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CHAPTER 29 CONSUMPTION AND EXCHANGE
LET US take up the organization of
consumption first, because people have to eat before they can work
and produce.
"What do you mean by the organization of consumption?"
your friend asks.
"He means rationing, I suppose," you remark.
I do. Of course, when the social revolution has become thoroughly
organized and production is functioning normally there will be enough
for everybody. But in the first stages of the revolution, during the
process of reconstruction, we must take care to supply the people as
best we can, and equally, which means rationing.
"The Bolsheviki did not have equal rationing," your
friend interrupts; "they had different kinds of rations for
different people.
They did, and that was one of the greatest mistakes they made. It
was resented by the people as a wrong and it provoked irritation and
discontent. The Bolsheviki had one kind of ration for the sailor,
another of lower quality and quantity for the soldier, a third for
the skilled worker, a fourth for the unskilled one; another ration
again for the average citizen, and yet another for the bourgeois. The
best rations were for the Bolsheviki, the members of the Party, and
special rations for the Communist officials and commissars. At one
time they had as many as fourteen different food rations. Your own
common sense will tell you that it was all wrong. Was it fair to
discriminate against people because they happened to be laborers,
mechanics, or intellectuals rather than soldiers or sailors? Such
methods were unjust and vicious: they immediately created material
inequality and opened the door to misuse of position and opportunity,
to speculation, graft, and swindle. They also stimulated
counter-revolution, for those indifferent or unfriendly to the
Revolution were embittered by the discrimination and therefore became
an easy prey to counter-revolutionary influences.
This initial discrimination and the many others which followed
were not dictated by the needs of the situation but solely by
political party considerations. Having usurped the reins of
government and fearing the opposition of the people, the Bolsheviki
sought to strengthen themselves in the government seat by currying
favor with the sailors, soldiers, and workers. But by these means
they succeeded only in creating indignation and antagonizing the
masses, for the injustice of the system was too crying and obvious.
Furthermore, even the "favored class," the proletariat,
felt discriminated against because the soldiers were given better
rations. Was the worker not as good as the soldier? Could the soldier
fight for the Revolution-the factory man argued-if the worker would
not supply him with ammunition? The soldier, in his turn, protested
against the sailor getting more. Was he not as valuable as the
sailor? And all condemned the special rations and privileges bestowed
on the Bolshevik members of the Party, and particularly the comforts
and even luxuries enjoyed by the higher officials and commissars,
while the masses suffered privation.
Popular resentment of such practices was strikingly expressed by
the Kronstadt sailors. It was in the midst of an extremely severe and
hungry winter, in March, 1921, that a public mass-meeting of the
sailors unanimously resolved voluntarily to give up their extra
rations in behalf of the less favored population of Kronstadt, and to
equalize the rations in the entire city.1
This truly ethical revolutionary action voiced the
general feeling against discrimination and favoritism, and gave
convincing proof of the deep sense of justice inherent in the masses.
All experience teaches that the just and square thing is at the
same time also the most sensible and practical in the long run. This
holds equally true of the individual as of collective life.
Discrimination and injustice are particularly destructive to
revolution, because the very spirit of revolution is born of the
hunger for equity and justice.
I have already mentioned that when the social revolution attains
the stage where it can produce sufficient for all, then is adopted
the Anarchist principle of "to each according to his needs."
In the more industrially developed and efficient countries that stage
would naturally be reached sooner than in backward lands. But until
it is reached, the system of equal sharing, equal distribution per
capita, is imperative as the only just method. It goes without
saying, of course, that special consideration must be given to the
sick and the old, to children, and to women during and after
pregnancy, as was also the practice in the Russian Revolution.
Let me get this straight," you remark. "There is to be
equal sharing, you say. Then you won't be able to buy anything?"
No, there will be no buying or selling. The revolution abolishes
private ownership of the means of production and distribution, and
with it goes capitalistic business. Personal possession remains only
in the things you use. Thus, your watch is your own, but the watch
factory belongs to the people. Land, machinery, and all other public
utilities will be collective property, neither to be bought nor sold.
Actual use will be considered the only title-not to ownership but to
possession. The organization of the coal miners, for example, will be
in charge of the coal mines, not as owners but as the operating
agency. Similarly will the railroad brotherhoods run the railroads,
and so on. Collective possession, cooperatively managed in the
interests of the community, will take the place of personal ownership
privately conducted for profit.
"But if you can't buy anything, then what's the use of
money?" you ask.
None whatever; money becomes useless. You can't get anything for
it. When the sources of supply, the land, factories, and products
become public property, socialized, you can neither buy nor sell. As
money is only a medium for such transactions, it loses its
usefulness.
"But how will you exchange things?"
Exchange will be free. The coal miners, for instance, will deliver
the coal they mined to the public coal yards for the use of the
community. In their turn the miners will receive from the community's
warehouses the machinery, tools, and the other commodities they need.
That means free exchange without the medium of money and without
profit, on the basis of requirement and the supply on hand.
"But if there is no machinery or food to be given to the
miners?"
If there is none, money will not help matters. The miners couldn't
feed on banknotes. Consider how such things are managed to-day. You
trade coal for money, and for the money you get food. The free
community we are speaking of will exchange the coal for food
directly, without the medium of money.
"But on what basis? To-day you know what a dollar is worth,
more or less, but how much coal will you give for a sack of flour?"
You mean, how will value or price be determined. But we have seen
already in preceding chapters that there is no real measure of value,
and that price depends on supply and demand and varies accordingly.
The price of coal rises if there is a scarcity of it; it becomes
cheaper if the supply is greater than the demand. To make bigger
profits the coal owners artificially limit the output, and the same
methods obtain throughout the capitalistic system. With the abolition
of capitalism no one will be interested in raising the price of coal
or limiting its supply. As much coal will be mined as will be
necessary to satisfy the need. Similarly will as much food be raised
as the country needs. It will be the requirements of the
community and the supply obtainable which will determine the amount
it is to receive. This applies to coal and food as to all other needs
of the people.
"But suppose there is not enough of a certain product to go
around. What will you do then?"
Then we'll do what is done even in capitalistic society in time of
war and scarcity: the people are rationed, with the difference that
in the free community rationing will be managed on principles of
equality.
"But suppose the farmer refuses to supply the city with his
products unless he gets money?"
The farmer, like any one else, wants money only if he can buy with
it the things he needs. He will quickly see that money is useless to
him. In Russia during the Revolution you could not get a peasant, to
sell you a pound of flour for a bagful of money. But he was eager to
give you a barrel of the finest grain for an old pair of boots. It is
plows, spades, rakes, agricultural machinery, and clothing which the
farmer wants, not money. For these he will let you have his wheat,
barley, and corn. In other words, the city will exchange with the
farm the products each requires, on the basis of need.
It has been suggested by some that exchange during the
reconstruction should be based on some definite standard. It is
proposed, for example, that every community issue its own money, as
is often done in time of revolution; or that a day's work should be
considered the unit of value and so-called labor notes serve as
medium of exchange. But neither of these proposals is of practical
help. Money issued by communities in revolution would quickly
depreciate to the point of no value, since such money would have no
secure guarantees behind it, without which money is worth nothing.
Similarly labor notes would not represent any definite and measurable
value as a means of exchange. What would, for instance, an hour's
work of the coal miner be worth? Or fifteen minutes' consultation
with the physician? Even if all effort should be considered equal in
value and an hour's labor be made the unit, could the house painter's
hour of work or the surgeon's operation be equitably measured in
terms of wheat?
Common sense will solve this problem on the basis of human
equality and the right of every one to life.
"Such a system might work among decent people," your
friend objects; "but how about shirkers? Were not the Bolsheviki
right in establishing the principle that 'whoever doesn't work,
doesn't eat'?"
No, my friend, you are mistaken. At first sight it may appear as
if that was a just and sensible idea. But in reality it proved
impractical, not to speak of the injustice and harm it worked all
around.
"How so?"
It was impractical because it required an army of officials to
keep tab on the people who worked or didn't work. It led to
incrimination and recrimination and endless disputes about official
decisions. So that within a short time the number of those who didn't
work was doubled and even trebled by the effort to force people to
work and to guard against their dodging or doing bad work. It was the
system of compulsory labor which soon proved such a failure that the
Bolsheviki were compelled to give it up.
Moreover, the system caused even greater evils in other
directions. Its injustice lay in the fact that you cannot break into
a person's heart or mind and decide what peculiar physical or mental
condition makes it temporarily impossible for him to work. Consider
further the precedent you establish by introducing a false principle
and thereby rousing the apposition of those who feel it wrong and
oppressive and therefore refuse coöperation.
A rational community will find it more practical and beneficial to
treat all alike, whether one happens to work at the time or not,
rather than create more non-workers to watch those already on hand,
or to build prisons for their punishment and support. For if you
refuse to feed a man,for whatever cause, you drive him to theft and
other crimes - and thus you yourself create the necessity for courts,
lawyers, judge', jails, and warders, the upkeep of whom is far more
burdensome than to feed the offenders. And these you have to feed,
anyhow, even if you put them in prison.
The revolutionary community will depend more on awakening the
social consciousness and solidarity of its delinquents than on
punishment. It will rely on the example set by its working members,
and it will be right in doing so. For the natural attitude of the
industrious man to the shirker is such that the latter will find the
social atmosphere so unpleasant that he will prefer to work and enjoy
the respect and good will of his fellows rather than to be despised
in idleness.
Bear in mind that it is more important, and in the end more
practical and useful, to do the square thing rather than to gain a
seeming immediate advantage. That is, to do justice is more vital
than to punish. For punishment is never just and always harmful to
both sides, the punished and the punisher;. harmful even more
spiritually than physically, ant there is no greater harm than that,
for it hardens and corrupts you. This is unqualifiedly true of your
individual life and with the same force it applies to the collective
social existence.
On the foundations of liberty, justice, and equality, as also on
understanding and sympathy, must be built every phase of life in the
social revolution. Only so it can endure. This applies to the
problems of shelter, food, and the security of your district or city,
as well as to the defense of the revolution.
As regards housing and local safety Russia has shown the way in
the first months of the October Revolution. House committees, chosen
by the tenants, and city federations of such committees, take the
problem in hand. They gather statistics of the facilities of a given
district and of the number of applicants requiring quarters. The
latter are assigned according to personal or family need on the basis
of equal rights.
Similar house and district committees have charge of the
provisioning of the city. Individual application for rations at the
distributing centers is a stupendous waste of time ant energy.
Equally false is the system, practiced in Russia in the first years
of the Revolution, of issuing rations in the institutions of one's
employment, in shops, factories, and offices. The better and more
efficient way, which at the same time insures more equitable
distribution and closes the door to favoritism and misuse, is
rationing by houses or streets. The authorized house or street
committee procures at the local distributing center the provisions,
clothing, etc., apportioned to the number of tenants represented by
the committee. Equal rationing has the added advantage of eradicating
food speculation, the vicious practice which grew to enormous
proportions in Russia because of the system of inequality and
privilege. Party members or persons with a political pull could
freely bring to the cities carloads of flour while some old peasant
woman was severely punished for selling a loaf of bread. No wonder
speculation flourished, and to such an extent, indeed, that the
Bolsheviki had to form special regiments to cope with the evil.1
The prisons were filled with offenders; capital punishment was
resorted to; but even the most drastic measures of the government
failed to stop speculation, for the latter was the direct consequence
of the system of discrimination and favoritism. Only equality and
freedom of exchange can obviate such evils or at least reduce them to
a minimum.
Taking care of the sanitary and kindred needs of street and
district by voluntary committees of house and locality affords the
best results, since such bodies, themselves tenants of the given
district, are personally interested in the health and safety of their
families and friends. This system worked much better in Russia than
the subsequently established regular police force. The latter
consisting mostly of the worst city elements, proved corrupt, brutal,
and oppressive.
The hope of material betterment is, as already mentioned, a
powerful factor in the forward movement of humanity. But that
incentive alone is not sufficient to inspire the masses to give them
the vision of a new and better world, and cause them to face danger
and privation for its sake. For that an ideal is needed, an ideal
which appeals not only to the stomach but even more to the heart and
imagination, which rouses our dormant longing for what is fine and
beautiful, for the spiritual and cultural values of life. An ideal,
in short, which wakens the inherent social instincts of man, feeds
his sympathies and fellow-feeling, fires his love of liberty and
justice, and imbues even the lowest with nobility of thought and
deed, as we frequently witness in the catastrophic events of life.
Let a great tragedy happen anywhere -an earthquake, flood, or
railroad accident-and the compassion of the whole world goes out to
the sufferers. Acts of heroic self-sacrifice, of brave rescue, and of
unstinted aid demonstrate the real nature of man and his deep-felt
brotherhood and unity.
This is true of mankind in all times, climes, and social strata.
The story of Amundsen is a striking illustration of it. After decades
of arduous and dangerous work the famous Norwegian explorer resolves
to enjoy his remaining years in peaceful literary pursuits. He is
announcing his decision at a banquet given in his honor, and almost
at the same moment comes the news that the Nobile expedition to the
North Pole had met with disaster. On the instant Amundsen renounces
all his plans of a quiet life and prepares to fly to the aid of the
lost aviators, fully aware of the peril of such an undertaking. Human
sympathy and the compelling impulse to help those in distress
overcome all considerations of personal safety, and Amundsen
sacrifices his life in an attempt to rescue the Nobile party.
Deep in all of us lives the spirit of Amundsen. How many men of
science have given up their lives in seeking knowledge by which to
benefit their fellow-men-how many physicians and nurses have perished
in the work of ministering to people stricken with contagious
disease. how many men and women have voluntarily faced certain death
in the effort to check an epidemic which was decimating their country
or even some foreign land-how many men, common workingmen, miners,
sailors, railroad employees-unknown to fame and unsung-have given
themselves in the spirit of Amundsen? Their name is legion.
It is this human nature, this idealism, which must be
roused by the social revolution. Without it the revolution cannot be,
without it, it cannot live. Without it man is forever doomed to
remain a slave and a weakling.
It is the work of the Anarchist, of the revolutionist, of the
intelligent, class-conscious proletarian to exemplify and cultivate
this spirit and instill it in others. It alone can conquer the powers
of evil and darkness, and build a new world of humanity, liberty, and
justice.
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