Taking Power Seriously - Venezuela

Taking Power Seriously: John Holloway and the Venezuelan Strategy

Friday, Apr 15, 2005

By M. Junaid Alam - Seven Oaks Magazine

John Holloway, well-known left intellectual and author of the popular anarchist polemic Change the World Without Taking Power: The Meaning of Revolution Today, recently offered a concise presentation of his strategic vision on revolutionary change at ZNet. In his essay there, he strongly rejects the idea of approaching or seizing the state as an instrument for achieving social change, and encourages the notion of multiplying various kinds of incipient rebellions that bypass the state as the most fruitful path to human self-determination.

In advancing his thesis, however, Holloway fails to take stock of important current political developments or ground his definition of capitalism in a concrete context. As a result, he makes a number of simplistic assertions and leans on certain false dichotomies about the state and the process of revolutionary change. By examining these flaws, I think it is possible to show that Holloway’s concept of “changing the world without taking power” is, unfortunately, trapped in a narrow framework where premises hang from a ceiling of intellectual defeatism and conclusions crash into walls of political paralysis.

Holloway’s broadside against taking power is stern and unequivocal: he warns that “focus[ing] our struggle on the state” or “tak[ing] it as a principle point of reference” “leads us in the wrong direction.” He writes, “The state…is a form of social relations…developed over several centuries for the purpose of maintaining or developing the rule of capital.” Therefore, “we have to understand that the state pulls us in a certain direction.” How? “It seeks to impose upon us a separation of our struggles from society”; it “separates leaders from the masses”; it “pulls us into a process of reconciliation with reality, and that reality is capitalism, a form of social organization that is based on exploitation and injustice, on killing and destruction.” Worse, it “also draws us into a spatial definition of how we do things,” one which not only “makes clear distinction between the state’s territory and the world outside,” but also “has no hope of matching the global movement of capital.” These then are Holloway’s most salient points against state-centered struggle.

The fundamental problem with all these concerns is that they could be raised anywhere. For instance, Holloway posits struggle within the state as a “reconciliation with reality,” as capitulation, because after all the state represents the “reality of capitalism.” But is the “reality of capitalism” not everywhere? Private institutions, organizations, cultural mores, and the entire general social milieu are all thoroughly penetrated and profoundly shaped by capitalism. Indeed, that is precisely why all these elements must be resisted and contested in the first place. What occurs vis-à-vis the state in particular, however, is not a “reconciliation” with the reality of capitalism, but a confrontation with the reality of capitalism by forces opposed to capitalism in its most important arena of control.

Turning to the issue of leaders becoming separated from masses, nothing about this process is exclusive to the state either. Leaders can betray, deceive, or abandon whoever they are tasked with representing in any social situation where money, power, and politics is involved – the workplace, the sports club, the university, the union, and so on. The difference is only that the stakes are higher when the state is involved. This cannot be invoked as an excuse to abandon social situations in general or the state in particular, since that would amount to total inaction. Leaders must be held accountable through concrete organizational mechanisms, and masses must themselves stay conscious and vigilant: it is this interplay which determines in the end how effectively and faithfully any leaders represent those who choose them.

The objection that taking on the state apparatus confines oneself to certain parameters of struggle – “spatial definitions” – could also be invoked in any other scenario. To struggle is necessarily to place oneself in the specific arena where struggle is being waged – preferably at its highest, sharpest level. This is true whether one is speaking of physical terrain on a military battlefield, ideological terrain on a political battlefield, or national terrain on a state-centered battlefield. One is, in fact, always “drawn” into “spatial definitions” no matter what one does. The question is only whether one chooses the space of concrete struggle, or the space of empty retreat.

On this score, to condemn state-centered struggle because it has “no hope” of combating “global capital” is to merely tinker with words, since capital is only global in the sense that it plants itself in every nation by negotiating access through state permission. Global capital is resisted partially when one state demands to set the terms of national development; it is resisted more forcefully when a bloc of states demand the same; and it is resisted not at all when the state has acquiesced to capital’s demands - because revolutionaries there decided to let the state fall into right-wing hands by refusing to be “drawn into spatial definitions,” or rather, by accepting the spatial definition of defeat.

Ultimately, Holloway’s sweeping assertions about flaws in state-centered struggle are misleading for two reasons. One, the same kinds of flaws exist in any other sphere of struggle. Two, and most important, state-centered struggle does not create flaws in movements, but rather reveals them. For as we have seen, the only difference in regards to the state is one of degree: because the power of capitalism is so deeply entrenched within the state, the true strengths and limitations of any movement are exposed in confrontation with it. Avoiding confrontation may allow a movement to hide its weaknesses, and it may lead to some short-term self-glorification, but it will also avoid solving the actual problem. The viability of any revolutionary movement is determined by how effectively it is able to confront the system exactly in that arena where the system has been crafting the injustices that gave rise to the movement in the first place. It is not clear why Holloway believes the answer is to abandon the arena altogether, instead of working on new ways to address the flaws of the movement which are revealed within it.

What would be most instructive in examining Holloway’s case for changing the world without taking power, however, is to look at a movement that has taken power and is carrying out change: the Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela. Here is a living, breathing example of social struggle, where it is possible for us to examine in real terms and without theorizing what actually happens in a genuine revolutionary process.

What has the revolutionary government of Hugo Chavez Frias accomplished? It has undertaken a land reform program placing hundreds of thousands of hectares of idle land in the hands of small farmers and the landless poor; it has made education free for all from elementary through university level, offering students free daily meals; it has created special banks to assist women, small businesses, worker cooperatives, and farmers; it has locked into place the nationalization of the oil industry; it has organized vaccinations and community campaigns to increase literacy, training 1.3 million people to read; it has enlisted the previously unemployed to repair sanitation and transportation infrastructure; it has established 300 free health and dental clinics in slums where medical care has never been seen before; it has introduced price controls on 160 basic foodstuffs and 60 essential household goods, subsidizing food markets in poor communities.

It is unfortunate - though perhaps not surprising, given the implications for his thesis - that Holloway fails to even mention this most remarkable development in his article. For what the Venezuelan example illustrates above all is that the anarchist notion of the state as intrinsically negative – a notion Holloway expresses most openly when he writes, “Betrayal is already given in the state as an organizational form” – is untenable as any sort of universally applicable position. Indeed, it would take a fanciful imagination to pretend that Chavez, who has played a decisive role in improving the lives of millions within his country, has “betrayed” the revolutionary process.

It follows from the reality in Venezuela that Holloway’s previously-discussed reasons for abandoning state-centered struggle are not sustainable either. Chavez did not “reconcile” himself to capitalism, he used state power to help break capitalist political control and declare the path of revolution; he was not defeated by “spatial definitions,” but seized upon the spatial definition of the historical narrative of Simon Bolivar to animate and excite the national imagination; he was not crushed by “the global movement of capital,” but snatched it by the throat, prevented oil privatization, and pumped $3.7 billion dollars derived from state-controlled oil revenues into social investment in just one year. Thus we see that the conquest of state power was not only not a barrier, it was an essential part of carrying out and defending the concrete improvements made on the ground.

The Venezuelan example, then, deals a blow to the anarchist shibboleth of the state as inherently reactionary. But it would be a serious mistake to think that it vindicates the equally erroneous vangaurdist shibboleth that posits people as subjects to be trained by an enlightened state leadership. Caught between these false dichotomies of “good people/bad state” versus “bad people/good state”, Holloway not only adopts the anarchist end of this view, but wrongly dismisses all state-centered struggle as lying on the vangaurdist end. He writes: “The state oriented-argument can be seen as a pivoted conception of the development of struggle”, whereby, “First, we concentrate all our efforts on winning the state,” and “then…we can think of revolutionizing society.” This description, aside from being a caricature of the way most socialists conceive of revolutionary change, is very far off the mark in explaining what has happened in Venezuela.

For while it is undoubtedly true that holding state power has helped Chavez mount a strong defense of the revolutionary project, he did not simply do this overnight, nor did he do it by himself. The Chavez government would neither be in power nor have the political strength to carry out any of its policies even while in power had there not been an intense, dialectical process of engagement with the people who comprise the backbone of the revolution. Time and time again, it has been the active mobilization of the people from the slums – those who have felt that it is their government under attack - which has thwarted the right-wing forces of the oligarchy, media elite and embittered sections of the middle classes still aiming to unseat the revolution.

Through a constant process of support, feedback, initiative, pressure, frustration criticism, and, most importantly, mass demonstrations, it has been the masses who have propelled the revolution forward, strengthening and consolidating it every step of the way. In just a period of a few years, the revolution has fought and won a wave of battles: a short-lived right-wing coup, ratification of a new constitution, judiciary reform, two national legislative elections, two presidential elections, a business-led oil industry sabotage campaign, an attempted referendum recall, a viciously dishonest corporate-owned media – and, of course, the United States.

Throughout all this, the government, which certainly did not start out by declaring itself socialist, was forced to either start meeting the expectations of the people or risk finding its basis of support disappear. It had to answer concretely the demands and concerns of supporters like Juan Blanco, who complained shortly after the opposition launched its debilitating national strike in December 2002, “The assistance we get is very small; we do not even feel it. I ask, what is the goal of the revolution – where are we headed?” To which Chavez has now supplied the answer we are all familiar with: “I am convinced, and I think that this conviction will be for the rest of my life, that the path to a new, better and possible world, is not capitalism, the path is socialism.”

It is unfortunate that Holloway, in accepting the framework of false dichotomies about state and people, necessarily rejects the state and the electoral arena as a site of social struggle. It robs him of the ability to see that the construction of socialism is a process and not one of absolute, fixed immovable forces; that in this process the state can be a vehicle for change precisely to the degree that the people are pushing for change through the state. The great strength in this approach, in the context of a revolutionary program, is that it constitutes an active, positive initiative in which concrete, visible gains can be made, defended and referenced. The poor can be fed, schools can be built, children can be taught, the sick can be treated – in the assets of the state lies the active, real basis for cultivating the soil from which the flowers of humanist values may blossom.

But by dint of his ideological disposition Holloway is forced to look to the negative - “rebellions” and “insubordinations,” the central focus of which is “people saying no to capitalism, no, we shall not live our lives according to the dictates of capitalism, we shall do what we consider necessary or desirable and not what capitalism tells us to do.” He calls for “multiply[ing] and expand[ing] these refusals.” The underlying problem with this approach is that saying no only goes so far no matter how many times one repeats it. It is intrinsically a negative demand and implies a program of only reflexive reaction, not positive action.

Moreover, it turns out that often times “doing what we consider necessary” actually coincides with “the dictates of capitalism” because capitalism is a totalizing force. Holloway, in describing capitalism as “not (in the first place) an economic system, but a system of command,” proposes we break this control through refusal: “To refuse to obey is to break the command of capital.” But this is misleading because the means of enforcing the “system of command” is rooted in the “economic system” itself. The state commands, coordinates, develops, defends, and appropriates a vast amount of capital, and, in so doing, sets the basis for its further ability to regulate a wide array of social relations and organizations upon which people depend in their everyday lives.

In this sense, then, capitalism is not so much “a system of command” but a system of tenuous consent – people must work within the system in order to eat, to live, to buy things, and to maintain their position in society. Therefore to “refuse to obey” in the immediate sense is not to “break the command of capital” but rather to break one’s connection to the social and support structure made possible by capital; it is to become isolated, atomized, individuated, and assigned to oblivion. This process is accelerated by the fact that, if a “refusal” turns into more militant forms of insubordination with any sign of creating “trouble,” the state unleashes its energies and either marginalizes and demoralizes the movement or crushes it ruthlessly.

The only way to change this situation is to translate the idea of resistance into positive action aimed at building an alternative society. Naturally, this requires an economic basis – a project which cannot be achieved by any kind of magic, by NGOs, by “civil society,” or by any other scattered, isolated, nebulous group hovering and floating about on the margins. It can only be achieved by a broad democratic mass movement which understands, among other things, the necessity of controlling that hub which has been responsible for overseeing the theft of our labor and channeling the wealth we produce upwards and in ways designed to control and fragment us: the state.

The goal of this control should be twofold: to remove what is destructive and to reenergize what is productive for the ascending movement of human liberation. It is impossible to speculate in the abstract what in the state would warrant removal and what would warrant renewal; one might make broad references to decreasing armaments, eliminating advisory boards for corporations, reorienting research away from environmentally hazardous chemicals and toward cures for the ills those chemicals have caused, increasing funds for public education, transportation – and so on.

The guiding idea, however, should be to dethrone power without principle and coronate principle without power. That is to say, we must strive for the empowerment of our humanist principles as well as the disempowerment of unprincipled power. It is this dual process which will help break apart the old array of social relations and open up the path to genuine human development and solidarity among humankind.

*M. Junaid Alam, 22, is co-editor of the leftist youth journal Left Hook (http://www.lefthook.org), and attends Northeastern University in Boston. He can be reached at alam@lefthook.org.

Buy Your Gas at Citgo: Join the BUY-cott!
Monday, May 16, 2005
By Jeff Cohen

Looking for an easy way to protest Bush foreign policy week after week? And an easy way to help alleviate global poverty? Buy your gasoline at Citgo stations.

And tell your friends.

Of the top oil producing countries in the world, only one is a democracy with a president who was elected on a platform of using his nation’s oil revenue to benefit the poor. The country is Venezuela. The President is Hugo Chavez. Call him “the Anti-Bush.”

Citgo is a U.S. refining and marketing firm that is a wholly owned subsidiary of Venezuela’s state-owned oil company. Money you pay to Citgo goes to Venezuela — not Saudi Arabia or the Middle East. There are 14,000 Citgo gas stations in the US. By buying your gasoline at Citgo, you are contributing to the billions of dollars that Venezuela’s democratic government is using to provide health care, literacy and education, and subsidized food for the majority of Venezuelans.

Instead of using government to help the rich and the corporate, as Bush does, Chavez is using the resources and oil revenue of his government to help the poor in Venezuela. A country with so much oil wealth shouldn’t have 60 percent of its people living in poverty, earning less than $2 per day. With a mass movement behind him, Chavez is confronting poverty in Venezuela. That’s why large majorities have consistently backed him in democratic elections. And why the Bush administration supported an attempted military coup in 2002 that sought to overthrow Chavez.

So this is the opposite of a boycott. Call it a BUYcott. Spread the word.

Of course, if you can take mass transit or bike or walk to your job, you should do so. And we should all work for political changes that move our country toward a cleaner environment based on renewable energy. The BUYcott is for those of us who don’t have a practical alternative to filling up our cars.

So get your gas at Citgo. And help fuel a democratic revolution in Venezuela.

Jeff Cohen is an author and media critic (www.jeffcohen.org)

2 Comments

  1. denisdekat:

    “changing the world without taking power”

    Nothing can change without the power to make it happen. Maybe I am not as wise, maybe I lack creativity, but you need power to change things…

  2. Mike S:

    Speaking of the murky, misinforming media types whose job is to delegitimize sponsors of democracy and social spending in sovereign nations, NPR did a piece on Hugo Chavez after the Robertson blunder (–that at least brought the Vewnezuela issue into the press–) and they absolutely chopped Hugo Chavez to pieces. The show was TO THE POINT with Diana Naiad sitting in for Warren Olney, and the host plus three think tank propogandists fired volleys into the radio effigy of Chavez while one token skeptic tried to stop the bleeding–which was tough because the foursome used no facts, only hystrionic accusations. I’ve followed the Venezuela issue four two years, and am always interested when it creeps onto the mainstream media’s radar. I was sorely disappointed at NPR’s handling of the issue. What follows is a letter/email I sent to the show and NPRs ombudsman. Another point of view (largely the correct one) can be found at venezuelanalysis.com:

    Headline: Apart from the War on drugs and financial crises Latin America rarely commands our headlines

    I am writing to register my discontent with the August 25th “To the Point”

    I was disappointed to hear NPR, indispensable as it is, once again unquestioningly beating the white house’s drum in a diplomatic show of swords with a country in possession of, you guessed it, oil. If Chavez is indeed a strongman, would the American security establishment even know his name but for that noxious, dwindling, delusion-inducing black substance deposited under him?

    70-75% approval rates—if only George Bush could have the kind of popularity. Perhaps the secret is that infamous dirty trick: buying off your constituency (75% of the population) with bribes of human services and worker protections, and then honoring that bribe after fair and square elections. But apparently in such cases even popularity is not above suspicion, or beneath contempt—for it is “creeping.” That’s right, like communism before it, and socialism too, popularity itself now creeps, and only accrues, one would infer, to creeps. Creeps like Hugo Chavez, not our own humble, democratically elected head of state, who wisely chooses to be dispopular.

    “The State Department emphatically stated that the US does not engage in the assassination of elected officials”—but apparently NPR does engage in the assassination of their character.

    But please don’t accuse me of socialist anti-American dogmatism, or left-leaning dogmatism, or dogmatic, Fidel-befriending anti-Americanism for saying so-—because though I might for good reason be anti-Canada and Anti-Antarctica, as these countries [sic] truly do lean to the left, I am not anti-American. At least not as anti-American as the creepy subject of your show (Chavez) who garnered somewhere between 5 and 500 such epithets within a short 30 minutes on your show today. To be concise: please be more careful with the jingoistic “anti-American” and check on the definition of “dogmatic” adj, definition 2? And also “despot”, as in: ‘He’s an elected head of state yet the United States considers him a hostile despot.”

    Latin Americans have suffered long under the reforms of the Washington Consensus and the policies of those who subscribe to the Chicago School of Economics—like the World Bank’s new head, Paul Wolfowitz. Though you call Chavez a symptom of these failed U.S. economic interventions in Latin America, more likely he and leaders like him will be the cure, if there is to be a cure for what ails this region. And to risk being dogmatic, I dare say the US is what ails the region. But as you report, Latin America never makes the headlines except in relation to the war on drugs or financial crises. Yes, we must remember those, but let’s not forget the coups—-some of them get into the papers. Our business leaders must have timely information on such matters. But not often enough for most Americans to see the pattern. We’re too forgetful anyway. What happens in Latin America should happen quickly and quietly so far as the US and US media are concerned.

    “What is America’s beef with Venezuela?” I couldn’t really make out the arguments or evidence amid the spew of colorful epithets, but the real reasons were palpable by the shape of your guests’ evasions: Venezuela could be an example to other countries in the region. You know, like the Haitian Revolution and the first slave democracy was an “example” in the Carribean? Couldn’t have that which is why when it happenned, in the early 19th century, the US censured it. And what might Venezuela’s example mean to the region today? For one, Chavez in Venezuela is reversing the usual cycle of nationalization and privatization of Latin American industries. For the 25 year period referred to on your show as being almost unprecedented in impoverishment, not just in Venezuela, but elsewhere in the region and world, leftist governments were supposed to nationalize industry after it had been run into the red by American and European companies, thus socializing debt, and then after a coup by the right and a return to General or Colonel so-and-so, everything would be privatized again, ready to reap profits for American businessmen at the expense of the people and the land’s resources. Hugo Chavez represents Latin American nations seeking the national interest, avoiding if possible the terms and conditions of US and World Bank-engineered trade deals, and developing a social infrastructure that can prosper without the heavy hand of the US upon them. And this attempt by Venezuela includes such scandals as the “multi-billion dollar social programs” your guests decried. I think it was said best by the guest who proffered incriminating quotes from Chavez’ speeches, the one about Latin America not kneeling down before US demands anymore. Is that bad? For Latin America to get up off its knees? Apparently so.

    We could use a few multi-billion dollar social programs here in the US, like funding education initiatives, increasing college grant and loan money, and criminal and drug addict rehabilitation programs, rather than the multi-billion dollar wars, tax cuts, and emerging police state apparatus that we are getting. If our leaders cared what we thought of them, we might get some of our tax money spent on us—-though some might call it bribery.

    As for the veneer of democracy—what’s that? You don’t even question that the democracy in Venezuela is a sham—-it just is because your guests say it is, again because of the leanings and bents and streaks that Chavez purportedly has (”a very authoritarian bent”, etc) but not because of facts or evidence or analysis or anecdotes. If you are looking for democracy’s veneer, try looking in the US and use the press/radio to halt the erosion of our democracy and its replacement with those ironic terms that say one thing and mean another. There’s democracy’s veneer. Why is democracy only endangered “over there” and only if there’s oil “over there.” The US record in Latin America of coups, assassinations, assassination attempts, arms dealing, death squad training, etc., is appalling, and was not even mentioned. Of course Venezuela is suspicious of us. That is the history there. The Monroe Doctrine as applied in practice: United Fruit, ALCOA, Exxon-Mobile, Standard Oil, Monsanto, etc.

    And what about: “meddling in other democratic institutions, like TV and the courts.” Host: “It is a democracy, there’s a lot of anti-Chavez propaganda . . . on the Venezuelan airwaves.” News flash: Latin American TV is US TV in Spanish. They get Spanish CNN, Portuguese Fox, whatever we give them via our satellites. So Venezuela puts up one channel that broadcasts 4 hours a day – to counter the countless hours of US-made for-Latinos TV. And even though it’s only four hours, and Rupert Murdoch and Ted Turner supply 24-hours a day – the US Government is promising to spend our tax money to send up another satellite to counter theirs, to “push” more democracy. Great.

    Try to connect US aid for democracy in the region with its emergence or even its prospects for emergence. (Hint: it can’t be done). It’s just like trying to plant “democracy” with tanks and bombers in Iraq. Does it work? Clearly not. Do our leaders intend it to work? Hmmm . . .

    And you didn’t even pause to consider our humble leader’s meddling in our democratic institutions like TV, courts, etc.

    As your guest remarked, he believes, “frankly’ he believes, that Hugo Chavez lies awake at night thinking—“what can I do to really irritate the United States?” That really, really is a quote from your show. Yes, the leaders of most nations spend their nights that way. Also, take note of Cindy Sheehan. Obviously she’s up nights thinking “what can I do to really irritate George Bush.” Not of there own good, but of doing us harm they dream. Why is everyone always picking on the United States?

    And one last bit on your hatchet job. “Hugo sees China as an ideological ally.” Now that should rile a lot of Americans, because who doesn’t know someone affected by our loss of jobs to the growing economy of China? And upon reflection, what’s the US answer to those kinds of shady ideological alliances: CAAFTA, and other similar trade agreements: you know, trade agreements that export more jobs to worker’s-rights-barren hinterlands–like China.

    P.S. To the person responsible for reading this: I write you because I care, both about Latin Americans, and NPR and our democratic institutions. I am an avid listener and I think most of NPR’s programming has an important role in helping the public be informed. Especially shows like “To the Point.” I understand this show is not investigative journalism, but a talking-heads style interview show. But you don’t have to soft pedal your questions, and as in this case, you certainly don’t have to ask them in a leading, self-answering, FOXesque way. As in “what are the Bad things Chavez has been doing”—bypassing the more essential question of whether he’s actually done anything bad at all. Remember, this was on your show today as a result Pat Robertson’s comments—which included the words “kill” and “assassinate” although after his retraction/refinement, most respectable journalists now quote him as having said only “take him out” as he later asserted. Then we accuse Chavez of “playing the victim” in this. Yes, he’s trying to play that coveted role usually reserved for the US. So we have the nut case Robertson throwing a spit-ball at Chavez from the right, and NPR doing a similar deed for everyone not quite so gullible as a Robertson Rapturite. Your show as a whole seemed to say, “with everything except the assassination part we agree.” I know it’s not supposed to be advocacy journalism on your show either, but today it was.

    With Venezuela the current US elite will either go the way we went with Cuba, or the way we went with Chile. Neither choice is good for Venezuela, and neither choice is good for us. Such considerations are decidedly beneath–consideration-—with this administration. But why is it always our job to be involved in other peoples’ affairs? And will NPR and “To the Point” march beside the administration, Howard Cosel style, giving us the play by play, as they did during the run-up to the Iraq war, or will NPR and “To the Point’ seek and report the truth, no matter if the truth involves debunking a powerful interest.

    If this is evidence of the “chilling effect” Washington’s funding threats have had on your enterprise—don’t worry, Americans care about their independent media and will sponsor your reportage in the pursuit of the truth.

    Thank you

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