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CHAPTER 25
THE IDEA IS THE THING
DID you ever ask yourself how it happens
that government and capitalism continue to exist in spite of all the
evil and trouble they are causing in the world?
If you did, then your answer must have been that it is because the
people support those institutions, and that they support them because
they believe in them.
That is the crux of the whole matter: present-day society rests on
the belief of the people that it is good and useful. It is founded on
the idea of authority and private ownership. It is ideas that
maintain conditions. Government and capitalism are the forms in which
the popular ideas express themselves. Ideas are the foundation; the
institutions are the house built upon it.
A new social structure must have a new foundation, new ideas at
its base. However you may change the form of an institution, its
character and meaning will remain the same as the foundation on which
it is built. Look closely at life and you will perceive the truth of
this. There are all kinds and forms of government in the world, but
their real nature is the same everywhere, as their effects are the
same: it always means authority and obedience.
Now, what makes governments exist? The armies and navies? Yes, but
only apparently so. What supports the armies and navies? It is the
belief of the people, of the masses, that government is necessary; it
is the generally accepted idea of the need of government. That
is its real and solid foundation. Take that idea or belief away, and
no government could last another day.
The same applies to private ownership. The idea that it is right
and necessary is the pillar that supports it and gives it security.
Not a single institution exists to-day but is founded on the
popular belief that it is good and beneficial.
Let us take an illustration; the United States, for instance. Ask
yourself why revolutionary propaganda has been of so little effect in
that country in spite of fifty years of Socialist and Anarchist
effort. Is the American worker not exploited more intensely than
labor in other countries? Is political corruption as rampant in any
other land? Is the capitalist class in America not the most arbitrary
and despotic in the world? True, the worker in the United States is
better situated materially than in Europe, but is he not at the same
time treated with the utmost brutality and terrorism the moment he
shows the least dissatisfaction? Yet the American worker remains
loyal to the government and is the first to defend it against
criticism. He is still the most devoted champion of the "grand
and noble institutions of the greatest country on earth." Why?
Because he believes that they are hishe,
as sovereign and free citizen, is running them and that he could
change them if he so wished. It is his faith in the existing
order that constitutes its greatest security against revolution. His
faith is stupid and unjustified, and some day it will break down and
with it American capitalism and despotism. But as long as that faith
persists, American plutocracy is safe against revolution. institutions, that
As men's minds broaden and develop, as they advance to new ideas
and lose faith in their former beliefs, institutions begin to change
and are ultimately done away with. The people grow to understand thee
their former views were false, that they were not truth but prejudice
and superstition.
In this way many ideas, once held to be true, have come to be
regarded as wrong and evil. Thus the ideas of the divine right of
kings, of slavery and serfdom. There was a time when the whole world
believed those institutions to be right, just, and unchangeable. In
the measure that those superstitions and false beliefs were fought by
advanced thinkers, they became discredited and lost their hold upon
the people, and finally the institutions that incorporated those
ideas were abolished. Highbrows will tell you that they had "outlived
their usefulness" and that therefore they "died." But
how did they "outlive" their "usefulness"? To
whom were they useful, and how did they "die"?
We know already that they were useful only to the master class,
and that they were done away with by popular uprisings and
revolutions.
Why did not old and effete institutions "disappear" and
die off in a peaceful manner?
For two reasons: first, because some people think faster than
others. So that it happens that a minority in a given place advance
in their views quicker than the rest. The more that minority will
become imbued with the new ideas, the more convinced of their truth,
and the stronger they will feel themselves, the sooner they will try
to realize their ideas; and that is usually before the majority have
come to see the new light. So that the minority have to struggle
against the majority who still cling to the old views and conditions.
Second, the resistance of those who hold power. It makes no
difference whether it is the church, the king, or kaiser, a
democratic government or a dictatorship, a republic or an
autocracy-those in authority will fight desperately to retain it as
long as they can hope for the least chance of success. And the more
aid they get from the slower-thinking majority the better the fight
they can put up. Hence the fury of revolt and revolution.
The desperation of the masses, their hatred of those responsible
for their misery, and the determination of the lords of life to hold
on to their privileges and rule combine to produce the violence of
popular uprisings and rebellions.
But blind rebellion without definite object and purpose is not
revolution. Revolution is rebellion become conscious of its aims.
Revolution is social when it strives for a fundamental
change. As the foundation of life is economics, the social revolution
means the reorganization of the industrial, economic life of the
country and consequently also of the entire structure of society.
But we have seen thee the social structure rests on the basis of
ideas, which implies that changing the structure presupposes
changed ideas. In other words, social ideas must change first
before a new social structure can be built.
The social revolution, therefore, is not an accident, not a sudden
happening. There is nothing sudden about it, for ideas don t change
suddenly. They grow slowly, gradually, like the plant or flower.
Hence the social revolution is a result, a development, which means
that it is revolutionary. It develops to the point when considerable
numbers of people have embraced the new ideas and are determined to
put them into practice. When they attempt to do so and meet with
opposition, then the slow, quiet, and peaceful social evolution
becomes quick, militant, and violent. Evolution becomes revolution.
Bear in mind, then, that evolution and revolution are not
two separate and different things. Still less are they opposites, as
some people wrongly believe. Revolution is merely the boiling point
of evolution.
Because revolution is evolution at its boiling point you cannot
"make" a real revolution any more than you can hasten the
boiling of a tea kettle. It is the fire underneath that makes it
boil: how quickly it will come to the boiling point will depend on
how strong the fire is.
The economic and political conditions of a country are the fire
under the evolutionary pot. The worse the oppression, the greater the
dissatisfaction of the people, the stronger the flame This explains
why the fires of social revolution swept Russia, the most tyrannous
and backward country, instead of America where industrial development
has almost reached its highest point - and that in spite of all the
learned demonstrations of Karl Marx to the contrary.
We see, then, that revolutions, though they cannot be made, can be
hastened by certain factors; namely, by pressure from above: by more
intense political and economical oppression; and by pressure from
below: by greater enlightenment and agitation. These spread the
ideas; they further evolution and thereby also the coming of
revolution.
But pressure from above, though hastening revolution, may also
cause its failure, because such revolution is apt to break out before
the evolutionary process has been sufficiently advanced. Coming
prematurely, as it were, it will fizzle out in mere rebellion; that
is, without clear, conscious aim and purpose. At best, rebellion can
secure only some temporary alleviation; the real causes of the
strife, however, remain intact and continue to operate to the same
effect, to cause further dissatisfaction and rebellion.
Summing up what I have said about revolution, we must come to the
conclusion that:
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a social revolution is one that
entirely changes the foundation of society, its political, economic,
and social character;
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such a change must first
take place in the ideas and opinions of the people, in the minds of
men;
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oppression and misery may hasten
revolution, but may thereby also turn it into failure,
because lack of evolutionary preparation will make real
accomplishment impossible;
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only that revolution can be fundamental, social, and
successful which will be the expression of a basic change of ideas
and opinions.
From this it obviously follows that the social revolution must be
prepared. Prepared in the sense of furthering the evolutionary
process, of enlightening the people about the evils of present-day
society and convincing them of the desirability and possibility, of
the justice and practicability of a social life based on liberty;
prepared, moreover, by making the masses realize very clearly just
what they need and how to bring it about.
Such preparation is not only an absolutely necessary preliminary
step. Therein lies also the safety of the revolution, the only
guarantee of its accomplishing its objects.
It has been the fate of most revolutions -- as a result of lack of
preparation -- to be sidetracked from their main purpose, to be
misused and led into blind alleys. Russia is the best recent
illustration of it. The February Revolution, which sought to do away
with the autocracy, was entirely successful. The people knew exactly
what they wanted; namely the abolition of Tsardom. All the
machinations of politicians, all the oratory and schemes of the Lvovs
and Miliukovs - the "liberal" leaders of those days could
not save the Romanov régime in the face of the intelligent and
conscious will of the people. It was this clear understanding of its
aims which made the February, Revolution a complete success, with,
mind you, almost no bloodshed.
Furthermore, neither appeals nor threats by the Provisional
Government could avail against the determination of the people to end
the war. The armies left the fronts and thus terminated the matter by
their own direct action. The will of a people conscious of their
objects always conquers.
It was the will of the people again, their resolute aim to get
hold of the soil, which secured for the peasant the land he needed.
Similarly the city workers, as repeatedly mentioned before, possessed
themselves of the factories and the machinery of production.
So far the Russian Revolution was a complete success. But at the
point where the masses lacked the consciousness of definite purpose,
defeat began. That is always the moment when politicians and
political parties step in to exploit the revolution for their own
uses or to experiment their theories upon it. This happened in
Russia, as in many previous revolutions. The people fought the good
fight-the political parties fought over the spoils to the detriment
of the revolution and to the ruin of the people.
This is, then, what took place in Russia. The peasant, having
secured the land, did not have the tools and machinery he needed. The
worker, having taken possession of the machinery and factories, did
not know how to handle them to accomplish his aims. In other words,
he did not have the experience necessary to organize production and
he could not manage the distribution of the things he was producing.
His own efforts -- the worker's, the peasant's, the soldier's --
had done away with Tsardom, paralyzed the Government, stopped the
war, and abolished private ownership of land and machinery. For that
he was prepared by years of revolutionary education and agitation.
But for no more than that. And because he was prepared for no more,
where his knowledge ceased and definite purpose was lacking, there
stepped in the political party and took affairs out of the hands of
the masses who had made the revolution. Politics replaced economic
reconstruction and thereby sounded the death knell of the social
revolution; for people live by bread, by economics, not by politics.
Food and supplies are not created by decree of party or
government. Legislative edicts don't till the soil; laws can't turn
the wheels of industry. Dissatisfaction, strife, and famine came upon
the heels of government coercion and dictatorship. Again, as always,
politics and authority proved the swamp in which the revolutionary
fires became extinguished.
Let us learn this most vital lesson: thorough understanding by the
masses of the true aims of revolution means success. Carrying out
their conscious will by their own efforts guarantees the right
development of the new life. On the other hand, lack of this
understanding and of preparation means certain defeat, either at the
hands of reaction or by the experimental theories of would-be
political party friends.
Let us prepare, then.
What and how?
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