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Statement of the Humanist Movement |
1. Introduction
2. Global Capital
3. Real Democracy versus Formal Democracy
4. The Humanist Position
5. From Naive Humanism to Conscious Humanism
6. The Anti-Humanist Camp
7. Humanist Action Fronts
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1. Introduction
Humanists are women and men of this century, of this time. They recognize the achievements
of humanism throughout history, and find inspiration in the contributions of many
cultures, not only those that today occupy center stage. They are also men and women who
recognize that this century and this millennium are drawing to a close, and their project
is a new world. Humanists feel that their history is very long and that their future will
be even longer. As optimists who believe in freedom and social progress, they fix their
gaze on the future, while striving to overcome the general crisis of today. Humanists are
internationalists, aspiring to a universal human nation. While understanding the
world they live in as a single whole, humanists act in their immediate environments.
Humanists seek not a uniform world, but a world of multiplicity: diverse in ethnicity,
languages and customs; diverse in local and regional autonomy; diverse in ideas and
aspirations; diverse in beliefs, whether atheist or religious; diverse in occupations and
in creativity. Humanists do not want masters, they have no fondness for authority figures
or bosses. Nor do they see themselves as representatives or bosses of anyone else.
Humanists want neither a centralized state nor a para-state in its place. They want
neither armed gangs nor a police state in their place. But a wall has arisen between
humanist aspirations and the realities of todays world. The time has come to tear
down that wall. To do this, all humanists of the world must unite.
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2. Global Capital
This is the great universal truth: Money is everything. Money is
government, money is law, money is power. Money is basically sustenance, but more than
this it is art, it is philosophy, it is religion. Nothing is done without money, nothing
is possible without money. There are no personal relationships without money, there is no
intimacy without money. Even peaceful solitude depends on money.
But our relationship with this "universal truth" is contradictory. Most people
do not like this state of affairs. And so we find ourselves subject to the tyranny of
money a tyranny that is not abstract, for it has a name, representatives, agents,
and well-established procedures.
Today, we are no longer dealing with feudal economies, national industries, or even
regional interests. Today, the question is how the surviving economic forms will
accommodate to the new dictates of international finance capital. Nothing escapes, as
capital worldwide continues to concentrate in ever fewer hands until even the
nation state depends for its survival on credit and loans. All must beg for investment and
provide guarantees that give the banking system the ultimate say in decisions. The time is
fast approaching when even companies themselves, when every rural area as well as every
city, will all be the undisputed property of the banking system. The time of the
para-state is coming, a time in which the old order will be swept away.
At the same time, the traditional bonds of solidarity that once joined people together are
fast dissolving. We are witnessing the disintegration of the social fabric, and in its
place find millions of isolated human beings living disconnected lives, indifferent to
each other despite their common suffering. Big capital dominates not only our objectivity,
through its control of the means of production, but also our subjectivity, through its
control of the means of communication and information.
Under these conditions, those who control capital have the power and technology to do as
they please with both our material and our human resources. They deplete irreplaceable
natural resources and act with growing disregard for the human being. And just as they
have drained everything from companies, industries, and whole governments, so have they
deprived even science of its meaning reducing it to technologies used to generate
poverty, destruction, and unemployment.
Humanists do not overstate their case when they contend that the world is now
technologically capable of swiftly resolving the problems in employment, food, health
care, housing, and education that exist today across vast regions of the planet. If this
possibility is not being realized, it is simply because it is prevented by the monstrous
speculation of big capital.
By now big capital has exhausted the stage of market economies, and has begun to
discipline society to accept the chaos it has itself produced. Yet in the presence of this
growing irrationality, it is not the voices of reason that we hear raised in dialectical
opposition. Rather, it is the darkest forms of racism, fundamentalism, and fanaticism that
are on the rise. And if groups and whole regions are increasingly guided by this new
irrationalism, then the space for constructive action by progressive forces will diminish
day by day.
On the other hand, millions of working people have already come to recognize that the
centralized state is as much a sham as capitalist democracy. And just as working people
are standing up against corrupt union bosses, more than ever citizens are questioning
their governments and political parties. But it is necessary to give a constructive
orientation to these phenomena, which will otherwise stagnate and remain nothing more than
spontaneous protests that lead nowhere. For something new to happen, a dialogue about the
fundamental factors of our economy must begin in the heart of the community.
For humanists, labor and capital are the principal factors in economic production, while
speculation and usury are extraneous. In the present economic circumstances, humanists
struggle to totally transform the absurd relationship that has existed between these
factors. Until now we have been told that capital receives the profits while workers
receive wages, an inequity that has always been justified by the "risk" that
capital assumes in investing as though working people do not risk both their
present and their future amid the uncertainties of unemployment and economic crisis.
Another factor in play is management and decision making in the operation of each company.
Earnings not set aside for reinvestment in the enterprise, not used for expansion or
diversification, are increasingly diverted into financial speculation, as are profits not
used to create new sources of work.
The struggle of working people must therefore be to require maximum productive return from
capital. But this cannot happen unless management and directorships are cooperatively
shared. How else will it be possible to avoid massive layoffs, business closures, and even
the loss of entire industries? For the greatest harm comes from under-investment,
fraudulent bankruptcies, forced acquisition of debt, and capital flight not from
profits realized through increased productivity. And if some persist in calling for
workers to take possession of the means of production following nineteenth-century
teachings, they will have to seriously consider the recent failures of real socialism.
As for the argument that treating capital the same way work is treated will only speed its
flight to more advantageous areas, it must be pointed out that this cannot go on much
longer because the irrationality of the present economic system is leading to saturation
and crisis worldwide. Moreover, this argument, apart from embracing a radical immorality,
ignores the historical process in which capital is steadily being transferred to the
banking system. As a result, employers and business people are being reduced to the status
of employees, stripped of decision-making power in a lengthening chain of command in which
they maintain only the appearance of autonomy. And as the recession continues to deepen,
these same business people will begin to consider these points more seriously.
Humanists feel the need to act not only on employment issues, but also politically to
prevent the State from being solely an instrument of international capital, to ensure a
just relationship among the factors of production, and to restore to society its stolen
autonomy.
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3. Real Democracy versus Formal Democracy
The edifice of democracy has fallen into ruin as its foundations the
separation of powers, representative government, and respect for minorities have
fallen into ruin.
The theoretical separation of powers is nonsense. Even a cursory examination of the
practices surrounding the origin and composition of the different powers reveals the
intimate relationships that link them to each other. And things could hardly be otherwise,
for they all form part of one same system. In nation after nation we see one branch
gaining supremacy over the others, functions being usurped, corruption and irregularities
surfacing all corresponding to the changing global economic and political situation
of each country.
As for representative government, since the extension of universal suffrage people have
believed that only a single act is involved when they elect their representative and their
representative carries out the mandate received. But as time has passed, people have come
to see clearly that there are in fact two acts: a first in which the many elect the few,
and a second in which those few betray the many, representing interests alien to the
mandate they received. And this corruption is fed within the political parties, now
reduced to little more than a handful of leaders who are totally out of touch with the
needs of the people. Through the party machinery, powerful interests finance candidates
and then dictate the policies they must follow. This state of affairs reveals a profound
crisis in the contemporary conception and implementation of representative democracy.
Humanists struggle to transform the practice of representative government, giving the
highest priority to consulting the people directly through referenda, plebiscites, and
direct election of candidates. However, in many countries there are still laws that
subordinate independent candidates to political parties, or rather to political
maneuvering and financial restrictions that prevent them from even reaching the ballot and
the free expression of the will of the people.
Every constitution or law that prevents the full possibility of every citizen to elect and
to be elected makes a mockery of real democracy, which is above all such legal
restrictions. And in order for there to be true equality of opportunity, during elections
the news media must be placed at the service of the people, providing all candidates with
exactly the same opportunities to communicate with the people.
To address the problem that elected officials regularly fail to carry out their campaign
promises, there is also a need to enact laws of political responsibility that will
subject such officials to censure, revocation of powers, recall from office, and loss of
immunity. The current alternative, under which parties or individuals who do not fulfill
their campaign promises risk defeat in future elections, in practice does not hinder in
the least the politicians second act betraying the people they represent.
As for directly consulting the people on the most urgent issues, every day the
possibilities to do so increase through the use of technology. This does not mean simply
giving greater importance to easily manipulated opinion polls and surveys. What it does
mean is to facilitate real participation and direct voting by means of todays
advanced computational and communications technologies.
In real democracy, all minorities must be provided with the protections that correspond to
their right to representation, as well as all measures needed to advance in practice their
full inclusion, participation, and development.
Today, minorities the world over who are the targets of xenophobia and discrimination make
anguished pleas for recognition. It is the responsibility of humanists everywhere to bring
this issue to the fore, leading the struggle to overcome such neo-fascism, whether overt
or covert. In short, to struggle for the rights of minorities is to struggle for the
rights of all human beings.
Under the coercion of centralized states today no more than the unfeeling
instruments of big capital many countries with diverse populations subject entire
provinces, regions, or autonomous groups to this same kind of discrimination. This must
end through the adoption of federal forms of organization, through which real political
power will return to the hands of these historical and cultural entities.
In sum, to give highest priority to the issues of capital and labor, real democracy, and
decentralization of the apparatus of the State, is to set the political struggle on the
path toward creating a new kind of society a flexible society constantly changing
in harmony with the changing needs of the people, who are now suffocated more each day by
their dependence on an inhuman system.
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4. The Humanist Position
Humanist action does not draw its inspiration from imaginative theories
about God, nature, society, or history. Rather, it begins with lifes necessities,
which consist most elementally of avoiding pain and moving toward pleasure. Yet human life
entails the additional need to foresee future necessities, based on past experience and
the intention to improve the present situation.
Human experience is not simply the product of natural physiological accumulation or
selection, as happens in all species. It is social experience and personal experience
directed toward overcoming pain in the present and avoiding it in the future. Human work,
accumulated in the productions of society, is passed on and transformed from one
generation to the next in a continuous struggle to improve the existing or natural
conditions, even those of the human body itself. Human beings must therefore be defined as
historical beings whose mode of social behavior is capable of transforming both the world
and their own nature.
Each time that individuals or human groups violently impose themselves on others, they
succeed in detaining history, turning their victims into "natural" objects.
Nature does not have intentions, and thus to negate the freedom and intentions of others
is to convert them into natural objects without intentions, objects to be used.
Human progress in its slow ascent now needs to transform both nature and society,
eliminating the violent animal appropriation of some human beings by others. When this
happens, we will pass from pre-history into a fully human history. In the meantime, we can
begin with no other central value than the human being, fully realized and completely
free. Humanists therefore declare, "Nothing above the human being, and no human being
beneath any other."
If God, the State, money, or any other entity is placed as the central value, this
subordinates the human being and creates the condition for the subsequent control or
sacrifice of other human beings. Humanists have this point very clear. Whether atheists or
religious, humanists do not start with their atheism or their faith as the basis for their
view of the world and their actions. They start with the human being and the immediate
needs of human beings. And if, in their struggle for a better world, they believe they
discover an intention that moves history in a progressive direction, they place this faith
or this discovery at the service of the human being.
Humanists address the fundamental problem: to know if one wants to live, and to decide on
the conditions in which to do so.
All forms of violence physical, economic, racial, religious, sexual, ideological,
and others that have been used to block human progress are repugnant to humanists.
For humanists, every form of discrimination, whether subtle or overt, is something to be
denounced.
Humanists are not violent, but above all they are not cowards, and because their actions
have meaning they are unafraid of facing violence. Humanists connect their personal lives
with the life of society. They do not pose such false dichotomies as viewing their own
lives as separate from the lives of those around them, and in this lies their coherence.
These issues, then, mark a clear dividing line between humanism and anti-humanism:
humanism puts labor before big capital, real democracy before formal democracy,
decentralization before centralization, anti-discrimination before discrimination, freedom
before oppression, and meaning in life before resignation, complicity, and the absurd.
Because humanism is based on freedom of choice, it offers the only valid ethic of the
present time. And because humanism believes in intention and freedom, it distinguishes
between error and bad faith, between one who is mistaken and one who is a traitor.
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5. From Naive Humanism to Conscious Humanism
It is at the base of society, in the places where people work and where
they live that humanism must convert what are now only simple isolated protests into a
conscious force oriented toward transforming the economic structures.
The struggles of spirited activists in labor unions and progressive political parties will
become more coherent as they transform the leadership of these entities, giving their
organizations a new orientation that, above short-range grievances, gives the highest
priority to the basic proposals advocated by humanism.
Vast numbers of students and teachers, already sensitive to injustice, are becoming
conscious of their will to change as the general crisis touches them. And certainly,
members of the press in contact with so much daily tragedy are today in favorable
positions to act in a humanist direction, as are those intellectuals whose creations are
at odds with the standards promoted by this inhuman system.
In the face of so much human suffering, many positions and organizations today encourage
people to unselfishly help the dispossessed and those who suffer discrimination.
Associations, volunteer groups, and large numbers of individuals are on occasion moved to
make positive contributions. Without doubt, one of their contributions is to generate
condemnations of these wrongs. However, such groups do not focus their actions on
transforming the underlying structures that give rise to the problems. Their approaches
are more closely related to humanitarianism than to conscious humanism, although among
these efforts are many conscientious protests and actions that can be extended and
deepened.
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6. The Anti-Humanist Camp
As the people continue to be suffocated by the forces of big capital,
incoherent proposals arise that gain strength by exploiting peoples discontent,
focusing it on various scapegoats. At the root of all such neo-fascism is a profound
negation of human values. Similarly, there are certain deviant environmental currents that
view nature as more important than human beings. No longer do they preach that an
environmental catastrophe is a disaster because it endangers humanity instead to
them the only problem is that human beings have damaged nature.
According to certain of these theories, the human being is somehow contaminated, and thus
contaminates nature. It would have been better, they contend, had medicine never succeeded
in its fight against disease or in prolonging human life. "Earth first!" some
cry hysterically, recalling Nazi slogans. It is but a short step from this position to
begin discriminating against cultures seen to contaminate or against "impure"
foreigners. These currents of thought may be considered anti-humanist because at bottom
they hold the human being in contempt, and in keeping with the nihilistic and suicidal
tendencies so fashionable today, their mentors reflect this self-hatred.
There is, however, a significant segment of society made up of perceptive people who
consider themselves environmentalists because they understand the gravity of the abuses
that environmentalism exposes and condemns. And if this environmentalism attains the
humanist character that corresponds, it will direct the struggle against those who are
actually generating the catastrophes big capital and its chain of destructive
industries and businesses, so closely intertwined with the military-industrial complex.
Before worrying about seals they will concern themselves with overcoming hunger,
overcrowding, infant mortality, disease, and the lack of even minimal standards of housing
and sanitation in many parts of the world. They will focus on the unemployment,
exploitation, racism, discrimination, and intolerance in a world that is so
technologically advanced, yet still generates serious environmental imbalances in the name
of ever more irrational growth.
One need not look far to see how the right wing functions as a political instrument of
anti-humanism. Dishonesty and bad faith reach such extremes that some exponents
periodically present themselves as representatives of "humanism." Take, for
example, those cunning clerics who claim to theorize on the basis of a ridiculous
"theocentric humanism." These people, who invented religious wars and
inquisitions, who put to death the very founders of western humanism, are now attempting
to appropriate the virtues of their victims. They have recently gone so far as to
"forgive the errors" of those historical humanists, and so shameless is their
semantic banditry that these representatives of anti-humanism even try to cloak themselves
with the term "humanist."
It would of course be impossible to list the full range of resources, tools, instruments,
forms, and expressions that anti-humanism has at its disposal. But having shed light on
some of their more deceptive practices should help unsuspecting humanists and those newly
realizing they are humanists as they re-think their ideas and the significance of their
social practice.
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7. Humanist Action Fronts
With the intention of becoming a broad-based social movement, the vital
force of humanism is organizing action fronts in the workplace, neighborhoods, unions, and
among social action, political, environmental, and cultural organizations. Such collective
action makes it possible for varied progressive forces, groups, and individuals to have
greater presence and influence, without losing their own identities or special
characteristics. The objective of this movement is to promote a union of forces
increasingly able to influence broad strata of the population, orienting the current
social transformation.
Humanists are neither naive nor enamored of declarations that belong to more romantic
eras, and in this sense they do not view their proposals as the most advanced expression
of social consciousness or think of their organization in an unquestioning way. Nor do
they claim to represent the majority. Humanists simply act according to their best
judgment, focusing on the changes they believe are most suitable and possible for these
times in which they happen to live.
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