Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan
The Mechanics of Rule: What Does the Ruling Class Do?
To understand the path to social change, one must first understand the nature of class rule. A ruling class does not merely occupy offices; it exercises state power to ensure the reproduction of the social relations that underpin its dominance.. State power is a relation where social power is concentrated and exercised to promote and protect specific structures—primarily the mode of production of which the ruling class is the dominant bearer.
When a class rules, it carries out two essential functions
through the state: representation and mediation.. Through representation,
the state promotes the ruling class’s interests and ensures its leadership is
reflected in state policies. Through mediation, the state ensures that
the ruled classes both submit to and contribute to the existing order..
This is achieved through mechanisms such as extraction (taxation and
surplus labour), co-optation (securing loyalty through democratic forms
or economic growth), and, when necessary, repression..
For those seeking to transform society, the following
recommendations are essential to break this cycle of reproduction and establish
a popular, socialist democracy.
1. Develop "Audacity" and Intellectual Realism
The first requirement for the working population is to break
through the "hard crust of dogma" and adopt a position of profound
realism.. Drawing on the revolutionary traditions of Danton and Lenin,
there must be "audacity, audacity, still more audacity!" in
both thought and action.
However, this audacity must be grounded in the truth. As
Lassalle and Gramsci noted, "to tell the truth is revolutionary.".
If the people wish to change a system fundamentally, they must know how it
works in its complex and fluid reality rather than constructing utopian
ideals in thought. Scientific analysis of the existing state is not a luxury;
it is a necessity for anyone interested in social transformation.
2. Maintain an Independent Organized Existence
A popular or workers' state cannot exist if the people are
merely passive recipients of state policy. The working-class collectivity
must control and subordinate specialized state apparatuses from the outside..
This is only possible if the masses maintain an independent organized
existence separate from the state machinery.
The basis of this power is class organization..
Without active, independent organizations, the state inevitably slips back into
traditional forms of bureaucratic domination. The strength of a popular class
character in government is directly revealed by the extent to which it operates
through non-military mass mobilization rather than top-down commands.
3. Adopt Cadre Leadership Over Bureaucracy
To move beyond the "factory despotism" of
capitalism, the common people must develop a new technology of organization:
the cadre.. Unlike the bureaucrat, who applies calculable rules without
regard for the individual, or the manager, who commands from a position of
authority, the cadre is an organizer who is part of the collective..
Cadre leadership relies on ideological and practical
mobilization for common goals, using inspiration and solidarity rather than
impersonal commands. The task of the popular movement is to unify the
collective through commitment to a political line, ensuring that the "masses
decide everything" rather than a small group of experts.
4. "Smash" the Class Character of the State
History has proven that the working class "cannot
simply lay hold of the ready-made state machinery and wield it for its own
purposes.". To achieve a popular democracy, the people must "smash"
the class character of the existing apparatus..
This does not mean the physical destruction of every agency,
but rather the dismantling of bureaucracy, technocracy, and the exclusive,
ritualistic forms of parliamentary politics.. A socialist transition
requires a strenuous effort to dismantle the barriers between workers in
their factories and functionaries in their offices, replacing exclusive
rule with forms of popular democracy and mass involvement.
5. Build Broad Social Alliances
No revolutionary movement can succeed in isolation. The
working class must constitute a broad social bloc that includes
employees and other oppressed strata. The success of revolutionary politics
depends on the ability to build broad and enduring social alliances and
majorities..
In modern society, where people often suffer from isolation
and "self-disdain," the movement must consciously organize social
collectivities at all levels.. By drawing atomized individuals into the
life of society through struggle, the movement helps the people regain their
human value and dignity, forming the bedrock of a new social order.




Comments
Post a Comment