We Are Coming Father Abraham 300,000 Strong- In Honor Of Old Abe Lincoln On His Birthday
********
…he, Father Abraham he, pug-ugly he (damn, that age of photography, that Mathew Brady and his merry band, that damn warts and all pre-digital photography, when a painterly touch might have made him, well, just plain), yes, warts and all he (and thus no catch for gentile Kentucky bourbon daughters, or so it seemed), all Kentuck born and Illini-bred (where the best they could do was say nigra when talking about the slave problem. And later, much later the sons and grandsons of poor as dirt mountain boys, Harlan County roughs, picked that up nigra expression too, and went to their graves with that on their lips, jesus.), all keep the races split, let them, the blacks (nigras, remember) go back to Canaan land, go back to Africa, go to some not union place but keep them out of Chi town (sounds familiar) had a conversion, maybe not a conversion so much as a lining up his beliefs with his walk the walk talk.
So he ran for president, President of the United States, not as a son of William Lloyd Garrison (hell, no, he would still be stuck in Springfield or maybe practicing law in bell-weather podunk Peoria), or a righteous son of Captain John Brown, late of Kansas and Harpers Ferry (he had no desire to share the Captain’s blood-soaked fate), but to hold the union together, and to curb that damn land hunger slavery, that national abyss. And since they ran politics differently in those days (no women, latinos, nigras to fuss over, sounds familiar) and were able to touch up a picture or two he won, barely won but won. And then all hell broke loose, and from day one, from some stormy March day one, he had to bend that big long boney pug-ugly body to the winds, his winds.
And he did, not unequivocally, not John Brown proud to erase the dripping blood and canker sore from his homeland, but in a revolutionary way nevertheless, break down slavery’s house divided, broke it down, no quarter given when the deal went down. More like some latter day Oliver Cromwell (another warts and all man) pushing providence forward with a little kick. More like old Robespierre flaming the masses with the new dispensation, the new word slave freedom. Kept freeing slaves as he went along, kept pushing that freedom envelope, kept pushing his generals south and west and east and tightening , anaconda tightening, the noose on the old ways until Johnny Reb cried uncle, cried his fill when righteous Sherman and his cutthroat bummers got to work too. Yes, old Father Abraham, the last of the revolutionary democrats, the last of the serious ones, who couldn’t say black better that nigra, and never could, but knew the old enlightenment freedom word, knew it good.
…and now he belongs to the ages, and rightfully so, warts and all.********
Workers Vanguard No. 946
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6 November 2009
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On Karl Marx, Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War
(Letter)
Massachusetts
30 August 2009
30 August 2009
I had a few thoughts on your article “Honor Abraham Lincoln”
(Workers Vanguard, No. 938). I just finished Eric Foner’s
Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877 and reread
some articles by Marx on the US Civil War. One of the things that’s striking is
that Marx gave what is basically (critical) political support to a capitalist
party, by congratulating Lincoln on re-election (see Karl Marx on Lincoln
Re-Election, supra). Fake socialists have a long history of looking
to some supposedly progressive wing of the bourgeoisie, so it’s striking when
Marx himself seems to support that view, and it needs to be put in
perspective.
It was essential to give military support to the North, but
political support presumes that a class is performing a historically progressive
role that could not be performed by a more progressive class, the proletariat.
This is actually a time when the concept of a “two stage revolution” makes
sense, even though the term was not used at that time. The US working class was
small, unorganized and without the social weight it would possess a generation
or more later. Chattel slavery was heinous in itself, but beyond that, as Marx
said, “Labor cannot emancipate itself in its white skin, wherein its black it is
branded.” It was inconceivable that there would be an advance in the class
struggle, in terms of unions, never mind socialist revolution, while slavery
existed. The aftermath of the Civil War, in particular Radical Reconstruction,
gave birth to labor struggles and a modest rise in socialist consciousness in
the US. Reconstruction’s defeat, symbolized by the withdrawal of federal troops
to crush the rail strike of 1877, ended capitalism’s progressive role.
Marx was also writing about the US before the experience of the
Paris Commune. (I cannot find any writings by Marx or Engels dealing with
Reconstruction.) Marx’s writings on the US Civil War, along with radical
abolitionists like Frederick Douglass and the whole thrust of Radical
Reconstruction, presumed that one could use the capitalist state for progressive
ends. The Paris Commune proved that false, or at least put that historical era
clearly at an end. That task today can be fulfilled only by the proletariat.
Joel
WV replies:
The Civil War—the Second American Revolution—was the greatest event
in U.S. history. By defeating the South, the industrialized system in the North
uprooted the nearly 250-year-old institution of chattel slavery and paved the
way for the expansion of capitalist property relations from one end of North
America to the other.
Joel rightly emphasizes that the Northern ruling class in the Civil
War era played a historically progressive role at a time when the small and
unorganized working class lacked the social weight to supplant bourgeois rule.
He concludes correctly that the class struggle, unionization and the prospect of
socialist revolution could not advance as long as slavery existed.
However, Joel intimates that there is a common thread between Karl
Marx’s congratulations to Abraham Lincoln for his re-election to the presidency
in 1864 and the reformists’ political support for “liberal” bourgeois forces
today: “Fake socialists have a long history of looking to some supposedly
progressive wing of the bourgeoisie, so it’s striking when Marx himself seems to
support that view, and it needs to be put in perspective.”
Marx supported Lincoln because he was a bourgeois revolutionary in
a period when, as Joel himself notes, the U.S. bourgeoisie was playing “a
historically progressive role that could not be performed by a more progressive
class, the proletariat.” Thus, this support has nothing whatsoever
in common with the politics of today’s fake socialists, whose pro-Democratic
Party program helps chain workers and the oppressed to their capitalist class
enemies.
Joel correctly notes that the defeat of Reconstruction “ended
capitalism’s progressive role.” Following the Civil War, the U.S. began to play
an increasingly bellicose role abroad, waging war against Korea and clashing
with its European competitors over Asia, the South Pacific and the Western
Hemisphere. While the Republican Party had championed the emancipation of the
slaves during the Civil War and supported the great expansion of black rights
during Reconstruction, it was quickly becoming the party of the big capitalists,
who had little interest in the rights and advancement of black people. The years
of the Grant administration saw the creation of new corporations that were, as
described by Henry Adams at the time, “more powerful than a sovereign State”
(quoted in “On Henry Adams and Democracy,” New York Review of
Books, 27 March 2003). Moreover, as we noted in Part One of “The Grant
Administration (1869-1877) and the Rise of U.S. Imperialism” (WV No. 938,
5 June), we see in this period “shades of the imperial presidency to come.” By
the late 19th century, the U.S. had become an imperialist power, bringing death
and destruction to subject countries such as the Philippines.
Joel suggests that the Paris Commune of 1871, the first instance of
the dictatorship of the proletariat in history, showed that one could no longer
use the capitalist state for progressive ends. Actually, what the Paris Commune
confirmed was that the proletariat, victorious in its social
revolution, “cannot simply lay hold of the ready-made state machinery
and wield it for its own purposes,” as Marx underlined in The Civil War in
France (1871). What the Paris Commune showed was that the working class must
smash the existing capitalist state apparatus and replace it with its own state,
the dictatorship of the proletariat.
The real issue at hand, in the case of the U.S. Civil War, is the
question of when the bourgeoisie as a class ceases to play a historically
progressive role. For various historical reasons, that question played out
differently in Europe and the U.S. In fact, as early as 1848, amid the European
revolutions of that year, Marx skewered the conservatism of the German
bourgeoisie, writing, “The German bourgeoisie developed so sluggishly, timidly
and slowly that at the moment when it menacingly confronted feudalism and
absolutism, it saw menacingly confronting it the proletariat and all sections of
the middle class whose interests and ideas were related to those of the
proletariat” (“The Bourgeoisie and the Counter-Revolution” [1848]).
The 1848 revolutions marked the period when the European
bourgeoisies ceased to play a historically progressive role. Indeed, they feared
the prospect of revolutionary upheaval more than the dominance of the landed
nobility, and allied themselves with the aristocracy against the working and
artisan masses in revolt. At the same time, the proletariat was still too weak
to immediately vie for power. It was the experience of the betrayals by the
bourgeoisies in the 1848 revolutions that led Marx to emphasize the necessity of
organizing the proletariat in a party independent of all other classes.
In the case of the U.S., as Joel himself notes, the working class
could not play an independent role so long as the institution of slavery
continued to exist. The North’s momentous suppression of the slaveholders’
rebellion gave great impetus to the industrialization of the country and
fostered the development of the proletariat—capitalism’s gravedigger. The Civil
War and Reconstruction represented the last progressive acts of the U.S.
bourgeoisie.
Joel asserts that the period of the Civil War—including Marx’s
support to Lincoln—“is actually a time when the concept of a ‘two stage
revolution’ makes sense, even though the term was not used at that time.”
However, this poses the question in an ahistorical manner. Marx was not working
within the framework of “two stage revolution.” To the contrary, for Marx, the
Civil War was not the first stage of a revolution whose sequel would bring the
working class to power but the culmination of the bourgeois revolution. The
dogma of “two stage revolution,” as originally developed for tsarist Russia,
held that because Russia was a backward country that had not yet undergone a
bourgeois-democratic revolution, a bourgeois republic was necessary to achieve
modernization and prepare the proletariat for taking power. But by the time the
two-stage conception appeared on the scene, capitalism was no longer capable of
playing a historically progressive role.
Discussing this stagist strategy, Russian revolutionary Leon
Trotsky remarked: “The Menshevik idea of the alliance of the proletariat with
the bourgeoisie actually signified the subjection to the liberals of both the
workers and the peasants” (“Three Conceptions of the Russian Revolution”
[1939]). All manner of Stalinists and fake socialists have sought to justify
their “two stage” betrayals of the proletariat by pointing to Marx’s support to
Lincoln and other similar instances. From the Mensheviks’ support to bourgeois
liberalism during the 1917 Russian Revolution to the defeats of the Second
Chinese Revolution in the late 1920s and the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s, the
two-stage framework has always been a straitjacket for the working class and a
program for bloody counterrevolution.
Everything depends on time, place and circumstance, as Engels was
fond of saying. In contrast to the Republican Party of the early 1860s, which
fought to uproot black chattel slavery, the capitalist Republican and Democratic
Parties today are the gendarmes of world reaction. Imperialism can be put out of
business only by a series of working-class revolutions that overthrow
capitalism, expropriate the bourgeoisie and prepare the way for a communist
future for all of humanity. We struggle to build internationalist revolutionary
parties dedicated to that goal.
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