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Camouflaging
class rule
Our
society is routinely described in terms that
camouflage the reality
of exploitation and class rule.
The
story goes like this. Everyone is basically equal. There is no ruling
class as we are all citizens in a “democracy.”
We live not in capitalism (that outmoded concept) but in a classless “market economy”
where we are all consumers, taxpayers and investors (if only through
our pension schemes). In some countries the camouflage is taken one
step further: the social system is officially defined to be not just
democratic but actually socialist. Those who insist on pointing out
the reality behind the camouflage are labelled “extremists,”
denied access to the mass media, and banished from respectable
society.
This
camouflage is so familiar to us that it is easy to assume it has
always existed. In fact, it is quite a recent development in
historical terms. Pre-industrial ruling classes never thought of
pretending that they did not exist. On the contrary, they glorified
or even deified themselves as intrinsically superior beings. The
Greek philosopher Aristotle, who for many centuries was considered
the fount of all wisdom, wrote that some people are slaves and others
masters in accordance with their natures. Feudal law highlighted
class by specifying in detail the dress appropriate to each class and
making it illegal for people to wear clothes inappropriate to their
station in life.
The
situation started to change when the thinkers of the Enlightenment
(such as Voltaire, Rousseau, and Montesquieu) questioned the doctrine
of natural inequality as well as other received ideas. In 1789
revolutionaries overthrew the French monarchy and aristocracy in the
name of the Enlightenment ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity.
But some of them (Babeuf and his followers), disappointed that the
revolution had failed to achieve these ideals, wanted to go further
and strike at the roots of property itself. For the first time a
ruling class felt the need for some camouflage.

In
Britain, where the transition from feudalism to capitalism was
accompanied by less political upheaval, the need for concealment did
not become urgent until later. Democracy was condemned as a dangerous
extremist notion, while the class structure continued to be
sanctified by religion and custom. Nineteenth-century British
economists like Ricardo and Adam Smith talked quite openly about the
division of society into classes. They were closer in this respect to
Marx than to their twentieth-century successors (see the article on
Smith in January’s Socialist
Standard). You may also recall a verse in the nineteenth-century
hymn All Things Bright and Beautiful that goes:
The rich man
in his castle,
The
poor man at his gate,
He
made them high and lowly,
And
ordered their estate.
British
ruling class attitudes shifted in face of the growing movement for
universal male suffrage represented by the working class Chartists.
The capitalists began to wonder whether they had exaggerated the
threat inherent in political democracy. Perhaps it would not endanger
class privilege all that much, provided that at the same time they
made greater efforts to indoctrinate the workers. That is why the
1867 Reform Act, which first extended the franchise to part of the
working class (male householders), was followed by the 1870 Education
Act, which first made provision for general elementary education. “We
must educate our masters,” Chancellor of
the Exchequer Robert Lowe cynically remarked.
By
the early twentieth century the ideological transformation was
complete. Capitalist society could now be defined as “democracy”
and its demands imposed in the name of democracy, as when US
president Woodrow Wilson christened World War One “a
war to make the world safe for democracy.”
The class structure was henceforth to be camouflaged rather than
openly justified. It was also about this time that there appeared new
economic theories – in particular, the
marginalist school – in which class was
no longer a central concept.
With
the rise of the so-called “communist”
regimes in Russia and elsewhere, a similar fate befell the word “socialism.”
The new class system in these countries was defined as “socialism,”
just as the old class system in the West was defined as “democracy.”
But the essence of the matter was the same: in both cases, in
mainstream or official discourse the real class structure of the
society simply did not exist. In the countries under Communist Party
rule, just to say that there was a ruling class was grounds for
condemnation as a “Trotskyite”
or “counterrevolutionary.”
(For an example from the Chinese “cultural
revolution” see
http://www.marxists.org/archive/cliff/works/1969/06/intro.htm)
The
camouflaging of class rule generates endless hypocrisy, and hypocrisy
is not one of the more appealing character traits. But, as poet
Matthew Arnold remarked, “hypocrisy is
the tribute that vice pays to virtue.”
The prevalence of hypocrisy is a sign that it is no longer possible
openly to justify certain evils, showing that there has after all
been some progress in human thinking. Class society is now on the
defensive, and there is no way to defend the indefensible.
STEFAN
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