Wars
save no one!
Wars
among “nations” organize humanity into armies of
soldiers, men and women, who, in turn, maim and
annihilate “enemy” villages, towns, and cities of
grandmothers, mothers, daughters, sisters, children
born and unborn.
Wars
among “nations” destroy the air, water, soil, and
wildlife that sustained humanity for centuries before
the introduction of pesticides and bio-technology,
before the organizing of “humanitarian relief”
removed the woman and tipped the scale that has
now fallen upon her.
Once,
the God of War, Huitzilopochtli, revealed to people
a place where the Eagle, perched on a cactus, carries
a writhing Serpent in its beak, recalls the late
thinker and writer, Gloria Anzaldua. The Eagle threatens
extinction of the Serpent, “sacrificed” to the “higher
masculine powers.” [1] .
In
wars, “nations” never save the feminine, women,
girls, grandmothers, mothers, daughters, sisters,
children born and unborn. Between the Eagle and
the Serpent, the equilibrium is splintered. Democracy
is sacrificed to the ideology of the international
Market. The capitalist’s trickle down theory is
not Democracy.
Democracy
is sacrificed to the ideology of the international
Market
It
is no wonder that nations of armies invade other
nations with “shock and awe” to end all terrorism
by transforming sleeping women and children into
bloodied corpses. It is no wonder that young men
at computer consoles dispatch drones toward enemies
that rarely fail to be women, tillers of the soil,
caregivers to future generations and to elderly
grandparents, custodians of our ancestral heritage.
And when women demand the restitution of democracy,
demand the right to be recognized and determine
a course for humanity that does not result in the
destruction of all that sustains life, laws are
mandated, social restrictions imposed, cultural
images are generated, and political objections are
set into motion in an effort to hold firmly to all
that is anti-democratic.
But
the capitalist’s wars are always saving women!
For
the powerful, women are anti-democratic except when
they are useful to serve the capitalist in generating
the illusion of democracy.
If
Marxist scholar and activist Rosa Luxemburg were
alive today, she would write again what she wrote
over 90 years ago: We are confronted, she wrote,
with the “awful proposition”:
The
dilemma humanity faces is this “inevitable choice,”
and the “scales are trembling in the balance awaiting
the decision of the proletariat.”
What
is the relationship of women’s struggles to the
proletariat’s international struggle for Democracy?
For
the powerful, women are anti-democratic except when
they are useful to serve the capitalist
Rosa
Luxemburg’s analysis of women’s struggles within
the broader struggle of the proletariat resonates
today as we witness the vanguard leadership of the
ruling class instigating more wars among nations
and imposing ever more draconian repressive tactics
to minimize and therefore better manage resistance
within and without national boarders. Although a
close friend to leading feminists of her day, Luxemburg
refused to declare herself a feminist. She was critical
of feminism, recognizing in the feminism of her
time, as did Black, Chicano, and Indigenous women
in the late 1960s and early 1970s, a racial and
ethnic perspective that equated women with
European women and an even specific class
of European women, as Luxemburg discovered, when
she asked: who is speaking and for whom? For what
class of women does Feminism report to serve
and why?
In
a 1912 speech titled, “Women’s Suffrage and Class
Struggle,” Luxemburg told her audience that “the
worst and most brutal advocates of the exploitation
and enslavement of the proletariat are entrenched
behind throne and altar as well as behind the political
enslavement of women” (The Rosa Luxemburg
Reader). And they were not exclusively men.
The
ruling class (in Germany
and elsewhere in Europe) would
like nothing more than to continue suppressing the
women’s vote, she said. The capitalist state is
fueled by fear - fear of resistance, opposition
to its anti-democratic ordering of humanity. Women
have within their means the power to “threaten the
traditional institutions of rule,” particularly
militarism, Luxemburg continued, “(of which no thinking
proletarian woman can help being a deadly enemy).”
If “millions of women” stood up to “strengthen the
enemy within, i.e. revolutionary Social Democracy,”
the monarchy and robber barons would have a fair
fight on their hands - and they just might topple.
If
‘millions of women’ stood up … the monarchy and
robber barons would have a fair fight on their hands
- and they just might topple
On
the other hand, who are these German women calling
for suffrage? From what class do they hail? What
group is the most immediate and greatest threat
from within? “Bourgeois ladies!” They are like “lionesses”
in the struggle against “male prerogatives” but
would “trot like docile lambs in the camp of conservative
and clerical reaction if they had suffrage.” But
note: aside from the few jobs they hold, do these
women take part in social production? No, Luxemburg
answers. Bourgeois women are “co-consumers of the
surplus value their men extort from the proletariat.”
And watch out: they are “usually even more rabid
and cruel in defending their ‘right’ to a parasite’s
life than the direct agents of class rule and exploitation.”:
The
women of the property-owning classes will always
fanatically defend the exploitation and enslavement
of the working people by which they indirectly receive
the means for their socially useless existence.
Luxemburg
asked her audience to recall the 1871 defeat of
the Paris Commune, when the men brought out the
machine guns, the “raving bourgeois females” out
did them “in their bloody revenge against the suppressed
proletariat.”
Some
Serpents “fall” - but not as a result of their
engagement as a proletariat on the right side
of history!
The
underpaid and free labor of poor and working class
women ‘is productive for society like the men’
Twenty
years before the Paris Commune ended in defeat,
here in the U.S., a former enslaved woman stood before an audience
of predominantly women, bourgeois women, at the
Women’s Rights Convention in Akron,
Ohio. Few women were permitted to “speak in meeting” just as in Rosa
Luxemburg’s day. “‘Slowly from her seat in the corner
rose Sojourner Truth, who, till now, had scarcely
lifted her head. ‘Don’t le her speak!’ gasped half
a dozen in my ear’” (Narrative of Sojourner Truth). [3]
“I
tink dat ‘twixt de niggers of de Souf and de women
at de Norf all a talkin’ ‘bout rights, de white
men will be in a fix pretty soon...‘Nobody eber
help me into carriages, ober mud puddles, or gives
me any best place…and ar’n’t I a woman? Look at
me? Look at my arm...I have plowed, and planted,
and gathered into barns, and no man could head me
- and ar’r’t I a woman?”
Bourgeois
society will fail to recall that white capitalist
men playing the role of the Biblical serpent
as opposed to our symbol for Mother Earth, whispered
in the ears of white women words fit to conjure
up images of horror: Black men as rapist, Black
men as beast! The vilification of our grandfathers,
fathers, and sons kept the vote from the Black community
until the mid-1960s.
Nonetheless,
the surplus value from our labor and from our wombs
helped to produce the bourgeois society in this
U.S. Empire! But how necessary it is for the bourgeois
educators to omit this historical development from
the classrooms today!
Sixty-one
years from the day Sojourner Truth stood begging
for the rights of Black women, Luxemburg pointed
out the reality material conditions since the advent
of capitalism - that the underpaid and free labor
of poor and working class women “is productive for
society like the men” (“Women’s Suffrage and Class
Struggle”). What of those women, millions of proletarian
women, who work at “factories, workshops, on farms,
in home industry, offices, stores” - aren’t these
women as “productive in the strictest scientific
sense” in our present society? These women are “productive,”
but they are also “women exploited by capitalism.”
The
proletarian woman marches with the tunnel workers
from Italy to Switzerland, camps in barracks and whistles as
she dries diapers next to cliff exploding into the
air with blasts of dynamite. As a seasonal worker,
she sits in springtime amidst the commotion of train
stations on her modest bundle, a scarf covering
her plainly parted hair, and waits patiently to
be hauled from east to west. (“The Proletarian Woman”) [4]
People
around the world will come together to work toward
a democratic world order
And
there is another kind of work women do that is not
considered work because it does produce a profit
for the capitalist rulers Luxemburg told her audience
(“Women’s Suffrage and Class Struggle”). Raising
children and housework is not “productive in the
sense of the present capitalist economy no matter
how enormous an achievement the sacrifices and energy
spent...This is but the private affair of the worker,”
a “nonexistent” worker. By contrast, the work of
the “music-hall dancer” is work. Her “legs sweep
profit into her employer’s pocket,” but “all the
toil of the proletarian women and mothers in the
four walls of their homes is considered unproductive.”
This “brutal and insane” treatment of the proletarian
women “corresponds to the brutality and insanity
of our present capitalist economy.”
The
first task of the proletarian woman is to “clearly
and sharply” see this “brutal reality.”
“The
education and intelligence” of women has served
to bring women to the Social Democracy organizations
and to unions, crying “injustice!” In turn, Socialism
has benefited from this “mental rebirth of the mass
of proletarian women.” But so have the capitalists,
for the Party no doubt also made these women “capable
productive workers for capital.”
“The
current mass struggle for women’s political rights
is only an expression and a part of the proletariat’s
general struggle for liberation.”
While
there is injustice in the capitalist system, it
is not enough, Luxemburg pointed out, for proletarians
to cry “injustice!” and look to the leaders and
the electoral process for relief. We should note,
she told her audience, that the Social Democracy
organizations and unions in Germany do not “use the argument of ‘injustice.”
And why should they? We experience injustice,
leaders! And the response: What injustice!
Furthermore,
poor women and working class women are “productive”
but yet have no “political rights.” Two years later,
Luxemburg would say that the poor and working class
woman should be weary of the “bourgeois advocates
of women’s rights” who only “want to secure
political rights in order then to assume a role
in political life” (“The Proletarian Woman”).
Revolutionary
Social Democracy does not ask for justice! [5]
“We
do not depend on justice from the ruling class,
but solely on the revolutionary power of the working
masses and on the course of social development which
prepares the ground for this power.” Consequently,
we must recognize in our world today that the capitalist
rulers profit from When
we hear speeches or read articles that conclude
with a request that we “ask Obama…” or “ask your
Congressional representative…” the message is from
the capitalist rulers and these individuals are
doing a disservice to the poor and working classesnational
boundaries but the U.S. Empire and its “allies”
and their combined batons, tasers, drones, fighter
jets, bombs, jail and prison cells are for us -
the proletarian of the world. The anti-democratic
nature of the bourgeois society fears women’s suffrage
as women have the potential to “advance and intensify”
the proletarian class struggle. The bourgeois class
understands this and the proletariat must understand
this as well. “The proletarian woman can only follow
the path of the workers’ struggle, the opposite
to winning an inch of real power through primarily
legal status” (“The Proletarian Woman”). There can
be no boundaries of any kind in our struggle against
the capitalist rulers, against an Empire intent
on war and more war.
Rosa
Luxemburg would be pleased to see the people take
to the streets in the global Occupy Wall Street
protests, acknowledging, as they do so, that the
artificial divisions of humanity that result in
dispossession, deportation, and misery, are no longer
acceptable, and that people around the world will
come together to work toward a democratic world
order.
Those
“vanguard” leaders with their vested interests in
capitalism and imperialist ventures will never tell
the truth about capitalism’s proliferation of poverty
and its violent repressive apparatus. Therefore,
when we hear speeches or read articles expounding
on the human condition under capitalism and these
speeches and articles conclude with a request that
we “ask Obama…” or “ask our Congressional representative…”
we should recognize the message from the capitalist
rulers and we will know then that these individuals
are doing a disservice to the poor and working classes.
We should shut our ears or tear the pages to shreds!
We should shout: Shame on you - for you are as much
an arm of the repressive apparatus as the militarized
police force, if not more so because you have the
ears of the people, and clearly you are deceivers.
We have work to do! Our power will bring about the
balance between the Eagle and the Serpent.
Luxemburg:
Proletarian
women, the poorest of the poor, the most disempowered
of the disempowered, hurry to join the struggle
for the emancipation of women and of humankind from
the horrors of capitalist domination! (“The Proletarian
Woman”)
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels,
PhD, has a Doctorate in Modern American Literature/Cultural
Theory. Click here
to contact
Dr. Daniels.