Revolutionary Discipline and Sobriety

Cliff Connolly argues for a culture of sobriety within our organizations, drawing from the example of Austrian Socialism.  

Soviet anti-alcohol poster

“The revolution demands concentration, increase of forces. From the masses, from individuals. It cannot tolerate orgiastic conditions… The proletariat is a rising class. It doesn’t need intoxication as a narcotic or a stimulus. Intoxication as little by sexual exaggeration as by alcohol. It must not and shall not forget, forget the shame, the filth, the savagery of capitalism. It receives the strongest urge to fight from a class situation, from the communist ideal. It needs clarity, clarity and again clarity.” -V.I. Lenin1

After a long period of stagnation and defeat, the workers’ movement in the United States has found renewed energy in the process of base building. Labor revolts in behemoths of capital like Amazon and Target provide inspiration to many in unorganized sectors, and a new wave of tenant union formations following the COVID-19 economic crash give many socialists hope for the future. More visibly, the spectacular uprising in the wake of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor’s deaths pushed the demand for police abolition into the mainstream. Whether all this dissident energy will be marshaled to victory or sunk back into the swamp remains to be seen. To ensure the best outcome, it is crucial for the working class to build cultural institutions to reinforce its political ones. In my previous essay in this series, I wrote about some of the forms these institutions could take. Now I will argue that special care should be taken in the foundation of their internal character. This should of course be democratically determined by the masses themselves, but communists should encourage the values most suited for a robust popular movement.

Whereas bourgeois culture provides temporary relief from alienation through escapist media, dimly lit bars, and readily available opioids, proletarian culture should seek to transcend alienation through community. Creating media that is genuinely social and opening up spaces for neighbors and co-workers to fraternize will be an important part of this process. Without a focus on healthy socialization, however, combatting alienation could easily take a toll on the physical and mental well-being of our organizers and community members. This is the necessity of revolutionary sobriety.

How can we accurately analyze the political and economic trends of our time, and respond to them strategically, if we can’t even think straight? How can our neighbors overcome the precariousness of proletarian life if our social spaces are designed to induce numbness rather than inspire hope? Drugs and alcohol are a distraction from serious organizing at best and a plague on our communities at worst. The reality, however, is that they do exist, and the allure of intoxication is strong. This cannot be ignored or willed away through calls for simple abstinence. The only solution is to develop strong bonds between base building cadre and members of the class, and encourage healthy living by setting a positive example. Communists should act as champions of the proletariat, and this requires a higher degree of discipline than working at an NGO or canvassing for progressive electoral candidates. Sober cadre will organize healthy communities, which will in turn produce capable comrades to further the interests of the class. 

This is not a new idea; Marxists throughout history have used it to build powerful movements, while others have ignored it to their own peril. In the early twentieth century, the Austrian Social Democratic Workers’ Party didn’t restrict their organizing to bread and butter issues like housing and healthcare. They built communal facilities for socialization, and an immense system of educational and cultural organizations. These efforts were focused on building the capacity of workers to take charge of society, with sport and sobriety being watchwords of the day. The Socialist Workers’ Sports International, for instance, wrote in its core principles, “Workers’ sport must fight against alcohol, which is an enemy of socialist society”. The resulting success led to their capital becoming known as as “Red Vienna”.2

 Decades later in the United States, the heroic efforts of the Black Panther Party were defeated in large part due to the massive (and FBI directed) influx of drugs into black communities. While the Panthers took significant steps to address the problem of addiction among the masses, their internal culture was far too lenient toward drug abuse. Grave consequences followed; police used drug charges to recruit members as snitches, and prominent leaders like Huey Newton and Eldridge Cleaver eventually became addicts themselves. Newton disbanded the Party after an embezzlement scandal, befriended Jim Jones, and was killed by a crack dealer in 1989. Cleaver raped multiple women, became a Mormon and joined the Republican Party before finally succumbing to his crack addiction in 1998. Perhaps these men still would have betrayed their cause even had they been sober, but the drugs certainly didn’t help. Regardless, revolutionary sobriety was necessary for a strong socialist movement to develop, and many Panthers knew it. In 1968, Shirley Williams wrote The Black Child’s Pledge to set a standard for the youth to emulate. It reads: “I pledge to develop my mind and body to the greatest extent possible. I will learn all that I can in order to give my best to my People in their struggle for liberation. I will keep myself physically fit, building a strong body free from drugs and other substances which weaken me and make me less capable of protecting myself, my family and my Black brothers and sisters”.3 We can only speculate what may have changed if the party’s leadership had followed the example their comrade Williams laid out.

We see similar mistakes being made today in a socialist milieu that is opposite to the Black Panthers in almost every meaningful way. The mostly white Hipster Left, centered in gentrified Brooklyn, has none of the Panthers’ strengths and an even worse weakness for drugs. Its followers are personally dull and practically useless. While the phenomenon is mostly confined to petit-bourgeois circles, it will pose a significant danger to serious socialist organizing if tolerated in our movement. 

The monumental task we face as communists in the twenty-first century is multifaceted: we must create order out of chaos for a class with scarcely any political, economic, or social organization. The cultural component cannot be ignored, and it must properly address the failures of both past socialist attempts and present bourgeois decay. Humanity deserves a world where happiness and fulfillment are attainable through our collective labor; drugs and alcohol are no substitute for the real joys of life. Furthermore, they pose a clear and present danger to the momentum of any major political force. It is for these reasons that we will explore the merits of revolutionary sobriety. 

E. Bor, text reads: “WE WILL OVERCOME!” with “ALCOHOLISM” on the snake, 1985.

The Science of Substance Abuse

The hegemonic narrative about substance abuse goes something like this: an individual starts using drugs, the drugs make them feel good, so they do more drugs, and after a certain threshold of use is reached the individual becomes physically addicted to the chemical hooks within the drugs. At this point, they are an addict who requires either treatment in a rehab center or psychological torture in a prison cell depending on who you ask. Both of these approaches to solving the problem rely on the assumption that addiction is caused by drugs. This assumption not only prevents us from treating substance abuse, it also narrows the problem to encompass only those who develop a “physical” or “chemical” dependency on drugs. Completely left out of the equation are the millions of people who rely on alcohol, opioids, and other psychoactive substances to complete regular tasks such as going to work or spending time with family. This fatal narrative is based on a series of experiments from the mid-twentieth century in which laboratory rats were placed alone in an empty cage and given access to two water bottles- one infused with morphine, the other plain water. In almost every case, the rat would prefer the morphine water and die from an overdose within a couple of weeks. These experiments were sensationalized by the media and received by the public as definitive proof that addiction is caused by drugs. Neoliberal politicians used this hysteria to increase police budgets and expand the prison system in an effort to “get the drugs off the streets”.

Now we must ask the obvious question- why would a lonely rat in an empty cage not make use of the only source of happiness in its environment? Why would human beings living in economic poverty, political disenfranchisement, and social alienation not do the same? Here we find an alternative narrative that frames substance abuse as a collective issue rather than an individual one. In the late 1970’s, Canadian psychologist Bruce Alexander hypothesized that drug addiction is caused primarily by living conditions rather than the chemical properties of the drugs themselves. To test this, he and his colleagues began a new series of experiments on lab rats centered around a large housing colony they dubbed ‘Rat Park’. Rat Park was 200 times larger than a standard lab rat cage and contained 16–20 rats of both sexes at any given time, as well as food, toys, and space for mating. Four groups were tested: one who lived in isolated cages for the 80-day duration of the experiment, one who lived in Rat Park, one who were weaned in cages and then transferred to Rat Park after 65 days, and one who were weaned in Rat Park and then transferred to cages after 65 days. Each group was given access to regular tap water and sweetened morphine water. As expected, the caged rats overwhelmingly preferred the morphine while the community of Rat Park overwhelmingly preferred the plain water. Alexander noted that when he added Naloxone (which negates the effects of opioids) to the morphine water, the rats of Rat Park began to drink it, presumably for the sweeter taste.4

The Rat Park experiments received little media attention and subsequently lost their funding within a few years. Although initially ignored, they quietly demolished the foundation of ‘common sense’ about substance abuse. Addiction is the product of alienation rather than drugs, and the presence of drugs in a healthy social environment does not breed substance abuse. Further experiments broadened the horizons for this new strain of thought. In 2008, a study by Marcello Solinas and his colleagues sought to find out whether enriched environments can be used to curb substance abuse. The scientists first injected mice in standard laboratory environments with cocaine until they had developed addiction-related behaviors and then transferred them to an enriched environment similar to Rat Park. After 30 days, they found that environmental enrichment eliminated both behavioral sensitization and conditioned place preference to cocaine in the experimental group of mice. The results with the control group were perhaps even more insightful:

“Whereas environmental enrichment eliminates addiction-related behaviors, 30 days of social isolation, a negative environmental condition for social animals such as rodents, led to an exacerbation of behavioral sensitization…In addition, because social isolation is a form of chronic stress, these results also suggest that environmental enrichment may act as a functional opposite of stress.”5

A follow-up study by Solinas and colleagues published in 2009 attempted to prove that enriched environment was not only effective treatment for substance abuse, but also powerful preventative medicine. An experimental group of mice were raised in an enriched environment, and a control group was raised in standard laboratory conditions. Upon reaching adulthood, both groups were placed in standard environments and subjected to trials of cocaine injections for the duration of the experiment. The mice raised in the enriched environment showed signs that the rewarding effects of cocaine were blunted compared to the control group. This protection against the abuse-related effects of cocaine was caused by a reduced activation of striatal neurons and dramatic changes in the neuronal adaptations normally associated with the drug’s use. In short, the results proved the study’s hypothesis that positive experiences in childhood and adolescence decrease an individual’s sensitivity to drugs and vulnerability to addiction.6

These studies are by no means exhaustive, but they demonstrate that the hegemonic narrative about substance abuse is extremely flawed. Rather than reifying this account, communists should commit to developing a scientific analysis of our communities’ drug problems to find a solution. Few sources emphasize the social dimension of medicine better than Dr. Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara’s speech to the Cuban militia in 1960:

“The task of educating and feeding youngsters, the task of educating the army, the task of distributing the lands of the former absentee landlords to those who laboured every day upon that same land without receiving its benefits, are accomplishments of social medicine. The principle upon which the fight against disease should be based is the creation of a robust body; but not the creation of a robust body by the artistic work of a doctor upon a weak organism; rather, the creation of a robust body with the work of the whole collectivity, upon the entire social collectivity.”7

Now we must leave the laboratory conditions behind and look to our surroundings for opportunities to emulate the Cubans’ success in combating social ills.

Healthy Masses

Substance dependence in all its forms is a symptom of the alienation inherent to the capitalist mode of production. Students lean on adderall as an academic crutch, rural workers use painkillers as a substitute for dying community bonds, and millions rely on alcohol to relieve the crushing stress of being alone in the wilderness of the “free” market. The United States consumes over 80% of the world’s opioids despite making up less than 5% of the global population. Stagnant wages, the financial crisis cycle, scarce social programs, and the decline of manufacturing towns all combine to drain the lifeblood of civil society. A country that once brimmed with social clubs, community sports leagues, and neighborhood outings now has little to offer anyone outside the churches and universities (in many cases, even these lack the resources to bring their constituents together). As the social bonds between neighbors wither, more people than ever before are turning to drugs and alcohol as a coping mechanism. Capitalists- from big pharmaceutical shareholders to petite bourgeois liquor store owners- are happy to supply the poison. 

As communists, we are committed to emancipating humanity from the horrors of class warfare. While multi-billion dollar conglomerates are outsourcing entire industries, gutting welfare programs, and raking in profits from the ensuing misery, 158,000 people are dying every year from drug and alcohol abuse. As always, the proletariat bears the brunt of this assault. We cannot stand idly by while these atrocities decimate our class. Revolution cannot be made by masses racked with illness; this social disease must be treated at the social level.

The isolation of addiction can only be overcome through community and interdependence. In order to handle substance abuse among the workers who form our bases of support, civil society must be resuscitated with the vigor of communism. Red sports leagues, gym clubs, youth groups, scholarly circles, hobby meet-ups, artistic collaborations, health check-ins, and similar associations will afford the opportunity of togetherness to all. The conditions which drive people to chemical dependence (financial issues, mental health crises, etc) are much easier to conquer with a tight support network. This culture of mutual care will cement the class bonds necessary for our struggle, and keep comrades engaged between periods of intense political activity.

Perhaps the easiest way for organizers to gather their collaborators outside of formal meetings is to establish “Dues Night” as a regular social event. It serves the dual purpose of collecting resources for common use and forming ties between comrades who might otherwise never get to know each other. This space would give everyone a chance to share good food, swap stories, make plans to see that movie Twitter won’t shut up about, and generally walk away feeling closer to the people they depend on to achieve victory. No matter what form these social institutions take, they should generally require the active participation of all involved. Playing basketball will always be more engaging than watching a documentary, for instance, and will create tighter circles of friendship.

It is in these communal spaces that we have the best chance to encourage healthy living among those we intend to build a new world with. By setting a positive example of sobriety, physical fitness, and intellectual study, we put ourselves in a position to improve the lives of everyone around us. Much of our identity is determined by who we surround ourselves with, so it follows that being surrounded with outstanding comrades will raise one’s life to its highest potential. We cannot expect everyone to follow our lead, and we certainly cannot try to force our habits on others. That said, there is power in setting the course to a better future, and many will be inspired to emulate the habits of those they see organizing the leaders of tomorrow. While nobody is perfect, communists should strive to be true paragons of working-class militancy. Achieving that goal could very well spell the difference between willfully empowered and politically crippled masses. The social body of the proletariat is intentionally wracked with drug-induced illness by our class enemies, and this can only be reversed with intention by the champions of our class.

Sober Cadres

Being a revolutionary necessitates being out of step with the norms of bourgeois society. Making the commitment to fight for a communist future makes us alien in many ways to the vast majority of our peers, just as joining a military or a missionary group would. These commitments require a high degree of discipline to fulfill, and individuals who completely subordinate their personal interests to a higher cause are rare. Those who do cannot expect to enjoy all the material comforts of an ordinary life, but they often find a higher level of fulfillment. The temporary “joys” of the capitalist superstructure are hollow and often fully detrimental to the individual’s long-term health and happiness. As the hydralike stress of precarious proletarian existence piles up, it can be tempting to find relief in the most convenient places- binge TV, pill mills, liquor bottles, junk food, and other empty promises of consumer culture. When we make these poor decisions, we should avoid blaming ourselves and instead ask who these decisions serve- ourselves, or the multi-billion dollar corporations that our class enemies built around them?

Changing the world is an immense task; clear heads and healthy bodies are needed. This point is aptly illustrated in Julius Deutsch’s contribution to the Czechoslovakian workers’ temperance journal Der Weckruf circa 1936: “As a soldier for socialism and a fighter for freedom and peace, the worker athlete requires first and foremost the inner strength necessary to persist in the difficult struggles of our time. Clarity and sobriety, discipline and levelheadedness, holy enthusiasm and a will to make sacrifices: these are the qualities that form the socialist struggle. Does it need any proof that such qualities can only prosper in minds not clouded by alcohol?”8

Ho Chi Minh, Vo Nguyen Giap, and cadre members in study.

Serious work requires a serious approach, and a level of professionalism is required for revolutionary organizers to get the job done. Not the vapid professionalism of HR departments and cubicle farms, but a new professionalism unique to the working class. Comrades should treat themselves and each other with respect, not out of fear for some taskmaster’s reprisal, but out of a common desire to accomplish the tasks of the day. Meetings should start on time. Dues should be collected on a regular schedule. Individuals falling behind on their work should be checked on and assisted if the need arises. Core members of organizing projects should spend their free time in activities that will restore their energy and build their capabilities, not drain and erode them. These habits will prove to be major advantages in our fight against alcoholic police officers, coked-out real estate developers, and disorganized business owners. 

Any collective project, whether a revolutionary labor union or a church’s food pantry, will expect a higher degree of involvement from its core organizers than from its regular members. Not everyone has the time or the technical skills needed to bottom-line such endeavors, and those who do have a responsibility to step up to the plate. These small groups, or cadre, are the powerhouse of the class. Taking direction from the masses they live and labor with, cadre members should focus their lives on facilitating the self-emancipation of the proletariat. In doing so, they must hold themselves to a standard worthy of the valiant people they serve. Building on the victories and sacrifices of the past, today we see indigenous struggles for socialism across South America, labor resistance to Amazon throughout the global north, Black leadership in the fight for police and prison abolition in the United States, and more. Honoring the sacrifices of those involved means exercising discipline in our personal lives to become the best organizers we can possibly be. 

Sobriety is only one requirement among many in this respect, but a critical one. It’s possible to drink a night away, wake up the next morning, collect oneself, and tackle important problems with the help of a competent team. But it’s not feasible to perform at one’s best in that situation, nor does it come with the satisfaction and confidence of a fully collected life. Why be the weakest link in a chain of dedicated organizers in exchange for fleeting relief from an otherwise unfulfilled existence? Only those who accept the misery of life under capitalism as permanent turn to drugs and alcohol to mitigate their feelings of hopelessness. Revolutionaries refuse to admit defeat in the face of alienation, and spit on the snake oil remedies offered to them by the bourgeoisie. That said, no one can be a revolutionary alone, and many who commit to the work of communism will come to our movement carrying the burdens of addiction and ill-health. Overcoming these afflictions will be a protracted process, and we should do everything possible to support our partners undertaking this important work. 

Most people on the left already identify addiction as a physical ailment and treat it as such, but it’s important to remember that the urge to numb oneself in the first place is a symptom of the social disease inherent to capitalist culture. Taking this attitude towards drug use will enable us to build strong cadres without shunning new comrades eager to join the cause who happen to suffer from momentary urges, lingering habits, or serious dependency. There is no drug on earth stronger than an empowered community. Those who combine their struggle against addiction with the fight for socialism can be valuable allies, and should be encouraged to join our ranks. Their commitment to the cause in both their organizing work and their personal lives will serve as a shining example for others.

There are many disciplines beyond sobriety that communists should uphold. Equally important for our physical and mental health is daily exercise and a balanced diet. These positive habits will help us work and feel our best, and blaze the trail for our friends and neighbors to join in. Our comrade CLR Gainz was right to point out that in order to take the reigns of society, the proletariat needs not just metaphorical but physical strength. As they said in their most recent article: “Strength training is not only a significant means of becoming healthier but, by reorganizing the composition of bodies to make them less fat to more muscle, also represents the physical manifestation of a disciplined person.”9 This area of self-development is especially neglected among those in the North American left, which should be remedied as soon as possible.

A dynamic reading regimen, much more common than workout routines in our ranks, is imperative as well. Without a thorough study, we cannot understand the world around us, much less change it. Reading is only the first step in learning, however. Our grasp of complex topics becomes even tighter when we explore them through writing, and tighter still when we share our knowledge with others in person and engage in Socratic dialogue. Inquiry of history, political theory, science, and other fields is enhanced through collective effort just as much as practical organizing. Our individual studies should be undertaken for the express purpose of teaching and learning from our comrades. In sharing knowledge, we develop deeper bonds and broader wit.

John Reed’s account of the October Revolution has the words “revolutionary discipline” on everyone’s lips, from Lenin, to the sailors, to the red guards, to the commissars leading the charge on the Winter Palace. It was the slogan which kept everything running smoothly that night; passes were checked, prisoners were treated decently, and imperial finery was expropriated by the people of Petrograd rather than looted by individuals. In the end, little to no blood was spilled until the reactionary Junkers took up arms against the people of Moscow. That the proletariat could take hold of all political, economic, and social power in Russia’s urban centers in such an orderly fashion is remarkable. The Bolsheviks built the internal culture of self-regulation that produced these admirable feats, and we must follow their example today. This discipline guides organizers to make the best decisions in moments when prolonged study is not possible, and the coworkers, neighbors, and comrades who follow them all benefit. 

Historic Success: Austrian Marxists

“I don’t consider the fight against alcoholism necessary because it harms the health of the individual, but because it harms the workers’ movement by demoralizing, corrupting, and bourgeoisifying many good workers who could be great representatives of the workers’ movement otherwise. Anyone has the right to harm his own health if he considers the indulgence in certain pleasures worth it; but nobody has the right to encourage indulging in pleasures that hamper the development of the workers’ movement by rendering thousands of good comrades incapable of doing their duty” -Otto Bauer 

The short-lived Austrian socialist movement was one of the most deeply rooted of the 20th century. From its landslide electoral victory in 1919 until its tragic defeat by fascist forces in 1934, the Austro-Marxists transformed their capital city of Vienna into a workers’ paradise. They combined the typical benefits of a welfare state with an expansive system of socialized cultural institutions, all built on the foundation of a mass labor movement. With far more favorable conditions than the Bolsheviks (who were in the midst of a destructive civil war), the Austrians built what may have been the most advanced proletarian municipality in human history. Basic subsistence needs were met, union membership guaranteed, public transportation provided, comfortable housing furnished, universal health care and education maintained by the state, and all of this was protected by a network of workers’ militias. That the militia leaders eventually made poor strategic decisions that ceded ground to the fascists does not change the robust character of the rank and file.

Photo of the Austrian Workers’ League for Sport and Body Culture

It was precisely for this reason that SDAP (Social Democratic Party of Austria) valued sobriety and forged close bonds with the temperance movement. A worker plagued with a debilitating illness cannot contribute to the common defense. While an alcoholic may be able to perform the bare minimum tasks required of them at work, they are less useful on the frontline of a street brawl with fascists. Moreover, a drinking worker does not have the clear head required for strategic thinking and adds little to meetings while causing interruptions and dragging out deliberations. This was as true in the early twentieth century as it is today, although we now have even larger problems with the opioid crisis digging its claws ever deeper into our class. 

The Austro-Marxists understood that bolstering the social health of the proletariat was a prerequisite for continuing militancy, and embarked on a bold push towards that end. While addressing the underlying economic causes of ill health with social programs, they also organized cultural institutions to promote sport and sobriety. The Workers’ League for Sport and Body Culture in Austria (ASKÖ) and the Workers’ Temperance League (AAB) both attracted mass participation, improved the health of the Austrian working class, and provided strong recruits to the socialist militias under the Republican Schutzbund. 

Thousands of worker-athletes taking to the streets to fight for socialism is a sight hard to imagine for some of us today, but our history shows it to be possible. By committing to the welfare of the social body, and recognizing substance abuse as its antithesis, the SDAP built a powerful legacy. We would do well to learn from their positive example.

Contemporary Mistakes: The Hipster Left

When most people think of socialist heroes, we imagine the brave organizing of Rosa Luxemburg, the militant internationalism of Che Guevara, or the lifelong dedication of Alexandra Kollontai. Unfortunately, there is a small minority who believe that tomorrow’s red champions will be the libertine intellectuals writing poetry and smoking angel dust in the gentrified hell that is Brooklyn, NYC. There we find a strange clique of upper middle-class art types who flit between orgies, Whole Foods, and DSA meetings, genuinely believing themselves to be socialists. Personalities such as Rachel Rabbit White, Katherine Krueger, and the Chapo Trap House boys dominate the scene, each encouraging their cohorts to further deranged and privileged behavior. For an example of this debauchery masquerading as political struggle, we will examine Kaitlin Phillips’ aptly named profile of the scene The ‘Hooker Laureate’ of the Dirtbag Left.10

Reading through the article, it’s hard not to cringe when remembering that these people claim to fight for working-class liberation. In a borough that was once filled with drugs as a pretext for police harassment of the mostly black community, the new (mostly white) residents have the gall to equate buying PCP for their parties with community care. We find this party filled with the likes of ‘nitrate anarchists’, ‘sex cult’ enthusiasts, Oyster (you know, the girl from the ‘human-centipede four-way’), and one of Rachel’s friends who gave us this gem: “‘We’re going to overthrow capitalism. Although the form to sign up is kind of complicated.’ Someone else nods, ‘I’m a dumb Marxist bitch.’” The fact that these people represent themselves to the world as having common cause with those of us on the front lines of labor and tenant struggles is infuriating. Their activities discredit the movement despite their distance from any real organizing, mainly due to the long reach their money buys them on the internet.

Communists oriented towards concrete struggle should work to stifle the spread of these philistines’ ideas. It is no great sacrifice to exchange the ketamine plates and poetry readings of Brooklyn hipsters for union meetings and picket lines. Anyone claiming the red banner as their own should remember the words of the founding mother of Bolshevism, Nadezhda Krupskaya: “We should try to link our personal lives with the cause for which we struggle, with the cause of building communism…This is not asceticism. On the contrary, the fact of this merging, the fact that the common cause of all working people becomes a personal matter, makes personal life richer.”11 Disciplining one’s private life to the needs of one’s community heralds both fulfillment and efficacy, without forfeiting joy.

The coming communist dawn

A Sober, Socialist Future

The ultimate test of a person’s character is not found in their philosophical leanings, but in their class allegiance. It lives in the realm of practice, not theory. What sets communists apart from the rest of the left in practice is our commitment to actions that build the capacities of our class. No sacrifice in the name of this historic mission is too great, no discipline too much to ask. I appeal to this spirit of dedication within all my comrades when I advocate for strong, sober cadres of organizers to lead our push towards world revolution. Billions of our people suffer while trillions of dollars are made from their misery; each bottle of pills putting a paycheck in the capitalists’ pocket and a worker’s body in the grave. We must marshall our class to rebuild civil society from the ground up, providing hope and community where alienation was once the rule. Without taking responsibility for the mental and physical well-being of ourselves and our neighbors, we cannot hope to radically re-organize society before climate change does it for us.

The Austrian Marxists’ legacy gives us a blueprint for future struggle. By prioritizing the health of our communities, we can turn them into powerful fighting forces for socialism. The best available scientific evidence demonstrates that physical and mental well-being are both improved by sober living, active exercise, and communal bonds. While tragic mistakes led to many Austrian Marxists being butchered by the fascists, we can ensure their work was not in vain by carrying it on today. We cannot allow elements like the Hipster Left to expand their influence from socialites and internet dwellers to the broader movement. Although they have no concrete connection to the working class, their wealth affords them serious reach and the corroding effects of this should not be underestimated. Their encouragement of moral abandon and drug use would further devastate neighborhoods already immobilized and divided, effectively carrying on the work of the FBI’s Cointelpro initiatives. In contrast, our mission is to heal and unify our communities. This is how we will build political legitimacy and ultimately establish a democratic mandate for socialism.

It should be clear that a disciplined mind and body are of utmost importance for anyone worthy of calling themselves a communist. There is no savior coming from heaven or earth to aid the working class in its struggle for emancipation. We must take the reigns of power to build a future free from climate catastrophe, exploitation, and oppression. We strive towards a future where humanity can find joy in its daily endeavors rather than separating life into periods of alienated labor and drug-induced numbness. With clarity as the watchword of the day, determined comrades building thriving communities will pave the road to a better world.

  1. “Clara Zetkin: Lenin on the Women’s Question – 1.” 29 Feb. 2004, https://www.marxists.org/archive/zetkin/1920/lenin/zetkin1.htm.
  2. “Antifascism, Sports, Sobriety: Forging a Militant … – PM Press.” https://www.pmpress.org/index.php?l=product_detail&p=790
  3.  “Black Panther Party – Marxists Internet Archive.” https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/workers/black-panthers/.
  4. “The Effect of Housing and Gender on Morphine Self … – PubMed.” https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/98787.
  5. “Reversal of cocaine addiction by environmental enrichment ….” 4 Nov. 2008, https://www.pnas.org/content/105/44/17145.
  6. “Environmental Enrichment During Early Stages of Life ….” 7 May. 2008, https://www.nature.com/articles/npp200851.
  7. “On Revolutionary Medicine – Marxists Internet Archive.” https://www.marxists.org/archive/guevara/1960/08/19.htm.
  8. “Der Weckruf. | Library of Congress.” https://www.loc.gov/item/sn89049975/. Accessed 23 Dec. 2019.
  9.  “Brick by Brick: An Appeal to Strength – COSMONAUT.” 23 Jan. 2019, https://cosmonaut.blog/2019/01/23/brick-by-brick-an-appeal-to-strength/.
  10. ‘Hooker Laureate’ of the Dirtbag Left – The Cut.” 12 Nov. 2019, https://www.thecut.com/2019/11/rachel-rabbit-white-poetry-book-launch-party.html.
  11. “Women and Marxism: Krupskaya – Marxists Internet Archive.” https://www.marxists.org/archive/krupskaya/works/ethics.htm.

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