V.I. Lenin to American Workers
“The American people have a
revolutionary tradition which has been adopted by the best
representatives of the American proletariat, who have repeatedly
expressed their complete solidarity with us Bolsheviks. That tradition
is the war of liberation against the British in the eighteenth century
and the Civil War in the nineteenth century. In some respects, if we
only take into consideration the “destruction” of some branches of
industry and of the national economy, America in 1870 was behind 1860.
But what a pedant, what an idiot would anyone be to deny on these
grounds the immense, world-historic, progressive and revolutionary
significance of the American Civil War of 1863-65!
The representatives of the bourgeoisie
understand that for the sake of overthrowing Negro slavery, of
overthrowing the rule of the slaveowners, it was worth letting the
country go through long years of civil war, through the abysmal ruin,
destruction and terror that accompany every war. But now, when we are
confronted with the vastly greater task of overthrowing capitalist wage-slavery,
of overthrowing the rule of the bourgeoisie—now, the representatives
and defenders of the bourgeoisie, and also the reformist socialists who
have been frightened by the bourgeoisie and are shunning the revolution,
cannot and do not want to understand that civil war is necessary and
legitimate.
The American workers will not follow the
bourgeoisie. They will be with us, for civil war against the
bourgeoisie. The whole history of the world and of the American labour
movement strengthens my conviction that this is so. I also recall the
words of one of the most beloved leaders of the American proletariat,
Eugene Debs, who wrote in the Appeal to Reason,[4] I
believe towards the end of 1915, in the article “What Shall I Fight
For” (I quoted this article at the beginning of 1916 at a public meeting
of workers in Berne, Switzerland)[5]—that
he, Debs, would rather be shot than vote credits for the present
criminal and reactionary war; that he, Debs, knows of only one holy and,
from the proletarian standpoint, legitimate war, namely: the war
against the capitalists, the war to liberate mankind from wage-slavery.
I am not surprised that Wilson, the head
of the American multimillionaires and servant of the capitalist sharks,
has thrown Debs into prison. Let the bourgeoisie be brutal to the true
internationalists, to the true representatives of the revolutionary
proletariat! The more fierce and brutal they are, the nearer the day of
the victorious proletarian revolution.
We are blamed for the destruction caused
by our revolution. . . . Who are the accusers? The hangers-on of the
bourgeoisie, of that very bourgeoisie who, during the four years of the
imperialist war, have destroyed almost the whole of European culture and
have reduced Europe to barbarism, brutality and starvation. These
bourgeoisie now demand we should not make a revolution on these ruins,
amidst this wreckage of culture, amidst the wreckage and ruins created
by the war, nor with the people who have been brutalised by the war. How
humane and righteous the bourgeoisie are!
Their servants accuse us of resorting to
terror. . . . The British bourgeoisie have forgotten their 1649, the
French bourgeoisie have forgotten their 1793. Terror was just and
legitimate when the bourgeoisie resorted to it for their own benefit
against feudalism. Terror became monstrous and criminal when the workers
and poor peasants dared to use it against the bourgeoisie! Terror was
just and legitimate when used for the purpose of substituting one
exploiting minority for another exploiting minority. Terror became
monstrous and criminal when it began to be used for the purpose of
overthrowing every exploiting minority, to be used in the
interests of the vast actual majority, in the interests of the
proletariat and semi-proletariat, the working class and the poor
peasants!”
– V.I. Lenin, “Letter to American Workers”
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