War as a Catalyst for Crisis

If the Iran conflict escalates, the region faces the threat of another wave of statelessness.

Tomasz Konicz

Trump went way back, all the way to the 1979 embassy takeover and the 1983 Beirut bombing against U.S. troops, to justify the U.S. and Israeli attack on Iran in an initial statement.[1] Even though the U.S. president’s public statements have an increasingly short half-life, and Trump could claim the opposite as early as tomorrow, he did ultimately name two military objectives of the current bombing campaign: the extensive disarmament of the Iranian regime, particularly regarding its nuclear program, and – optionally – its overthrow, should opportunities arise. Washington and Tel Aviv appear to be planning a multi-day intensive bombing campaign against key officials, the state apparatus, and its infrastructure, which would significantly weaken the regime, in the hope that this would spark an uprising that – supported by the CIA, Mossad, and special forces – would bring an end to the mullahs’ rule. On the evening of February 28, Trump also kept all options open in a brief phone interview with Axios: from short-term bombing to hinder the Iranian nuclear program to regime change.[2]

The talk of regime change is strikingly reminiscent of the murderous disaster the neocons under George W. Bush wrought during the invasion of Iraq—but this time, appearances are indeed deceptive. This is not only due to the simple fact that no significant ground forces are ready for an invasion. The neocons did indeed have the democratization of Iraq in mind, with the aim of subsequently integrating the country into the U.S. hegemonic system; they made no compromises with the remnants of the swiftly defeated Saddam regime in order to rebuild state structures from the ground up. The bloody consequences are well known: anomie, state collapse, a bloody civil war, and its “freezing” into a sham state fractured along ethnic and religious lines. The U.S. easily won the Iraq War against the crumbling Iraqi regime, but it lost the peace after the anomic centrifugal forces in Iraq were unleashed.

No “Democratization”

Trump’s imperialism, on the other hand, has a completely different thrust; Washington has long since shed the ideological veil of human rights imperialism as practiced by Western centers during the neoliberal decades.[3] The Islamofascist mullah regime, which had thousands of demonstrators massacred just a few weeks ago, is to be replaced by a regime subservient to the U.S. This approach is easier to carry out, as large parts of the state and repressive apparatus can simply be taken over. The precedent here is the case of Venezuela, whose head of state was effectively handed over to the U.S., while the power structures characterized by racketeering otherwise remained untouched . The offer of “total immunity” that Trump made in his speech to the officials of the Iranian regime clearly points in this direction.

The authoritarian alternative to the mullahs, the Shah’s son Reza Pahlavi, seems to have been dug straight out of the CIA’s dustbin of history.[4] His father’s genocidal regime was swept away in the wake of the 1979 revolution. His supporters are currently attempting to gain dominance within the Iranian opposition through nationalism, intimidation, and threats, while specifically targeting leftist and feminist movements. A miniature dictatorship is already taking shape. Meanwhile, tensions are also coming to light between the Pahlavi camp and Kurdish opposition groups, which have been accused by the monarchists of separatist aspirations.[5] Even U.S. officials have told media representatives that the Pahlavi monarchists are causing them “fear.”[6] The would-be Shah has already held official talks with members of the Trump administration, such as Steve Witkoff.

Crisis and War

Venezuela, the Al-Qaeda state of Syria,[7] and now, prospectively, Iran – crisis imperialism is merely returning to its roots in its twilight years by once again relying on authoritarian regimes.[8] The human rights imperialism of the neoliberal era thus represents only a brief historical episode. The novel aspect, however, is the crisis process of capital, which, in its economic and ecological dimensions, shapes geopolitical developments as well as concrete imperialist aggression. Without the crisis, there would be no American attempt at regime change.

This is not an abstraction; the global crisis of capital is manifesting itself in very concrete ways. Iran is already on the brink of ecological collapse. In parts of the country, the water supply has collapsed; even in the capital, Tehran, with its ten million inhabitants, the water is occasionally cut off. According to the British newspaper The Guardian, an evacuation of the Iranian capital is now even being considered should no substantial rainfall occur by the end of the year, as its population can barely be supplied with water.[9] The increasing extreme weather events, the lack of rain, and the ever more frequent heat waves are all leading to slumps in crop yields in Iran, which already has to import food.[10]

Iran has been subject to various forms of sanctions for decades; the regime has experience in circumventing or mitigating this economic pressure. However, the decisive tipping point was the current ecological and economic escalation of the crisis dynamics. The sanctions imposed on Iran have exacerbated the escalation, but did not trigger it. The protests were triggered by a massive devaluation and a surge in inflation caused by the suspension of subsidies for basic foodstuffs. At its core, the uprising against the mullahs – which was brutally suppressed – was economically motivated, as even basic foodstuffs became unaffordable for an increasing number of Iranians. The rising demand for imports (and foreign currency) is met with dwindling revenues: China is the Iranian oil industry’s most important customer, yet Beijing purchased the energy resource at a steep discount due to sanctions, further exacerbating Iran’s economic situation.

Reasons for War

The timing of the attack is likely indeed linked to the mass murderous suppression of the protests. It is a window of opportunity that the U.S. and Israel wish to exploit, during which the regime is weakened and has lost its legitimacy among large segments of the population. The time lag between the Iranian uprising and the Israeli-American attack is due to the logistics of war: The U.S. had to assemble its forces in the region, secure their supply lines, etc., which takes weeks. The mullahs’ rule does indeed appear rotten, porous, and highly corrupt, as evidenced by the extensive penetration of the Iranian state by Israeli and Western intelligence agencies. The Israelis were not only able to eliminate part of the Iranian leadership during the 2025 bombing campaign; they have now managed once again to take out Supreme Leader Khamenei on the first day. Netanyahu is said to have been shown images of the body shortly after it was recovered.[11]

In Israel’s case, the reasons for war are obvious: Tel Aviv wants the end of the mullah regime out of pure self-preservation. Israel wants the government overthrown, since the “Islamic Republic” of Iran has elevated the destruction of Israel to a state doctrine. Since October 7, 2023 – the mass-murderous terrorist attack by Hamas on Israel, which was cheered by Iran and militarily supported by Hezbollah attacks – regime change appears to have become the guiding principle of Israeli policy toward Iran. Israel wants to prevent, at all costs, a repeat of an attack such as the one carried out by the Iran-backed Hamas. The current right-wing government in Jerusalem would likely favor a reactionary, U.S.-aligned regime under Reza Pahlavi, yet regime change appears to be the top priority – regardless of the succession debate. Israel’s minimum objective, intended to secure the survival of the Jewish state in a hostile region, consists of permanently preventing Iran’s nuclear program.

In the case of the U.S., domestic political reasons are usually emphasized: Trump wants to divert attention from the pedophilia scandal involving members of the U.S. ruling elite. Meanwhile, there is growing evidence that the president himself may have molested girls and children. The attack on Venezuela was already interpreted as an attempt by Trump to divert attention, similar to Reagan’s invasion of Grenada in 1983, which was intended to divert attention from the Iran-Contra affair. The military triumph in Caracas also simply led to the fascists in the White House – here, above all, Trump’s close confidant Steven Miller – taking a liking to the use of military force without consequences. They have simply gotten a taste for blood.

Yet at the same time, it is evident that the Trump administration is targeting China’s second “gas station” in Iran. Beijing is (and has been) the most important customer in both Caracas and Tehran. The deployment of the colossal U.S. military machine – following Trump’s dismantling of the remnants of American hegemony – effectively constitutes the last significant lever with which Washington can maintain its global dominance.[12] Precisely because the crisis is also breathing down the Trump administration’s neck, as the dollar increasingly loses its role as the world’s reserve currency and Washington faces mounting budgetary problems. The attacks on oil-producing countries that have broken away from the U.S. orbit also appear intended to consolidate the dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency, as the “petro-currency.”

Moreover – and this must not be overlooked in the era of oligarchic brutalization in the U.S.—Trump was encouraged to attack Iran by the Gulf despotisms, which showered his clan with “gifts” and deals worth billions. Saudi Arabia, in particular, pressed Washington in secret talks to carry out the bombing, while officially maintaining a neutral stance.[13] Iran’s attacks against the Gulf states are a direct consequence of this tactical acquiescence and support for the U.S. attack, which would also neutralize a key Shiite rival of the Saudis for the time being. Riyadh hopes to rise to become the leading regional power in the wake of the war.

Outlook and Prospects

Without substantial deployment of ground forces, the bombing campaign against Iran is likely to peter out after a few weeks without bringing about regime change. The regime is ailing; it is corrupt; and it can apparently be easily penetrated by intelligence agencies that can simply buy information. But it still has hundreds of thousands of supporters and fighters under arms, particularly in the militias, who will remain loyal without substantial military pressure for one simple reason: the regime provides them with material support. Their children are not malnourished; they can make ends meet for their families in the midst of a socio-ecological crisis in which this is no longer possible for ever-larger segments of the population.

Consequently, the organizational structures are likely to remain intact despite the barrage of bombs, the chains of command continue to function, and unreliable elements within the repressive apparatus were neutralized anyway during the brutal counterinsurgency at the beginning of the year. The machine guns stand ready in case spontaneous protests flare up again, which could easily be drowned in blood once more. The backbone of the regime is too strong to be broken by airstrikes and demonstrations alone.

There are hardly any significant, powerful opposition groups that could challenge the regime militarily. The People’s Mujahideen, a left-wing Islamist splinter group of Iranian state Shi’ism, resembles a sect with some 3,000 followers that sporadically organizes attacks in Iran.[14] The Shah’s son, Pahlavi, has no significant battle-tested forces at his disposal. What remains are the minorities: the Kurds, through the Iranian successor organization to the dissolved PKK, have significant combat units; separatist aspirations – which could potentially be encouraged by Turkey – exist among the Azeris in northwestern Iran, as well as in Iranian Baluchistan in the southeast of the country.

However, these groups would likely strengthen Iran’s centrifugal forces, fueling instability and state collapse – while the U.S. would prefer to install a stable, U.S.-aligned regime in Iran. Turkey’s initial opposition to an attack on Iran stems precisely from Ankara’s fears that Iranian Kurds might fight for independence or autonomy (Washington’s betrayal of Rojava, in which the Kurds were sacrificed, which was overcome by Ankara’s resistance).[15] This scenario of a renewed wave of state decomposition in the region also seems most likely in the event of an escalation. The country, with a population of 90 million, could disintegrate into a gigantic, second Syria. In this case, however, it would not only be Iran where conflicts could erupt along ethnic or religious lines.

Iraq would also be affected; following the freeze in the Sunni-Shia civil war, it is little more than a hollow shell of a state, where militias effectively hold sway depending on the region. And Shias constitute the majority of Iraq’s population. Shia militias, most of which are backed by Iran, have already threatened attacks against U.S. military bases and other facilities. A resurgence of the civil war seems quite likely in the event of an escalation.[16] The Syrian Islamist regime, which emerged from the Sunni terrorist network Al-Qaeda, is already massing troops along the border with Iraq.[17] Turkish interventions are also conceivable, aimed at occupying the Azerbaijani regions of Iran or attacking the Kurds as part of Erdogan’s neo-Ottoman imperialism.

And finally, the conflict could very quickly trigger global economic upheaval if Iran blocks the Strait of Hormuz, which could happen simply through the threat of drone or missile strikes – a navy is not necessary for this. This would shut down one of the most important shipping routes for fossil fuels. As is so often the case with Western wars over the world order (Robert Kurz), the war would thus simply become a catalyst for crisis, accelerating the crisis process of capital in fits and starts—both in the region and globally.

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[1] https://x.com/WhiteHouse/status/2027654336138924410

[2] https://www.axios.com/2026/02/28/trump-iran-war-israel-off-ramps

[3] https://www.konicz.info/2026/01/28/verrat-aus-prinzip/

[4] https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2026/02/24/reza-pahlavi-iran-trump-00793877

[5] https://apnews.com/article/iran-iraq-kurds-pahlavi-6beae57e9fdc3546a61ec8f1432eef4b

[6] https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2026/02/24/reza-pahlavi-iran-trump-00793877

[7] https://www.konicz.info/2026/01/28/verrat-aus-prinzip/

[8] https://exitinenglish.com/2026/03/19/what-is-crisis-imperialism/

[9] https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/15/how-day-zero-water-shortages-in-iran-are-fuelling-protests

[10] https://www.tehrantimes.com/news/507241/Climate-change-significantly-impacts-food-security-in-Iran-expert

[11] https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog_entry/natenyahu-said-shown-picture-of-khameneis-body-retrieved-from-compound/

[12] https://medium.com/@ascentreact/everything-must-burn-862b983914a6

[13] https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/02/28/trump-iran-decision-saudi-arabia-israel/

[14] https://esut.de/2025/04/fachbeitraege/58620/der-geist-der-volksmudschahedin/

[15] https://www.konicz.info/2026/01/28/verrat-aus-prinzip/

[16] https://www.thenationalnews.com/news/mena/2026/02/28/iran-backed-militias-in-iraq-say-us-israel-attack-kills-at-least-two-fighters/

[17] https://x.com/ScharoMaroof/status/2027754904991781276

Originally published on 03/01/2025

What is Crisis Imperialism?

And how does it differ from the classical imperialism of earlier eras?

Tomasz Konicz

Crisis imperialism is the state’s quest for dominance – carried out through economic, political, or military means – during an era of contraction in the valorization process of capital. The state apparatuses of the core of the world system strive for dominance in a systemic crisis fueled by constant advances in productivity, that, on the one hand, create regions of economic and ecological scorched earth – primarily in the periphery – and, on the other hand, make the emergence of a new regime of accumulation, in which wage labor would be valorized on a massive scale in commodity production, impossible. This crisis process is accompanied by a rise in debt that outpaces global economic output and leads to the emergence of an economically superfluous humanity, as illustrated, for example, by the refugee crises of recent years.

This also highlights the fundamental difference between crisis imperialism and the imperialism of earlier eras, since the latter took place during a historical phase of capital expansion – originating in Europe in the 16th century – that was driven precisely by the genocidal exploitation of labor. The plunder of resources – such as the gold and silver of Latin America – and the development of new markets in the Global South – sugarcane, spices, etc. – could only be realized through the mass valorization of “hands,” which in most cases could only be achieved through forced labor. The trail of blood left by this imperialist expansion of the capitalist world system – which integrated ever-new peripheral regions into the world market, often through military force – stretches from the genocide of the indigenous peoples of Latin and Central America, through the Atlantic triangular trade in African slaves and the British Empire’s exploitation of India, to the atrocities of Belgian imperialism in the Congo of the late 19th century, the effects of which are still felt today, when the failure to meet rubber quotas by forced laborers resulted in severe mutilations – such as the chopping off of hands.

The ultimately military drive for expansion by imperialist states is a consequence of capital’s valorization compulsion, whereby imperialist tendencies can gain momentum precisely in response to the internal contradictions of the valorization process: Overaccumulation of capital seeking investment, increasing social tensions intended to be mitigated through colonization, or capital’s demand for raw materials and energy sources that cannot be produced domestically often lead those states possessing sufficient means of power to pursue corresponding forms of imperialist expansion.

Following the 20th century, during which, due to the “Cold War,” practices of informal imperialism were more commonly employed – involving the installation of dependent, formally sovereign regimes in the periphery through economic pressure or intelligence-led coups – forms of direct imperialist aggression are once again gaining the upper hand in the 21st century, in conjunction with the imperial decline of the United States and the increasing tendencies toward state and social disintegration in the periphery. This also carries with it the danger of major wars waged between imperialist great powers.

During its historical phase of expansion, the capitalist world system was characterized by cycles of hegemony in which an imperialist great power was able to attain a hegemonic position that was, at least temporarily, tolerated by competing powers. The 19th century was marked by a British hegemonic cycle, and the 20th century by a U.S. hegemonic cycle of industrial rise and decline. The increasing number military conflicts today are an expression of the U.S.’s hegemonic decline, and the socio-ecological crisis of capital prevents the emergence of a new hegemonic power.

China, which is engaged in a global struggle for hegemony with Washington, is unable to succeed the U.S. as the “world policeman” due to the crisis-induced increase in internal turmoil (debt and real estate crises). The current phase of escalating military conflicts thus represents a bloody real-life satire of the talk of a “multipolar world order” demanded by all imperial rivals of the declining United States. The systemic crisis prevents the emergence of a hegemon, though many state apparatuses continue to strive – ultimately in vain – to become as powerful as the U.S., and the erosion of U.S. hegemony provides them with the necessary leeway for their own military adventures. Moreover, growing internal contradictions are once again fueling the drive for imperial expansion (e.g., Russia, Turkey).

A central concrete difference between today and the imperial quest for dominance in earlier centuries thus lies in the fact that the hunt for markets and “hands” that could be exploited through violent integration into the world market now plays hardly any role at all in the globalized world system due to the aforementioned systemic crisis of overproduction. In the late-capitalist crisis imperialism of the 21st century, the imperialist drive for expansion manifests itself in efforts to seal off the economically superfluous masses of the periphery – both in “Fortress Europe” and in the U.S. In this respect, expansion thus turns into the sealing off of the core from the periphery, which also plays hardly any role as a market.

The collapsed periphery, with its “failed states,” now plays a role only within the framework of extractionism as a supplier of raw materials, building upon the forms of decay of 20th-century “informal imperialism” by – as in the case of cobalt mining in the Congo – organizing raw material extraction independently through local post-state power structures (militias, gangs, sects, etc.) who do this on their own initiative, only to then channel them to the world market through shadowy channels and middlemen. Militarily, the core countries interact with the “scorched earth” regions only within the framework of “world order wars” (Robert Kurz), in which the periphery is either to be stabilized through state-building processes (“nation building”) or at least militarily neutralized as a disruptive factor. The global drone campaign of the former “world policeman,” the U.S., in the “war on terror,” or the – consistently failed – Western interventions in Afghanistan and Somalia fall into this category of the imperial core’s futile struggle against the social consequences of the systemic crisis – originating from the core – in the periphery.

Thus, the current era of crisis imperialism is characterized by the interplay between the state’s quest for dominance and the crisis process of capital, which exhibits a market-mediated, fetishistic momentum fueled by the internal contradictions of capital (which, in market competition, tends to divest itself of its own substance, value-creating labor). The functional elites of the state apparatuses find themselves confronted with the consequences of the crisis, which unfolds, mediated by the market, “behind the producers’ backs” (Marx), as if exposed to an external, natural force, even though the increasing contradictions and distortions (debt, social erosion, economic and environmental crises, etc.) are the unconscious product of market actors in their pursuit of the highest possible capital valorization. Capital has thus brought forth a social formation that lacks control over this blindly unfolding dynamic and is ultimately driven by it into social and ecological collapse.

The state-level competition arising from this systemic crisis of overproduction consequently leads to the formation of an economically grounded imperialism that strives for the highest possible trade surpluses. Through the trade surplus, the crisis of overproduction – as well as the accompanying compulsion to incur debt – is exported to countries that are running ever-larger deficits. In this regard, the Federal Republic of Germany was particularly successful following the introduction of the euro. The political dominance of the FRG in the eurozone stems precisely from the extreme German trade surpluses between the introduction of the euro and the euro crisis, which led to the southern European debt crisis and to deindustrialization in the indebted states, while the industrial base of the German export industry remained intact. After the outbreak of the euro crisis, German Finance Minister Schäuble was able to unilaterally impose the consequences of the burst European debt bubbles – which were accompanied by German trade surpluses – on the crisis-stricken states in the form of strict austerity policies, amidst fierce political disputes. This widened the economic gap between Berlin and “its” eurozone – and cemented Germany’s claim to leadership, while states driven to the brink of bankruptcy, such as Greece, had to accept extensive losses of sovereignty. The protectionism that has been on the rise in recent years, and which has become openly apparent since the Trump administration, represents precisely a reaction to this crisis-driven urge to achieve the highest possible trade surpluses. Before the open trade wars that Trump ignited due to the extensive deindustrialization of the U.S., many countries attempted to improve their trade balances through currency devaluation races.

The objective crisis process of capital thus unfolds through corresponding crisis-imperialist conflicts between state actors – this, the execution of the crisis dynamic through economic, geopolitical, intelligence, or military power struggles, constitutes the objective core of crisis-imperialist practice. This applies not only to the eroding core countries (such as in Southern Europe), but also to the periphery of the world system, where the crisis process has advanced further and widespread social disintegration is giving way to state collapse. The imperialist interventions in Syria and Libya following the “Arab Spring” – where failed modernization regimes, having degenerated into kleptocracies, found themselves threatened by desperate uprisings – make it clear how crisis-induced upheavals first open up opportunities for imperial interventions. Social tensions in the post-Soviet space, where Russia’s hegemony rapidly eroded until the outbreak of the war in Ukraine, gave rise to a similar dynamic of protest, uprising, and external intervention. Putin’s Russia chose to wage a war of aggression against Ukraine precisely in the wake of the uprisings in Belarus and Kazakhstan.

At times, states with imperial ambitions also exploit the consequences of crises directly –Erdogan’s Islamofascist Turkey, for instance, used the refugee flows into the EU as a lever of power to extort concessions and money from Brussels and Berlin. And Ankara also justifies its imperialist expansion in northern Syria and northern Iraq by claiming it intends to concentrate refugees in these regions in the future. Imperialism must therefore be viewed not only historically as an ideological and practical precursor to fascist excesses – the same process is also unfolding in the current systemic crisis.

Imperialist striving for dominance also interacts with the ecological crisis of capital, which, due to its compulsion to grow, is incapable of establishing a resource- and climate-friendly reproduction of humanity. This includes, for example, the tensions in the far north, in the Arctic, where the rapidly melting ice cap is opening up new shipping routes and making new deposits of fossil fuels accessible – and over whose extraction the neighboring countries of Russia, the U.S., Canada, and the EU are in dispute. The conflict between Russia and the West over Ukraine, which began in 2013 as a struggle between competing economic blocs (the EU and the US versus Putin’s envisioned “Eurasian Union”), now also has a climate policy dimension. Ukraine possesses highly fertile black soil, which is rapidly gaining value as a geopolitical lever of power in light of looming, climate-induced food shortages and impending hunger crises – food could become the oil of the 21st century.

The crisis is thus driving the late-capitalist state behemoths into confrontation in both its economic and ecological dimensions. Crisis imperialism thus resembles – to stay with the image of the climate crisis – a cutthroat competition on a melting iceberg, or a struggle on the sinking Titanic. Since the socio-ecological systemic crisis cannot be resolved within the framework of the capitalist world system, crisis imperialism finds its vanishing point in a major war, which would have catastrophic consequences due to the destructive potential accumulated under late capitalism. Without an emancipatory systemic transformation, the collapse of civilization threatens to descend into climate catastrophe and nuclear war.

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Originally published on konicz.info on 06/23/22

Crisis, Riots and What Next?

Thomas Meyer

The bourgeois discourse on violence is dominated by the attitude of condemning violence from the left. This can be seen very clearly in the condemnation of the climate protests of Last Generation, where the call for the heavy hand of state violence cannot be extreme enough (Konicz 2022). In contrast, violence legitimized by the state is not an object of critique. This applies all the more to structural violence (such as against refugees and Hartz IV recipients) or social catastrophes imposed by the IMF’s structural adjustment measures. Right-wing violence is trivialized, reduced to so-called individual cases or equated with left-wing violence, i.e. no significant distinction is made between violence against people (which often ends fatally) and violence against things or against the bourgeois property order (blockades & occupations). Naturally, such an attitude is suitable for preventing practical social critique and limiting “freedom” & “self-determination” to the approval of the existing. Right-wing violence appears to be less of a threat to the bourgeois order, especially as neo-Nazis often “improperly” do what the state does anyway through official channels – for example in the case of refugee deterrence (“properly” picking up and deporting “foreigners,” burning them in prison,[1] shooting them,[2] etc., instead of chasing them through the park and murdering them). In bourgeois discourse, the violence that appears to pose a threat to the bourgeois order is criticized, while the violent structures of bourgeois society are “taken for granted.” The violence legitimized by the rule of law does not even appear linguistically as such, or it is claimed to be “proportionate” or “necessary.” If violence is then exaggerated, it is once again only “regrettable individual cases.” The police powers acts passed in recent years are increasingly transforming the bourgeois constitutional state into a police state. Preventative detention was used against climate protests on the basis of these laws, i.e. the imprisonment of people who could presumably commit a “criminal offense” or participate (!) in climate protests (which are not even punishable in and of themselves). It should only be a matter of time before climate activism is equated with terrorism![3]

Riots cause particular outrage in the bourgeois discourse on violence, i.e. the usually “relatively spontaneous” uprisings (triggered by certain individual events, such as police violence, price increases for essentials such as bread, but also for petrol, tickets, etc.), which often appear pointless and aimless and are characterized by looting and excesses of destruction of other people’s property. Riots are therefore of a different quality than strikes, in the sense of orderly and formalized struggles for interests (as can be wonderfully observed in collective bargaining disputes). Their social causes are therefore often not understood or they are only interpreted as irrational excesses of violence, which are to be “dealt with” by even more police batons and early warning systems.

This irrationality is an expression of the irrationality of social rationality. “Rioting” people, often young people, are people who live within this society but cannot participate in it. They may be formally equal in legal terms, but they are treated differently (for example, if you come from a “problem neighborhood” or have a “foreign” name, you are more likely not to be invited to a job interview, despite having the same qualifications). They usually share the ideals and goals of society (work, consumption, family), but are excluded from their realization. That the promises of equality and happiness of bourgeois society can be fulfilled or that opportunities for advancement can be realized is increasingly becoming an illusion.  The social catastrophes in so-called problem neighborhoods (“ghettos” or suburban settlements) are not understood as the result of the social upheavals of crisis capitalism and its neoliberal crisis regime since the 1970s, but are racialized: There is agitation and claims that they are a “cultural problem” of black people, the result of “lack of integration,” represent a “foreigner and migrant problem” and/or a problem of “Islam.” Instead of understanding the social causes of the riots and the specific historical constellation in which they take place, they are externalized as a “problem.” A problem that is allegedly being brought into bourgeois society from “outside.” This unwillingness to understand is obviously far more irrational than torching cars or looting supermarkets. Robert Castel, for example, explains against the backdrop of the youth riots in the banlieues in France in 2005: “The problem with these young people is not that they are outside society. This is neither the case in terms of the space they inhabit (the suburban settlement is not a ghetto) nor in terms of their status (many are French citizens and not foreigners). But they are not within society either, because they do not occupy a recognized position in it and many of them are obviously not in a position to obtain such a position. If there has been a revolt of despair, it is in the conviction of having no future, of being deprived of the means necessary to be considered full members of society” (Castel 2009, 36, emphasis added).

In his book Riot Strike Riot, Joshua Clover examines this phenomenon and attempts to contextualize it theoretically and historically. He makes it clear that the bourgeois concept of violence that comes into play in the condemnation of riots is highly problematic: “That property damage equals violence is not a truth but the adoption of a particular set of ideas about property, one of relatively recent vintage, involving specific identifications of humans with abstract wealth of the sort that culminate in, for example, the legal holdings that corporations are people.” (Clover 2016, 11.). The violence to which those who are marginalized and made superfluous are exposed is ignored: “However, this insistence on the violence of the riot effectively obscures the daily, systematic, and ambient violence that stalks daily life for much of the world. The vision of a generally pacific sociality that only in exception breaks forth into violence is an imaginary accessible only to some. For others – most – social violence is the norm. The rhetoric of the violent riot becomes a device of exclusion, aimed not so much against ‘violence’ but against specific social groups.” (ibid., 12).

Clover distinguishes riot from riot prime. The former refers to riots before the labor movement, before the implementation of industrial capitalism (moral economy, resistance of the Luddites, etc., see also Kurz 1999, 125ff.). The historical background is, among other things, the destruction of the commons accompanying “original accumulation” (Marx) and the simultaneously increasing dependence on the market. While the strike sought to enforce the highest possible price for labor power in the factory as well as better and more tolerable working conditions, a rise in the price of goods on the market (bread riots) was a more frequent cause of a riot. Riots did not set the price of labor, but the market price of consumer goods (or they prevented exports so that bread would be sold here and now at a “fair” price and not at a higher price elsewhere). They did not interrupt production, but circulation; the riots were, in a sense, circulation struggles (Clover 2016, 15f.). They did not take place in industry, but in public space, in markets. This is to be distinguished from “riots” (hereafter “riot” again), i.e. those riots that have become more and more important since the 1970s, which is related to the never-ending crisis of capital since the 1970s. They are therefore qualitatively different from the riots in the early days of capitalism. What riot and “riot” have in common is the looting of goods, the spontaneity and disorderliness of their actions. The difference is that today the production of goods is fragmented across the globe, whereas in early capitalism everything necessary for life was still produced in close proximity. This change makes it impossible for a riot to “appropriate and take over” production. If riots are playing a greater role again today, in contrast to the declining importance of strikes, this does not mean that there is a return to older forms of protest. Clover emphasizes that the historical dynamics of the valorization of value are of decisive importance in the theoretical assessment of riots. Even if riots interrupt circulation today, this is not the same as the circulation of the 18th century. With Clover, we can establish the fact that concepts themselves have a history (as, of course, does the thing to which they are supposed to refer), that similar phenomena that occur in the history of capitalism are not a recurrence of the same thing. This must be taken into account in the analysis.

Clover’s explanations have been criticized (Armstrong 2021) that his historical “tripartite division” (“riot-strike-riot prime”) is too schematic, that he does not, for example, address the militant struggles of slaves (which did not take place in the sphere of circulation) and that his distinction between riot and strike is not tenable, look at past mass strikes or wildcat strikes where there was an overlap between struggles in circulation and production (sabotaging trains, disrupting “supply chains” to support striking factory workers).

He was also criticized for focusing on Western countries. If one looks at the world as a whole, then there can be no question of the significance and number of strikes decreasing. Two of Clover’s critics therefore seem to conclude that Clover was apparently mistaken when he said that the crisis of capital has been insoluble since the 1970s, because “the global industrial proletariat has never been as large as it is today, and there have probably never been as many strikes as there are today” (Arps & García Doell 2021). For the two authors, this essentially puts an end to the discussion on crisis theory (see Kurz 2005 & 2012 and, specifically on China, Ming 2023 and the article by Tomasz Konicz in this exit!)

The historical-concrete context that Clover is elaborating is equally applicable to strikes. Fortunately, an increase in strikes has been observed in recent years (see for example Scholz 2022 and Autorenkollektiv 2023). The authors of Analyse & Kritik are undoubtedly right with this observation. However, it should be borne in mind that they are taking place against the backdrop of a tightening space for shaping the value-dissociation form and therefore have a completely different range of possibilities than strikes of previous generations (even if they are also more necessary than ever). It is therefore a little cheap to think that by counting strikes we have refuted Clover’s comments on the crisis.

Clover points out that workers” struggles are tied to the precondition of successful capital valorization and that they become obsolete when the valorization of value enters a systemic crisis (i.e. not a mere cyclical crisis). These are therefore struggles within the capitalist formal context, which as such is not called into question. In the crisis, such struggles then become more and more irrelevant, which makes their defensive and affirmative character clear. As Clover writes: “Labor’s historical power has rested on a growing productive sector and its ability to seize a share of expanding surplus. Since the turn of the seventies, labor has been reduced to defensive negotiations, compelled to preserve the firms able to supply wages, affirming the domination of capital in return for its own preservation. The worker appearing as worker in the period of crisis confronts a situation in which ‘the very fact of acting as a class appears as an external constraint.’ […] We might find a decisive moment by returning […] to Detroit and to 1973, where ‘for the first time in the history of the UAW, the union mobilized to keep a plant open.’ This will swiftly become the paradigm for labor organizing, wanted or not. […] Capital and labor find themselves now in collaboration to preserve capital’s self-reproduction, to preserve the labor relation along with the firm’s viability. […] We might call it ‘the affirmation trap,’ in which labor is locked into the position of affirming its own exploitation under the guise of survival” (Clover 2016, 30, 146f.).

A strike is dependent on economic growth. If certain factories or entire production sectors are no longer profitable, (surplus) value shrinks, there is also less surplus value to distribute that the workers could appropriate. In such a situation, trade unions – since they only represent people in their function as variable capital – advocate that the jobs are retained, usually under worse conditions, so that the factory remains profitable for the time being (possibly in contrast to a competing “location”), provided the workers accept all the necessary conditions. The scope for action within the value form narrows, the room for maneuver becomes narrower. As long as one does not question the wage system as such, but only ever stands up for higher wages (or for lower wages so that the store is not closed down), one participates in the organization of one’s own social decline (or that of other workers). Clover points out that since the 1970s, utilized labor in the production sector has increasingly declined and accumulation has shifted to the financial sphere. The result is the production of a “surplus population” (ibid., 26), which forms the social substance of the riots. People are released into superfluousness, yet they remain forced to reproduce themselves capitalistically: “Capital may not need these workers, but they still need to work. They are thus forced to offer themselves up for the most abject forms of wage slavery in the form of petty production and services – identified with informal and often illegal markets of direct exchange arising alongside failures of capitalist production” (ibid..).

If “normal” working conditions become the exception, the order that “well-behaved citizens” understand as “orderly” disintegrates. The surplus population becomes a “security problem.” In contrast to the 18th and early 19th century, this population is at the mercy of a highly armed police force “as a standing army within.” The state is waging a “war against drugs and terror” (ibid., 36). No wonder that riots are often sparked by police killings.

The shift of value realization to the financial sector and at the same time the intensification of transport and logistics (which shorten the turnover period of capital) could not stop the “stagnation and decline of global profitability” (ibid., 31). Clover sees no contradiction in the fact that individual companies are able to make a profit for themselves, prevail in competition, are extremely successful according to capitalist criteria and do not appear to be in crisis. Clover distinguishes the system as a whole and its crisis from the level of individual capital. He therefore does not make the serious mistake often made by many of today’s remaining Marxists (or followers of the New Marx Lekture) of inferring the state of the system as a whole from the characteristics of individual capitals (cf. Kurz 2012). The conclusion is then drawn: Yes, work is indeed being done, things are being produced, and exploitation is taking place! Where is the systemic crisis? On the contrary: “For Marx’s value analysis, the movements of profits are surface phenomena corresponding to an underlying shift in the balance of constant to variable capital: means of production to waged labor, or dead to living labor. Despite countervailing forces, this so-called organic composition of capital tends to rise over time as competition compels increasing productivity, iteratively replacing labor with more efficient machines and labor processes […]. Over time, however, the rise in the ratio of dead to living labor undermines the capacity for value production […]. The same dynamic that originally drives accumulation […] also undermines it, until manufacturing capacity and labor capacity can no longer be brought together, and instead empty factories and unemployed populations pile up side by side. […] Crisis and decline come not from extrinsic shocks but from capital’s internal limits” (Clover 2016, 133f.).

The inner barrier of capital has made emancipation within the barriers of capital (which is dubious anyway) more and more irrelevant. As a result, strikes are thinning out, almost disappearing from the scene, or are just spreading hot air, as what is being struck is becoming increasingly unprofitable (apart from the fact that strikes, which are not aimed at abolition, do not address the destructive nature of the capitalist mode of production and its catastrophic effects on the climate). When more and more people are put out of work, factories stand empty, suburbs and workers’ housing estates turn into “problem neighborhoods,” there is simply nothing left for many people to strike about. In order to “make their voices heard,” the circulation of goods is interrupted (looting, sabotage, blockade of highways, etc.), their own hated neighborhoods or police stations are torched.

A riot triggered by a singular event can spread within weeks to become a “conflagration” that expresses a fundamental rejection of the “ancien régime” and possibly seeks (and implements) its overthrow. As Clover emphasizes, a riot, just like a strike, does not have to be emancipatory as such (ibid., 191). This point is particularly important to emphasize following Clover, as it is now perfectly clear that the “practice of the riot” (or that which seems similar to it) is also one of right-wing radicals and conspiracy ideologues, as can be seen in the storming of the Capitol in the United States (01/06/2021) and the Parliament in Brazil (01/08/2023) (although this did not exactly happen spontaneously).

Since the Arab spring and Occupy Wall Street in the early 2010s,[4] riots have repeatedly involved the occupation of public spaces (although there is no necessary link) or the occupation of infrastructure (which is central to the circulation of goods), such as the occupation of the Port of Oakland (Occupy Oakland). In their dynamics, the riots obviously point to something that goes beyond looting and torching. The occasion may seem singular and the course of a riot chaotic and spontaneous. The question is what becomes or could become a “conflagration.”

A social struggle that seeks to improve the position of people or workers will come to nothing if more and more people can no longer really participate in the valorization process, but on the contrary exist more and more in an informal economy with no prospect of their lot in life ever improving. This by no means only affects people from the former factory proletariat, but also knowledge workers from universities (the internship generation, ongoing fixed-term contracts, etc.), i.e. also qualified workers. A riot that sets itself the goal of redefining prices is anachronistic today, given the global crisis of capital: “The public whose modality is riot must eventually encounter the need to pursue reproduction not just beyond the wage but beyond the marketplace” (ibid., 173). This necessity is all the more pressing because “attempts at appeasement” of all kinds are no longer effective today. While the riots of the 1960s in the USA could still be “pacified,” admittedly also by police batons and lead bullets, but also by integrative measures such as social programs etc., which could certainly improve the social situation, this effect has failed to materialize today. Social programs cannot erase the superfluousness of those who “benefit” from them. This is all the more tragic when a regime is actually successfully overthrown, but nothing changes in the social and material situation of the people, those who are “rioting” remain a surplus population and one gang is just replaced by another. As Clover writes, these attempts at appeasement were possible because in the era of Keynesianism, i.e. the expansion of the mass of value, social programs were initiated and could take effect. This has now definitely come to an end: “One could perhaps imagine demands in the present that would, if met, alter in substance the circumstances of the excluded. But the swelling ranks of the excluded is the same fact as the inability to meet such demands—the two faces of crisis. Just as the U.S. can no longer deliver accumulation at a global level, and thus must order the world-system by coercion rather than consent, the state can no longer provide the kinds of concessions won by the Civil Rights movement, can no longer purchase the social peace. It is all sticks and no carrots. […] The prolongation of the riots and of their fury is doubtless a measure of social pressures building around racialized policing and around the immanent violence applied to the management of surplus populations in general. It is also a measure of the fading appeal of moderation and optimistic compliance. This approach still retains some charisma […]. At the same time, the argument that the bottomless violence and subordination is structural, and cannot be resolved either practically or theoretically through redistributive participation, grows ever harder to refute” (ibid., 186).

So if the compulsion remains that the surplus population must of necessity reproduce itself capitalistically, the crucial question is how to initiate material reproduction beyond wage labor and beyond “just” prices. It would be important to create a different kind of “public sphere” that interrupts the “normal course” and addresses precisely this. Public space and infrastructure occupations could be a means to this end (the latter are becoming increasingly important in the course of climate protests: from road blockades to the sabotage of pipelines a la Malm 2021). The aim would therefore be to break open the formal shell of the economy and politics, i.e. to transcend both the riot and the strike in order to develop the reproduction of society beyond wage labor and the market. Clover uses the “Commune” as an institutional metaphor for this (ibid., 187ff., on the Paris Commune see also Kurz 1999, 237ff.). However, the problem, as became clear during the Arab Spring and elsewhere, is that the addressee may remain the state due to a lack of alternatives, thus reproducing a problematic orientation towards the state. The tragedy of this is that at best a regime change is achieved, i.e. a replacement of the functional elites or gangs, without this changing the social situation of the surplus population in any way (not to mention the meaning and content of production and consumption).

The material side of all this shit, i.e. the fragmentation of the production of all the necessities of life across half the world, makes “appropriation” impossible. Even an alternative public sphere or a general interruption of normality will not be able to change this (at least not immediately or in the short term), although they could at least address the problem “on a large scale.”[5] Unfortunately, Clover does not elaborate on the “material” side in his book (which is undoubtedly very difficult and because no one really has definitive answers). In theoretical terms, and in practical terms too obviously, there is still much to be done. In any case, Joshua Clover’s book on riots (the next ones are sure to come) makes an important contribution to understanding this phenomenon and placing it in its historical context.

Literature

Armstrong, Amanda: Die vergessenen Massenstreiks – Zu “Riot.Strike.Riot” von Joshua Clover – eine Kritik, in: Analysis and Critique No. 670, 20.4.2021, https://www.akweb.de/bewegung/joshua-clover-kritik-riot-streik-strike/

Arps, Jan Ole; García Doell, David Ernesto: Riots für Kommunist*innen – Joshua Clover bietet eine Theorie des Aufstands – hilft das für die politische Praxis in Deutschland?, in: Analysis & Critique No. 669, 16.3.2021, https://www.akweb.de/bewegung/joshua-clover-theorie-aufstand-praxis-fuer-deutschland/

Collective of authors: “The situation is serious – time to strike,” in: Wildcat No. 111 (Spring 2023), 42-49.

Castel, Robert: Negative Discrimination: Youth Revolts in the Paris Banlieues, Hamburg 2009.

Clover, Joshua: Riot. Strike. Riot: The New Era of Uprisings, London 2016.

Konicz, Tomasz: No weather for climate protests, 2022, on exit-online.org.

Kurz, Robert: Das Weltkapital – Globalisierung und innere Schranken des modernen warenproduzierenden Systems, Berlin 2005.

Kurz, Robert: Geld ohne Wert – Grundrisse zur einer Transformation der Kritik der Politischen Ökonomie, Berlin 2012.

Kurz, Robert: Schwarzbuch Kapitalismus – Ein Abgesang auf die Marktwirtschaft, Frankfurt 1999.

Kurz, Robert: Weltordnungskrieg – Das Ende der Souveränität und die Wandlungen des Imperialismus im Zeitalter der Globalisierung, 2nd edition, Springe 2021.

Malm, Andreas: How to Blow Up a Pipeline, London 2021.

Ming, Shi: Fierce storms, terrible waves – The CP leadership prepares for social upheaval, in: Le Monde Diplomatique 4/2023.

Scholz, Nina: Die wunden Punkte von Google, Amazon, Deutsche Wohnen & Co – Was tun gegen die Macht der Konzerne?, Berlin 2022.


[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Oury_Jalloh

[2] Aydemir, Fatma: Police violence in Germany, taz.de from 12.8.2022.

[3] This text was written at the beginning of 2023.

[4] See also: Feuerherdt, Alex: Das Volk gegen ein Prozent – Der Antisemitismus der “Occupy” -Bewegung, jungle.world from 1.12.2011.

[5] By this I do not mean the “state of exception,” which is merely a continuation of normality by other means, with the aim of establishing a capitalist normality at a higher level by force or keeping the surplus population in check (see Kurz 2021, 320ff.).

Populism for the Poor

A Polemic on the Post-Leftist Desire for self-deception in the midst of a manifest socio-ecological systemic crisis.

Tomasz Konicz

They are anything but modest when it comes to their ostentatiously displayed modesty. The leaders of the so-called “Left Party” (Partei dei Linke – hereinafter PDL), Ines Schwerdtner and Jan van Aken, gave up part of their salary in the fall of 2024 in order to receive the statistical German average wage from then on. They wanted to “change the world,” and an “average salary” was perfectly sufficient for this, whereas “exorbitant salaries would lead to exorbitant politics,” the party leaders explained with all due modesty to any media representatives who wanted to hear it.[1] The money saved would be donated, and special consultation hours would be set up at the party headquarters to help people in need. No concern was too small, party leader Schwerdtner asserted. Populism for the poor and disenfranchised of this late capitalist world, so to speak.

Of course, this populist idea of becoming the advocate of the “little man” did not grow on the dung heap at Karl Liebknecht House (to stay with the populist jargon). The original left-wing populist can be found in Austria and goes by the name of KPÖ. The website of the Communist Party of Austria in Graz states that – surprise, surprise – “exorbitant politicians’ salaries… lead to exorbitant politics.”[2] The KPÖ in Graz uses the money it collects in this way to help people in need – meticulous records are kept of this, and the relevant data is publicly available. The crucial difference to the PDL, however, is that the Austrian communists oblige all elected representatives to limit their salaries to the average wage of a skilled worker in order to be able to use these funds for social policy.

The KPÖ’s strategy should therefore be taken seriously. It is a form of left-wing populism that genuinely strives to help people in the midst of a manifest systemic crisis, while at the same time taking the wind out of the sails of opportunism within its own ranks. Because, let’s not kid ourselves, the salary cuts are primarily intended to deter careerists and their cliques, who have already taken over many left-wing projects as soon as they became successful – starting with the Fischer gang and the Greens. The PDL, on the other hand, is staging a populist charade that is only concerned with external impact and showmanship in order to achieve electoral success and lead as many of its old boy networks and Rackes as possible to well-paid feeding troughs (always stay populist!).

The difference between populism and melodrama lies precisely in the salary cap that would have to apply to the entire party, its apparatus, and above all to the foundation that misuses the name of Rosa Luxemburg in order to be taken seriously. This would actually add up to a considerable sum of money that could be used to help many people who have fallen on hard times during the crisis. In Graz alone, several million euros have already been raised in this way. If the Left Party were to introduce a similar salary cap for all office holders and employees, similar sums would be raised every month, which could actually be used to provide concrete help to a great many people in need – be it soup kitchens or food banks, which are now barely able to meet the growing demand.

The critique of German post-left populism, which has now become almost hegemonic, is thus a critique of this charade performed by actors hungry for power and position. After only a few months, the PDL’s electoral success is thus turning out to be a disaster for all that remains of the left in Germany.[3]

But even as a consistent, sincerely meant strategy, such as that pursued by the KPÖ, populism must be subjected to radical, fundamental critique, as its basic assumption is false. The voice of the people, the vox populi, which populism seeks to capture and transform into politics in order to assert the interests of the people, is preformed by late capitalist crisis ideology and how subjects are socialized in capitalist society. The internal interests articulated by populism are therefore an expression of adherence to a practice of false immediacy in the midst of the capitalist systemic crisis – that is, the doomed post-leftist effort to realize the political goals that impose themselves as “immediate” surface phenomena (welfare state, work, climate protection, democratization, etc.).[4]

Populism can therefore only operate within the framework of internal capitalist interests, which are subject to a crisis-induced process of erosion – and it merely parrots society’s brutalizing ideological self-image. The guiding principle of populist politics is thus not the harsh, uncomfortable reality of the crisis, but the false ideological illusion that the crisis produces through cultural-industrial mediation by means of the vox populi preformed by late capitalism. This is particularly devastating because of the rapidly unfolding systemic crisis, which has now also engulfed the core of the world system, and which makes a radical, transformative critique of late capitalist society, with its contradictions and prevailing crisis ideology, essential for survival—and not parroting it, as is characteristic of populism.[5]

This subjugation to the imperatives and “practical constraints” of the permanent crisis inherent in populism has now driven the imposition of a party foundation that has hijacked the name of Rosa Luxemburg (RLS) to the point of real satire. In its strategy paper entitled Linke Triggerpunkte (Left Trigger Points), the RLS simply argued that all issues that contradict the right-wing, pre-fascist hegemony in the FRG and would thus “trigger” right-wing reactions should be avoided. Don’t rock the boat, is the motto of the – well – Rosa Luxemburg Foundation. In particular, the issues of refugees and the climate crisis should be avoided so as not to alienate potential voters (and, by the way, this says it all about the crazy, old-left fixation on wage earners and “proletarians” as the “revolutionary subject,” who in fact, in their function as variable capital, act more as its last resort, as the RLS implicitly admits in its right-wing “strategy paper.”[6]

Ultimately, the aim is to avoid addressing the systemic crisis that is currently destroying the social and ecological foundations of civilization in order to remain compatible with late capitalist politics. And the PDL is sticking to this line. It is in fact an ideological declaration of surrender, with which the PDL simply enters into populist competition with the AfD, without even being able to conceive of a counter-principle to fascism in the manifest crisis. Other bogeymen are constructed (bigwigs, the rich), alternative historical periods are romanticized as a “golden age” (the “social market economy” of the second half of the 20th century) – and at the same time, any hint of radical, categorical criticism of the disintegrating foundations of late capitalism evaporates. Phrases and posturing take the place of critique. Women and men strike a Che Guevara pose when they demand higher tax rates for “fat cats.”

Wagenknecht’s Heirs

So what does the new German left-wing populism in the form of the PDL want? It wants to return to the past, back to the social market economy, to the Rhineland prosperity capitalism of the post-war period. The social question is at the center of populist propaganda. The Left Party strikes a pose as the advocate of the little people, demanding an expansion of the welfare state, higher taxes for the rich, and a greater role for the state in the economy—just as was the case in the economic miracle of the Federal Republic of Germany.

Not only strategically, but also in terms of content, the new left-wing populism thus turns out to be a mere copy of the policies of Sahra Wagenknecht and the National Socialist forces that formed the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW).[7] Ms. Wagenknecht explicitly formulated the crazy idea of being able to return to the second half of the 20th century by means of populist politics in her book Die Selbstgerechten (The Self-Righteous) shortly before the split.[8] The Left Party is the populist heir to Wagenknecht’s Querfront populism, pursuing left-wing conservative policies, to use Wagenknecht’s apt oxymoron, although the PDL at least refrains from parroting the crisis-induced rise in resentment, xenophobia, and racism that characterizes the BSW.

And the whole thing is obviously – to return to populist jargon once again – a single lie and a deception, a kind of popular deception committed by pseudo-populists, which the PDL performs with all its false immediacy. There is no going back to the social market economy; the clocks cannot be turned back. The crisis process stands in the way of this populist anachronism. The crisis as a fetishistic process, eating its way in fits and starts from the periphery to the centers, driven by the internal contradictions of capital, is now evident. Everything is obvious—and it is almost impressive to see the mental contortions the German post-left still manages to perform in order to ignore this evidence.

It is obvious: the trade wars that Trump started are the political consequence of deindustrialization in large parts of the United States, where the internal barrier of capital manifests itself.[9] The fetishistic self-movement of capital on a societal level, generated by competition between market subjects, becomes evident in the climate crisis.[10] There is no capitalist interest behind the fact that the compulsion to valorize will soon render entire regions of the world uninhabitable. The self-destructive irrationality of the capitalist system, which uses instrumental rationality to turn the whole world into material for its boundless valorization process, is self-explanatory when one takes a cursory look at global CO2 emissions.

No one wants a revolution; there is no revolutionary subject. That, too, is obvious. And yet – even though almost all sections of the population cling fiercely to its forms of socialization – the system is collapsing. It is the capitalist compulsion to valorize in its agony that calls the system into question by breaking down under its own contradictions – while left-wing populism wants to make everything a question of distribution and clings to a society in dissolution in a reactionary manner. The right wing is, in a sense, acting in a forward-looking manner; it wants barbarism, it wants collapse, in order to approach fascist madness in a cleansing steel storm – the populist left is acting conservatively, clinging to the ideologically distorted ideal images of economic miracle capitalism.

But there can be no welfare state in late capitalism, because the whole of society depends on the pot of the valorization process, quite prosaically in the form of taxes and wages. The PDL’s moronic drivel about the welfare state is a lie. When the valorization process stagnates or simply collapses, when the economy no longer “runs,” then everything else is also up for grabs. Redistribution does not help when the mass of valorized labor in commodity production melts away, when the valorization process destroys its ecological foundations.

There will also be no peace in collapsing late capitalism, as the increasing internal contradictions and ecological upheavals almost inevitably drive the state monsters into external expansion and military adventures. The arms build-up in the West is not only a reaction to Russian imperialism, which launched a war of aggression against Ukraine from a position of internal instability and geopolitical weakness.[11] Increasing resource bottlenecks and raw material shortages will make ordinary wars of plunder necessary again wherever the process of capital valorization, with its boundless hunger for resources, is to be maintained. Food supplies are at risk in the medium term, which is already reflected in corresponding inflation. A catastrophic major war is only a matter of time. In the dark present of the 21st century, there is only war.

Late capitalist democracy is also a thing of the past. In times of crisis, fascist tendencies inevitably gain the upper hand, together with an oligarchic brutalization of the increasingly authoritarian state apparatus. This is not a prediction for the future; it is already happening: in the US, in parts of Eastern Europe, and to some extent also in Germany. What’s more, fascism is the subjective agent of the objectively already unfolding systemic transformation into post-capitalist barbarism. The optimization of the valorization process, realized through democratic discourse, which constitutes the Orwellian essence of capitalist democracy, is turning into an objective tendency toward self-destruction in the manifest crisis of the system, whose subjective political actor is fascism.[12]

The Stepping Stones for the Stepping Stones

Almost everyone knows, really everyone suspects, that the system is coming to an end. And yet the populism of the Left Party, with its obvious fairy tales, is quite successful. The PDL’s deceivers of the people (always stay populist!), who pretend that the systemic crisis does not exist in order to throw social democratic sand in people’s eyes, are simply pursuing their own intra-capitalist interests. The populist question of cui bono, of “who benefits,” which inevitably turns into ideology when considering the irrational, fetishistic crisis process, is entirely appropriate in the autopsy of populism.

Redefining the systemic question as a question of distribution simply opens up career paths in politics. There is a concrete need for this. The ideological taboo of saying what is, of clearly naming the self-destruction of the system, must be maintained even in its agony. However, the basis of capitalist ideology production, the naturalization of capitalism, can hardly be maintained due to increasing upheavals. The false narratives of left-wing populism, according to which the excessive greed and lust for power of a class of sinister puppet masters and bigwigs are responsible for this, create ideological outlets that alleviate the pressure for legitimacy. There is nothing that a few new tax rates and economic shifts toward Keynesianism cannot fix, according to the implicit lie of left-wing populism. The seemingly radical pose and hollow rhetoric conceal the gulf between the reality of the crisis and the anachronistic postulates of the PDL.

The Greens have twisted the urgent insight into the capitalist climate crisis[13] into a commitment to “green capitalism,” while the Left Party is doing something similar with regard to the internal barriers of capital and their social consequences.[14] The PDL thus offers itself to the capitalist functional elites as crisis managers. And this is not done metaphorically, but quite concretely –visible to anyone who wants to see it. Any pseudo-radical rhetoric from prominent figures in the PDL melts away immediately as soon as there is even the slightest chance of participating in politics.

The TikTok product Heidi Reichinnek, for example, jumped on the anti-fascist wave of outrage in early 2025 that was triggered by the taboo-breaking of the then CDU top candidate Friedrich Merz in the heated election campaign phase when the CDU used the votes of the AfD to push through tightening of immigration laws.[15] At the time, the chairwoman of the Left Party group in the Bundestag said that Merz had left the democratic center and had the AfD in tow.[16]  Just a few months later, the same Heidi Reichinnek and her parliamentary group enabled the election of the same Friedrich Merz as chancellor, who committed the greatest fascist “taboo breach” in German postwar history.[17] This was accompanied by the most pitiful phrases: “End the chaos,” “always ready,” “for the good of the country and its people,” always “cooperation possible.” Reichinnek can simply rely on the fact that the memory of her TikTok fan swarm has to be measured in seconds.

Why did the PDL enable the early election of Merz as a stepping stone? Why did the PDL members of the Bundestag effectively act as stepping stones for the stepping stones? To demonstrate their reliability in the political arena, to prove that they can be a reliable partner in “cooperation” in capitalist crisis management. And this decision by the PDL not to stand in the way of German pre-fascism was recognized and appreciated, within narrow limits. The CDU’s decision on its incompatibility with the PDL has been made, and the FAZ, as a kind of late-capitalist Izvestia, basically the central organ of the Federal Republic’s functional elite, ran a headline after the chancellor election that said the “Left Party” was no longer “suitable as an bogeyman.”[18] The path to normalization, to ordinary participation, has been paved since the chancellor election – the PDL’s anti-fascist campaign slogans were the opportunistic sacrifice that the party, which hatched Wagenknecht, was only too willing to make.

The leading PDL cliques are, to stay with populist jargon, an abyss of cheap phrases and ass-kissing towards the functional elites wherever possible. And this post-leftist imposition wants to do nothing other than the political business that is oriented towards ordinary, worn-out crisis strategies. The reactionary state fetish that characterizes a large part of the German old left forms the perfect ideological springboard for career planning in crisis management, since the state moves into a central economic position in manifest crisis phases in order to support the stuttering valorization machine.

Dysfunctional Hyper-Opportunism

However, as mentioned above, there are strict limits to the PDL’s participation. In return for its parliamentary function as a stepping stone for Merz, the PDL faction expected not only the “normalization” of relations with the CDU, but also a seat on the secret service committee. Our Heidi Reichinnek, who made it possible to quickly elect a chancellor who had the “AfD in tow” in order to “avoid chaos” in Germany, wanted to be on this committee for one reason only: to prove her reliability, “for the good of the country,” etc., etc. Well, that was too much of a stepping stone for the CDU and SPD. The already pitiful calculation of getting into the intelligence committee by means of the chancellor election did not work out, as Reichinnek failed to obtain the necessary majority in June.[19]

But that does not deter the opportunistic participation mania of the power-hungry middle-class snobs with proletarian tendencies who make up the majority of the PDL’s old boy networks – on the contrary. Opportunism escalates into hyper-opportunism, it overturns itself, becomes dysfunctional, stands in its own way, negates itself, so to speak. It is opportunism without an opportunistic chance, without opportunity, which virtually takes control of the bullying machines at the top of the PDL: No one demanded it of her, there were no government posts in sight, and yet Ines Schwerdtner, the imposition at the top of the “Left Party,” demanded an increase in the retirement age in August 2025, while expressing the usual “concerns.”[20]

This was a populist cardinal sin committed here without cause, with Ms. Schwerdtner simply telling the truth: not regarding the retirement age, but with regard to the character of the PDL’s “left-wing populism,” which simply lies to people. As I said, they do not believe in the social demagoguery they spew in the systemic crisis. The populists of the PDL lie; it is not ignorance. Ms. Schwerdtner just wanted to be part of the reactionary debate on crisis management strategies in order to signal her “ability to govern.” And that contradicts not only the PDL’s anachronistic social welfare rhetoric, but also the populist credo and tactics of social demagoguery, which is based on sweet-talking people until you are in power – only to then forget your promises and betray your voters. Schwerdtner overshot the mark and had to be called back, although the PDL can probably rely on the short attention span of its Reddit and TikTok brigades.[21]

And that’s nothing new, really. The PDL already stumbled over its dysfunctional hyper-opportunism during the 2021 election campaign. The man who reverently knelt before Wolfgang Schäuble, Dietmar Bartsch, then the party’s top candidate, declared much of the painstakingly negotiated election program obsolete during the heated campaign phase because the competition criticized it.[22] Following criticism from the SPD and the Greens on a number of program points, Bartsch threw a good part of his party’s program overboard in order to demonstrate the party’s ability to govern in the middle of the election campaign – instead of doing so, as is customary with every other party, only in the event of possible coalitions after the election.[23] Despite the change in leadership, much of the old left has remained opportunistic. Hyper-opportunism can thus be defined as a thirst for power and career advancement that stands in its own way.

The proletarian streak of the “Left Party,” its ostentatious display of love for the working class, for wage earners, is a quirk of the middle-class snobs who make up the majority of the PDL leadership.[24]  The internal capitalist interests of wage earners, which this pseudo-populism purports to represent, will be betrayed at the earliest opportunity. No question about it. Ms. Schwerdtner’s love of work goes so far that she would like to see the working life extended – as long as Ms. Schwerdtner herself does not have to work, of course. After all, why shouldn’t we apply the same populist categories to Ms. Schwerdtner as she does to her political rivals?[25] To evaluate Schwerdtner on the basis of her own work ideology: here, a middle-class snob who has never really worked is calling for the extension of working life so that she can provide her political clique with jobs and money as quickly as possible.

And it is no coincidence that the traditional German work ethic, which Ms. Schwerdtner aggressively propagates, is at the heart of this populist taboo-breaking, which only provides a glimpse of this ragtag group’s possible participation in government. The state fetish of the German old left in and around the PDL – which is reinforced by objective state-capitalist crisis tendencies – is complemented by the German work ethic. It is a product of the old left’s belief in the proletariat as a “revolutionary subject,” as well as a central ideologeme of late capitalist crisis ideology, to which the PDL is attached.

Labor, however – leaving the populist rubbish behind – is the substance of capital. The outright hysteria surrounding work, the relentless agitation against everything that does not contribute to the process of capital valorization, are expressions of the crisis of this very process of valorization, which is driving it toward self-destruction. That is why, in times of crisis, the potentially murderous work ethic manifests itself again and again, to the point of forced labor and starvation – even in the 21st century.[26] Everything must become work because work itself is breaking down.[27] The PDL, with its populist hatred of “profiteers” and “parasites,” which stifled any radical critique, is only one post-leftist current of this crisis ideology.

The Regressive Desire for Self-Deception

The PDL can thus already be understood as a post-left formation; they are opportunistic barbarians who dwell in the ruins of past emancipatory attempts. The actual intra-capitalist interest that drives these populist cliques thus materializes in figures such as Schwerdtner or Reichinnek: It is the panicky urge to find a place in late capitalist crisis management in order to become its subject. This also explains the dysfunctional tendency toward hyper-opportunism –time is running out, and the systemic crisis, which these opportunists are dishonestly framing as a redistribution crisis, is progressing inexorably. And they sense that time is running out for them to still “find a place.” As a result, there are hardly any taboos, even without gratification: stepping stones are paved to the chancellorship, promises of a welfare state are turned on their head, etc. The ridiculousness of demanding marginal improvements to a system in open dissolution in the midst of a manifest socio-ecological systemic crisis is blatantly obvious.

But this does not explain the evident popularity of the PDL’s pseudo-populism, which has in fact long since become hegemonic in the German post-left. Its hypocrisy is evident: Germany’s post-left populists polemicize against fascist stooges in order to pave their way into the chancellery a few months later; they engage in social demagoguery, which they refute without any opportunistic motive by demanding an increase in the working life. These populist lies, which can be easily exposed, nevertheless find open ears and receptive minds. Many old leftists and broad sections of the population simply want to be deceived. There is a widespread desire for self-deception that cannot be explained simply by demagoguery or the hope of followers for a warm place in crisis management. This pseudo-populist filth is so successful because it appeals to a widespread, irrational need that is rampant in the manifest crisis of the system.

This irrational, dark need, which takes hold of the masses in the wake of the fully revealed irrationalism of capital, is best illuminated by the concept of regression. The fear-induced relapse into earlier stages of development, often used to ward off traumatic experiences, corresponds to a variety of reflexes of ideological defense against the crisis in the disintegrating political sphere. In this magical thinking, the global crisis of capital is to be banished by making perceiving, reflecting upon, or discussing it taboo. Concretely, this manifests itself in the struggle of the post- and old left against radical crisis theory. It is a kind of taboo that is being established, a compulsive unwillingness to know – which, in view of the manifest crisis and the openly apparent fetishism of capital[28] increasingly often turns into ridicule: for example, when young PDL members demand “justice in the climate collapse,”[29] or when left-leaning German comedians issue ultimatums to billionaires[30] to put an end to the crisis, while the latter have long since had their bunkers built.[31]

The post-left regression that drives the populism of the PDL and the disintegrating BSW is related to the explicitly reactionary aspirations of the right, which has also been expressed concretely in the querfront efforts of recent years.[32] However, this preconscious and unconscious crisis reflex goes beyond a merely political dimension. The crisis of capital also affects the subjects whose own constitution and socialization are shaped by late capitalism. What capital does to wage earners, their constitution as subjects, as citizens and market subjects, is on the verge of dissolution. And regression wants to cling to this, to late capitalist identity, which – by the way – also explains the rampant identity mania that is merely an expression of dissolving identities. When everything is in flux, when things are in motion, subjects cling to what they still have left – to the identity they acquired through their socialization, even if this is also eroding.

Radical crisis theory and the resulting transformative practice, the escape from the capitalist prison of thought, thus amounts to a necessary, painful break with identity. And it is precisely this break with capital that the old left refuses, as crisis theorist Robert Kurz already explained in his examination of anti-German ideology at the beginning of the 21st century:

The impending categorical break would be such a painful break with identity that the death throes of the old paradigm of critique consist primarily in devising avoidance strategies in this regard.”[33]

The post-left pseudo-populism of the PDL is thus not only an opportunistic career project in an era of open crisis management, it also builds on this unconscious crisis tendency toward regression, on the subjects’ fear of impending “loss of self,” so to speak. It is also a populism of the intellectually poor, to put it populistically. In this context, Robert Kurz spoke explicitly of a “reactionary longing for a return to the old familiar patterns of interpretation” in “large parts of the left.” The anachronistic talk of the welfare state, the zombie-like return of anti-imperialism in the form of post-colonialism, the praise of hard work in the face of the impending AI rationalization pushes, the ridiculous polemic about parasites and fat cats in the face of the manifest climate crisis – all these appeal to this regressive need among all the old leftists who have not yet openly defected to the right.[34]

The populist desire to march back into the idealized social market economy is merely a post-left expression of this general tendency toward regression, as exemplified by Wagenknecht.[35] It is literally an “avoidance strategy,” as Kurz put it. Or, to put it another way: the identitarian delusion – whether based on national or religious grounds – is an expression of clinging to late capitalist society, which shaped these identities through socialization.

And yet this regressive flight into identitarian delusion and class struggle stupidity will not stop the fetishistic march toward crisis. Every day, open crisis fetishism strikes a blow to the numb wannabe class warriors who can only smell sinister capitalist interests everywhere. It is obvious that the looming climate catastrophe, for example, also threatens to put an end to capital’s profiteering. The crisis will continue to unfold in its ecological and economic dimensions, even if populism and old-left dullness obscure or marginalize radical crisis theory. The fetishistic reality of the crisis cannot be mobbed away.

The categorical break that Robert Kurz predicted in his book Die antideutsche Ideologie [The Anti-German Ideology] is now very much on the agenda. Not because the fearful market subjects blinded by identity want it, but because it will inevitably take place in the course of the upcoming transformation of the system:

“On the historical agenda is the categorical break with the basic forms of the modern commodity-producing system as such, as announced by the concept of value criticism: the capital relation must be fundamentally criticized as value socialization. If, after the collapse of state socialism, the labor movement, and traditional Marxism, there is to be a renewed theoretical and practical critique of the ruling world system, its economic terror, its social impositions, and its processes of destruction, then this critique must become more radical; that is, unlike previous left-wing paradigms, it must go deeper, to the roots and to the categorical basis of commodity-producing modernity. This includes a critique of the fetishistic form of subject and interest, of ‘abstract labor,’ and of the democratic legal form: all of which are foreign concepts to the dying consciousness of the categorically immanent labor movement Marxism. Since one was oneself an integral part of the history of capitalist modernization, one cannot and does not want to break away from commodity-producing modernity.”[36]

Despite the ever-advancing dynamics of the crisis, nothing has changed in this regard over the past two decades. This old left is in fact the main disruptive factor in the establishment of a radical awareness of the crisis, which could only develop on the political left. Nowhere is this clearer than in the decaying products of “state socialism, the labor movement, and traditional Marxism,” which have taken on a populist form in the PDL – they are flesh from the ideological flesh of capital, its last resort in the disintegrating left, so to speak, which attempts to suppress any emancipatory impulse. Opportunistic calculation, old-left dullness, and general regression go hand in hand here.

Especially against the backdrop of the inevitable systemic crisis, which will necessarily lead to an open-ended systemic transformation, this post-left “identity populism” has a disastrous effect. Emancipation in crisis can only be the result of a consciously waged struggle for transformation.[37] On this point, Robert Kurz writes in The Anti-German Ideology:

“But that is precisely why the crisis leads to nothing but crisis, the failure of capital to function, and not to the self-evident demise of capital as a social relationship, as has become a false assumption in people’s minds. The crisis therefore never replaces emancipation, the emancipatory social movement, precisely because it is purely objective. Of course, there is no automatic, objective emancipation; that would be a contradiction in terms. And it is therefore completely open how people will react to crisis and collapse. In its objectivity, the absolute internal barrier of capital can become an external condition for emancipation as well as for social decay into barbarism, which capitalism has always carried within itself as a potentiality and as a manifestation.”[38]

The opportunistically motivated, regressive dullness propagated by the PDL within the dwindling German remnants of the left thus objectively blocks the necessary “categorical break with the basic forms of the modern commodity-producing system,” as Kurz put it.[39] This categorical break, however, would be a prerequisite for anemancipatory social movement” that would consciously wage social struggles as part of the objectively imminent struggle for transformation.[40]

Telling it like it is – clearly and publicly articulating the crisis and the necessity of overcoming capitalism in order to survive – seems hardly conceivable anymore in the populist morass that has spread throughout the remnants of the left in the wake of the PDL’s catastrophic election victory.[41] Instead of radical critique of the frothing identity and work mania, which are only expressions of the crisis of labor and the market subject, instead of a conscious, forward-looking search for emancipatory paths to transformation, the PDL is staging a backward-looking farce that is blatantly obvious in its regressive hypocrisy. Incidentally, the PDL’s ideological-identitarian blockade extends not only to the left-wing media landscape, which has been largely brought into line, but also to left-wing discussion forums and social networks, most of which are moderated by people who do not have to work because they are paid by the PDL – as parliamentary assistants, party employees, volunteers, interns, etc. The fundamental radical discourse, the understanding of emancipatory ways out of the impending catastrophe, is being cut off at its root.

Emancipation requires a radical, categorical break with value-based society, both ideologically and identitarily, as a precondition for emancipatory transformative practice – precisely because value-based society is breaking down due to its contradictions. Regression, the comfortable opportunistic path of the PDL, on the other hand, acts as one of the breeding grounds for fascism. Fascism is an extremism of the center, which drives precisely what it finds in the center in terms of ideology and identity to extremes in response to crises.

This regressive openness to the right, which drove Wagenknecht to leave the National Socialist Party, can currently be best demonstrated by the largest populist hollow body in the PDL, party leader Jan van Aken.[42] Van Aken has developed the habit of having posters made for himself[43] in order to sell himself as a tribune of the people in populist fashion.[44] Here, the right-wing degeneration of a simplified critique of capitalism becomes visible as if under a magnifying glass: praise for the hard work that “keeps the country running” goes hand in hand with the personification of the crisis in a “clique of millionaires.” Mr. van Aken, similar to his co-chair, is someone croaking the praises of work even though he has never had to “really work” in the populist sense.

As mentioned, labor is the substance of capital – the rampant work hysteria that is once again giving rise to forced labor in the FRG is an expression of the crisis of capital, which, with the impending AI rationalization push, threatens to finally rid itself of its own substance.[45] Emancipatory practice would consist in fighting for the end of compulsory labor and the realization of automation in a post-capitalist society emancipated from fetishism. The German work mania, which escalated during the last severe systemic crisis in the context of National Socialist extremism from the center to the Auschwitz motto “Arbeit macht Frei” [Work makes you free], is currently flaring up in response to the crisis in almost all political camps. Van Aken reproduces this work fetish in a post-leftist variant by contrasting the proletarian masses with a clique of parasites.

The discourse hegemony of fascism in the FRG becomes particularly visible when van Aken expresses anti-fascist views and unwittingly lapses into fascistoid critique of fascism, imagining fascism as a sinister elite conspiracy (“bigwigs”) directed against national labor, against – surprise – the “hard-working people.”[46] Workaholism, personification of the causes of crisis, conspiracy thinking – all on one poster whose simplified critique of capitalism could also be found on a Nazi poster, if only “bigwigs” were replaced with “Jews.” This has nothing to do with a critique of the actual dynamics of the crisis, which are actually causing the distribution struggles to escalate on the surface. This is not an expression of a counter-principle to fascism, but merely its populist rival.

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[1] https://www.zdfheute.de/politik/deutschland/linken-vorsitzende-schwerdtner-van-aken-gehalt-spende-100.html

[2] https://www.kpoe-graz.at/tag-der-offenen-konten-2023.phtml

[3] https://www.konicz.info/2025/03/23/alle-werden-wagenknecht/

[4] https://www.untergrund-blättle.ch/politik/theorie/emanzipation-in-der-krise-7306.html

[5] https://jungle.world/artikel/2025/14/autoland-ist-abgebrannt

[6] https://www.rosalux.de/fileadmin/rls_uploads/pdfs/Studien/Studien_3-24_Linke_Triggerpunkte_web.pdf

[7] https://www.konicz.info/2025/03/23/alle-werden-wagenknecht/

[8] https://www.konicz.info/2021/06/29/schreiben-wie-ein-internettroll/

[9] https://exitinenglish.com/2025/06/06/trump-at-the-inner-barrier-of-capital/

[10] https://www.konicz.info/2022/01/14/die-klimakrise-und-die-aeusseren-grenzen-des-kapitals/

[11] https://www.akweb.de/politik/russland-ukraine-konflikt-kampf-auf-der-titanic/

[12] https://www.konicz.info/2024/01/13/e-book-faschismus-im-21-jahrhundert/

[13] https://www.konicz.info/2024/05/29/aktualisierte-neuausgabe-klimakiller-kapital/

[14] https://www.konicz.info/2025/11/01/understanding-jd-vance/

[15] https://www.konicz.info/2025/01/28/schwarz-brauner-durchbruch-in-der-heissen-wahlkampfphase/

[16] https://www.zdfheute.de/video/zdfheute-live/reichinnek-bundestag-redebeitrag-debatte-migrationsgesetz-video-100.html

[17] https://x.com/antonnft6/status/1919821830660976804

[18] https://www.faz.net/aktuell/politik/inland/kommentar-zum-unvereinbarkeitsbeschluss-die-cdu-sollte-ihr-verhaeltnis-zur-linken-aendern-110466519.html

[19] https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/innenpolitik/geheimdienst-gremium-reichinnek-afd-100.html

[20] https://www.n-tv.de/politik/Linken-Chefin-haelt-Erhoehung-des-Renteneintrittsalters-fuer-moeglich-article25948019.html

[21] https://www.zdfheute.de/politik/deutschland/rentenalter-linke-schwerdtner-aussage-korrektur-100.html

[22] https://www.wsws.org/de/articles/2024/01/04/link-j04.html

[23] https://www.konicz.info/2021/09/24/linkspartei-wagenknecht-statt-kampf-um-emanzipation/

[24] Workers are so underrepresented that the party had to introduce a quota in 2025. https://www.freitag.de/autoren/sebastian-baehr/die-linkspartei-will-eine-arbeiterquote-einfuehren-kann-das-klappen

[25] https://x.com/fr_dr_kniffel/status/1992268626490269713

[26] https://www.konicz.info/2013/03/15/happy-birthday-schweinesystem/

[27] https://exitinenglish.com/2025/06/06/trump-at-the-inner-barrier-of-capital/

[28] https://exitinenglish.com/2023/01/23/the-subjectless-rule-of-capital/

[29] https://x.com/tkonicz/status/1992636311359172882

[30] https://x.com/tkonicz/status/1928306598717403243

[31] https://konicz.substack.com/p/the-exodus-of-the-money-people

[32] https://www.konicz.info/2024/06/06/linkspartei-querfrontschrecken-ohne-ende/

[33] Robert Kurz, Die antideutsche Ideologie, Vom Antifaschismus zum Krisenimperialismus: Kritik des neuesten linksdeutschen Sektenwesens in seinen theoretischen Propheten, Münster, 2003, p. 14.

[34] https://exitinenglish.com/2024/08/03/ai-the-final-boost-to-automation/

[35] https://exitinenglish.com/2024/08/10/the-great-regression/

[36] Robert Kurz, Die antideutsche Ideologie, Vom Antifaschismus zum Krisenimperialismus: Kritik des neuesten linksdeutschen Sektenwesens in seinen theoretischen Propheten, Münster, 2003, p. 14f.

[37] https://exitinenglish.com/2023/02/22/emancipation-in-crisis/

[38] Robert Kurz, Die antideutsche Ideologie, Vom Antifaschismus zum Krisenimperialismus: Kritik des neuesten linksdeutschen Sektenwesens in seinen theoretischen Propheten, Münster, 2003, p. 227.

[39] In the US, the Democratic Socialists of America and the regressive rag Jacobin fulfill a similar crisis-ideological function.

[40] https://www.untergrund-blättle.ch/politik/theorie/den-transformationskampf-aufnehmen-fuer-ein-kaempferisches-krisenbewusstsein-009092.html

[41] https://www.konicz.info/2025/03/23/alle-werden-wagenknecht/

[42] https://x.com/tkonicz/status/1995044050798612824

[43] https://x.com/tkonicz/status/1995108620632002741

[44] https://x.com/tkonicz/status/1995110373213536561

[45] https://exitinenglish.com/2024/08/03/ai-the-final-boost-to-automation/

[46] https://x.com/tkonicz/status/1995107787139936504/photo/1

Originally published on konicz.info on 11/30/2025

The Aesthetics of Modernization

From Detachment to the Negative Integration of Art

Robert Kurz

The separation of life and art is an old theme of modernity. All artists who want to express a truth and who consume themselves existentially in their creations have always suffered from this separation. Whether art shows well-proportioned beauty or, conversely, the aesthetics of ugliness in its various representations, whether it criticizes society or seeks to rediscover the wealth of forms in nature, whether it is realistically or fantastically oriented: it always remains separated from everyday life and thus from social reality as if by a glass but impenetrable wall. Artistic creations are either ignored or they are world-famous as museum objects, dead before they are even born. The artist thus resembles a figure from the tragedies of antiquity: just as water and fruit forever recede before the thirsty Tantalus, so life recedes before him; just as King Midas had to starve to death because all objects turned to gold under his touch, so the artist as a social being must starve to death because all objects turn into pure exhibits under his touch; and like Sisyphus, he always rolls his stone in vain – his work remains disconnected from the world.

All attempts by art to break out of its glass ghetto have failed. Sculptures set up in factories and paintings on the walls of offices remained foreign bodies; literary readings in churches or schools never got beyond the character of compulsory events. When the Dadaists resorted to provocation out of desperation and dragged toilet bowls or rusty iron pipes into the sacred halls of art to mock the bourgeoisie, this offer was accepted with animal seriousness as an art object and cataloged like Michelangelo’s sculptures or Picasso’s paintings. The tautological definition is: art is everything that society perceives a priori in a separate space, in a reservation called “art,” and which, therefore, in its impregnated artistic objecthood, can be collected independently of any content, like stamps or insects. It doesn’t matter what the art wants and how it presents this, its effects are always defused and trivialized. For the capitalist elites, the artist is not even a court jester, but at best a special supplier like the wine merchant or the confectioner. You wouldn’t buy a used car from him, and you wouldn’t want him to be your son-in-law. At least that is his status in classical modernity.

Modern society has always seen its own mode of existence and its categories as supra-historical and universally human. If there is something rotten and actually unbearable about this system, then it is never supposed to be a historical problem that can be overcome through critique, but always an irrevocable condition of existence per se, which humanity unfortunately has to live with. Modernism also perceives the dilemma of the separateness of art and life through this lens of false ontologization. People pretend that in ancient Greece the artist was just as much a seller of his possibilities as he is today and that even the ancient Egyptians exhibited their images of the gods in galleries and museums or put price tags on them at auctions.

But in ancient civilizations there was no separate social department called “art” or “culture” in the sense that we understand them today. The modern structure of separate and mutually independent spheres, which also determines our language and our thinking, was completely alien to all earlier societies. Whatever human deficits, problems and social power relations they had, they did not divide their existence into separate functional areas. Such a division of social life only developed when the so-called economy was detached from the rest of life in the modern era; an elementary change that cannot be emphasized enough. Recent systems theory regards this as “progress” and the previous state of humanity as a lack of “differentiation,” axiomatically assuming a measure of primitiveness: The more integrated a society is through an overarching cultural context, the more primitive it is from this perspective; and conversely, the more “differentiated” a society is, the more it has split into separate spheres (based on the independence of the capitalist economy), the more “developed” it appears and the more “opportunities” it supposedly offers. This way of thinking has become so self-evident that it no longer seems absurd to see the highest achievement of social evolution in the fact that the functionally reduced human being only represents an intersection of systemic structures.

In reality, however, pre-modern civilizations were not primitive, but highly differentiated; only this kind of differentiation does not correspond to the concept of it accepted today. The old, predominantly agrarian societies did not have a culture, in the way that one “has” an external and random object, but they were a culture. This is even expressed in our scientific language, albeit most of the time unconsciously: we readily speak of the “culture” of ancient Egypt, antiquity, the Middle Ages, etc. and, as a rule, we indicate in this way both the special artifacts and artistic representations of sculpture, painting or literature and, on the other hand, the respective civilization, accompanied by its social structure and its relationship to the world in general. On the other hand, when we talk about “modern culture,” we only mean that particular aspect of artistic forms of expression that have been relegated to a separate sphere and never the social context as a whole. So we unconsciously “know” that culture used to be the whole and not a functionally separate sphere for the edification of the money-earning individual on his Sunday trips to the museum.

In fact, the Latin word “cultus,” from which our concept of culture derives, means both “planting” and “agriculture” as well as “worship,” “way of life,” “sociality,” “education” and even “clothing” (for certain occasions). This multi-layered terminology points to the culturally integrated character of ancient agrarian civilizations. The differentiated contents and forms of both their “metabolism with nature” (Marx) and their social relations and aesthetics did not fall apart as “subsystems,” each with its “own logic,” but were always only different aspects of a single and coherent cultural mode of existence. In modern terms, the description of this culturally integrated existence must sound confusing: production was aesthetic, aesthetics was religious, religion was political, politics was cultural and culture was social. In other words, the social aspects that are distinct for us were intertwined, and each area of life was to a certain extent contained in every other.

One might perhaps be tempted to speak of these agrarian cultures as religiously constituted, because religion was apparently the strongest integrative element of such a “society as culture.” It is well known that not only all kinds of artistic crafts, but also the theater and sporting competitions emerged from cultic acts; more precisely: they were cultic acts of a special kind. But even the quite ordinary activities of everyday life had a fundamentally cultic character; even humor and irony were cultically integrated. Nevertheless, it would be wrong to single out “religion” as the systemically defining moment of such societies, because in doing so we are already thinking of our functional concept of separate spheres. But religion was not a religion in the modern sense either, not a mere “belief,” not a limited opportunity for transcendental thoughts, and certainly not a “private matter.”

We must therefore not simply imagine the religious character of ancient cultures as a restrictive, irrationally coercive relation. The religious was at the same time the public, the so-called politics, the form of debate. It is not for nothing that the Latin word “privatus” has a rather negative, derogatory meaning, which becomes even clearer for us when we look at the corresponding ancient Greek term: there, the “privatus,” who does not participate in public life on a daily basis and as a matter of course, is the idiot. The fact that the religious aspect is both the form of public life and encompasses the whole of everyday life is not, however, an index of the limitations of this society, as the ideology of modern self-legitimization claims. Conversely, it could just as well be said that such a civilization had much more publicity and debate than the modern system, in which most of society’s affairs are settled automatically and without debate through the mechanics of the “detached” economy. Whichever way we look at it, our modern self-image does not allow us to come to terms with the existence of a culturally integrated society. We have no concepts for it.

This modern blindness to the character of pre-modern conditions has created yet another major misunderstanding. At the center of what we call “religion” is basically, in all cultures, the problem of human mortality and death as a process, event and “goal of life.” Along with religion, modernity has also relegated death to a special functional sphere, thus separating it from life just like it has done to art. In this way, the modern secularization of society did not lead to a different and possibly more reflective approach to death, but rather to its being repressed and ignored. What religion had meant in the old societies was not overcome and positively abolished, but merely functionally reduced to an irrational remnant for the private sensibilities of the abstract individual. With regard to bodily mortality, modernity went even further: just as old people who have become “useless” for capitalist reproduction appear even to their own children as mere “waste” and are locked away in institutions separated from normal life, the dead are also “disposed of” like garbage and industrial scrap.

Once modernity had repressed death, it could only understand the earlier integration of life and death as a frightening “fixation on death.” The fact that the ancient Egyptians attached so much importance to their tombs and to embalming the dead is usually interpreted as a sinister death cult, as if they had been preoccupied with nothing else. Modern man is even more disgusted by the widespread Neolithic custom of burying the bones of the dead in the middle of the house under the fireplace. In reality, all these people must have been extremely fun-loving, as ancient studies can now prove in many respects. The natural integration of death into everyday life only seems strange to us because the problem of our own mortality has been “outsourced” to a place that is invisible in ordinary life. Various cultural critics have repeatedly made this separation of life and death, as well as the separation of art and life, an agonizing topic in the history of modernization, without, however, ever radically criticizing the underlying social structure.

 In a “society as culture,” which was even capable of integrating death, “art” was necessarily always part of everyday life and was therefore completely unthinkable as an exhibit of a sterilized and dead sphere “behind glass.” But that is precisely why it was not art as art, but a specific moment in an integrated social context. The “artist” could therefore only be an artist and be recognized in the sense of a technical ability, but not as a social representative of “the” art. The problem of functional divisions, which so preoccupies modernity, arose with it in the first place and could not even have been formulated before. The question therefore arises as to where this systemic “differentiation” actually comes from.

The process of modernization has by no means divided up society evenly and equally. Rather, a certain aspect of human reproduction, namely the so-called economy, was split off from all other aspects and from life in general. It is therefore no more possible to speak of an economy in our sense of the word for the ancient agrarian civilizations than it is to speak of an art or religion, even though the term originates from antiquity. However, while in ancient Greece, as in all pre-modern civilizations, “oikonomia” was a household economy in an integrated cultural context, a factual prerequisite and a means for cultic and thus social or aesthetic purposes, in the modern age it developed into an absurd end in itself and the central content of society. Money, as capital, was coupled back onto itself and thus became a blind “automatic subject” (Karl Marx) that is eerily presupposed for all human and cultural purposes.

As this “valorization of value” (Karl Marx) or abstract economic profit maximization split off from life as a dynamic end in itself, a separate, independent “functional sphere” emerged for the first time, like a foreign body in society, which began to rise to dominance and become the center. And it was only the existence of this detached and simultaneously dominant sector that made all other aspects of social reproduction left over from the capitalist economy appear as separate “subsystems,” that are, however, without exception of merely secondary importance and subordinate to the assumed economic end in itself.

Under the dictates of the independent economy, productive activity has mutated into abstract “labor” in an alienated functional space separate from life, which is only regulated secondarily and under the compulsion of its own uncontrollable “system legality” by the equally separate special sphere of politics. Such a “politics” split off from the culturally integrated society must therefore have been just as unknown to pre-modern civilizations as the “disembedded economy” (Karl Polanyi) of the capitalist self-purpose and the corresponding positive concept of abstract “labor” outside an integrated context of life. Modern politics and the associated institutions of the state and law cannot be equated with the apparently corresponding pre-modern institutions, which, just like “religion,” did not have the character of separate functional sectors. Only in the process of modern social disintegration through the “disembedded economy” did politics, the state and law emerge as complementary “subsystems” of the second order and thus as the first servants (ministers!) of the mute a priori of the capitalist economy.

When the central content and purpose of society has become a split off end in itself, then life must necessarily sink to a mere remnant. Expressions of life beyond the systemic divisions and complementary functional spheres of market and state, economy and politics, competition and law have been degraded to the residual waste of “leisure”; and somewhere in relation to this diffuse remnant, not only religion but also art and culture are located in a special sphere. All things that were once crucially important to people, all existential questions, all associated aesthetic purposes and forms of expression have become this meaningless “remnant” and their representatives have to scramble for the crumbs that fall from the table of monstrous self-purpose.

The situation of art and aesthetics in general is particularly absurd. Although every manifestation of life in itself always has an aesthetic moment for humans, capitalism has negated this elementary fact and separated aesthetics into a separate space, just like all other moments. “Work” is not aesthetic, the economy is not aesthetic, politics is not aesthetic; only aesthetics is aesthetic. It is as if the aesthetics of things lead an abstracted, ghostly existence of their own alongside things; just as the social nature of products leads an abstracted, separate existence alongside the products in the abstract form of money, which has become an end in itself, and abstract formal logic, as the “money of the mind” (Marx), becomes independent and stands alongside the concrete logic of real relationships.

The modern artist’s glass prison consists precisely in this structural separation of the aesthetic. Art flounders helplessly back and forth in this prison; it is no longer the artistic form of a social content, but a dissociated “formality” – either form without content or content as mere form. Art must therefore ape the end in itself of capital, which, as an abstract form (money) that feeds back on itself, would prefer to emancipate itself from any material content, without ever being able to realize this absurdity. “Art for art’s sake” is only the culmination of art as an involuntary caricature of capital, without being able to solve the dilemma at the heart of the capitalist system.

But if, through its own distress, it has become a delusional, self-obsessed end in itself, art, in its unreconciled separateness, can give rise to social hubris: Instead of understanding itself as the product of a system of divisions and mobilizing the radical critique of this destructive self-serving structure, art begins to “aestheticize” the division itself and its functionalist manifestations. Not only its own dilemma becomes an aesthetic subject, but also the glaring capitalist schizophrenia as a whole. However, if the capitalist structure is not criticized but aestheticized, then bodies torn apart by grenades, raped women, starving children and the obscenity of power can also appear as merely aesthetic objects. The detached aesthetic does not return to the social content, but only illuminates it in cynical reflection. An “aestheticization of politics” within the unresolved capitalist system thus leads not to emancipation, but directly to barbarism. Aesthetically staged politics was the secret of fascism’s success and Hitler was the prototype of the artist as politician, who did not reintegrate the separate spheres but stylized their disintegration into a bloody Gesamtkunstwerk.

The precarious situation of art in the capitalist structure of divisions also has a gendered aspect. In order for the “disembedded economy” of capitalist self-purpose to establish itself at all and produce the modern separation of spheres, an elementary precondition was necessary: Everything that was not absorbed into this system of divisions had to be primarily dissociated in its turn. And these were those aspects of life that were once culturally integrated but were then shifted onto modern women: family, “housework,” childcare, caregiving, “love,” etc., along with their associated characteristics. This also included a supposed special receptivity to aesthetics: women, as “natural beauties,” adorn themselves and the homes of their loved ones. This social space, which could not be completely absorbed by capitalist structures but nevertheless remained necessary for human reproduction, emerged as a separate kind of privacy in contrast to the entire social structure of capital and the internal divisions it contained. A paradoxical “separation from the overall system of divisions” (Roswitha Scholz) thus emerged, which forms its “dark reverse side” and is connoted as “female,” while, conversely, the official system as a whole is occupied and dominated by “masculine” elements.

This realization of the elementary and primary gendered dissociation, which emerged from feminist critique, points to a peculiar gendered relationship between the private and public spheres, which also affects the detached aesthetic sphere of art and culture. In the culturally integrated pre-modern societies, there were indeed strong patriarchal moments, but not in the “differentiated” and exaggerated modern form. The culturally integrated differentiation, for which we no longer have terms, did not separate “privacy” and “publicity” in the way we understand them today. In modern terms, much of what is considered private today was public, and vice versa; insofar as the public sphere was “male,” it remained limited, or there were “male” and “female” public spheres simultaneously and in parallel in the cultural context.

The paradoxical forms of disintegration based on the “disembedded economy,” however, have gendered the public and private spheres in a twofold way. On the one hand, there is the intimate space of privacy, in which “the woman” is the so-called fairer sex and at the same time responsible for the warmth of the nest, the comfort of the master, loving care, etc. – and for this very reason is considered inferior and “weak of spirit.” In contrast to this inferior private sphere, the entire system of capitalism with the “disembedded economy” at the top appears as the “masculine” sphere of bourgeois public life and as society proper. On the other hand, there is also a second internal split between the private and public spheres within this official “male” structure: absurdly, the activity for the subjectless end in itself of the system appears here as the “male” private sphere of the capitalist subject with specific interests, the “homo economicus” and money earner, while the complementary sphere of politics, which is also “male,” is defined as the public sphere. And the dissociated sphere of aesthetics or art and culture is merely an extension of this internal public sphere within the “male” capitalist pseudo-universe.

Therefore, “the artist” is in principle a male being within the capitalist public sphere, albeit in a particularly precarious place. There are also female artists, just as there are female politicians, entrepreneurs, scientists, etc. – but firstly, they are merely exceptions that prove the sociological rule; and secondly, they always have to adapt to the “male” rules of the game, which only proves that these are not biological conditions, but socio-historical attributions. The structurally “male” artist in his glass cage of dissociated aesthetics becomes a particularly schizophrenic being: On the one hand, he is a thoroughly capitalist “man” and moneymaker who rests on bourgeois privacy of the first order and needs “the woman” as an inferior caregiver in the background like any ordinary car salesman. On the other hand, within the “male” bourgeois public sphere, he represents a dissociated “female” element in the form of aesthetics itself, which is not absorbed into the functionalist system but is nevertheless part of the capitalist public sphere.

Only in the form of detached, sterile, museum-like art objecthoods can the “feminine” appear within the male pseudo-universe. The artist is thus the capitalist man who is the only one allowed to show his female side and even be homosexual if necessary – but only as the social aberration of the narcissistically self-centered aesthetic, who also robs “the woman” of her ascribed attributes and is thus the superman precisely because he even incorporates the “feminine” in a masculine way and degrades “the woman” as a model, object, or muse to a mere object of beauty. At the same time, however, bourgeois society chalks up his representation of the feminine in the masculine as a shortcoming and the “feminine inferiority” rubs off on him, so that he is regarded by his fellow car salesmen as a social exotic and is not really taken seriously.

However, this structure of divisions, which is the essence of modernity, is already perceived as a historical past. The capitalist dynamic has blown up its own social form and yet continues to proceed unabated. Mass culture and new media seem to level out the systemic “differentiation”: What critics denounced half a century ago as the “culture industry” (Adorno) is now celebrated by postmodernists as the reintegration of art and life. Mediatization is seen per se as emancipation from the constraints of capitalist reality; the world is declared to be a digital game. Everywhere is teeming with “opportunities” that can be seized in the spirit of media “democratization.” And in the amusing habitual masquerade of the sexes, the brave new postmodern world believes it has also overcome gender inequality. The transvestite is almost being proclaimed the new revolutionary subject.

The rhetoric of opportunity in postmodern cultural professional optimism, even if it sometimes presents itself as radical left-wing, is suspiciously reminiscent of the Orwellian language of neoliberal economists. In fact, it is not art that is returning to society as “democratic mass culture” but, conversely, the market is overstepping its boundaries and renewing its claim to totality harder than ever. Once the capitalist economy had detached from the cultural context of life and transformed its remnants into separate subsystems, its dynamics could not remain in this state of disintegration. While the sectors of art and culture, sport, religion, “leisure” etc. initially seemed to be able to assert a certain logic of their own against the dominant system of the “disembedded economy,” they are now being successively “economized” themselves.

These areas were dependent and secondary from the outset: if the structuring social context of society is determined by the end in itself of money, then priests, athletes, and artists must also “earn money,” whether directly as sellers in the market or indirectly through the state’s siphoning of money from market processes. But for a long time, this dependence was only external. As long as art was not subject to the economic laws of the market in its own production, it could not yet be a completely capitalist commodity, but only became so retrospectively in circulation. But the capitalist end in itself is as voracious as it is insatiable, and so it ultimately had to devour the already mutilated remnants of life: the detached art and culture as well as the meager “leisure time” and limited family intimacy.

Art only returns to life to the extent that life has already dissolved into the economy. Now art no longer has an existence of its own, not even as a sphere of a separate aesthetic, but has itself become a direct economic object and therefore its production is already taking place with a view towards how it can be marketed. In the boundless capitalism of the late 20th century, all objects in the world and in life no longer have any intrinsic qualitative value, but only the economic value conferred on them by their marketability.

What postmodernism would like to see as an emancipatory opportunity for art in capitalist mass culture is in reality its destruction. If the “cheerful positivists” (Michel Foucault) of postmodernism today want to place this prophetic insight of Adorno in the vicinity of conservative cultural pessimism, then they are only proving that they themselves have capitulated unconditionally to the economic imperative and are no less affirmative than the conservative pseudo-critics. If conservative cultural pessimism criticizes the destruction of art by the capitalist culture industry only from the point of view of its own past, when it was still a self-purposeful aesthetic in classical modernism, postmodernism twists the final push of the dissolution of art into economics into its re-appropriation by society. And while conservative cultural criticism mourns the bourgeois family and the elitist subjects of the old educated bourgeoisie, postmodernism misjudges the lonely media misery of the atomized “decentered subject” as an emancipatory spring. Some cling to the capitalist past, others to the capitalist present, both deny a new perspective for the anti-capitalist future.

Men and women, artists and car salesmen have become identical today only insofar as they have
all assumed the same empty identity of “homo economicus” and are no longer themselves as will-less agents of the “automatic subject.” The “differentiation” of sectorally split subjectivities is crushed by the market economy until everyone is a kind of car salesman, no matter what they do. The naïve belief in the cultural-industrial postmodern consumer democracy is disgraced under the dictatorship of capitalist supply. The culture industry is therefore not to be criticized because it is mass culture, but because it is absorbed in the alienated form of the “disembedded economy.” Its aesthetics are not the aesthetics of man, but the aesthetics of the commodity.

In the democracy of commodities, people as human beings no longer have anything to say. The aesthetics of commodities does not integrate the disintegrated individuals, but the commodities as ghostly pseudo-subjects. It is not the aesthetic form of a content, but the “design” of economic abstraction. This final stage of modern aesthetics can be described on several levels:

  • Firstly, it is an aesthetics of particularism. Contexts and connections are not taken into account. It ignores the fact that the whole is more and something qualitatively different than the sum of its parts. The design is the glittering aesthetics of the abstract single commodity for the consumption of the abstract single individual, while the whole of the landscape, the cities and the social space is transformed into a stinking garbage dump.
  • Secondly, this design corresponds to an aesthetic of arbitrariness. Form and content no longer have any relationship to each other, because the content itself is redefined as form. Capital is indifferent as to whether it valorizes itself through the production of pig carcasses, anti-personnel mines or laxatives. Art, which has been economized into design, must be just as indifferent to what it produces – if only it presents itself as marketable and capable of being staged in the media. This eliminates any yardstick. While conscious cultural integration must always develop standards, even if it is aware of their relativity and can change them, commodity aesthetics is a priori without standards – in keeping with the postmodern “decentered subject,” who literally “doesn’t care about anything.” A world without standards, which makes everything indifferent, can only produce one thing: endless boredom.
  • Thirdly, art and culture degraded to the design of the commodity world proves to be the aesthetics of simulation. The crazy postmodern idea of a media-induced de-realization of reality (Jean Baudrillard et al.) is only too eager to believe in the appearance of design because it produces it itself. Media simulation attempts to build a parallel virtual and dematerialized world in which capitalism no longer faces any natural or social barriers and the growth of the “disembedded economy” can continue indefinitely. In economic terms, the virtual illusory worlds of the media correspond to the casino capitalism of the last 15 years: the decoupled financial markets simulate an accumulation of capital that has long had no real economic ground under its feet. Capitalism continues to run on air, so to speak, after it has crossed the edge of the abyss. In this economic milieu of “fictitious capital” (Karl Marx) of stock market booms, debt, gambling, and “risk” sociology (Ulrich Beck), a zeitgeist has developed that wants to cover up the intolerability of capitalist impositions by “pretending.” In the simulative pose of media self-aestheticization, individuals act “as if” they were competent, successful, beautiful and reflective, while their real social relationships collapse.

Particularism, arbitrariness, and simulation reveal that destroyed art, through its mutation into commodity aesthetics, is only negatively integrated into a social life that is no longer life at all. The old problem of the separation of art and life has not been solved, but has become irrelevant because social man himself has become irrelevant. But even this irrelevance proves to be mere appearance, in which the “automatic subject” creates illusions about itself in people’s minds, so to speak. Capitalist reality must be de-realized because it has reached the absolute end of its development without any way out, while systemically conditioned people refuse to acknowledge this historical crisis. But behind the smooth design of commodity aesthetics, its true negative existence is relentlessly revealed. They cannot escape their real suffering, even if they try to de-realize themselves through the media.

The “disembedded economy” can only ever integrate itself tautologically into itself, but its claim to smooth totalization must fail, because although it can make real, sensual life negative it cannot incorporate it into its surreal world of independent abstractions – just as it is incapable of de-realizing death. The repressed does not return; it is always already there. Only on the surface of the design does the system of divisions appear to be dissolved into the economization of the world. Behind this appearance, however, the disintegrated real world becomes unbearable. Just as gender dissociation does not disappear in travesty, but rather the postmodern “feralization of patriarchy” (Roswitha Scholz) continues to shift the burdens of the social crisis primarily onto women even after the decomposition of the bourgeois family, the aesthetic misery of the functionalist world does not disappear in commodity-aesthetic design, but emerges all the more starkly in the desolation of economized public spaces.

When the real crisis can no longer be suppressed, media de-realization proceeds to “aestheticize” the unconquered and painfully perceived misery, even if this aestheticization of the crisis no longer takes on the political forms of the 1930s, but even appears “economized” in politics itself. But the motifs of fascism grin out of the commercial, commodity-aesthetic mediatization of poverty, violence and the degeneration of gender relations. The aesthetics of media de-realization and boundless arbitrariness is the aesthetics of civil war and barbarism, because they ultimately eliminate civilizational inhibitions.

There can be no return to classical modernism, just as there can be no return to the old agrarian forms of culturally integrated society. But continuing to live in capitalist disintegration is just as impossible. Art, too, can only positively transcend itself by consciously becoming the moment of a new social movement that goes beyond the old workers’ movement Marxism and exposes the root that has produced the system of divisions and functional separations. Cultural integration of society on a new, higher level of development will only be possible if the self-purpose of the economy is broken and the basic gender dissociation is abolished. The prerequisite for a new emancipatory debate today is self-defense against the capitalist economization of the world.

Originally published on exit-online.org on 01/11/2002

The State of Feminist Theory

“Sexism is once again being declared a secondary contradiction”

Konkret: Your new book is called Back to the Roots.

Roswitha Scholz: As the subtitle suggests, the title refers to the regression in Marxist-feminist theory formation, or rather in left-wing theory formation as a whole, since this often forms the basis for feminist theories. And here we can observe a return to the old Marxism of the labor movement with class struggle and labor ontology, and to the hard-working and willing average citizen. There is an attempt to explain sexism, racism, anti-Semitism, anti-Gypsyism, homophobia, and transphobia simply in terms of class conflict. That, in a nutshell, is my criticism of current left-wing theory.

How did this regression come about?

This is taking place against the backdrop of general regression in global society—the shift to the right, the turn to nationalism, the nationalization of capital through tariffs, and so on, which are responses to the failure of globalization, even though it is clear that this will not work and will only exacerbate the crisis. The left’s return to class struggle Marxism and the ontology of labor must also be seen against this backdrop. It is a reflex response to these crisis-ridden social conditions and the left-wing counterpart to right-wing regression.

So what is the problem with the concept of class?

The problem with the concept of class is that it no longer applies today. The concept of class as found in Marx’s work can no longer accurately describe current conditions, because society has evolved from an industrial society to a service society with a broad middle class. The central cause of the regression lies here: in the middle classes’ fear of social decline. In this context, Marx speaks of a dynamic contradiction: as productive forces develop, more and more jobs are being rationalized away, while production output is increased. The key point here is that abstract labor is not something ontological, but rather a historical product of capitalism and patriarchy that must be questioned. Therefore, workers can no longer be the ones to whom one simply appeals.

Were they ever?

That’s precisely the joke. As we know, the proletariat also veered toward fascism, as early as the 1930s. Marx’s entire concept of class in and of itself has been thoroughly discredited. And it continues to be discredited today. One could refer back to the Frankfurt School, where Dialectic of Enlightenment states that in the course of self-preservation, humans become amphibians. In other words, they become stimulus-response beings who no longer question their existence and instead just conform to their circumstances.

And what is the problem with Marxist-feminist analysis?

Take, for example, Lise Vogel’s Social Reproduction Theory. The book was published back in 1983, but is currently the subject of heated debate. Vogel takes Marx as he is – that is, the class struggle Marx, not my fetish Marx – and then simply paints the sphere of reproduction in feminist colors. What she does not do is to conceive of women as the other, as active participants in an undervalued sphere of reproduction. For me, this other encompasses the socio-psychological aspect: that is, the split within the male subject, which designates female characteristics as inferior, and the fact that this can also be demonstrated in scientific, theological, and philosophical discourses. Furthermore, value-dissociation is a process. In the past, there was a polarization of gender characteristics: men were rational with a strong superego, and women were emotional and sensual, and so on. But that has not remained the case. Since the 1970s, more and more women have been entering the workforce and the level of education has risen. Today, more women than men graduate from high school. They are no longer considered just housewives, but, as Regina Becker-Schmidt says, are doubly socialized. Nevertheless, women still have a lower status than men.

In your book, you write that social regression has been evident in mainstream society for decades, but has accelerated in recent years. When was that? With the crisis of globalization in 2007 and 2008?

Wilhelm Heitmeyer described this regression back in the 1980s, when the Republicans were winning elections. And the “individualization” described by Ulrich Beck, which began during this period, led to great uncertainty and the conservative shift of the Kohl years. After “reunification,” there were the events in Rostock, Mölln, and Solingen. But it really took off in 2007 and 2008 with the financial crash. This was followed by the euro crisis, the Greek crisis, and, in the mid-2010s, the refugee movements. The result is figures like Trump and the rise of right-wing parties throughout Europe. To my knowledge, only two people on the left foresaw the financial crash: the American sociologist Immanuel Wallerstein, based on his world-systems analysis, and Robert Kurz with his crisis theory. Before that, he was ridiculed for it. They called him collapse Kurz.

Why is left-wing theory formation regressing in the crisis of capitalism? Shouldn’t the opposite actually be the case?

Over the past 30 years, especially after 2008, many Marx reading circles formed. There was a new philosophical reading of Marx, and anthology after anthology was published. But that was a relatively short-lived trend, and with the rise of the right, the left has reverted to this class struggle Marxism and, to a not inconsiderable extent, to vulgar Marxism, because what applies to society as a whole also applies to the left, namely that in times of crisis, people orient themselves toward old certainties or stupidities.

Does left-wing regression also mean believing that one no longer needs to be concerned about sexism, racism, etc.?

The juxtaposition of class and identity politics resonates with anti-woke sentiment. This is embodied, for example, by the BSW. Another example is the attempt by “Z,” the magazine for Marxist renewal, to explain and solve the problem of intersectionality through class struggle. This isn’t necessarily crude sexism on display, but racism, sexism, and so on are once again declared to be secondary contradictions. The sexism isn’t direct, but it is already an inherently sexist line of argumentation. Of course, it must also be said that identity politics is also open to criticism. It is not entirely innocent, but has itself become authoritarian. I wrote a decidedly anti-antiziganist text in which the word “gypsy” appeared frequently. And then, at an event, someone actually counted how often I used this term. Like an old grammar school teacher who constantly marks spelling mistakes in the margins. Totally formalistic. In a text about anti-Gypsyism, the negative connotation commonly used in the dominant society must also appear. Critiques of language only makes sense if they take context and intention into account.

Roswitha Scholz: Back to the Roots. Zur Regression marxistisch-feministischer Theoriebildung heute. Texte aus 30 Jahren. Zu-Klampen-Verlag, Springe 2025, 334 pages, 32 euros.

Originally published in Konkret No. 11 (2025)

Autumn of Reforms

Onward to Libertarianism, Authoritarianism, Social Darwinism…!?

Herbert Böttcher

In October, the German chancellor proclaimed an “autumn of reforms.” Now that a solution has been found for migration – except for the problems that still exist “in the cityscape” – it is time to focus on the “native” citizens: citizen’s income, health care, pensions… in short, the welfare state. The situation is reminiscent of what began in the 1990s. First, after a wave of discrimination against refugees, the right to seek asylum was dismantled. Then the focus turned to the German “losers.” Hartz IV was implemented – supported by a consensus among democrats: those who do not work should not eat. Even back then, foreign skilled workers were sought for the domestic labor market. However, xenophobic German mobs had to be appeased because they didn’t like the influx of foreign human capital. Promises were made to consistently deport migrants who did not work. This was stated in a leaflet published by the red-green federal government in August 2002.

In the meantime, the world has moved on. The competitive advantage that Germany had gained by being one of the pioneers of social cuts with Hartz IV has been exhausted. As the “export world champion,” Germany had also exported debt along with its goods. The government insisted that indebted countries, especially in southern Europe, pay their debts and exercise budgetary discipline, i.e., cut social services. In addition, since the late 1990s, there have been increasing and worsening crashes on the financial markets, along with the costs of rescuing “systemically important” banks. Germany’s advantage in global competition has been exhausted. The “world export champion” has become a candidate for relegation, and Germany is also increasingly involved in the global crisis of capitalism. This became apparent with stagflation in the 1970s. Neoliberalism and its reforms were supposed to combat it, but now we are back to stagflation tendencies – albeit at a much higher level of the crisis with a correspondingly larger fall. Nevertheless, the response points in the direction of more of the same, “only” more libertarian, authoritarian, social Darwinist and nihilistic.

Libertarianism

Tendencies toward libertarianism are spreading as a radicalized continuation of neoliberalism. This is reflected in the world’s best-selling novel, Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. The novel tells of the superiority of an individual who consistently asserts his interests and celebrates himself as a “prime mover” against the impositions of bureaucratic administration. Libertarian ideas carry on the neoliberal idea that only capitalist society, with the unhindered unfolding of market forces, corresponds to human nature. A new emphasis is evident in the aggressiveness of the attacks on social equality and the supposedly socialist/totalitarian welfare state. These attacks are accompanied by discrimination and contempt for those who cannot assert themselves. States prove their leadership when they succeed in enforcing low taxes and wages and reducing regulatory bureaucracy. Inequality becomes a hallmark of “positive freedom.” US Vice President Vance and German-born tech billionaire Peter Thiel are considered part of the libertarian camp. They see the world threatened by the Antichrist, who lures people with liberal freedoms, suppresses necessary hierarchies, and sacrifices excellence to the principle of equality. The world is threatened by communism and a dictatorship of equality. The tendencies toward libertarianism are not directly reflected in the “German welfare state.” Nevertheless, these tendencies are reflected in the aggressive tone used against non-workers and in the broad social and party-political consensus on reducing bureaucracy. Merz’s 2009 book Mehr Kapitalismus wagen (Dare For More Capitalism) contains programmatic “groundbreaking” ideas. It contains attacks on the redistributive (welfare) state and praise for natural inequality in a market economy based on competition and property. Both go hand in hand with the relativization of material inequality, the reduction of which is not a political end in itself.

Authoritarianism

Libertarian tendencies are enforced with repressive state measures against enemies both outside and inside of the country. Trump’s erratic behavior, oscillating between libertarian contempt for the state and protectionism, extortionate deals, and militaristic threats, does not reflect the delusions of an individual, but is an expression of the fact that capitalist conditions are increasingly spiraling out of control and amalgamating with irrational delusions. In Europe, too, contradictions are intensifying between liberal economic policy orientation, complete with democratic incantations, and authoritarian repression, first against refugees and/or migrants and then against the poor in their own country. These are accompanied by a mixture of indifference, social coldness, and hostile aggression found in large sections of the population. Above all, the middle class, which is collapsing in the crisis and suffering from precarious employment and inflationary increases in the cost of living, wants to see the normality of “prosperity” secured, and it feels threatened by social losers. With their repression of refugees and the poor, the centrist parties are seeking to connect with the concerns of “the” people. Right-wing parties and movements are falling on “fertile” ground. They are able to score points with populist-identitarian ideas. In view of the longing for “homogeneous normality,” everything that is diverse appears threatening.

Social Darwinism and Nihilism

Libertarianism and authoritarianism charged with identitarian politics boil down to social Darwinism. The strong, who are capable of achieving wealth and prestige, ultimately becoming excellent “superhumans,” should survive. According to Nietzsche, a nihilistic Judeo-Christian slave morality stands in their way. It promotes compassion and solidarity with the weak and, at the same time, resentment against the successful.

Capitalism is nihilistic at its core, its sole purpose being to turn money into more money. It knows only empty quantifications, but no content, i.e., qualities that make up life – neither the purpose of production for the satisfaction of human needs nor the purpose of sensitive and loving care for the reproduction of life. At best, these are waste products of its abstract self-purpose. If the “dynamic contradiction” (Marx) associated with the accumulation of capital encounters not only logically but also historically – as we are experiencing in the escalating crises – the immanent barrier to the valorization of capital, everything runs into emptiness, into nothingness, into annihilation. It stands to reason that self-destructive capitalism charges itself with irrational delusion, with the delusion that it can secure a capitalist normality through the destruction of non-exploitable human life and ignore the destruction of the foundations of life in creation.

The Cityscape as Capitalist Self-Revelation

The chancellor’s speech on the cityscape reveals what the autumn of reforms is all about. Under the guise of paternalistic concern for daughters, non-workers – especially those who look foreign – are stigmatized. Fears are not only exploited rhetorically, but at the same time an authoritarian repressive policy is enforced against migrants in a policy of isolation and deportation that stops at nothing, and against locals who are denigrated as supposed freeloaders and work-shy and forced into the yoke of work under the threat of having their means of subsistence withdrawn. Those who do not work should not eat. This applies to locals and even more so to foreigners. However, those whose human capital is exploitable are welcome to come and are well received.

From refugees to addicts to the poor and homeless, we encounter global and social problems in the “cityscape” and everything that politics “gets up to.” We can no longer “afford” capitalism, which causes people whose human capital is not exploitable to fall, drives them away, delivers them to death, and, on top of that, destroys the foundations of life.

Originally published in micha links 3 (2025)

The Cultural Direction of the 21st Century

Symbolic Orientation and New Social Critique

Robert Kurz

Can there still be any goals for the 21st century society? Despite – or perhaps because of – the global social crisis, there is no longer any talk of a new dawn at the turn of the century. The prayer wheel of endless modernization continues to turn, but very few people still want to believe in it. In order to start something new, there would have to be a passionate debate about social projects to be pursued. But the social, political and cultural passions seem to have died out, and the discourses in the media are dragging on laboriously. No new challenges are being formulated either in social relations or in our relations with nature. The idea of a great “task for humanity” not only sounds antiquated, but naive and downright pointless.

What is touted today as new and forward-looking is no longer any specific content or a goal, but mere form or mere medium, an apparatus that has become mindless. The Internet is the best example of this. The faster the technology of communication develops, the less content there is that is still worth communicating. When the technological means must replace the content, “instrumental reason” leads itself ad absurdum. In the final stage of this development, people equipped with perfect means of communication have nothing more to say to each other.

This unmistakable lack of content and aimlessness points to the intellectual and cultural exhaustion of the prevailing social system. Just as people can only be individuals in society, they can only develop social content and goals as individuals. The self-referential individual, on the other hand, is inevitably empty, unable to create his own content; his projects are lost in vain triviality. At the end of the 20th century, modernity sank into deadly boredom. In this respect, extremist microeconomics, social atomization and lack of solidarity have already taken their revenge on capitalism in cultural terms as well. Because the social monads are drifting apart, they can no longer set social goals for themselves; and because they no longer have any meaningful connection to each other, they drift apart even more. However, a society that cannot set a common goal for itself is doomed to die out.

In order to be able to formulate a social goal and thus substantive projects, a cultural “direction” is required, a spatio-temporal orientation of society. This orientation relates not only to technology or the economy, but also to the social psyche, to the social imagination, to the relationship between the genders and the “attitude towards life,” and not least to our relationship with history. Of course, modern capitalism also had such a cultural-symbolic orientation. But having reached its destination as a world system, it can no longer see a destination and therefore loses all orientation in space-time. The task of adapting to the blind processes of the world market, which is constantly propagated in all media, does not represent a substantive goal of active reorganization, a positive “humanity project,” but is merely the mechanical reproduction of a structure that has long since become independent, which a priori relegates any content and thus any goal or project to the status of indifference: no matter what it is, it can never have an autonomous meaning, but can only provide material for the same old valorization process of capital.

The fact that so-called postmodernism does not overcome modernity in this decisive respect and does not produce anything new is already evident in the insubstantiality of its own concept, which only refers to an empty “after.” Postmodernism does not provide a new social orientation, but instead elevates disorientation to a virtue. The commodity-producing system, frozen in aimless acceleration, is supposed to survive its state of cultural exhaustion in order to continue spinning idle for all eternity. Postmodern theory is to a certain extent the caricature of a signpost, in that it points in all directions at once and therefore remains meaningless.

It is easy to see that a new cultural-symbolic orientation and thus new social goals can only be gained through radical critique of the exhausted social order; and radical critique is precisely what postmodernism rejects as no longer conceivable. Now, indeed, the previous socialist critique of society has exhausted itself along with its object, because it was itself imbued with the spirit of capitalism. Just as Eastern state capitalism was only a historical derivative of Western private capitalism, it also shared the latter’s cultural imaginations and symbolic codes. The critiques of society in the 19th and 20th centuries stopped at the boundaries of the modern commodity-producing system; they were themselves descendants of “instrumental reason,” by which they were ultimately overtaken and swallowed up.

So if a new cultural orientation can only be gained through a radical critique of society, the reverse is also true: such a critique of the prevailing order in the 21st century can only be formulated together with a fundamentally different symbolic coding of spatio-temporal perception. Anyone who wants to break the “terror of the economy” must also consciously crack the imaginative codes of capitalism; the critique of the political economy can only be completed if it is accompanied by a critique of the symbolic order and cultural orientation inherent in this system, i.e. if it directs attention and hopes in a different direction and overturns the “image of the world” in general.

So far, this problem has not been addressed as thoroughly and comprehensively as the critique of economic categories; and that is why the left is still in retreat, even though the exhaustion of the capitalist world is becoming ever more apparent. What does the now obsolete cultural orientation of capitalism actually consist of? On the time axis, it is undoubtedly a one-sided dynamic directed towards the future. Modernization is synonymous with a permanent devaluation of the past and thus of history. Regardless of their quality, “the new,” fashion, incessant economic development and constant movement are regarded as values in themselves. The modern concept of history, as created by the philosophy of the Enlightenment, is entirely determined by this code, in which humanity appears, as it were, like a launched rocket, following its trajectory in a mechanical historical upward movement. In this restlessness, the past is seen only as the burnt-out waste of the present and the present only as the waste of the future.

The reactionary supposed counter-image, namely an imaginative idealization of the past, is only the other side of the same coin. It neither grasps the intrinsic value of past cultures nor overcomes the destructive momentum of capitalist dynamics, but only ever mystifies the impersonal capitalist relation of domination in an elitist way and projects it back into history. It is its own past that capitalism idealizes in conservative and reactionary modern ideologies in order to repressively banish the catastrophic consequences of its blind dynamics and its internal social contradictions. In reality, this idealization is just another mode of devaluing history. Reactionary cultural pessimism and liberal ideology of progress represent the two cultural poles of the same capitalist de-historicization, which can also turn into each other; fascist thinking contains both moments equally.

In postmodernism, this immanent capitalist polarity of “progress” and “reaction” has collapsed. This is often celebrated as the overcoming of the opposition of “left” and “right,” but in fact points to the cultural as well as the political and ideological exhaustion of capitalism. Bourgeois “progress” has turned into a meaningless circular movement and has therefore become identical with “reaction.” The devaluation of the past now takes place in only one identical way, namely that history, past cultures, ideas, and conditions are also transformed into commodities that can supposedly be consumed at will. This hallucinated simultaneity, which bathes the entire space of human history in the cold light of the market and erases all differentiation the more we talk about “difference,” gives postmodern commercial culture a desperate resemblance to the hustle and bustle of monkeys playing in a library and screeching as they throw the books around.

A new orientation of culture linked to a radical critique of capitalism can only consist of ending the permanent devaluation of history – but neither in the sense of idealizing any past nor as its consumption, but as a critical search for the traces that capitalism has systematically obliterated. It is about uncovering the history of modern discipline and human indoctrination, the historical transformation of life into the material of economic imperatives, in order to call into question the apparent self-evidence of this way of life. Today, every manager, politician or soccer star answers questions about their past mistakes and the cause of these mistakes with a stereotypical phrase: “We are looking to the future.” Reversing this perspective would to a certain extent be a “critique of capitalism in reverse,” a symbolic orientation towards critical retrospection, a refusal of the capitalist law of motion, a “shot at the clock” (Walter Benjamin).

Paradoxically, in order to win a different future, the buried past is more important than the emptied present. Emancipatory progress can only be saved if critical thinking emancipates itself from the symbolic code of bourgeois Enlightenment philosophy and thus from a concept of history that implies a permanent “automatic” orientation towards the future determined by the “invisible hand” of the economy. Today, it is progressive to stop and turn around to look back at the ruins of modernization. It is therefore about a different understanding of history, an overthrow of the historical world view. Society can only come to its senses if it develops a passion for a radically critical archaeology of exhausted modernity.

Such a reversal of perspective would also have consequences for our psychological orientation. For the critical-emancipatory turn backwards in order to reassure oneself of history also means a change in the cultural-symbolic relationship between “inside” and “outside.” Capitalist man is “guided externally” by criteria of prestige and beautiful appearances, as suggested by advertising, packaging and “self-presentation.” Here too, however, the reversal of the cultural direction would not be a mystifying “inwardness” or an esoteric “contemplation of essence” as a reactionary flip side of the same coin in order to flee from social contradictions into an imaginary inner self. On the contrary, the emancipatory “path inwards” would consist of discovering the repressed history and the false objectification of capitalist constraints in the psyche and language too – as an “inner archaeology” of modernization on both a personal and socio-psychological level, so to speak, in order to make the process of the psychological “internalization” of these constraints visible. Psychoanalysis, which has been prematurely declared dead, and the feminist critique of language contain unexploited possibilities for such a recoding.

Finally, orientation in space cannot remain unaffected by this radical cultural-symbolic paradigm shift. Just as the capitalist dynamic is directed blindly into the future in terms of time, it is oriented “upwards” in terms of space. The futurist poet Marinetti already wished at the turn of the last century that the automobile would take off like a rocket; and a few decades later a man actually landed on the moon. The fact that this “take-off” imagination of capitalism is male-dominated is evident to the point of ridicule in the form of the rocket as a symbol of the phallus; the orientation toward air and space, which is by no means coincidentally military in nature, contains the image of a “detached” male sexuality that, in a sense, flies away.

But even this symbolic code has long since been exhausted. Space travel has become as boring as the empty future of the market. Only chemical-physical deserts can be found on the accessible planets. And even their use as resources for capitalist exploitation remains illusory, because the costs of transportation would swallow up millions of times the possible yield. The technology of fossil fuels, on which the capitalist mode of production is based, is far too primitive for a “departure into space.” Cape Canaveral and Baikonur are already ruins of the male-oriented commodity-producing civilization, they just don’t know it yet.

A radical symbolic recoding in relation to space will direct our gaze “downwards”: not only in the archaeological sense that history lies beneath our feet, but also with regard to technological challenges and the requirements of social reproduction. In addition to the interior of the earth, most of the earth’s surface remains unexplored, namely the lower layers and the bottom of the oceans. The fact that the expenditure of resources and skills for this objective has remained minimal in comparison to aeronautics and space travel shows the deep dependence of scientific and technological development on the symbolic codes of capitalism, which have become obsolete. If man is a cultural being, then he will have to seek a new cultural orientation in space, time and psyche; and perhaps this turn in the 21st century will revolutionize society just as much as the social and economic crisis.

Originally published in Folha de São Paulo on 11/28/1999

Racist Resentment Against Refugees

A Delusional Way Out of the Crisis

Herbert Böttcher

“Enough…”

After the attack in Solingen on August 23, 2024, Friedrich Merz used this slogan to reflexively demand stricter deportation and asylum policies without a moment’s pause or even respect for the mourners. Criminals are to be deported to Afghanistan and Syria. The fact that the legal requirements for this are – for good reason – lacking did not play a role, even less so the fact that this would require cooperation with Afghan and Syrian terrorist regimes. Merz succeeds in driving the other parties forward with populist rhetoric. In a competition to outdo each other, the democratic parties are fighting for the refugee deportation national championship. They are praised by the AfD for finally doing what the AfD has always demanded.

“Authoritarian Temptations”

Back in 2018, the study “Authoritarian Temptations” diagnosed the “manifestation of a ‘raw bourgeoisie’”[1] and found “that authoritarian attitudes are hidden under a thin layer of civilized, genteel (‘bourgeois’) manners […].”[2] They manifest themselves in contempt for weak groups, the demand for privileges for the established and an orientation towards “competition and personal responsibility.”[3] “Authoritarian temptations are […] primarily to be interpreted as reactions to individual or social loss of control. They generate a demand for political offers aimed at restoring control through the exercise of power and domination as well as through exclusion and discrimination or group-related misanthropy.”[4]

The breeding ground for such “authoritarian temptations” is the worsening experience of crisis. They range from war and environmental destruction, terror, poverty and social division to social decline. In the face of such experiences, the neoliberal advice that everything will be fine with hard work and permanent self-optimization loses its plausibility. The impression arises that everything is “getting out of hand” and out of control. Authoritarian, identitarian and resentful attitudes are gaining traction and are combined with the illusion that this can reverse the loss of control and restore the threatened normality. “Concrete” solutions to “concrete” problems are demanded. They are determined by the search for stability in a mixture of authoritarian-repressive and identitarian strategies. Identitarian boundaries are marked between Germans and non-Germans, workers and freeloaders, friends and enemies and, where possible, enforced in an authoritarian and repressive manner.

“Germany, But Normal” (AfD)

The capitalist relations of production and dissociated reproduction, of work and life outside it, of production and consumption, of tension and relaxing recreation are assumed to be normal. This understanding of normality, which also applies to defenders of democracy, is interspersed on the right with what the AfD understands by “Germany, but normal.” This is primarily about ethnic and cultural identity. It essentially includes traditional gender dualism and the bourgeois family as well as a dichotomous world view that makes a clear distinction between those who belong and those who must remain outside. “Race” is replaced by ethnic and cultural identity as an exclusionary marker – occasionally concealed by the euphemistic talk of a plurality of ethnicities. But even this does not abolish the exclusion marked by identity, because every ethnic group should remain where it is or be “returned” to where it belongs. Exclusionary identity politics becomes the basis of “group-related misanthropy” (Wilhelm Heitmeyer). Strategies of exclusion aim to return to a confusedly imagined normality by regaining control.

A right-wing “culture war” along the lines of “nobody can take away our German identity” is in some ways replacing the “class struggle.” The socially disadvantaged, who feel respected and understood in their longing for German normality, overlook the fact that they too would be further marginalized by the AfD’s economic policy ideas. The Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance” (BSW) closes this open socio-political flank. It combines the issue of social disparities and social exclusion with a German-national orientation, according to which the first priority must be social justice for Germans who have been left behind. People who have to flee their home countries because they are victims of all the crises that destroy the foundations of life – be it poverty, economic crises, collapsing states, wars or ecological destruction processes – compete with them.

Together Against the “Superfluous”

The current attempts to re-establish control are focused on migrants. They are stigmatized as the “mother of all problems” (Seehofer). The democratic center as well as right-wing and left-wing German-identitarian orientations agree on this. In contrast to the already unspeakable asylum debates in the 1990s, which were accompanied by attacks on refugee shelters, there is no longer even talk of fighting the causes of flight. This kind of talk was not meant seriously back then either. However, it was obviously used to relativize the so-called asylum compromise by referring to the “actual” problems that drive people to flee their home countries. In the meantime, the view has become so nationally and immediately narrowed that the global dynamics of destruction are no longer even in sight.

However, the focus extends beyond Germany’s borders when it comes to recruiting migrants who are needed to compensate for the shortage of skilled workers in production and marketing, such as in the care sector. Foreign human capital is important so that Germany does not fall even further behind in global competition. In this way, the terror of deportation against “useless” people who exploit “us” is combined with the global hunt for usable human material that benefits “us.” A differentiation between superfluous “parasites” and “honest workers,” even among natives, is part of a consensus that is shared right up to the democratic “center” of society. Such selection also applies internally, albeit to a lesser extent. Analogous to the asylum debate in the 1990s, the rejection of migrants today is also linked to social cuts for locals and their stigmatization as “work refusers.”

The Fetishization of Work as a Social Consensus

The hatred of non-working migrants and “native refusers of work” is an expression of the fetishization of work in capitalism. Labor is not a contradiction to capital, but rather its substance as an indispensable source of value and surplus value. Therefore, work should not be affirmed, but criticized. It is no coincidence that the slogan “he who does not work should not eat” is a cross-class social consensus. Hatred of non-working people is a manifestation of structural antiziganism. It feeds on the rejection of Sinti and Roma, so-called gypsies, who have refused a modernity based on work, while structural anti-Semitism is virulent in the rejection of “rapacious financial capital” at the expense of creative capital, i.e. in a critique of capitalism reduced to the sphere of circulation à la “closing the casino” (attac). Both ideas are linked by the fetishization of work. They meet in the need to irrationally concretize crisis situations in terms of individuals or certain groups (who are then to be excluded), as well as in the illusion of being able to compensate for the loss of political control and regain political agency through regulatory and even authoritarian measures and orders.

The latter is a fanciful illusion. Even authoritarian governments cannot regain the lost controls. The barrier that even they cannot overcome is the logical and historical barrier of capital valorization. This barrier is set by the fact that – mediated by competition – less and less labor is used for the production of value and surplus value, and this decline can no longer be compensated for by cheaper production and the expansion of markets. However, the ability to act politically is tied to a functioning accumulation of capital. The more this accumulation collapses, the more clearly the political capacity to act, as well as legal capacity, including human rights, reach their limits. The extent to which legal capacity is tied to the ability to valorize labor as “human capital” is dramatically demonstrated in migration policy. The protection of the law is open to exploitable migrants, while those who are superfluous for the valorization of their labor are given inferior rights, if they are lucky, or end up being handed over to terrorist regimes without the right to live, locked up in camps or left drowning in the Mediterranean while sea rescue is criminalized.

Freedom, But Different

Against the backdrop outlined above, democratic and repressive-autocratic politics are moving closer together. In terms of content, both variants are confusingly similar, the more it is a matter of ultimately desperate attempts to extend even post-democratic control options beyond the crisis. They differ above all on the formal level of hostility or respect for democratic processes and institutions. The latter is no small matter and must be defended against attempts to undermine democracy. However, this should not obscure the fact that more is at stake if collapse is to be prevented, namely liberation from subjugation to the deadly and irrational end in itself of capitalist socialization, namely the increase of capital for its own sake. Freedom would consist of gaining control over the reproduction of life within the framework of an “association of free people,” instead of living or dying as an appendage to the machinery of valorization. “Under the spell of the tenacious irrationality of the whole” (Theodor W. Adorno), this may seem illusionary. Beyond this spell, however, nothing is more unrealistic than the supposedly “illusionless pragmatism” (Robert Kurz) to which so-called Realpolitik has committed itself in the face of the escalating deadly reality of the crisis. The more this continues, the more the catastrophe accelerates, instead of the “course of events” being interrupted and broken – irritated by the suffering of people and with a critical view of the social totality of capitalist socialization. Then “freedom […] could consist in the fact that the people who come together to reproduce their lives not only do so voluntarily, but also deliberate and decide together on the content as well as the procedure. […] Such freedom, which would be the exact opposite of liberal universal servitude under the dictates of labor markets, is in principle practically possible at all levels and aggregations of social reproduction – from the household to the transcontinental networking of production” (Robert Kurz).


[1] Wilhelm Heitmeyer, Authoritarian Temptations, Berlin3 2018, 87.

[2] Ibid., 310.

[3] Ibid.

[4] Ibid., 84.

First published in konkret in 11/2024.

Fetish Labor

Marxism and the Logic of Modernization

Robert Kurz

1. “Labor” as the Historical Identity of Modernity

A theory that has become historically powerful can no longer be dismissed as “error and mistake,” not even when certain historical manifestations that were related to it have exhausted themselves and disappear into the abyss of the past. For history is not a scientific process of falsification of a dead objectivity, but a human development. Real history is “overcoming” [Aufhebung] in Hegelian terminology, not falsification. This also applies to all great theories as inner moments of this history. In this respect, Marx’s theory can only be overcome, not declared false. The current manner of historical opportunism, which hastens to put an end to Marx, Marxism and any critique of capitalism at all under the pressure of an external history of events that has not yet been grasped, and to proclaim the positive “end of history” (Fukuyama 2006), has already immortally disgraced itself after a short time. After the collapse of a state socialism legitimized by Marxism in the East, we are not experiencing the worldwide upswing of market-based democracy, but the embarrassing crisis of the West itself: not only economically and socially, but also ideologically and in terms of legitimization.

In dialectics as well as in mysticism and in the esoteric, cabalistic systems, there is the doctrine of the identity of opposites. This identity of opposites can be deciphered in real history and theory as the overarching, general social form that determines the essence of a historical configuration of society that is common to all participants and factions “within” this form, relativizes their opposites and presents them as polar determinations within an identical whole. Such an insight, however, is only possible when the gun smoke of the immanent battles has cleared, when the formation becomes visible as an identical whole only at the moment of its sinking, whereas before, this identity had to remain hidden from the participants: otherwise they would not have been able to fight their battles, to drive the historical formation to its maturity and eventual “abolition.”

In this sense, the epochal rupture that is taking place before our eyes could be understood in a perhaps surprising way that is quite different from what our consciousness, still caught up in the declining epoch, is capable of imagining; namely not as the victory of capitalism over socialism, not as the triumph of liberal over dogmatic principles or of the political right over the political left, but rather as the historical barrier and crisis of the common reference system, the common historical-social form, the development and implementation of which has determined not only post-war history since 1945, but at least the last 200 years. Seen in this light, Marxism, which has become historically powerful in this period, can only really be buried together with all its opponents.

On closer inspection, it becomes apparent that the category of “labor” represents the identity of opposites in modernity, not only as a theoretical concept, but also as an objectified real category of historical-social existence. The objectifications of “labor” in the form of economic “value,” in the incarnation of commodities and commodity relations, money and money relations, competition and profitability, rationalization and economization of the world, determined the life of modernity in an ascending line and to an increasing degree. And it was only through these unfolding objectifications of “labor” that modern political forms emerged: the oppositions of market and state, capitalism and socialism, right and left, nationalism and internationalism, dictatorship and democracy. Such a view may initially cause an incredulous shaking of the head; but only because theoretical consciousness, like everyday consciousness, has instinctively de-historicized and ontologized its own social forms of existence in the process of modernization: they appear in their most abstract determinations as human forms of existence in general.

It could be illuminating that this applies equally to the immanent opponents of the history of modernization, only the accentuations and the occupation of the poles are different. This becomes clear when the various socializing moments of modernity are aligned with their opposites. The liberal moment of the market, capitalism, internationalism and democracy is consistently contrasted with the illiberal moment of the state, socialism, nationalism and dictatorship. However, just as the illiberal moment could always be occupied by both the left and the right and thus refers to the identity of the left-right opposition (ideological liberalism has never been able to represent an independent axis that broke with the left-right scheme of the political coordinate system, but has always only colored the respective course of the results), the liberal and illiberal series of concepts also have their identity: these categories are not in a dualistic relationship, but in a relationship of historical-genetic opposition to one another. Dictatorship is not the external opponent of democracy, but the other of democracy itself: Its historical-genetic form of enforcement, as it appears unequally in the different regions of the world. Similarly, nationalism is both a conditional factor and a product of internationalization itself and not its external negation; the same could also be said about the opposition of market and state or of capitalism and socialism.

A comparison with other historical formations shows that the core identity of all these oppositions is “labor” with its objectified categories. The pre-modern agrarian societies from the Neolithic to the take-off of industrialization knew neither “labor” in the modern sense as a social category of totality nor its form-abstractions (commodity, money) and laws of motion (competition, profitability) in our sense. The abstract concept of “labor,” insofar as it existed at all, referred solely to the existence of the underage and dependent (slaves, clients, serfs); it therefore did not possess the dignity of social universality, but on the contrary expressed degradation per se (Arendt 1981). A social sphere of “labor” and thus of the abstract economic had not yet been differentiated; material reproduction was still interwoven with religion, social traditions, etc. Consequently, commodities and money had neither a central nor even an independent, abstracted existence, but remained embedded in a system of reciprocal obligations; or was there a qualitatively completely different set of social rules of mutual “gifting” (Mauss 2002)?

The fact that “labor” and its reified, independent categories (“value,” commodity, money, capital, wages, “valorization process”) are the identical of modernity is also shown by the fact that they, together with their forms of representation, have been equally endorsed, affirmed in terms of identity, and ontologized by every ideological and political manifesto writer of our age. Marxism, as we know, is not only no exception here, but has identified itself with the “workers’ point of view” and has fundamentally claimed the point of view of “labor” as the supposed antithesis of “capital.” Significantly, however, the right-wing conservative and even the right-wing extremist counterparts also did this by elevating the “figure of the worker” (Jünger 1982) to a figure of light and identification. But the representatives of capital themselves followed this identification no less. Anyone who considers the demand for the “right to work” and the slogan “Push aside the idlers!” to be a privilege of the Marxist International must be proven wrong by the symbolic figure of U.S. capitalism during its ascendance: “The moral fundamental is man’s right in his labor. […] In my mind nothing is more abhorrent than a life of ease. None of us has any right to ease. There is no place in civilization for the idler” (Ford 2008, 5f.).

Certainly, in the course of the historical process of modernization, the various functionaries and ideological positions of this identical process have played off the different manifestations, modes of existence, and spawns of the emerging “labor” system against each other: The living form of action “labor” against its dead, reified form “money” (capital), the nation as a coherent form of reproduction of “labor” (which only emerged in the modernization process in the first place) against the incoherent reference form of the world market and world society, etc. But the central sun of all identifications (apart from a few hedonistic dissidents in all camps) was and always remained the ontologized axiomatically defined “labor,” without any reflection on the change in meaning this term underwent in the course of real history.

If we view the opposites in modernity not as a battle of eternal metaphysical principles, but as complementary and genetic moments of a single historical process, then the path taken by modernity can be reconstructed as the unleashing of “labor”: The system of the old agrarian societies, based on religion and traditions, was replaced by the system of abstract economization, in which “labor” in the form of the capital form has set itself as a paradoxical end in itself. The tautological feedback of money on itself (“valorization,” profit) is identical with a corresponding feedback of “labor” on itself, insofar as money and thus capital is nothing other than the dead, reified form of representation of “labor.”

However, this transformation of life activity into the abstract, inherently absurd social end in itself of “labor” was only possible by detaching this “labor” from the coherent life process and thus differentiating the abstract economic sphere of the market and its criteria; the elements of religion, tradition, personal obligation, “gift,” etc. were eliminated as forms and criteria of social relations, and humanity was subjected to the “economistic” labor fetishism. Only through its separation and differentiation from the rest of the life process could “labor” become independent and rise to the category of totality by subordinating the separated areas of life to itself as an abstract, dominant principle, coloring them and gradually making them conform to its image.

This process was undoubtedly not a conscious and reflective one, but rather always proceeded through particular and limited subjective motivations. The inherently absurd, self-serving character of the “labor” formation that emerged in irrational spurts and the lack of self-reflexivity of the process are mutually dependent. One can say about modernization what Melville has his Captain Ahab express: “All my means and methods are reasonable; only my goal is mad.” The “madness” of the goal, namely the self-serving accumulation of dead “labor,” naturally also had to have a long-term effect on the “means and methods,” because there can be no mere internal rationality in itself. In this respect, modernization as the unleashing of “labor,” its forms of representation and functional forms, is ultimately nothing other than secularized religion. On the one hand, Max Weber illuminated this in his The Protestant Ethic (Weber 2001), but did not grasp it deeply enough; on the other hand, he describes the same process as the “disenchantment of the world” (Weber 1978), although one could just as well speak of a merely new kind of negative world enchantment through modern labor fetishism.

Just as the rationality of modernity proves to be irrational at its core and abstract reason is derived from the abstract, non-substantive character of “labor,” the history of the implementation of this formation is also marked by severe irrational upheavals, outbreaks of violence and new coercive relations. It was only against fierce resistance, not only from the old agrarian powers but also from the “direct producers” of peasant and artisan provenance in their pre-modern form, that the new “labor” system with its absurd demands was violently imposed. For example, one of these demands was the meaningless, denatured time discipline of factories and offices: “The imperatives and behavioral impositions of wage labor: to be independent of biological and climatic rhythms, to repeat the same monotonous hand movements day after day, to arrive at the factory on time and not to leave it before the end of the working day, were alien to pre-industrial people. Their lives followed a different rhythm and did not yet know the strict separation of work and life” (Eisenberg 1990, 105).

On the other hand, the same compulsively and pathologically emerging “labor” system has also produced its own new enticements, gratifications and moments of emancipation. In this continuous ambivalence, the history of the assertion of “labor” can be roughly divided: From the still corporative, feudal and agrarian imprints or mixtures in the industrialization history of the 19th century, through the “ideologization of the masses,” the class struggle, the modernization dictatorships, and the thrust of two world wars, to the general “democratization,” “de-ideologization,” and increasing “individualization” (Beck 1992) in the second half of the 20th century. Just as dictatorship is in a historical-genetic relationship with democracy and is itself its form of implementation, collectivism in its Marxist and also in its nationalist-radical-right variant proves to be a transitional stage of the later abstract individualization itself, directed against the old agrarian “community” (Tönnies 1979), even if this was not conscious or was formulated in an ideologically contradictory way (for example through the inherently contradictory National Socialist term “national community”), with “de-ideologization” also being the genetic result of the previous stage of ideological development that produced Marxism and nationalism, not its mere opposite.

This historical unleashing of abstract “labor” and the associated separation of life and productive activity had a gendered aspect from the outset; the history of the assertion of “labor” was identical to the development of modern gender relations. A peculiar structural reversal can be observed in comparison to pre-modern societies. In the latter, productive activity was not public and did not have a general social form; it was largely part of the domestic economy and thus of the “oikos,” the “whole house,” in whose space housewives had an incomparably greater social significance than they do in modernity. At the same time, from the point of view of the male “polis” and its public, productive activity in the domestic context was something inferior and degraded, reinforced by a concept of labor based on slavery. In modernity, this relationship is turned on its head: “labor” as a sphere released from the context of life, represented abstractly in the money-form, becomes a new kind of public terrain and thus a “masculine” matter. The sphere of the male “polis” public sphere is “economized” (in stark contrast to antiquity) and only then does it become ideologically positive in the sense of modern patriarchy.

On the other hand, this means that “oikonomia” is taken away from women in order to make them responsible in the reduced private household for everything that cannot be covered by the now public-social “labor economy” and its abstract end in itself (money valorization): “housework” in the reductionist modern sense, child-rearing, “love.” Modernization through “labor” therefore does not initially mean improving the position of women in society, but on the contrary, exclusion and devaluation of the “feminine” to an even greater extent; the ungrateful activities assigned to women now only serve “to secure and rationalize instrumental striving for achievement as the pattern of male socialization” (Eckart 1988, 202f.), i.e. as a dumping ground for systemic suffering. Insofar as women, following the false promise of the universalism of “labor,” seek to assert themselves in its sphere, they remain fundamentally structurally disadvantaged to this day as “strangers or […] as a historical group of latecomers on the labor market” (ibid., 206). It is therefore no exaggeration to claim that the “dissociation” and modern coding of the “feminine” has become the “condition of possibility for the male principle of abstract ‘labor’” (Scholz 1992, 24).

In this sense, both the labor movement of the West and the state-socialist accumulation regimes of “catch-up modernization” in the East and South can be understood as structurally “male” dominated carriers of the internal development of capitalism itself, which they only superficially fought against in its empirically found, as yet undeveloped form. In the one case, their immanent goal was the equality of “working men” as modern monetary and legal subjects, and in the other case it was the self-assertion of the historical latecomers as modern nations and as participants in the world market: both logically necessary in the sense of the total “labor” system.

If Marx and Marxism have been regarded as “finished” since the epochal rupture of 1989 at the latest, then this designation is unintentionally ambiguous. For Marxism, seen from the “outside,” is not “finished” as the loser in the battle, leaving someone else as the shining victor; rather, it is “finished” as the completed and thus irrelevant task of the modernization process itself. This task was the social generalization and global implementation of modern “labor.” Marxism was the pacemaker of this process, especially against the narrow-minded powers of representation of the still immature stages of capitalist development. For the system-immanent thinking that clings to past conflicts, the result can only be formulated as a paradox: Marxism is at an end because “labor” can no longer be enforced and because the history of capitalist development, of which it was a part, has reached its absolute limits.

Of course, this surprising result also sheds new light on the question of Marx’s theory. It has often been stated that Marx, with his immense theoretical oeuvre, is not absorbed by Marxism; on the other hand, no one would want to claim that Marx had nothing to do with Marxism. In fact, Marx’s theory can be read for long stretches as an immanent theory of modernization, which certainly takes a positive view of capitalism and argues openly in terms of the labor ontology, even occasionally in a directly “Protestant” way. In this respect, Marx is compatible with Marxism and its immanent “task.” And by no means surprisingly, he proves to be a “man of the 19th century,” for whom the “dissociation” of the complementary female sphere and the separation of “labor” from the life process is not a central theme of critique; it is precisely in this respect that Marx remains affirmative.

On the other hand, Marx also contains a somewhat hidden, “esoteric” line of argument that goes beyond Marxism as well as the modern mode of socialization in general. Despite his affirmation of “labor,” Marx had no doubt that its fetishistic, reified forms of representation, commodities and money, were to be abolished in a revolutionary process of transformation. This contradiction in his theory, which points beyond modernity, was always a nuisance for all Marxisms, all of whom remained caught up in the immanent task of modernization and were treated like a family shame. Marx can be read in such a way that, in contrast to Marxism, he did not affirm “labor” unconditionally and, so to speak, unconsciously. Rather he affirmed labor as a historically unconsciously produced means by which the “sources of wealth are opened up” (Marx 1993, 135) and that acts as a kind of “pedagogy of history,” i.e. he didn’t necessarily view it in the absolute Protestant sense.

Seen in this way, “labor” would only be a historical ladder that can be pushed away when the pre-modern poverty of needs has been overcome with its help. Despite his statements to the contrary, Marx was always on the verge of breaking with the labor ontology; but he probably felt that the time was not yet ripe for such a break and that the historical movement of his epoch could not yet jump over this shadow. Today, however, it is precisely the Marx that is no longer compatible with Marxism that could prove to be fruitful and surprisingly contemporary. For the crisis of the common reference system of the previous combatants is emerging ever more clearly as a crisis of the world system of “labor” itself; and thus it leads us to a much more fundamental crisis of capitalism than the Marxists could ever have dreamed of. When the final curtain of an epoch is drawn, history once again lapses into deep objective irony.

2. Marx’s Crisis Theory and the Marxist Labor Utopia

In the shadow of the major global crisis at the end of the modernization process and on the threshold of the 21st century, Marxism’s ideas about the end of the capitalist mode of production are also bathed in a peculiar twilight. In the phantasmatic crisis, as it appeared in Marxist theories and ideas, the (supposed) limit of capital had to be identical with a generalization and maximum expansion of “labor.” In the real crisis, as it is beginning to emerge before our eyes, the opposite is the case. The negative identity of “labor” and capital becomes visible precisely in this crisis, which appears as a “crisis of the labor society.”

The contradiction, in which Marxism ironically reaches its absolute limits together with capitalism, can still be found undisguised in Marx himself. Insofar as he himself is a labor fetishist and thus a labor ontologist, he must of course insist that capitalism perishes precisely because of the massification and totalization of the “working class,” which is not one of capitalism’s functional social categories, but is supposed to be its “gravedigger.” The “classic” formulation for Marxism in the sense of this view is the famous passage in the 24th chapter of Capital (vol. 1) on the original accumulation of capital. “The number of capitalist magnates falls continuously, and the remaining ones monopolize and usurp for themselves all the advantages that this process of transformation holds. Meanwhile, misery increases, as does the amount of pressure, subjugation, degradation, and exploitation inflicted upon the constantly growing working class. But the outrage felt by the members of that class also increases, and they are brought together and are trained and organized by the mechanism of capitalist production itself. Capital’s monopoly now shackles the very mode of production that had flourished because of and under it. The concentration of the means of production and the socialization of labor reach the point where neither process is compatible with its capitalist shell. This bursts, and now the bell tolls for capitalist private property. The expropriators are expropriated.” (Marx 2024, 691).

This passage, which has long sent a kind of holy shiver down the spine of Marxists, argues entirely within the historically still expanding fetishism of labor. The social contradiction appears in a sociologically truncated form. The “capitalists” are becoming fewer and fewer, and the “proletarians” are becoming more and more; Marxism has been content with this simple calculation, misjudging its historical role and concluding its “inevitable victory” from it. In this understanding, it is not the abolition of “labor” that marks the boundary of capitalism, but its “socialization” at a high level. And the strange concept of the “capital monopoly,” which must be broken, suggests precisely the common Marxist idea that it is not the form of capital or the capital fetish as such that must be overcome, but merely its unjustified “monopolization” by a particular social class. The concept of “private property” is extremely truncated here; it does not appear to be linked to the subjectless social form of commodities or money, but to the subjective, sociologically defined “power of disposal” of a certain group of people over the material means of production. This is where we hear the Marxist Marx and all Marxisms have never gotten beyond this barrier of consciousness.

In the Grundrisse, on the other hand, Marx sometimes returns to his original and much more consistent “esoteric” intention, and here we find an almost diametrically opposed view of the historical end of capital: “But to the degree that large industry develops, the creation of real wealth comes to depend less on labor time and on the amount of labor employed than on the power of the agencies set in motion during labor time, whose ‘powerful effectiveness’ […] depends rather on the general state of science and on the progress of technology, or the application of this science to production” (Marx 1993, 592). Quite openly, we are talking here about a historical situation in which the “productive workers” are by no means becoming more and more numerous, but on the contrary, the scientification of production is making them positively superfluous on a massive scale. The real end of capital is thus characterized by the fact that, together with the “capitalists,” the “proletarians” in the sense of mass reproductive activity organized by capital are also becoming fewer and fewer, and that both classes together are thus reaching the limits of their reference system.

Marx smells a rat here, so to speak; in order to avoid an open break with the labor ontology, he tries to reduce the problem to a mere superfluousness of “immediate labor.” But can the activities of scientificized production still be subsumed under the concept of “labor”? If the Grundrisse had already been published in the 19th century, Marxism would have had to recognize this as a fundamental problem and reject this statement by its master just as fundamentally, because at that time the concept of “labor” was still much more closely tied to “immediate productive activity.” Since then, however, the very history of the assertion of “labor” itself has also inflated its concept; all and every activity or expression of human life is defined as “labor.” This inflation of the term expresses the totalitarian character of the “labor” system, which has made all spheres differentiated or “dissociated” in the course of its development similar to its image and has blurred the trace of its genesis. However, this does not alter the fact that this system is objectively based on mass repetitive “immediate productive labor,” which can be transformed into mass purchasing power and only thereby enables the valorization cycle of capital. The concept of “labor” as such, which emerged from this mode of production in the first place, stands and falls with this systemic context.

Under the conditions of a socially comprehensive inflation of the concept of “labor,” Marxism was initially able to interpret away the unpleasant problem that emerged in the Grundrisse with some contortions, insofar as it took note of it at all. The fact that “productive labor” is becoming less and less instead of more and is being rendered superfluous by scientification was conjured away into a distant science fiction future, far beyond the “proletarian revolution” (communists) or the “socialist transformation” (social democrats), although Marx pretty much says the opposite. For the historically foreseeable future, however, the process of scientification should, if you please, continue at such a leisurely pace that it would further diminish “labor” instead of making it superfluous. The old Marxist idea of the end of capital thus seemed to be firmly established for the time being.

There remained the small problem of how to carry over the “labor” ontology, as a supposedly “eternal natural necessity,” into that distant post-capitalist future. The Marxists also found what they were looking for in Marx. “Labor” was to be reduced, as a so-called “necessity,” to ever smaller scraps for everyone. Marxism neither posed the question of how a “labor” ontology could still be derived from a vanishing remnant, nor did it consider the idea that “labor,” instead of being reduced to an ever smaller remnant (to which labor fetishism must then cling), could be reintegrated into the life process at a higher level and abolished as a differentiated, abstracted sphere. Instead, the “superstructure” of a “realm of freedom” would apparently rise on the absurd “basis” of a shrinking residual amount of “necessary labor,” in which humanity could then indulge in solving crossword puzzles or even higher pleasures. Some very daring people also wanted to further define this area as “labor,” but as its playful side, so to speak (in the sense of the utopian Fourier, for example). And the “women” were then to be graciously accepted into this male labor utopia on an “equal footing,” with the secret awareness that this whole construct is always already structurally defined in male terms.

3. The Real Crisis of the Labor Society

The collapse of Marxist ideology is determined precisely by the fact that the end of capital, and thus of the labor fetishism in the second version of Marx that was interpreted away, has come closer. As is well known, it was the microelectronic revolution, with its new control, automation and rationalization techniques, that for the first time made more “labor” superfluous than can be reabsorbed by the expansion of the markets. According to a survey recently published in Washington by the International Labor Organization (ILO) in Geneva, global unemployment has reached historically unprecedented proportions: “In the wake of the biggest labor market crisis since the depression of the 1930s, 820 million people worldwide, or 30 percent of the entire workforce, were out of work at the beginning of 1994” (Handelsblatt, March 7, 1994). This means that the stage has finally been reached in which “productive labor” is shrinking inexorably as a result of the process of scientification. Neither the new fields of activity in the “tertiary sector” nor the low-wage campaigns can change this. The former are largely dependent, derivative sectors that remain indirectly dependent on industrial incomes; the latter result in one-sided export offensives that can only exacerbate the global crisis through predatory competition.

It is therefore no coincidence that since the early 1980s there has been periodic talk of the “crisis of labor society” as rationalization progresses. However, this way of speaking only applies if the “labor society” is understood as identical to the capital relation. For “capital” and “labor” are only two sides of the same coin. Any logic based on the formula pars pro toto must lead itself to absurdity. Just as it was an illusion to allow “labor” to supposedly triumph over “capital” unilaterally and “continue to work” on its own without its own abolition through state socialism, it is just as much and even more of an illusion to see “labor,” which has been rationalized away, unilaterally plunged into crisis, while “capital” would continue to accumulate merrily. In both cases, the reciprocity of the relationship is misjudged. The flip side of structural mass unemployment is inevitably the structural end of capital accumulation. On the empirical surface, this problem appears as a global collapse of the purchasing power of the masses, which is, however, the last mediating instance of the valorization cycle. Capital has therefore begun to dissolve its own social substance. Although this barrier can be pushed out through state credit, speculative money creation, printing press inflation and debt crises, this cannot be done permanently and is only possible at the cost of financial crises.

This is exactly what Marxism never expected and could not have expected in its ideology. The supposed “labor” ontology breaks down within capitalist development itself. “Labor” loses its power of social generalization, even in its reified monetary form. As a result, the consciousness based on it, including and especially the Marxist consciousness, falls into disrepair. “Labor” loses its dignity; it can no longer be canonized ideologically as the creator of the necessities of life. On the contrary, precisely in its crisis, it reveals itself as a blindly running social machine that is unable to make sense of anything except its own tautological end in itself, to turn “labor” into more “labor” and thus money into more money. In this way, it ultimately produces world destruction for its own sake.

At the same time, the crisis of its differentiation as an abstract, separate sphere comes to light. The male universe of modernity is collapsing. The dissociated areas that were delegated to women are beginning to dissolve because the new productive forces enable women to increasingly distance themselves from their roles and allow them to flow into the official sphere of the “labor” system, especially as it nears its end. This not only intensifies competition on the collapsing labor markets, but the previously separated areas of activities that cannot be integrated into the process of creating “labor” money (including childcare, care of the elderly, affection, “love,” etc.) are abandoned and fall into decay. It is not women’s emancipation per se that is the cause of this society-wide “relationship crisis,” but the structure of the male “labor” system itself, which presupposes the society-wide gender dissociation as its secret functional basis, but can no longer maintain this. The hopes of being able to publicly organize or even commercialize the dissociated areas as “work” themselves prove to be an illusion. This is where the dependent character of the tertiary or service sector becomes most apparent: not only has the monetary subsidization of public childcare in state socialism collapsed, but the corresponding institutions (or mere promises) in Western “labor” societies are also failing due to a lack of funding. However, apart from the problem of psychological inadequacy and alienation, such activities can only be commercialized for a small minority of those able to pay.

This shows that emancipation is not possible on the basis of “labor.” The double crisis of the “labor” economy and gender relations also points to the end of the common reference system in this context. The problem is already being formulated to some extent by isolated voices in feminist theory: “The expansion of the concept of work has made it possible to make women’s burdens conscious and tangible in words. However, the expansion of the concept of work has reached its limits, which are expressed in word monsters such as ‘relationship labor’ or ‘emotional labor.’ These artificial words make use of the analogy to the concept of labor with critical intent and thereby run the risk of reducing human conditions to labor […]. It is precisely the consistent discussion about the content of housework that has made the limits of the analogies of the concept of work clear […]. The offers are reflexes to a narrowed discussion about emancipation, which concentrated too one-sidedly on work and surreptitiously subjected women to the ascetic Protestant work ethic” (Eckart 1988, 206f.). From this problematization, it is only a step to the complete rejection of a positive, perpetuated concept of “labor,” as feminism had also inherited from the Marxists: “In this respect, the women’s movement need not even set out to redefine female activity as “labor” to prove its (moral and economic) value; for “labor” in this sense is itself, so to speak, the ‘root of all evil’” (Scholz 1992, 20). This does not mean that the ascribed “feminine” areas of activity should be affirmed as such or even be a kind of manifestation of transcendence, since they represent nothing other than the flip side of abstract “labor.”

The fact that the concept of “labor” is softening and disintegrating has also become clear in the ecological debate and in the debate about the reduction of working hours, as well as in (albeit marginal) sectors of feminism. The problem here, however, is that we generally don’t see a systemic link with the crisis of capital and therefore the mediation of everything by money. Marxism is, of course, least suitable for establishing this link. Its ideological substance is exhausted in the idea that is still contained in point 8 of the proposed direct measures in the Communist Manifesto: “Equal liability of all to work. Establishment of industrial armies” (Marx & Engels). Insofar as the Marxists have not defected to the Western market economy in droves anyway, they reproduce this historical labor fetishism all the more militantly. It is not the “other” Marx who is discovered, for whom “labor” could be deciphered as a historically temporary “pedagogy of history” in order to unleash social wealth and then be stripped away, but rather the bias in this form petrifies to the point of unconsciousness.

Today, no one clings more fiercely to a fantasized further and perpetuated ability of capital to accumulate than the remnants of demoralized Marxism. This is by no means a reflection of earlier predictions of collapse that did not come true, which were themselves always formulated in terms of labor ontology anyway (insofar as they existed at all). Rather, this almost greedy expectation of a new “accumulation model” reveals the inner identity of the time-honored oppositions. This also applies to the fossilized powers of the former labor movement. The slogan of the German Trade Union Confederation for May Day 1994 consisted of a single word, actually a cry: “Work!” And the slogan of the SPD in the super-election year 1994 tripled this cry: “Work! Work! Work!” It is fitting that the seven leading industrial nations of the West held an inconclusive “employment summit” in March 1994, sensibly enough in the old automobile metropolis of Detroit.

The end of the modern working society, which is also the logical end of the valorization of capital, obviously finds a moment of inertia in all of modernity’s ideological camps. While the alternative left positions are hopelessly entangled in the categories of labor fetishism and still want to represent the “utopia” in the reified monetary form of “labor,” the massive terminal moraines of the labor movement exhaust themselves in a completely unrealistic emergency program of unadulterated “labor” ideology. The dominant neo-liberal and market-radical positions in academia and in the old bourgeois parties, on the other hand, share the basic ideology of labor ontology, but they only want to represent “labor” (in accordance with the real logic of the system, which is its strength) at the level of the microelectronic productivity and profitability standards achieved, i.e. to cut off a growing mass of people from the ability to reproduce themselves in accordance with market-economic “natural law,” shrugging their shoulders regretfully and relegating them to the ghetto of misery. From this paralysis arises the ghostly revival of a third form of bourgeois labor fetishism, i.e. the neo-right, neo-patriotic, neo-nationalist revenants. This strange return is based on an absurd promise that cannot be kept under the current world market conditions, namely the false hope of being able to reconstitute the systemic forms of “labor” on a national or even ethnic-tribal basis. The accompanying music to this is the helpless invocation of old conservative “virtues” that have long since been worn out by the corrosive market process itself, as if the globally objectified crisis of the (blindly assumed) “labor” economy could be countered and overcome by ethical and national ideological campaigns. This would mean wanting to extinguish the conflagration of a supermarket (which the world has become) through wistful memories of corner stores, through hymns to Kaiser Wilhelm (or worse) and through pious prayers. Just as the neoliberal program in fact amounts to a perverse democratic administration of misery, the neo-nationalist program, as a mere decaying form of another historical ideology of “labor,” which is just as substantially “finished” as Marxism, amounts to nothing more than a pseudo-ethnic gang war and irrational pseudo-political outbursts of delusion.

It can therefore be seen that the end of Marxism is also the end of capitalism, the end of the left is also the end of the right and the liberals. It is the common reference system of “labor,” the one-sided “male” structure and thus the mediation of the entire society by money that is inexorably decaying. The question is no longer which of the past and generally obsolete ideologies of “labor” will be victorious, but whether the common basis can be overcome. The question is therefore, firstly, whether people can reoccupy autonomous reproductive activities beyond the market and the state (i.e. beyond “labor” and money), and secondly, whether the (capitalist) socialization potentials and scientific potentials produced by “labor” can be transformed beyond the system of “labor.”

The problem is not the alleged threat of “bear skinning” (the common phantasmatic negative figure of Marxist, liberal and right-wing nationalist work fetishism) or the notorious “collective leisure park” fantasized by conservatives today, but the decoupling of human life and reproductive activity from the self-purposeful fetish of “labor” and the reintegration of this abstracted, independent sphere into the entire life process. An abolition of “labor” understood in this way would also be identical with an abolition of modern gender roles. Only when people organized in new forms of communal communication have regained control over their own lives from the objectified, anonymous and now untenable powers of alienation of the state and the market can they ask themselves unbiasedly what they want to do with the productive forces left behind by historical labor fetishism in a material and sensual way, without destroying the world and themselves in the process.

Literature

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Beck, Ulrich: Risk Society, New York 1992.

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