HU Jintao (1942- )
The “paramount leader” of capitalist China after Jiang Zemin,
and from the years 2004-2012. During this period the Chinese capitalist economy expanded
rapidly, and was only moderately affected in a negative way by the world financial/economic
crisis of 2008-2009. This period of the first decade and a half of the new century also
marks the emergence of capitalist China as a powerful new imperialist country. Hu was
succeeded in 2012 by Xi Jinping.
HU Yaobang (1915-89)
A Chinese revisionist chieftain who was Chairman, then General Secretary, of the (still so-called)
Communist Party of China from 1980 to 1987. He was of peasant origin, joined the CCP in 1933 and took
part in the Long March. Early on, during the war against Japan
(1937-45), he became closely associated with Deng Xiaoping and
began serving as a political cadre. After Liberation in 1949 he became head of the Young Communist
League, but was ousted during the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution.
When Deng was rehabilitated so was Hu. When Deng was once again removed from office in the mid-1970s,
so was Hu. But once the capitalist roaders achieved full
power after Mao’s death Hu was rehabilitated (in 1977) and quickly made his way up in the top ranks
of the new revisionist leadership of the Party and State. Although Deng Xiaping was still the real
“Paramount Leader”, Hu was made the nominal head the CCP in 1980.
However, there was contradiction and tension
within the top revisionist leadership, with some revisionists—like Hu—wanting to switch over more
strongly and more rapidly to a more Western-style monopoly capitalist market economy, while others
wanted to keep to more traditional state capitalist forms (as in the Soviet Union during its early
revisionist period). Deng himself remained somewhat publicly ambiguous on the issue, though really
wanting ever more market liberalization. But when serious student demonstrations broke out in 1987,
the “conservative” revisionists favoring traditional state capitalism succeeding in forcing Hu
Yaobang out as formal head of the CCP and nation. Hu was charged with “laxness” and “bourgeois
political liberalization” which caused, or at least aggravated, the protests. However,
Zhao Ziyang was then appointed General Secretary of the CCP and at
Deng’s direction proceeded to pursue market “reforms” even more intently than Hu Yaobang did. Thus
Deng sacrificed Hu in order to placate those favoring state capitalist tradition while still keeping
to his market liberalization program.
The day after Hu Yaobang’s death in 1989, there was
a small demonstration honoring him which called upon the Party and government to restore his “good
name”. Then a week later, on the day before Hu’s funeral, the huge student demonstrations began in
Tiananmen Square in Beijing. Deng Xiaoping ordered
the violent suppression of these demonstrations which resulted in the murders of a great many
unarmed protesters. Both Hu Yaobang and Zhao Ziyang were blamed for these protests and for allowing
them to “get out of hand”. Since that time, the economic market “liberalization” of the Chinese
economy has continued, while any political “liberalization” (in the direction of a bourgeois
democracy) has been totally stopped.
“Hu was notable for his liberalism and the frank expression of his opinions, which sometimes agitated other senior Chinese leaders.... He was one of the first Chinese officials to abandon wearing a Mao suit in favor of Western business suits. When asked which of Mao Zedong’s theories were desirable for modern China, he replied ‘I think, none’.” —Wikipedia article on Hu Yaobang (accessed on Jan. 31, 2020).
HUAC
See: HOUSE UN-AMERICAN ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE
HUA GUOFENG [Old style: HUA KUO-FENG] (1921-2008)
The designated successor to Mao Zedong as the Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party, who was
also the Premier of China and thus for several years the top leader of both the Party and
government of China. He performed ineptly, arrested or alienated the more Maoist forces in the
Party, and was outmaneuvered in the struggle for power by the more bourgeois reactionary forces
led by Deng Xiaoping.
“Hua Guofeng” was his Party
name (or nom de guerre); his real name was Su Zhu. He was born into a family of poor peasants
and completed primary school, but probably received no further formal education. He joined the
revolutionary ranks in 1935 when the Communist forces reached his area following the Long March.
His early career was as a cadre in Hunan province and he was involved in directing land reform
work there in the early to mid-1950s. Hua served as Party secretary in the province beginning in
1970.
During the Cultural Revolution Hua, with the
support of Zhou Enlai, was named to the preparatory group for the establishment of the new
Revolutionary Committee of Hunan. He was first elected as a member of the Central Committee of
the CCP at the Ninth Party Congress in 1969. In 1973 he became a member of the Politburo, and
was then appointed Deputy Premier and head of public security (1975-76). After Zhou Enlai’s
death in January 1976, Hua Guofeng became Premier. In his last days Mao designated Hua to
succeed him as Party Chairman. In addition to the Premiership and Party Chairman position, he
also was soon designated as the Chairman of the Central Military Commission, thus holding all
the top formal positions of power in his hands.
The official story is that the “Gang of Four”,
Mao’s closest followers including his widow Jiang Qing, were planning a coup to overthrow
Hua and his associates, but that Hua pre-empted this by arresting the “Gang of Four” and their
top supporters. [It is still not completely clear what the precise actual situation was then,
but the fact remains that Hua arrested and overthrew the “Gang of Four” in his own coup
supported by the reactionary forces.]
Hua Guofeng then brought the Cultural Revolution
to a complete end and began reversing some of its policies. It seems he was attempting to move
the economy back toward the Soviet-style bureaucratic and commandist form of the late 1950s in
China. However these backward steps were not enough for the more bourgeois forces in the Party,
and especially for Deng Xiaoping who also hungered for yet another return to personal power.
With the support of the large number of national bourgeois forces still within the CCP, Deng
outmaneuvered the hapless Hua and forced him into early retirement. Hua was forced to resign as
Premier in 1980 and was formally replaced as Party Chairman in September 1982.
Despite the major and prolonged campaigns within
the CCP during the 1966-1976 period against capitalist roaders, they were still a very strong
presence in the Party. This was because so many non-Marxist nationalists had joined the Party
during the anti-imperialist struggles and the period of the New Democratic Revolution. Probably
the only way a bourgeois restoration could have been avoided over the long run was to keep the
Cultural Revolution going at one level or another on a more or less permanent basis. Hua did
not understand that it was essential to do this.
From a historical standpoint Hua Guofeng must
be viewed as a somewhat pathetic transitional figure whose own insufficient grasp of Marxism
and insufficient revolutionary zeal ended up playing into the hands of Deng Xiaoping and the
bourgeoisie.
HUGHES, Langston (1902-1967)
African-American poet, novelist and short-story writer, dramatist, and social activist, who was
born in Joplin, Missouri and raised in Kansas and Ohio. Although he was a leading figure in the
Harlem Renaissance beginning in the 1920s, his major influence was only belatedly recognized.
His lyrical poetry reflected his deep knowledge of folk culture and colloquial speech, and of
jazz and blues music. He was a pioneer in what came to be called “jazz poetry”. These things
made him very popular with the masses although literary critics were slow to take him
seriously—no doubt partly for reasons of both racism and class snobbery.
Hughes was attracted and sympathetic to
communism though he never made a deep study of Marxist-Leninist theory or actually joined the
Communist Party. But many of his lesser-known poems do celebrate revolution and socialism. In
1932-3 he travelled in the Soviet Union for about a year, and in 1936 he travelled to Spain in
support of the Spanish Republic’s struggle against the fascist generals revolt led by Franco.
However, by the end of the 1930s Hughes’ most radical years were over. And during the McCarthy
Era, he unfortunately succumbed to the heavy pressures from the government to disassociate
himself from the communist movement (although by then the U.S. Communist Party was no longer
truly revolutionary or “communist” in any case).
Two of Langston Hughes’ autobiographical
works are The Big Sea (1940), and I Wonder as I Wander (1956), neither of which
is very progressive politically.
“Listen, Revolution,
We’re buddies, see –
Together,
We can take everything:
Factories, arsenals, houses, ships,
Railroads, forests, fields, orchards,
Bus lines, telegraphs, radios,
(Jesus! Raise hell with radios!)
Steel mills, coal mines, oil wells, gas,
All the tools of production.
(Great day in the morning!)
Everything –
And turn’em over to the people who work.
Rule and run’em for us people who work.
[...]
On that day when no one will be hungry, cold oppressed,
Anywhere in the world again.
That’s our job!
I been starvin’ too long
Ain’t you?
Let’s go, Revolution!”
—Langston Hughes, “Good Morning Revolution” (excerpts), 1932.
[The full poem is available at:
https://theworkersdreadnought.wordpress.com/2008/12/13/good-morning-revolution-langston-hughes-1932/ ]
“Hughes was accused of being a Communist by many on the political right, but he always denied it. When asked why he never joined the Communist Party, he wrote, ‘it was based on strict discipline and the acceptance of directives that I, as a writer, did not wish to accept.’ In 1953, he was called before the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations led by Senator Joseph McCarthy. He stated, ‘I never read the theoretical books of socialism or communism or the Democratic or Republican parties for that matter, and so my interest in whatever may be considered political has been non-theoretical, non-sectarian, and largely emotional and born out of my own need to find some way of thinking about this whole problem of myself.’ Following his testimony, Hughes distanced himself from Communism. He was rebuked by some on the Radical Left who had previously supported him. He moved away from overtly political poems and towards more lyric subjects. When selecting his poetry for his Selected Poems (1959) he excluded all his radical socialist verse from the 1930s.” —Wikipedia article on Langston Hughes (accessed on March 10, 2017).
“HUGO EFFECT”
The tendency for the “informal economy” (the part not very well monitored or taxed by the government)
to considerably expand during recessions or depressions, and to decrease during recoveries or booms.
[The name for this tendency was coined by the bourgeois economists Francesco Pappadà &
Kenneth S. Rogoff, in their paper “Rethinking the Informal Economy and the Hugo Effect” (NBER working
paper W31963, December 2023)]
HUJI SYSTEM
See HUKOU SYSTEM below.
HUKOU SYSTEM
The system of household registration and residency permits in China which dates back to
ancient times, but which has also been a prominent feature of the People’s Republic of China.
A registration record officially identifies a person as a resident of some locality and
includes other information including the person’s parents, spouse, and date of birth. In
Chinese the formal name of this system is huji, and a hukou is the residency
status of a person. But informally, hukou is also the name for the system, and that
is what this registration system is called in English.
In 1958 the PRC officially promulgated the
family registration system to establish some general social stability and to control the
movement of people from rural to urban areas. During the socialist period the government
was attempting to keep the migration from the countryside to the cities from occurring in
a premature and disorderly fashion. In general, the movement to the cities was limited to
the workers and families needed to fill the new jobs which were opening up in the rapidly
expanding socialist industries there.
In recent decades, since the restoration
of capitalism in China, the hukou system has been officially kept in place. But to
accomodate both local and multinational capitalist corporations, and their need for cheap
labor from the countryside, it has generally not been enforced. This has led to tens of
millions of migrant workers living technically illegally in the cities, and having no
rights to public housing, education, and other social benefits there. This has created a
massive and growing social problem of gross discrimination against migrant workers. Since
migrant workers are not allowed to enroll their children in urban schools, most of these
children must remain with their grandparents or other relatives in the countryside, which
means they are in effect forcibly separated from their parents. By 2005 there were as many
as 130 million of these “home-staying children”, as they are called in China, with parents
living away from them in distant cities.
In many respects, the lives of migrant
workers in China are similar to that of illegal migrant workers in the U.S. and other
“advanced” capitalist countries. They are needed and exploited by urban capitalists, but
they are paid extremely low wages and are denied many rights and benefits that other
people have. This discrimination against well over a hundred million migrant workers in
China is one of several important factors leading to rapidly increasing social unrest.
In recent years, although the central government loosened its control over the hukou
system, it mostly just transferred this control and discrimination to the local
governments. And although the movement of people to the cities became unofficially allowed,
the super-exploitation and discrimination against them that awaited them there was as bad
as ever. That part of the hukou system still continued unabated.
However, in December 2013 the Chinese
government announced that it would be ending the hukou system, some aspects of it
immediately, and some aspects gradually over time. This is being done for several reasons.
The increased social unrest caused by mistreated migrant workers in the cities was
seriously worrying the ruling class. And the government has somewhat changed direction by
even more strongly promoting urbanization. It came to the conclusion that it would
actually promote economic development to increase the speed of
urbanization in China. This view may have some
partial validity to it, though it also may well end up promoting the creation of massive
slums in China if more and more of the millions of rural people being rapidly moved to the
cities are unable to find jobs.
“HUMAN CAPITAL”
The ridiculous doctrine of contemporary bourgeois economists that capital is the source of
all wealth, and that human capabilities and labor itself are just another form of “capital”. The
characteristics and abilities of workers which allows them to be productive are thus termed “capital”.
As the Wikipedia puts it (07/25/22): “Human capital is a concept used by social scientists to
designate personal attributes considered useful in the production process. It encompasses employee
knowledge, skills, know-how, good health, and education.”
Marx, as well as pre-Marxian classical bourgeois
political economists such as David Ricardo, understood very well that human labor (acting on the
products of the natural world around us) was the source of all wealth. However, this admission hugely
grated on the sensibilities of bourgeois theorists, and so first they came up with the theory that
labor was merely one of the three “factors of production”, the other two being capital and land. Later,
during neoclassical reformulation of bourgeois economics
in the last part of the 19th century, they dropped “land” from the equation (and began calling it just
another kind of capital). But this was still not good enough for them! Even in their own economic
theory there was still the painful recognition that workers had a fundamental role in the production
of wealth, even if the capitalists and their capital were also supposedly required. So the final step
in this nonsense, carried out in the 20th century, was to subsume human labor itself, and workers’
knowledge and abilities, into their absurd concept of “capital” as well. So, at this point, and
according to the bourgeois theorists, the only thing required for capitalist production is
supposedly capital, in one or another of its various forms!
“Neoliberalism not only protects the market from the regulatory state; more
radically, it expands market principles to realms thought to be partially social. Whereas [Karl]
Polanyi, for instance, warned about the tendency of a market society to relentless ‘commodify’
social relations, neoliberal theorists embrace this as a virtue, arguing that market measures can
be efficiently applied to value everything from human life to the environment.
“In the neoliberal
view, labor is better understood as ‘human capital,’ a concept associated with
[Milton] Friedman’s University of Chicago colleague Gary
Becker. According to Becker, markets pay workers precisely what they deserve, even though in some
cases wages are insufficient to sustain a decent life. Conversely, even rapacious billionaires
merit their earnings, by definition, because markets are presumed perfectly efficient when
protected from government interference.”
—Robert Kuttner, a liberal bourgeois economist,
“Free Markets, Besieged Citizens”, The New York Review of Books, July 21, 2022, p 12.
HUMAN GENOME PROJECT
[Intro to be added...]
“As the results of the HGP [Human Genome Project] began to come in, Michael Dexter, the CEO of Wellcome [a private British Trust promoting biological research from a bourgeois perspective —Ed.], claimed that the completion of the project was more important than putting a man on the moon, on a par with inventing the wheel. In fact, the results were something of a theoretical embarrassment to genocentrism. Humans, supposedly the pinnacle of evolution, with the most complex of brains, turned out to possess only some 20,000 genes—about as many as a fruit fly. The molecular biologists who had confidently predicted that all human life could be read off from the linear string of DNA went rather quiet.” —Hilary & Steven Rose, Genes, Cells and Brains (2014), p. 280.
HUMAN IRRATIONALITY
We human beings, as almost everyone knows, are not entirely rational animals. And for this reason we
can be commonly tricked and fooled, subjugated, oppressed, and exploited, most especially by the
ruling bourgeoisie in present-day capitalist society.
But, on the other hand, we humans are just rational
enough that—with the help of the leadership of the most knowledgeable and enlightened among us,
who form themselves into proletarian revolutionary parties—there is the quite rational expectation
that we will eventually figure out what is in our own collective interests, and how to struggle to
make revolution and put that into effect.
See also:
ILLUSORY TRUTH EFFECT [Psychology]
HUMAN KNOWLEDGE
See also:
AGNOSTICISM,
KNOWLEDGE,
REFLECTION THEORY,
THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE
“For the most valuable result ... would be that it should make us extremely distrustful of our present knowledge, inasmuch as in all probability we are just about at the beginning of human history, and the generations which will put us right are likely to be far more numerous than those whose knowledge we—often enough with a considerable degree of contempt—have the opportunity to correct.” —Engels, Anti-Dühring (1878), MECW 25:80.
“But as for the sovereign validity of the knowledge obtained by each individual thought, we all know that there can be no talk of such a thing, and that all previous experience shows that without exception such knowledge always contains much more that is capable of being improved upon than that which cannot be improved upon, or is correct.” —Engels, ibid.
“Human knowledge is not (or does not follow) a straight line, but a curve, which endlessly approximates a series of circles, a spiral. Any fragment, segment, section of this curve can be transformed (transformed one-sidedly) into an independent, complete, straight line, which then (if one does not see the wood for the trees) leads into the quagmore, into clerical obscurantism (where it is anchored by the class interests of the ruling classes). Rectilinearity and one-sidedness, woodenness and petrification, subjectivism and subjective blindness—voilà the epistemological roots of idealism. And clerical obscurantism (=philosophical idealism), of course, has epistemological roots, it is not groundless; it is a sterile flower undoubtedly, but a sterile flower that grows on the living tree of living, fertile, genuine, powerful, omnipotent, objective, absolute human knowledge.” —Lenin, “On the Question of Dialectics” (1915), LCW 38:363.
HUMAN NATURE
[Intro material to be added... ]
“Herr Proudhon does not know that all history is but the continuous transformation of human nature.” —Karl Marx, The Poverty of Philosophy (1847), chapter 2.3.
“The theory that human nature exists in the abstract has always been an ideological weapon for the exploiting classes. Particularly the representatives of declining classes on the verge of extinction cling stubbornly to the theory of human nature and regard it as a tool of public opinion for saving their classes from extinction and for their frantic restorationist activities.” —Chu Lan, who goes on to illustrate this in a discussion of how Confucius defended slave society in part by appeals to “human nature”. This is from an English condensation of his article “Deepen the Criticism of the Bourgeois Theory of Human Nature” which appeared in Chinese in the CCP theoretical magazine Red Flag, 1974, #4; this condensation appears under the title “A Discussion on Western Music” in China Reconstructs, July 1974, pp. 37-39, online at: https://www.bannedthought.net/China/Magazines/ChinaReconstructs/1974/CR1974-07.pdf
“‘How Children Outgrow Socialism’
“One of the main ruling-class arguments
against socialism or communism is that ‘it goes against human nature’. We Marxists have
always ridiculed that argument, since obviously in this society people differ tremendously
in this regard, and sharing, cooperation, the desire for more equality, and even for outright
socialism or communism definitely do not go against the ‘nature’ of some of us!
“Since sharing, cooperation, equality,
etc., do not go against the ‘nature’ of some of us, the fact that they do (in this society)
go against the ‘nature’ of others cannot possibly be a result of any inherent biological or
psychological imperative in all human beings. In other words, human differences in this
regard are quite obviously mostly cultural and ideological; that is, they are (mostly at
least) due to the way that people are brought up and educated.
“Nevertheless, the bourgeois ideologists
stick to their guns, and never stop talking about how ‘human nature’ precludes sharing,
equality, socialism and communism. They don’t let little things like facts and logic get in
the way of their opinions!
“The new issue of Science magazine
published by the National Academy of Sciences—a bourgeois establishment institution in science
if ever there was one!—has an interesting article in this regard. The report below, from its
online science information site, is entitled ‘How Children Outgrow Socialism’. Oddly enough,
the bourgeoisie is too stupid to realize that the study reported on here actually proves the
opposite of what they think it does!
“What their own study shows, and what
they admit here, is that younger children are much more likely to share, cooperate and favor
equality among themselves than older children. Now obviously that means that if anything is
innate in people it is the tendencies toward sharing, cooperation and equality, rather
than the selfishness that the bourgeoisie always claims is innate!
“And the study also further demonstrates
(what has been pretty obvious all along), that culture and education can transform and
overpower what is innate in us (whatever that is) to a considerable degree.
“What this study really shows is that
those fine human cooperative and sharing characteristics which most children still have to
some degree even as late as the age of 10 or so are gradually beaten out of them later on. In
other words, as kids become more and more acculturated in this society, they become less and
less cooperative and sharing, and more and more selfish individualists. It seems to me that
this is a very strong damnation of the nature of this society, of its form of economy and
culture, and its educational system!
“I love it when the ruling class promotes
yet another ‘proof’ of the ‘necessity’ of selfishness and of huge and ever-growing inequalities
in society, which actually proves the precise opposite of that!”
—Scott Harrison, from a letter sent
to friends, May 30, 2010, together with the report “How Children Outgrow Socialism” by Dan
Ferber, (May 27, 2010), on the “Science NOW” news site, both of which are still available at:
https://www.massline.org/Politics/ScottH/OutgrowingSocialism-100530.pdf
HUMAN RIGHTS
The rights of individuals within society, which of course depend upon the particular
society. As one would expect, however, bourgeois thinkers attempt to portray the rights
which obtain for the bourgeoisie under the capitalist system—including the right to
exploit other people—as the set of human rights which should hold always and everywhere.
HUMANISM
1. [Broad sense:] The view that values
human beings above all else, which seeks to maximize human freedom and the achievement
of human potentialities, and which finds the locus of ideology in human beings themselves.
“Of all things in the world, people are the most precious.” (Mao, SW4:454) In this broad
sense, Marxism-Leninism-Maoism is the most consistent form of humanism.
2. [Narrow, bourgeois sense:] A
petty-bourgeois perversion of the above, which attempts to accomodate itself to private
property and bourgeois values, decries the use of violence (even if it is in the interests
of the people), and opposes revolution.
“HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION”
[As most commonly used in the contemporary world:] A euphemism used by an imperialist power
such as the United States for its invasions or other forms of intervention in another country
which is too weak to prevent this from happening. I.e., just another “pretty” term for
capitalist-imperialism.
“Applauding [Britain’s Prime Minister] Blair’s moral gunboats and
Gladstonian convictions of superiority, Niall Ferguson, professor of politics at
Oxford, said, ‘Imperialism may be a dirty word, but when Tony Blair is essentially
calling for the imposition of Western values—democracy and so on—it is really the
language of liberal imperialism... imposing your views and practices on others.’
“Ferguson’s honesty is provocative
to the ‘liberal realists’ who dominate the study of international relations in Britain
and teach that the new imperialists are the world’s crisis managers, rather than the
cause of a crisis. With honourable exceptions, these scholars of ‘geopolitics’ have
taken the humanity out of the study of nations and congealed it with a jargon that
serves great power. Laying out whole societies for autopsy, they identify ‘failed
states’ and ‘rogue states’, inviting ‘humanitarian intervention’—a term used by
imperial Japan to describe its bloody invasion of Manchuria. (Mussolini also used
it to justify seizing Ethiopia, as did Hitler when the Nazis drove into the
Sudetenland.)” —John Pilger, Freedom Next Time: Resisting the Empire (2007),
p. 7.
HUMANITY — Ideological Transformation Of
Social revolution is a process of changing both the socioeconomic structure of society and also
the attitudes and perspectives of the people in the original society. These two changes
interpenetrate: society can’t be changed and reconstructed unless the people change; and just as
certainly, all the people can’t be changed, and thoroughly so, unless society is also thoroughly
changed. In other words, genuine social revolution is a matter of more or less simultaneously
changing society and the people in it. Each of these changes depends, to a considerable degree,
upon the other. And each of these changes will have to be part of a step-by-step, drawn out process.
Nobody, no matter how brilliant, jumps all the way from bourgeois ideology to a “complete” and
totally consistent socialist/communist world view in one fell swoop!
The prospects and possibilities for socioeconomic
change become conscious in the minds of individual people at different times, and to different
initial degrees. In general those with a more advanced revolutionary consciousness will have to
help educate the others, and help organize and lead them. However, it frequently happens that one
individual’s consciousness and activity will be superior to that of another in one or more
respects, while the second person’s consciousness and activity may still be superior to that of
the first in other reguards, sometimes even if just on one important point about how to deal with
an immediate class struggle. For this reason, even those more generally advanced ideologically can,
and seriously need to, still learn many things from those who are in some respects not as advanced
or sophisticated as they are. This is why the mass line method of
leadership is so useful and important. While the leaders of the mass struggle may only have an
occasional thing to learn from any single poorly educated worker, there are lots and lots of those
workers in this society. And when considered together their brilliance often greatly exceeds even
the most well-read Marxist-Leninist-Maoist leader.
While it is true that in general the more advanced
part of the masses has to come forward and educate and lead the rest, there are many dangers and
pitfalls here. Marx, in the third of his marvelously profound “Theses on Feuerbach”, put it this
way:
“The materialist doctrine that men are products of circumstances and upbringing
and that, therefore, changed men are products of other circumstances and changed upbringing
forgets that circumstances are changed precisely by men and that the educator must himself be
educated. Hence this doctrine necessarily arrives at dividing society into two parts, of which
one towers above society (in [the utopian socialist] Robert Owen, for example).
“The coincidence of the changing of
circumstances and of human activity can only be conceived and rationally understood as
revolutionizing practice.”
What this means is that in class society it is only
class struggle, past, present and future, along with as much of the widespread but dispersed wisdom
among the masses as can be gathered, which can first educate the leadership core of the masses (and
especially the party), and allow that leadership core to then educate the masses in general about all
the lessons that have actually been derived from their mass practice. Or put another way, existing
and new MLM theory which is summed up from mass struggle and the the ideas and experiences of the
masses must then be returned to the masses in a more concentrated form. This is what revolutionizing
practice actually is; practice that makes us all more truly revolutionary. —S.H. [Oct. 13, 2023]
See also:
“NEW MAN”, The
HUMANITY — Extinction Of
“It should be commonly recognized that no stake whatever, no cause,
no principle, no consideration of honor or obligation or prestige or maintaining
leadership in current alliances—still less, no concern for remaining in office, or
maintaining a particular power structure, or sustaining jobs, profits, votes—can
justify maintaining any risk whatever of causing the near extinction of human
and other animal life on this planet.
“Omnicide [killing
everyone]—threatened, prepared, or carried out—is flatly illegitimate,
unacceptable, as an instrument of national policy; indeed, it cannot be regarded as
anything less than criminal, immoral, evil. In the light of recent scientific
findings, of which the publics of the world and even their leaders are still almost
entirely unaware, that risk is implicit in the nuclear planning, posture, readiness,
and threats of the two superpowers. That is intolerable. It must be changed, and that
change can’t come too soon.” —Daniel Ellsberg, The Doomsday Machine: Confessions
of a Nuclear War Planner (2017), p. 347.
[It is quite the commentary on
the prevailing ideology in capitalist-imperialist society that something like this
even needs to be said! And it is not just the warmongers in the Pentagon that seem
to have no care about the future of humanity, whether it lives or dies. The same can
be said about the media, politicians of all stripes, liberals as well as conservatives,
and so-called “educated” people in general. The capitalist-imperialist system will
likely be the death of us all unless the masses can be aroused to the danger and
horror that stares them in the face. How is it that, given this deep and desperate
situation there is not even any noticiable anti-nuclear weapons movement in countries
like the United States?! Yes, it is because of mass ignorance of the true dangers of
nuclear war; but that ignorance is itself also due in part to the desire of the public
not even to investigate, to learn, to think about, or to know the overwhelming
danger that exists, and to blindly trust the “good intensions” of those who control
the current society. If the people do not wake up soon, they may very well all die at
the hands of the world’s imperialist maniacs. —S.H.]
“The life of dialectics is the continuous movement toward opposites.
Mankind will also finally meet its doom. When the theologians talk about doomsday,
they are pessimistic and terrify people. We say the end of mankind is something which
will produce something more advanced than mankind. Mankind is still in its infancy.”
—Mao, “Talk on Questions of Philosphy”, Aug. 18, 1964; in Chairman Mao Talks to
the People: Talks and Letters: 1956-1971, ed. by Stuart Schram, (NY: Pantheon,
1974), p. 228.
[Mao is surely correct in saying
that humanity will not last forever. Any entity which arises in the universe will
eventually come to some end in one way or another. There are now two rather obvious
ways in which human beings might come to an end by gradually, and gently!,
replacing ourselves with something superior. The first is through genetics and greatly
speeded up evolution which we are now becoming capable of controlling and guiding
ourselves. However, although such a means might even go so far as to create a new
species qualitatively superior to us, it seems to me that it would still very likely
be a recognizable continuation of Homo sapiens, at least for the foreseeable
future.
[The other even more plausible
way in which humanity might replace itself with something better is through great
advances in artificial intelligence
(which in fact seem to be already underway at the present time). This method offers
the possibility of a much more radical break away from current Homo sapiens,
though there are probably social reasons why human-like androids will be part of the
process, at least in the beginning. It is also possible that for a while the two
methods, genetic enhancement and AI, might be combined in complementary ways, though
eventually AI will almost inevitably become the dominant method, and eventually the
single remaining method.
[Mao was correct to take an
optimistic stance on the question of the eventual extinction of humanity, and to
suggest that humanity might gradually replace itself with something superior. However,
these days we cannot deny the growing and extremely serious threat to our continued
existence from the capitalist-imperialist social system itself, which now—more clearly
than ever—might wipe out humanity before we have an opportunity to gradually replace
ourselves with something better. The most serious and obvious way that this could occur
is through global thermonuclear war, but there are other possibilities as well. As Mao
said, we totally dismiss the absurd claims of theologians about any gods calling an
end to human life on Earth. But, unfortunately, we cannot so easily dismiss the threat
that capitalism itself might kill us all. Indeed, the recognition of this real
possibility is now one of the major reasons for renewed urgency in making socialist
revolution. —S.H.]
HUME, David (1711-1776)
Scottish subjective idealist philosopher and historian. He was an extreme
empiricist and philosophical
agnostic. He was one of the originators of
utilitarianism, but he also held (inconsistently) that
moral beliefs cannot be rationally justified and are based on mere custom.
In economics Hume put forward a
quantitative theory of money and favored free trade. He was a friend and adviser to
Adam Smith.
See also below, and:
OUGHT-FROM-IS, and
Philosophical doggerel about
Hume.
HUME’S PARADOX
The supposed mystery that a small class of rulers can (most of the time!) manage to control
and govern the vastly more numerous masses who they exploit and oppress. Here is the
euphemistic way that Hume himself originally put it (of course without any reference to
social classes or exploitation!):
“Nothing appears more surprising to those who consider human affairs with a philosophical eye, than the easiness with which the many are governed by the few.” —David Hume, The First Principles of Government (1742).
While certainly regretable, Hume’s “Paradox” should not be too surprising to Marxists
who understand that one of the basic principles of historical
materialism is that the dominant ideas of any age are those of the ruling class. While
the rule of “the few” over “the many” can unfortunately last for a long time, in historical
terms the rule of the exploiters and oppressors is still precarious. All it takes is one
grand moment of revolution to topple the bastards!
See also:
COOPERATION—Evolution Of:
Negative Aspects Of
HUNDRED FLOWERS MOVEMENT
A public campaign launched by Mao in May 1957 which was intended to promote the frank and
open discussion and criticism of the Communist Party of China and the new revolutionary
government by the broad masses, including intellectuals. The famous slogan that Mao raised was
“Let a hundred flowers bloom and a hundred schools of thought contend!” But it was also firmly
stated by Mao that this would have to occur within the framework of upholding the revolution,
the new socialist system, and the continued leadership of the CCP. However, many reactionary
elements popped out of the woodwork and seized the opportunity to attack socialism and the
revolution. This in turn led to the necessity of cracking down on these class enemies in a new
anti-rightist campaign. But even after that, the true principles of the Hundred Flowers Movement
were still upheld by Mao. (This is a point seldom understood by bourgeois critics of Maoist
China who always equate “democracy” with opposition to socialism and communism.)
“HUNDRED YEAR MARATHON”
An overal plan or goal which has been developed by the pro-capitalist nationalist ruling class
in the People’s Republic of China to develop both China’s economic power and its resultant
military and political power to the point where by 2049, the 100th anniversary of the
establishment of the PRC, China will have overtaken the United States and all other countries
and will have become the most powerful and dominant nation in the world. This is the long-term,
and obviously imperialist, goal of the current Chinese regime.
The roots of this goal go back to the period
of the 19th and early 20th century when China was humiliated, invaded and exploited by Western
and Japanese imperialism. The hope at that point was to eventually regain China’s former glory.
With the success of the Chinese Revolution and the establishment of the PRC on October 1, 1949,
Mao and his Marxist followers sought to reconstruct China for both the benefit of the Chinese
people and for the even greater purpose of completing the world proletarian revolution for the
benefit of all humanity. But even during the Mao era there was a secondary undercurrent,
especially by the then mostly hidden capitalist-roaders
who had a much less internationalist perspective and who were far more concerned merely to
build China into a powerful country once again. After Mao’s death, the head of this pack of
bourgeois nationalists, Deng Xiaoping, led in transforming
the whole purpose of the Chinese revolution into just making China rich and powerful. The
world proletarian revolutionary goal was dropped completely.
In capitalist-imperialist China today the
ruling national bourgeoisie centered within the (still so-called) Communist Party of China is
consciously engaged in this “Hundred Year Marathon”. However, their top leaders are mostly
smart enough to downplay this sort of open talk about their long term goal of domination, and
individuals such as the current Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, generally speak in vaguer terms
about the “Chinese Dream”, and so forth. But there are many less discreet individuals within
the Party, within the military, and within Chinese society generally, who call themselves
ying pai (or “hawks” or “eagles”) who are much more open about their right-wing
nationalist ambitions for China. It is they who are leading this ideological charge within
this “Hundred Year Marathon”.
In the U.S. it is the reactionaries and the
military who so far are raising the greatest alarm about all this (though the entire U.S.
ruling class is becoming more and more worried). One recent volume is even called The
Hundred-Year Marathon: China’s Secret Strategy to Replace America as the Global Superpower
(2015), by Michael Pillsbury. He is a former CIA analyst and top advisor on Chinese affairs
to the U.S. Defense Department. The alarms raised by people like Pillsbury will of course
lead to greater contention and an intensified arms race between the U.S. and China. However,
it is a plain fact that China is a rapidly rising imperialist power, and the top existing
(though economically declining) imperialist power,
the U.S., is willing to do anything it deems “necessary” to stay on top—including an eventual
war with China. At least proxy wars of this sort, if not full-scale total inter-imperialist
war, are virtually inevitable in coming decades.
See also:
“HIDE YOUR AMBITIONS AND BUILD YOUR
CAPABILITY”
HUNGARY — 1919 Proletarian Revolution
Communists managed to lead a revolution and briefly seize power in Hungary in the aftermath
of World War I and the October Revolution in Russia. Proletarian power was proclaimed on
March 21, 1919. A Soviet-style government was set up at a session of the Budapest Soviet of
Workers’ Deputies in the form of a Revolutionary Government Council made up of People’s
Commissars—including both Communists and Social-Democrats. The leader of the Hungarian
Communists, and the revolutionary regime, was Bela Kun.
The Hungarian Soviet Republic only managed
to survive until August 1919, when it succumbed in an unequal struggle against the superior
forces of foreign interventionists and counter-revolutionaries at home, who were supported
by traitorous Social-Democrats.
HUNGER
See also: WORLD HUNGER
“In the United states, nearly one in eight households doesn’t have enough to eat.” —New York Times, March 19, 2021, from the article “Full Minds, Empty Stomachs”.
“One in five Black and Hispanic adults in households with children said they did not have enough to eat in the previous week, compared with 6.4 percent of white Americans.” —New York Times, “Of Interest: Noteworthy facts from today’s paper”, June 15, 2021.
HUSSERL, Edmund (1859-1938)
German idealist philosopher and founder of the philosophical
school known as Phenomenology. His ideas are based on
previous idealist philosophers, and especially Plato,
Leibniz and Franz Brentano.
Overall, Husserl should be considered to be a subjective
idealist in that he believed that the object of cognition does not exist outside the
consciousness of the subject.
Husserl abandoned his early attempts to turn
philosophy into a strictly defined science, and instead took up a position highly critical
of science and scientific thinking in philosophy. Husserl’s views were quite influential in
bourgeois thought, and became the foundation of German
existentialism, especially that of
Heidegger.
HUXLEY, Thomas Henry (1825-95)
English naturalist and close associate and defender of Charles
Darwin, and popularizer of evolutionary theory. He was nicknamed “Darwin’s bulldog”. Also
a prominent agnostic (a term which he coined), with regard to
the question of God’s existence.
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