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Introducing the O.R.U.
The members of
the Committee for a Proletarian Party (CPP) and the Communist Organization,
Bay Area (COBA) are pleased to announce that we have completed the merger
of the two groups. Our new name is the Organization for Revolutionary
Unity (O.R.U.). Following a year of preparatory work, the merger solidified
our unity on basic ideological, political, and organizational principles
and launched our new Marxist-Leninist organization.
Some of the
keys ideological and political underpinnings of the O.R.U. are found in
the COBA-CPP pamphlet, "New Democracy and the Transition to Socialism"
and "The Cultural Revolution in China". We have considerable
unity on the main lessons concerning class struggle under socialism, and
especially the contributions of Mao Tse-tung. A related area of basic
ideological agreement concerns the Soviet Union. The O.R.U. believes the
USSR has abandoned socialism and has gone over to an exploitative society,
a new form of state monopoly capitalism. In preparing for our merger,
OPP and COBA jointly debated Line of March on the nature of the Soviet
Union.
Although we
are small, over the last ten or more years the members of the O.R.U. nave
had considerable experience in a number of Marxist-Leninist organizations,
including some of the self-proclaimed communist parties. Our members come
from various political backgrounds, with histories in trade union struggles,
the women's movement, fighting race discrimination, GI organizing, national
liberation support work and the Chicano national movement. We believe
that no currently existing organization constitutes a genuine center for
a revolutionary ML party nor do we consider ourselves to be the only genuine
force on the left. However, we certainly hope to contribute to the formation
of such a center.
We have united
around a general plan of action for our first year, agreeing to make Central
American solidarity work the key component of our mass-oriented work giving
emphasis to the role of U.S. imperialism both in Central America and the
U.S. Some of our members are active in Central American support organizations,
and we recently participated in the U.S.-Mexico border demonstration in
opposition to U.S. intervention in El Salvador. This is one area of work
we hope to explore with others in terms of setting up joint work.
We are also
interested in circulating and discussing our views on women's oppression,
the result of a year-long study taken up by formerly COBA members and
others. By and large, the anti-revisionist movement has failed to really
examine the situation of the majority of women workers in the U.S. today.
By focusing solely on the industrial proletariat, they often have ignored
the fact that women are mainly entering new or expanding sectors of the
economy, many of which are critical to monopoly capitalism. Women are
42% of the workforce; they predominate in electronics production and clerical
work. Communists can and must tap this working class power by organizing
working women and actively supporting the progressive women's movement.
Our strategic
view is that the alliance between the working class and the oppressed
nationalities is the core alliance for bringing about revolution in this
country. We believe national oppression is the material basis and root
cause of racism. Developing correct political line and practice on the
U.S. national questionsBlack, Chicano, Mexicano, Hawaiian, Native
American--is of critical importance, something which requires joint efforts
by the left. We welcome contributions toward our understanding of these
national questions.
The formation
of the O.R.U. comes during a difficult period. Ten years ago the anti-revisionist
movement was a rising political force. Now it is in disarray--its forces
splintered, politically confused, and lacking organization. Formerly,
China and Albania were a source of political inspiration and instruction.
But when the capitalist roaders took state power in China, and when Albania's
leaders rewrote history to their own liking, many in the movement lost
their bearings. U.S. Marxist-Leninists went in all directions. Some followed
China; others, Albania. Some gave up on proletarian revolution and began
to see national revolutions as the ultimate goal. Many dropped out completely
to become professionals or trade union officials. And, many former anti-revisionists
flocked to the pro-Soviet pole to become born-again revisionists.
Although the
international communist movement is in crisis at this time, it is beginning
to pull itself together on firmer ideological footing than before. Slowly
and cautiously, anti-revisionist unity is reforming. We in the O.R.U.
want to be a part of this process. As a start, the left needs to analyze
the political lessons of the 1970s in order to begin to build a genuine
communist party and revolutionary movement in the U.S.
In learning
from past errors, we will make every effort to avoid premature, simplistic
analyses. For example, the claim made by CWP that we are now in a revolutionary
situation, such as Lenin talked of; or the similar line of the RCP which
more or less banks on the seizure of state power in this decade. We must
also not go with the flow and sell ourselves out to reformism like the
C.P. and SWP, among others, a huge danger in this country for leftists
trying to be "relevant".
We in the Organization
for Revolutionary Unity believe we have managed to keep our bearings and
unite in an organization around a relatively solid ideological orientation.
We hope to expand our relations with a variety of other organizations
and individuals around the country and to develop joint practical and
theoretical work. A united left presence is critical to combat the onslaught
of the ruling class in this period of capitalist economic crisis. We look
forward to discussions, exchanges of materials and views on questions
facing the movement, and welcome the initiatives of others. We have not
and will not seek out only those with whom we are in 90-100% agreement.
The questions facing the movement are too complex, for any one group to
pretend it has all the answers. While we will uphold our principles, and
expect others will do the same, one major lesson the past 10 years has
taught us is that the masses demand that leftists learn how to work much
better with each other, and more importantly, how to work among the people.
We commit ourselves to these tasks.
There are a
number of other basic points which make up the foundation on which the
new organization exists. We would be happy to make our views available
and to receive any comments or criticisms you may have, or to discuss
them in person.
March
1983
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