Chavez appears at public event, FOX News
Ailing President Hugo Chavez  appeared cheerful here Thursday at an event to celebrate the bicentennial of  Venezuelan independence, where he said that the socialist revolution he had led  for 12 years is "eternal."
Dressed in a military uniform, Chavez made a brief  televised speech in which he said that the cancer from which he is suffering had  made him feel "a million times more love" for his people and for himself and he  repeated that he is convinced he will win this "battle" against the often fatal  disease.
Chavez returned to Venezuela on July 4 after undergoing surgery to  remove a cancerous tumor in Cuba, and since then he has adhered to a strict  recovery plan, which he said on Wednesday has now entered a new phase during  which it could be necessary for him to have radiation treatments and  chemotherapy.
The Venezuelan leader swore that he will continue doing  "everything that I may need to do" to win this "difficult" battle.
"I swear  it a million times: I will live, we will live, for the fatherland, for life," he  exclaimed.
"Our revolution that is now beginning the 21st century was born to  transform itself into the eternal revolution, into the permanent revolution,  into the perpetual revolution," he shouted.
Uneven and combined development affects not only the shape and pace of advance of the means of production of a society, but also the class structure. In the Russian case it meant a small and weak domestic capitalist class, heavily penetrated by external financiers, a colossal and repressive bureaucracy, and a freshly formed and small, but potentially powerful, urban working class.
This had implications  for the coming Russian Revolution. The largest social group, the peasantry,  lacked the cohesion or commonality of interest necessary to lead a revolution.  It could play a revolutionary role only insomuch as it could connect to a  revolutionary class in the cities. The bourgeoisie would not play a  revolutionary role, because it feared and was antagonistic towards the working  class that it oppressed and exploited.
This posed a problem for the country’s socialist movement, which was divided between its Bolshevik and Menshevik factions. For the Mensheviks, the coming revolution would be bourgeois in character. Therefore it would be made by the “democratic bourgeoisie”. Workers might assist as part of a democratic coalition of forces, but could at best act as a kind of ginger group assuring certain rights for workers in the ensuing democratic regime.13 The Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, recognised the need for a militant struggle by workers. In their formulation there would be a “revolutionary-democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and peasantry” which would drive the revolution through. The proletariat would, according to this rather vague scenario, limit itself to the tasks appropriate to a bourgeois revolution.14 This formulation persisted until 1917, when, in the course of the revolution, Lenin won the Bolshevik Party (which Trotsky had by then joined) to a perspective remarkably similar to that of permanent revolution.15
For  Trotsky the solution to the problems faced by Russia—an agrarian revolution to  resolve the land question, the overthrow or Tsarism and the introduction of  democracy, and so on—could only be brought about by workers. This struggle might  begin with tasks common to the bourgeois revolutions of the past (the English  Revolution of the 17th century or the French and American revolutions of the  18th), “but the principal driving force of the Russian Revolution is the  proletariat, and that is why, so far as its methods are concerned, it is a  proletarian revolution”.16 Faced with this, “the proletariat is driven by the  internal progress of events towards hegemony over the peasantry and to the  struggle for state power”.17 Having established a workers’ state, it was  implausible to suggest that the workers would accept a self-denying ordnance and  stop at purely “democratic” or “bourgeois” tasks. On the contrary, they would  use their power to wrest economic, social and political control from the old  ruling class.18
In other words, the revolution could pass directly over into  a social revolution leading towards the establishment of socialism and becoming  “permanent”.19 However, having made such a revolution the working class would  face a potentially hostile mass of peasantry, who, having taken control of their  land in alliance with the workers, would now have quite different interests.  This would mean the eventual overturning of the revolution unless the workers  could prove that socialism offered greater potential than private capitalist  agriculture. But that meant accessing far greater material and cultural  resources than were available in Russia. Successful revolution would again run  up against the limits of the pre-requisites for socialism.
For Trotsky, the  pre-requisites did not exist on the national terrain. He insisted on the  international nature of revolution because the prerequisites only existed on a  world scale. Russia must provide the prologue for the European, and ultimately  the world, revolution.
As capitalism is an international system, connected both through imperialism and the world market, crises provoking revolutionary situations were likely to be regional or global in scale. The other dimension to the “permanence” of the Russian Revolution was, therefore, that revolutions would have to follow in major European countries. The revolutionary wave that followed 1917 was confirmation of the viability of Trotsky’s theory; the ultimate defeat of this wave, which paved the way for Stalinist counterrevolution, was, in a negative sense, also a confirmation.
As capitalism is an international system, connected both through imperialism and the world market, crises provoking revolutionary situations were likely to be regional or global in scale. The other dimension to the “permanence” of the Russian Revolution was, therefore, that revolutions would have to follow in major European countries. The revolutionary wave that followed 1917 was confirmation of the viability of Trotsky’s theory; the ultimate defeat of this wave, which paved the way for Stalinist counterrevolution, was, in a negative sense, also a confirmation.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment