Monday, July 3, 2017

Misogyny is Revisionism Part 2: The Masque of the "Red" Pimp

Soviet anti-prostitution poster: “After the destruction of capitalism — the proletariat will abolish prostitution — the great scourge of humanity!”
In the first part of this series, we deconstructed the notion that “transwomen are women” from a Marxist perspective. In that piece I said that notion is perhaps the most destructive facing the left today, but I’m going to have to reconsider that assertion as we tackle the next anti-feminist/anti-Marxist “big lie” facing the left today, the notion that “sex work is work”. Marxism has always recognized prostitution as one of the vilest forms of exploitation; every major Marxist revolutionary has condemned it in unequivocal terms. The Communist Manifesto openly proclaims that the socialist revolution will do away with “prostitution both public and private.”[1] In her first major work, Nadezhda Krupskaya, described how revolutionary workers, during one night of major labor strikes, also directed their rage at the brothels, destroying eleven of them in a single night.[2] And, yet, despite this damning and overwhelming Marxist condemnation of prostitution, the left has started to drink the “sex-work” Kool-Aid. This ranges from assertions that prostitution (and pornography, which is just filmed prostitution) is just a job like any other to outright proclaiming it liberating for women, a strike against bourgeois moralism! Pimps have become re-cast as “managers”, and johns as “clients”. Some so-called “Marxists” have even come out in support of collectivized brothels under socialism! Unsurprisingly, most of these declamations are being made by men who, distraught that the revolution wants to take away “their porn” and “their women”, are now trying to have their cake and eat it too by twisting the Marxist notion of free love and the Marxist attacks on bourgeois morality to suit their own exploitative ends. In this they are assisted by the “PhD Prostitutes”, well-off bourgeois women, often holding advanced degrees, who engage in prostitution as a lifestyle “choice”. Joseph Goebbels would be proud.

But for now, we will leave these reactionary elements to stew where they are. First, it is incumbent to debunk the central assertion behind all of this, that “sex work is work”. To tear this apart, we need to first answer the question, what is labor? In his first major published work, The German Ideology, Marx defines labor as such:

“The first premise of all human existence and, therefore, of all history, [is that humans] must be in a position to live in order to be able to ‘make history’. But life involves before everything else eating and drinking, a habitation, clothing and many other things. The first historical act is thus the production of the means to satisfy these needs, the production of material life itself. And indeed this is an historical act, a fundamental condition of all history, which today, as thousands of years ago, must daily and hourly be fulfilled merely in order to sustain human life.”[3]

To put it in more succinct terms, labor is the process by which human beings create, and facilitate the use, of products of social value. Does the act of sexual intercourse in of itself have social value? Does pornographic material have social value? The answer is no. Sexual intercourse is not a fundamental human need in the way food, water, clothing, and shelter are. Nor does intercourse in of itself help us interpret and understand the world in the way that science and art do. Intercourse does take on social value when its purpose is reproduction, in that case it becomes reproductive labor. It also holds social value when it becomes a means of interpersonal communication, such as intercourse between lovers, but that is not necessarily labor as it does not produce anything of wider use for a community. In Prostitution and Ways of Fighting It, Alexandra Kollontai said, “prostitutes are all those who avoid the necessity of working by giving themselves to a man, either on a temporary basis or for life.”[4] She is clearly separating it from labor, rather defining it as the last act of the most desperate and rejected members of society. What does prostitution create, then? It creates, and increases, alienation and exploitation of the worst kind. Kollontai also railed against prostitution because it “threatens the feeling of solidarity and comradeship between working men and women, the members of the workers’ republic. And this feeling is the foundation and the basis of the communist society we are building and making a reality.”[5]

But if prostitution is not labor, what is it? The answer is simple. Sexual slavery; contractual rape. Continuing on her points already made, Kollontai reasoned that “Prostitution arose with the first states as the inevitable shadow of the official institution of marriage, which was designed to preserve the rights of private property and to guarantee property inheritance through a line of lawful heirs.”[6] This is a summation of what Engels described in The Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the State; that prostitution allowed for men to engage in carnal relations outside of their marriage. In the society that gave birth to prostitution, women were either the de facto property of men, or their de jure property, as in the case of wives. The prostitute was essentially a slave, with no rights or autonomy of her own; her entire existence was devoted to serving men. This continued in the age of feudalism, where prostitution was highly organized and ubiquitous, in order to maintain the chastity and faithfulness of men’s daughters and wives, who remained their property. But it is capitalism that has brought forth the full horrific nature of prostitution, where now the whole lot of woman is threatened with prostitution if they cannot afford to feed themselves and their families, or pay their bills, afford an education, or any of the other necessities working people struggle to obtain and secure. Again we see the separation of prostitution from labor; the prostitute in capitalist society is the woman who cannot make an existence by labor alone. The prostitute is not even considered a human being, but rather a commodity. They are below even the lumpenproletariat, that great mass that contains both those almost totally squeezed dry by capitalism, as well as the criminal element of society, which are still recognized as human. This is the class to which the pimp belongs to.[7] The pimp is a parody of the parasitical capitalist who profits off the labor of the working class; in the case of the pimp, he profits off the dehumanized woman turned commodity.

The industrial and technological revolutions that have occurred under capitalism have only made the prostitute’s life worse. With the advent of mass pornography, especially in the modern age of mass and instant communication, the prostitute is no longer the commodity of just one john, but of millions of johns, who fuck her by proxy; in turn the pimp’s profits are doubled, tripled, quadrupled beyond anything they ever were. And not just women now, but also homosexual and gender non-conforming men, who as “exiles” from the community of men are increasingly finding themselves subjected to the lot previously reserved almost exclusively for women. Almost every pornography website has a section for “transsexual” porn. In prostitution we see the development of patriarchy and capitalism in microcosm; the mass dehumanization of human beings aimed at smashing our solidarity with one another, leaving us increasingly alienated and isolated, viewing one another not as comrades in a common struggle, but vessels to derive selfish pleasure.

The pro-“sex work” advocates would have one believe that entering prostitution is a “choice” freely made on the part of the prostitute, and to deny this is to deny the prostitute’s “agency”. To illustrate their point, they trot out the “PhD Prostitutes” mentioned above. But Marxists should know better than to take such evidence at face value. The Marxist method looks not at the conditions of individuals isolated from society as a whole, but at the individual within the larger social context they exist in. A study conducted by the Soroptimist International, “an international volunteer organization working to improve the lives of women and girls, in local communities and throughout the world” found that most prostitutes “were sexually and physically abused as children, deprived and pushed into selling sex at age 14, on average.” It also goes on to say:

“In one study of prostituted women, 90 percent of the women had been physically battered in childhood; 74 percent were sexually abused in their families, with 50 percent also having been sexually abused by someone outside the family. Of 123 survivors at the Council for Prostitution Alternatives in Portland, Oregon (an agency offering support, education, shelter and access to health services to clients of all sex industries), 85 percent reported a history of incest, 90 percent reported a history of physical abuse, and 98 percent cited a history of emotional abuse.”

The study also notes that women of color, women from the third world, and indigenous women are even more likely to be forced into prostitution.[8] Additionally “71 percent reported being physically abused and 63 percent reported being raped by a customer. In a rigorous study of pimps in seven cities in the United States, 58 percent of prostitutes reported violence, while 36 reported having abusive clients.” It also challenges the notion that “high-class” “call-girl” prostitution is safer than street prostitution, finding that escorts will be abused by johns at least twice a year. But perhaps the most damning evidence presented in the study to the “choice” argument, is the evidence that “more than 90 percent of prostituted women in various surveys want to leave prostitution, but lack viable options.”[9]

Despite this, the pro-“sex work” crowd insist that prostitution is not contractual rape, because prostitutes are giving their consent. But how can “consent” obtained under economic coercion truly be consent? This sounds like arguments put forward in defense of capitalism as a whole; for example, that workers who do not like the conditions of their work or their wages can always “choose” to get a different job. Marxists rightly recognize this argument as a diversion, because of the external circumstances that prevent individuals from just easily choosing the job they want to do. It is the same with the prostitute; her “consent” is only a passive consent, not the active consent that recognized as being necessary for a truly consensual sexual relationship. The “PhD Prostitutes” who are able to freely choose and screen their “clients” represent an incredibly small minority, and perhaps cannot even be considered prostitutes, but bourgeois dilettantes “playfully” aping the suffering of the classes beneath them.

Similarly, abolitionists have come under attack from the “sex work” crowd, being accused of moralism and puritanism. They argue that criminalization only worsens the plight of prostitutes, whereas bringing them into the recognized workforce through legalization and unionization will ease their suffering. In this first part, they are correct. The criminalization of the prostitute is an expression of not just bourgeois, but patriarchal hypocrisy, because the prostitute is essentially punished for trying to survive, punished for fulfilling the desires of the ruling class. The second part, however, is dead wrong. The countries that have legalized prostitution have seen a dramatic increase in human trafficking, because contrary to the free choice arguments of the “sex work” hypocrites, there exists nowhere near enough women who want to commodify themselves to meet the demand.[10] In Australia and New Zealand, legalization has decreased the agency of prostitutes, and increased the power of pimps, by introducing the “all-inclusive”, a single fee paid to the pimp instead of directly to the prostitute, essentially depriving prostituted women of what little power of negotiation they had.[11] In Germany, a pregnant prostitute was coerced into having group sex with a bunch of men who “wanted” a pregnant woman; under German law, this was perfectly legal. The prostitute in question said she felt like she had no power to say no, as her agency had been usurped by the brothel.[12] Similarly, the “sex worker unions” advocated for by the “sex work” activists are another vehicle for pimps and their supporters to exercise their dominance; the Scarlet Alliance, Australia’s largest “sex worker union” even harassed survivors of the sex industry.[13] Rosa Luxemburg did advocate for the formation of revolutionary unions of prostitutes, but not to “regulate” prostitution, but to smash it. In fact, the advocates of full legalization (with or without regulation) belong in the company of fascists, not revolutionary socialists. The Nazis established an extensive and centralized system of brothels in cities and military camps, as well as in the concentration camps themselves. When Franco seized power in Spain, he overturned the abolitionist reforms of the Republic, and re-legalized prostitution so that men were guaranteed their brides were virgins and not “spoiled goods”.[14]

The most effective method of combatting prostitution has been the Nordic Model, which is made up of two components: 1) The decriminalization of selling sex, and the criminalization of pimps and johns; and 2) The creation and strengthening of state resources, such as education, professional training, counseling, and community support, to help prostitutes make a safe exit from the industry. Countries that have adopted the Nordic Model, such as Sweden, Norway, and Iceland have seen dramatic reductions in prostitution. The Swedish Ministry of Justice found that since the adoption of the Sex Buyer Law in 1999, prostitution has fully halved, and continues to decline.[15] Additionally, no evidence has been found that prostitutes are being forced underground as a result of this policy.[16] And most importantly, not a single prostitute has been murdered by a john since the law came into effect. What the pimps, johns, and their apologists cannot stand about the Nordic Model is that it ends their monopoly on power, and actually punishes their exploitation of women, all while empowering their former slaves. This is why they always try to erect obfuscations against the Nordic Model, even outright crying about how it victimizes the “poor johns”. Some of the more cunning faux leftists argue against the Nordic Model on the basis that it increases the power of the bourgeois state and police; or they claim that there is no use in combatting prostitution since no reform under capitalism will eliminate it. On the contrary, the Nordic Model represents a perfect example of a transitional demand. Trotsky defined the transitional demand as being a bridge between the minimum demands of social democracy and the maximum demands of revolutionary socialism; demands that would allow the oppressed to win not just key reforms, but also to increase their strength and confidence against the capitalist state. Transitional demands are not just calls for reform, but calls for openly revolutionary action that will spark reforms and strengthen existing ones. The Nordic Model is a perfect example precisely because it is a reform that strikes at the heart of the patriarchal and capitalist system; it allows the masses to see just who supports and benefits from prostitution. Eugene Debs, when he was city clerk of Terre Haute, advocated for a kind of proto-Nordic Model, refusing to assess fines on prostitutes, because the police took no action against the pimps or the usually wealthy johns. As for the false concerns about increasing the power of the bourgeois state and police, the Nordic Model, like any good transitional reform, forces the state and the police to actually work for, not against, the people they claim to represent. Would these same “socialists” so worried about the cops being unleashed on pimps and johns have cried the same tears when Eisenhower sent in the National Guard to enforce the desegregation of schools in the Jim Crow south? It would, at the very least, be amusing to see a socialist cite this as an example of giving the bourgeois state “too much power”.

To reiterate, every socialist revolution has struck with the full force of its power against prostitution and the sex industry. Every major socialist revolutionary has recognized the emancipation of women from sexual slavery as one of the basic tasks of the revolution. These “sex work socialists” are more than just hypocrites and revisionists, they are outright misogynistic reactionaries. The degeneration of the revolutionary left in the western world, especially in the Anglophone world is what has allowed these trends to sprout and grow. The pernicious influence of neoliberalism and postmodernism have infected the body of the revolutionary left; slowly eating away at it like gradual poisoning. The Marxist concept of free love aims to eliminate the current patriarchal system of sexual coercion and exploitation, and replace it with a humane and open system of actively consensual intimacy. Those who believe otherwise would best be served by dropping the act, and joining the Libertarian Party, because that is where their politics truly lie. The left needs to remember its mission; the liberation of the oppressed peoples of the world, and take an active stand against the pimps and johns playing dress-up as communists.


[1] Engels, Karl Marx and Frederick. “Communist Manifesto (Chapter 2).” Marxist Internet Archive. Marxist Internet Archive, n.d. Web. 02 July 2017.
[2] Krupskaya, Nadezhda. “On the Workers’ Strikes and Attacks on Brothels.” Facebook. Dmytriy Kovalevich, 05 Dec. 2016. Web. 02 July 2017. This portion is the only English translation of Krupskaya’s first article available online.
[3] Marx, Karl. “The German Ideology Part I: Feuerbach. Opposition of the Materialist and Idealist Outlook A. Idealism and Materialism.” Marxist Internet Archive. Marxist Internet Archive, n.d. Web. 02 July 2017.
[4] Kollontai, Alexandra. “Prostitution and Ways of Fighting It.” Marxist Internet Archive. Marxist Internet Archive, n.d. Web. 02 July 2017.
[5] Ibid.
[6] Ibid.
[7] Marx summarizes the membership of the lumpenproletariat in The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte as follows: “Alongside decayed roués with dubious means of subsistence and of dubious origin, alongside ruined and adventurous offshoots of the bourgeoisie, were vagabonds, discharged soldiers, discharged jailbirds, escaped galley slaves, swindlers, mountebanks, lazzaroni, pickpockets, tricksters, gamblers, maquereaux [pimps], brothel keepers, porters, literati, organ grinders, ragpickers, knife grinders, tinkers, beggars — in short, the whole indefinite, disintegrated mass, thrown hither and thither, which the French call la bohème.” (Emphasis added.)
[8] The wide prevalence of racist porn can attest to this. Most porn sites have their material broken down by race. The “Asian fetish” is probably the most egregious example of racist fetishization.
[9] “Prostitution Is Not a Choice.” Soroptimist International of the Americas (2014): 2–6. Print.
[10] Cho, Seo-Young; Dreher, Axel; Neumayer, Eric; “Does Legalized Prostitution Increase Human Trafficking?” World Development, 2013, 41:67–82.
[11] Valisce, Sabrinna. “Advocating for the Nordic Model in Australia.” Facebook. Deep Green Resistance Australia, 03 May 2017. Web. 02 July 2017.
[12] Bindel, Julie. “Pregnant Women Are Being Legally Pimped out for Sex — This Is the Lowest Form of Capitalism.” The Independent. Independent Digital News and Media, 23 Apr. 2017. Web. 02 July 2017.
[13] Davoren, Heidi. “Former Sex Workers Claim Harassment by Pro-prostitution Groups after Speaking out.” ABC News. N.p., 12 Oct. 2016. Web. 02 July 2017.
[14] Morcillo, Aurora G. “Introduction: Gendered Metaphors.” The Seduction of Modern Spain: The Female Body and the Francoist Body Politic. Lewisburg: Bucknell UP, 2010. 19. Print.
[15] Aleem, Zeeshan. “16 Years After Decriminalizing Prostitution, Here’s What Sweden Has Become.” Mic. Mic Network Inc., 25 Oct. 2015. Web. 02 July 2017.
[16] English summary of the Evaluation of the ban on purchase of sexual services (1999–2008), Swedish Ministry of Justice, 2010. See also: Max Waltman, “Prohibiting Sex Purchasing and Ending Trafficking: The Swedish Prostitution Law,” 33 Michigan Journal of International Law 133, 133–57 (2011), pp. 146–148.

Misogyny is Revisionism Part 1: On the Left's "Woman" Problem

The dialectics of idealism masquerading as dialectical materialism.
The Marxist left finds itself confronted by three insidious big lies that threaten the revolutionary and emancipatory foundation of the Marxist project, all related to undermining women’s liberation; they are:

1. Transwomen are women.
2. Sex work is work.
3. Feminism is bourgeois.

Misogyny in its many forms has long been a challenge for the left; not just the misogyny of the reactionary right, but misogyny coming from within the left itself. But it has not been until recently that this leftist misogyny has sought to portray itself as being inherently progressive. By engaging in revisionism of the most blatant kind, reactionary elements within the left have managed to posit themselves as the agents of progress. Much has already been written about the harms caused by these three lies, but no attempt has yet to be made to debunk them from a solidly Marxist standpoint. That is what we are out to accomplish here; to demonstrate definitively that these big lies are not just regressive, but inherently revisionist and anti-Marxist to the core.

The first of these three big lies, “Transwomen are women”, might well be the most damaging, because it directly contradicts the heart of the Marxist method: dialectical materialism. There are two main definitions used by proponents of transgenderism to explain their narrative. The first is that gender is an identity; the state of being a man or a woman (or any one of the other numerous “gender identities”) stems not from biological sex (to the extent that transactivists acknowledge the existence of biological sex), but from an internal identity, i.e. personal feelings, personal consciousness. The second definition says that transpeople are not really the sex they physically are, but the sex they say they are, because they really have “male” or “female” brains. Both of these definitions are rooted in the personal, not the material. One of the patron saints of queer theory, Judith Butler, says:
“It’s one thing to say that gender is performed and that is a little different from saying gender is performative. When we say gender is performed we usually mean that we’ve taken on a role or we’re acting in some way and that our acting or our role-playing is crucial to the gender that we are and the gender that we present to the world. To say that gender is performative is a little different because for something to be performative means that it produces a series of effects. We act and walk and speak and talk in ways that consolidate an impression of being a man or being a woman.”[1]
Though queer theory is a postmodernist philosophy, its roots go far deeper than just postmodernism; rather, this statement of Butler’s is an example of the dialectics of idealism. Marxism, as a philosophy, was formed in reaction to the idealist dialectics of the Young Hegelians. The dialects of idealism posit that reality flows from consciousness. Marx, on the other hand, argued “It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness.”[2] That is, it is not our thoughts that shape material reality, but material reality that shapes our thoughts. In fact, Marx’s first major work, The German Ideology, is exclusively dedicated to explaining this.

So what is the materialist definition of gender? And how does the embrace of the idealist definition under the guise of Marxism harm the Marxist aim of women’s liberation? The foundational Marxist text dealing with the oppression of women is Engels’ The Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the State. According to Engels, while there has always existed a sexual division of labor in human society, it is not until the rise of private property that this division becomes hierarchical. Before the rise of private property, society was organized under what was called “mother right”, i.e. a person’s family is traced through their mother, given the difficulty of identifying with certainty the father in primitive communist society. But because private property grew out of male labor, and became concentrated in male hands, mother right gave way to “father right”. In order to bequeath his property to his son, the father needed to know with certainty who his sons were. This meant controlling the reproductive labor of the female sex, and its subordination to male supremacy; thus the advent of patriarchy. In Chapter II of Origin of Family Engels calls the overthrow of mother-right “…the world historical defeat of the female sex. The man took command in the home also; the woman was degraded and reduced to servitude, she became the slave of his lust and a mere instrument for the production of children.”[3] Note that Engels here is dealing with sex, with biology. Women are not oppressed because of some abstract gender identity, but because of their sex. Class society and patriarchy, the two of which exist in a symbiosis, need to control women’s reproductive labor to sustain themselves. To put it more bluntly, they need to control the means of reproduction. Thus, women’s oppression has its origin in material reality.

But we have not yet dealt with the concept of gender. In the current queer theory dominated discourse, sex and gender are increasingly become conflated to the point that they are being used as synonyms for one another. Engels analysis of patriarchy is in many ways incomplete, but it forms the basis of future materialist explorations of sex and gender. The second-wave feminists who developed much of the thought around gender did not revise these fundamentals, but expanded on them, the opposite of what today’s revisionists are doing. Gender, according to the radical feminist Rebecca Reilly-Cooper, is “the value system that prescribes and proscribes forms of behaviour and appearance for members of the different sex classes, and that assigns superior value to one sex class at the expense of the other.”[4] Gender is therefore not the same thing as biological sex, but a kind of parasite grafted on top of biological sex to maintain the current sexual hierarchy, and ensure continued male control over reproductive labor. Gender non-conforming, as well as homosexual, men and women are therefore “exiled” from their gender community not because of some abstract identity, but because they do not fulfill their proscribed functions as members of their sex class; they are essentially class traitors. Intersex people, which form a distinct material category, are also lumped into this community of “exiles” because they too are unable to fulfill the goals of the patriarchal sexual hierarchy. Such communities of exiles have existed throughout history, and continue to exist to this day in all parts of the world, from the hijra in India to the two-spirited people of the Native Americans to the contemporary shunning and violence directed at gender non-conforming individuals. But to reiterate, none of this has to do with identity, but with the material structuring of class society.

While transactivists have started to turn against the biomedical explanation for transgenderism, it is very much alive and well in the medical and psychological community. Victorian-era theories about “brain sex” that would have earned the ire of Marx and Engels are now making a comeback. At best, these theories are chimerical pseudoscience which have not even come close to being conclusively proven in any legitimate scientific study. The standards by which gender dysphoria is diagnosed falls back on the constructed tropes of masculinity and femininity already discussed. Such theories risk misconstruing gender roles as being rooted in nature as opposed to constructions that reinforce ruling class control. Rather than being seen as the disease, dysphoria should be seen as the symptom of the sexual hierarchy. The pressures of gendered socialization are ubiquitous, and begin at birth. Very often we are not aware of the subtle forms socialization exerts upon us. For those who reject this socialization, it follows that they would experience levels of extreme discomfort and anguish. Gendered socialization is not just some abstract phenomena, but is, again, literally grafted onto us. Under this system of socialization, the penis becomes more than just the male sex organ, but the symbol of male aggression and supremacy, in the same way the vagina becomes the symbol of female inferiority and subjugation. Sensitive individuals who struggle against this socialization often hate their bodies, but not because their bodies are somehow “wrong”, but because of what they are drilled into believing their bodies are. What they suffer from is the inability to tear away the curtain that has been placed in front of material reality and to see reality in an objective manner. The fields of medical and psychological science are not immune from the influence of the ruling class. This is especially the case in the world of psychology, where a method of analysis is employed that isolates the individual from the wider society around them, preferring to view internal struggle as the result of some defect as opposed to the result of material and social forces exerted on the individual.
While capitalism has broken down certain elements of patriarchy, and allowed for women to make some gains, it has not dismantled patriarchy completely. Capitalism, being a class system, still needs to retain control of the means of reproduction. For example, laws that restrict access to abortion and contraceptives, while having negative repercussions for all women, have the most negative impact on poor, working-class women. These laws may be cloaked in the terminology of moralism, but have a far more base logic; they ensure the continued production of future proletarians for the benefit of the capitalist machine.

By shifting the definition of “woman” away from a materialist one to an idealistic one, we lose the ability to define and fight the causes of women’s oppression. In its most extreme form it erases women as a class, and makes it impossible to talk about patriarchy as an existing force. Why, then, are Marxists, who are supposed to be dialectical materialists embracing a set of ideas the very opposite of dialectical materialism? To answer this, we need to look at the nature of patriarchy; it is a system that predates capitalism. As already stated above, patriarchy and class exist in a symbiosis with one another. The one cannot be eliminated without the elimination of the other. Overthrowing capitalism is not the same as overthrowing class. As Mao pointed out, class dynamics still exist in the socialist society, and require continuous vigilance and combat on the part of revolutionaries. This is why many socialist states still restricted women’s rights to certain degrees, such as the draconian anti-abortion laws of Ceausescu’s Romania. All males benefit in some way from patriarchy, even males in a socialist society. It therefore follows that socialist males fighting capitalism also benefit from patriarchy. While men and women may be in solidarity with one another as workers, working class men also belong to the male sex class, a class that predates the existence of the modern working class. Class allegiances run deep. This is why so many socialist and “feminist” men are quick to defend and even endorse the violent language and actions perpetrated by some gender non-conforming men against the female sex class, regardless of how these gender non-conforming men identify themselves. This is not to deny that gender non-conforming men are discriminated against, and face harassment and violence themselves, but even as exiles from the male sex-class, they still benefit from some of the privileges awarded to this sex class. Note that I do not use privilege in the manner it’s currently used by the regressive left, i.e. as some abstract notion that needs to be “checked”. Rather, it is an actually existing force that must be combated, just as white revolutionaries must actively combat white supremacy, and first world revolutionaries must actively combat “their” state’s imperialism.

Opportunism and the “fear” of being on the “wrong side of history” are also driving forces behind this embrace of revisionism. The Anglophone left, especially in the United States, given its weakness in the overall political arena, has long sought to be seen as “acceptable” and “polite”, and is often eager to jump on any bandwagon it believes can advance it. This desire to be accepted also drives the fear. It is true that communists have made serious errors in judgment in the past, but that is not an excuse to rebel against core philosophies and hastily embrace ideas and movements without fully analyzing their beliefs and goals. This is not to say that communists should not be on the forefront in defending gender non-conforming individuals. A thoroughgoing socialist revolution requires that these existing oppressive structures be cast aside. But it is possible to defend gender non-conforming people without embracing misogynistic pseudoscience and revisionism.

Women are not just oppressed, but thoroughly exploited. Working class women make up what is possibly the most thoroughly exploited section of human society. By embracing philosophies that not only erase their ability to define and explain their exploitation, but also deny them the agency to organize as a revolutionary class, these “Marxists” have proven that they are in direct contradiction to Marxist philosophy and ideas. They are engaging in revisionism.

In the next part, we will examine the second big lie plaguing the left today, the notion that “sex work is work”.


[1] “Judith Butler: Your Behavior Creates Your Gender.” YouTube. Big Think, 06 June 2011. Web. 29 June 2017.
[2] Marx, Karl. “Economic Manuscripts: Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy.” Marxists Internet Archive. Progress Publishers, n.d. Web. 29 June 2017.
[3] Engels, Frederick. “Origins of the Family — Chapter 2 (III).” Marxists Internet Archive. N.p., n.d. Web. 29 June 2017.
[4] Reilly-Cooper, Rebecca. “Gender.” Sex and Gender. N.p., 06 Sept. 2015. Web. 29 June 2017. Emphases present in original text.

Once Upon a Time in the Nepotist Republic of Barzanistan


Mullah Mustafa Barzani, longtime leader of the Kurdish independence movement in Iraq, and father of the incumbent president of Iraqi Kurdistan, Massoud Barzani, said back in 1973 that if the United States helped Kurdistan to gain its independence, they would be “ready to become the 51st state”.[1] It appears as if the first part, at least, is about to become reality. One June 7, 2017, Massoud Barzani announced that an official independence referendum for Iraqi Kurdistan will take place on September 25, 2017. In April, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said he would respect the results of the referendum. Given its strategic location, the US has groomed Iraqi Kurdistan as another foothold for its imperialist ambitions in the region, and with Israel increasingly becoming an international pariah, and Saudi Arabia under intense scrutiny over its support for Islamic fundamentalism the world over, the timing of this referendum could not be more perfect for Washington.

Iraqi Kurdistan might be more accurately called Barzanistan, given the near-total domination of the region’s political and economic system by the Barzani family. The Barzanis have been power players in the area for centuries; before the advent of modern capitalism, they were a prominent feudal family. After WWII, Mullah Mustafa was part of the short-lived Soviet-backed Republic of Kurdistan that was established in western Iran, and after a brief sojourn in the Soviet Union, he returned as a staunch anti-communist to his ancestral homeland in Iraq to lead the movement for independence there. Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Barzanistan has sought to present itself as an oasis of democratic development and economic modernism in a troubled region, but in reality it is a violently tribal, corrupt, and patriarchal society. Political dissidents, journalists, and individuals critical of Barzani are regularly jailed or “disappeared”.[2] When a regional newspaper accused the Barzani family of being involved in oil smuggling, it was targeted by the government and threatened with legal action.[3] Most of the major businesses in the region are controlled by the Barzani family. Officially Barzani himself is worth $2 billion, but there is almost no difference between his personal holdings, and the funds controlled by the government and his Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP). Under his presidency, Barzani has overseen the transformation of public spaces into personal fiefdoms for himself and his family members. Even Michael Rubin, in an article for the Middle East Forum, a conservative think tank whose stated goal is to promote “American interests”, admitted to the ubiquitous corruption, embezzlement, and nepotism engaged in by the Barzanis.[4] Not that the opposition party, the nominally social-democratic Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), the KDP’s bitter rival during the region civil war in the 1990s is much better, but level of wealth it controls pales in comparison to that of Barzani. The head of the PUK, former Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, only has a personal fortune of about $400 million, a far cry from the billions controlled by the Barzanis.

Though elections in Barzanistan are considered “free and fair” by international standards, the reality is something quite different. Given its dominance of the economy and state institutions, the KDP has enjoyed a comfortable majority in every post-invasion election. Barzani himself was appointed president in 2005 by the parliament, then directly re-elected in 2009 with 69.6% of the vote. But when it came time for presidential elections in 2013, the KDP decided otherwise, citing regional instability and the rise of ISIS as justification for illegally extending Barzani’s presidential term for another two years. In 2015 Barzani’s term expired, but he has remained in office despite this with the backing of all the usual suspects.

Barzanistan also loves to present itself as a beacon of women’s rights and empowerment. Propaganda videos featuring women Peshmerga fighters in makeup were devoured by the western media, as well as western “leftists” eager to fetishize these “beautiful” and “exotic” femme fatales. Barzani himself frequently proclaims his dedication to women’s rights, even saying on International Women’s Day that Kurdish women have “made more sacrifices than men in history”.[5] And the western establishment loves it. But as always, the west’s cynical exploitation of “liberated” Middle Eastern women belies an ugly reality. Female genital mutilation and “honor killings” are widespread. A 2010 study found that 72% of women in Iraqi Kurdistan had been subjected to some kind of FGM.[6] In Garmyan and New Kirkuk, the FGM rate exceeds 80%. About 500 honor killings are reported every year, but the real number is far higher. An investigation commissioned by the European parliament posited that there is at least one honor killing per day in Barzanistan capital, Ebril.[7]

The other irony underlying the progressive image presented by Barzani and the western media is the rampant anti-leftist policies of the Barzani regime and the KDP. The major rival to the KDP’s ambitions of hegemony in Greater Kurdistan is the far-left Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) that was established by the formerly Marxist-Leninist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and its allies. Barzanistan has worked closely with the Turkish regime in its efforts to crush the PKK, allowing Turkish warplanes to attack PKK targets in Iraqi Kurdistan, and maintaining a blockade against the revolutionary experiment in the Federation of Northern Syria (Rojava), controlled by the Democratic Union Party (PYD), one of the KCK’s constituent parties, and its armed wings, the People’s Defense Units (YPG), and the Women’s Defense Units (YPJ). This blockade was even maintained as ISIS attempted to seize Kobane. When Yezidi militia affiliated with the YPG and YPJ liberated the Iraqi town of Sinjar from ISIS, Barzani not only levied another blockade against them, but also denounced them as “terrorists”, and had Peshmerga forces launch sporadic attacks. And this is in the aftermath of ISIS’s genocidal campaign against the Yezidi people. The KDP has sought to opportunistically make itself the de facto leader not just of the Kurdish people, but also other ethnic and religious minorities in the fight against ISIS, even taking advantage of the unrest to seize control of three towns disputed with the Iraqi central government, including the “Kurdish Jerusalem”, Kirkuk. While the KDP is against ISIS, it does not want to see the fight against ISIS take on any kind of revolutionary character, the way it has under the KCK’s leadership.

There are also longstanding links between Israel and the KDP. During the 1960s, Israel armed and trained KDP fighters, and even had advisers within Mullah Mustafa’s command center.[8] Israeli media even broadcast a photograph from the 1960s of Mullah Mustafa and Moshe Dayan embracing one another. These close ties have been maintained and nurtured by the current regime. Israeli media and politicians regularly boast about their good relations with Barzanistan, and in 2014 Netanyahu came out in support for the independence of Barzanistan. Barzani himself has publicly lamented that Iraq’s refusal to recognize Israel has prevented the opening of an Israeli consulate in Ebril.[9] The last thing the Middle East needs is an avowedly pro-Israel state in one of its most important and strategic geopolitical locations (Iraqi Kurdistan shares a sizeable border with Israel’s arch-enemy Iran, and there is no doubt that the apartheid settler state would love to take advantage of this). While Israel has some measure of support from Egypt and Jordan, and has become increasingly closer with Saudi Arabia, an independent Barzanistan would offer to Zionism the unwavering and uncritical regional ally it has never had. Zionism has deep popular support from among the KDP’s constituency, and even friendly relations with the PUK. KDP cybertrolls have become a source of free PR for Israel, winning over both the “sensible centrists” and the hardcore neo-conservatives by pandering to their anti-Arab and anti-Islamic sentiments. Beyond their pro-Zionism, the KDP crowd exhibits in general an Uncle Tom mentality towards the west, seeking to prove themselves as honorary westerners and defenders of “liberal” values; i.e. going along with whatever the foreign policy of the United States, and to a lesser extent the EU, is at the moment.

Israel is not the only reactionary regional power excited at the possibility of an independent Barzanistan. In the wake of the fallout between Saudi Arabia and Qatar, Saudi Arabia made vocal its support for Kurdish independence; the official Twitter account of the Saudi regime even Tweeting #standwithkurdistan. Their support comes with a caveat; the KSA and its allies want to be allowed to build military bases in Barzanistan to “counter” “Iranian influence” in exchange for supporting its independence. But it is obvious Saudi Arabia would not stop with just building military bases.[10] The effects of Saudi soft power to spread their ultra-fundamentalist brand of Islam is well-documented. Saudi-funded madrassas and mosques are hotbeds of jihadist recruitment, and have served as a kind of cultural imperialism, undermining and distorting the foundations of liberal-minded societies throughout the Third World. Though Barzanistan is a deeply conservative and reactionary society, Islamism has been mostly kept at bay. Combined, the two Islamist political parties only have sixteen seats in the KRG parliament. And for all of the KDP’s faults, it has maintained a relative level of secularism; religiously motivated terrorist attacks have been rare in Barzanistan. There should be no doubt that with Saudi troops and influence, this secularism will soon be on the defensive.

Barzanistan independence would also serve to deal the final blow to what’s left of the Iraqi state. US foreign policy advisers have made no secret of their plans to partition the Middle East up into sectarian statelets, making the region safer for imperialism. Though Iraqi Prime Minister Abadi has said he would respect the results of an independence referendum, he also protested to Barzani’s unilaterally calling for one, a move which directly contravenes Iraq’s constitution which stipulates that any territorial changes must be approved by the Iraqi state as a whole. There is no doubt that Iraqi Kurds have faced grave injustices in the past by the Iraqi state, but that does not justify unilateral moves like Barzani’s, nor does it justify his outright annexation of the disputed territories. Additionally, around 20% of Iraq’s oil reserves are found in Barzanistan and the areas disputed between the KRG and the Iraqi central government. The Iraqi people have already had most of their oil wealth plundered from them by foreign multinationals that swept in when the previously nationalized oil industry was privatized in the aftermath of the US invasion. If an independence referendum is inevitable at this point, its parameters should be negotiated in accordance with the Iraqi constitution. Iraqis have already faced enough wholesale disenfranchisement from their political system and resources.

Besides the immense benefits for imperialism an independent Barzanistan would provide, there is also a far more glaring problem with Barzani’s independence plans. Iraqi Kurdistan is only one of four regions of historic Kurdistan, and in terms of population, it comes in third, at about 6.5 million. Depending on the overall number of Kurds, that’s only about 14-21% of the total Kurdish population. The majority of Kurds are living in Turkish Kurdistan, which is the historic center of the Kurdish nation. Kurds in Turkey have been subjected to decades of political and cultural repression, not to mention wholesale ethnic cleansing. Until recently, even speaking Kurdish in private was illegal in Turkey. And with the heads of the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP) in prison, and Erdogan’s renewed war against the PKK, the situation is grim. Kurds have not fared much better in Iran, either, which hosts the second-largest Kurdish population. During the reactionary terror that delivered Iran over to theocracy, Khomeini declared “jihad” against Iranian Kurdistan, a center of revolutionary leftist and communist activity in Iran. Iranian security services regularly rape, torture, and murder Kurdish leftists, and in the aftermath of major rioting in Mahabad in 2015, the Kurdish leftists resumed the armed struggle against the theocratic regime, saying the situation had become unbearable. And in Syria, from the 1960s until the start of the civil war, most Syrian Kurds were not even citizens, and subjected to poverty and discrimination. The Assad government still refuses to negotiate the establishment of a Kurdish autonomous region despite pressure from Russia to do so. The establishment of an independent Barzanistan, essentially a rump Kurdistan, would allow these regimes to escalate the repression against their Kurdish populations, and more easily justify denying their right to self-determination. Nowhere would the danger be greater than in Turkey, where Erdogan’s combination of traditional chauvinist Turkish ultra-nationalism and Ottoman-era Islamism has taken on frighteningly repressive dimensions with the backing of the Trump White House. The Kurds themselves would be among the primary losers of such “independence”.

Leftists have long been at odds on how to respond to the “Kurdish question”. The Barzani regime’s attempts to monopolize the entire discussion has led many leftists to denounce not just Kurdish self-determination as an imperialist plot, but also the Kurds themselves as being imperialist stooges. The KCK shoulders a certain amount of responsibility, too, with its at-times opportunistic behavior and wavering overtures to American imperialism alienating even their own allies. The left has a duty to uphold the right of oppressed nations to self-determination, and there can be little doubt that the Kurds are an oppressed nation, but uncritically endorsing any independence movement, regardless of its goals and backers is playing a dangerous game. As Lenin said, those looking for a “pure” revolution will never find it, and those who outright reject the Kurdish struggle because there is no “perfect” Kurdish socialist organization are just as foolish as those taking a completely uncritical stance. It is absolutely possible to support Kurdish self-determination while also rejecting and opposing the reactionary and imperialist attempts by Barzani and the KDP, the US, and Israel to establish an “independent Kurdistan”. Difficult questions call for critical thinking and nuanced conclusions. At the same time, leftists outside of the Middle East announcing positions and their “support” for or against an issue has little to no material effect. Those in the first world who want to support oppressed nations would best be served by mobilizing against their own governments first, the source of much of this oppression, instead of making hollow declarations on Facebook or Twitter.

[1] Pike, Otis. CIA: The Pike Report. Nottingham: Spokesman, 1977. 212. Print.
[2] An exhaustive list of human rights violations committed by the Kurdistan Regional Government against dissidents can be found here: http://ekurd.net/related-articles/freedom-of-expression-and-journalism-in-iraqi-kurdistan
[3]  "Barzani's KDP Targets Paper That Alleged Oil Smuggling." Barzani’s KDP Targets Paper That Alleged Oil Smuggling. Committee to Protect Journalists, 05 Aug. 2010. Web. 07 June 2017.
[4] Rubin, Michael. "Is Iraqi Kurdistan a Good Ally?" Middle East Forum. AEI Middle Eastern Outlook, Jan. 2008. Web. 08 June 2017.
[5]  "Kurdish Women Made More Sacrifices than Men in History: Barzani." Kurdistan24.net. Ed. Karzan Sulaivany. Kurdistan24, n.d. Web. 15 June 2017.
[6]  "Female Genital Mutilation in Iraqi Kurdistan: An Empirical Study by WADI." (2013): n. pag. 2010. Web. 7 June 2017.
[7] Kurdish Human Rights Project. "The Increase in Kurdish Women Committing Suicide." (n.d.): n. pag. European Parliament. Directorate for Citizens' Rights and Constitutional Affairs, June 2007. Web. 8 June 2017.
[8] Entessar, Nader. "Chapter 5: Kurdish Politics in Regional Context." Kurdish Politics in the Middle East. Lanham: Lexington, 2010. 161. Print.
[9] Baig, Sadi. "A Clean Break for Israel." Asia Times, 30 June 2004. Web. 08 June 2017.
[10]  "Source: S. Arabia Intends to Builds Military Bases in Iraq's Kurdistan in Return for Supporting Independence." Farsnews. Fars News Agency, 11 June 2017. Web. 15 June 2017.