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Once we've cleared away all the smoke being blown in your response, we see that -- yes -- the broad left you are building is one that contains people who are not necessarily anti-capitalist. You are deliberately trying to strengthen, and are making arguments to expand, an entity that is in no way revolutionary.
Not in opposition to or counterposed to building revolutionary politics, but a broad left as opposed to pasivity and cynacism and demoralization and lack of struggle. Not counterposed to rebuilding a revolutionary left in the US, but as part of the dynamic process in which an organic revolutionary left can emerge. Given that in non-revolutionary times only a minority of people engaged in movements will probably become radicals, healthy movements that can connect to the class struggle and potentially head in a radical direction (though most likely initially confused) are the forum out of which a more generalized revolutionary current will develop.
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Or as you put it, you attract people into the broad left first, then presumably later make them revolutionary after they work with you for a period of time by springing on them all the narrower more divisive and "sectarian" arguments about the need for revolution (I'm guessing this is somehow supposed to be different than stageism, but I fail to see how).
I guess that would be stage-ism, but it's also comically far away from how we operate and a strange and mechanical view of consiousness. You present it here as though we recruit people to reformism and then try and recruit them to revolutionary marxism; you are confusing building on an induvidual level and building a more general struggle in which marxism and other revolutionary ideas contend for the way forward for struggle. It's a process in which revolutionaries can begin to connect with workers and people struggling against oppression and build some organic credibility and connections.
We try and support things that will help develop a "broad left" because such a development will allow for potential mass radicalization - or at least the development of a revolutionary current. We don't argue for people to be convinced of refomrist ideas and then "spring" revolutionary ideas onto them. That's a silly view. Of course we'd like to convince everyone to be revolutionaries, but it's just not going to happen with everyone at this point - so then what? Not try and contend for the influence of class-based ideas in movements, leave everyone who sincerly wants to fight austerity to only reformist arguments and strategies on offer?
Again you provide no alternative. Should we relate to movements by going to where workers are struggling, trying to recruit as many as we can and then leave? So people already accuse us of this, but they are just as mistaken as you arguing the exact opposite. The reality is inbetween. We do try and build our own group while also trying to popularize radical arguments inside movements. But we also realize in non-revolutionary times, only a fraction of those workers angry enough to want to fight will actually become revolutionaries. What will help create conditions for more radicalization? More struggle, more sucessful and politically deepening struggle.
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In light of this, I have a follow-up question. How do you claim you are building a revolutionary movement and party if your primary political task right now is building a political entity -- an "alternative to the Democrats," to use your phrase -- that is not revolutionary, in a way that makes it perfectly acceptable and welcoming to those who are not anti-capitalist?
What? First, you never answer any of my questions to you and you're asking me a follow up question? Please.
Our primary immediate task is not specifically "building an organizational alternative" to the Democrats. This is the potential we saw that might have developed out of the Green party in 2000 because in 1996 and 2000 they ran Nader basically on a platform of opposition to Democratic betrayals. We saw it as something that might help a "new Left" to solidify, but we do not have a speficic goal of some electoral platform - our position is that such formations need to always be judged against the specific circumstances and potential at a given time. The US ALWAYS needs a political alternative to the Democrats, but that doesn't mean that any and all alternatives are worth trying to build or support at all times. I think that's why, in retrospect, it was a mistake and mis-estimate of the anti-war movement to think Nader would be able to rally an anti-war opposition to Bush and Kerry. Likewise it would have been a mistake to think that a protest campaign could rally vauge disatisfaction with Obama and opposition to austerity. A healthy Occupy movement maybe could have pulled something like that off because they would have had a wide hearing and a wide grassroots organizing potential. But I think the lack of enthusiasm around the 3rd parties who ran against Obama show that outside of a more organized opposition, such leapfrogging in consiousness is unlikely under present conditions.
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How, on a practical level, is that possible? What kind of arguments are you using to attract people to this "broad left"?
We are not "trying to attract people to the broad left", our understanding is that most workers who are angry and want to fight will probably be attracted to the broad left, but that revolutionaries have a role to play in arguing both for the ultimate aims, but also for immediate aims and tactics within these movements which will grow the movements in size and influence the more they tap into class anger. In addition, the more people struggle, the more expectations are raised and the more people have direct experience in struggles, the more there is a large base for revolutionary ideas beyond what induvidual or small groups of radicals can convince through propaganda and agitiation on a one-on-one sort of level.
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If you put forth explicitly socialist analyses in your propaganda and agitation at the movement activities you participate in, in what sense are you "building a broad left' rather than attempting to build a revolutionary left? On the other hand, if you are putting forth generic arguments like "tax the rich" and "ditch the democrats," I fail to see how you are trying to build revolutionary consciousness in the movements you're working in.
So you are using slogans to argue against the poltical arguments we make in movements? Sure we can have a sign that says "All power to the worker's councils" and we would agree with that - but that is not the point of a slogan. "All power to the Soviets" only works when the question of power is a popular question. Slogans are simple rallying points. The arguments we make in movements however are things like: in anti-racist struggles, arguing for a class rather than post-modern/I.D. politics view of oppression because this will not only further a class understanding, but a movement on this basis IMO would become stronger, more effective, and have a higher likely hood of radicalizing further. In the anti-war movement generally a lot of the general arguments we had in the movement were over supporting Democrats, imperialism, and supporting resistance in Iraq. These are the general political arguments and in addition, one-on-one we try and convince people of the need for socialism, invite people to our study groups and meetings etc.
But my question remains... how do we help conditions to build a revolutionary left, how does this develop in the absense of struggles? What does it mean to have a theory of organizing the vanguard when no real vanguard can develop out of a demoralized class? Studying and propaganda activities and so on are of course always possible and always essential, but beyond the one on one things how can we link revolutionary ideas and tradditions to the class if struggle and consiousness are starting at a low level? If not through a more general struggle, how does a vanguard drawing revolutionary conclusions emerge?