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"Whether...a change from the supremacy of natural science to a new social science will take place...depends on one factor: how many brilliant, learned, disciplined, and caring men and women are attracted by the new challenge...."
-- Erich Fromm, To Have or to Be, 1976, p.161 -- L O V E -- |
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Introduction The People For a Cooperative Society program for existential change is unique and powerful because it combines two readily complementary ideas, each of which, individually, is powerful and longstanding: (1.) a cooperative society, where everyone works together for the common (and individual) good, expressed in selected portions of the work and teachings of Erich Fromm, Daniel De Leon, Karl Marx, and others, and (2.) the notion of "brotherly love," or the "love ethic," expressed in selected portions of the work and teachings of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Mohandas "Mahatma" Gandhi, Jesus, Leo Buscaglia, Erich Fromm, and others. The love ethic is also known in Greek as agape (ah goh' pay). The entire PCS program is communicated in neutral language people find friendly and accessible, a deliberate outreach methodology comprising a powerful third leg of the program. Transference of ownership of industry from private to public is a key part of the PCS program, but might not necessarily create the long-dreamt of "brotherhood of man." Thus, PCS also seeks a concomitant personal transformation away from the pathological narcissism engendered by capitalism, toward this ethic of "brotherly love." This principle, taught from childhood, would comprise the moral and ethical (indeed, the "socio-behavioral") underpinning of the new society. The moral and ethical infrastructure of a Cooperative System will be based explicitly on the "love ethic." It will be taught to, and reinforced in, everyone from infancy onward, a kind of "ethico-behavioral" overlay to the new society. From Each According to His Abilities, to Each According to His Needs So wrote Louis Blanc, in a principal later echoed by Karl Marx. In an obvious conclusion of behavioral logic that the entire movement for economic democracy seems to have missed, anyone who takes Blanc's principal seriously must grapple with the love ethic, for the principle implies the love ethic. I am not going to work as hard as, or perhaps even harder than you, knowing that my remuneration may be the same as, or even less than yours, unless I see you as my brother. Indeed--unless I love you. The PCS program thus consists not merely in a new political-economic arrangement, but a dramatically new and powerful "socio-behavioral" arrangement, as well, to guide the character of our interpersonal interactions in the new society. This latter arrangement is based on an enhanced set of interpersonal values and principles that are the most elevated ever conceived by the human mind or heart, those of brotherly love. While the entire PCS program is revolutionary, this latter component, the new socio-behavioral arrangement, in fact comprises a seminal paradigm of personal and social relations, especially when understood as part of a larger comprehensive program for revolutionary social change. Indeed, how does one have radical social transformation without one of the most radically transformational ideas of all time--love? We would not venture to predict, at this early stage, the exact role the love ethic will play in the new society, but the notion that it must play some kind of substantive role is an official part of the PCS program, and a key part of what makes PCS powerful and unique among all groups working for radical social change. What is It The love ethic, as conceptualized by PCS and properly understood, is not a passive, wishy-washy, "turn the other cheek" philosophy, but a strong, enlightened paradigm defined as an active concern for the needs and welfare of others, in approximate proportion to our concern for our own needs and welfare. Implied are active behaviors and attitudes like respect, tolerance, courtesy, patience, charity, generosity, sensitivity, concern, compassion, and empathy. A great historical esteem attaches to the principle of love, or the "love ethic." Deservedly so, for this principle is arguably the most powerful social force available to humankind. Christ taught a variant of it; King taught a variant of it; Gandhi taught a variant of it. It is powerful, elegant, and already widely (if superficially), promulgated. It is strongly associated with the best and most elevated actions of humankind. Love is perhaps our most transformative power and principle. Accordingly, how could one proffer a program of genuine and deeply transformative social change without it? Before and After the Revolution The principle of love has important, if not profound, implications for the cooperative project, both before the Social Transformation (i.e. the "revolution"), in working for a cooperative society, and later, once that future society has been established. Here's why:
Rosa Luxemburg Indeed, the remarks below of political revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg reasonably paraphrase the Cooperative argument, that personal transformation and change are required if the revolution is to succeed; a change in ownership is not enough. She makes explicit that the success of the revolution requires "...a complete inner rebirth of the proletarian." Thus does she reject a narrow Marxist materialism or historicity, and affirm the Cooperative program plank calling for personal change: In a socialist society the industrialist with his whip ceases to exist. The workers are free and equal human beings who work for their own well-being and benefit. That means by themselves, working on their own initiative...and delivering the most reliable and meticulous work. ... In a word: the worker in a socialist economy must show that he can work hard and properly, keep discipline and give his best without the whip of hunger and without the capitalist and his slave-driver behind him. This calls for inner self-discipline, intellectual maturity, moral ardour, a sense of dignity and responsibility, a complete inner rebirth of the proletarian. Her point comes through clearly enough, as she ties the motivation of people to work under socialism with their new-found affinity for, and toward, each other. What can the principal and value at the core of this affinity be, if not brotherly love? Thus does People For a Cooperative Society include this notion of brotherly love, or agape, in its political program! Conclusion All things considered, then, People For a Cooperative Society believes the love ethic must play an important role in any serious attempt at social transformation, whatever the exact nature of that role turns out to be. And thus do we urge everyone to learn about the principle of love. Insofar as said principle resonates, we urge you even to live this principle. This should help improve oneself, present-day society, and the efficacy of the movement for a cooperative society. And it could make the critical difference between the success or failure of the larger revolution, once the formal transition to public ownership is complete. Note People For a Cooperative Society is an advocacy organization. It has no religious or theological bearing, underpinning, or tendency of any kind, whatever, and no "spiritual" one beyond what is explicitly stated at this website. PCS and its program draw upon the work of religious figures only insofar as that work speaks to the power and value of the love ethic, or the desirability of a cooperative mode of social organization. Our citation or valuing of this work or these principals in no way accepts or implies any acceptance of any larger metaphysical system. |
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~ Advocating the Necessity of Economic & Personal Change ~ - People For a Cooperative Society - |