Taken from The Crusade for a Christian Civilization, #3, 1982
On December 9,
1981, a striking six‑page public interest advertisement appeared in the
Washington Post and the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the first two in a
series of such publications to appear throughout the West. In the
advertisements, the Societies for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property
(TFP) jointly addressed the public of their respective nations in a Message
entitled "What Does Self‑Managing Socialism Mean for Communism: A
Barrier? Or a Bridgehead?" The Message was written by Prof. Plinio Correa
de Oliveira, the founder and president of the Brazilian TFP. It exposes
Francois Mitterrand's program of self‑managing socialism and its
ambitious designs for the West.
The Message was
subsequently published in other leading newspapers in 18 countries of the Free
World, bringing the total number of papers in which it appeared up to 44. To
date, it has been published in the following countries: the United States,
Argentina, Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador,
England, Germany, Italy, Peru, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, Uruguay and
Venezuela.
The scope of the
campaign against self‑managing socialism was extended when a one page
summary of the Message was published in six of South Africa's major newspapers.
Later, an advertisement summarizing the Message and its world‑wide
repercussions was published in three papers in Germany, two in Ireland, one in
Austria, two in Australia, two in New Zealand, one in Costa Rica, and one in
the Philippines.
A Far‑Reaching
Message with Even Farther‑Reaching Effects
What have been
the effects of this weighty document since it was first published in December?
The amount of correspondence the TFP centers and
bureaus have received is astounding, with thousands of letters and coupons
requesting copies of the work to distribute to relatives, friends, libraries
and universities. The majority of people expressed enthusiastic support for the
campaign, while the very few who showed disagreement sometimes couched it in
insulting terms and almost always remained anonymous.
We can say that
socialism, recently proud of the promotion it had been receiving abroad and its
successes in many countries, has now taken a discreet and reserved attitude.
Something has changed in the politico‑ideological scene of the whole
West.
What happened in
France surprised and confused the optimistic and the naive.
Since French self‑managing
socialism boasted of being democratic and open‑minded in politics, the
Message published without the slightest difficulty in the democratic press of
the whole West should have encountered no obstacle in the major French
newspapers of the center and right. But when the thirteen TFPs contacted the
six largest Parisian dailies they received dry and inexplicable refusals. Of
these papers, one of the most important that had signed a contract to publish
the document broke it abruptly soon afterwards. The unanimous conduct of these
papers is all the more inexplicable since the Message is a very large paid
advertisement that no publishing company would normally refuse.
With the
publication in France thus prevented, the thirteen TFPs had to content
themselves with a mass mailing of 300,000 copies of the Message all over the
country. This drew a large and enthusiastic response and, according to many
observers, played an important role in enlightening French public opinion.
There followed the significant defeat of the socialist-communist coalition in
the recent regional elections.
The refusals to
publish the Message gave rise to the Communiqué entitled "France: The Fist
Crushes the Rose," also by Prof. Plinio Correa de Oliveira. Published in
23 papers of 11 countries, it denounced to world public opinion the presumable
interference of the French socialist government in the strange and despotic
curtailment of the TFPs' freedom of speech.
The Communiqué
pointed out that since a socialist government can deprive any company owner of
his rights, reduce him to a mere worker, and even expel him from his own
company, the newspaper‑owner's independence from the government is only
an illusion. This finding has a far‑reaching scope: Except for the
promise of freedom, all that is left to the self-managing regime is its
similarity to communism.
Crusade's readers
will find the texts of both the Message and the Communiqué published here in
their entirety.
This Message has been published in the following
newspapers:
United States: The Washington Post, The New York Times, Los
Angeles Times and Dallas Morning News;
Canada: The Globe and Mail (Toronto) and La Presse (Montreal);
Germany: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung;
Italy: Il Tempo (Rome)
and Il Giornale Nuovo (Milan);
England: The Observer (London);
Portugal: Comecio
do Porto (Oporto) and Diario de
Noticias (Lisbon);
Spain: La Vanguardia (Barcelona)
and Hoja del Lunes (Madrid, Bilbao,
Seville and Valencia);
Switzerland: La Tribune de Geneve;
Australia: The Australian (Sydney);
Brazil: Folha de Sâo Paulo;
Ultima Hora (Rio Janeiro), A Tarde (Salvador), Estado de Minas (Belo Horizonte), Jornal do Commercio (Recife), O
Estado do Parana (Curitiba), O
Popular (Goiania) and Jornal de Santa
Catarina (Blumenau);
Argentina: La Nacion (Buenos Aires);
Chile: El Mercurio (Santiago);
Uruguay. El Pais (Montevideo);
Bolivia: El Diario (La
Paz) and El Mundo (Santa Cruz);
Ecuador: El Tiempo and El Comercio (Quito) and El Universo (Guayaquil);
Columbia: El
Tiempo (Bogota), El Pais (Cali)
and El Colombiano (Medellin);
Venezuela: Diario
de Caracas, El Universal and El Mundo (Caracas), El Impulso (Barquisimeto) and Panorama
(Maracaibo);
Peru: El Comercio (Lima).
The Message
Plinio Correa de Oliveira
The Double Game of French Socialism:
Gradual in Strategy, Radical in Goal
What Does Self‑Managing Socialism
Mean for Communism:
A Barrier? Or a Bridgehead?
The FRENCH
REVOLUTION at the end of the eighteenth century, the revolutionary tremors of
1848, the Paris Commune of 1871, and the ideological and temperamental
explosion of the Sorbonne in 1968 were important milestones not only in the
history of France but in the annals of the West as a whole.
Indeed, these
movements, each in its own way and in its own specific proportions, gave
international expression to aspirations and doctrines some of which arose in
France and others elsewhere, but all of which had germinated in that country
with an altogether unique capacity to spread. The historical events thus
generated in France encountered and put in motion, in the spirits of the
various peoples of the West, aspirations, tendencies and ideologies whose rise
marked their psychological, cultural, political and socio‑economic
development in the centuries that followed.
Similar effects
are now being felt from the unbloody but no less profound "revolution,
" with its own chain of causes and effects, set in motion by the victory
of the Socialist Party in last year's May 10 elections and the consequent rise
of Mitterrand to the Presidency. The crises affecting (in different degrees)
communist and capitalist regimes are awakening all over the world tendencies
and movements that boast of being especially modern and whose adherents believe
that the clear, concise and victorious expression of everything, or nearly
everything, they think and desire is inherent in the self‑managing socialism
now ruling in Paris. Naturally, this sets them on the way to achieving, in
their own countries, similar successes to the profit and joy of international
communism, of which self‑managing socialism is but a trainbearer and
fellow traveler.
I. The center and
the right in the face of French Socialism: optimistic illusion, scope of the
defeat, and the crossroads
1. The Illusion
For the "man
in the street" in most countries of the West, the French Socialist Party
is, like so many others, the result of a mere combination of personal interests
and ambitions centered around a party program accepted with varying degrees of
conviction.
This is easy to
understand. World public opinion is informed about socialism mainly through
television, radio and the press. The image, partly implicit and partly
explicit, of the Socialist Party (SP) projected by the media is usually: a) an
electorate consisting mostly of blue collar workers imbued in different degrees
with the mentality of the party, but also including many middle class voters
whose conciliatory socio‑econornic tendencies converge at one point or
another with vague philosophical sympathies for a "philanthropic"
socialism; b) a party leadership consisting. at least on the upper and middle
levels, of professional politicians concerned above all with gaining power,
and consequently accustomed to flexibility and daring, as well as to prudence
and every compromise necessary for success.
This general view
of socialism is not very objective. It corresponds to the optimistic illusions
of many political opponents of the SP, illusions which used considerably to the
Party's recent victory, and which have now placed the French voters of the
center and the right at a critical pass.
2. A Look at the Real SP
When observed
without illusion or optimism, the SP manifests an unflagging and monolithic
ideological character. It systematically deduces its entire political,
economic and social program from the philosophical principles it accepts. And
the complete and inexorable application of this program to every individual
and every nation ‑ to France as well as to all mankind ‑ is the
final goal of the concrete action advocated by the Party. To what means does it
resort to attain this gigantic objective? It gradually manipulates culture,
science, man and nature by resorting to sophisticated tactics of
dissimulation. When the Party comes to power, all State agencies become
instruments for achieving this goal.
According to the
SP, while this must be done with the slow gradualism that circumstances almost
always demand, it must be accelerated as much as possible. During this whole
process, no word must be said, no step taken that does not have as its supreme
goal the final anarchy (in the etymological sense) also desired by communist
theoreticians.
This character of
the SP appears clearly in its official documents, in books by authors
representative
its thinking and also in writings for internal circulation
intended primarily for the training of its members.
Besides
circulating in the SP's ranks. this material is also disseminated among
leftists of different hues, intellectuals and politicians outside the left, and
so on, thus gradually increasing the number of party sympathizers. The man in
the street, however, knows little or nothing of this material. *1
3. The Great Factor in
the Rise of Socialism in France: Abstention Prevails in the Center and the
Right
Observers and
analysts of the recent presidential elections in France are certain that the
victorious leftist candidate was helped by votes from considerable sectors of
the center and the right. Since Mitterrand's
margin over his opponent was 1,065,956 votes (3.1% of the net valid
votes not counting blank and void ballots) in the second round of the
elections, the shift of centrist and rightist votes to the socialist candidate
was a considerable ‑ perhaps decisive ‑ factor in the tight
electoral race. One only need consider that a change of just half this number
would have meant a tie (See Chart I ‑ How 500,000 Votes Decided the
French Presidential Elections).
This shift is
shocking. Twenty years ago, every self‑respecting centrist and rightist
considered it treason to vote for a candidate of the SP, particularly one who
was part of an open coalition with the Communist Party (CP).2 In 1981 this
sense of consistency failed in many centrists and rightists of all ages, 3 who,
with a sometimes indolent or thoughtless tranquility, voted for Mitterrand. How
could this have happened?
But the failures
of the right and the center did not stop there . Their lukewarm election
campaigns lacked the dynamism and force de frappe indispensable for generating
popular support. These elements were not lacking in the socialist‑communist
campaigns.
This lack of
dynamism, naturally more noticeable in the parliamentary elections, had yet
another consequence: increased abstentions. In an election so decisive for the
future of France and the world, no less than 10,783,694 voters (29.6707o of the
electorate) abstained in the first round of voting. Significantly, the
abstentions outnumbered the votes for the SP (9,432,537).
The great loss in
the final runoff was suffered by the center‑right, whose total vote fell
from 14,316,724 in the first round of the presidential elections (April 26) to
10 , 892,968 in the first round of the parliamentary elections (June 14) ‑
a loss of 3,423,756 votes in this extremely brief period. Since between the two
elections the number of abstentions increased by 3,900,917 and the total
leftist vote increased only slightly (see Chart 11 ‑ Abstention and
Dispersion in the Center and the Right Favored the Left in the Recent
Parliamentary Elections in France) in all likelihood most of those abstaining
belonged to the center and the right. Many of them probably failed to vote
because of party infighting, or simply to spend election Sunday the way they
deemed most comfortable and entertaining.
An illusion held
by the non‑voters that a victory by an undoubtedly leftist, but easy‑going,
party would not have dramatic consequences accounted in large measure for
their critical non‑participation in the electoral process. Another
consequence of this optimistic view was that petty personal and regional
considerations, as well as the excitement generated by Mitterrand's victory,
led many centrists and rightists to cast their ballots for the SP. This helped
to bring about a shift similar to that which had taken place in the
presidential elections.
Everything leads
one to believe that the greatest number of abstentions and largest leakage of votes
must have occurred in the less rigidly organized parties, unless we were to
imagine a SP or a CP softening its discipline or trying to outdo its centrist
and rightist adversaries in abstentionist apathy.
So the SP won,
but its victory by no means indicates any increase in the socialist electorate,
as skillful leftist propaganda around the world would have it.
A comparison of
the 1978 and 1981 parliamentary elections shows that the leftist vote remained
practically unchanged: 14,169,440 in 1978 and 14,026,385 in 1981. (In both
cases these are first round figures since, due to the peculiarities of the
French electoral system, that is the only round in which comparisons are
possible.) But since the number of eligible voters increased by 1,138,675 in
this period while the total leftist vote stayed about the same. it is clear
that the left's share of the vote actually diminished. Thus, the left, which in
Left, which in 1978 had the support of 40.25% of the total electorate, now drew
only 38.59% ‑ far from a majority (see Chart III ‑Stagnation of the
Leftist Electorate in Parliamentary Elections from 1978 to 1981).
It is clear that
the recent victory of the SP was due less to a real strengthening of the left
than to lack of interest and some dispersion in the center and right. As we
will see later, this dispersion was partly due to the disorientation and
fragmentation of a considerable portion of the Catholic electorate.
If the socialist
victory were due to an increase of specifically leftist voters, it might be
very difficult to reverse. But since it was caused by disorientation in the
center and the right, the situation is not irreversible; the SP's victory of
1981 may be followed by its defeat in future elections.
May these
considerations be an encouragement to those who imagine that the advance of
socialism is definitive and who, instead of making use of their political
liberties to mount an orderly but fiery, unyielding and fruitful opposition,
run to shake hands and collaborate with the victors. Thus they give up the
fight to halt their country's slide down the ramp of socialism (which they
themselves call slippery) toward communism (which they recognize as fatal).
Their explanation: the socialist victory is definitive ‑ as though
anything were really definitive in today's unstable world.
4. The Crossroads: What Is to Be Done Now that the SP Has Won?
The fact is that
now the SP has the Presidency. Even without the support of the 44 deputies of
the Communist Party and 20 other deputies of small leftist parties, it has an
absolute majority in the Chamber of Deputies, with 265 out of 491 seats. To
reverse their losses, French centrists and rightists must select an effective
strategy for dealing with the SP. To do this they must make explicit to
themselves what the SP is. They must choose between the somewhat cosmetic image
of an opportunistic and easy‑going SP and the reality of an efficient SP
leading a gradual but unwavering march toward total collectivism.
The repercussions
of the victory of the SP and the establishment of the socialist regime in
France will increase the dynamism of socialist movements in other countries. In
addition, the announced intention of the present French government to interfere
abroad poses a similar question of strategy for the center and right in other
countries. The victory of French socialism is already giving leftist
politicians in Europe and the Americas the impression that their banner has
suddenly acquired a new power to attract multitudes throughout the West. The
imagine the electoral power socialism has shown in France to be much greater
than it really is, and sparks of socialist enthusiasm are beginning to flare up
in various nations. If the easy‑going image of the SP is real, this
situation is not a major threat. If, however, French socialism aims at
precisely the same ultimate goals as communism, then it is necessary to
enlighten and alert public opinion about it; for no one knows how far a leftist
tendency in public opinion may go when manipulated by the revolutionary psychological
warfare that Moscow wages so successfully all over the world.
5. Choosing a Strategy: Aspects of French Socialism
Doubtless, the
more objective and true‑to‑life an image the public now forms of
the SP, the faster and more appropriate its choice of strategy will be. While
it is impossible to exhaust such a vast matter in this general summary, it
seems timely to expose several characteristic features of the doctrine and
tactics of the French SP so as to sweep away the optimistic illusions that may
impede and slacken the fight against this grave danger.
II. Doctrine and
Strategy in the Socialist Program for France
1. "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity " in the Socialist Program
Every motto by
nature should be substantial and precise.
This is not so
with the trilogy, "Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité of the French Revolution.
Some of the many interpretations and applications which it has occasioned have
left in history marks of impiety, madness and blood that will never be erased.
4
One of the trilogy's
more radical interpretations can be enunciated as follows: Justice demands
that there be absolute equality among men. Equality alone, by suppressing all
authority, completely attains liberty and fraternity. Liberty can have only one
limit, namely, whatever is indispensable for preventing more gifted men from
setting up for their own benefit any superiority of command, prestige or
possessions. True fraternity characterizes the relations among entirely free
and equal men.
Inspired by
interpretations of the famous trilogy, the successive revolutionary leaders
from 1789 to 1794 came closer and closer to this radical enunciation. The
French Revolution, so ostentatiously moderate in its beginnings, suffered
clearly communist spasms during its last agony. As though repeating this
revolutionary process in slow motion, the democratic world took ‑ or is
completing the process of taking ‑ the political leveling of classes to
its ultimate consequences, though it still preserves markedly hierarchical
aspects in its culture and socio‑economic regime.
One can debate
which events, places and dates marked the beginning, in the nineteenth century,
of the principal movements for cultural and socio‑economic leveling. But
the fact is that by the middle of the century these movements had spread to
many countries and had become solidly established in several, even to the
extent of inspiring events such as the Revolution of 1848 in France and the
Paris Commune of 1871. Furthermore, in our century they were clearly present
among the profound causes of the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the consequent
propagation of communist regimes in countries behind and beyond the Iron and
Bamboo Curtains.5 This, not to mention all the communist revolutions and
agitation which have shaken various parts of the world, including the
explosion of the Sorbonne in May 1968.
The SP's platform
in the latest elections is presented explicitly and even proudly as part of
this general movement. It is the Projet
Socialiste pour la France des annees 80 ("Socialist Program for the
France of the 80's," which we will henceforth refer to as the "Program."
cf. footnote 1).6 Upon reading it one clearly verifies that its ultimate goal
is complete equality, from which full liberty and fraternity will supposedly
rise.7 According to this program, the main purpose of power is to prevent
liberty from producing inequalities.8 True, it calls the total suppression of
authority utopia. But it implies that this utopia is not a void beyond which
one plunges into the chaos of anarchism. On the contrary, it views it as a
horizon toward which one must ever reach, using every means to come as close as
possible to the unattainable, that is, the suppression of an evil deemed
necessary but so unpleasant: authority.9
2. The SP, the Center and the Right
The global
perspective presented in the last paragraph is the key to understanding the
whole Program.10
The Program
accepts and adopts in its entirety the radically egalitarian political heritage
that was built up in France starting in 1789. It considers useful the various
laws hitherto applied to reduce socio‑economic inequalities. It further
intends to resolutely move today's France toward the most radical application
of the controversial trilogy.11
The difference
between the SP on one hand, and the center and right on the other is that the
latter two ‑ for the most part ‑ accept the trilogy, but not with
the radical interpretation of the SP. Thus, instead of expressing the desire to
reach the ultimate egalitarian goal, they say or imply that they would like to
stop at some undefined distance from it.12
3. The SP and Communism ‑The Strategy of Gradualism
Is there a clear
difference between the strategy of the SP and that of communism for reaching
the ultimate goal of total equality? Yes: a) The SP fears that immediate
implementation of a regime of total equality would stir up undesirable
reactions; b) For this reason, which is purely a question of circumstances,
opportunism and strategy, the SP holds that communist principles must be
applied gradually, and in stages so
gauged as to avoid excessive shocks.13
A certain initial
moderation of the French socialists in the transition to total equality is not
the result of kindness, compassion or indulgence for a defeated adversary, but
rather the consequence of a strictly utilitarian calculation made long before
their victory.
However, it
should be emphasized that in its radical egalitarianism the French SP draws on
the socio‑economic experience ‑ which we know to be harsh and disappointing
‑ of all the countries in which communism is or has been put into
practice. Thus, to a great extent the SP avoids the nationalization so
characteristic of old‑fashioned communism and aims to establish, in all
or nearly all enterprises that have hitherto been private, another form of
democratic and radical egalitarianism: self‑management.14
4. Corporate Self‑Management: a Socio‑Economic Revolution
Self‑management
is the implementation of the principles and form of government of the Revolution
of 1789 in business enterprises. 1 5
The whole Program
appears to find in employer‑employee relations a residual image of the
relations between the king and the people. It aims to "dethrone" the
"king," eliminate his sovereignty in the business enterprise, and
transfer all power to the "plebeians," that is, the employees, and
particularly to the manual laborers. The Revolution has employed various means
to prevent the resurgence of different types of aristocracy in the political
sphere. Similarly, the Program endeavors to prevent corporate managers and
technicians from surviving as an aristocracy in "republicanized"
firms. In "large" corporations the individual proprietor disappears
immediately. The traditional concept of a business is itself broadened. Not
only do those employed by a particular concern share real rights over the
company and what it produces, but those rights extend, via representative
organizations, to consumers, purveyors, and so on. In fact, these rights
belong to society as a whole, represented by delegates of organizations or
groups more closely related to the enterprise (see Chart 1V, ‑The Ideal
Self‑Managing Enterprise Proposed by the Socialists).
Like a democratic
republic, each company ultimately will be ruled by a voting majority of its
workers. The company will hold assemblies to keep the workers informed about
all of its business. "Representatives" or "deputies" will
be elected to form a directorate (something of a soviet). The employee‑
managers will be mere executors of the directorate's will.
This system is
defined as self‑managing and affirmed as the logical socioeconomic
consequence of the people's political sovereignty. According to this notion, a
republic is a politically self-managing nation. A self‑managing regime
entails the "republicanization" of the socio‑economic
structure.16 In other words, it is the establishment of a corporate regime in
which the orientation given by specialists and technicians is subject to
assemblies and organizations made up mostly of people with less intellectual
development.
5. Self‑Management Must Encompass Society and Man as a Whole
This
"republicanization" must include not only corporations and businesses
but the whole social structure as well. Indeed, according to the Program the
full implementation of self‑management presupposes a profound
transformation in man and the application of the most radical interpretation of
the trilogy Liberty, Equality, Fraternity in all fields of activity comprised
in society, including corporations, the family, culture, teaching, and even
leisure itself. 17
6. Why Corporate
Reform Requires a Reform of Man
When it comes to
reforming mankind, the Program runs into exactly the same difficulties
encountered by statist communism.
Although they may
have lent themselves to abuse, the economic principles in force in the West
emanate from human nature itself. In brief, the common characteristic of these
principles is the affirmation of the legitimacy of private property, initiative
and profit.
The socialists,
however, propose to establish another economic system directed toward other
ends and stimulated by other incentives (cf. Program, p. 173). What they call
profit only for some must be gradually replaced by the criteria of social
utility, determined by the sovereign will of the people. In other words the
socialists, like the communists, hold that the individual exists for society
and should produce, not for his own good, but directly for the good of the
community to which he belongs.
Under this system,
the best incentive for work disappears, production necessarily drops, and
indolence and misery prevail in all of society.
Every man seeks,
both by the light of reason and by a continuous, powerful and fruitful
instinctive movement, to provide first for his personal needs and those of his
family. When self‑preservation is at stake, the human intelligence fights
more easily against its limitations and grows in both sharpness and agility The
will overcomes laziness more easily and confronts obstacles and struggles with
greater vigor. In short, the worker attains a level of productivity
quantitatively and qualitatively commensurate with the real necessities and
decorum of society. From this initial impulse imbued with legitimate love of
himself and his own, a man's love of his neighbor extends like concentric waves
that should ultimately encompass society as a whole. In this way, far from
benefiting only his small family group, his activity assumes a scope
proportional to society.
Socialism
instills discouragement in every worker by abolishing this powerful and natural
initial incentive to work and by replacing it with an increasingly egalitarian
wage system that fails to reward the more capable proportionately.
Thus, the whole
impulse of a nation's work force drops and becomes weak and insufficient, as so
obviously happens in Russia and its satellite countries. This also happens,
though perhaps less obviously, in Yugoslavia. And analogously this is what is
going to happen in self-managing France. 18
Here we stress
the strength of incentive provided by inequality and the depressive effect of
both general equal and microscopic inequalities.
The wage ceiling
in an egalitarian society will inevitably be equal for all, or only slightly
unequal, as can be verified by comparing wage ceilings in communist countries
with those in the West.
By the very
nature of things work capacity varies
immensely from man to man. The overall productivity of a nation presupposes the
full stimulation of all capacities, especially those of the extremely capable.
The legitimate ambitions of the
extremely capable can be almost unlimited in the socio‑economic regime of
the West. Once set in motion, they successfully stimulate the whole hierarchy
of necessarily lesser capacities which also have before them proportionate
possibilities of success. Once the rise of the very capable or the capable is
limited, their productive drive decreases. Furthermore, when the very capable
work below capacity, the capable also become discouraged, and the overall
production level drops.
Thus,
egalitarianism necessarily leads to a production inferior to the sum of a
country's work capacities. The more radical the egalitarianism, the lower the
level of productivity.
Now, it seems
that the ceiling allowed by the Program responds only to the modest aspirations
of the average.
7. The Self‑Managing Society and the Family
The Program's
authors apparently imagine that the family
the immediate object of man's love and the intermediate step between him
and society dampens his love for the
latter instead of multiplying it. Therefore, without banning the family (which
would of course be shocking and not exactly gradual), the Program declares in a
veiled way that it is unnecessary to the common good and places it on the same
level as free love and homosexual unions.19 The Program separates the
procreative function intrinsic to the family from its natural end and considers
it a mere fulfillment of the individual. The sterility of this function is
permitted and facilitated in every possible way. 20 Equality between men and
women must be as complete as possible both in their access to the most diverse
professions and in their performance of domestic tasks.21
Under self‑managing socialism the family will
become unstable and sterile, lose its identity, and be confounded with any
other union. One of the walls supporting every individual's personality will
thus crumble. As we will see later, the Program also aims to deliver the entire
educational mission so naturally proper to the family to a preferably
monopolistic, secularist and socialist school system, and that from the child's
first years.
So, all alone,
cut off from the family (which is reduced in fact to a mere couple), man is
left with only one environment, the self‑managing enterprise, which is
thus given the most favorable conditions to absorb him entirely, quite in the
socialist style.
8. Leisure
To complete this
absorption, a SP as totalitarian on behalf of the self‑managing society
as communism is on behalf of the Party, likewise strives to organize and
utilize human leisure.
In fact, the
Program also covers leisure which, if unregulated, would be the last haven of
human freedom in a self‑managing world; for man finds in leisure singular
possibilities to know and express himself, and to establish relationships and
friendships.
Gradualistic as
always, the SP states that it recognizes man's right to leisure. The average
reader becomes favorably impressed and does not realize that the SP ‑
fundamentally organizing and demanding as far as work is concerned ‑professes
a new concept of leisure which eliminates the distinction between leisure and
work, making both subject to simultaneous planning. The SP disapproves of
individual and personalizing leisure. It desires collective leisure and plans
leisure even inside people's own homes in order to better manipulate and
prepare them for the rough and sterile drudgery of self‑managing life. 22
9. Control of Lifestyles
In a self‑managing
society the company organizes work‑leisure in a totalitarian way. Who
will organize leisure‑work? In this field the establishment of strict
regulatory organizations becomes necessary precisely because the SP aims to
weaken and finally destroy the family, the preeminent natural ambience for true
leisure. To this end the SP encourages the creation of neighborhood
organizations and the like which are apparently expected to play a decisive
role in the distribution of dwellings and the non‑segregative
reassignment of people to existing or planned neighborhoods. Moreover, it will
even take care of the interior arrangement of the homes.
Furthermore,
company‑related organizations will favor the socialist plan by absorbing
the moments, the remnants of energy, the very breath of life not taken up by the
company's activities. The victim of this whole process is the individual,
regimented and fitted into the self‑managing communities and entirely
absorbed by the company‑related organizations combination.23
The outline of
the argumentation with which the SP tries to justify this gigantic absorption
is always the same: a) the proclamation of an individual right; b) the
affirmation of a social function of this
right; c) rigid planning of the exercise of this right
using the pretext that it must fulfill this social function; d) the consequent
absorption of this right by the planning authority.
10. Education
We turn now to
the formation of children and youth.
Self‑managing
education, according to the Program, begins no later than two years of age,
when it is most desirable that the child be handed over to a preprimary or
nursery school. But complete preparations must be made to receive those
children whose mothers choose to deliver them to socialist education at any
age, even when newborn.
How well all of this
fits in with the planned sterility of the self‑managing family! 24
Some schools may
still remain in private hands for a period of "gradual" transition.
But even they will be tied to the State educational machinery, which will
encompass all levels, from preprimary through university and postgraduate
school. Principals, teachers and other staff members in public or private
schools will have roles very similar, though not identical, to those of managers
and technicians in self‑managing companies. According to the principle of
"democratic planning," fathers and mothers and other interested
persons will likewise participate in the process of education. The
"commoners" of the school, that is, the students, will have ‑to
all imaginable degrees, and even to an unimaginable degree ‑ rights
analogous to those of the workers in the self-managing company.25
But that is not
all. In the school as well as in the family, child or adolescent
"plebeians" will be motivated and encouraged to wage a systematic
class struggle against educational and domestic authorities, and will hold
their own assemblies, tribunals, appellate courts and so on.26
In nationalized
or self‑managing schools, the curriculum, the whole teaching staff, and
the secularist and socialist formation of the intellect will be subject to the
State.27
The Program does
not make entirely clear which schools will be allowed to go on surviving ‑
or dying ‑ in private hands to the degree that the gradualist strategy
determines. Nevertheless, it is not hard to conjecture that they will manage to
evade the State's influence and power only to a small and uncertain degree, if
at all.28
Isn't this
educational network totalitarian? The Program tries to evade this embarrassing
question by citing an education plan to be prepared democratically so that
each and every one may be able to express his opinion. Supposedly, this plan
would thus represent the will of all.
On the basis of
this sophistry, the socialists claim that the unified system of education is
not a monopoly. Even though this system is unified, they contend that everyone
is invited to participate in it. So how can anyone brand it a monopoly?
One sees very
well that the Program achieves "Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité" quite
in its own way. At the moment of the collective decision, everyone is equal
because the power of decision belongs to the majority, which decides all educational
matters. It is for the minority to obey. When, then, is individual liberty
achieved? At the very moment of the voting, because every one is free to argue
and to vote as he likes. But only at that moment ...
11. The Right of Property in the Self‑Managing Regime
Everything
expounded up until now clarifies the global socialist meaning (and not merely
the application to business, as many imagine) of the self‑managing
regime. It also brings out the gradualism of the SP's strategy.
Now let us
analyze the self‑managing enterprise in more detail.
A reader
conversant with today's businesses may imagine that the application of the standards
of political democracy to the economic and social life of self-managing
businesses is more rhetorical than real. This is an illusion.
As mentioned
previously, the sovereign power deciding all important matters in the self‑managing
enterprise is really the workers' assembly. This assembly will determine the
organization of governing bodies and elect their members (an important detail:
the Program does not speak of a secret ballot). At meetings, the governing
bodies will apparently supply information and provide the opportunity for
discussion, both of which will guide the voters in their choices. Their idea,
it seems, is that each workers' assembly will try to reenact somehow the direct
democracy of the ancient Greek cities.
Naturally, in
certain matters these deliberations should be held in conjunction with
consumers or clients and representatives of the community (see Chart IV The
Ideal Self‑Managing Enterprise Proposed by the Socialists).
Will private
property survive in the regime contemplated in the Program? Beware. From the
Program's language one sees that if you question a French Socialist his answers
may be very reassuring ... and utterly empty.
In current
language, state property is distinct from private property?29 Therefore, from
a certain standpoint the self-managing enterprise can be considered private,
for its relationship to the State is distinct from that of a nationalized enterprise.
The Program calls
the self‑managing enterprise "socialized," that is, not
belonging to the State (therefore private), but not belonging to any individual
either, for in a general way the owner's attributes will be transferred to the
workers' assembly.
Will, then,
private property survive under the socialist regime? As far as large
enterprises are concerned, for a very short time, the Program answers. Medium
and small‑sized enterprises will continue somewhat longer, depending on
the circumstances.30
What determines
what a small, medium, and large business enterprise is? We have notions about
this matter based on common sense and in accordance with mental habits formed
in the present order of things. But the new society does not fit these mental
habits; it will generate other habits. So, the "size" of an
enterprise will be determined by the law, and the State will be able to
"gradually" pare down the amount of property a person may own.31
Within a few years enterprises now considered medium‑sized will have to
bear the severe taxation now imposed on large enterprises, and enterprises now
considered small will be deemed medium‑sized. As a result, the number of
small private properties (now favored in the fiscal plan) will be ever more
limited.
Of course,
considered in the overall context of the Program, private property appears
contradictory even when reduced to meager proportions, for it maintains its
individual character amidst a wholly socialized system. Hence it follows that
the end result of socialist gradualism will be the complete extinction of all
private property.32
Indeed, the
Program's gradualist strategy rejects the immediate extinction of all private
properties but provides for stages leading to their gradual extinction.
According to the Program. the self-managing regime will temporarily permit
small, medium‑sized and even large properties, but, to say the least, the
latter two will be moribund categories. Who can say, considering the logic of
its iron‑fisted egalitarianism, that the self-managing State does not
intend to eliminate small properties after it has done away with medium‑sized
and large ones?
Furthermore, how
can the worker in a self‑managing regime rise to proprietorship by
accumulating only what remains of his earnings after providing for his
subsistence? How many years of work will that take? And all this to enjoy his
property for only a few years? Is he going to leave it to the offspring of one
of his unions, a child handed over in earliest infancy to the State which alone
molded his mentality and made him a stranger to his own parents, who probably
will also be strangers to each other since their union was unstable? These
questions make it quite clear how property, even though it be small, is really
extraneous to the self‑managing world, where it survives only as long as
gradualistic tactics require.23
12. Rural Property in the Socialist Program
The Program is
apparent much more in its goals than in the stages it allows or tolerates out
of strategic necessity.
In this
perspective, how does rural property ‑ that is, the small family‑sized
property ‑ stand in a society molded by the SP? This question presupposes
the previous elimination of large and medium‑sized properties.
Both the Program
and the Declaration of the Government's General Policy made by Prime Minister
Pierre Mauroy are vague and ambiguous on this point.
The Program
proposes, measures that at first seem to be inspired by common sense and a
desire to protect the farmer: increased productivity, organized markets,
restoration of the farmer's status and the guarantee of his land. The sole
exception is a price‑protection system for agricultural products which
will almost certainly benefit only the small producers. Let the other
producers, tolerated out of gradualism, survive as they can, or wither.
What do the
rights of the small landowner amount to? The principal element of the
socialist proposition, is the creation of land offices which, among other
things, will organize the markets and be "in charge of ensuring a better
distribution and utilization of the soil."
Furthermore,
these land offices will be elements of a collective self‑management of
all arable land by both small landowners and consumers. This would continuously
subject the small property to divisions, changes in size, or amalgamations in
a situation of permanent land reform under dictatorially regulated prices for
agricultural products.34
***
When one
considers what the Program as a whole lays down for the self-managing society,
some questions come to mind: What is the essence of its inspiration? Is it
really liberal? What does it say about religion? This is what we will see now.
III. The
doctrinal core of the Socialist Program: secularism ‑ "liberté,
egalité, fraternité"
1. The Rights of Man in the Self‑Managing Society: to Become
Informed, Dialogue and Vote
We have already
seen that the SP plans to educate the citizen from the cradle to the grave,
molding his soul at work and leisure, in culture and art, and influencing even
the arrangement of his own home. How will this affect individual freedom?
At this point
what was said in the beginning about the relationship between and liberty and
equality in the trilogy of the French revolution is confirmed. Indeed, if
liberty means having nothing and no one above oneself, and consequently doing
anything one wishes ‑ for this is the radical and anarchical sense of the
term ‑ the self‑managing citizen is only apparently free. But at no
moment of his life will he be really free.
The self‑managing
citizen will find the realm of his purely individual choices, in which he
manifests the unique and unmistakable character of his personality, ever more
restricted. Both at work and at leisure he will be free to become informed, to
dialogue and to vote. But decisions will normally be made by the community. His
freedom will be limited to saying what he wishes in public debates and to
voting as he likes. As a voter, he is free to choose names and cast his ballot
in the decision‑making assemblies. As an individual, he is pushed by the
Program to the very limits of nonbeing.35 This is not done directly by the
State, but rather by a social fabric or mechanism comprising business and non-business
self‑managing groups.
The real power
structure in the self-managing society starts out from the assemblies, moves up
through the committees and other agencies of society until it finally reaches
the State ‑ that is, until self‑management heads for the final
dissolution of the State and the distribution of its powers to small,
autonomous communities.36 The worker could envision the power structure in the
shape of a diamond. At one end is his own company, in which he is a speaking
and voting molecule. At the opposite end is the State. But the State would be
at the top of the diamond and the workers' assembly at the bottom. We are not
suggesting here that self-management, once established, would be a mere façade
behind which the State would manipulate everything. That could happen. But we
are not discussing the deformations that a self‑managed society could
suffer once established. We are only considering what the genuine socialist
mirage would be if applied in its entirety.
So, it would be
consistent with the Program to suppose that:
a) Once the self‑managing
society is established, the powers of the State will
"gradualistically" wither;
b) But in
establishing it by law, the State is omnipotent. As long as the law serves as
the foundation and rule of that society, it will live by virtue of the
omnipotence of that act which organized and established it. And at least as
long as the State exists, it may at any time abrogate or expand this act as it
wishes;
c) In the
societies of the West, the State does not exercise such ample powers. Countries
in both East and West have generally adopted the principle of the sovereignty
of universal suffrage. But in the West this sovereignty is self restrained by
the recognition of greater or lesser individual liberties. In the East the
principle of government by the people has no practical value, and it is clear
that it will have none in the self‑managing society, where the liberty
of the individual is restricted to speaking and voting in the assemblies.
The State decides
everything in a self-managing society. It annihilates the family and
supplants it. It allots to the self‑managing molecules the tatters of
rights that will remain for them in society. It has unlimited power to legislate
on all self‑managing undertakings, whether they be businesses, schools,
or what have you. It teaches. It forms. It levels. It fills one's leisure time.
In short, it installs itself in the mind of the individual. All that is left to
him is his condition as a robot whose only signs of life are becoming informed,
dialoging, and voting. This trilogy would be the concrete implementation of the
other: "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity."
In a word, the
self‑managing society has its own morality and its own philosophy,37
which the robotized worker will inhale even in the air he breathes.
2. Religion and religions in the Program
The self‑managing
society does not confine itself to eliminating or restricting the individual's
liberties but, as we have seen, it even seeks to form his very conscience.
These
considerations naturally prompt one to ascertain to what extent the Program
mutilates the rights of Religion:
a) One could say
that every word, every letter of the Program is laicist. There is no thought of
God in it. For it, the source of all rights is not God but man, society. The
Program entirely ignores the next life, Revelation, and the Church as the
Mystical Body of Christ."
b) Religion, or
rather, religions ‑ as far as the Program is concerned, since it does not
recognize the supernatural character of any of them ‑ are merely social
realities which have always existed and still exist. They are realities extrinsic
to the self‑managing society that clash head‑on with its laicism.
This leads one to foresee that the self-managing society, which tends to
destroy everything extrinsic and contradictory to it, will work to extinguish
religions "gradualistically." True, the Program guarantees freedom
of worship. But this freedom is restricted to a bare minimum in a world opposed
to the Church in everything that society conceives and implements regarding the
economy, social organization, political totalitarianism, perpetuation of the
human species, the family, and even man himself.39 The Program implies such a
global vision of society that it necessarily pre supposes ‑ although not
explicitly ‑ a global vision of the Universe. For the Universe is, in a
certain way, the context of society. A global, laicist and self‑sufficient
society corresponds to an analogously global, laicist and self‑sufficient
universe.
In turn, a vision
of the Universe implies either an affirmation or a denial of God, a denial
perfectly real even though expressed by silence.4O The Program is therefore "a-theist," without God, atheist.
It is licit to ask whether or not the Program's
silence about God is merely a "gradualist" stage leading to some kind
of a plausibly evolutionist pantheism.
This reference to
a possible pantheism is made because the Program attributes a kind of
redemptive function to society as a whole. There the individual is rescued from
the shipwreck into which his very condition as an individual puts him. It is
the path to the solution of all problems.4l
The reference to
evolutionism is, in turn, related to the arbitrary, anti‑natural and
artificial character of socialist reformism, and even more closely related to
the fundamental relativism that it holds.42
On the basis of very obscure philosophical concepts with whose influence
it is nevertheless thoroughly permeated, the Program denies most fundamental
principles of the natural order (such as the distinction between the mission of
men and women, the family, marital authority, patria potestas, as well as the
principle of authority at all levels and in all fields, private property and
the right of inheritance). The Program, warring against the work of the
Creator, aims at reconstructing a human society diametrically opposed to the
God-given nature of man.
All of this
presupposes that nature, which the SP holds to be indefinitely malleable, can
be molded by man as he wishes. This is suggestive of evolutionism.
3. The Attitude of the French Episcopate Toward the SP
In view of all
this, we as Catholics cannot fail to express our astonishment ‑ an
astonishment that will be shared by all nations until the end of time once the
present confusion in people's minds is dispelled ‑ that the French
Bishops' Conference uttered not a single word of warning about the country's
peril in elections capable of bringing the mentors and leaders of the SP to
power and threatening the Church and the still living remnants of Christendom.
Indeed, in the two statements that it released (February 10 and June 1, 1981),
the Standing Committee of the French Episcopate expressed its neutrality
toward all candidates, affirmed that it did not "wish to influence the
personal decisions" of French Catholics, and made an appeal for the
electoral campaign to take place in a climate of 'respect' for men and groups,
including adversaries" (Statement of February 10, 1981). 43
In their
statement of June 1, entitled "On the Occasion of the Parliamentary
Elections," the bishops pointed out that "it is proper to a
democratic society" to choose between "opposing" projects and programs.
Thus, the Catholic Church was presenting "her own reflections on the near
future of our society ... not to support a group or to oppose anyone, but to
draw attention tot he essential values of the personal and communitarian life
of men." In so doing, the bishops wanted to contribute "to the
dignity and generosity of the debate."44
This attitude of
the bishops is consistent with the document "For a Christian Practice of
Politics,'' which they approved almost unanimously in Lourdes in 1972 (cf.
"Politique, Eglise et Foi" in Le Centurion, Lourdes, 1972, pp. 75‑110).
In this document the prelates state that "French Catholics today can be
found through the whole fan of the political chessboard [sic]" (op. cit.,
p. 80). That is to say, in the SP and CP as well. In face of this monumental
fact, the bishops merely affirm the legitimacy of pluralism and comment with
obvious sympathy on the commitment of "numerous Christians" to the
"collective movement of liberation" animated by Marxist inspired
class struggle, which they do not condemn clearly.45
In view of these
precedents, the fact ‑ astonishing in itself ‑ that for ten years
now socialist doctrine has been penetrating with impunity into the fold
entrusted by the Holy Ghost to the zeal and vigilance of the French Shepherds,
is no longer a matter of great surprise. Now, the votes of Catholics who have
strayed into the ranks of the socialist electorate contributed considerably to
the victory of self‑management in the recent election.46
Considering these
facts ‑ and there are so many more in today's world ‑ one better
understands how true it is that the Holy Church finds Herself. is Paul VI
noted, in a mysterious process of "self-destruction" (Allocution of
12/7/68) and penetrated by the smoke of Satan" (Allocution of 6/29/72).
IV. Is this
interference in France's internal affairs?
The elections of
a chief of state and representatives to the Chamber of Deputies are internal
affairs of each country. Freedom to do this without foreign interference is a
fundamental element of its sovereignty. So, an objection could be raised: How
can thirteen associations, twelve of them from countries other than France,
judge that they should publish throughout the West a commentary whose essential
theme is the recent French elections with the object of fostering the choice
of a strategy in view of their outcome?
This objection is
conceivable only in someone unaware of the full scope of the Socialist Program,
of the nature of the French SP and of the inevitable and extensive repercussion
of the socialist victory in the political and cultural life of the various
nations of the West.
The Program
actually states that one of its goals is interference in the internal politics,
and more particularly in the class warfare, of other countries. Therefore,
since the SP has risen to power, we must fear that it will use the resources of
the French State and France's international influence to "achieve this
goal.47 Thus, for the twelve foreign associations to take a position alongside
the esteemed and promising French TFP on the goals and action of the SP in a
document published in France and in their respective countries, is not to
interfere in exclusively internal affairs of another country but rather to take
precautionary action to safeguard the future of their own countries. By
publishing this pronouncement, the TFPs and similar associations of the
United States, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador,
Portugal, Spain, Uruguay and Venezuela, in conjunction with the TFP of France,
are doing nothing more than exercising their legitimate right of self defense.
It is therefore
appropriate for associations from twelve Western countries to address their
fellow‑countrymen, alerting them to the problems that can be expected
from the rise of the French Socialist Party. It is also proper for these
associations, with the support of their French brothers‑in‑ideal,
to make the French people aware of the internal complications into which F I
Program's predominantly ideologico
imperialistic approach to international politics may
entangle them.
Providence has
conferred on France such a position among the nations of the West that issues
and debates arising there are, more often than not, related to universal
problems. The French genius, agile in coming to grips with problems, lucid in
thinking, brilliant in expression, has shown in numerous historical junctures
that it knows how to discuss these issues on a level that relates them to the
universal thoughts of the human mind. Thus, in dealing with France's current
situation, the societies signing this Message clearly realize that many issues
presently in varying stages of fermentation in their own countries may be
hastened, or even thrust, to a critical point as a consequence of the worldwide
repercussion of what may happen in France in the coming months (cf. Chap. 1,
no. 4). This is one more reason to affirm that self‑managing socialism
represents a grave threat not only to France but also to the whole world.
The glorious future
of France according to Saint Pius X
We close these
considerations beseeching Our Lady, the Mediatrix of All Graces, to confirm
with events the words of prophetic resonance of the holy and unsurpassable
Pontiff Saint Pius X concerning France: "A day will come, and we hope it
is not far off, when France, like Saul on the road to Damascus, will be
enveloped in a celestial light and hear a voice that repeats to her: 'My
daughter, why dost thou persecute me?' And to her response, 'Who art thou,
Lord' the voice will reply: 'I am Jesus, whom thou persecutest. It is hard to
thee to kick against the goad, because in thine obstinacy thou destroyest
thyself.' And she, trembling and filled with wonder, will say; 'Lord, what
wouldst thou have me do?' And He: 'Arise, wash away the stains that have
disfigured thee, awaken in thy breast the dormant sentiments and the pact of
our alliance and go, first‑born daughter of the Church, predestined
nation, vessel of election, go as in the past, bear my name before all the peoples
and the kings of the earth " (Consistorial Allocution Vi ringrazio, of
November 29, 1911, in Acta Apostolicae Sedis, Typis Poliglottis Vaticanis,
Rome, 1911, p. 657).
"In the end
my Immaculate Heart will triumph, "Our Lady promised at Fatima. This is
what we ask Her for France and for the world.
On the 64th
anniversary of the last apparition of Our Lady at Fatima,
Sao Paulo, October 13, 1981
American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family
and Property
Association Française pour la Défense de la Tradition,
Famille et Propriété
Centro Cultural Reconquista (Portugal)
Sociedad Argentina de Defensa de la Tradicion, Familia
y Propiedad
Sociedade Brasileira de Defesa da Tradiçao, Familia e
Propriedade
Sociedad Chilena de Defensa de la Tradicion, Familia y
Propiedad
Sociedad Colombiana de Defensa de la Tradicion,
Familia y Propiedad
Sociedad Ecuatoriana de Defensa de la Tradicion,
Familia y Propiedad
Sociedad Uruguaya de Defensa de la Tradicion, Familia
y Propiedad
Sociedad Venezolana de Defensa de la Tradicion,
Familia y Propiedad
Young Canadians for a Christian Civilization
Jovenes Bolivianos pro Civilizacion Cristiana
Sociedad Cultural Covadonga ‑ TFP (Spain)
FOOTNOTES
1 . This
characterization of the SP is thoroughly documented.
The French
Socialist Party as it is today arose from the Congress of Epinay in 1971. Since
then the new political organization has
been publishing diverse official documents having to do with ideology and
programs. Such publications are made especially, during its national
congresses (held every two years) and election campaigns. To these are added a
significant number of internal publications intended for the formation of its
members or adherents, or for making known the conclusions of the Party's
several meetings and seminars.
Since it is
impossible to cite the abundance of material, thus produced, we shall give
preference in our citations to three absolutely fundamental documents of the
SP:
a)The Projet socialistc por la France de annees 80
("Socialist Program for the France of the 80's) (Club socialiste du
Livre. Paris, May, 1981, 380 pages) presents the ambitions of French socialists
for the next ten years. The Program redefines socialist priorities and
announces beforehand the principal undertakings for which the SP s action will
be known to the French people. It should be noted that it does not abrogate the
previous texts and programs of the Party (which will be referred to below).
Rather, "it
prolongs them to broaden at the same time their field of action and their scope"
(p. 7).
In the Party's
national convention held in Alfortville on January 13, 1980, the Program was
approved by 96% of the votes. The Manifesto of Créteil, of January 24, 1981,
as well as the 110 Propositions pour la France, which appeared along with it,
took their inspiration from the Program. On the basis of these two documents,
unanimously approved in the Congress of Créteil, the Socialist Party launched
Mitterrand's presidential campaign. (cf. Le
Poing et la Rose, no. 91, February 1981).
b) In 1972, the
SP and the CP started negotiations to establish a binding agreement for a
common policy for their government. This gave rise to the Programme comun de gouvernement de la gauche ("Common Program
of Government of the Left"), which was valid for five years. In 1977,
since the two parties had not reached an understanding for the renewal of the
agreement, the SP updated this Common Program on its own. Early in 1978, during
the election campaign, the SP published the updated program in order to give
public opinion "the possibility of
seeing for themselves" what the Party would do if it were to win the
elections, as well as to permit "every
one to follow its application" (Le
Programne comun de gouvernement de la gauche ‑ Propositionis socialistes
pour l'actualisation ["Common Program of Government of the Left ‑
Socialist Proposals for Updating"], Flammarion, Paris, 1978, 128 pages,
with a preface by FRANÇOIS MITTERRAND, p. 3).
c)Finally, the Quinze théses sur l'autogestion (Fifteen
Theses on Self-Management), adopted by the national Convention of the
Socialist Party on June 21 and 22. 1975, (cf. Le Poing et la Rose, supplement to no. 45., November 15, 1975. 32
pages) are of particular interest since in them the French socialists present
the perspective of a self-managing society as "the SP's own contribution, for the moment on the theoretical plane, to
the history of the workers' movement" (Documentation Socialiste, Club Socialiste du Livre, supplement to
no. 2, no date, pages 42‑43) and claim to have given a new content to the
idea of self‑management (idem, no. 5, no date,). 58).
With these
documents. the SP considered that it was giving the ordinary reader a
sufficiently broad set of notions to gain his rational support and vote.
Therefore they make up, so to speak, the SP's self‑portrait, a portrait
whose fidelity cannot be questioned since one must presume that a movement
that has just won such an adroit strategic victory is able to define itself.
Furthermore, the socialists definitely assume responsibility for what they
publish. One reads in the Program: "We
are the only ones to take the risk of expounding our tenets in black and white,
and to do so in print…we show ourselves just as we are." (p. 11).
Once in office,
Socialist Prime Minister Pierre Mauroy presented a Déclaration de ploitique généraldu Gounvernement ("Declaration
of the Government's General Policy") in the session of the National
Assembly of July 8th. In this Declaration and in the parliamentary debate that
followed, the Prime Minister confirmed the general line of the Program, thereby
also making important contributions, to the definition of the SP from the
standpoint of ideology and program (cf. Journal
Officiel, "Débats Parlementaires," 7/9/81 and 7/10/81).
Furthermore, the Prime Minister expressly affirmed on that occasion that he had
obtained "from the council of
ministers authorization to officially commit the government to this Declaration
of General Policy, according to article 49 of the Constitution"
(Journal Officiel, 7/9/81, p.55).
·
Reference to these documents in this work will be as
follows: "Program,": "Common Program ‑ Proposals for
Updating," "Fifteen Theses," and "Declaration of General
Policy" respectively. The emphases in the quotations are ours.
·
SP publications use the expression "Socialist
Program" both to specifically designate the document, "Socialist
Program for the France of the 80's," as well as to more generically refer
to the new socialist program that they propose for France and the world, which they
call projet autogestionnaire
("Program of Self‑Management"). In this case, the expressions
"Socialist Program" and "Program of Self‑Management"
are synonymous. In the text of this work the same ambivalent use of the
expression (sometimes specific, sometimes general) is maintained. The reader
will easily notice which sense is being used, all the more so since the
citations of socialist sources used here leave no margin for confusion.*
* Translator's Note: As will be seen on reading this
work, the "Socialist Program for the France of the 80's" (Projet socialiste ... ) is much more
than a mere program of a political party. It encompasses a complete reform of
human society and even of man himself. This is expressed well by the French
word Projet, which has no suitable
equivalent in English. Our word Program although it can be understood in a
broad sense, also has a more restricted meaning, corresponding to a short or
medium term plan of action. This is the case, for example, of the above
mentioned "Common Program of Government of the Left." Thus, the
reader must keep in mind that the word "Program" used in this
translation to designate the "Socialist Program for the France of the
80's" must always he understood in its broader meaning.
2. Even
though there is an open alliance between the SP and the CP, its beneficiary
still has to be slightly dissimulated. This means that the socialists must be
the ones who stand out:
"It is necessary for the Communist Party to accept this obvious
reality of French politics. The majority of the French will not entrust their
government to the left unless it is certain that socialism will establish
freedom for our times,"
"Like it or not, to achieve that, it is necessary for the Socialist Party to appear as the animating
force in the alliance. This takes nothing away from the role the Communist
Party should play in it" (Program, p. 366).
The communists
understood their role very well. According to the Secretary General of the SP,
Lionel Jospin, one and a half million communist voters (one fourth of the
Party) voted for Mitterrand in the first round of the presidential elections
(cf. Le Poing et la Rose, no. 83,
5/30/81, p. 1)
3. The
references to the right in this work do not include the traditionalist French
right, which often has a Catholic inspiration and whose presumable action in
the elections of 1974, 1978 and 1981 is difficult to ascertain and therefore
difficult to assess.
4. In his
Apostolic Letter Notre Charge Apostolique,
of August 25, 1910, condemning the French movement Le Sillon, of Marc Sangnier, Saint Pius X analyses the famous
trilogy as follows:
"The Sillon is nobly
solicitous for human dignity, but it understands that dignity in the manner of
certain philosophers of whom the Church does not at all feel proud. The first
element of that dignity is liberty,
understood in the sense that, except in the matter of religion, each man is
autonomous. From this fundamental principle it draws the following conclusions: Today the people are in
tutelage under an authority distinct from themselves; they ought to free
themselves from it: political
emancipation. They are dependent upon employers who hold their instruments
of labor, exploit them, oppress them and degrade them; they ought to shake off
the yoke: economic emancipation.
Finally, they are ruled by a caste, called the directing caste, to whom their
intellectual development gives an undue preponderance in the direction of
affairs; they must break away from their domination: intellectual emancipation. The leveling down of conditions from
this triple point of view will establish equality
amongst men, and this equality is
true human justice. A political and social organization founded upon this
double basis, liberty and equality (to which will soon be added fraternity) ‑ this is what they
call democracy.”
“…First of all, in politics the
Sillon does not abolish authority,
on the contrary, it considers it necessary; but it wishes to divide it, or
rather to multiply it in such a way that each
citizen will become a kind of king....”
"Proportions being preserved, it will be the same in the economic order. Taken away from a particular class,
the mastership will be so well multiplied that each workingman will himself become a sort of master….”
“We come now to the principal element, the moral element. . . .
Snatched away from the narrowness of private interests, and raised up to the
interests of the profession, and, even higher, to those of the whole nation,
nay, higher still, to those of humanity (for
the horizon of the Sillon is not bounded by the frontiers of the country, it
extends to all men, even to the ends of the earth), the human heart,
enlarged by the love of the common welfare, would embrace all comrades of the
same profession, all compatriots, all men. Here is human greatness and nobility,
the ideal realized by the celebrated trilogy, liberty, equality, fraternity.”
“Such, in short, is the theory ‑ we might say the dream ‑ of
the Sillon" (Acta
Apostolicae Sedis, Typis Poliglottis Vaticanis, Rome, 1910, vol. II, pp. 613-615,
English translation from The American
Catholic Quarterly Review, Oct. 1910).
Therefore, St.
Pius X follows in the wake of his Predecessors, who ever since Pius VI had
condemned the errors suggested by the motto of the French evolution.
In his Letter
Decree of March 10, 1791, to Cardinal de la Rochefoucauld and to the Archbishop
of Aix‑en‑Provence on the principles of the Civil Constitution o
the Clergy, Pius VI states:
“It [the French National Assembly] has established, as a right of man in society, this absolute liberty
that not only assures him the right of not being disturbed in his religious
opinion, but also of thinking, speaking, writing, and even publishing whatever
he fancies about Religion. It proclaims
that these monstrosities derive and emanate from the equality and the liberty
natural to all men. But who could think of anything more insane than to establish such equality and liberty among all, thus disregarding
reason, with which nature has especially endowed the human race and which distinguishes
it from the other animals? When created man and put him in the Paradise of
delights, did He not at the same time threaten him with the
penalty of death
if he were to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil? Did God not
restrict his liberty right from the beginning with this first precept? And when
he became guilty through his disobedience, did God not impose on him more
precepts through Moses? And although God 'left it up to
his free will' so that he could merit
good or evil, He nevertheless gave him 'commandments and precepts so that
if he would obey them, they might save him' (Eccl. XV, 15‑16).”
“Where then, is this freedom of thought and action that thc decrees of
the National Assembly attribute to man in society as being an immutable right
of nature itself? ... Since man right from his infancy is obliged to be subject
to his elders in order to be governed and instructed by them, and to order his
life according to the norms of reason, of human nature and of Religion, then it
is certain that this much trumpeted equality and liberty among men is null and
void from the moment of birth. 'Be subject of necessity' (Rom.,
XIII, 5). Therefore, so that men might
gather in civil society, it was necessary to constitute a form of government in
which the rights of freedom would be circumscribed by laws and by the
supreme powers of those who govern.
Whence follows that which St. Augustine teaches with these words: 'It is
therefore a general agreement of human society to obey its kings' (Confessions, book 111, chap. VIII,
opera, ed. Maurin, p. 94). This is why
the origin of this power should be sought less in a social contract than in God
Himself, author of what is right and just"(Pii VI Pont. Max. Acta, Typis S. Congreg. de Propaganda
Fide, Rome, 1871, vol. I, pp. 70‑71).”
Pius VI
repeatedly condemned the false conception of liberty and equality. In the
Secret Consistory of June 17, 1793, confirming the words of the Encyclical Inscrutabilc Divinae Sapientiae of
December 25. 1775, he stated:
“These most perverse philosophers go on to dissolve all links by which
men are bound together and to their superiors and by which they are held to the
fulfillment of their duties. They cry and proclaim ad nauseam that man is born
free and subject to no one, and that therefore society is nothing more than a
group of' stupid men whose imbecility bows to priests (who deceive them) and
kings (who oppress then): in such a manner that concord between priesthood and
empire is nothing but a monstrous conspiracy against man’s innate
liberty." And he went on: "These
boastful protectors of mankind have linked this false and lying word Liberty
with another equally fallacious word, Equality. That is, as though there should not be
among men gathered in civil society, on account of the fact that the are
subject to varied states of mind any move in differing and uncertain ways, each
according to the impulse of his desire, someone who by authority and force
would prevail, oblige and govern, as well as call to their duties those whose
conduct is disorderly, so that society itself not fall under the rash and
contradictory impetus of innumerable passions into anarchy, and dissolve
completely. It is like harmony, composed of the consonance of many sounds and
which, if not made up of appropriate balance of chords and voices, dissolves
into disorderly and completely dissonant noises” (Pii VI Pont. Max., Acta., Typis S. Congreg. de Propaganda
Fide, Rome 1871, vol. II, p. 26‑27).
5.
In addition to the countries inside the Iron and Bamboo curtains, communism has
also been implanted in: North Korea (1945), North Vietnam (1945), Guinea (1958)
Cuba (1959), South Yemen (1967), Congo (1968), Guyana (1968), Ethiopia (1974),
Guinea Bissau (1974), Benin (1974), Cambodia (1975), South Vietnam (1975),
Cape Verde Islands (1975), Santo Tome and Principe Islands (1975), Mozambique
(1975), Laos (1975), Angola (1975), Grenada (1979), and Nicaragua (1979).
The leftist
governments which have been in power in Afghanistan since 1978 gave rise to
strong popular reactions which prompted Russian troops to enter the country the
following year. Nevertheless, the anti-Communist guerrillas control most of
the country. One should also keep in mind the more or less disguised Marxist
governments in power in various parts of the world.
6. "There have been privileged moments in
our history which remain engraved in the collective memory: [the revolutions
of] 1789, 1848, the Paris Commune, and more recently the Popular Front, the
Liberation [from the Nazi occupation] and
May 1968 "(Program, p. 157).
"It [the SP] has
drawn on a good part of the energy and positive aspirations of the explosion of
May 1968 " (Program, p. 23).
"This diffuse extreme leftism (which appeared before the eyes of
public opinion especially after May1968) has the merit of posing same
troublesome questions to everybody, which is useful” (Documentation Socialiste,
no. 5, p. 36).
''Thus, a new sensitivity in the very bosom of the left saw, in the
'Cultural Revolution' that arose in California during the sixties, and of which
a certain ideology claiming to stem from [the revolution
of] May 1968 was the French version, the
coming of Leftist critique of Progress ... (Program, pp. 30‑31).
7.
". . . equality
itself [is] one of the most important
demands of the workers' movement" (Program, p. 127).
"The idea of equality continues to be a new and powerful one" (Program,
pp. 113‑114).
"Not only the inspiration French socialism, but also that of Marx
calls to mind the seizure of power by the immediate producers and the blotting
out of the distinction between the work of those who direct and those who
perform, between manual and intellectual work, and, after the Paris Commune,
evokes the withering away of the State" ("Fifteen
Theses," p. 6).
"A renewed questioning of the system of different pay scales should
logically be accompanied by attaching a new value to manual labor and by
developing a job rotation system" ("Fifteen
Theses," p. 10).
"The socialist theoreticians have shown how the inequalities which
the leading classes present as 'natural,' could be progressively overcome"
("Fifteen Theses," p. 10).
"The present division of labor will find itself progressively
questioned, along with all that it implies by way of exploitation and
alienation ... the hierarchical values established by capitalist society
affecting all sectors of social life, including relations between men and
women, children and adults, those who teach and those who are taught, workers
and those on welfare, etc. " ("Fifteen Theses," p. 10).
"Prejudices will be done away with: let barriers and hierarchies
between physical, playful, and sports activities ... and the other so‑called
intellectual activities be abolished" (Program, p.
302).
8. "At first sight the societies of the
East can claim features that make them seem like the 'traditional socialist profile'.
. . :
“‑legal appropriation of the essential means of production by the
collectivity;
“-planned economy:”
“‑But ... there are so many features that make it clear that the
Eastern societies have nothing to do with socialism.”
“These societies continue to be inegalitarian ... The social division
of labor has taken on forms that are not substantially different from those
that exist in the capitalist countries ... “
“In the name of the proletariat, the rulers have a dictatorship ... over
the proletariat ... Not only has the State not withered away, but it has become
an extremely efficient machine of social and police control ...”
"This is why, even if the
values they affirm are those of socialism (and this, by the way, is important),
we cannot consider the Eastern societies 'socialist' societies. The existence
of different social classes and the maintenance of a coercive State apparatus
... are inherent to the very relations of production" (Program,
pp. 67‑69, 7 1).
9. "Someone may say to me: You speak of
self-management but fail to clearly define how it will work; you raise it as an
abstract goal, a chimerical path toward a vague earthly paradise. That is true.
But there is a reason for it. We do not want to build a new utopia so perfect
on paper that it is impossible to achieve. Self-management is a continuous and
never completed work ... In saying this
we remain faithful to the spirit of Marxism: Marx never pretended that the
end of capitalism would ipso facto entail the establishment of an eternally
perfect regime" (PIERRE MAUROY, Heriteirs
de l’Avenir, Stock, Paris, 1977, pp. 278-279).
"The crisis of authority is one of the most important dimensions of
the crisis of advanced capitalism. [The Sorbonne
Revolution of] May 1968 in France was the
most spectacular revelation of this. The
schoolmaster, the employer, one's father, one's husband, one's superior,
whether greater or lesser, whether they have or want to acquire historic
status: Here are the enemies from now on.
Every [exercise of] power is more and more resented as manipulation . . . Anyone with the least authority is for
that very reason contested, if not discredited. In the eyes of the
Socialist Party the existence of this crisis is a positive development ...
provided that it goes all the way to its final term: the coming of a new
democracy. (Program, pp. 123‑124).
"One thing is certain: We will not turn back; the traditional forms of authority will not be restored. And that
is true particularly in the family; the contraceptive revolution, for example,
has created conditions for a new equilibrium of the couple."
(Program, p. 125).
10. "The Socialist Program is a global and
radical program for the reorganization of society, even if it has to be
gradual" (Program p. 121).
"Whatever field one considers, the application of self‑management
has no meaning if not within a global perspective"
(Program, p. 234).
"The Socialist Program is fundamentally a cultural program ...
culture is global. That is, it ... has to do with all sectors of human
activity" (Program, p. 280).
11. "Let us declare right away that we
consider as ours, by right of inheritance, the heritage of the political democracy
inaugurated by the bourgeois de robe at
the time of King Louts XVI" (Program 15).
"The self-managing perspective gives meaning to the workers'
struggle to control their own work ... sometimes confused struggles, which
multiplied after May 1968, but witch echo a long tradition, a moral and
material requirement that was once fulfilled in the Commune. Finally, it is
enriched by the specifically French tradition of the citizens' accumulated
responsibility, a responsibility whose bearers were the revolutionaries of 1789‑1793
and 1848. The self-managing program as conceived by the SP is inseparable from
the full blossoming of individual and collective liberties"
(Documentation Socialiste, supplement to no. 2, p. 43).
"Through all its actions, France will reassume, in history, a role
which to a great extent explains its influence in the world. France's radiant
influence ... cannot be separated from its culture and its past. Abroad, France is first of all that of the
revolution of 1789, that of audacity.... We want our country, by reassuming
its tradition, to bear high and far the values of the rights of man, of
fraternity. . . " ("Declaration of General Policy," p. 55).
12. Our
general references to the right do not include the traditionalist French right,
which goes much farther in its rejection of the trilogy.
13. "The socialists hold neither these
willful solutions of leftism nor the reformists' policy of little steps, nor
the myth of the union of populism" . . . Leftism is that particular form
of willfulness called maximalism which consists in wanting to skip the
intermediate stages to reach the maximum all at once. Maximalism disdains and
rejects transitional measures and jumps right into complete socialism. It
confuses the final objective with intermediate reforms" (Documentation
Socialiste, no. 5, pp. 32‑33).
"I refuse to
enter the debate between reform and revolution. That is a purely formal discussion, because he who accepts temporary improvements
in the condition of the workers is a
reformist, and he who deems
necessary a fundamental change of society, a revolutionary. The French
unions and the large French workers' parties have always admitted this [distinction]; they make it the basis of their everyday
policy . They do not play the irresponsible game of 'all or nothing' ... (PIERRE
MAUROY, Heritiers de l'Avenir, p.
274).
"The real significance of May 1968 ... is that the transformation
of society requires a program aiming at all that can possibly be accomplished. To change society .. is to reject the
illusion of a revolution that would be an instantaneous upheaval. There is
neither instantaneous upheaval nor a quick and definitive solution. It is
necessary to work on a long term basis, following a line that I would call
'tough reformism'.
"For us,
revolution is the gradual change of the structures of the existing system"
(ibid., p. 295‑296).
14. "The notion of self-management ... is
at the crossing of ways between scientific socialism an utopian socialism (for
which Marx and Engels had more than respect, even though they criticized
it)" (Documentation Socialiste, supplement to no. 2, p. 42).
"Today ... it is harder and harder to build socialism on a
centralized model. Socialism must set other goals for itself. Departing from
collective ownership of the principal means of production and from planning,
the self‑management program is the inversion of the logic that up until
now has characterized the evolution of industrial societies ("Fifteen
Theses, p. 6).
"This program of self‑management gives a new content to the
notion of social utility. Breaking away from an excessively 'economic' view of
socialism, it is not limited to the field of production. It attacks immense
socio‑cultural problems ... The program of self‑management links
its egalitarian goal ... to the implementation of democratic mechanism which
will once again permit calling into question ... the social division of
labor" ("Fifteen Theses," p. 11).
15. "French democracy is large manipulated.
It is also carefully limited. It stops at the threshold of the company."
(Program, p. 231).
"We are determined to promote a decisive progress of economic and
social democracy. The French, citizens in their communities, must also be such
in their places of work. Employers should neither fear nor oppose this
desirable and necessary evolution"
("Declaration of General Policy p. 49).
"In our Western societies,
democracy is more or less tolerated everywhere, except in business.
Whether the employer is an independent industrialist or a high ranking
government official, he holds the essential powers to the detriment of all ...
A business is a monarchy with a pyramidal structure. At every level the representative of the hierarchy is all‑powerful;
his decisions are final. The simple worker becomes a powerless man entitled
neither to speech nor initiative" (PIERRE MAUROY, Heritiers de l'Avenir, p. 276.
16. "Economic
democracy and political democracy are indissociable; their joint development requires that every worker, every citizen have, at all levels, the possibility and
the means of taking an active part in making decisions, choosing the
means, controlling their application and results" ("Common
Program ‑ Proposals for Updating, p. 50)
"Economic
democracy and social democracy are indissociable from political democracy
" (Documentation
Socialiste, supplement to no. 2, p. 145).
"The socialists want the French to stop being under tutelage.
Decentralization will be the heart of the experiment of the government of the
left, which, during the first three months of its accession to power will
undertake the most significant reform of these uncertain times giving the power
to the citizens. Finally the Republic will be liberated from the monarchy"
(PIERRE MAUROY, Heritiers de
l'Avenir, p. 295).
17. "For man to be liberated from the
alienations that capitalism imposes on him, for him to cease being an object
... it is necessary that he rise to [positions of] responsibility in businesses
and universities, as well as in communities at all levels" (Party
Statutes, Declaration of Principles, in Documentation Socialiste, supplement to
no. 2, p. 48).
"A global and decentralized strategy of educational and cultural
action ... is a decisive dimension of our struggle for self‑management.
It is one of t e first conditions for making the change of mentalities possible
... [Self-management] will
bring about a change in current conceptions of the family and the role of
women" ("Fifteen Theses, " p. 21).
18. This
negative psychological effect is intrinsic to self‑management. However,
this does not mean that each and every self‑managing undertaking will
fail. In one exceptional case or another, this effect of self‑management
may be counterbalanced or attenuated by psychological or other factors. But
such sporadic exceptions are by no means sufficient to form a stable foundation
for all the business undertakings of a
hole nation.
19. "While considering that the
family plays a very important role in the possibilities of expanding personal
life, the Socialist Party certainly the existence
of other forms of private life (celibacy, free unions, unwed fatherhood or
motherhood, and communities). Finally, it takes its stand against repression or discriminations
affecting homosexuals. Their rights and dignity must be respected.
''It is not for it [the SP] to legislate on how each one wants to run
his own life," (Program, pp. 15 1 ‑ 152).
The current
socialist government affirms, in an implicit but shocking manner, it radical
equivalence between marriage and other forms of sexual relations. Even before
the legislative session started, it already began to fulfill its campaign
promises to homosexual groups whose support it received:
a) The Ministry of Health decided that France
will no longer apply the World Health Organization's classification of
homosexuality as a mental illness (Le
Monde, June 28 and 29, 1981)
b) At the request
of the homosexuals, the Minister of the interior gave orders to eliminate the
branch of the Paris Police called "groups for repression" of homosexuals (consisting of inspectors in
charge of controlling homosexual establishments, especially to ensure that
closing hours are obeyed) and the files on homosexuals (whose existence, by the
way, the police department absolutely denies ‑ cf. Le Monde, June 28 and 29, 1981).
20. "The poor diffusion of contraception
methods, the conditions restricting voluntary interruption of pregnancy and the
poor application of the Veil Law (on abortion) are such that the majority of
women do not have control of their own sexuality, nor of their maternity ...
Putting an end to this situation means having sexual education in the schools and unrestricted access to free
contraception " (Program. p. 247).
21. Citing
a speech of Mitterand in Marseille in May 1979, the Program affirms: "One cannot … be socialist without
being feminist" (p. 45).
But the Program's
feminism is opposed to recognizing and glorifying the qualities of women as
such for this would he considered "the
old notion of 'feminity,' hidden under
a modernist liberal discourse . . . that harps on women 's particular aptitude,
the strength of their instinct, the richness of their interior world ... In
brief, one finds here again the idea of
a 'feminine nature' different front that of men that has always served
to justify the marginalization and domination of women " (pp. 50‑51).
This difference between men and women, which is so natural is precisely what
the SP is denying.
For this reason,
according to the SP, "school must
encourage the two sexes to have the same ambitions regarding their studies and
professional careers. A truly mixed education is necessary to eliminate
practical arts courses, for example, in which the girls are relegated to
learning sewing or secretarial skills while the boys are the majority in the
technical, industrial and commercial classes. The goal must be that all options
be mixed" (Program, p. 249).
Finally the
Program affirms that participation in domestic chores "must begin very early since the child under stands them and can
participate in them from an early age. Once this participation is achieved
while they are young, the boys' share must not be permitted to diminish nor the
girls' to increase as they reach adulthood.
And very naturally this participation will be maintained in old
age." (Program, p 307.
22. "Work is not the only thing in life.
The creation of the Ministry of Free
Time is a great ambition for bringing it about that free time for living,
the liberated time. The society of free time must be a society of
culture...."
"Cultural expansion will be one of the tasks of local communities"
("Declaration of General Policy," pp. 82‑83).
"The current separation between work and free time will itself be
questioned ... The socialist enterprise will thus evolve into forms of life more and more communitarian
in their core ... as well as in their periphery (social services, leisure,
culture, formation, etc.) (Program, p. 158).
"Let us cite, for example the possibility of common use of
household utensils, appliances or certain leisure gear… Likewise, a systematic
effort will be made to transform and enliven the urban environment to make it
more communitarian and to improve the conditions of collective housing. A
considerable effort will be made to
render the latter as attractive… as row houses, which are great consumers of
space and energy" (Program, p. 177).
"The associative movement will be the privileged support of the new
citizenry, particularly to give value to free time… it will be for us
especially to erase social segregation in the realm of free time. We will
undertake … the development of social forms of leisure and tourism" ("Declaration
of General Policy, p.151).
"So, another way of living is:
"- first of all to seriously
modify the content of work so that eventually the distinction between work and
leisure will no longer have the same meaning that it does today. But while it is true that this goal can only
be achieved, first and above all through the transformation of work, the
socialists must also propose a parallel transformation of leisure…"
"But it is necessary to delve more deeply into the other concepts
of leisure:
"- leisure after the workday, close to one's home or in the home
itself, will permit a progressive establishment of new rhythms of life and a
change of daily life. This will necessitate, for example, developing light
collective equipment for various uses. Such leisure is one of the means of
having a familial, cultural and militant life:
"- weekend leisure ..."
" leisure after retirement ..."
"No doubt the content of
free time will also be profoundly modified by the proposals made for other
fields: the school, continued education, family, decentralization, associative
life, sports, the media, health and consumption. They will progressively permit
making free time a self‑managed
time. In any case, there must be room in the Socialist for a free time
conceived s one that breaks loose from restraints and permits everyone to
expand, be it by individual effort or by participation in collective
activities," (Program, pp. 307 - 309). "
. . . a global conception of social life in which the time of education,
the time of work and the time of leisure are no longer considered isolated
moments of individual and collective existence by rather as elements of a
consistent ensemble" (Program, p. 289). This "consistency,'' of
course, will not be that of the poor "self-managing" worker but
rather that of the SP.
This is the
"paradise" of liberty and democracy of the self‑managing
socialist regime.
23. "The Cadre de vie ["frame of
life," in the sense of all ambiences, activities and relationships
surrounding people's lives] is part of
those new concepts which appeared in the 60's , bursting forth in May 1968…
this vast concept, which encompasses so many things, ranging from the
environment and transportation to urban renewal and architecture and even an
all-too-often forgotten free time, has never been define in its entirety… "The cadre de vi cannot e isolated and cut off from economic and
social realities. What frame fro what life" One sees well that the answer
is a political and global one. It is by changing life, especially at work, that
one changes the cadre de vie" (Francois Mitterrand, preface to the
book, Changer le Cadre de vie, by
Jean Glavany and Philippe Martin, Club Socialiste du Livre, Paris, 1981, p.
viii.)
"It is necessary to put an end to one of the most inadmissible
segregations: The cities… are becoming more and more cites of the more affluent
while suburbs of the poor. It is
necessary to make the city become, in an exemplary way … a place where the
different social milieux will rub shoulders with one another" (Pierre Mauroy, Debates on the declaration
of General Policy, Journal Officiel,
7/10/81, p.81.)
"To make Frenchmen once again masters of their daily lives is also
to involve them in the building and managing their cadre de vie… Local
communities will rule the real estate markets, which means the end of
speculation, and will be able to carry out voluntary town planning… We will
give the inhabitants full powers over their own cadre de vie. Living conditions
and cadre de vie will be the promised land of the new citizenry"
(Declaration of general Policy, " p. 51).
24. "The government will take the necessary
measures to make it possible for all
children from two to six years of age to have access to nursery schools. … It will experiment with the organization
of child care centers accepting infants from birth to six years of age" ("Common
Program - Proposals for Updating," p.30).
"Child-care center..
will be key piece in the initial system. This is the stage where the struggle against
social inequalities and segregations begins"(ibid.,
p.2870).
"The fight for equality begins in the nursery [school]"
(ibid., p. 311.)
"But how can the democratic sense, today anesthetized, be awakened?
First through the school, conceived as the place par excellence for
apprenticeship in self-management" (Program, p.
132.).
25. "Tripartite management (parents and
children, staff, and public collectivities [sic] must liberate initiatives and
permit after free discussion. the definition and evaluation in common of the
goals and responsibilities which it entails for each person … The spirit of
responsibility demands . . . the disappearance of prior hierarchical
control" (Program, p. 286).
"The basic liberties in schools and universities, as well as in the
army, are equally part of the requirements of the Socialist Program: freedom
of expression and assembly in the
schools, high schools and universities; socio‑educational homes run
directly by high‑school and college students; effective participation of the students in the life and management of
their school; right of class representatives to participate in every class
council and of the students to attend them; right of the students to
participate in the physical organization of their high-school or college; … student control of the organization of the
university and of the curricula ... the establishment of a real student
statute " (Program, p. 314).
"We will undertake a profound transformation of our educational
system. Everyone must participate in
it: parents, those who are elected, associations, representatives of employees
and employers, and above all the teachers… The unification of the public
educational system will be the result of general agreement and of
negotiation" (Declaration of General Poilicy," p. 51)
26. "The Socialist Program recognizes the
child's full place in society: equality, liberty and responsibility are not
reserved for adults. The rights to expression, creative activity, and
decision-making must be recognized from one's schooling on" (Program,
p. 311).
"Youth also has a specific place: [in modern
society] it is under tutelage…No matter
what social class they belong to, youngsters have no real responsibility
whatsoever and little control over their own lives. There is a considerable gap
between their capabilities and what they are now entitled to do in
society" (Program, pp. 311‑312).
"Nothing is more important today than to recognize the right of
young people be themselves."
"Within the
family, the right of youngsters to be themselves means: the possibility for a
young person to appeal a decision concerning him (relative to his choice of course or profession, the
way he lives ... ); the democratization and development of youth homes for young people in conflict
with their families; ... the facilitation of apartment rental for young
people . . . ; the free right to
contraception and the elimination of parental consent for minors' voluntary
interruption of their own pregnancies, a considerable development of sexual
education in schools. and a revision of
systematically repressive attitudes concerning the sexuality of minors "(Program,
pp. 313‑314).
27. ". . . generous and aggressive
conception of the socialists for [bringing about] a great, unified, laicist and
democratically‑managed public education service " (Program,
284).
"The government will set the goal of establishing a single and
exclusive body of teachers for all disciplines encompassing the whole schooling
from nurse school through grammar, secondary and professional schools" ("Common
Program ‑ Proposals for Updating, p. 35).
"All parents may have the religious or philosophical education of
their choice given to their children off school premises and without the
assistance of public funds" (idem, p. 32).
28. "All sectors of initial teaching and an
important part of continuing education will be consolidated in one national and
laicist public service controlled only by the Ministry of National Education.
"The establishment of a public service of national education will
be dealt with starting in the first session of the legislature ... As a
general rule, state‑assisted private schools will be nationalized whether
they be employer‑sponsored, for profit, or religious ... Necessary transfers
of premises will exclude any spoliation.
"The situation of premises or staffs of private schools not
receiving public funds may be the object, at their request, of a survey in view
of their eventual integration" ("Common
Program ‑ Proposals for Updating," pp. 31‑32).
29. According
to the traditional doctrine of the Church, the right of property is a
consequence of the natural order created by God. Animals, plants and minerals
exist for the use of men. Every man has then, by virtue of the human condition
itself, the right to submit any of those goods to his dominion. This is
appropriation. Appropriation has something exclusive about it in the sense that
a good that has been appropriated cannot be used by another who is not its
owner. In his Encyclical Quadragesimo
Anno of May 15, 1931, Pius XI states:
"The original acquisition of property
takes place by first occupation and by industry, or, as it is called,
specification. This is the universal teaching of tradition and the doctrine of
Our Predecessor, despite unreasonable assertions to the contrary, and no wrong
is done to any man by the occupation of goods which are unclaimed and belong to
nobody. The only form of labor, however, which gives the working man a title to
its fruits is that which a man exercises as his own muster, and by which some
new form or new value is produced'' Actu Apostolicae Sedi, Typis
Potyglottis Vaticanis, Rome, 1931, vol. XXIII, p. 194).
Property also
derives from work. Being by nature his own master, man is also the master of
his work. Consequently, he is entitled to ask a remuneration for the service
that he renders. Thus, what he acquires individually with the fruit of his work
belongs to him. This is what Leo XIII teaches in his Encyclical Rerum Novarum of May 15, 1891:
"Clearly the essential reason why those who engage in any gainful
occupation undertake labor, and at the same time the end to which workers
immediately look, is to procure property for themselves and to retain it by
individual right as theirs and as their very own. When the worker places his
energy and his labor at the disposal of another, he does so for the purpose of
getting the means necessary for livelihood. In return for the work done, he
accordingly seeks a true and full right not only to demand his wage but to
dispose of it as he sees fit. Therefore, if he saves something by restricting
expenditures and invests his savings in a piece of land in order to keep the
fruit of his thrift more safe, a holding of this kind is certainly nothing else
than his wage under a different form; and on this account land which the worker
thus buys is necessarily under his full control as much as the wage which he
earned by his labor. But, as is obvious, it is clearly in this that the
ownership of movable and immovable goods consists. Therefore, inasmuch as the
Socialists seek to transfer the goods of private persons to the community at
large, they make the lot of all wage‑earners worse, because in abolishing
the freedom to dispose of wages they take a way from them by this very act the
hope and the opportunity of increasing their property and of securing advantages
for themselves" (Acta Sanctae Sedis, Typographia
Polyglotta S.C. de Propoganda Fide, Rome, 1890‑1891, vol. XXIII, 642.)
Finally, property
may also be acquired by succession. Children, who are the continuation of their
parents, naturally inherit their goods. Regarding this family‑related
character of property, Leo XIII affirms in the Encyclical Rerum Novarum:
"Thus, the right of ownership, which we have shown to be bestowed
on individual persons by nature, must be assigned to man in his capacity as
head a family. Nay rather, this right is all the stronger, since the human
person in finally life embraces much more.
"It is a most sacred law of nature that the father of a family see
that his offspring are provided with all the necessities of life, and nature
even prompts him to desire to provide and to furnish his children, who, in fact
reflect and in a certain sense continue his person, with the means of decently
protecting themselves against harsh fortune, in the uncertainties of life. He
can do this surely in no other way than by owning fruitful goods to transmit by
inheritance to his children" (Acta Sanctae Sedis, Vol.
XXIII. p. 646).
Property, like
every right, has a social function, but it is not limited to its social
function. This is what Pius XII teaches in his radio message of September 14,
1952, to the Katholikentag of Vienna:
"It is for this reason that Catholic social teaching, besides other
things, so emphatically champions the right of the individual to own property.
Herein also lie the deeper motives why the Pontiffs of the social encyclicals, and also We
Ourselves, have declined to deduce, directly or indirectly, from the labor
contract the right of the employee to participate in the ownership of the
operating capital, and participate in decisions concerning operations of the
plant (Mitbestimmung). This had to be
denied because behind this question there stands that greater problem -- the
right of the individual and of the family to own property, which stems
immediately from the human person. It is a right of personal dignity; aright,
to be sure, accompanied by social obligations; a right, however, not merely a
social function" (Discorsi e Radiomessaggi di Sua Santita Pio XII, vol.
XIV, p. 314, English text from The
Catholic Mind, Jan. 1953.
From this
standpoint, public property is distinguished from private property.
The former
normally consists of the goods that the State has for accomplishing its
mission. Without exceeding its specific function, the State also may possess
and administer something for the common good, as for example, when it takes
over the exploitation of an underground resource in order to lessen the taxes
born by the citizen with the profits derived from it. But this must be done
only in a limited way and in special circumstances. The State may also do this
in relation to a certain type of wealth which of its nature would place the
individual owning it in a position to dominate the State itself.
The remaining
goods belong to the private domain, and not to the public domain. A private
proprietor may be an individual, a group, or an association of individual
owners.
Naturally, this
doctrine and this terminology, which exist implicitly or explicitly in current
language, are not those of the Program.
The Program does
not affirm the natural right of property given by God to man. It hypertrophies
the collective property of social
groups, transforming each of them into a totalitarian mini‑state in
relation to its members; and it calls self-managed property private, even
though this be instituted ‑ to a large degree imposed ‑ and even
regulated by the State as it wishes.
***
In mid September,
just as the writing of this Message was coming to an end, the Encyclical Laborem Exercens of John Paul II was
published. The principal media of the West gave it widespread and favorable
coverage.
The Encyclical
undoubtedly contains new teachings, not all of whose ultimate doctrinal and
practical implications are laid out.
More often than
not, these circumstances allowed news reports about the document to spread the
impression that according to John Paul II:
a) It is not an
imperative of the nature of things that private property (and therefore non‑state
property) be usually owned by an individual;
b) In principle
(and notably in modern conditions of economic life), it is legitimate and even
preferable that the right of property be normally exercised by groups of
persons instead of individual proprietors, thus better fulfilling its social
function. This would be the "socialization"
of property.
If one were to
accept this understanding of John Paul II's document, the necessary
conclusions would be:
a) that this
"socialization" sharply
contrasts with the above‑cited principles of the traditional Papal
Magisterium, which teaches that private property is a logical consequence of
the personal nature of man and the natural order of things:
b) that the
socialized regime advocated by the French SP finds important support in Laborem Exercens.
It would be
painful for any zealous Catholic to shoulder the responsibility for these
affirmations regarding the Encyclical of John Paul II, for they would have
incalculable consequences in the religious and socio‑economic spheres.
Indeed, if one were
to admit such opposition between the recent pontifical document and the
traditional documents of the Supreme Magisterium of the Church, the
theological, moral and canonical consequences would be innumerable.
As Chapter II of
this Message shows, the French SP affirms the logical connection between the
self‑managing reform of business that it advocates, and the reform of the
economy in general, of education, of the family, and of man himself. For the
French socialists these multiple reforms are nothing more than aspects of one
single global reform.
And right they
are: "Abyssus abyssum invocat"
‑ "Deep calls unto deep,"
(Ps. 41:8) One does not see how a Roman Pontiff could open the flood gates to
the self-management advocated by French socialism and thus implicitly or
explicitly support this global reform.
30. "The socialists favor the principle of
socialization of the means of production in all sectors where the socialization
of productive forces has already become a reality. On the other hand, this means
that small and medium-sized private enterprises will continue to exist, though
certainly in a profoundly modified context, and with new obligations" (Program,
p. 153‑154).
31.
According to the socialists, one of the goals of "democratic planning" is to determine "how and to what degree the reduction of
inequalities is brought about" ("Fifteen Theses," p. 15). In
other words, the government's Plans, to be elaborated on the national, regional
and local levels, will already aim at gradualistic leveling.
32. This
affirmation does not include a worker's ownership of his tools (an artisan's,
for example), or of durable objects he has acquired with his earning. But for
the worker's eventual heirs, this modest individual patrimony will be of little
or no importance when one considers the limitations that the Program imposes
on inheritances.
"The question of inheritance ... will be treated in the same
spirit: strongly progressive [inheritance taxes] on large fortunes, but greatly reduced [taxes]
on small bequests in direct line
inheritance, permitting the transmission of the ... family home ... farm or
shop" (Program, p. 154).
33. "There can be no self-management in a
capitalist regime: a private enterprise cannot be self-managed"
(Documentation Socialiste, no. 5, p. 57).
"Believe me, before long our descendants will regard private
ownership of the key means [of production] of
the national economy as a curiosity as out of place as the feudal regime now
appears to us" (Statement of socialist deputy Jean Poperen,
"Debates on the Declaration of General Policy," p. 77).
"Is this to say that we repudiate private property? By no means. We
know very well that one form of society does not replace another in one day or
even in one generation. It took capitalism centuries to emerge from the bosom
of feudal society. And socialism itself began its march in the most advanced
capitalist countries only in the middle of the last century ...
"One may consider that the maintenance of private property is a
response to certain needs ‑ especially psychological one - for security.
"But we aim also at progressively developing other practices
(leasing land to the tillers, automatic readjustment of the value of savings to
thc inflation rate, developing rental housing, encouraging family tourism to
the countryside, etc.)" (Program, pp. 153‑154).
"The Socialist Party not only does not question the right of
everyone to possess his own durable goods acquired by, or useful to, his work,
but it guarantees him the exercise [of that right]. In turn, it proposes to progressively
replace capitalist property with social property that may take many different
forms, for whose management the workers must prepare themselves" (Statutes
of the Party, Declaration of Principles, in Documentation Socialiste, supplement to no. 2. p. 48).
34. "Tenure
and guarantee of the land ‑ An instrument of work, the land will be
protected against real estate speculation by setting in operation a policy
based on the creation of land offices charged with ensuring better distribution
and utilization of the soil. It will also be protected against overuse.,
exhaustion resulting from intensive cultivation, and the abuse of techniques
harmful to nature and the environment" (Program, p. 208).
"The market will be organized under offices. These will ensure farmers a just
remuneration for their work thanks to guaranteed prices, taking into account
production costs within the limits of a quantum" (Program,
p. 206).
"Managed by representatives at the farmers, farmworkers, and the local
communities, [the land offices] ...
will assume especially the following functions:
‑ They ... will intervene in renting procedures ...
‑ They will have a permanent premptive right [to
buy] all land for sale. The lands so
acquired may be either resold or leased to farmers who need them" ("Pour
une agriculture avec les socialistes" in Les Cahiers de Documentation Socialiste, no. 2, April 1981, p. 20)
Mitterrand
describes the functioning of these land offices as follows:
"Contrary to what some want people to believe, these offices will
establish neither collectivism nor constraint. There can be no good land policy
but one which is discussed, agreed upon, and accepted by the different parties
involved, farmers, local communities, and the administration.
"It is therefore the farmers themselves who will adminster the
regional offices and coordinate land policy, discuss it together, and make
decisions regarding the distribution and zoning of land desiredable to maintain
an active agricultural population and a maximum [number] of installations" (apud Francois Mitterand - L'homme, les idees, le
programme, by Manceron and B. Pingaud, Flammarion, Paris, 1981, pp. 107
-108).
35. "One of the foundations of the
self-managing socialist society is the recognition of small social groups and
consequently of collective interests very close to the individual and easy to
grasp (family, shop, school class, association, neighborhood, etc.). Decisions
must be made her as well; the existence of community interest must definitely
be translated into a procedure. This is why the socialists … affirm that in the
last resort legitimacy can only be derived, tomorrow as today, from universal
suffrage. Common good and democracy are not at war with each other. The common
good simply cannot be defined except by democracy" (Program, p.131)
36. Just
like the French socialists, the communists have the self-management of society
as their final goal. In the preamble of the Russian constitution one reads: "The supreme objective of the Soviet
State is the building of a communist classless society in which communist
social self‑management will develop" (Constitution ‑ Ley Fundamental
de la Union de Republicas Socialistas Sovieticas, October 7, 1977,
Editorial Progreso, Moscow, 1980, p. 5).
There is,
therefore, no doctrinal discrepancy between communists and socialists on this
point. A discrepancy appears only in their conceptions of the disappearance of
the State.
The Institute of
Philosophy of Soviet Russia's Academy of Science define the role of the State
in the period of transition to self‑managing society as follows:
"The development of socialist democracy strengthens the power of
the State an at the same time paves the way for its extinction along with a
step to a social regime in which society may be run without the need for a
political apparatus or state coercion ....
''Now then, to call for a more rapid disappearance of the State on the
pretext of fighting bureaucratism and to proclaim, at the same time, the need
to renounce state power amounts, in the [present] conditions of socialism while the capitalist
world still exists (and what is even more grave, during the period of
transition to socialism), to disarming the workers in the face of their class
enemy.
"The process of the extinction of the State cannot be accelerated
by any kind of artificial measures. The State will not be abolished by anyone,
rather it will gradually fade away when political power ceases to be
necessary. This will be possible when the socialist State fulfills its
historical mission, but it requires, in
turn, the
strengthening of political power. Hence there is no opposition between
solicitude to strengthen the Socialist State and the perspectives of its
extinction; they are two sides of the same coin.
"From the standpoint of dialectics, the problem of the extinction
of the state is the problem of the transformation,
form the socialist State, into the communist self-management of society.
Some social functions analogous to those now fulfilled by the State will subsist
under communism. But their character and their application will not be the same
as they are in the current stage of development.
"The extinction of the State means: 1) the disappearance of the
necessity of state coercion and of the organs applying it; 2) the
transformation of the organizational, economic and educational-cultural
functions now fulfilled by the State into social functions; 3) the integration
of all citizens into the running of public affairs and the disappearance of the
need for public agencies.
"When all traces of the division of society into classes have been
erased, when communism has definitively triumphed, and when the forces of the
old world opposed to communism leave the scene, the necessity for the State
will also disappear. Society will no longer need special contingents of armed
men to guarantee social order and discipline. Then, as Engels has said, the
State machinery can be put into the museum of antiquities with the spinning‑whell
and the bronze ax" (Institute of Philosophy, Academy of Science of the
USSR, Fundamentos de la Filosofia
Marxista, F.V. Konstantinov, Editorial Grijalbo, Mexico, 2nd,
ed., 1965, pp. 538-539.)
37. "One does not adhere to socialism
without a certain view of man, of what he wants, of what he is able to do, of
what he must do, of his rights and of his necessities" (Program, p.
10).
38. "The Socialist Party does not aim at
self-gratification or at bearing witness to the beyond but rather at
transforming the structures of society" (Program, p. 33)
"The explanation of society ... is one thing, the ultimate destiny
of man another," the Program
affirms, as if anything could be
explained without considering its end.
But, under the
guise of consolation, the program slickly adds, "to the degree that clericalism is erased, anticlericalism loses
its justification. This is an enrichment of laicism a not a precious
acquisition of the socialist struggle over the last few years" (Program,
p. 29). In fact, more than clericalism, it is the clergy and the Church that
are thus "erased" in the Program.
39. Catholics
are frequently more sensitive to transgressions of the Law of God having to do
with the institution of the family than to those respecting the institution of
private property. So it is possible that some Catholic reader more or less
complacent with the idea of self-management in business will try to imagine an
application of the Program strictly limited to that field without touching the
individual, the family, or education. But this would be an illusion, because
the natural correlation between family and property makes such a separation
impossible. The mere reading of this work makes it clear that business self‑management
as described in the Program is inseparable from its philosophical and moral
foundations. Once accepted, these conditions necessarily affect all the aspects
o human life.
40. Thc
pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes contains
a quite synthetic description of modern atheism with various nuances. From
this standpoint, it is useful to quote it here: "The word atheism is used to signify things that differ
considerably from one another. Some people expressly deny the existence of God.
Others maintain that man cannot make any assertion whatsoever about him. Still
others admit only such methods of investigation as would make it seem quite
meaningless to ask questions about God. Many, trespassing beyond the boundaries
of the positive sciences, either contend that everything can be explained by
the reasoning process used in such sciences, or, on the contrary, hold that
there is no such thing as absolute truth. With others it is their exaggerated
idea of man that causes their faith to languish,‑ they are more prone, it
would seem, to affirm man than to deny God.. . . There are also those who never
inquire about God; religion never seems to trouble or interest them at all, nor
do they see why they should bother about it" (apud Vatican Council II, The Conciliar and Post-Conciliar
Documents, Scholarly Resources, Inc., Wilmington, Del. 1975, pp. 918‑919).
41. "To our understanding, collective is
synonymous with grandeur, beauty, profundity and the joy of living" (Program,
p. 157).
42. "The whole movement of science fits
into a permanent questioning of the postulates of the preceding phase" (Program,
p. 135).
"In our view there could be no knowledge constituted once and for
all. Since it implies rectification and even continuous reconstruction of
reality as we see it, knowledge can never be said to have been attained and
must constantly be questioned" (Program, pp.
136‑137).
43. This
position of evasive neutrality toward the elections was emphatically
reaffirmed by Msgr. Jean‑Marie Lustiger, the new Archbishop of Paris,
when speaking about an open letter addressed to him. In this letter, published
in Le Monde (May 10 and 11, 1981) a
Catholic Action organization (the JEC, Catholic Student Youth) asked him to
confirm or deny reports that he supposedly had taken a personal position in
favor of the outgoing president. In his statement, the Archbishop expressed
shock at the report, which he formally denied, and affirmed his agreement with
the position expressed by the Episcopate as a whole on February 10 (cf. La Croix, 5/12/81).
In the context of
these declarations, some vague promises of combative action made by Msgr. Jean
Honoré, Bishop of Evreux and President of the Episcopal Commission for the
Educational World, appear rather inadequate.
He said that the Catholic schools is not the "priority of priorities" for the Church. The bishops wish
to reserve their words "for the day
when the Catholic school will be in danger" (Informations Catholiques Internationales, no. 563, June 1981.)
44. For
the sake of brevity, the full text of the statements of the French bishops on
the recent presidential and parliamentary elections is not reproduced here. A
leaflet reproducing their complete text, transcribed from La Documentation Catholique, no.1803, 3/1/81, p. 248 and from Le Monde, 6/3/81, respectively, with an
English translation, is available for $1.00 postpaid from the American TFP,
P.O. Box 1868, York, Pennsylvania 17405.
45. In
this document, the French bishops state: "Our
pastoral ministry makes us witnesses to the
evangelical imperative that animates numerous Christians in all social
milieux, and to the hope which moves them as
they participate in the collective movement of liberation, with those with
whom they are or perceive themselves to be solidary in their daily lives. The
bishops of the Commission of the Workers World, among others, have expressed this
in the working document in which they inform us about the first phase of their
conversation with workers who have opted
for socialism. (op. Cit., p. 88)
"Today, a new fact has come to the fore. Christian in diverse milieus - blue collar workers, farm workers,
intellectuals - are expressing their
experience with a vocabulary of 'class struggle'…
"Obviously, this analysis in terms of 'class struggle' has helped
many militants to define with more precision the structural mechanisms of
injustice and inequality. We must also note that, to a greater or lesser degree, they do this taking as reference point elements of the Marxist
analysis of class struggle.
"An effort of lucidity and
discernment is required so that their ambition of achieving a more just and
fraternal society not be degraded along the way, and so that all along the way
it may benefit from positive impulses derived from the evangelical meaning of
man" (op. Cit. P. 89)
46. The
well‑known progressivist Catholic magazine Informations Catholiques Internationales (no. 563, June 1981)
affirms: "Everyone agrees:
one-fourth of those considered to be practicing Catholics are in favor of
Mitterrand, and three-fourths are for Giscard … The fact that one out of four of those Catholics voted for Mitterrrand,
and is of decisive political importance. Many more than a million votes
went to swell the camp of the left. Now
… if only half of these Catholics had voted for the outgoing president, it would have been enough to reelect him. Francois Mitterrrand owes his success to,
among other causes, the movement that led part of the Catholic to the left."
Not that the
magazine singles out only the "practicing Catholics," One should ask
how many baptized by non-practicing Catholics who consider themselves Catholics
could have been influence by a firm and enlightening word form the bishops and
this have refused to vote for the socialist candidate.
In pointing out
the reason for Mitterand's victory, prestigious organs of the press, whoxse
testimony in this mater is not suspect, comment that the most significant
advance of the left took place in the Catholic provinces of Western, Eastern
and Central France. (cf. La Croix,
semi-official organ of the Archdiocese of Paris, 5/12/81; L'Express, 5/5-11/81 and 5/12-15/81, and even L'Humanité, official organ of the Communist Party, 5/ 15/81).
Furthermore, as
the Program joyfully notes, Catholics not only vote for the SP but even join
it, apparently without any major problems of conscience: "The Socialist Party has always aimed to gather, without
distinction of philosophical or religious belief all workers who find in
socialism their ideal and their principles. So there are more and more Christians who not only join the Party but
adopt socialist [methods of] analysis themselves without thereby
renouncing their faith…" (Program,
p. 29).
This fact, by the
way, is public and notorious in France.
Lest there be any
doubt about the meaning of the verb ''join"
the citation above, Mitterrand makes it clear in his Conversations avec Guy Claisse:
"Militant
Catholics are not a cover up for the Socialist Party. They are at home [in it]. There are very many of them in the Party ...
"‑ Are they among the grassroots militants?
"‑ Yes. But also in the national leadership and in the local
executive boards" (Francois Mitterrand, Ici et Maintenant ‑ Conversations avec Guy Claisse, Fayard,
Paris, 1980, p. 12).
Therefore, the
bishops' failure to enlighten these Catholics is entirely inexplicable.
Finally, we must note that this openness of Catholics to socialism is not something
new, but dates from the middle of the last century, as Mitterrand himself is
pleased to register in his abovementioned book:
"From the beginning, my efforts have been to make Christians
faithful to their faith, recognize themselves in our Party, that the multiple
sources of socialism may flow towards the same river. In the middle of the
nineteenth Century, except for the
vanguard of people like Lamennais, Ozanam, Lacordaire, and Arnaud, French
Catholics belonged to the conservative camp. The Church, shaken by the
first French Revolution, concerned about the progress of the Voltairian
spirit, had closed ranks along side the power of the bourgeoisie, the power of
a narrow‑minded, egotistic social class, ferocious when necessary ...
"With Christ obscured, the Church an accomplice, there was no way
out but to wage a manly struggle to achieve, here and now, a state of affairs
delivering you from every, misery and humiliation. By a natural inclination, a
majority of the socialists adopted theories that rejected the Christian
explanation....
"A deepening rationalism and the rise of Marxism accentuated in the
proletariat the rejection of the Church and her teaching. Socialism, which was
made without Her, began to be made against Her. But also, what a silence of
Christianity! What a long silence!…
"Nevertheless, at the end of the century, Leo XIII in Rome and the Sillon among us began the turnaround.
The First World War accelerated the evolution. The camaraderies of the front,
death everywhere and for all, the country in danger, taught everyone to
recognize in each other the colors they subscribed to, even if their laicist or
religious translations remained different, if not antagonistic. The initial
appeal again rose up from the depths of the Church and the Christian world. The personalism of Emmanuel Mounier
finished giving Christian socialism its title of nobility" (op.
cit., pp. 14‑15).
In the face of
this historical panorama painted so much in accordance with socialist taste and
style, but unfortunately not lacking many elements of truth, one would expect
the French bishops to imitate the mettle and courage of Saint Pius X, who in
his Apostolic Letter Notré Charge
Apostolique of August 25, 1910, vehemently condemned the Sillon movement (cf. footnote 4) so
reverently recalled by Mitterrand.
47. "There
could be no socialist program for France alone. The dilemma, 'liberty or
servitude, "socialism or barbarism' is one that goes beyond our country
" (Program, p. 108).
"The
Socialist Party is a Party at one and the same time national and international" (Documentation Socialiste,
supplement to no. 2, p. 50).
"Socialism
is international by nature and vocation " (Program,
p. 126).
"The Socialist Party adheres to the Socialist International" (Statutes
of the SP, article 2, in Documentation
Socialiste, supplement to no. 2, p. 51).
"The moment it no longer identifies with a universal message,
France ceases to exist. France is either
a collective ambition or it does not exist" (Program,
p. 163).
"France, therefore can be the pole of attraction of a new
internationalism, (Program, p. 164).
"A country like ours ... has immense possibilities for carrying high and far, in Europe and in
the world, the universal message of socialism" (Program,
p. 18).
"France will contribute to the democratization of the [European
Economic] Community, it will use its
institutions to favor directing social struggles toward a common goal" (Program,
p. 352).
"The
Socialist Party. . . aims at a socialist transformation of international
society" (Resolution
of the Congress of Nantes in 1977, in Documentation
Socialiste, supplement to no. 2, p. 130).
"Socialism
is either international by nature or it denies itself" (Documentation Socialiste, supplement to
no. 9, p. 153).
"The search for the autonomy of our development is inseparable from
the international perspectives of self-managing socialism. In guiding our
action abroad as well as inside our borders, it bases our participation in
international cooperation on solidarity with the exploited classes" (Program,
p. 339).
In this regard,
it should be remembered that Mitterrand is one of the vice‑presidents of
the Socialist International (cf. L'Express,
May 22 to 28, 1981).
He is also a
founding member of the International Committee for the Defense of the Sandinist
Revolution (cf. Le Figaro 6/26/81).
This makes it easy to understand how Comandante Arce, of the Sandinist National
Liberation Front greeted Mitterrand as "a militant of the Nicaraguan cause" and a "friend of the Sandinist revolution"
whose victory in France has "an
immense political value in Nicaragua and Latin America" (cf. Le Monde, 5/13/81).
On the day of his
inauguration, Mitterrand chose to pay homage, with a luncheon in the Elysee
Palace, to European socialist leaders and chiefs of state, as well as to
representatives of the Latin American left. At his express desire, the widow of
Marxist ex‑president Allende sat at his right (cf. El Espectador, Bogota, Colombia, 5/24/81).
As President,
Mitterrand declared France's support of the fight of the Salvadoran people as
an "urgent priority" and
he promised to help Nicaragua "in
its difficult job of reconstruction. Latin America does not belong to anyone.
It is trying to belong to itself, and it is important that France and Europe
assist in the realization of this goal." Mitterrand declared (cf. Jornal do Brasil, Rio de Janeiro,
7/19/81).
Thanking Fidel
Castro upon receiving his congratulations, Mitterrand sent him a telegram
expressing his joy at the personal ties uniting him to the communist tyrant
and manifested his hope to "strengthen
the friendship between France and Cuba" (cf. Le Monde, 6/3/81).
Confirming that
intention, Antoine Blanca, personal assistant of Prime Minister Mauroy and the
man in charge of relations between his Party and Latin America and the
Caribbean, declared that the French SP will not tolerate any aggression,
economic blockade or discrimination against Cuba (cf. Folha de Sâo Paulo, Sâo Paulo, 7/27/81).
More recently,
the French and Mexican governments signed a joint communique categorically
supporting the "Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, guerrilla
organization made up of five Marxist groups working to overthrow the regime in
El Salvador. The communique, released simultaneously in Paris and in Mexico,
was delivered to the UN for distribution among member countries (cf. Folha de Sâo Paulo, 8/29/81) and
provoked a strong reaction from twelve Latin American countries, which declared
the attitude of France and Mexico a "'flagrant interference, in El
Salvador's internal affairs (cf. Jornal
do Brasil, 9/4/81).
The Ideal Self‑Managing Enterprise Proposed by the Socialists
I ‑ General
Outline of the Self‑Management Program
·
The goal of the self‑ management program is:
a)
that "the workers themselves organize the control
of production and the distribution of the fruit of their work; "
b)
"and, more generally, that the citizens decide in
all fields everything that concerns their lives" (Documentation Socialiste, no. 5, p. 57).
·
The self‑management program has a threefold
basis:
a)
"socialization of the principal means of
production;
b)
"democratic planning; "
c)
"transformation of the State" ("Fifteen
Theses, " p. 11).
II ‑
Socialization of the Means of Production
·
The Socialist Program calls for the
"nationalization "of certain types of enterprises which will then be
gradually integrated into the self‑managing regime.
·
To attain this objective "many options are
conceivable":
a)
"tripartite management " by "elected representatives of the
workers, representatives of that State (or
regions), and
representatives of certain types of consumers;"
b) "a
management council elected entirely by the workers in the enterprise;"
c) "the
coexistence of a management council elected by the workers and a supervisory
council which
would be made up
of representatives of the State … and
certain types of consumers" ("FifteenTheses," p. 12).
·
The SP claims that this "nationalization" is
not synonymous with "state takeover" (cf. "Fifteen Theses,"
p. 12), nor does it result in "collectivism" crushing human liberty,
because "workers and consumers are … called to sit on the boards of
nationalized enterprises," so that "the nalional[ized] corporations
will have . . . all the autonomy of management that they will need "
(MAUROY, "Debates," p. 81).
III ‑
Democratic Planning
·
According to the SP, the self‑managing society
will not bring about a restraint of freedom, but rather the opposite, since it
presupposes the participation of all in the planning of all spheres of life:
-- "Planning
is made compatible with self‑management by a democratic and decentralized
procedure that presupposes abroad popular participation before the definitive
choices on the different political levels are made through universal
suffrage" ("Fifteen Theses," p. 16).
-‑
"The new society will be worthwhile only through the rigor of its
principle. We aim to achieve unanimity but do not claim to start out from it .
. . " (Program, p. 139).
·
The purpose of the enterprise must no longer be profit
or the "egotistic " reflexes of the workers, but rather the
"social goals" set by "democratic planning":
-‑
"The pursuit of profit must no longer be the sovereign decisive factor in
investments and [ownership of] goods. It must give way to the reasonableness of
citizens democratically affirming their needs through planning and the
market" (Program, p. 172).
‑‑
Self‑management is not . . . a simple method of management destined to
replace capital with labor as the directing agent of enterprises and to utilize
the egotistic reflexes of basic worker units and their members to perpetuate
the mechanisms and economic strength of capitalism. Production units must bear
in mind the social goals set by national, regional and local plans"
("Fifteen Theses," p. 15).
·
Through "democratic planning" the workers
will choose the model of development ‑ how, by whom and for whom to
produce:
-‑
"Produce, work, Yes! But for whom, why, and how? The success of the
business depends on the kind of answers the workers get, or above all that they
give, to these questions. The model of development must first of all become an
affair of the workers themselves" (Program, p. 176).
·
Consumers will also give their opinions and make their
requirements known:
-‑
"The adaptation of production to the consumers' wishes . . . will be made
. . . on the basis of an organized and constant dialogue between the producers
indicating their technical and financial constraints and the consumers making
known their requirements regarding quality and price" (Program, p. 177).
·
Therefore, the Plan resulting from this ample
democratic dialogue is what really regulates the economy:
-‑
"The socialists . . . emphasize that investments based on prices and
profits amplify at a given moment the impact of the current economic situation
and are ill‑adapted to prepare for the future. Large investments must be
decided according to a plan based on the public interest and on periodic
forecasts. . . As the socialists see it, the plan, while leaving the fine
tuning of supply and demand to the market, is the overall regulator of the
economy " (Program, pp. 185‑186).
·
What is left of free enterprise in this picture? The
Program answers:
-‑
"Put briefly, the general direction is planned, but not the details of
implementation. Where the plan leaves off, there the initiative Of
industrialists and the spirit of enterprise take up their rights and the role
of the market comes into service once again (Program, p. 188).
IV ‑ The
Transformation of the State
·
The Marxist myth of the disappearance of the State
comes up once again in the program of self‑management as an expression of
hope for "the appearance of new forms of power" so that "the
function and the nature of the State may be transformed" (Fifteen Theses,
p. 19).
·
In order that this may be achieved, "a reduction
in the attributes of the central power" is envisioned.
-‑
"Certain functions which now depend directly on the government … should be
transferred to autonomous national agencies or offices. But the greatest
possible responsibility should be returned to local, departmental and regional
levels" ("Fifteen Theses," p. 22).
·
Even the "organisations de quartiers "
(block organizations) will receive some of the powers of the State, which will
thereby crumble ("Fifteen Theses," p. 22).
V‑ Anarchic
Functioning
·
There will be no hierarchy or real authority in the
self‑managing enterprise:
-‑ "It
should be quite clear that the new legitimacy is founded upon an authority
delegated by, and responsible to, the workers;"
-‑
"The relationship between principals and agents may recreate, at least
partially, the relationship between directors and directed. The Yugoslavs have
openly verified this after more than 20 years of experience . . . This is why
control must be exercised autonomously through joint production committees"
("Fifteen Theses," p. 13).
·
Some practical measures are proposed to prevent the
reestablishment of hierarchy:
-‑
"job rotation;"
-‑
"optional recall of elected representatives in charge" ("Fifteen
Theses," p. 10)
·
In the self‑managing enterprise everything is
decided by and made known to everyone:
-‑
"For the first time, debate about the general policy of the company, its
investments, its organization and its social behavior will take place before
all employees, and their decisions will be enforced by designated representatives" (Program,
p. 239).
-‑ "It
is necessary to lay down the principle of free access of workers'
representatives and of experts whom they may call to their assistance to all
the sources of information in the company . . . The wall of secrecy is, in
fact, nothing but the rampart of power. It must be torn down"(Program, pp.
241‑242).
·
As can be seen, these proposals establish a complete
subordination of specialists and technicians to assemblies and committees in
which the decisive majorities are normally made up of people with less
intellectual development.
VI ‑
Tactical Gradualism
·
The implantation of a self‑managing society will
not, however, be effected immediately. The SP will adopt a gradualist method:
--"To
successfully carry out this fearsome and grandiose task [of transforming
society], it [the SP] must not lend an ear to those . . . who preach the savage
liberation of all desires ‑ 'everything, right away, always and
everywhere: a permanent and generalized trance' ‑ and even less, of
course, to those who flatter these impulses to better deviate energy and wills
from the goals of social transformation" (Program, p. 33).
--"It
behooves us to go toward the ideal and understand the real"
("Declaration of General Policy," p. 46).
--"Rigor, of
course, calls for prudence. These reforms will be slow, but our determination
is great (ibid., p. 48)
VII - The Period
of Transition to Socialism
·
The gradualist method presupposes an "initial
period of transition to socialism" ("Fifteen Theses," p. 14)
during which the workers will little by little take over the enterprises that
are still left in the private sector.
·
This will be done by gradually increasing the power
and importance of the "comites d'entreprise" (joint production
committees):
-‑
"The committees . . . will necessarily be consulted before [taking] any
measure having to do with hiring, firing, assigning and changing posts,
classifying workers, determining work rhythm and the whole of working
conditions in general" ("Common Program ‑ Proposals for
Updating," p. 53).
-‑
"The joint production committees . . . will be fully informed about the
principal aspects and results of the management of the enterprises"
(ibid., p. 53).
-- "The
joint production committees will be informed in advance and consulted about all
economic and financial plans, investment and financing programs, the plans of
the company and its policy regarding pay, training and promotion of personnel
"(ibid., p. 53).
--"In order
to submit this information to the discussion of all workers, the joint
production committees . . . may hold a meeting of the personnel at their place
of work during one working hour per month " (ibid., p. 33).
·
During this "period of transition to socialism
" the State will intervene especially to ensure, through laws, the
continuity of the process:
-‑
"For socialists, it is an essential responsibility of the State to
intervene by law in order to fight every legal aspect of labor relations that
weakens either the individual's job security or the collective organization of
workers in the company" (Program, p. 227)
·
In this stage of the process, the State will impose a
series of measures supposedly favoring the workers, such as:
-‑
"Contracts of indefinite duration which will be the basis of normal labor
relations" (Program, p. 227).
-‑
Prohibition of "enterprises based on temporary employment" (Program,
p. 227).
-‑
"Union of the worker community . . . facing the holders of capital "
(Program, p. 227).
-‑
Prohibition of "every partial or total closure of an enterprise by the
employer as a means of pressure or sanction ("Common Program ‑
Proposals for Updating," pp. 52‑53).
-‑
Prohibition of "recording, in files . . . non‑professional
information, data or evaluations that might be harmful to the worker"
(ibid. p. 53).
-‑ Right of
veto over "decisions to hire and fire and decisions concerning the
organization of work, and the company's training program" (Program, p.
242).
-‑ Right of
"control over all company expenses related to salaries, social security,
budget for training program, housing assistance, etc." (Program, p. 242).
-‑
Technological innovations must not be an occasion to fire a worker but rather
to shorten his workday:
"Technological
progress will be imposed in France only with the workers, not against them.
They must be its beneficiaries and not its victims " (Program, p. 174).
-‑
"Firing will no longer be a right of the employer left to his own
discretion, For this end, the law will reestablish a requirement of requesting
prior authorization in all cases from the labor inspector, under pain of civil
and criminal penalties" ("Common Program ‑ Proposals for
Updating," p. 51).
VIII ‑ The
Final Goal: Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
·
The self‑managing society is a radical
fulfillment of the motto of the French Revolution, "liberté, igalité,
fraternité":
-‑
"There is no liberty but that of socialism " (Program, p. 10).
-‑
"Self‑management, extended to the whole of society, means the end of
exploitation, the disappearance of antagonistic classes, real democracy ‑
(Documentation Socialiste, no. 5, p.
5 7).
-‑
"Self‑ management is democracy generalized at all levels, it is
democracy achieved through and in socialism" (ibid., p. 5 7).
If you own a business, if you are part of upper,
middle or lower level management, or if you are an experienced and sensible
worker, we ask you: Do you believe that such a system of self‑management
can work? To answer this question, imagine your company reorganized tomorrow
according to this blueprint. Would it work?
The Communiqué
France:
The Fist Crushes the Rose
The fist and the
rose ...
A fist, rather
like a boxer's, holds the stern of a rose, ready to crush it. The rose opens on
the tip of the stem, as light and gracious as if it were in a porcelain vase.
It is not easy to
make the meaning of these heterogeneous "heraldic" symbols explicit,
especially when they are juxtaposed in this way. Do they symbolize the Marxist
working class leading a country flourishing in liberty? Perhaps. In any case,
had they been conceived to mean just that, they could hardly be more
appropriate: They well express the hopes of freedom that "socialism with a human face" does
its best to awaken.
But there is also
something obscure and contradictory in these symbols. The aggressive and brutal
fist seems as incompatible with the rose as a punch. One would say that such a
fist could not fail to start crushing the rose. And if the rose could
understand a fist like this, it would be shocked, stop smiling, and begin to
wither.
The relations
between socialism and an authentic and harmonious freedom are no different; no
matter how emphatically it promises freedom, socialism, wherever established,
begins to strangle it.
This, one can
fear, may now be happening in glorious and beloved France, well before the end
of the first year of self-managing government. This is the opportune moment to
make this clear, for the Mitterrand Government, with the support of the
socialist Communist coalition, is actively making propaganda for self‑management all over the West.
A concrete
example seems to adequately illustrate the apprehension that the fist may be
crushing the rose. It concerns precisely one of those freedoms that the naive
most expect the Mitterrand Government to preserve: the freedom of the press.
***
It is well known that
since December 9 of last year the thirteen Societies for the Defense of
Tradition, Family and Property (TFPs) have been publishing, in large newspapers
of fifteen countries, a Message warning
of the incompatibility between the perennial
principles of Christian Civilization on one hand, and, on the other, the
self‑managing reform to which the Socialist Party promised to commit
France in the 1981 elections. A gradual reform, yes, but also total,
demolishing the right to own land, businesses and private schools, invading the
family to organize children against their parents, and, in its end term,
sparing not even leisure, the interior arrangement of homes, and the very
person of every Frenchman. The Message was published in Argentina, Bolivia,
Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, England, Germany, Italy, Portugal,
the United States, Spain, Uruguay and Venezuela.
The TFPs found no
obstacles to the publication of their Message as a paid advertisement in any of
these countries. The newspapers opened up to them all the way. At no time did
they feel that, by publishing the Message, they were committing themselves to
views partially or totally not theirs. In so doing, these newspapers were
strictly consistent with the democratic principles they proclaim as their own.
It would have
been natural for the TFPs' Message to be published just as easily in the large
French dailies, which pride themselves on professing the same democratic
principles. But this time the TFPs had bitter experience to the contrary. They feel
obliged to inform not only the English‑speaking public about this, but
also that of each country where the Message has been published.
***
Leaving aside
avowedly socialist or communist newspapers, the serene and elevated Message of
the TFPs was successively submitted for publication to 6 French dailies with
circulation over 100,000. However, all these papers refused to publish it. This
attitude is inexplicable for several reasons, since:
a) Newspapers
which pride themselves on their democratic line, and which moreover are at
variance with each other on important points, in this particular case are
disconcertingly unanimous in their refusal to publish the document. Thus the
thirteen TFPs are deprived of having their viewpoint, which opposes self-managing
socialism, published on French soil.
b) Furthermore,
two of these newspapers had formally agreed to publish the TFPs' Message on
December 15 of last year. (At the last minute the French TFP decided to
postpone the publication because the attention of the public was then strongly
attracted by the events in Poland.) This contract was so firm that, by mutual
agreement, the agency negotiating the advertisement received payment in full
on December 11. All this notwithstanding, on January 6 this agency advised the
TFPs that the two dailies had just refused to abide by their agreement. The
reason: none.
c) Naturally, an
arbitrary breach of contract exposes the company which owns both newspapers to
a suit for loss and damages. But not even the perspective of such a predicament
was enough to prevent their refusal.
d) Advertisements
are one of the most common sources of income both for this publishing company
and the other companies which refused to publish the document. The size of this
Message would make its publication particularly inviting. So, the refusal is
contrary to the very nature of these journalistic enterprises as such.
***
At this point one
has to ask: What is the reason for this united front of refusals curtailing the
freedom of the TFPs in France? Far away on the horizon, only one explanatory
hypothesis takes shape. As private organizations, the publishing companies
which own these various papers can be placed at any moment on the list of self‑managing
enterprises by a legislative decision of the socialist‑communist
parliamentary majority. If that were to happen, their present owners would normally
become mere managers or even lose any role in the company whatsoever.
Is it so
surprising that these publishers deny the TFPs freedom of expression when their
own freedom, at least potentially, has been so profoundly shaken? What is the
real freedom of expression in a regime where a Damocles' sword hangs over the
head of every publishing company, owner, a sword hanging from a string held by
the government?
Whatever heat the
opposition newspapers may de facto be permitted to show, their situation is, de
jure, that of Damocles under the sword.
Incidentally, it
is altogether possible that a heated opposition may not be as annoying to a
government as another which courteously and serenely focuses on certain
delicate topics which not all currents of opinion have noticed.
Now, the Message
of the thirteen TFPs puts a finger on certain painful wounds unknown to the
Catholic electoral bloc, which weighed decisively on the socialist side in the
1981 elections. Such is the case, for instance, when it focuses on how a
compulsory self-managing regime is absolutely incompatible with the true
Doctrine of the Church about the character of the right of property, which
inheres by nature in every individual. The same applies when it points out how
the doctrine and program of the Socialist Party place marriage, free unions and
even homosexual unions on the same level.
It is not the
intention of the TFPs to start a debate with newspapers so conditioned by the
socialist self-managing Moloch. With this publication, the TFPs aims solely at
making the public in the largest countries of the Free World see how confined
freedom already appears to be at the beginning of the self‑managing
socialist regime. This should lead every citizen of the Free World to fear for
his own personal freedom if self-managing socialism is implanted in his
country.
Thus, one is led
to believe that a curtain is being drawn around today's France. Not an iron
curtain, nor one of bamboo. It is, as it were, an impalpable curtain of silence
of the press, which will inevitably march toward becoming total.
This fact is what
the TFPs are bringing to the knowledge of the whole West. The same French
newspapers will be asked to publish this Communiqué. But even if there is a new
collective refusal, the TFPs hope that the spreading of this Communiqué outside
France may succeed in making it known to a large part of the French people.
They also hope that it will open the eyes of the West to all that is contradictory
and impracticable in the self‑managing promise of socialism‑with‑freedom.
This finding has
a far‑reaching scope: Except for the promise of freedom, all that is left
to the self-managing regime is its similarity to Communism.
The Message of
the thirteen TFPs about self-managing socialism is making its way far and wide
in the world. Along its course, it has met everything: furious hatred, baseless
criticisms, inexplicable omissions, longstanding and luminous support from
friends who have never let themselves be dishonored by fear, and innumerable
new adhesions, some of them unexpected and magnificent.
This Communiqué
is one more great step along this road. Consistent with the Message, it has to
do not only with self‑managing socialism, but also with Communism. All
of this ‑ and that which is yet to happen ‑ will one day be written
into history; the epic History of one of the supreme efforts undertaken In
signo Crucis (in the sign of the Cross) to steer our agonizing Western
civilization away from the final shipwreck toward which it is letting itself
drift.
After the great
campaigns of the TFPs against Communism ‑ campaigns which have always
been doctrinal and orderly ‑ the communists keep silent. A little later,
furious media attacks based merely on distortions or calumnies with no
doctrinal content have been unleashed against the TFPs. Will this now happen
once again? As the French popular saying has it, "he who lives will
see."
Sâo Paulo, February 11, 1982
Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes
For the Brazilian
TFP and, by express delegation, the TFPs and similar organizations of the
United States, Argentina, Bolivia, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, France,
Portugal, Spain, Uruguay and Venezuela,
Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira
President of the National Council of the Brazilian
Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property
About the Author:
Plinio Corrêa de
Oliveira
Many statesmen of
our time, as well as highly‑placed businessmen and prominent figures in
science, culture and art, pride themselves in being prophets and apostles of
the immense secularist and egalitarian Revolution which embraces all of today's
world.
In the midst of
this ubiquitous and apparently victorious laicist and egalitarian revolution
appears the figure of Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira who has developed and lived
ideals diametrically opposed to the current dominant tendencies. His great
accomplishment is the Brazilian Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family
and Property (TFP), the direct result of an entire life of activity as a
writer, university professor, journalist and orator.
Plinio Correa de
Oliveira, born in Sâo Paulo, Brazil, on December 13, 1908, began his activities
as a Catholic militant in 1928, at the age of 20. The TFP was founded only in
1960, after a long and careful process of preparation. Since then its ideals
have been projected throughout practically all of South America, the United
States, Canada, Europe and South Africa. Since 1977 the TFPs have had a representative
office in Rome, the Ufficio Tradizione, Famiglia, Proprieta, and another in
Washington since last year. A number of activities of the TFP have had
surprising repercussions behind the Iron Curtain.
According to the
myth ‑ frequently accepted unquestioningly ‑ the egalitarian
Revolution finds, in new countries without tradition, a more fertile ground
than in those where tradition still powerfully impregnates the laws,
institutions and customs. In other words, the Americas would theoretically, be
more fertile ground for the Revolution than Europe.
The spread of the
TFPs has shaken this cliche. Formed initially in Sâo Paulo, the "New York
of Brazil," the TFP was made up of middle‑aged men, many of whom
came from old established families and from the upper middle‑class. Their
Christian, anti-socialist and anti‑communist proclamation was received
enthusiastically by young students and white‑collar workers, most of them
descendants of working class immigrants from the most varied origins.
Thus, spreading
throughout the so‑called underdeveloped world, poor in tradition and
resources but
enriched with the gift of the Faith, the movement in
favor of Tradition, Family and Property paradoxically reached super‑industrial
North America and traditional Europe.
The ideals of the
Brazilian TFP, the same as those of the other TFPs, are set forth in the book
Revolution and Counter‑revolution, published by Plinio Correa de Oliveira
in 1959, shortly before the founding of the Society. This book shows how
certain forces and ideological currents began to unite in the Fifteenth Century
to exterminate Christian Civilization and destroy the Catholic Church, and thus
do away with the fruits of the Redemption of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Basically,
these forces manipulate man's unbridled passions, especially pride and
sensuality, and use sophistry, political intrigue and economic pressure to
achieve their destructive end.
The first great
and, so to speak, collective social explosion of these passions occurred in the
Sixteenth Century with the Renaissance, affecting the cultural and artistic
field, and with the Protestant Reformation, which affected the religious field.
The action of pride as a revolutionary force in the religious field provokes
the rejection of the supreme authority of the Pope as monarch of the Church,
and that of the bishops as its hierarchy. In the humanist movement of the
Renaissance the fanatic admiration for Greek and Roman art became a pretext to
introduce naturalism, nudism, and immorality in general into the social customs
of Christian Europe.
The cumulative
effect of all these factors, nourished by pride and sensuality, resulted in
another explosion, the French Revolution of 1789. This second revolution
consisted mainly in raising the standard of equality, liberty and fraternity in
order to force transformations in the hierarchical structure of the State
analogous to those provoked by Protestantism in the structure of the Church.
Egalitarianism,
and its corollary, liberalism, did not tarry in reaching the only sphere of
Christian order that had remained more or less intact, the socioeconomic
field. The germs of utopian socialism, already present in the French
Revolution, rapidly spread through Europe until the middle of the nineteenth
century, when they produced scientific socialism, or communism: the third
revolution. This materialistic, atheistic and completely egalitarian revolution
is now reaching its zenith and is already developing into a fourth: the
proclamation of the freedom of all instincts. The rebellion of the Sorbonne in
1968 was a howling and characteristic preview of this fourth revolution.
In his book,
Plinio Correa de Oliveira emphasizes that the great global Revolution, whose
final phase we are now witnessing, is not above all a political or sociological
phenomenon, but even more profoundly a moral and religious transformation which
radiates its effects into all the aspects of the human personality. Whence the
revolutionary germ spreads into the Church and the State, into social customs,
art and culture, and into the political, social and economic order of today's
life.
In the face of
the revolutionary dragon, the Counter‑revolution, as Plinio Correa de
Oliveira sees it, is much more than a book: It is an ideal that invites modern
man to completely reject all the aspects of the laicist and egalitarian
Revolution and to restore the Christian order, the concretization in the
temporal and religious spheres of the redemptive work of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Every TFP fights
in its respective country for this Counter‑revolutionary ideal.
***
Plinio Correa de
Oliveira is a descendant of long established families from the states of
Pernambuco whence came his father, the lawyer Joao Paulo Correa de Oliveira,
and Sao Paul ‑ the most important
Brazilian state ‑ whence came his mother,
Lucilia Ribeiro dos Santos. He attended high school in the Colegio Sao Luis run
by the Jesuit Fathers of S. Paulo, and received his law degree from the famous
Law School of the University of Sao Paulo.
At an early age
he became interested in the philosophical, religious, and practical analyses
of the contemporary crisis, its genesis and its consequences. He is a militant
Catholic of profound conviction whose tongue and pen have always been at the
service of causes where the interests of the Church and of Christian
Civilization have been at stake. On leaving the university he began his
professional and public career, at the same time becoming prominent as the most
outstanding leader of the Catholic youth movement of Sao Paulo, which he
entered in 1928.
At 24 he was
elected to the Federal Constituent Assembly by the Catholic Electoral League,
becoming its youngest member and the one receiving the greatest number of votes
in the whole country.
Shortly
thereafter, he accepted the chair of the History of Civilization in the
University of Sao Paulo, and later also accepted the chair of Modern and
Contemporary History in the Pontifical Catholic University of Sao Paulo.
He was the first
president of the Archdiocesan Board of Catholic Action of the State of Sao
Paulo.
In 1951, the then Bishop of Campos, Dom Antonio de
Castro Mayer, founded the cultural monthly Catolicismo, Brazil's principal
anti-progressivist and anti-leftist publication, on whose editorial staff
Plinio Correa de Oliveira held an outstanding place from the beginning.
He also writes
for the Folha de S. Paulo, one of the great Brazilian newspapers. There he
takes up political, sociological and religious issues that have notable
repercussion all over the country. These articles are also published in various
other organs of the Brazilian press and of other countries in the Americas.
In addition to
Revolution and Counter‑Revolution, Plinio Correa de Oliveira wrote the
following books:
In Defense of Catholic Action (1943) ‑ This work,
with a preface by Cardinal Massella, then Apostolic Nuncio in Brazil, is an
acute analysis of the first beginnings of progressivist and leftist
infiltration in Catholic Action. The book received a warm letter of praise,
written in the name of Pius XII, by the then Substitute of the Secretariat of
the Holy See, Msgr. Montini, the future Paul VI.
Agrarian Reform: A Question of Conscience (1960) ‑
Written in collaboration with Dom Geraldo de Proenca Sigaud, Archbishop of
Diamaritina, Dom Antonio de Castro Mayer, Bishop of Campos, and the economist
Luis Mendonca de Freitas, this book criticized socialist and confiscatory
agrarian reform and affirmed that it violated the Commandments "Thou shalt
not steal" and "Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's goods." This
study provoked debates in Brazil, and became a best seller going through four
printings in twenty months. Political commentators affirmed that the book was
responsible for the failure of the agroreformist aims of the Joao Goulart
government. Translations were published in Argentina, Spain and Colombia.
The Declaration of Morro Alto (1964) ‑ Written
in collaboration with the same authors mentioned above, and following the
principles laid out in Agrarian Reform: A Question of Conscience, this study
presents a program of affirmative agrarian policy aiming to stimulate rural
production, thus benefiting rural proprietors, laborers, and the nation in
general.
The Church and the Communist State: the Impossible
Coexistence (1963) ‑ This work defends the thesis that it is impossible
for the Church to coexist with a government which, while granting Her freedom
of worship, prohibits Her from teaching that it is not licit to abolish private
property, founded as it is on two precepts of the Decalogue. This work received
a letter of praise signed by Cardinals Pizzardo and Staffa, from the Sacred
Congregation for Seminaries and Universities, in which that high organ of the
Holy See declares the doctrine expounded by the author a "most faithful
echo" of the Pontifical Magisterium.
This essay has
been translated into English, German, Spanish, French, Hungarian, Italian and
Polish. It has gone through 36 editions and was published in its entirety in 38
newspapers or magazines of 13 different countries.
Unperceived Ideological Transshipment and Dialogue
(1965) ‑ This work describes the subtle process whereby many Catholics,
through an irenic dialogue, are inadvertently transformed into communists. Five
editions of this essay have been published in
Portuguese, one in German, four in Spanish, and one in Italian. it has been
published in its entirety by six newspapers of four countries.
The Church in
the Face of the Rise of the Communist Threat ‑ an Appeal to the Silent
Bishops (1976) ‑ A history of the forty years of the progressivist and
"Catholic leftist" crisis in Brazil. It cites scandalously pro‑communist
poetry by Dom Pedro Casaldaliga, Bishop of Sao Felix do Araguaia. The book also
contains a resume of the work of the Chilean TFP, The Church of Silence in
Chile ‑ The TFP Proclaims the Whole Truth (*), which denounces the action
of Cardinal Silva Henriquez and many bishops and priests of that country who
systematically favored communism. Four editions.
Indian Tribalism, the Communist Missionary Ideal for
Brazil in the Twenty‑first Century (1977) (*) ‑ Denounces a new
facet of the progressivist onslaught in Brazil: Communist‑Structuralist
neomissiology. Seven editions besides its publication in Catolicismo.
I am Catholic ‑ Can I Oppose Land Reform? (1981)
‑ Analyzes the document The Church and Problems of the Land approved by
the 18th General Assembly of the National Conference of Brazilian Bishops
(CNBB), showing how that organ of the bishops is fighting for a land reform
that favors the implantation of communism in Brazil. The book also contains a
critique of the bishops' document from the economic standpoint by the economist
Carlos Patricio del Campo. Three editions.
***
As an
intellectual, Plinio Correa de Oliveira holds an undeniably outstanding place
on the Brazilian scene. As a man of action, he is the most dynamic anticommunist
leader in the country. His personality now projects all over Brazil and abroad
as that of one of the most notable men of thought and action in our epoch of
achievements and crises, of apprehensions, of catastrophes, but also of
splendid affirmations of the Christian conscience.
(*) Available in English. Request from Foundation for
a Christian Civilization, P.O. Box 1868, York, PA 17405.