reporting can we really expect from a capitalist mouthpiece? Thanks for the news though - at least some facts were left in by the editors, instead of making it 100% spin.

Tseka
5th May 2009, 21:09
Rise again!!!

SocialismOrBarbarism
5th May 2009, 21:10
Although its great people are challenging capitalism and becoming active in left wing politics, I am saddened by the fact its down such a dead end route as social democracy, or 'Eurocommunism' (although this term seems inappropriate as its Japan). This will just pacify people and keep them respectable, and how long is it until this party is fully absorbed into capitalism, when it, like all social democratic parties, comprimises its politics for power and acceptance in the bourgeois circles of power that is electoral politics or 'democracy' as they (the powers that be) so cutely refer to it. I'd rather find out workers were being attracted to revolutionary groups and ideas, because clearly anti-capitalist feeling is there but is unfortunately being channelled the wrong way.

While I agree that reformism is a dead end...would revolution in Japan actually be a viable alternative?

Pogue
5th May 2009, 21:19
While I agree that reformism is a dead end...would revolution in Japan actually be a viable alternative?

Well its the only 'alternative'. Reformism and social democracy just channels energy down a dead end.

Stranger Than Paradise
5th May 2009, 22:00
While I agree that reformism is a dead end...would revolution in Japan actually be a viable alternative?

What do you suggest? There can be no other route to freedom than revolution. So what is your alternative?

вор в законе
5th May 2009, 22:06
Different countries and conditions have different "routes".

Stranger Than Paradise
5th May 2009, 22:07
Different countries and conditions have different "routes".

Yes but ultimately these routes all will be revolutions.

вор в законе
5th May 2009, 22:19
We don't know that, unless you have a crystal ball and see the future. In fact, in so far, all "communist" revolutions have turned into dictatorships.

Stranger Than Paradise
5th May 2009, 22:25
We don't know that, unless you have a crystal ball and see the future. In fact, in so far, all "communist" revolutions have turned into dictatorships.

That's because they have been organised in this manner. The only libertarian revolution we have seen is Spain 1936. And we have no idea whether this would have turned into a dictatorship or not. I don't think it would have.

вор в законе
5th May 2009, 22:26
Perhaps it failed because it was too libertarian.

Stranger Than Paradise
5th May 2009, 22:29
Perhaps it failed because it was too libertarian.

No it failed because of the strength of the opposition. The Stalinists and Facists united to crush it.

Wanted Man
5th May 2009, 22:44
Millions of working people moving against capitalism obviously means something. It will also be up to them to prevent it from just becoming another matter of begging for reforms. But while there are plenty of reasons to be critical of the JCP, I'm not seeing any here. They're stating the goal of socialism quite clearly in this instance, and add that they also want to fight for better living standards now. But maybe they need to say "We want worse living standards" to be ideologically pure?


No it failed because of the strength of the opposition. The Stalinists and Facists united to crush it.
Are you an idiot?

Stranger Than Paradise
5th May 2009, 22:46
Are you an idiot?

Sorry explain it to me better then?

Wanted Man
5th May 2009, 23:06
It's another discussion, but even the most biased ideologues wouldn't claim that the communists and fascists "united" in Spain. It's absolutely absurd.

Interestingly enough, at the end of the war, anarchists in Madrid did ally with the military and social-democrats to commit a coup against the communists and hand the city to the fascists: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cipriano_Mera But it could be said that the war was lost at the time anyway, or one could cite previous "stalinist betrayal" as an excuse...

But enough about this, I refer to this thread: http://www.revleft.com/vb/unofficial-spanish-civil-t72021/index.html (just the most recent SCW thread)

hero(W)IN
6th May 2009, 02:56
The JCP is not a "social democracy" party. They are fully communist, yet pragmatic as to how the journey through socialism should take place. Beginning with improving living conditions for workers to solidify support before drastic measures like nationalizations of industry. Social democratic parties are ones which can't decide that they are communist for fear of being ostracized by the right-wingers, and so they settle to aim for an ineffectual, half-hearted socialism/capitalism hybrid which is doomed to revert to full capitalism. The JCP is certainly not like that, and it is very encouraging that they will probably get MORE than 4 MILLION votes in the next election...

Glenn Beck
6th May 2009, 03:29
No it failed because of the strength of the opposition. The Stalinists and Facists united to crush it.

Perhaps what needs to be explain is why the Stalinists attracted the most support from the Spanish working class. Certainly defeat is sometimes inevitable but a far more constructive use of one's time would be analyzing the situation for a better strategy instead of expecting less opposition next time.

I won't touch the "united" thing

SocialismOrBarbarism
6th May 2009, 06:43
What do you suggest? There can be no other route to freedom than revolution. So what is your alternative?

I don't see what else they could possible do. Your fetishism of revolution without taking into account the actual conditions in the country seem a bit naive. Revolution just doesn't seem like much of an option in Japan. For example:


Deposits of gold, magnesium, and silver meet current industrial demands, but Japan is dependent on foreign sources for many of the minerals essential to modern industry. Iron ore, copper, and bauxite must be imported, as well as many forest products.I mean, what exactly would they do if they actually succeeded? They couldn't last long under a Cuban type embargo. Besides calling bourgeois "democracy" democracy, their program didn't seem nearly as bad as people are making it out to be considering the conditions in their country.

Cult of Reason
6th May 2009, 17:22
would revolution in Japan actually be a viable alternative?

No, or, at least, not in Japan alone. Japan is famous for its paucity of resources, particularly the industrial ones. Its economy is based around the model of importing raw materials and/or refined materials and exporting finished goods. It would be a case of, "Great, we have had our revolution, but where is our food going to come from? Our self-sufficiency rate is 50% and there isn't much more land that we can cultivate, and the Capitalist countries will not trade with us," "Great, we have had our revolution, but we need iron and we don't have enough and the Capitalist countries will not trade with us..." etc.. The JCP is probably aware of this problem.

In order for a revolution in Japan to be viable, there would also have to be a revolution in much of the Afro-Eurasia supercontinent, with important areas including Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine and Guinea. Exposition can be found in my signature under "Full Report".

Stranger Than Paradise
6th May 2009, 17:28
Sorry. My use of the term united was wrong. What I meant was they both opposed the libertarian revolution.

cyu
6th May 2009, 19:57
Japan is famous for its paucity of resources, particularly the industrial ones... In order for a revolution in Japan to be viable, there would also have to be a revolution in much of the Afro-Eurasia supercontinent, with important areas including Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine and Guinea.

All the more reason for Japan to join us in supporting leftists around the world. If anybody has enough wealth to make an impact on political movements, Japan is certainly one of them.