CHAPTER 27 ORGANIZATION OF LABOR FOR THE SOCIAL REVOLUTION
PROPER preparation, as suggested in the preceding pages, will
greatly lighten the task of the social revolution and assure its
healthy development and functioning.
Now, what will be the main functions of the revolution?
Every country has its specific conditions, its own psychology,
habits, and traditions, and the process of revolution will naturally
reflect the peculiarities of every land and its people. But
fundamentally all countries are alike in their social (rather
anti-social) character: whatever the political forms or economic
conditions, they are all built on invasive authority, on monopoly, on
the exploitation of labor. The main task of the social revolution is
therefore essentially the same everywhere: the abolition of
government and of economic inequality, and the socialization of the
means of production and distribution.
Production, distribution, and communication are the basic sources
of existence; upon them rests the power of coercive authority and
capital. Deprived of that power, governors and rulers become just
ordinary men, like you and me, common citizens among millions of
others. To accomplish that is consequently the primal and most vital
function of the social revolution.
We know that revolution begins with street disturbances and
outbreaks: it is the initial phase which involves force and violence.
But that is merely the spectacular prologue of the real revolution.
The age long misery and indignity suffered by the masses burst into
disorder and tumult, the humiliation and injustice meekly borne for
decades find vent in acts of fury and destruction. That is
inevitable, and it is solely the master class which is responsible
for this preliminary character of revolution. For it is even more
true socially than individually that "whoever sows the wind will
reap the whirlwind": the greater the oppression and wretchedness
to which the masses had been made to submit, the fiercer will rage
the social storm. All history proves it, but the lords of life have
never harkened to its warning voice.
This phase of the revolution is of short duration. It is usually
followed by the more conscious, yet still spontaneous, destruction of
the citadels of authority, the visible symbols of organized violence
and brutality: jails, police stations, and other government buildings
are attacked, the prisoners liberated, legal documents destroyed. It
is the manifestation of instinctive popular justice. Thus one of the
first gestures of the French Revolution was the demolition of the
Bastille. Similarly in Russia prisons were stormed and the prisoners
released at the very outset of the Revolution.1
The wholesome intuition of the people justly sees in prisoners social
unfortunates, victims of conditions, and sympathizes with them as
such. The masses regard the courts and their records as instruments
of class injustice, and these are destroyed at the beginning of the
revolution, and quite properly so.
But this stage passes quickly: the people's ire is soon spent.
Simultaneously the revolution begins its constructive work.
"Do you really think that reconstruction could start so
soon?" you ask.
My friend, it must begin immediately. In fact, the more
enlightened the masses have become, the clearer the workers realize
their aims, and the better they are prepared to carry them out, the
less destructive the revolution will be, and the quicker and more
effectively will begin the work of reconstruction.
"Are you not too hopeful?"
No, I don't think so. I am convinced that the social revolution
will not "just happen." It will have to be prepared,
organized. Yes, indeed, organized-just as a strike is organized. In
truth, it will be a strike, the strike of the united workers of an
entire country -- a general strike.
Let us pause and consider this.
How do you imagine a revolution could be fought in these days of
armored tanks, poison gas, and military planes? Do you believe that
the unarmed masses and their barricades could withstand high-power
artillery and bombs thrown upon them from flying machines? Could
labor fight the military forces of government and capital?
It's ridiculous on the face of it, isn't it? And no less
ridiculous is the suggestion that the workers should form their own
regiments, "shock troops," or a "red front," as
the Communist parties advise you to do. Will such proletarian bodies
ever be able to stand up against the trained armies of the government
and the private troops of capital? Will they have the least chance?
Such a proposition needs only to be stated to be seen in all its
impossible folly. It would simply mean sending thousands of workers
to certain death.
It is time to have done with this obsolete idea of revolution.
Nowadays government and capital are too well organized in a military
way for the workers ever to be able to cope with them. It would be
criminal to attempt it, insanity even to think of it.
The strength of labor is not on the field of battle. It is in the
shop, in the mine and factory. There lies its power that no army in
the world can defeat, no human agency conquer.
In other words, the social revolution can take place only by means
of the General Strike. The General Strike, rightly understood
and thoroughly carried out, is the social revolution. Of this
the British Government became aware much quicker than the workers
when the General Strike was declared in England in May, 1926. "It
means revolution," the Government said, in effect, to the strike
leaders. With all their armies and navies the authorities were
powerless in the face of the situation. You can shoot people to death
but you can't shoot them to work. The labor leaders themselves were
frightened at the thought that the General Strike actually implied
revolution.
British capital and government won the strike-not by the strength
of arms, but because of the lack of intelligence and courage on the
part of the labor leaders and because the English workers were not
prepared for the consequences of the General Strike. As a matter of
fact, the idea was quite new to them. They had never before been
interested in it, never studied its significance and potentialities.
It is safe to say that a similar situation in France would have
developed quite differently, because in that country the toilers have
for years been familiar with the General Strike as a revolutionary
proletarian weapon.
It is most important that we realize that the General Strike is
the only possibility of social revolution. In the past the General
Strike has been propagated in various countries without sufficient
emphasis that its real meaning is revolution, that it is the only
practical way to it. It is time for us to learn this, and when we do
so the social revolution will cease to be a vague, unknown quantity.
It will become an actuality, a definite method and aim, a program
whose first step is the taking over of the industries by organized
labor.
I understand now why you said that the social revolution means
construction rather than destruction," your friend remarks.
I am glad you do. And if you have followed me so far, you will
agree that the matter of taking over the industries is not something
that can be left to chance, nor can it be carried out in a haphazard
manner. It can be accomplished only in a well-planned, systematic,
and organized way. You alone can't do it, nor I, nor any other man,
be he worker Ford, or the Pope of Rome. There is no man nor any body
of men that can manage it except the workers themselves, for
it takes the workers to operate the industries. But even the workers
can't do it unless they are organized and organized just for such
an undertaking.
"But I thought you were an Anarchist," interrupts your
friend.
I am.
"I've heard that Anarchists don't believe in organization."
I imagine you have, but that's an old argument. Any one who tells
you that Anarchists don't believe in organization is talking
nonsense. Organization is everything, and everything is organization.
The whole of life is organization, conscious or unconscious. Every
nation, every family, why, even every individual is an organization
or organism. Every part of every living thing is organized in such a
manner that the whole works in harmony. Otherwise the different
organs could not function properly and life could not exist.
But there is organization and organization. Capitalist society is
so badly organized that its various members suffer: just as when you
have pain in some part of you, your whole body aches and you are ill.
There is organization that is painful because it is ill, and
organization that is joyous because it means health and strength. An
organization is ill or evil when it neglects or suppresses any of its
organs or members. In the healthy organism all parts are equally
valuable and none is discriminated against. The organization built on
compulsion, which coerces and forces, is bad and unhealthy. The
libertarian organization, formed voluntarily and in which every
member is free and equal, is a sound body and can work well. Such an
organization is a free union of equal parts. It is the kind of
organization the Anarchists believe in.
Such must be the organization of the workers if labor is to have a
healthy body, one that can operate effectively.
It means, first of all, that not a single member of the
organization or union may with impunity be discriminated against,
suppressed or ignored. To do so would be the same as to ignore an
aching tooth: you would be sick all over.
In other words, the labor union must be built on the principle of
the equal liberty of all its members.
Only when each is a free and independent unit, cooperating with
the others from his own choice because of mutual interests, can the
whole work successfully and become powerful.
This equality means that it makes no difference what or who the
particular worker is: whether he is skilled or unskilled, whether he
is mason, carpenter, engineer or day laborer, whether he earn much or
little. The interests of all are the same; all belong
together, and only by standing together can they accomplish their
purpose.
It means that the workers in the factory, mill, or mine must be
organized as one body; for it is not a question of what particular
jobs they hold, what craft or trade they follow, but what their
interests are. And their interests are identical, as against the
employer and the system of exploitation.
Consider yourself how foolish and inefficient is the present form
of labor organization in which one trade or craft may be on strike
while the other branches of the same industry continue at work. Is it
not ridiculous that when the street car workers of New York, for
instance, quit work, the employees of the subway, the cab and omnibus
drivers remain on the job? The main purpose of a strike is to bring
about a situation that will compel the employer to give in to the
demands of labor. Such a situation can be created only by a complete
tie-up of the industry in question, so that a partial strike is
merely a waste of labor's time and energy, not to speak of the
harmful moral effect of the inevitable defeat.
Think over the strikes in which you yourself have taken part and
of others you know of. Did your union ever win a fight unless it was
able to compel the employer to give in? But when was it able
to do so? Only when the boss knew that the workers meant business,
that there was no dissent among them, that there was no hesitation
and dallying, that they were determined to win, at whatever cost. But
particularly when the employer felt himself at the mercy of the
union, when he could not operate his factory or mine in the face of
the workers' resolute stand, when he could not get scabs or
strikebreakers, and when he saw that his interests would suffer more
by defying his employees than by granting their demands.
It is clear, then, that you can compel compliance only when you
are determined, when your union is strong, when you are well
organized, when you are united in such a manner that the boss cannot
run his factory against your will. But the employer is usually some
big manufacturer or a company that has mills or mines in various
places. Suppose it is a coal combine. If it cannot operate its mines
in Pennsylvania because of a strike, it will try to make good its
losses by continuing mining in Virginia or Colorado and increasing
production there. Now, if the miners in those States keep on working
while you in Pennsylvania are on strike, the company loses nothing.
It may even welcome the strike in order to raise the price of coal on
the ground that the supply is short because of your strike. In that
way the company not only breaks your strike, but it also influences
public opinion against you, because the people foolishly believe that
the higher price of coal is really the result of your strike while in
fact it is due to the greed of the mine owners. You will lose your
strike, and for some time to come you and the workers everywhere will
have to pay more for coal, and not only for coal but for all the
other necessities of life, because together with the price of coal
the general cost of living will go up.
Reflect, then, how stupid is the present union policy to permit
the other mines to operate while your mine is on strike. The others
remain at work and give financial support to your strike, but don't
you see that their aid only helps to break your strike, because they
have to keep on working, really scabbing on you, in order to
contribute to your strike fund? Can anything be more senseless and
criminal?
This holds true of every industry and every strike. Can you wonder
that most strikes are lost? That is the case in America as well as in
other countries. I have before me the Blue Book just published in
England under the title of Labor Statistics. The data prove
that strikes do not lead to labor victories. The figures for the last
eight years are as follows:
Results in Favor of:
|
Working People
|
Employers
|
|
1920
|
390
|
507
|
|
1921
|
152
|
315
|
|
1922
|
111
|
222
|
|
1923
|
187
|
183
|
|
1924
|
162
|
235
|
|
1925
|
154
|
189
|
|
1926
|
67
|
126
|
|
1927
|
61
|
118
|
Actually, then, almost 60% of the strikes were lost. Incidentally,
consider also the loss of working days resulting from strikes, which
means no wages. The total number of workdays lost by English labor in
1912 was 40,890,000, which is almost equal to the lives of 2,000 men,
allotting to each 60 years. In 1919 the number of workdays lost was
34,969,000; in 1920, 26,568,000; in 1921, 85,872,000; in 1926, as a
result of the general strike, 162,233,000 days. These figures do not
include time and wages lost through unemployment.
It doesn't take much arithmetic to see that strikes as at present
conducted don't pay, that the labor unions are not the winners in
industrial disputes.
This does not mean, however, that strikes serve no purpose. On the
contrary, they are of great value: they teach the worker the vital
need of coöperation, of standing shoulder to shoulder with his
fellows and unitedly fighting in the common cause. Strikes train him
in the class struggle and develop his spirit of joint effort, of
resistance to the masters, of solidarity ant responsibility. In this
sense even an unsuccessful strike is not a complete loss. Through it
the toilers learn that "an injury to one is the concern of all,"
the practical wisdom that embodies the deepest meaning of the
proletarian struggle. This does not relate only to the daily battle
for material betterment, but equally so to everything pertaining to
the worker and his existence, and particularly to matters where
justice and liberty are involved.
It is one of the most inspiring things to see the masses roused in
behalf of social justice, whomever the case at issue may concern.
For, indeed, it is the concern of all of us, in the truest and
deepest sense. The more labor becomes enlightened and aware of its
larger interests, the broader and more universal grow its sympathies,
the more world-wide its defense of justice and liberty. It was a
manifestation of this understanding when the workers in every country
protested against the judicial murder of Sacco and Vanzetti in
Massachusetts. Instinctively and consciously the masses throughout
the world felt, as did all decent men and women, that it is their
concern when such a crime is being perpetrated. Unfortunately that
protest, as many similar ones, contented itself with mere
resolutions. Had organized labor resorted to action, such as a
general strike, its demands would not have been ignored, and two of
the workers' best friends and noblest of men would not have been
sacrificed to the forces of reaction.
Equally important, it would have served as a valuable
demonstration of the tremendous power of the proletariat, the power
that always conquers when it is unified and resolute. This has been
proven on numerous occasions in the past when the determined stand of
labor prevented planned legal outrages, as in the case of Haywood,
Moyer, and Pettibone, officials of the Western Federation of Miners,
whom the coal barons of the State of Idaho had conspired to send to
the gallows during the miners' strike of 1905. Again, in 1917, it was
the solidarity of the toilers which thwarted the execution of Tom
Mooney, in California. The sympathetic attitude of organized labor in
America toward Mexico has also till now been an obstacle to the
military occupation of that country by the United States Government
in behalf of the American oil interests. Similarly in Europe united
action by the workers has been successful in repeatedly forcing the
authorities to grant amnesty to political prisoners. The Government
of England so feared the expressed sympathy of British labor for the
Russian Revolution that it was compelled to pretend neutrality. It
did not dare openly to aid the counterrevolution in Russia. When the
dock workers refused to load food and ammunition intended for the
White armies, the English Government resorted to deception. It
solemnly assured the workers that the shipments were intended for
France. In the course of my work collecting historic material in
Russia, in 1920 and 1921, I came into possession of official British
documents proving that the shipments had been immediately forwarded
from France, by direct orders of the British Government, to the
counter-revolutionary generals in the North of Russia who had
established there the so-called Tchaikovsky-Miller Government. This
incident -- one out of many -- demonstrates the wholesome fear the
powers that be have of the awakening class-consciousness and
solidarity of the international proletariat.
The stronger the workers grow in this spirit the more effective
will be their struggle for emancipation. Class consciousness and
solidarity must assume national and international proportions before
labor can attain its full strength. Wherever there is injustice,
wherever persecution and suppression-be it the subjugation of the
Philippines, the invasion of Nicaragua, the enslavement of the
toilers in the Congo by Belgian exploiters, the oppression of the
masses in Egypt, China, Morocco, or India-it is the business of the
workers everywhere to raise their voice against all such outrages and
demonstrate their solidarity in the common cause of the despoiled and
disinherited throughout the world.
Labor is slowly advancing to this social consciousness: strikes
and other sympathetic expressions are a valuable manifestation of
this spirit. If the greater number of strikes are lost at present, it
is because the proletariat is not yet fully aware of its national and
international interests, is not organized on the right principles,
and does not sufficiently realize the need of world-wide coöperation.
Your daily struggles for better conditions would quickly assume a
different character if you were organized in such a manner that when
your factory or mine goes on strike, the whole industry should quit
work; not gradually but at once, all at the same time. Then the
employer would be at your mercy, for what could he do when not a
wheel turns in the whole industry? He can get enough strikebreakers
for one or a few mills, but an entire industry cannot be supplied
with them, nor would he consider it safe or advisable. Moreover,
suspension of work in any one industry would immediately affect a
large number of others, because modern industry is interwoven. The
situation would become the direct concern of the whole country, the
public would be aroused and demand a settlement. (At present, when
your single factory strikes, no one cares and you may starve as long
as you remain quiet.) That settlement would again depend on yourself,
on the strength of your organization. When the bosses would see that
you know your power and that you are determined, they'd give in
quickly enough or seek a compromise. They would be losing millions
every day, the strikers might even sabotage the works and machinery,
and the employers would be only too anxious to "settle,"
while in a strike of one factory or district they usually welcome the
situation, knowing as they do that the chances are all against you.
Reflect therefore how important it is in what manner, on what
principles your union is built, and how vital labor solidarity
and cooperation are in your every-day struggle for better conditions.
In unity is your strength, but that unity is non-existent and
impossible as long as you are organized on craft lines instead of by
industries.
There is nothing more important and urgent than that you and your
fellow workers see to it immediately that you change the form of your
organization.
But it is not only the form that must be changed. Your union must
become clear about its aims and purposes. The worker should most
earnestly consider what he really wants, how he means to achieve it,
by what methods. He must learn what his union should be, how it
should function, and what it should try to accomplish.
Now, what is the union to accomplish? What should be the arms of a
real labor union?
First of all, the purpose of the union is to serve the interests
of its members. That is its primary duty. There is no quarrel about
that; every workingman understands it. If some refuse to join a labor
body it is because they are too ignorant to appreciate its great
value, in which case they must be enlightened. But generally they
decline to belong to the union because they have no faith or are
disappointed in it. Most of those who remain away from the union do
so because they hear much boasting about the strength of organized
labor while they know, often from bitter experience, that it is
defeated in almost every important struggle. "Oh, the union,"
they say scornfully, "it don't amount to anything." To
speak quite truthfully, to a certain extent they are right. They see
organized capital proclaim the open shop policy and defeat the
unions; they see labor leaders sell out strikes and betray the
workers; they see the membership, the rank and file, helpless in the
political machinations in and out of the union. To be sure, they
don't understand why it is so; but they do see the facts, and they
turn against the union.
Some again refuse to have anything to do with the union I because
they had at one time belonged to it, and they know what an
insignificant role the individual member, the average worker, plays
in the affairs of the organization. The local leaders, the district
and central bodies, the national and international officers, and the
chiefs of the American Federation of Labor, in the United States,
"run the whole show," they will tell you; "you have
nothing to do but vote, and if you object you'll fly out."
Unfortunately they are right. You know how the union is managed.
The rank and file have little to say. They have delegated the whole
power to the leaders, and these have become the bosses, just as in
the larger life of society the people are made to submit to the
orders of those who were originally meant to serve them-the
government and its agents. Once you do that, the power you have
delegated will be used against you and your own interests every time.
And then you complain that your leaders "misuse their power."
No, my friend, they don't misuse it; they only use it, for it is the
use of power which is itself the worst misuse.
All this has to be changed if you really want to achieve results.
In society it has to be changed by taking political power away from
your governors, abolishing it altogether. I have shown that political
power means authority, oppression, and tyranny, and that it is not
political government that we need but rational management of our
collective affairs.
Just so in your union you need sensible administration of your
business. We know what tremendous power labor has as the creator of
all wealth and the supporter of the world. If properly organized and
united, the workers could control the situation, be the masters of
it. But the strength of the worker is not in the union meeting-hall;
it is in the shop and factory, in the mill and mine. It is there
that he must organize; there, on the job. There he knows what he
wants, what his needs are, and it is there that he must concentrate
his efforts and his will. Every shop and factory should have its
special committee to attend to the wants and requirements of the men,
not leaders, but members of the rank and file, from the bench and
furnace, to look after the demands and complaints of their fellow
employees. Such a committee, being on the spot and constantly under
the direction and supervision of the workers, wields no power: it
merely carries out instructions. Its members are recalled at will and
others selected in their place, according to the need of the moment
and the ability required for the task in hand. It is the workers who
decide the matters at issue and carry their decisions out through the
shop committees.
That is the character and form of organization that labor needs.
Only this form can express its real purpose and will, be its adequate
spokesman, and serve its true interests.
These shop and factory committees, combined with similar bodies in
other mills and mines, associated locally, regionally, and
nationally, would constitute a new type of labor organization which
would be the virile voice of toil and its effective agency. It would
have the whole weight and energy of the united workers back of it and
would represent a power tremendous in its scope and potentialities.
In the daily struggle of the proletariat such an organization
would be able to achieve victories about which the conservative
union, as at present built, cannot even dream. It would enjoy the
respect and confidence of the masses, would attract the unorganized
and unite the labor forces on the basis of the equality of all
workers and their joint interests and aims. It would face the masters
with the whole might of the working class back of it, in a new
attitude of consciousness and strength. Only then would labor acquire
unity and the expression of it assume real significance.
Such a union would soon become something more than a mere defender
and protector of the worker. It would gain a vital realization of the
meaning of unity and consequent power, of labor solidarity. The
factory and shop would serve as a training camp to develop the
worker's understanding of his proper role in life, to cultivate his
self-reliance and independence, teach him mutual help and
coöperation, and make him conscious of his responsibility. He
will learn to decide and act on his own judgment, not leaving it to
leaders or politicians to attend to his affairs and look out for his
welfare. It will be he who will determine, together with his fellows
at the bench, what they want and what methods will best serve their
aims, and his committee on the spot would merely carry out
instructions. The shop and factory would become the worker's school
and college. There he will learn his place in society, his function
in industry, and his purpose in life. He will mature as a workingman
and as a man, and the giant of labor will attain his full stature. He
will know and be strong thereby.
Not long will he then be satisfied to remain a wage slave, an
employee and dependent on the good will of his master whom his toil
supports. He will grow to understand that present economic and social
arrangements are wrong and criminal, and he will determine to change
them. The shop committee and union will become the field of
preparation for a new economic system, for a new social life.
You see, then, how necessary it is that you and I, and every man
and woman who has the interests of labor at heart, work toward these
objects.
And right here I want to emphasize that it is particularly urgent
that the more advanced proletarian, the radical and the
revolutionary, reflect upon this more earnestly, for to most of them,
even to some Anarchists, this is only a pious wish, a distant hope.
They fail to realize the transcending importance of efforts in that
direction. Yet it is no mere dream. Large numbers of progressive
workingmen are coming to this understanding: the Industrial Workers
of the World and th-e revolutionary Anarchist-syndicalists in every
country are devoting themselves to this end. It is the most pressing
need of the present. It cannot be stressed too much that only the
right organization of the workers can accomplish what we are
striving for. In it lies the salvation of labor and of the future.
Organization from the bottom up, beginning with the shop and factory,
on the foundation of the joint interests of the workers everywhere,
irrespective of trade, race, or country, by means of mutual effort
and united will, alone can solve the labor question and serve the
true emancipation of man.
"You were speaking of the workers taking over the
industries,' your friend reminds me. "How are they going to do
this?".
Yes, I was on the subject when you made that remark about
organization. But it is well that the matter was discussed, because
there is nothing more vital in the problems we are examining.
To return to the taking over of the industries. It means not only
taking them over, but the running of them by labor. As concerns the
taking over, you must consider that the workers are actually now in
the industries. The taking over consists in the workers remaining
where they are, yet remaining not as employees but as the rightful
collective possessions.
Grasp this point, my friend. The expropriation of the capitalist
class during the social revolution-the taking over of the
industries-requires tactics directly the reverse of those you now use
in a strike. In the latter you quit work and leave the boss in full
possession of the mill, factory, or mine. It is an idiotic
proceeding, of course, for you give the master the entire advantage:
he can put scabs in your place, and you remain out in the cold.
In expropriating, on the contrary, you stay on the job and
you put the boss out. He may remain only on equal terms with the
rest: a worker among workers.
The labor organizations of a given place take charge of the public
utilities, of the means of communication, of production and
distribution in their particular locality. That is, the telegraphers,
the telephone and electrical workers, the railroad men, and so on,
take possession (by means of their revolutionary shop committees) of
the workshop, factory, or other establishment. The capitalistic
foremen, overseers, and managers are removed from the premises if
they resist the change and refuse to cooperate. If willing to
participate, they are made to understand that henceforth there are
neither masters nor owners: that the factory becomes public property
in charge of the union of workers engaged in the industry, all equal
partners in the general undertaking.
It is to be expected that the higher officials of large industrial
and manufacturing concerns will refuse to coöperate. Thus they
eliminate themselves. Their place must be taken by workers previously
prepared for the job. That is why I have emphasized the utmost
importance of industrial preparation. This is a primal necessity in a
situation that will inevitably develop and on it will depend, more
than on any other factor, the success of the social revolution.
Industrial preparation is the most essential point, for without it
the revolution is doomed to collapse.
The engineers and other technical specialists are more likely to
join hands with labor when the social revolution comes, particularly
if a closer bond and better understanding have in the meantime been
established between the manual ant mental workers.
Should they refuse and should the workers have failed to prepare
themselves industrially and technically, then production would depend
on compelling the willfully obstinate to coöperate-an
experiment tried in the Russian Revolution and proved a complete
failure.
The grave mistake of the Bolsheviki in this connection was their
hostile treatment of the whole class of the intelligentsia on account
of the opposition of some members of it. It was the spirit of
intolerance, inherent in fanatical dogma, which caused them to
persecute an entire social group because of the fault of a few. This
manifested itself in the policy of wholesale vengeance upon the
professional elements, the technical specialists, the cooperative
organizations, and all cultured persons in general. Most of them, at
first friendly to the Revolution, some even enthusiastic in its
favor, were alienated by these Bolshevik tactics, and their
cooperation was made impossible. As a result of their dictatorial
attitude the Communists were led to resort to increased oppression
and tyranny till they finally introduced purely martial methods in
the industrial life of the country. It was the era of compulsory
labor, the militarization of factory and mill, which unavoidably
ended in disaster, because forced labor is, by the very nature of
coercion, bad and inefficient; moreover, those so compelled react
upon the situation by willful sabotage, by systematic delay and
spoilage of work, which an intelligent enemy can practice in a way
that cannot be detected in due time and which results in greater harm
to machinery and product than direct refusal to work. In spite of the
most drastic measures against this kind of sabotage, in spite even of
the death penalty, the government was powerless to overcome the evil.
The placing of a Bolshevik, of a political commissar, over every
technician in the more responsible positions did not help matters. It
merely created a legion of parasitic officials who, ignorant of
industrial matters, only interfered with the work of those friendly
to the Revolution and willing to aid, while their unfamiliarity with
the task in no way prevented continued sabotage. The system of forced
labor finally developed in what practically became economic
counterrevolution, and no efforts of the dictatorship could alter the
situation. It was this that caused the Bolsheviki to change from
compulsory labor to a policy of winning over the specialists and
technicians by returning them to authority in the industries and
rewarding them with high pay and special emoluments.
It would be stupid and criminal to try again the methods which
have so signally failed in the Russian Revolution and which, by their
very character, are bound to fail every time, both industrially and
morally.
The only solution of this problem is the already suggested
preparation and training of the workers in the art of organizing and
managing industry, as well as closer contact between the manual and
technical men. Every factory, mine, and mill should have its special
workers' council, separate from and independent of the shop
committee, for the purpose of familiarizing the workers with the
various phases of their particular industry, including the sources of
raw material, the consecutive processes of manufacture, by-products,
and manner of distribution. This industrial council should be
permanent, but its membership must rotate in such a manner as to take
in practically all the employees of a given factory or mill. To
illustrate: suppose the industrial council in a certain establishment
consists of five members or of twenty-five, as the case may be,
according to the complexity of the industry and the size of the
particular factory. The members of the council, after having
thoroughly acquainted themselves with their industry, publish what
they had learned for the information of their fellow-workers, and new
council members are chosen to continue the industrial studies. In
this manner the whole factory or mill can consecutively acquire the
necessary knowledge about the organization and management of their
trade and keep step with its development. These councils would serve
as industrial colleges where the workers would become familiar with
the technique of their industry in all its phases.
At the same time the larger organization, the union, must use
every effort to compel capital to permit greater labor participation
in the actual management. But this, even at best, can benefit only a
small minority of the workers. The plan suggested above, on the other
hand, opens the possibility of industrial training to practically
every worker in shop, mill, and factory.
It is true, of course, that there are certain kinds of work -such
as engineering: civil, electrical, mechanical-which the industrial
councils will not be able to acquire by actual practice. But what
they will learn of the general processes of industry will be of
inestimable value as preparation. For the rest, the closer bond of
friendship and cooperation between worker and technician is a
paramount necessity.
The taking over of the industries is therefore the first great
object of the social revolution. It is to be accomplished by the
proletariat, by the part of it organized and prepared for the task.
Considerable numbers of workers are already beginning to realize the
importance of this and to understand the task before them. But
understanding what is necessary to be done is not sufficient.
Learning how to do it is the next step. It is up to the organized
working class to enter at once upon this preparatory work.
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