By Pedro Campos
On June 21st, Granma and Juventud Rebelde newspapers published the “Declaration of Cuban Youth” which condemned the Trump administration’s new US policy towards Cuba, and nobody signed it, nobody, not a single organization.
This kind of document has traditionally been used by the Cuban government to set the political approach that “Cuban revolutionaries” and all of their institutions need to follow: from the Party to the school children.
Behind the lack of signatures and names are the people responsible for the statement who are an important part of the contradictions that confine the “proletarian dictatorship” political system. The clash is between centralization and democratizing the system, which is being resolved in favor of centralization, until it reaches its maximum state.
It will end up destroying all of the system, because less and less people are involved in the decision-making process and as a result, less and less people are interested in maintaining the injustice.
Meanwhile, and as a part of the advance of this sickness which is eating away at the heart of the system, this kind of document, without naming the writers by name and personalizing them, represent a lack of respect for the same institutions created during the Revolution, its appointed leaders and especially the people of Cuba, who really have been taken less and less into account.
In this particular case, it’s a complete lack of consideration for, and awareness of, the Cuban youth, which are not only those who applaud or feel forced to applaud the system, but hundreds of thousands of young people, God knows how many there are, who don’t follow the government and its politics.
There has been more than one time when top leaders have set out an approach that wasn’t totally or partially shared by some leaders of their subordinate organizations and so the resulting statements didn’t meet “those at the top’s” expectations. The response “top leaders” found in the end for this was to write out the documents themselves and to send them to lower organizations for their leaders to sign. But, this hasn’t even been happening for some time: they are simply published without a signature.
This phenomenon which we so clearly see in the national political climate is the same in the national economy too. With the state’s productive enterprises, the results of production and decisions about what to do with the money workers generate from the general exploitation of the Cuban people in many different ways, are becoming more and more concentrated within this circle of upper echelons.
The state-run socialist system, which tries to hide the State’s monopoly capitalism controlled by the political and military bureaucratic elite, is locked into the same classical and main contradiction of mainstream capitalism: while production is more social, appropriation (of the results of production) is more private. While some large owners are getting rich, the productive majority are becoming increasingly poorer.
Frederick Engels wrote about this subject and said that for mainstream capitalism, state monopoly capitalism, believed to be socialism, has led to crisis and that’s why it ends up destroying itself: “Accumulation of wealth at one pole is, therefore, at the same time, accumulation of misery, agony of toil, slavery, ignorance, brutality, mental degradation, at the opposite pole, i.e., on the side of the class that produces its own product in the form of capital.”
We Cuban democratic socialists have proposed solutions to these problems in many articles and essays and I have personally put these idea forward to government-party-state institutions:
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