By Ralph R. Reiland on 12.28.04 @ 12:06AM
Mean do-gooder enslavers we'll always be with us.
You'd think today's socialists would be a little more cautious
when it comes to preaching about the merits of centralized
planning, a bit more wary about putting the state in charge of
every nook and cranny of daily life, given the way things have
turned out over the past century.
It wasn't just the bad economics, the sight of people queuing up
in the Soviet Union each morning to stand in line for hours for
bread before the shelves went bare, or the decade-long waits for
drab apartments. Worse was the price of pounding every doubter and
straggler into line, the slaughter by the bodyguards of
collectivism of the millions who failed to proclaim the nonexistent
virtue of a failed system, the elimination of millions who failed
to buy the idea that a man's mind was nothing compared to the
collective wisdom of the state.
The final tally, the grand total of those killed in the
Marxist-Leninist war of class genocide against private property,
individuality, profit and the market, is variously estimated at
between 80 million and 110 million, with as many as 65 million in
China, 25 million in the former Soviet Union, 1.7 million in
Cambodia, and on and on.
It was the world's most full-scale totalitarianism, an ideology
that had come to rule a third of mankind, a revolutionary vision of
egalitarianism and virtue that turned into, in the words of Martin
Malia, professor of history emeritus at the University of
California, Berkeley, who died last month, the "most colossal case
of political carnage in history."
As I said, with a grand total of millions of victims, one would
suppose that the remaining true believers in the socialist camp
might be a little shy or unsure in calling for yet another round of
centralized planning and great leaps forward.
Such, however, is not the case, as evidenced by the call for
grandiose state intrusion in the most private of matters in the
November-December 2004 issue of the Internationalist Socialist
Review. The crisis described in America is that of an
escalating "class attack" by the bourgeoisie in which "more and
more responsibility for children's welfare has been placed on
individual families."
Not only isn't the state being given "more and more
responsibility for children's welfare," but back home at the stove
and washing machines we're seeing exactly no progress toward the
unionization of wives and mothers. In a system that thrives on
capitalism, hierarchy and sexism, it's still "primarily women who
are expected to perform the unpaid domestic labor of raising
children, cooking, housework, and primary health care."
Things could be swell, in short, if only our kids were raised in
state dogma centers and the AFL-CIO was put in charge of any
work-related grievances in our home kitchens. Simply stated, it
would have been capitalism rather than communism that ended up on
the ash heap of history if it weren't for all those clothes that
are rolling around in America's washers and dryers and all those
quickie meals that are popped into our microwaves each night
without a dime of compensation. Or as it's summarized in the
International Socialist Review, "Capitalism now relies on
the unpaid labor of women within the home."
In this God-awful "privatized nature of the family," female
homemakers are said to be now raising the next generation of
proletarian workers for nothing. And while the "prevailing media
image of women today is that of a white suburban mom in a minivan
whose top concern is 'national security,'" we're told that the real
picture is much closer to what Frederick Engels called the
"proletarian wife," a "head servant" who slaves away in an unpaid
"second shift," fully "excluded from public protection."
Pulling out all the big stars from the communist galaxy, the
authors underline their point with a quote from Karl Marx,
explaining that capitalism stays alive only through "privatized
reproduction," i.e., privatized children. And from Lenin comes the
quote on the "domestic slave" in a capitalist home, where "petty
housework crushes, strangles, stultifies and degrades her, chains
her to the nursery, and she wastes her labor on barbarously
unproductive, petty, nerve-racking, stultifying and crushing
drudgery."
In time, of course, those who refused the warm embrace of the
state as a solution to all this were declared to be morally
depraved, and killed, 100 million or so in all, give or take a few
gulags or forced famines.
topics:
Health Care, Economics, Communism