[Lately, interest in the history of the Revolutionary Communist Party USA (RCP) and its predecessor organization the Revolutionary Union (RU) seems to have had a slight bump up, for good reasons and bad. Good: efforts to reassess and reclaim some of the important organizing work and promotion of revolutionary line done by these groups, and by the New Communist Movement more broadly in the 1970s. Bad: the watching-a-train-wreck fascination as the sorry, tattered remnants of the RCP settle deeper into the swamp of a bizarre cult of personality around its glorious leader Bob Avakian.
One topic of discussion invariably triggered by such interest is the RCP's notorious longtime line condemning homosexuality as bourgeois decadence and LGBTQ people as incapable of being communists. I have therefore decided to post this paper, written over a decade ago, which contains some thoughts on that line and its history, drawing on personal experience.
It was written during a most unusual period in RCP history. In 2001, the group issued a draft for a new party programme, and accompanying programmatic documents on homosexuality and on the Chicana/o National Question (spoiler alert: there's no nation). Then they invited members and others to comment on it on a website called changetheworld.info. The ensuing discussion, though kept under close scrutiny by minders from the RCP leadership, was often lively and thoughtful, especially around gender issues. My contribution was posted there, and stirred some interest and discussion. In a little over a year, the website was
reined in and shut down by Avakian, along with the whole new programme project. Unfortunately, even the WayBack Machine has evidently not archived all of this material. I had to find my contribution on an abandoned hard drive.
However, the emergence of the Kasama Project from a core of folks who broke with the RCP in the second half of the last decade has provided a deeper look into this history than anything that has come before. Since its recent redesign, the Kasama website no longer responds to searches for Red Closet, the heading under which they used to group these articles. However, using the site's search engine with the terms "homosexuality, Avakian" will bring up more than a dozen articles, and scores of comments, many incisive, many heart-rending.
On the whole, I think they tend to confirm and deepen the comments in this earlier contribution.
Dennis O'Neil]
Sisters and Brothers of the
Revolutionary Communist Party—
Despite some misgivings, I
am writing this comment on the RCP’s recent document, On the Position on
Homosexuality in the New Draft Program, at the urging of several RCP cadre. My misgivings are based on the
concern that my particular history might lead folks to ignore my comments or to
assume that I am bringing them forward with bad intentions. I was a founding
member of the party and helped draft the RCP’s first programme, adopted in
1975. I left in the 1978 split that formed the Revolutionary Workers
Headquarters. I am still a Maoist and remain active in a revolutionary
socialist group, the Freedom Road Socialist Organization.
I trust that those RCP
members with whom I have had discussions of the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgendered) question and other issues since then, especially in recent
years, will speak up for my good faith.
I am writing because of my
respect for the contributions to the revolutionary struggle RCP cadre have
made, and my optimism that the self-criticism begun in this new document can
move forward to rectify a very bad line.
That said, my comment is not
even going to address the substance of the line on “homosexuality” in the new
draft programme. I feel certain that others more qualified than myself will
weigh in on that.
I want instead to address
what I see as a serious flaw in the paper’s methodology, its failure to adhere
to Marxist-Leninist standards of self-criticism. (As I wrote this I found
myself slipping back into the polemical style I used to use in the 1970s. I’ve
gone back and tried to clean that up, but if I haven’t completely succeeded, I
apologize.)
THE IMPORTANCE OF
SELF-CRITICISM
As we all know, Mao Zedong
placed a very high importance on the practice of criticism-self criticism in
his writings, going so far in some ”non-canonical” works as to call it the best
guarantee of the continuation of the dictatorship of the proletariat. Leaving
that aside, I direct interested readers to “Rectify the Party’s Style of Work,”
“On Coalition Government,” and “On Correcting Mistaken Ideas In the Party,” to
name a few.
In particular, I will quote
briefly from the first of these articles:
The mistakes of the past
must be exposed without sparing anyone's sensibilities; it is necessary to
analyze and criticize what was bad in the past with a scientific attitude so
that work in the future will be done more carefully and done better. This is
what is meant by “learn from past mistakes to avoid future ones.”
Chairman Mao also called for
fearlessness in dealing with criticism and cited it as essential in inner-party
struggle.
SOME POINTS ON THE NEW
DOCUMENT
The closing section of the
document has a promising title:
Our Past
Analysis of the Question of Homosexuality--what was right, what was wrong, how
we came to recognize our significant errors, and what we can all learn from
this.
However, it does not
deliver.
First, consider the overall tone of the thing. Does it
forthrightly say, “We were wrong”? No. It sort of weasels around. You have
proposed to change the line (which is a good thing), so clearly the line must
have been more wrong than right. That should be your starting point. The part
that was right was the secondary aspect of the contradiction between right and
wrong on this question. The main attention in a self-criticism should be
devoted to the principal aspect, in this case what was wrong.
Second, a good self-criticism, an unsparing one, should
consider the damage done in practice as a result of the wrong line. While such an evaluation is a task which
falls primarily to RCP members, your errors affected the broader movement as
well. Therefore, I will cite three points from outside observation.
One is the longtime RCP line
that LGBT revolutionaries could not be real communists, and thus not join the
RCP because of their anti-working class ideology. If, and this is speculative,
there continued to be LGBT members in your ranks (as there were in the RU where
an early version of the same line ruled after 1972, and the early RCP), what
was the effect on these dedicated fighters of forcing them for years not only
to deny their identity, to stay in the closet, but also to compare themselves
to prostitutes and drug addicts?
Another is the disgust and
distrust that other honest revolutionaries felt at seeing the RCP cling, as
years passed, and decades, to a line that was so clearly wrong and in denial of
advances in struggle and understanding won by the lesbian, gay, bi and trans
movement and its numerous allies. (This is different from other questions of
line disagreement. RCP members and
I differ in our evaluation of the Gang of Four. This is serious, to be sure.
But it is not the same as telling me that, no matter what their line, my
comrades who are queer are incapable of being communists because their gender
identity marks them as hopelessly bourgeois.) Without respect,
unity-struggle-unity is a hard policy to implement.
Last is the nearly
insurmountable barrier this line raised to the recruitment of young activists
from the often very good work done in such party-led organizations as No
Business As Usual and Refuse & Resist.
The fact that no mention is
made of the harm that the wrong line did to the RCP and the revolutionary
movement as a whole implies that the error was relatively trivial. Was it?
Third, a good self-criticism, a materialist one, will look
at the roots of the error. Why did RCP fall into this error? There is a passing
mention of bad lines in the history of the international communist movement,
then the paper declares the RCP’s opposition to “the
more degrading and abusive sexual practices engaged in by some homosexuals
(which do exist), and to some misogyny towards women (including lesbians) on
the part of some male homosexuals,” as if deep-seated concerns about these
particular phenomena were the root cause that drove the adoption of the
anti-lesbian and gay line. The bad experiences of the masses with prison rape
are raised. Finally, authors cite distress over the mid-’70s turn of some activists
to “identity politics,” evidently to help explain why the line was
adopted. This is pretty thin
gruel.
There is no
mention in the whole paper of homophobia, save in one footnote where there is
no choice, because a book so entitled is cited there. There is no mention of
heterosexism. Do these ugly and deeply rooted currents in U.S. capitalist
society really not exist? Do they have no reflection in the RCP?
Also, there is
only limited mention of patriarchy or exploration of the close links between
male supremacy and heterosexism, between oppression based on gender and on
gender identity. Is that because the paper’s authors think no such links exist?
Fourth, the section’s subtitle promises that it
will explain “how we came to recognize our significant errors.” There is only a
brief mention of criticism, including from “activists and revolutionary-minded
youth.” Well, activist youth have been raising these criticisms since the ’70s.
The first to do so are now middle-aged. What criticisms were raised that got
heard and why? What was their content?
Going back to my second point, how did the wrong line manifest itself in
practice and how did that help RCP members come to understand that the line was
wrong?
Fifth, a thorough self-criticism would require
reviewing the line struggle inside the RCP. I know this sounds heavy. This is
not a call for naming names or revealing the internal workings of the party.
Look how the Chinese Communist Party issued summations of its internal line struggles and rectification
campaigns, even in the midst of the anti-Japanese war. There had to be line
struggle in the RCP over this change--truth arises in the minority. What kind
of struggle took place, what lines were defeated? To portray it simply as a process of study abstracted from
line struggle is surely not a fearless summation.
ANOTHER VERSION
I would offer a
different picture of what has happened in the RCP around this line. I am pretty
confident it is accurate in its general approach, though I am prepared to be corrected
in part or whole. I offer this both to deepen my own understanding and in the
hope it can help serve you as a basis for some deeper self-criticism.
The roots of the
RCP’s incorrect line go way back before its founding. The Revolutionary Union
had an essentially homophobic line. This was primarily a reflection of societal
homophobia, which was deeply rooted in its leadership and rank and file. We
struggled against other backward and poisonous ideological currents in the
general society which had, which had to have, manifestations inside even
revolutionary organizations in this society--white chauvinism and male
chauvinism to name two. We accepted homophobia and embraced it. This was
compounded and justified by two secondary factors.
One was the main
current in the history of the international communist movement, which was
itself homophobic. There were, however, counter-traditions to be found, as
summarized by the Proletarian Unity League, a Marxist-Leninist organization in
the U.S. which published, in 1981, Lesbian and Gay Exclusion: The Policy
That Dares Not Speak Its Name, a polemic against the line held by the RCP and other forces in
the New Communist movement of the ’70s. (The Black Panther Party, a strong
influence on several founders of the RU, used a lot of blatant homophobic
rhetoric, but Huey Newton was also one of the first leaders from the ‘60s to
embrace the newborn gay liberation movement and hail its revolutionary
potential.)
The other was
the tendency to tail backward views in the industrial working class, where the
RU was seeking to base itself. When this manifested itself, to use an example
from one unit I recall, as instructions to cadre to take their sandwiches to
work only on untoasted white bread with the crusts on, it did no harm and
became a humorous reminiscence later. When it took the form of “proletarian”
fag-baiting, the damage was real.
From the
beginning there was line struggle around the issue.
When the
national leadership of the RU was trying to unify a broad range of local
collectives into a single national organization, they decided not to
standardize all lines from the top down, but rather to win folks over at the
base. In 1972, if memory serves, I attended an East Coast regional meeting, at
which the national leaders, including those from our region, were eager to for
us adopt a position against lesbians and gays being admitted to the RU (and one
against smoking marijuana, as well). Out of, say, 40 people present, I think
eight of us voted against gay exclusion.
I am very proud
of that vote. I am not so proud of what happened next.
The internal
culture of the RU and the early RCP became increasingly homophobic. Fag jokes,
implications of limp-wristedness and the whole nasty package were common
currency in the group, and only rarely criticized or even commented on. The
tone was set from the top levels of the organization. Not surprisingly, male
leaders and cadre tended to behave worse that their female counterparts. I fell
into this easily enough.
Politically, gay
and lesbian groups and activists, part of a vibrant and challenging new social
movement, were regarded with derision or as agents of bourgeois ideology in the
workers’ movement. Communists and others who allied with them were considered
weak and suspect.
When I was asked
to help in the drafting of a programme to be debated and adopted at the
founding congress of the RCP, I did so. I recall the drafting of the section of
the programme on decadence, which the RCP enshrined at that congress, formally
embracing the line it has carried like an albatross for a quarter of a century.
(Since the very existence of this first programme is not mentioned in the new
document, I have included the 1975 section on “homosexuality” in an appendix,
along with the language from the 1981 programme.) The drafters, myself
included, laughed about the comparison with drug addiction and prostitution and
about the declaration that “homosexuals and others who are caught up in these
things will be re-educated to be productive members of society.” We knew damn
well that formulation implied reeducation camps--and we thought it was funny.
When a large
section of the RCP split in 1978, there was an opportunity to do some
rectification. Some of the more blatantly homophobic leaders split and helped
form the Revolutionary Workers Headquarters, which I was a part of. Those who
remained in the RCP could have lost the line then. Instead, it was in the RWHq
that the struggle took place which led to us abandon the line of homophobia and
exclusion. I was won back to my original position by other comrades in the
organization and outside of it, and with a great sense of relief. I knew the
shit I had been running was raggedy, I had known all along, and I was glad to
be able to start cleaning it out of my brain.
The RCP adopted
its new programme in 1981. I don’t know if there was open struggle at that time
or not--minor changes did appear between the draft and the final programme. At
heart, the new programme adopted the incorrect line from the old programme
wholesale, while modifying its language slightly. The comparison with
prostitution and pornography was made over two paragraphs instead of in the
same sentence. Instead of being re-educated under socialism, homosexuals would
be reformed, and their homosexuality struggled against. And they would have a
right to a job and housing while being subjected to all this.
And because this
line was in the programme, RCP members were bound to defend the indefensible
for the next 20 years.
The next major
public step the RCP took was the 1988 Revolution article. The current summation speaks
highly of it as a step forward on the line and as a model of theoretical
investigation. This is a very bad evaluation. The paper did shift ground some,
as the document points out: “homosexuality” is no longer likened to drug
addiction but more to religion (a distinction Marx did not find so significant
when he called religion the opiate of the masses). The main thing is that in
the contradiction between truth and falsehood, between right and wrong, it is
still solidly on the wrong side.
Methodologically,
the problem is that the whole project represented the philosophical error of a
priorism. The programme
was correct, by definition, and was not at that time subject to redrafting. Thus,
the task of the group who produced it was not to seek truth from facts, but to
produce an elaborate rationalization for an incorrect line that was under fire
from without and at least being questioned from within. The product reflects
the un-Marxist method used. It is virtually unreadable, full of abstruse spacey
speculation and the shallowest imaginable characterizations of gay culture, all
negative. It is also pretty much devoid of discussion of the actual oppression
suffered by, and the many fierce struggles waged by, LGBT people on a daily
basis. (So, for that matter, is the current paper).
A priorism is not Marxism. It is an idealist
deviation. It proceeds not from the concrete analysis of concrete conditions,
but from a set of a priori assumptions about how things are. I hope you will not take the
1988 article as a model for how to do theoretical work.
The rest of the
story is quickly told--partly because from the outside, it can only be seen
through a glass darkly. The RCP tried to rectify its practice without changing
its line, deepening a trend that goes back to the mid-’80s. The party spoke up
on and sometimes took part in struggles around AIDS, anti-gay and lesbian
violence and state sponsored homophobia. It would seem an internal struggle was
underway, whether open or indirect. It may well have contributed to the long
overdue decision to revise the RCP programme.
ON DOING THE
RIGHT THING
Now, with the
programme and its associated documents under discussion, you have the
opportunity to deepen the self-criticism you have begun. I am not alone in
hoping that you take the opportunity to do so. I am sure there will be many,
“homosexual” and straight alike, making comments on the new line. Much of it
will be critical.
Please don’t
become all defensive about criticism of the new position, especially since it
is still just a draft. The paper has a tendency to portray the new position as
the result of a rigorous, methodical and women-centered Marxist evaluation that
is superior to other thinking on the subject. Please consider that this might
not be so, and look at various comments on it in a welcoming spirit.
The fact is,
you’ve been out of the loop on this for almost 30 years. You have relatively
little social practice to sum up in this area. It would be idealism to think
that you could get everything right on the first try. But there are a lot of
people who hope you continue in the effort, and hope you accept contributions like this one in the
spirit in which they are offered.
In Struggle,
Dennis O’Neil
August 27, 2001
APPENDIX
From Programme
And Constitution of the Revolutionary Communist Party USA (1975)
Socialist
society will wipe out the decadence of capitalism in all spheres. Prostitution,
drug addiction, homosexuality and other practices which bourgeois society
breeds and the bourgeoisie promotes to degrade and enslave the masses of
people, will be abolished. The prostitutes, drug addicts and others who are
caught in these things will be re-educated to become productive members of
society, with working class consciousness. The shame connected with these
practices will be taken from the shoulders of these victims and the guilt will
be placed where it belongs—on the bourgeoisie.
(page 43)
From New
Programme And New Constitution of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA (Draft for Discussion) (1980)
The twisted
outgrowths of this society, such as pornography and prostitution, will be
forcibly abolished right off the bat and their re-emergence will not be
tolerated. As for the prostitutes and others victimized by this capitalist
degeneracy, they will be given productive work, politically educated and freed
from the immediate source of their oppression, while education will also be
carried out broadly in society to expose capitalism as the source of this
degradation and to remove the tendency to blame or look down on the victims.
As for
homosexuality, this too, is a product of the decay of capitalism, especially of
the increased ripping apart of the family, which is inevitably taking place
under capitalist conditions, especially as it sinks into deeper crisis. In
particular it stems from the distorted, oppressive man-woman relations
capitalism produces. Once the proletariat is in power, no one will be
discriminated against in jobs, housing and the like merely on the basis of
being a homosexual. But at the same time education will be conducted throughout
society on the ideology behind homosexuality and its material roots in
capitalist society, and struggle will be waged to eliminate it and reform
homosexuals.
(page 67)
From New
Programme And New Constitution of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA (1981)
The twisted
outgrowths of this society, such as pornography and prostitution, will be
forcibly abolished right off the bat and their re-emergence not tolerated. As
for the prostitutes and others victimized by this capitalist degeneracy, they
will be given productive work, politically educated and freed from the immediate
source of their oppression, while education will also be carried out broadly in
society to expose capitalism as the source of this degradation and to remove
the tendency to blame or look down on the victims.
As for
homosexuality, this too, is perpetuated and fostered by the decay of
capitalism, especially as it sinks into deeper crisis. This is particularly the
case because of the distorted, oppressive man-woman relations capitalism
promotes. Once the proletariat is in power, no one will be discriminated
against in jobs, housing and the like merely on the basis of being a
homosexual. But at the same time education will be conducted throughout society
on the ideology behind homosexuality and its material roots in exploiting
society, and struggle will be waged to eliminate it and reform homosexuals.
(page 77)
[A final note from 2013: The writing team referred to as drafting the 1975 "Programme" consisted of precisely two people, Bob Avakian and myself.]
5 comments:
In some ways I miss the smarmy ideological arguments. Of the late 60's-70's. It was easier to putdown others in different groups than to organize for revolution.I was pretty good at being sectarian. I was at the aforementioned East Coast meeting. My partner and I were 2 of the votes who agreed with you. Following the codification of the anti gay position and closely tied to the RU's opposition to passage of the ERA, my partner and I went on a tour to visit people we had worked with in the south. Most of the people we visited were in the October League (our main competitor for the Maoist crowd) They laughed at us. We tried to defend our line but...we knew we were wrong.
Interesting, this reminds me of an anecdote worth sharing…
Some time back in 1974 I was honored to have a sit-down with Chairman Bob, and he told me a story about an early "recruitment" trip to the Bronx. He was in NY to meet an existing collective that might join the RU. But the key info he wanted to share was that when he knocked on the apartment door, it was opened by a guy wearing a dress.
Now please understand that I (like nearly everyone in the RU at the time) was a major Chairman Bob fanboy, but even I listened and thought to myself, "caftan, Chairman, caftan!" I'd guessed the identity of the comrade who'd opened the door, a fella who I thought of at the time as an unreformed hippie, and envisioned him wearing something from Morocco. What kind of small-town idiot, uncertain of his own manhood (I dared wonder to myself), doesn't know that men wear caftans?
Okay, maybe regular folks in the US from outside the major metropolitan-areas, who aren't familiar with the "hasidic hat" community don't realize men wear robe-like
tunics, but what kind of internationalist has such a narrow view?
Its true that there are two different (and competing) sources of interest in the RCP....
One is that an emerging communist generation wants to understand better what happened to the earlier 1970s communist movement (which tried party-building and mass implantation). And the RU is an important experience to start with.
And the other is the morbid fascination in the extreme and bizarre degeneration of a once-respected political group. (Whether people agreed with the RCP or not.... and I agreed with it.... there was generally a sense that they were serious, radical, thoughtful etc.) And now, they have made themselves a joke (or more precisely, Bob's delusions about himself have made them a joke.)
I have felt for a while that they are in their end-game for various reasons -- the bleeding of membership, the disappearance of periphery, the aging of the numb-looking remaining core, etc.
For much of their arc, the RCP could (when they chose, with great effort) mobilize about 8-10 thousand people for some event (a Mao Memorial, a major demonstration, anything really). That was about the size of their reach -- and it remained rather steady for years (over the 1970s, 80s, into the Mumia campaign or NION of the 1990s). And a large part of that rested on C. Clark Kissinger's ability to form alliances and networks.
Now we are watching the end-result of a cultification -- where people attracted by the overt talk of revolution and change run into a kind of "ewwww" factor when they realize the mindless "whateverism" they are asked to adopt.
In the latest round of Avakian "film premiers" the RCP now announced they were able to draw about 600 people nationwide (after singleminded effort). These 600 were (I assume) the audience attendance at the start of Avakian's 6 hour filmed talk. They don't say how many were still in the room when the lights went up. (And we can only imagine.)
That is about a tenth of the RCP's reach for most of their existence. That is their new normal.
In 2008, almost exactly five years ago, their similarly-promoted coming out talks on Avakian's New Synthesis drew 800 people, in three main city events.
Now (after five more years of their attempt to concentrate shrinking cadre forces in NYC) they were able to draw (again by their count) 220 people in that city.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
In many ways, there is an awful cost to the cultification, the obvious morbidity and the terrible history of homophobia.... There is nothing controversial (these days) about treating the fading RCP like a joke -- they did that to themselves. The controversial thing is to try to excavate the layers of experience (positive, negative and ambivalent) that can be lessons for revolutionaries today.
I had very pro gay sentiments and united w the RCP at the time on many levels. Saying they were anti gay is reductionist. They stood firm and deep with the real anti gay laws and horrors they suffered. The line was complex, but an error overall, but not to the extent this blog implies. A lot of this had to do with confronting male property rights and the role of women within it. The new synthesis is profoundly more scientific in dealing with contridictons between the people and the system, and BAs new talk (on DVD) embraces GBLT/o and what humanity is capable of on a much higher scale than anything else I've seen. Rafael
Thiis is a great post thanks
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