The following review is not a careful consideration of Russell’s arguments. Instead it serves primarily as a collection of the best quotes in the book. It is also a basic explanation of the structure of the text.
Bertrand Russell goes through three major leftist roads to freedom, and provides a charitable critique of each.
Socialism
How does Russell define socialism? Socialism is “the advocacy of communal ownership of land and capital” (17). Socialism is the democratic control of land and the means of production. Instead of a capitalist owning the mills or fields, they are democratically run.
There have been a variety of takes on how this might be implemented. On one hand there is the model set out by cooperatives or “guilds”, where the workers directly or by way of electing representatives, control the means of production. On the other hand, State Socialists advocate that the people embodied in the state own the means of production. The obvious critique which is apparent in the oppressive history of the USSR and so on, is that the state simply takes the place of the capitalist as the exploiting class or entity. So state socialism is clearly not viable.
Russell’s explanation of socialism necessarily takes him through the three main tenets of Marxism.
I
First is the Materialist Conception of History. “Marx holds that in the main all the phenomena of human society have their origin in material conditions, and these [Marx] takes to be embodied in economic systems. Political constitutions, laws, religions, philosophies – all these he regards as, in their broad outlines, expressions of the economic regime in the society that gives rise to them. It would be unfair to represent him as maintaining that the conscious economic motive is the only one of importance; it is rather that economics molds character and opinion, and is thus the prime source of much that appears in consciousness to have no connection with them.”(21) Material/economic forces are the primary drivers of history, not conscious ideas. The dialectic that is being brought out here is that “base” economic conditions produce commodities, lifestyles, culture and society. They in turn generate a “superstructure” which is ideologies that then reinforce the base. These ideologies might be religious (see Max Weber’s The Protestant Work Ethic), or otherwise (meritocracy). The important point here is that humans don’t consciously think of an ideal society and then create it (despite our efforts at doing so), it is created in a sort of unconscious way, and then we think about it, reflect on it, bolster it, and yes, challenge it.
II
The Law of the Concentration of Capital. “Marx supposed that the number capitalist enterprises must diminish as the magnitude of single enterprises increased.”(22) This is the tendency toward monopolies. Which leads Marx to think that as capital concentrates in a few organizations, it will be easier for workers to eventually seize and democratize them. In this way, the bourgeoisie “digs their own graves’.
III
The Class War. “Marx conceives the wage earner and the capitalist in a sharp antithesis” (23) The workers who own nothing but personal possessions, are exploited by the capitalist who own the means of production, and therefore automatically all of the value that the workers produce. The capitalists then give some of that value back to the workers in the form of a wage. But according to the cold logic of capital, their wages need not be any more than the bare means of subsistence, i.e. the amount of money it takes for the worker to come to work the next day and reproduce their labor for the capitalists.
Anarchism
Russell writes , “Anarchism … is the theory which is opposed to every kind of forcible government. It is opposed to the state as the embodiment of the force employed in the government of the community. Such government as anarchism can tolerate must be free government, not merely in the sense that it is of a majority but in the sense that it is assented to by all. Anarchists object to such institutions as the police and the criminal law, by means of which the will of ne part of the community is forced upon another part.” (40)
There is some crossover between socialism and anarchism in that they both believe in “communal ownership of land and capital.” (42). “Socialism and anarchist communism alike have arisen from the perspective that private capital is a source of tyranny by certain individuals over others. Orthodox Socialism believes that the individual will become free if the state becomes the sole capitalist. Anarchism, on the contrary, fears that in that case the state might merely inherit the tyrannical propensities of the private capitalist. Accordingly, it seeks for means of reconciling communal ownership with the utmost possible diminution in the powers of the state, and indeed ultimately with the complete abolition of the state. ”(42)
In talking about anarchism he quotes two of the major anarchists, Bakunin and Kropotkin. Bakunin writes, “The state is authority; it is force; it is the ostentation and infatuation of force: it does not insinuate itself; it does not seek to convert …. even when it commands what is good, it hinders and spoils it, because it commands it, and because every command provokes and excites the legitimate revolts of liberty; and because the good from the moment it is commanded, becomes evil from the point of view of true morality. …. Liberty, morality and the human dignity of man consist precisely in this, that he does good, not because it is commanded, but because he conceives it, wills it, and loves it.” (50) It seems to me that this should be the goal of society: to eradicate crime, not by force, but by changing the way in which our society produces crime and makes it possible and indeed necessary (necessary insofar as everything that happens appears as though it could not have happened any other way). Anarchism is not about allowing murder, rape, and theft, it’s about preventing it without the violence inherent in the state apparatus (which is obviously not doing a great job at preventing these things anyway).
Kropotkin “desires to abolish wholly the system of wages not only, as most socialists do, in the sense that a man is to be paid rather for his willingness to work than for the actual work demanded of him, but in a more fundamental sense: there is to be no obligation to work, and all things are to be shared in equal proportions among the whole population.” (51) Russell writes, “In such a community as [Kropotkin] foresees, practically everyone will prefer work to idleness, because work will not involve overwork or slavery, or that excessive specialization that industrialism has brought about, but will be merely a pleasant activity for certain hours of the day, giving man an outlet for his spontaneous creative impulses. There is to be no compulsion, no law, no government exercising force; there will still be acts of the community, but they are to spring from universal consent, not from any enforced submission of even the smallest minority.”(51) Individuals will not need to be threatened with starvation in order to work. Everyone’s basic needs will be met. Where governmental organization exists, it is to be done with universal consent.
Russell writes, “My own opinion … is that pure Anarchism, though it should be the ultimate ideal to which society should ultimately approximate, is for the present impossible, and would not survive more than a year or two if it were adopted.”(10) By this he means that if the state and all its functionality were to be abolished today without any coherent strategy for rendering the state unnecessary, then it would be disastrous. New forms of domination would likely emerge. The anarchist struggle is to render the state, the police, prisons, and militaries unnecessary, superfluous and irrelevant. Simple, immediate, abolition is not in itself an emancipatory strategy.
Syndicalism
Syndicalists “wish to destroy the state, which they regard as a capitalist institution, designed essentially to terrorize the workers. They refuse to believe that it would be any better under State Socialism. They desire to see each industry self-governing. … Syndicalism aims at ownership by Organized Labor. It is thus a purely trade union reading of the economic doctrine and the class war preached by socialism.” (63)
“Syndicalism stands for what is known as industrial unionism as opposed to craft unionism.” (66). Craft unionism unites a single association of those that are involved in a single craft or industrial process. All workers working under a particular kind of commodity may unionize.
Industrial unionism on the other hand is the “natural form of fighting organization when the union is regarded as the means of carrying on the class war with a view, not of obtaining this or that minor amelioration, but to a radical revolution in the economic system. Examples include the I.W.W. Russell writes, “ It is clear, I think, that the adoption of industrial rather than craft unionism is absolutely necessary if Trade Unionism is to succeed in playing that part in altering the economic structure of society, which its advocates claim for it rather than for the political parties.”(70)
Russell also believes in a form of guild socialism which “aims at autonomy in industry, with consequent curtailment, but not abolition of the power of the state.” (70)
“The best practicable system, to my mind, is that of Guild Socialism.” (10) Guild socialism is opposed to state socialism, in that the democratic ownership of the farms and mills is done by the workers of those institutions, and not the state. (71)
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The second Part of the book moves on to talk about various other issues concerning liberation, but I won’t go into them. However, I will say his section on international affairs is very disappointing. It ends up justifying the White Man’s Burden and imperialism. It’s like imperialism with a human face because Africa can’t govern itself. It’s very antiquated at best.
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To conclude, Russell views the state as a necessary evil for the time being, but we should keep an eye out for rendering it unnecessary as soon as possible. He believes in guild socialism where workers own the means of production in cooperatives that can become incredibly large and federated through industrial unionism. In such a system there is no capitalist class that controls or exploits labor, and there is no state like in state socialism that does the same thing in a different way. These federated labor organizations will look like unions. Whereas industrial unions now wage a class war against capitalists, their function post capitalism would be to democratize and organize labor.