Marxist Center: Hello world!

  1. Die Neue Zeit
    Die Neue Zeit
    http://marxistcenter.com/2013/08/13/hello-world/



    By Geary Middleton

    This is the very first article of a new political and journalistic project. We are a loose writers collective with a common set of principles:

    First of all we owe you an explanation of who we are. This project flows from the “Orthodox Marxist” group, a fraction of the “Revolutionary Marxists” group on the webforum Revleft.com, commonly reproached with terms as “Kautskyites”, “Kautskyite revivalists” or “neo-Kautskyites”. While we’re not referring to ourselves as such, it does have a kernel of truth as we place ourselves among those who reevaluate the legacy of Second International Marxism, a new current if you will which was marked with Lars T. Lih’s scholarly work Lenin Rediscovered – “What is to be done?” in context. As such we draw our inspiration from this scholarly current and other groups that perform similar work.

    But we are an independent group of young comrades from around the globe seeking for answers. And in our quest for linking the dots, of which this website will surely be a reflection, we strive to give a more up to date content to these ideas, to “merge” the ideas of Marxism again with the conditions of the 21st century.

    We don’t have a party line though and the articles will, certainly in the beginning, be more of a result of one’s own findings, than anything else. We are also open for contributions and if you like to do so you could reach us at [email protected]

    Our political basis

    So, how “loose” is loose? Don’t we have anything in common? Well, we do, obviously! The following is a short overview of the views we share:

    As Marxists we stand for the reappropriation of the basic principles of the Marxist programmatic concept of the democratic republic. This means that the working class, through democratic and republican principles, collectively decides how the means of production are used against private ownership by state bureaucrats. It is the class dictatorship of the working class governed by democratic workers’ organs. It is the self-emancipation of the working class through the struggle for the working class to take political power.

    These goals are crystallised in the communist programme. Because the programme is about the political take-over of the working class over society, it stipulates the strategic, objective, steps needed to reach our goal and overcome the undemocratic barriers that the ruling class – a minority – put into place to keep itself in power.

    On the one hand, democratic-republic principles are, among others: the election and recallability of all public officials; universal military training and service, the right to bear arms and political rights in the armed forces; the election of judges and generalised trial by jury; freedom of information; and so on. It is also based on the extension of democratic forms of decision-making like workplace committees and so on.

    On the other hand, these principles stand for a truly democratic way of organisation and discussion. It is the purpose of this project to start to engage in a theoretical discussion on political democracy, programme and republican values as a contribution to a cultural change within the left and the whole of society. This can only be done if we are open and respectful.

    Namesake

    We call ourselves the “Marxist Center” for two reasons:

    1) As we base ourselves on a reevaluaton of the revolutionary traditions of the Second International, we fight for a longterm strategy of “revolutionary patience”. This means an active opposition to “shortcuts” on both rightwing notions that want to enter coalitions in the name of “relevancy” and “realism” and leftwing notions that seek to reach working class power through mass strikist strategies.

    2) We seek to be a center of debate and analysis based on these traditions. While our contribution will inevitably start humble, we aspire to grow and have an impact on the working class community.


    Our tasks

    For these reasons we aim for the following:

    1) To clarify our own ideas, first and foremost. This we aim to do by researching historical topics of interest, attempting to give our own analysis on current world events and engage in debate with each other and with the wider (far left) community.

    2) To popularise the ideas of revolutionary Marxism. That is, both the ideas of Marx and Engels (“classical” Marxism) and the ideas of the early, Marxist, Second International that was fundamental for the formation of mass worker-class movements in Europe and elsewhere, notably also the RSDLP and the Bolsheviks that placed themselves in the same tradition.

    3) To add to, in however modest a way, a practical community. A common theme among our detractors is that because we emphasise open debate we want to setup a “talking shop”. While we can only begin humble and, in some respects, abstract, we aim for an actual party-movement and will aid any such developments and to help answer the most important question of our times what is to be done?

    As Lenin put it, “without revolutionary theory there can be no revolutionary movement”. Anyone that is up for the task, is happily invited to join the ranks of this project!