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Bill’s notes on Commodity Fetishism

“What I have to examine in this work is the capitalist mode of production, and the relations of production and forms of intercourse that correspond to it.” From the first Preface to Capital by Marx.

So this is not intended to be a standard economics textbook that just talks about the market. It is intended to include how capitalism controls our social relations. And it is doing this with the purpose of letting people see how they themselves can take control of their own social relations by abolishing capitalism, and creating an economy that we control so that it operates in everyone’s interests.

But commodity fetishism hides this possibility from us.

Here is Marx’s description of commodity fetishism:

“The mysterious character of the commodity-form consists therefore simply in the fact that the commodity reflects the social characteristics of men’s own labor as objective characteristics of the products of labor themselves as the socio-natural properties of these things.”

And he adds this formulation: “To the producers, therefore, the relations connecting the labor of one individual with that of the rest appears, not as direct social relations between individuals at work, but as what they really are, material relations between persons and social relations between things.”

In other words, in the capitalist society Marx has imagined so far, which is an early stage of capitalism, we are all private producers. We all relate to one another, outside the family, through money. Nobody fixes our car for free, except as a rare exception. Nobody tutors for free except, as a rare exception. We do not consult with one another with respect to what we are going to produce or how many of them we will produce. There is no social plan regulating the capitalist economy. It is simply millions of private producers acting on their own. Yet in a very inaccurate and rough way, and leaving aside huge crises, we manage to more or less meet people’s needs, at least from the point of view of capitalism. This process works by means of supply and demand.

For example, if too many individuals decide to produce a particular commodity so that this commodity is overproduced, then the supply will exceed demand. It will be hard for producers to find buyers, and the exchange value will drop below the labor time required to produce the commodity. Many producers of this commodity will then switch to producing some other commodity to get a better rate of return.

If too few individuals decide to produce a particular commodity, then there will not be enough of this commodity for everyone who wants one. In this case, its exchange value will rise above the labor time required to produce it. Then, more people will decide to start producing this commodity to take advantage of the extra exchange value they will get.

This is how we very crudely make production line up with people’s needs – through the highly inefficient process of supply and demand where the exchange value of the commodity rises above and below the labor time required to produce it. Or, put differently, it is the rate at which commodities exchange with each other that dictates whether we producers leave a particular line of production or join another line of production. So the amount in which commodities exchange for one another dictates to us that we need to either produce more of a commodity or less of it.

Of course, all these wild fluctuations could be avoided if we came together, calculated how much our society needs of each commodity and assigned the right number of people to produce a specific amount in order to exactly meet those needs.

But not only do we not do this, the fetishism of commodities gives people the impression that we CAN’T do this. The fetishism of commodities leads us to believe that we cannot control our economy. It gives the impression that commodities have value because of something entirely intrinsic to them that has nothing to do with us and the total social labor time we spend producing them. It gives the impression that the economy is something objective that cannot be controlled by us. And, of course, a major reason why people think this way is because we are all looking at the economy from the perspective of an isolated, powerless, private individual where our major way of relating to one another is through the exchange of commodities (or money). From that perspective the economy seems objective and overpowering.

Commodity fetishism, therefore, arises with the establishment of social relations, where people do not discuss and plan out how much of each commodity to produce, but of people relating to objects, or things, which in turn relate to people. And so it appears to everyday consciousness that people are naturally related only through things, but in essence this manner of social organization is not a natural occurrence but is itself a collective social product, produced by humans. For this reason it can be changed by humans.

So we have unconsciously and without any planning produced a commodity economy that now rules over us.  Marx uses the analogy of religion: “As in religion man is governed by the products of his own brain, so in capitalistic production he is governed by the products of his own hand.” In other words, we create gods and then bow down to them and let them rule over us. Similarly, with the world of commodities. We created this capitalist economy but now it rules over us.

As long as the exchange of commodities governs how much we produce, argues Marx, the process of production has the mastery over humans, instead of being controlled by them. That is, the operation of the law of value inevitably involves the subjection of humans to things, and economic activity is controlled by the blind laws of the market.

We have all sorts of ways of revealing that we don’t see the economy as something that we can collectively control. We talk about the market as if it has a life independent of us. For example, we hear said: “We will see what the market will tolerate,” as if the market has a will of its own. Or, “The market crashed,” as if humans had nothing to do with it.

Marx’s goal is to unmask the phenomenon of commodity fetishism and emphasize that this entire system was collectively created by humans, although it was not consciously planned out and then created. But by becoming conscious of this entire process, we are then in a position to take control. But this must be done collectively and democratically. Otherwise we will be fighting among ourselves over who controls the decisions and who controls the products of labor, and we will not have real control over the economy.

One final point on the fetishism of commodities before we conclude: Above we quoted Marx as saying: “To the producers, therefore, the relations connecting the labor of one individual with that of the rest appears, not as direct social relations between individuals at work, but as what they really are, [my emphasis] material relations between persons and social relations between things.”

What Marx is saying here is that commodity fetishism is not entirely a false perception. Under capitalism, the exchange of commodities really does rule our lives. We do not control them; they control us. The point, then, is to understand that things could be organized in an entirely different way. This is the essence Marx wants us to grasp.

So this is an example where Marx depicts appearance and essence as being connected or related concepts as opposed to being opposites – one true and the other false. This is where appearance does correspond with reality in a sense, because in capitalism social relations really are mediated by things, commodities.

Appearance and essence are then part of the same reality. Commodity fetishism for Marx amounts to reality, but on the level of appearance, yet appearances are not all of what reality consists of.

I want to conclude with this long quote from the Fetishism section where Marx imagines an entirely different society, one that we would call socialism:

“Let us finally imagine, for a change, an association of free men, working with the means of production held in common, and expending their many different forms of labor-power in full self-awareness as one single social labor force. All the characteristics of Robinson’s labor are repeated here, but with the difference that they are social instead of individual. All Robinson’s products were exclusively the result of his own personal labor and they were therefore directly objects of utility for him personally. The total product of our imagined association is a social product. One part of this product serves as fresh means of production and remains social. But another part is consumed by the members of the association as means of subsistence. This part must therefore be divided amongst them. The way this division is made will vary with the particular kind of social organization of production and the corresponding level of social development attained by the producers. We shall assume, but only for the sake of a parallel with the production of commodities, that the share of each individual producer in the means of subsistence is determined by his labor-time. Labor-time would in that case play a double part. Its apportionment in accordance with a definite social plan maintains the correct proportion between the different functions of labor and the various needs of the associations. On the other hand, labor-time also serves as a measure of the part taken by each individual in the common labor, and of his share in the part of the total produce destined for individual consumption. The social relations of the individual producers, both towards their labor and the products of their labor, are here transparent in their simplicity in production as well as in distribution.”

This is a society in which people collectively take control and democratically decide what will be produced, who will produce it, and how much will be produced. This represents real freedom, not the worthless isolated individual freedom that the capitalists embrace where the isolated individual is truly powerless. Rather, it is the freedom of coming together, listening to one another’s arguments, and then proceeding along the course that attracted the most support. Here, people can be as powerful as their arguments. This is real freedom.

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DSA SF Endorsements – November 2018

As the largest socialist organization in San Francisco, DSA SF is proud to be selective in our electoral endorsements. We don’t endorse in every race, and we consider endorsement only if a significant number of members express interest. Campaigns undergo a thorough process of research and debate before we ever hold a vote, and must meet several rigorous standards, chief among which is the capacity of the ballot measure or candidate to build real power for the working class.

DSA SF members voted to endorse three campaigns in the November 6, 2018 elections:

  • Tony Kelly for District 10 Supervisor, our first local candidate endorsement
  • Yes on Proposition Calso known as Our City, Our Home
  • Yes on Proposition 10, also known as the Affordable Housing Act

Tony Kelly for District 10 Supervisor

Tony Kelly is a longtime activist with a strong record of fighting for racial and environmental justice in District 10. His years of work alongside Greenaction on the Hunters Point Shipyard contamination scandal—in which the Navy and its contractors covered up the existence of radioactive waste beneath housing developments, while City government turned a blind eye—have demonstrated his commitment to the wellbeing of his community.

Tony is a proud socialist and member of DSA SF, and his platform includes bold approaches to issues of housing and homelessness; systemic racism and police brutality; creation of a public bank to divest the city from corporations that exploit workers and destroy our planet; and getting big money out of politics. Tony is the only major candidate in District 10 who has not taken money from developers, lobbyists, or corporate interests, and the City Hall machine is fighting hard against him.

Long ignored by even their own representatives in City Hall, the people of District 10 deserve a Supervisor who will truly fight for their health, dignity, and rights. And all of us, as San Franciscans, deserve a government that will stand up to the capitalist class as it attempts to turn our city into a playground for the rich.

Electing Tony Kelly will help us begin to build a city for the many, not the few.

Sign up to volunteer for Tony Kelly!

Yes on C

Prop C is one of the most ambitious pieces of homelessness legislation that San Francisco has ever seen on the ballot. The premise is simple: tax the rich to house the poor.

If passed, it would enact a small (0.5%) gross receipts tax on companies making over $50 million a year, the revenues from which would fund a set of comprehensive services to alleviate and prevent homelessness in San Francisco:

  • Permanent, supportive housing for 4,000 homeless youth, families, and adults
  • Mental health and addiction services
  • Emergency shelters for 1,000 people
  • Homelessness prevention services, such as rental assistance and eviction defense

According to the most conservative estimates, there are more than 7,500 homeless San Franciscans at any given time, and many advocates believe the actual number is several times higher. Enormous waitlists for shelter beds can leave people on the street for months. We live in one of the wealthiest cities in the wealthiest nation in the history of the world, and yet people starve in the shadow of billion-dollar skyscrapers.

Large corporations like Square and Stripe have poured incredible amounts of money into defeating this measure, because to them, a negligible tax increase is worse than our most vulnerable neighbors dying in the streets. Even after the Trump administration handed them a massive tax break, wealthy capitalists are unwilling to pay their fair share.

It’s time we made them.

Sign up to volunteer for Yes on C!

Yes on 10

Prop 10 is all about expanding rent control and keeping rental housing affordable throughout California. Thanks to a 1995 law known as Costa-Hawkins, cities are prohibited from creating new rent control laws, which limit the actual cost of rent, and vacancy control laws, which limit how much a landlord can raise the rent after a tenant moves out. Prop 10 would repeal Costa-Hawkins.

If Prop 10 passes, cities would have the ability to enact both types of laws for the first time in more than 20 years. In San Francisco, for example, we could expand rent control to units built after 1979. We could ensure that when you move out of your rent-controlled apartment, the next tenant doesn’t have to pay ten times what you did. In short, we could finally start addressing the affordability crisis that is driving thousands of working-class people out of the city each year.

We face an uphill battle in this election. Landlords and real estate lobbyists have spent millions of dollars spreading lies about Prop 10, and we need all the help we can get to pass this historic reform.

Your landlord is scared we’ll stop them from reaping enormous profits and perpetuating the housing affordability crisis. Let’s show them they should be.

Sign up to volunteer for Yes on 10!

 

Join DSA SF in voting Tony Kelly for D10 Supervisor, Yes on C, and Yes on 10 on November 6, 2018!

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New Blood: Welcoming Our Incoming Steering Committee

At our June 27th General Meeting, DSA SF elected a new Steering Committee! We want to thank our outgoing Steering Committee for their tireless work in helping this fledgling chapter get off the ground and grow into the healthy, productive organizing space that has become. Here’s a statement from the new SC:

First and foremost, we would like to thank each and every one of you for putting your faith and trust in us to steer the chapter. Our chapter has accomplished so much in the short two years since our refoundation and we are honored that so many of you felt that we were best suited to facilitate the growth of our work.

We started the night reviewing all of the hard work and incredible things that we accomplished over the last year. After sharing the memories of direct actions, mutual aid projects, and our brilliant electoral wins on Prop H and Prop F, we took to the stage with five of our comrades to discuss our visions for the direction of the chapter. After 45 minutes of phenomenal discourse and sharing profound ideas, you elected us:

Shanti S: Shanti Singh is a native Yinzer and housing justice organizer who worked on Board of Supervisors campaigns before embracing fully automated luxury gay space communism. She was co-chair of LPRAC and helped start Housing before joining the SC, functioning as a proxy for Atlas, her tuxedo cat, who is the real power behind the throne. 

Jennifer B: After having her heart broken by the San Jose Sharks too many times, Jenbo left the South Bay for San Francisco where she now spends her days avoiding papercuts at a law office and nights discussing revolution in seedy bars. She is relentlessly devoted to ensuring that every voice in the chapter bears the same weight, and welcomes all feedback, concerns, praise, and chisme.

Faiq R: Faiq Raza moved to San Francisco by way of Karachi, Saudi Arabia, Canada, and New Jersey. He spends his days as a computer programmer and nights discussing ways to work towards a housing system meant to house people rather than extracting profit.

Elizabeth M: Lizzie is is a lifelong leftist who went through cycles of engagement before finding DSA SF, by far the most exciting political project she’s been a part of. She moved to San Francisco from the Midwest 6 years ago and she’s very happy with both the sense of community here and the total lack of winter weather.

Mia L: Mia drove from North Carolina to San Francisco just to see what it was like and now she’s never leaving. A geologist by training, she became a leftist after realizing that destroying the capitalist paradigm is the only way to make the planet safe and livable for generations to come.

We look forward to facilitating and growing all of the incredible work that you choose to take on in the coming year. We welcome any feedback from all members regarding any of our decisions — please feel free to email us at steeringcommittee@dsasf.org! We remain committed to upholding many of our campaign promises surrounding some of the toughest issues that our chapter faces including transparency, communication, and diversity. Thank you all again for your trust and support.

NewsSocialist feminism

In Solidarity with Sex Workers: Come March with Us!

On June 2nd a group of sex workers is organizing a protest in Oakland. They outline five goals: to make the Bay Area and local media more aware of the systematic violence against sex workers, legal and otherwise; to make it clear that sex workers’ concerns are intersectional concerns; to elevate sex workers’ voices; to be visible and to celebrate; and to celebrate the anniversary of the founding of St. James Infirmary.
We have an additional goal: we want to affirm that sex workers are workers, and, like all workers, deserve self-determination.

Sex workers have faced attacks on all sides by the law. Often they work against women: in 2010, an Australian law set restrictions on women’s breast sizes in pornography. Moral handwringing in 2014 led to the restriction of an arbitrary laundry list of sex acts in pornography.  These laws are written without consulting actual sex workers about their interests: most recently, AB-1576 was introduced to the California assembly without sex workers’ input. Laws against sex work aren’t only motivated by hegemonic Christian-tinged moral interest, but also by feminists: women and women’s groups were major proponents of the “Nordic Model” of criminalizing buying sex but not selling it, but a large body of evidence says it pushes sex work underground and makes it more dangerous.

 

And at the U.S. federal level they’re facing another vicious attack: in April, SESTA and FOSTA passed in the Senate and House, respectively. SESTA and FOSTA shift criminal and civil liability onto websites where sex workers post, discuss, and advertise. This creates a chilling effect, where websites proactively take down or filter content that may be related to sex work.

Sex workers themselves are largely opposed to SESTA and FOSTA. Like the earlier attacks, it’s unclear if they even prevent sex work; instead, workers say they’ll be forced to take more dangerous, less visible work. Sex work existed before the internet, and it will definitely exist off of the internet, but the internet provides tools, information, solidarity, and safety. Switter, a Twitter-like website used by sex workers has been impacted. People worry how they will share “bad date lists” and peer references. Backpage’s closure makes it harder for workers to find safe clients; instead they’re moving to the street.

And sex workers are being undermined by leftists: Bernie Sanders, an open socialist and sometime-darling of the DSA, voted yes on SESTA, prompting workers to produce a video open letter.

The attacks on sex work are class warfare. By marginalizing sex workers, capital creates a vulnerable class that it can exploit for profit. By making it difficult to talk about sex work on the internet, capital keeps sex workers separated and unorganized, and reinforces that vulnerability. We don’t know what society will look like after capitalism, or how and whether sex work will fit into that, but we do know that sex workers need support now. Sex workers are workers, and all workers deserve the chance to band together and control their own work.

Visibility isn’t always safe for sex workers: by making themselves present on June 2nd, they’ll be putting themselves at risk in order to organize. Join us as we stand and march with them!

Written by DSA SF SocFem member Elizabeth Morgan.

News

Stop Imperialist Wars

The bourgeoisie is laying a trap. For the past five years, in some form or another, the forces of global capital, which take (in part) the form of the governments that form the EU and the USA, have been calling for a war of annihilation upon the people of Syria. “Human rights are being violated!” they wail. Human rights! Coming from the class that keeps the masses of the world in penury and misery, such yelling is less than empty. The United States and its partners in the European Union wish to destroy the institutions of the Syrian state and replace them with quisling dogs amenable to the capitalist class of the exploiter nations. The Democrats, Republicans, the whole of the capitalist class line up behind the landlord Donald Trump and chant with him: Human rights for Syrians—at the barrel of our guns!

When an A-10 Warthog shoots a thousand bullets a second into farmland, poisoning the soil with depleted uranium tips, who exactly is being gifted these vaunted “human rights?” When NATO member Turkey invades Afrin, causing a massive amount of the population to leave or face arrest and torture, do they bring “human rights?” When the US blocks importations of cancer medicine into Syria to punish the people, do they think this perverse cruelty is going to somehow bring about “human rights”?

Do these rights include housing, a job, a fair wage, food, medicine? Or do “human rights” for the US and NATO mean just one thing: The right to be exploited by transnational companies assisted by a puppet government dependent upon the forces of US capital? It isn’t necessary to melt down and inject 50 hours of Parenti lectures to come to the conclusion that these so-called “human rights” don’t mean a thing when they’re brought in on the wing of a warplane. Our decimation of Libya, our free-market regime change in Iraq, not to mention our wars of annihilation upon the Koreans and Vietnamese people (remember their story of nuns being killed in South Vietnam, and ghost boats off of Tonkin!) make it clear: America brings only death, destruction, and punishment if it is denied a market.

The War on Syria, which has for years been waged by America and it’s NATO & EU allies, has been drawing to a close. To many Syrians, peace is almost on the horizon, and the task of rebuilding can truly begin. To America, a country is slipping out of reach, and must be brought into line.

We, as socialists, must stand and repeat the slogan: No to War! Any war America wages is unjust, no matter what humanitarian smokescreen is used to obscure the true reasons. We live in the belly of the beast, the heart of global capital and imperialism, and in order to fulfill our duty as socialist we must bite the intestines, piss on the guts, and clog the veins of this grotesque animal.

No to Imperialist War! No to murder and decimation!

This essay was written by a member of DSA SF. Thank you to the DSA members and many other community members who turned out to anti-war rallies this weekend.