Witness to the German Revolution (11 page)

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Authors: Victor Serge

Tags: #History, #Europe, #Former Soviet Republics, #Germany, #Modern, #20th Century, #Political Science, #Political Ideologies, #Communism; Post-Communism & Socialism

BOOK: Witness to the German Revolution
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The bourgeoisie won't let a halfpenny go
“The propertied classes must agree to make sacrifices.” That is how the Stresemann-Hilferding government puts it, and we know that it is demanding the payment of various new taxes in foreign currency. An unavoidable necessity. According to the official budget report of August 20, state expenditure has increased 3,500,000 times—taking the pre-war level as one—and income 77,250 times. With a deficit of that size, the functioning of the machine will soon come to a halt. And then, if they want to make starving people work harder, they really must tell them that the rich are chipping in something…
Only there's a problem: the rich are idiots, the rich are stubborn, the rich don't want to pay. The Nation, the Republic, the
Vaterland
104
can rot, I'm keeping my money! The association of Saxon industrialists has written to citizen Hilferding to state that the new taxes are too high; they can't pay. The landowning deputies in the Reichstag, appropriately harangued by Herr Helfferich—one of those morally responsible for Rathenau's murder—are demanding “dictatorship against the parties and against the mobs on the streets” and…lowering of taxes. Traders in Berlin are preparing to sack their staff and close their shops on October 1, if taxes remain at
their present level. After all, they are fleecing the consumers as best they can, and they still can't make a living! A strike in the markets is being organized for the same reasons; the proprietors of cafés and restaurants are getting excited, protesting, talking of closing down… The Chambers of Commerce have declared that certain taxation measures cannot be applied. Small traders and manufacturers have ceased activity, killing two birds with one stone, hitting the proletariat and the tax collectors.
This spontaneous resistance by obstinate capitalists who won't yield a halfpenny, at a time when the very existence of bourgeois society is at stake, shows just how deep and insoluble are the internal contradictions which mark the doom of the capitalist system. As it is, they seem to be condemning the efforts of Stresemann and Hilferding to failure: these belated saviours of the bourgeoisie may make it scream, but will not succeed in making it pay even the maintenance expenses of the state; it will pay only when the working class has it by the throat. And they won't succeed in making the proletarians, who want to see things resolved, work harder than they can or will.
Phynances and stupidity
The day before yesterday, September 5, at Berlin, the dollar was quoted at 19,500,000 marks. The intervention by the Reichsbank on the stock exchange had no effect except to transfer a certain number of millions of gold marks into the pockets of the speculators. And yesterday, the dollar was worth 46,000,000; today it's worth 60,000,000. What will it be worth tomorrow? A hundred million? Now it is quite simply to be feared that in a few days the printed paper of the German state will no longer be accepted by foreign financiers. The most recent effort by the Reichsbank to stabilize the mark was of such an imbecile nature that the whole bourgeois press has made it public. The
Berliner Tageblatt
has told how
the Reichsbank intervention lowered the price of the dollar and the pound sterling, for a few moments. The stock exchange pirates had merely to buy the foreign currency sold by the government agents cheap—so as to sell it again half an hour later at a higher price…
Herr Helfferich proposes
Alarmed by the fresh collapse of the mark, the Stresemann-Helfferich government is proposing to create a new German paper money for which the standard of value would be not gold but corn. Helfferich, the agent of the big landowners who want to restore the monarchy, the man involved in the Rathenau assassination, has clearly learned from the experience of Soviet Russia with its corn loans. The paper money he proposes to issue will be guaranteed by the private sector, in particular by agriculture, that is, by the big landowners. Henceforward all German finances will be in the hands of a landowning oligarchy. A fine plan that is! The only outcome of the present crisis would be to allow the landowners to rob the Reichsbank in a respectable fashion and to establish a sort of economic dictatorship.
Helfferich, a pompous scoundrel, is enough to make you laugh. Does he really imagine that, in the present stage of the class struggle, it is possible to capture power by a device appropriate to starvers and usurers?
The Great Coalition plots against the working class.
It is said that the government is preparing dictatorial measures. This is stated and reiterated every evening. But the financial and the overall situation have got so much worse in the last few days that there must be some truth in these rumors which are getting more and more detailed. A decree on the compulsory surrender of foreign currency is due to appear any day now. A strong man “commissar” will, it is said, have the responsibility for applying it. There is talk of
establishing a sort of financial dictatorship of which citizen Helfferich will be the man in charge. There is talk of withdrawing the regulations which are an obstacle to exports. There is talk, finally, of government decrees on the intensification of labor, which in practice means extending the working day… All these measures will be enacted without consulting the Reichstag. Thanks to the support of the SPD, Herr Stresemann thinks he can quite openly disregard democratic and parliamentary practices. For action is necessary, and nothing can be asked of the masses without taking something from the propertied classes—or at least pretending to take it. The requisition of foreign currency will obviously run up against so many obstacles that it will inevitably fail to a very large extent. But its consequence will be to legitimize the legal, or rather the dictatorial, intensification of the exploitation of labor.
Note that the Great Coalition of bourgeois parties and the SPD is preparing this attack on the basic rights of the working class at the very moment when unemployment is spreading in all industrial centers and in all industries…
The continuing inflation was putting increasing strains on German national
unity. The Ruhr occupation continued, and the right wing government in
Bavaria was increasingly in conflict with the policies of Stresemann's “Great
Coalition.” Meanwhile in Thuringia the possibility emerged of a KPD-SPD
coalition government.
The Ruhr profiteers
Correspondance internationale
, September 15, 1923
“The inhabitants of the Ruhr themselves want to be rid of this abscess…” The abscess in question—the German expression can also
be translated as “seat of gangrene”—is the Reich's financial assistance to the Ruhr. And the newspaper which is using these vigorous terms is none other than the bourgeois and very patriotic
Germania
. Recently, the German press has been almost unanimous in claiming that the expenses caused by passive resistance in the Ruhr are the main cause of the financial collapse of the Reich. Under the pretext, as fallacious as it was patriotic, of financing passive resistance, all the resources of the nation have been drained off and the coffers of the state have been emptied. Since the start of the occupation, 500 million gold marks have thus passed from the Reichsbank into the safes and pockets of rich speculators, hundreds of millions have been swallowed up by the safes of the big Ruhr industrialists—while the working population, whose passive resistance is the only genuine one, and which is bearing the whole burden of it, because it is consciously defending the future of the German proletariat, has been dying of hunger. Now the scandal is becoming public. It's a bit late, for now there is nothing left to give to the insatiable profiteers of the Ruhr. These, as the Russian paper in Berlin,
Nakanunie
, puts it very well, have won a battle, not against M. Poincaré, but against their own nation.
Here we have grasped in action one of the features of dying capitalism. The dominant class, pushing the logic of its instincts to the logical conclusion, becomes the enemy of the nations whose industrial and financial power it has helped to create. As soon as a leak is discovered that will sink the massive ship, all those on board think of nothing but looting. During the Russian Revolution, the émigrés looted, sold and resold the “homeland.” The disaster of capitalist Germany has several comparable causes:
1. The flight of capital. The German capitalists moved thousands of millions of gold marks abroad.
2. Stock exchange gambling on a falling market; the enrichment
of the bandits of commerce and industry by the fall in value of the mark (the process is well known: low wages, cheap goods, victorious competition abroad—and the ultimate ruin of the country).
3. The enormous swindle that was the economic war in the Ruhr.
The capitalist is the enemy of the nation; from now on the true interests of the nations are those of the workers' International.
The victims of the Ruhr
Will they be forgotten because Mussolini has opened fire on Corfu,
105
because there is an earthquake in Japan, because Degoutte's soldiers have been trampling on them for too long and because the popular press needs some fresh, up-to-date dramas?
A hundred thousand people have been brutally driven out of their homes. The whole working-class press has been gagged. Dozens of working-class militants have been sentenced by court-martials or are waiting to be sentenced. There is killing almost every evening, at random, of those who pass along the dark streets, a gaunt worker returning home without having found tomorrow's bread… Towns are isolated as they were in medieval sieges. All postal communications in various major districts have just been suspended for three days.
In the hospitals of Frankfurt there is an old woman of 86, eight pregnant women, a mother suffering from pleurisy accompanied by her sick child, the mother of newborn twins; all these
women have been expelled from the “peacefully occupied” region by the French authorities.
There have been expulsions, and there still are expulsions, sometimes at a day's notice, sometimes at one hour's, of numerous workers' families, including old people, invalids and newborn children. Up to September 4, there had been 1,600 hundred expulsions in the Palatinate alone. Obviously the great majority of these were poor people.
And these impoverished people are at one and the same time making the fortune of the German profiteers in the Ruhr and the careers of General Degoutte's zealous underlings.
As far as we know, not a single voice has been raised in the advanced French press to stigmatize these disgraceful facts. The press of the French bourgeoisie in 1923 is as servile towards imperialism as the German press was in 1914. In 1914, 93 German intellectuals, the cream of the universities and the literary salons, spoke out in support of the invasion of Belgium. In 1923 the mandarins of the Sorbonne, the Collège de France and the Académie,
106
of all the professorial chairs and all the institutions of higher learning, are silent at the occupation of the Ruhr. All bourgeoisies, all imperialisms, all literary lackeys are the same…
A bluff: the confiscation of foreign currency
While notes for a 100 million marks are being hurriedly printed, Herr Stresemann, after a speech on the “age of revolutions” (to Berlin journalists on September 7), has again put on his dictator's mask. On September 8, an extraordinary decree appeared on the confiscation of foreign currency and securities. Its terms temporar-ily
suspend articles 115, 117 and 153 of the constitution (inviolability of goods, residences and the mail). A high commissioner has been given the most extensive powers to confiscate foreign currency that has been held without permission. The confiscation of all property and long prison sentences will be imposed on those who resist the law. The rich must put the interests of the homeland first! Are you satisfied, proletarian? Just to please you, we have even struck a great knife-blow at the constitution…
Immune from confiscation are foreign currency and banknotes held for commercial and industrial purposes, those necessary for companies operating in Germany, those belonging to people normally resident abroad or to people who receive them “by virtue of moral obligations.” Very good. But then which currency can be confiscated? What speculator is such an imbecile that he cannot invoke—with documents to back him up—commercial and industrial necessities in addition to the highest moral obligations?
At the very most this decree will enable the government to rob a few unfortunate holders of small amounts of currency, to assist some shady stock exchange vendettas, and to foster a demagogic agitation around some prosecutions which will be useful to citizen Hilferding.
A truth of Herr Stinnes
Under no obligation to cultivate the bluff of the taxation measures introduced by Stresemann and Hilferding, the journalists getting paid by Stinnes are continuing their direct campaign against the working class.
Under the headline “Truth,” an “important figure writing anonymously” recently stated in the
Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung
(leading article of September 8) that “to claim that Germany can be rescued from its current dangerous situation by taxing the propertied
classes is a lie.” For the truth is that “the German people must work at least two hours more, with at least the same intensity as before the war.” In so many words.
This is the viewpoint of business circles who don't want to pay. Their resistance to taxes is growing, taking on varied aspects. On September 3 and 4, Berlin markets were completely out of butter and fats. The landowners in Herr Helfferich's party
107
don't want to sell them for paper money and are thus showing the government their disapproval of its taxation policy. The Bavarian industrialists are protesting against the new tax laws. The Saxon farmers too. In Bavaria, the whole of public opinion has been mobilized to this end. We should remember that the taxes on capital whose repeal they are demanding were voted for under Cuno on the eve of the last general strike in an atmosphere of growing anxiety. When the factory committees grabbed it by the scruff of the neck, the German bourgeoisie shouted out: “All right, I'll pay.” But citizens Hilferding and Severing have soothed its fears. It is tightening its purse strings once more. It has lost sight of the fact that, despite being sometimes legally dissolved, the factory committees are nonetheless a little stronger every day.

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