We come from a time of disorganization and strategic confusion, developing our theories behind closed doors while social conflict recedes under the continuous blows of capital. It is a reality we must face head-on: we are experiencing a palpable retreat in the mass struggle. Not so long ago, evictions could be stopped at the doorstep; today, the few that are halted are fought in the cold of the courts, under the protection of a moratorium that will soon expire. Levels of union conflict are minimal, and we on the radical left painfully accept a position of minority status and fragmentation.
This inertia is not a coincidence; it is the confirmation of the definitive exhaustion of the struggle paradigm of the previous political cycle. It has reached its limits; it has crashed against the wall of capitalist reality.
However, far from succumbing to defeatism, there is movement in our local offices, assemblies, and collective meetings. A new generation of activists, together with renewed political forces, refuses to accept capitulation. Today we are witnessing fascinating debates taking place within mass organizations-and within the revolutionary movement itself. The recent splits, new organizations, reassessments, and self-criticisms reveal a deep and undeniable yearning: there is a hunger to recover a tradition of genuine struggle. There is a will to take stock, to update our theory, and to devise a strategy that will restore our real and decisive role within our class.
But herein lies a contradiction and a cause of stagnation: a significant part of this theoretical ferment, this strategic richness, occurs within each organization and is not shared with the movement as a whole.
It is only right to acknowledge those who are already paving the way. Spaces for reflection and debate, such as those convened by Zona de Estrategia, recent calls for dialogue and sharing-like the valuable statement from our comrades at Ignis or the Marxism and Strategy Conference of the CRT (Revolutionary Workers' Current)-the initiatives of Anticapitalistas, and the call for a united front proposed by the Socialist Movement, demonstrate that the will to build bridges and raise the theoretical level is already alive. These are steps in the right direction, which we applaud. However, it is urgent that they not be the exception; we need to generalize them.
We speak directly to the various anarchist and communist groups; to organizations with revolutionary intentions. To those who, from outside institutional channels, believe in the working class as the only historical subject capable of dismantling this system. We start from the premise that our class is diverse and that our emancipation demands a direct and uncompromising fight against all the structural oppressions that affect it, understanding that our struggle goes far beyond mere economic exploitation.
The tradition of the labor movement taught us to unite when conditions demand it. And we uphold this: we will share strikes, picket lines, unions, and evictions when social conflict requires it, maturely accepting that our organizational paths at the political level may differ. However, today we need to take a further step. We need to break the isolation.
We call for sharing not only the conclusions, but also the debates. Let's lose the fear of expressing our doubts. If we are rethinking our strategy and taking stock, let's do so in a climate of genuine camaraderie. Let us foster joint forums, share articles in our publications, and organize meetings and roundtables where tactical or strategic disagreements are not grounds for excommunication, but rather the necessary driving force to sharpen our shared theory and propel collective progress.
The time for eyeing each other askance, for competing to be the purest vanguard of a movement in decline, must be over. Capital gives us no respite, and the reorganization of our class demands that we rise to the occasion, with boldness, without dogma, and without sectarianism.
We need to be organized and engaged in dialogue. Let this be a call to class struggle; a step forward for the joint advancement of the proletariat's political struggle. Comrades, we'll see you in the streets and in the debates.
T. Morago
https://regeneracionlibertaria.org/2026/03/17/comunistas-anarquistas-acudamos-a-la-lucha-de-clases/
_________________________________________
Link: (en) Spain, Regeneracion: Communists, anarchists, let us join the class struggle - A Call to Class Struggle By LIZA (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]
Source: A-infos-en@ainfos.ca
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten