The Nationalities Question
 James Herod
April 1973
      The discussion last Monday served to update the argument on the nationalities  question, clarifying the current state of the debate and adding a new aspect  or two.
     The nationalities question remains very central, although I am somehow  surprised at this. I somehow feel that it shouldn't be important still. But it  is important, mainly because of the confused position that so many people are  taking on the question. The question is intimately related to our own  struggle, to the black power question, to the third world peoples debate, and  even, ironically, to the women's movement. But confusion on the issue is  rampant, as far as I am concerned.
     The strong tendency here, as on so many other issues, to mechanically  transfer to our situation positions on this question that were worked out  seventy-five years ago for other situations, is, as always, disgusting. We can  now find groups like RU talking about multi-national struggles when discussing  the movement internal to the United States. That is, they are now defining  Indians, Puerto-Ricans, Mexican-Americans, Black people, and so forth, as  nations which have to unite to form a multi-national front to fight against  imperialism. It is no accident that they refer to these groups as internal  third world colonies and see the fight as being against imperialism and not  capitalism. The whole analysis is so misconceived that your first impulse is  to completely ignore it, to not even grant it the recognition of an argument.  This would be possible if the analysis weren't so deeply entrenched and  becoming ever more widespread across the entire left – old left, new  left, and new old left.
     The discussion on Monday was about minorities in China but the issues raised  have more general significance. The interesting thing was that because of our  two professors the whole issue got linked up to liberal theory in this  country, namely, to the shift in liberal thought from the melting pot thesis,  which was the prevailing ideology here for decades, to the new (post-melting  pot) stress on ethnic heterogeneity. Both theories are ideological, of  course, merely serving as useful props to the status quo. The melting pot  thesis justified the enormous assimilation or homogenization of the immigrant  labor force that was required by industrialization under capitalist auspices.  Workers had to be able to understand the boss. Now that the main danger is  that the society might split along class lines, and that solidarity might be  established among workers, a shift to an ideology of ethnic diversity and  heterogeneity was necessary, as part of the divide and rule strategy. It is a  convenient way of keeping the working class divided, passive, and integrated.
     The left's (old and new) stress on minorities means that it has fallen into  the same liberal trap, and this exposes an interesting link with bourgeois  theory. I had never connected the left's nationalities question with liberal  ethnic theories before, until I was reviewing the question and thinking about  it before the seminar began (and looking over Luxemburg's critique, and also  pulling out the `Culture of Poverty' debate (Valentine) and recalling Nina's  work and the Glaser-Moynihan thesis in Beyond the Melting Pot).  And then of course these very issues did come out in the discussion, by grace  of our two liberal professors. This does clarify things quite a bit and  highlights the obnoxious absurdity of the neo-liberal position (a la the  McGovern campaign, as its most ludicrous expression yet, that is, the whole  quota thing, which rightly brought rebuttals even from liberals, especially  Jewish liberals). But the quota business, and the categories, are still very  much a part of the left, both in what is left of the New Left and also  apparently in the new Old Left (in the form of this so-called multi-national  strategy). Our professors of course had taken over lock, stock, and barrel the  neo-liberal, post-melting pot, ethnic heterogeneity line. One of them took the  argument to the extreme of implying that it was wrong for a tribe to abandon  its slash and burn agriculture! He seemed to be arguing that all cultures and  peoples must be maintained intact (as fossilized museum showpieces for U.S.  tourists and social scientists, one can presume). What nonsense! Our other  professor spoke approvingly of the move to turn New York City into a state,  and of the Quebec separatist movement, and of self-determination for all the  various ethnic groups in the United States. When pushed to define more  precisely the content or meaning of self-determination or autonomy for all  these ethnic groups in a society like that found in the United States, he was  at a loss, but he believed in it nevertheless. What a cold warrior, and a  mediocre one to boot.
     Our professors disapproved of the assimilation of national minorities in  China (if this is indeed what is happening.) They saw it as bad that minority  languages were dying out (if they were). For them this was proof that China is  a dictatorial state. But in fact they started with this  assumption, that China is a totalitarian society, and hence if minority  languages are disappearing it is because of coercion (they were being wiped  out, exterminated by the government). This is so very ironical because for  decades it was seen as democratic, as the road to freedom, to let go of one's  own language and culture and become part of the great American Middle Class,  the great Melting Pot. Now however they condemn as culturecide the melting pot  in China, and set forth instead the ideal of cultural autonomy and  heterogeneity as the new road to democracy and freedom. What a bad trip! What  a psycho!
     It is clear to me that the whole question of minorities in China depends on  one's judgement about the structure of power in that society. If you began  from the opposite position – that China is a democratic society –  you would come to a very different view of the matter. My position is fairly  ambivalent on the China question because I am not willing to write China off  yet as completely totalitarian (like I have the Soviet Union), but neither am  I willing to say it is socialist and democratic. I think a struggle is being  waged there to make it democratic, but the outcome isn't in yet. So I don't  know about the minorities question there. Is the assimilation free or coerced  (if assimilation is in fact happening)? Thus for me the assimilation of a  minority or the disappearance of a minority language has no meaning in and of  itself. It is neither good nor bad in and of itself. This fact has no meaning  by itself. It must be interpreted. It all depends on why. Was it destroyed by  force or was it abandoned voluntarily? (`Voluntarily' does not include however  the kind of voluntary integration of ethnic minorities seen in the United  States: assimilate or else. Integrate in order to be able to get a job, get  ahead, and take care of yourself. That is, assimilation could actually be seen  as voluntary only in a truly democratic and socialist society, and then of  course there probably wouldn't be any real need to abandon one's own language  and culture. It is thus impossible to separate the nationalities question from  the question of the structure of power in the society in question. Is the  society democratic or totalitarian? This is the question, and one that must be  answered before any meaningful discussion of the nationalities question can  take place.
     When challenged about their unstated biases, about their implicit starting  points, our professors denied of course that they had any preferences or  assumptions. At that point they claimed to be neutral (after more than an hour  of clearly political statements). They said they didn't care one way or the  other. They said they were only interested in establishing the facts. This is  the standard dodge. About all one can do with the facts is list them. The  minute you try to determine what they mean then you have to face the question  of power in China, democracy or tyranny. That is, you have to examine your  overall framework. But this question apparently was not up for discussion for  the professors. They claimed it was irrelevant to the present task, which was  merely to establish the facts. But obviously the facts, in and of themselves,  have no meaning for the professors either. The interpretation that they  do give to the facts (and did clearly give for  more than an hour) flows out of their hidden, unacknowledged, undefended  framework (bias); hence their attempt when challenged to separate facts from  values, in order to continue their game, in order to continue to camouflage  their implicit answers to the larger questions; all with the best of  intentions and sincerity of course.
     In authoritarian societies like the United States and Russia, minorities get  zapped regardless of whether the ideology is melting pot or ethnic diversity.  Even if they survive or are tolerated like the Uzbeks for example or the  Lithuanians or even the American Indians, they are in no sense autonomous or  self-determining. Power is centralized in Moscow and Washington.  No group within these territories is autonomous. That's what a  nation-state means almost – the monopolization of all power by the state.  People may have some limited say on minor issues, within this national  framework, but they are not autonomous. And the trend has been for even this  limited say to diminish more and more. This point is not even up for argument,  despite the claims of the Soviet and American governments. The nationalities  question is thus inseparable from the general struggle for democracy,  equality, and socialism, i.e., for the equal distribution of power and wealth.  The problem is not intelligible outside of this framework, nor is it  solvable.
     My previous position on this, explained in the introduction to the draft  constitution, still holds, but must be explained more fully in relation to all  these other aspects of the problem.
     The argument on nationalities is really the same argument as that against  decentralization and community control. What must be opposed is fragmentation of societies. There is no way  to return to the fragmented autonomous estates of feudal Europe. There is no  way, nor is there any point, in returning to small scale organization and  small scale production. It is only people lacking the slightest sense of  history – of the one thousand year long destruction of local autonomy  – who can even entertain such a scheme. What must be demanded is  autonomy for the people as a whole (self-government). The argument is about  the structure of power within the entire unit (however big or small),  democracy or tyranny, and not about the size of the unit. All you have to do  to stump persons arguing for decentralization (breaking up the U.S. into a lot  of smaller states) is to ask them how decisions would be made within these  smaller units. This brings you back immediately to the real questions (class,  power, self-rule).
     And so it is not difficult to see the weakness of programs like: (1) Black  Power: the problem is not to get blacks into power but to get everyone into  power. (2) Women's Power: the problem is not to get men out of power and women  into power, but to get the bourgeoisie out of power and the proletariat into  power. (3) Indian Power: the Indians as Indians have already lost the battle,  long ago. The problem now is to win for the first time the battle to be a  human being, not merely an Indian. (4) Youth Power: the problem is not a  generational problem, but a problem of securing for all ages dignity as human  beings. The problem is not black power, woman power, Indian power, or youth  power, but human power – full and equal power as human beings in a  democratic society.
     This brings into relief the central error of all attempts to build a movement  on third world peoples, blacks, women, Indians, or nations. It violates the  central self-identity of the proletarian revolution (wage-laborers) and the  central goal of that revolution (a classless society, an egalitarian society). The whole point after all is to  eliminate discrimination based on such personal characteristics as sex, race,  language, looks, intelligence, and age, as well as the central oppression of  wage-slavery. People might need to organize temporarily as blacks, women, or  Indians, but the theoretical framework within which this is done must  not include a call for self-determination of these various  minorities. Self-determination of the people as a whole is the goal, not  fragmentation of the people along ethnic lines. If this call were ever carried  to its logical and consistent conclusion, that is, autonomy for  all minorities in the U.S., for Swedes, Poles, Germans, Irish,  English, Italians, Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Turks, Arabs, Greeks, Chinese,  Japanese, Russians, Rumanians, French, Filipinos, etc. etc. etc., even the  protagonists of such a program could see the absurdity of the argument. For  some reason however they limit their `nations' in this country to Blacks,  Latinos, Indians (and in the feminist version, Women).
     This turns out to be a central stumbling block for our revolution it seems  – the substitution of these categories based on personal attributes for  a class analysis. It happens most completely in the New Left, which completely  ignores the working class and recognizes only youth, women, and blacks. In the  Old Left it also happens but in a different way. There it is the combination  of the two analyses, the superimposition of one on the other, that is the  problem. The Old Left has a class analysis of sorts. It recognizes the working  class (in a patronizing, emulative, romanticizing fashion). Its tendency  however (as with SWP) is to pander to the minorities, in a most manipulative  way, and to elevate these groups to the vanguard of the fight because they are  the most oppressed. This is only for temporary, tactical reasons though  because they themselves are the real vanguard. They can't assume that role  however until the movement reaches a certain level, and to make it reach that  level the stress now has to be put on minorities.
     As with everything else from the Old Left, this is the mechanical carry over  of the arguments flowing out of revolutions on the fringe of capitalism into  our own very different situation in the advanced capitalist societies. Lenin  may have been right to call for the autonomy of nationalities, given his goal  (the seizure of state power by the vanguard Bolshevik party and the protection  and preservation of that power), and given the fact that any other goal,  workers councils and direct democracy for example, wasn't even on the agenda.  He also perhaps had his reasons for promising the peasants land with one hand  and the workers bread with the other (two contradictory promises) in order to  win their support for the goal of seizing power. But all that this raises is  the question: did this goal have anything to do with the establishment of  socialism. Basically I side with Luxemburg, although I am even less inclined  to defend the Bolsheviks than she was. I do defend them. I believe they were  revolutionaries in intent. But good intentions are not enough. One must  succeed. One must actually get where one sets out to go. It is more than clear  by now that the Russian revolutionaries did not get to the free society. The  whole thing therefore has to be called into question. Nothing is sacrosanct.  Nothing is beyond scrutiny. And this includes Lenin.
     So on the domestic level then the nationalities question is quite clear in  broad outline: there must be no fragmentation. It gets much more complicated  of course when one tries to deal concretely with strategies for the fight  against discrimination against women, blacks, browns, youth, old people. The  objective is clear: to win freedom from discrimination for being female,  black, young, not freedom as women, as blacks,  as youth. In other words, sex, race, and age would cease to be  salient personal attributes, any more than height is (i.e., no longer noticed,  rewarded, or punished, no longer the basis for relating to the person, no  longer relevant). But it is harder to work out the complex question of how  this can be done and what the relation is between this fight against  discrimination and the class struggle (or the fight for freedom, for the  destruction of wage-slavery). I can't hope to work this out here either. But  in a sense this is the key question. So it is a real failure to leave it  unanswered. (For example, do blacks organize their own unions, set up black  caucuses in white unions, or work completely inside white unions?) This is why  it is so very urgent to work out a thorough treatment of the internal  stratification of the proletariat. What is the best way to handle and  conceptualize the relationship between these categories (which have taken on  historical reality) and the class per se?
     But on the international level I am now even more confused. At the time of  the events, I supported both the Ibo struggle for national independence and  the revolt of the Bengalis. But in view of my rejection of Lenin's national  self-determination plank, at least in its application to the U.S., perhaps I  have to reconsider. But have I also rejected it for Russia? After all, Russia  was not a national economy at that time like the U.S. is today  – so Luxemburg's argument was slightly off maybe, because it presupposed  such a national economy, that is, an integrated economy over the entire  territory. Things get fairly complicated in these situations in the colonies  and neo-colonies. Do the same principles apply there as here? Is the existence  of an integrated economic and social unit the key? What is going on here? In  the absence of a widespread and large proletarian class it is even impossible  to talk of a revolution to abolish wage-slavery. But of course peasants are  slaves also. Peasants are trapped by capitalism just like wage-laborers. So I  have to review in detail this whole question. Focus especially on the Ibo and  Bengali cases. Try to work out the issues. Study Marx more on China, India,  Spain, Ireland. Read more Lenin on the nationalities question. Read Mao on  class structure in rural China.