ANARCHIST BOOKFAIR IN LONDON
The CWO will have a stall at the Anarchist Bookfair in London.
When: Saturday, 7 October 2023
Where: four venues in East London (see link below)
Introduction
The translation of the Theses on Precarity and the ‘Gig Economy’ that follows, appeared in Mutiny/Mutinerie, the bilingual agitation sheet of our comrades in Klasbatalo, the Canadian affiliate of the Internationalist Communist Tendency. Here we just want to make a few observations to add to Klasbatalo’s correct summary of the situation of the workforce in this sector, as a contribution to further analysis and discussion. The comrades rightly observe that we are witnessing a growth in the number of struggles in the ‘gig economy‘ and that, often, those struggles take place outside the traditional trade union framework of mediation. This is also because – we should add – the traditional trade unions have so far had little to do with this "emerging" sector, or are only now beginning to look at it. In addition to this, it must be stressed that, beyond the ready determination of the workforce in these sectors to fight, their actions, as far as we know, always lack any sense that the system has to be overthrown, and that only real alternative to this society based on exploitation is communism.
But this is no surprise, because only the revolutionary organisation, or class party, can give us this perspective. Instead, and once again no surprise, the basic organisations that arise from those struggles remain substantially within the union logic of negotiating the conditions of the sale of commodities including labour power, a logic that presupposes the continuing relationship between capital and labour and, in fact, accepts it, regardless of any improvements (even if only for a short time) that might be extorted from this relationship. The possibility for such improvements are thus very limited today, despite the fact that in the ‘gig economy‘ exploitation is so intensely above the average, that it could be argued that there is room – limited and only if the workers fight decisively – for an attenuation of exploitation itself, that is, to obtain what are currently defined, with a very ambiguous word, as "rights". This includes the limitation and/or suppression of piece work, pay increases, the recognition of their status as wage workers (and not self-employed), with all that flows from this such as sickness benefits, pensions (if and when there are any): in short, the enjoyment of the "rights" of indirect and deferred wages. In some respects, it is a scenario very similar to that in warehouse distribution (logistics), a sector taken as a reference point by the "riders", who deliver meals to homes. It is no coincidence that the conditions of riders and distribution centre workers are very often rightly defined, as "slave labour" and "nineteenth century", precisely because the owner – who still really exists, even if hiding behind an algorithm – oppresses the workforce just like the masters of the steam powered factories of nineteenth century memory. Needless to say, however, the return to forms of exploitation and ruthless domination of the nineteenth century type is now to be found, with greater or lesser intensity, in every category of paid work and, indeed, in apparently “self-employed” work.
We understood this fact from the beginning of this phenomenon (see our VIth Congress in 1997). "Manchesterisation" of the labour force was (and continues to be) the response of capital to its own structural crisis that first manifested itself in the early 1970s, as a basic countertendency – though not the only one – to the fall in the rate of profit.(1)
This aspect – the intensification of exploitation as an imperative necessity of capital – rightly underlined by our comrades, obviously does not mean passively accepting capitalist conditions, with the consequent disarmament of the class, whilst waiting mechanically for the fateful hour X of the revolution to come about. It would be a mistake for the working class not to fight on a daily basis, even for the smallest demands, because if it did not do so it would certainly not be able to carry on (nor be worthy of...) the fight to free itself from the chains of the bourgeoisie. Only malevolent opponents, usually the defenders of some form of radical reformism, attribute that stupid opinion to us. We do not say that one should not "demand", but only that in times of deep crisis the spaces for making such demands are considerably restricted, and even tending to disappear. This only underlines even more clearly that the interests of capital and those of the working class are irreconcilably divergent, completely opposite, and that the road to a real improvement in the conditions of existence of the "old" and "new" proletariat can only come about, today more than ever, over the corpse of the capitalist system.
Internationalist Communist Party
Translated from the Italian
(1) The definition refers to the city of Manchester, "capital" of the Industrial Revolution in England, during which the working class conditions were, as we know, appalling. The document referred to from the VIth Congress of the Internationalist Communist Party can be found on the website at Globalisation and Imperialism
Klasbatalo
October 2019
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ANARCHIST BOOKFAIR IN LONDON
The CWO will have a stall at the Anarchist Bookfair in London.
When: Saturday, 7 October 2023
Where: four venues in East London (see link below)
READING GROUP
This meeting's text: Theses on the Tasks of International Social-Democracy by Rosa Luxemburg
When: Saturday, 7 October 2023 at 6:00pm
Where: Hamilton, Canada (contact us through our social media for location details: linktr.ee)
Klasbatalo
NO WAR BUT THE CLASS WAR: WHAT OPPOSITION TO IMPERIALIST WAR REALLY MEANS
PUBLIC MEETING AND DISCUSSION
Topics of discussion:
When: Saturday, October 14, 2023 at 2:00pm
Where: 134 W 29th St, Fl. 2, Conference Room 3-4, New York, NY
Internationalist Workers’ Group
LONDON RADICAL BOOKFAIR
The CWO will have a stall at the London Radical Bookfair.
When: Saturday, 4 November 2023
Where: Great Hall and adjoinging rooms at Goldsmiths University, 8 Lewisham Way, London, SE14 6NW
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