by Paul Rackemann: reflections on Che Guevara's pamphlet on the development of cadres, reprinted by the Sons of Kokoda, and distributed by the Australia First Party.
    
 One must remember that military men are in some respects different from
 men of peace, and the relationships within a Communist organisation are
 in some respects different from the relationships between free members 
of a voluntary organisation in a society that is not actually in the 
throes of armed conflict.
     Comrade Guevara
 appears to be looking down on his revolutionary group from above. He 
also assumes responsibility for an entire aspect of society that we can 
leave alone, i.e. economic production.
     As long as we allow the 
existence of a stable money system and do not interfere unnecessarily in
 the affairs of commercial firms, we can confidently expect them to 
provide for the economic wants of our community. That is one enormous 
group of cadres we shall not have to train. 
     He blathers on 
about "errors" which are only to be expected when a bunch of soldiers, 
ignorant of the principles of economics, and equally ignorant of the 
particular technical knowledge of every industry which can only be known
 by those actively engaged in it, blithely take command and start 
issuing orders. He is also, of course, worried about the inevitable 
development of a class of officers or officials who, having acquired 
power and some degree of expertise, begin to settle into their positions
 and make themselves comfortable. 
     From what I can recall, Trotsky blathered on about these sorts of "errors" as well. 
     Che's
 romantic ideas about the development of cadres, in special schools mind
 you, fall down because he and his professors are all working from 
mistaken assumptions. He shows a childlike belief in the great modern 
god, Education, which will fail like all the other gods, because it 
focusses on doctrine and tries to fight reality. 
     We as 
nationalists are not fighting the better aspect of human nature. We are 
certainly fighting the craven compulsion to conform to the corrupt 
doctrines of a treacherous ruling elite. We are not fighting the 
economic instincts of man, which lead to self-interested economic 
efforts and the existence of a range of large and small economic units 
specialising in various parts of the productive process. We may be 
fighting the political power of large economic units, which seek to 
create a homogenous, non-white market which they can exploit. We are 
certainly fighting the enormous industry of deception, which calls 
itself education and the media, and which ties large numbers of rather 
silly and dishonest people to a depraved doctrine, which they must pass 
on to get their wages. 
     We may need to "develop cadres," as Che
 says, but we don't need to do it in the way he envisages. We mostly 
need to develop people with an immunity to the corrupt doctrines of the 
Establishment, an ability to think without being frightened by the 
programming so thoroughly inculcated by the scum in authority. We don't 
need to create superhumans, as Che thinks he 
does: we simply need to create free minds. Minds that are free will not 
willingly co-operate in their own destruction by the relatives of man. 
04 January 2013
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In the end, the success of a society depends on the quality of humans this society got!
ReplyDelete....And we are looking for a few good men...!!!
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