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OFFICE OF THE CHAIRPERSON
CAPITALIST CRISIS MAKES SOCIALISM NECESSARY
Statement on the 20th
Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall
By Prof. Jose Maria Sison
Chairperson, International Coordinating Committee
International League of Peoples' Struggle
9 November 2009
Since the fall of the Berlin wall on 9 November 1989, the world capitalist
system has sunk deeper into crisis. It is now undergoing its most severe
crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s, with some commentators
calling the present crisis “the Greater Depression” in terms of its
effects on the jobs and livelihood of the workers and peoples of the
world.
After emerging as the world’s sole superpower in the wake of the collapse
of the former Soviet Union, the US itself is wracked by a severe crisis
and is further plunging the world with it. The imperialists and its
propagandists perorate on how value and value-creation in the economies of
the socialist states and then the modern revisionist regimes were
distorted by the state bureaucracy.
Now all the countries of the world in varying degrees are reeling from a
crisis driven by unbridled private greed under the slogan of “free market
globalization” involving the fantastic accumulation of immense wealth by
the financial oligarchy and monopoly capitalists through unrelenting
super-exploitation of the working people, financial manipulation and the
berserk generation of fictitious capital.
Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, the social conditions of the workers
and peoples of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union have plummeted
under the conditions of unbridled capitalist exploitation, oppression and
violence. Poverty levels have risen due to massive unemployment and
depressed incomes. Inflation has been cutting down the value of wages,
pensions and savings.
State investment in production and job creation has been significantly
reduced. Public allotment to education and other social services has
plummeted. The educated have difficulties finding work and illiteracy is
spreading. The workers’ and peoples’ health have taken a beating, causing
severe malnutrition, stunting growth among the youth and shortening the
average life span of people.
The number of children living in the streets and left to fend for
themselves in these very cold countries has multiplied. The suicide rate
has grown among them by significant percentages. The situation of the
street children and society at large is being further aggravated by the
current financial and economic crisis.
The anger and discontent of the workers and peoples of Eastern Europe and
the former Soviet Union are becoming manifest in different ways. Parties
of the Left are becoming popular and are gaining strength in national
elections. The workers and people are speaking out against the accelerated
escalation of exploitation, oppression and violence of the big
bourgeoisie.
Survey after survey shows that the people feel they are plunging deeper
into poverty and that they are increasingly disillusioned and angry with
capitalism and its unfulfilled promises. With the onslaught of the current
economic and financial crisis, there is rising interest in and study of
Marxist and progressive writings. The imperialists and the local ruling
classes are responding to this by deflecting the workers and peoples from
the class struggle and anti-imperialist solidarity by promoting divisions
and hatred based on chauvinism, racism, ethnocentrism and religious
bigotry.
The Comecon is gone. But all the former revisionist- ruled countries are
now in the tight grip of the US-controlled world capitalist system and are
caught up in the turmoil of the gravest economic crisis since the Great
Depression. The crisis is whipping up fascism and aggressive wars. The
room for inter-imperialist competition has become more cramped and more
intense, with Russia and China joining in as big power players.
The Warsaw Pact is gone. But the NATO has been expanded as to include the
former revisionist- ruled countries in Eastern Europe, reaching the
borders of Russia. Most of the former revisionist- ruled countries are
potential hotbeds of fascist repression and aggressive wars as already
indicated by the violent disintegration of Yugoslavia by a series of wars
instigated by the imperialists and by wars involving Chechnya and Georgia.
Mercenary forces from the former revisionist- ruled countries have been
deployed by the NATO to distant lands like Iraq and Afghanistan.
The crisis of monopoly capitalism has brought ever-greater suffering among
the workers and peoples of the world. The imperialist- controlled
multilateral agencies underestimate world hunger when they report that
only 1 billion people go hungry out of the more than six billion human
population. They say that this is the largest number of people going
hungry in history, and the same number of people suffer from malnutrition.
This situation is bound to get worse, as world economic output is
predicted to decrease this year, the first time since World War II. The
contraction of employment is estimated to last for another eight years.
The number of people living on less than $2 per day will increase by
hundreds of millions. Decreasing demand for consumer goods,
semi-manufactures and raw materials impacts heavily on millions of workers
and peasants in neocolonial economies.
The workers and peoples of the world are waging various legal and illegal
forms of organized action to protest the anti-people policies of
imperialism. International gatherings of the monopoly capitalists, the
finance oligarchy, and heads of imperialist states have become occasions
for mass protests by indignant workers and peoples in the meeting areas
and in various countries. Countries assertive of national independence are
exposing and lambasting the dictates and impositions of imperialism.
Armed revolutions for national liberation and democracy are continuing and
gaining strength in the Philippines, Colombia, India, Peru and Turkey. The
people of Iraq and Afghanistan are waging armed resistance against the
occupation and colonization of their countries by the US. The armed forms
of struggle are bound to grow in strength and advance as a result of the
intensification of the crisis of monopoly capitalism.
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Since the fall of the Berlin
Wall, the workers and peoples of Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union
and the world have undergone ever worsening economic and social
conditions. They see monopoly capitalism as an evil and bankrupt system
that is destroying the world’s productive forces and is inflicting immense
suffering on the people.
Monopoly capitalism is igniting the people’s desire for socialism. So long
as imperialist oppression and exploitation persist, the people fight for
national and social liberation. It is farthest from the truth that
monopoly capitalism is the end of history. The utter bankruptcy of
monopoly capitalism and its descent to ever more barbarous forms of
plunder and aggression drive the people to fight for their rights and for
a bright socialist future.
The workers and peoples of the world are called upon to persevere in the
struggle for genuine socialism, against monopoly capitalism that is now in
the throes of its worst crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
The crisis of the world capitalist system makes socialism necessary for
humankind.
Contrary to the claims of the imperialists and their propagandists that
socialism fell in 1989, the fall of the Berlin Wall has actually meant the
collapse of the modern revisionist regimes in the former Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe and the completion of the restoration of capitalism. It is
the end result of the revisionist betrayal of socialism started by
Khruschov in 1956 and completed by Gorbachov in the years of 1989-91.
The history of socialist countries from the Bolshevik victory of 1917 up
to 1956, and from the founding of the People’s Republic of China up to
1976 shows great leaps in the advancement of the social, economic,
political, cultural and defense situations of the workers and peoples of
those countries. The poverty, hunger, joblessness, and the cruelties of
exploitation and oppression before the victory of the socialist revolution
were overcome. The great victories in socialist construction and
revolution were achieved despite imperialist wars of aggression and
economic and military blockades and subversion.
The rise of modern revisionism in socialist countries and elsewhere
reversed all the great achievements of socialism. Advances in the
situation of the workers and peoples were slowly but surely eroded, and
pre-revolutionary forms of exploitation, oppression and violence were
restored. Together with criminal syndicates in the so-called free market,
the modern revisionist big bourgeoisie grew fat on bureaucratic corruption
and enjoyed the lifestyles of the rich and famous, while the workers and
peoples suffered from the decrease in food, jobs, savings and social
services.
As workers and peoples grew restive and began clamoring for reforms, the
ruling revisionist regimes imposed severe political repression. In Eastern
Europe, and in East Germany especially, this condition fueled the mass
protests that brought about the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. The
revisionist regimes in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union
peacefully gave up power and gave way to the legalization of their
bureaucratic loot, the barefaced restoration of capitalism and the blatant
privatization of state assets.
Since Nikita Khrushchov’s reign in the Soviet Union, genuine proletarian
revolutionaries the world over have called the ruling regimes in the
Soviet Union and its satellite states in Eastern Europe as modern
revisionists, who mouth socialism but practice capitalism. They have
predicted that it will not take long before capitalism reveals itself
bare-faced in these countries.
The fall of the Wall has shown how accurate their predictions are. The
modern revisionists in these countries have since exposed themselves as
pseudo-communists and anti-communists. It is modern revisionism, not
socialism, which fell with the Berlin Wall and delivered the workers and
peoples of the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe into the even more
predatory and violent rule of barefaced capitalism. The revisionists had
earlier undermined, eroded and destroyed socialism.
Since 1989 up to the present, imperialism and its well-paid propagandists
in the mass media and academe have tirelessly repeated their line on the
fall of the Berlin Wall. They have misrepresented the revisionist regimes
as socialist and boasted that their fall meant the futility of socialism
and the end of history with capitalism and liberal democracy.
They have touted the jump from the frying pan of revisionist- ruled state
monopoly capitalism to the flames of barefaced capitalism as the beginning
of development and democracy. But the imperialist powers are incomparable
in discrediting monopoly capitalism through their unbridled plunder and
wars of aggression and the recurrent and increasingly severe crisis.
The workers and peoples of the world are subjected to ever-increasing
exploitation, oppression and violence and are impelled to wage resistance,
seek national and social liberation and aim for the attainment of
socialism. The present crisis, which has been generated by the US-directed
policy of neoliberal “globalization” in the last three decades, incites
the people to struggle for socialism.
The world capitalist system continues to sink deeper into crisis. It is
devastating jobs and livelihood of the workers and peoples of the world.
The profuse use of public funds to bail out the big banks and corporations
in the military industrial complex is building bigger bubbles than ever
before. These are bound to burst and cause a steeper fall in the crisis.
The US and its imperialist allies have generated the global financial and
economic crisis, have plunged the world into a state of economic
depression and have aggravated and deepened the conditions for state
terrorism and aggressive wars.
The combination of state monopoly capitalism and monopoly capitalism in
imperialist countries is responsible for the unprecedentedly greatest
devastation of productive forces through the most rapacious forms of
private profit-taking and private accumulation, including the wanton
creation of fictitious capital.
We are in the era of modern imperialism and proletarian revolution.
Further economic crisis, social disorder, state terrorism and imperialist
wars of aggression are in prospect. These are the objective conditions for
the rise of revolutionary movements for national and social liberation led
by the working class. ### |