ParkCungHee
Deity
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2006
- Messages
- 12,921
Do you believe it's possible for labor unions to be organized regressively?
If they do, what is their role in the class system?
If they do, what is their role in the class system?
Yeah, I think that's entirely possible, and in fact has been the predominate form of trade unionism in the developed world from 1945 onwards.
It's uncontentious enough to say that the function of the trade union is not simply to represent labour to capital, but to function as part of an apparatus of mediation between labour and capital. The function of the union is not prosecute class struggle, but to achieve a "class peace" on what are percieved as equitable terms. To labour, they offer improved wages, conditions, etc., and to capital they offer workplace discipline.
The ultimate interests of the working class, however, are not to pursue a nicer wage-labour, but to abolish wage-labour as such, and that means challenging the employing class for control over production. This is something that obviously involves what the employer would see as not a little ill-discipline, and the union is held accountable for preventing this from happening. This is achieved by integrating workers into the union apparatus, control of which lies not in the hands of the workers but of the bureaucracy. The ability of the union to secure day-to-day demands more effectively than independent organisation would keeps workers obedient to the union, and allows rank-and-file militants to be marginalised as troublemakers.
Obviously, this sort of integration prevents the sort of independent working class organisation that we see as necessary for working class emancipation. It becomes necessary to challenge the hegemony of the union bureaucracy, either from within (rank-and-fileism) or without (independent organisation). (Speaking only for myself, I tend to be sceptical of the former, because I think that the problems are so deeply structural as to be effectively irresolvable. I think that the latter is the way to go, although I'm critical of the narrow focus of traditional syndicalism, because I don't think that class struggle can be understood as a workplace-only affair.)
So essentially, the modern union fulfills the role of the Pinkertons.
Yeah, I think that's entirely possible, and in fact has been the predominate form of trade unionism in the developed world from 1945 onwards.
It's uncontentious enough to say that the function of the trade union is not simply to represent labour to capital, but to function as part of an apparatus of mediation between labour and capital. The function of the union is not prosecute class struggle, but to achieve a "class peace" on what are percieved as equitable terms. To labour, they offer improved wages, conditions, etc., and to capital they offer workplace discipline.
The ultimate interests of the working class, however, are not to pursue a nicer wage-labour, but to abolish wage-labour as such, and that means challenging the employing class for control over production. This is something that obviously involves what the employer would see as not a little ill-discipline, and the union is held accountable for preventing this from happening. This is achieved by integrating workers into the union apparatus, control of which lies not in the hands of the workers but of the bureaucracy. The ability of the union to secure day-to-day demands more effectively than independent organisation would keeps workers obedient to the union, and allows rank-and-file militants to be marginalised as troublemakers.
Obviously, this sort of integration prevents the sort of independent working class organisation that we see as necessary for working class emancipation. It becomes necessary to challenge the hegemony of the union bureaucracy, either from within (rank-and-fileism) or without (independent organisation). (Speaking only for myself, I tend to be sceptical of the former, because I think that the problems are so deeply structural as to be effectively irresolvable. I think that the latter is the way to go, although I'm critical of the narrow focus of traditional syndicalism, because I don't think that class struggle can be understood as a workplace-only affair.)
I wouldn't describe it as corporatist, because that implies that labour organisations play a significant role in the economic decision-making process, which is quite rare these days. The unions primarily serve as intermediaries between labour and capital rather than participants in capital.
While Karl Marx did say religion is the "opium for the poor" (or something like that) my opinion is that while times are changing, the end result is precisely the same. This is what I mean:
In western countries, the population is getting more and more secular and generally less religious. However, the class struggle still exists and not much seems to being done about it. This is my theory on that: Just as religion was once the opium for the poor, now other things are replacing it, such as literally opium and other drugs itself (ironically enough) sex, video games, other things.
Now poor people have other means to be preoccupied so as to prevent them from realizing the injustice of capitalism, that is, that the wealth is so unevenly distributed. It used to be religion, but now it's more secular means of being kept artificially content.
Would you agree with me or disagree?
Yeah, one of the main arguments of the Frankfurt School was essentially this. You should read The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception.
I'd forgotten aelf.Of course, Tf or Cheezy can do it with far many more words.
Emmanuel Goldstein.
He helps you tell the difference between people who appear to espouse leftist ideals just for the sake of power (duckspeak for one) and people who are usually more quiet and try to bring about real change, just for starters.
Full Communist? probably not, the Soviet Union and Red China are enough to show that it doesn't work. Call it a Socialist then.wikipedia said:He is persistently anticapitalist, but often disagrees with other leftists about how to defeat capitalism and what to do next.