Abstract
| An overview of a Marxian approach to crime and justice is set forth. The paper offers a brief critique of theory in American criminology in Part I as well as a critique of the distorted ways in which American criminology permits crime to be defined in Part II. Part III sets forth several Marxian propositions on the origins of crime in a variety of differing modes of production emphasizing the social sources of crime in capitalist systems. This section also lays out the parallel justice systems which protect sectors of the capitalist economy from the criminal justice system. Part IV suggests some features of low crime societies would be helpful as policy guides in high crime societies. |
INTRODUCTION In the paper which
follows, I would like to offer a short and clear outline of a Marxian theory of
crime. The intention here is to present in one place a coherent set of ideas
about the social, political and economic sources of crime. I will set forth some
basic propositions and discuss each briefly in the body of the paper. Before
beginning the central part of the paper, I will discuss theoretical perspectives
used to understand crime. After that I want to spend a bit of time on the
concept of crime. The last part of the paper will be given over to some general
policy considerations. The paper stands in opposition to conventional theories
of crime which locate illegal behavior outside the dynamics of the privatized
accumulation of surplus values, the privatized use of commodities, as well as
the privatized use of human beings. The paper begins with a methodological
critique of conventional theories.
PART I.
THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES. There are several theoretical perspectives,
each with variable validity which are used in American criminology to explain to
the student and the citizen how to understand the dynamics of crime. Most of
these theories are conservative in that they locate the dynamics of crime in
personal or interpersonal characteristics and, thus, exclude dominant social
institutions from critical investigation and policy considerations. The position
advanced here is that crime is too serious a matter for any such privileged
analysis. If the sources of crime are found in social institutions, then the
criminologist, the student and the citizen should know that. A Marxian theory of
crime locates the principal sources of crime in the ordinary operation of the
day to day operations of the political economy of a society as one will observe
from the proposition below. In the Marxian view, a sound policy for reducing
crime must begin with social relations.
Of the major theories of crime
differential association theory (D.A.T.) is, perhaps, the most commonly used
perspective. But D.A.T. cannot be a theory of crime since it is also a theory of
all kinds of socialization, learning and mutual influence in role relationships.
Chinese are Chinese because, among other things, they differentially associate
with Chinese people... as do French, German and the British. D.A.T. is equally a
theory of ethnocentric behaviors. Physicians differentially associate with
medical school professors, residents, interns, nurses and ill people. Physicians
are constructed by and organize their behavior as if they were physicians
through and only through such interaction. One cannot be a "physician outside
such a social life world. D.A.T. is a theory of socialization generally. So
while it is true that D.A.T. is important to the organization of criminal
behavior it may not be used in a special theory of crime. That which is a
constant across human behavior generally may not be adduced as a theory special
to one form of human behavior.
D.A.T. begs the question of why young men and women are engaging in crime. It begs the question why it is that one comes to learn and practice crime as a way of life. Still less does it tell us why the total population of criminals increase and decrease in a given society or vary greatly in size across societies. In as much as it is a theory of all human behavior, D.A.T. cannot be a particular theory of crime.
The same is true for labeling theory and societal reaction. People
labeled as thieves, prostitutes and criminals usually are, in reaction to such
labels, more like to behave in ways compatible with those labels. But the same
is true for doctors, police as well as criminologists. There is one additional
disqualifier of labeling theory as a special theory of crime. Many people who
routinely commit crime are never so labeled, never associate differentially with
such criminals and still do crime. Political criminals, corporate criminals and
white criminals are not so labeled and still systematically engage in crime over
their careers. Yet again many people do not accept labels nor do they organize
their behavior in ways consonant with labels even under the most difficult
circumstances. I have in mind ethnic groups some members of which resist
labeling "jews, niggers, wops, polacks, and japs." They try to
maintain their dignity in spite of such labeling practices. It takes a very
distorted research design to generate fundings supportive of D.A.T., labeling
theory or societal reaction theory.
Control theory
cannot be a theory of crime since, in terms of the research design theory, it
does not predict, uniquely, upon criminal behavior. In the political
crime of F.B.I. agents, C.I.A. agents, the military as well as corporate
officers and organized crime employees, there are goals, rules, sanctions,
hearings, adjudications, rewards, promotions: in a word, all the elements of
social control exist!! These people are not left loose on their own and drift
into crime because social controls have broken down. Control theory is doubly a
mystification since the theory is used as an apology for a police state in which
the crimes of the poor are differentially policed at the expense of the
collective interest in a society safe from the predations of the powerful and
oriented to democratic processes and the civil rights necessary to democracy.
When we examine stringently the wide variety of genetic, physiological,
psychological as well as interactionist theories which are currently advanced to
explain criminal behavior we find them flawed and we find them exculpating of
the larger social, political, economic and historically variable factors which,
in the Marxist perspective, are closely associated with crime.
Poverty cannot be adduced as a cause of crime in as much as there
are many very poor societies with very little crime. People in China, in
the Muslim societies, as well as most poor people in the U.S. do not commit
crime. On the other hand rich people routinely commit crime in both rich and
poor societies. Studies of corporate crime and white collar crime find such
behavior endemic. Where there is poverty and where community or social
solidarity is strongly supported, as in religious or socialist societies, the
relationship between poverty and crime disappears. In privatized societies
oriented to accumulation and with no dependable relationship to the means of
distribution, one can be sure crime is high among rich and poor alike. When
people are seen as stratified in systems of high and low social honor, one can
be sure that the persons at the lower end of the system will be victims of a
wide variety of crime and victimize each other.
And
there are lowcrime societies with all the factors currently used to explain
high crime rates. Differentiation association, labeling processes, few controls,
ethnic diversity, secularized, industrial, densely populated and genetically
diverse. Switzerland and Japan are cases in point. A good theory of crime
must have "causes" which vary with criminal behavior, must be uniquely
associated with the form of crime under examination and must be useful to lower
crime rates as social policy is based on them. Conventional theories are not
much more than careless speculation. They have no place in a respectable
criminology.
In the third part, I propose social conditions which do
vary across societies, across time and across social groups within which crime
does vary. They are radical propositions. A crimeridden society concerned
to develop good policy must consider radical transformations of society if,
indeed, these propositions are valid. It is not enough to catch criminals and to
punish them ... a good and decent society must change the conditions which
subvert the moral capacities of our young people, our business people, our
politicians and our own moralities as well. If criminology must develop better
theory, it must first develop a better conceptual apparatus with which to
apprehend crime.
PART II. THE CONCEPT OF
CRIME. The definition of crime is one of the most political processes one
may observe in criminology journals and texts. In this and other papers, I have
proposed a wide ranging definition of crime based upon a theory of human rights.
Specifically, I define crime as any act, any relationship, any social process
and social organization which subverts the human project. In this definition is
an assumption that one cannot develop as a human being nor function as a human
being without the enabling social conditions. There is also the assumption that
the unit of criminal action is as much a social relationship or a social
institution as it is a given discrete individual person. A second major failing
of contemporary criminology is the practice of defining the individual person as
the unit of theoretical analysis. A Marxian approach to crime sets social
relations, social practices, social organizations as the unit of theoretical
concern. Racism, sexism, authoritarianism as well as the distortions of class
privilege become crime under this approach. It is the C.I.A., the F.B.I., the
capitalist corporation which should be the focus of social control and social
policy. The single individual, acting alone, creating crime alone is unknown in
the real world. If D.A.T. teaches us anything, it teaches us that.
At
the same time, acts labeled as crime may be emancipatory while activities deemed
right and proper may be criminal under this view. Whoever controls the
lawmaking apparatus controls the defining process. Slave masters, feudal
lords, capitalist stockholders, nationalists, as well as racists, sexists, and
bureaucratic elites all distort the concept of crime and justice to reproduce
and extend their own special advantages at the terrible expense of workers,
women, minorities and colonial subjects. Criminologists cooperate with this bent
politics when such definitions are naively accepted.
Each exploitative
regime, elite, or class adduces theories to justify and to gloss over these
larger injustices. A decent criminology transcends the special claims of such
privileged and powerful interests and asserts as a concept of crime, that
behavior which needlessly alienates people from their full humanity. One has
only contempt for a criminology blinded to the politics of definitions; blind to
this power to define used to special advantage. One must never use only legal
specifications of crime and only legal prohibitions of activity as the basis of
theories and concepts of crime else one blind oneself to much injustice. Now I
want to end this critique of contemporary criminology in the U.S. and set forth
a more adequate history of crime.
PART III. MARXIAN
PROPOSITIONS OF CRIME. The propositions set out below delineate some of
the social conditions which a Marxian theory encompasses in the dynamics of
crime. Most generally Marxists say that crime is a result of unjust conditions
in society. There is the assumption that, of all the children born to women, by
far the largest majority could become and remain decent, constructive,
productive members of society if the social conditions were right. There is the
assumption that genes, body chemistry, and childhood trauma count little in the
calculus of crime. There is the assumption that a good and decent society
allocating its resources for the collective good, making space for individual
productive labor and tending carefully to the socialization of its young could
create a low crime environment. There is the assumption that crime is not a part
of the human condition but rather detracts from it. The explicatory propositions
appear below.
Proposition 1. Crime Rates and
Forms vary with Mode of Production. This is the central organizing principle of
Marxist theory. Ways of thinking, acting and creating culture vary with the mode
of production of a society. In egalitarian, collectivized societies everyone has
a secure and significant relationship to the means of production as well as to
the means of distribution. One's material wants are determined, in part, by the
kind of ideological culture produced in that society and one is provided the
resources needed for the role allotted one in that production. The production of
ideological culture is the central human labor and all else is subsidiary.
Ideological culture includes forms of religion, forms of family life, forms of
political life, forms of socialization as well as all possible social
relationships. It includes art, science, prose, music as well as sports and
recreational activities. Architecture, civil engineering, city design and
international trade systems are all human products growing out of ideological
work. One's relationship to the means of production of culture is set by the
logics of that modenot by genes or individual purpose.
In
societies where the mode of production is organized to exclude persons from
either the production of material and ideological culture or from the means of
distribution of essential cultural resources, one can expect crime rates to
increase. The kind of crime varies from pretheoretical resistance and rebellion
to more coherently and theoretically organized rebellion and revolution. The
basest and most pretheoretical form of resistance and rebellion is theft from
others also excluded from the means of production. Theft from one's slave
master, feudal lord or capitalist employer is a bit more theoretically sound but
still is prepolitical. Political action which eliminates alienating modes of
production and, most importantly, institutes participatory means of production
and communal means of distribution are the most theoretically informed kinds of
"crime." Behavior which transfers the alienation of a mode of production to
others similarly situated in the class, slave, or feudal structure is the least
theoretically informed. Mugging, income tax cheating or spouse abuse are
examples.
There have been five generic modes of production in human
history each of which has had its own forms of crime and its own rates of crime.
The mode of production most common in human time and space has been a primitive
communism. We shall speak of developed communism in Part IV.
1.
Primitive Communism. In this mode of production, each person from the age of
three or so has been assigned a role in the production of material resources.
The gathering of firewood, the fetching of water, the making of building or
wearing materials as well as the collection of food begins at an early age. Each
cohort of young people is given material resources on the basis of need as the
production of ideological culture requires. Each person is expected to produce
on the basis of full ability (although ability often is limited by gender and
occupational divisions as one grows older and thus alienating).
The
means of production are collectively owned or there is no concept of private
ownership of the means of production. Therefore there is no concept of theft.
Most tribes and bands hold themselves to be part of nature rather than the
owners of trees, lands, animals, or waters. One uses such tools as needed, lives
in such housing as is available, eats such food as prepared with little regard
to private ownership. The notion of privileged usage of personal items exists.
Clothing, adornments, tools and space may be temporarily or primarily, used by
one person, but the notion of private ownership with its exclusionary
conditions: the right to use, the right to abuse and the sole right to the
fruits of production are nonsense notions in this social formation. Tribes do
claim territory from which other tribes may be excluded.
In such
societies, one cannot steal fruits from trees, steal food from family or take
insects from another. The notion of theft is a nonsense notion in communal
society. The sky, land and water belong to no one person. There is occasional
murder and violation of sexual rules as well as blasphemy but organized, career
criminality is unknown. Political crime, and white collar or organized crime are
unknown. Communal societies are low crime societies. To the extent that other
tribes are viewed as nonhuman, there is predatory theft, murder and rape against
outsiders but only rarely within the structure of community.
2. Feudal
Societies. Feudalism begins with violence and survives by violence. It is a
system of political and predatory crime in which an elite claims ownership to
whole towns, provinces and peoples. A predatory band imposes its hegemony upon
communal society and extracts surplus value from communities for a privileged
life style. Whoever says feudalism says political and economic crime. We can see
that clearly post hoc but in the midst of such a feudal society, one sees it as
natural while resistance and rebellion are seen as crime.
In feudal
society, laws are used to enforce a system of production and distribution that
creates and sustains feudal relations. A lawmaking apparatus and a
lawenforcing apparatus is needed to preserve such exploitative relations.
The lawmaking apparatus is personal and the law enforcing apparatus is
private to the feudal lords but both are necessary and both are held in contempt
by the subjects of feudal or colonial rule. The history of Ireland is a history
of such feudal conflict. To their credit, the Irish continue to resist and rebel
even after 800 years of predatory British occupation. In a feudality, formal law
arises to displace folkways controlling the distribution of surplus value.
The kinds of crime defined by feudal lords include withholding of feudal
fees and services, leaving the land or hiding animals and crops from the "shire
reeve" or hunting animals in the feudal domain. Such laws separate people from
the means of production on the one hand and lock them into a forced labor system
on the other. Crime also encompasses deviations from deference patterns in
speech, body or clothing conventions. One may be legally beaten for insolent
looks or words in that they challenge the hegemony of the aristocracy. One must
bow and scrape, salute and look away in such a society. One must accept
degradations, pass them on to one's children and accept a religious ideology
which sanctifies such degradation. That is the law. Such is the character of
feudality. The nature, focus and incident of crime is shaped by this mode of
production.
3. Slavery. Throughout history, predatory economics has
appropriated the labor of one tribe to use of another. Sometimes this entails
raiding parties as in the case of the Vikings and sometimes it entails the
taking of slaves as in the case of Turks, Greeks, Spaniards, Arabs as well as
Jewish tribes. Both slave and slavemaster have secure and significant
relationships to the means of production of material culture with a great
inequality in the distribution of resources. However from birth 'til death the
slave is, in principle, assured of the necessities for the reproduction of its
labor power. In the production of ideological culture, the slavemaster reigns.
Therein lies the greater crime. The potentialities of human beings are alienated
to a iniquitous mode of production.
The slave master cannot steal the
means of production. Land, tools, clothing, buildings, livestock and artifacts
are the property of the slavemaster even as they are used by the slave. The
slavemaster takes what he wishes as he wishes. Some petty theft, some flight
from slavery as well as occasional violence within the slave population occurs
but the kind of crime found in capitalist societies is inconceivable. In slavery
the mode of production is the central criminal process. All else is incidental.
4. Capitalism. Capitalism is the only mode of production that separates
production and distribution. Profit is the wedge that splits the economy into
two sectors. Goods are produced but not distributed unless the "owner" can make
a profit. In all other modes of production, resources are produced for the sole
reason of distribution and redistribution. One produces food in order that one's
family and friends may eat. One produces housing for the immediate use of a
family on a solidarity. Religious occasions are created for and by the direct
involvement of the communicants. Medicine, recreation, political knowledge, as
well as art, music and other forms of ideological culture are produced in order
to create and sustain social relatedness. Only capitalism transforms material
and ideological culture into commodities produced by a few to be sold (or
withheld) to the mass market. The very means to produce social life and cultural
events and artifacts is problematic in capitalism.
If we accept that the
production of culture in its manifold forms is the distinctly human labor that
distinguishes people from other animals, then we begin to appreciate capitalism
is, in its ordinary operations, a mode of production that routinely interferes
with the human project. The essential crime in capitalism, whatever its many
virtues, is the tendency to deny people the necessary resources for life and
society. There is no other society which systematically excludes people from
productive labor. Much crime is committed by rich and poor alike in the attempt
to reunite production and distribution with the least cost or effort to the
individual. There are other features of capitalism which promote different kinds
of crime. These are treated in the following propositions.
5. Socialism.
In socialist formations, the state holds title to the means of production and
guarantees the distribution of those supplies necessary to the production and
reproduction of cultural life. In fact, socialist modes of production have
achieved remarkable results in providing a significant, secure and adequate
relationship to the production and distribution of essential material resources,
as well as an improved relationship to the means of production of ideological
culture for the majority of people in a fairly short time.
There is a
fatal flaw in socialist formulations, however. There is the tendency of state
functionaries to control the means of production and to repress the production
of ideological culture, especially politically significant culture. This
tendency is a gross violation of the need of people to produce their own,
historically located politics. The imposition of laws, policies, programs,
projects, and institutions from a remote governing agency is a substantive
crime. People are alienated from the production of institutions, roles,
relationships, and from significant sectors of similarly situated others with
whom they well might learn, might respond and might cooperate in some of the
most fundamentally human labor to be done. With small exception whoever says
socialism says bureaucracy with its concentrations of power and its politics of
exclusion. Whatever the justifications for bureaucratic socialism (and there are
justifications) still the human project suffers. Developed communism corrects
this flaw but before that, discussing communism, I want to specify features of
the capitalist mode of production which set the social, economic and political
conditions conducive to crime.
Proposition 2.
Capitalism Tends to Disemploy People. The separation of people from both
creative productive activity and necessary distributive relations constitutes
one kind of crime and sets the conditions for others. The tendency to disemploy
people derives from the fact that shortterm profit rates determine
employment policy. Profit requires a reduction of the costs of production. Of
all the major factors at the point of production, only labor costs can be
reduced without immediate threat to other capitalist sectors. Supplies and raw
materials are owned by other capitalists who resist reduction of their own
profits. The owners of a given capitalist sector are few and close enough to set
prices. The costs of land, buildings, and other capital goods also are in the
hands of capitalists. It is the labor force which offers the greatest potential
for reduction of costs and thus increase in profits as long as there is a
reserve army of the disemployed.
There are several ways to keep labor costs
down. From the point of view of the capitalist, the best way seems to be
automation. The tendency is to replace high cost labor with machines. Machines
don't strike, talk back, get pregnant, demand vacations and retirement benefits,
take coffee breaks and require medical benefits. Machines don't want to control
the labor process scheduling, speed, quality, quantity, and kind of
goods produced. Scientific management can go only so far in making workers as
docile as machinery. In response to the drive to reduce labor costs, the long
range tendency is to increase productivity with machinery and thus evade labor
costs. For every high tech job created in 1985, ten production jobs are lost.
The disemployed have only limited means to reunite production and distribution.
Crime is one way.
Another tactic to reduce labor cost is to use a
reserve labor pool to replace workers who do want jobs at equitable pay and
humane working conditions. Children, women, Blacks, and other minority groups
have been used to drive down wages. Any form of discrimination which justifies
lower pay creates, in the same instance, a reserve labor force to compete with
the established work force. Currently, the Reagan administration urges the
minimum wage rate be lowered to $2.50/hour for teenagers. An adult cannot
survive on $2.50 an hour in this economy nor can a teenager unless it is
subsidized by the larger family system. Depressions, migrations, discrimination
and automation all provide the capitalist with the political means to lower
labor costs. Such use of alternative labor pools sets the stage for much racial
violence and violence toward women.
The migration of capitalist firms to
thirdworld countries where labor costs, taxes, pollution controls and
energy costs are lower also disemploys workers. In recent years, some three
million net jobs have been lost to capital flight from the U.S. according to
Bluestone. The capture of U.S. markets by third world capitalists further
disemploys U.S. workers and creates a surplus population of the disemployed. At
present, in a population of 240 million, only 110 million people work at paid
labor. Between 7% and 18% are disemployed and still look for jobs. The figure
depends upon who is counted and who does the counting. The others use
alternative economic practices to reunite production and distribution.
The first kind of crime created by capitalism, then, is the very
disemployment itself. In Marxian theory, one creates oneself as a human being in
the act of productive labor. If one is disemployed as a result of the ordinary
operation of an economic system, one is denied a relationship to the means to
produce oneself as a human. In the terms set here, this is a crime against human
rights. Of course there is a lot of unpaid labor which is fully oriented to the
human project but this is labor outside the logics of capitalist
production. Mothering, nursing, playing, teaching and learning, friendship, a
great deal of religion as well as creative art, music, writing, singing, helping
and playing, are important human endeavors and count greatly in the
selfproduction of one as a human being. It is only capitalism which
deliberately sets about to disemploy or underemploy people.
Proposition 3. Capitalism Requires Parallel,
Noncapitalist Systems of Redistribution. The disemployment of people sets
the conditions for additional kinds of crime. When one is disemployed one must
find some means to reunite production and distribution. There are several
generic solutions all of which require one to establish a relationship to a
noncapitalist system of distribution. First is, of course, the family
relationship. A great deal of production and distribution in all societies is
within the communal system of family. Production for use rather than profit; use
on the basis of need rather than profit. Over half of the economy of the U.S. is
outside the accounting categories of capitalist wage labor and market exchange.
But many families cannot supply all its members with all their wants and
needs especially if the adult members are out of work. In a politically
responsive capitalist society, the state itself taxes and redistributes on the
basis of need. That redistribution is often meager and meanspirited but is
important to the millions of women, children and elderly people who must survive
on the margins of the capitalist economy. In capitalist formations, there are
many imperatives for the state to grow and this redistribution function is a
major imperative. More on this later in Proposition 9.
Private charity
also provides for redistribution outside capitalist dynamics of profit and
market exchange. Church groups, public agencies and nonprofit organizations
solicit gifts and donations. These are redistributed on the basis of need after
overhead expenses are met. United Way, Catholic Charities, Salvation Army and
thousands of other groups give away billions. Without the family, the state and
private charity, capitalism could not survive its legitimacy problems.
Finally, there is crime as a parallel, noncapitalist system of
redistribution. Estimates vary but some say 8 to 25% of the gross national
product involves crime. Robbery, burglary, theft, mugging and extortion involve
the forcible reunion of production and distribution. In this form of crime,
usually called street crime, there is no exchange, no pretence at reciprocity,
and no social relationships, however superficial, created. The means of
production include weapons, violence and coercion. In Marxian criminology, this
is called pretheoretical resistance and rebellion. The capitalist property owner
does not withhold property for purposes of profit; it is surrendered at the
point of a gun.
Crime does several things to renew and redeem capitalism.
In the first instance above, it reunites production and distribution for some
few million people in our economy. Crime also renews demand. A theft of a car
creates a demand for another as does the theft of a bicycle, television, stereo,
or other goods. Crime provides flexibility in a system. Black-marketing, bribery
and theft get goods to where they are wanted outside of pricing or territorial
agreement among capitalists and outside of work rules. Street crime indirectly
provides legitimacy for any society in which it appears in that it outrages
those socialized to the norms of the society. The punishment of those caught
satisfies those for whom the concept of justice is narrow and negative. Crime
provides a veneer of legitimacy for policing and arbitrary actions of the state.
If crime did not exist in a capitalist society, its contradictions would be more
visible. More people would be destitute and more capitalists bankrupt.
In brief, the tendency of capitalism to disemploy people creates several
parallel economic systems. One such system is street crime defined as the
forcible reunification of production and distribution for those for whom the
economy does not work well enough to meet real and false needs.
Proposition 4. Capitalism Separates Capitalists from the
Means of Production. In capitalist societies, workers as a class cannot buy back
100% of what they produce since they do not get 100% of the value of that which,
as a class, they produce. Some part; 5, 10, 15, 20% goes to the capitalist
class. In modern times, the capitalist class is so concentrated that fewer than
1% of the population owns 25% or more of the wealth. Capitalists cannot
personally use the surplus production. Even having so much wealth they cannot
consume all the shoes, coats, food, computers, housing, health care, autos,
radios or plastic cups the system produces. Surplus production occurs uniquely
in capitalist systems. Several crimes arise from that characteristic.
Capitalists have to separate production and distribution and then they have to
reunite it. If they do not, they go bankrupt and have only their labor power
left to sell. Much corporate crime and petty bourgeois crime is oriented to the
reunification of production and distribution on terms favorable to profit.
First there is the crime of withholding necessities from those who are
unable to pay the costs plus profits. Millions live in squalor, poor housing,
ill health, malnourished and poorly clothed even when the stores, shops and
warehouses are overflowing; even when houses and offices set vacant. This
withholding is necessary in a profitoriented society but is senseless in
socialist, communist, feudal or slave societies. Unable to use or sell 100% of
the wealth produced, the capitalists must lay off, cut back, or steal markets
from other capitalists by bribery, by import quotas or by war. Depressions and
wars both destroy needed food, goods and productive capacity.
Wars renew
demand. Wars are used also to dominate foreign markets at the expense of other
foreign capitalist firms. War is the crime of last resort for capitalism.
Corporations which build airplanes and tanks in the U.S. must bribe foreign and
domestic buyers. Multinational corporations, including American, must pervert
the political process in other countries in order to buy, sell and repatriate
profits. Multinational corporations produce and sell high profit goods in the
poorest countries in the world thus distorting the local economies and
extracting surplus value to be repatriated to the richest countries in the
world. In the Marxist concept of crime, this is criminal. This is the nature of
the capitalist system that produces more than workers as a class can buy back.
Corporate crime arises, in part, in the effort to sell surplus production and
thus realize profits.
Capitalists must disobey worker safety laws,
product safety laws, environmental protection laws, tax laws, and import quotas
if they are to avoid bankruptcy. Capitalists must use and discard workers, cheat
customers and abandon communities if they are to survive. They must fix prices,
bribe legislators and use fraudulent advertising. Honest capitalists don't long
survive in a real competitive system. Capitalism must externalize the costs of
production since no economic system can produce without a net loss to social and
ecological niche in which it is found. Nobel prizes to the contrary, capitalist
economics is a criminal economics.
Proposition
5. Capitalism Must Create False Needs in order to Realize Profits.
Perhaps one of the most dangerous conditions creating the propensity to crime is
the need of capitalism to create false needs. Disemployed workers cannot buy the
surplus product. Underpaid workers can't buy the surplus product. People in
other ecological niches have value to spend. Some workers have discretionary
income. They could absorb a lot more than they need. Layer upon layer of false
needs are created by a multibillion dollar advertising industry. In
addition to the distortions of the economy created by advertising, in addition
to the creation of hundreds of thousands of unproductive workers, in addition to
the misuse of the media or the debasement of art forms, the creation of false
needs increases crime. Street crime, white collar crime and corporate crime are
stimulated by spurious demand created by advertising as the paid servant of
capitalist enterprise.
The best writers, psychologists, statisticians,
actors, cinematographers, musicians as well as some sociologists are put to work
trying to help the capitalist corporations dispose of "surplus" production and
thus realize profit in a system where no amount of advertising can increase the
capacity of all the working class to purchase 100% of that which it produces.
Radio, T.V., newspapers, handbills, posters, junk mail, magazines all try to
generate demand for the sake of profit.
All parts of a population are
targets of the advertising industrynot just those 3040% of the
workers with some discretionary income. Children, the disemployed, the
marginally employed as well as the staid middle class professional are exhorted
to consume on the basis of psychological want rather than on the basis of
interpersonal and social need.
The children of the lower classes, the
excluded minorities as well as the disemployed young males who internalize these
false needs and do what needs to be done to satisfy them. Young urban minority
males rob, mug, steal and hustle to generate income to purchase the goods
advertised. Young urban girls, mostly minority girls, prostitute themselves,
shoplift, write bad checks and join their male counterparts in mugging,
hustling, and stealing. Part of the proceeds from street crime go to purchase
the basics of life and part of the proceeds go to purchase the falsities of
advertising campaigns.
The middle class also internalizes the false
needs of advertising. Middle class professionals steal from the corporation for
which they work in order to consume high profit, high energy, capital intensive,
high status goods and services. White collar criminals steal to sustain a
lifestyle. Automobiles, appliances, vacation packages, investment schemes as
well as luxury items are advertised in a thousand exclusive magazines, mailing
lists, and newspapers. The Yuppies have the discretionary income. A childless
professional couple with combined incomes of 70, 80, 100 thousand can get by in
their lifestyle without resorting to white collar crime if they work for one of
the few thousand firms which pay well, provide health benefits, vacation and
generous retirement packages. The rest of us must steal from our clients, firms,
and cheat on our taxes if we are to provide for our children, our retirement,
our divorced spouses and, at the same time, maintain our lifestyle.
Corporations must lie in its ads, must default on its guarantees, must
bribe its customers, must cheat on its taxes, must violate worker safety laws,
pollution laws, and consumer protection laws if it is to provide its
stockholders and upper management with the salaries and dividends they need in
order to meet their false needs.
If we set concern for
natureconservation of natural resources, low levels of energy use as
well as avoidance of unnecessary pollution as part of a theory of human rights,
then the creation of false needs, the demand they generate for hard goods, all
these lead one to add this indictment of advertising against capitalism. Living
in harmony with nature, preserving the ecological integrity of the earth and
thrifty use of existing supplies of exhaustible resources become an important
social goal while reckless use and rapid exploitation become crimes against
humankind. That these are false needs can be known by evaluating the life styles
of Buddhists, Hutterites, or American Indian tribes which live in simple harmony
with self, others and with nature. Future generations will pay dearly for this
profligacy.
Another kind of crime laid against an economic system which
deliberately creates false needs involves the distortion of the character
structure of the individual human being. Exposure to the best efforts of the
advertising industry from the earliest years throughout one's life mystifies
one. One who is oriented to consumption as the test and aim of the good life
loses to some degree the capacity to center oneself on one's sociality. One
loses, to some extent, control over one's own value system. One is separated
from the process by which one becomes human through reflexive
selfcriticism. One loses the capacity for a contemplation which takes one
beyond one's possessions and through on to uniquely human concerns. One becomes
driven by need for unnecessary acquisitions and display. The capacity to invest
oneself in the quest for a world community of peace and justice is compromised.
Capitalism creates false needs, some of which involve crime, all of which create
the conditions for several forms of crime.
Proposition 6. Capitalism Requires the Private Accumulation
of Wealth. In an economic system in which production is geared to individual
profit, individual welfare and private estate, the common needs of a society are
neglected. And the private accumulation of wealth is necessary for each since
social accumulation is haphazard. For the individual lawyer, physician,
shopkeeper, garage owner and independent entrepreneur there is the real need to
build an estate for one's later years. Should one fail to do so one would have
to rely on the miserly dole of the state or the half hearted generosity of sons
and daughters. The ten million or so small business people must exploit their
workers, clients and customers. Doctors must turn into business persons,
prescribe unnecessary therapeutic regimes, perform unnecessary operations and
unnecessary pharmaceutical regimes. Physicians must get together and form an
effective and profitable monopoly over the production and distribution of health
services. They must restrict competition from other, competing health and
healing systems. They must split fees, take a percentage on prescriptions they
write, have roundrobin referral tactics as well as overbill second and
third party insurers. They must orient the medical system to therapy rather than
to preventative health practices. It is more profitable to heal people than to
prevent illness. In a word, medical practice must become criminal practice in an
individualist society. The same imperatives of self protection and personal
estate operate in auto repair shops, legal practices, real estate investment,
rentals, and speculation, in local banking, in stock brokerage, in bars,
restaurants and other service business. The owner must use and discard
employees, deceive customers, bribe local inspectors, purchase the town council
and bend the legal system to one's own private needs.
It is the foolish
doctor or insurance broker indeed who fails to create a million dollar portfolio
comprised of tax exempt bonds, high yield certificates of deposit, stable real
estate rentals or mortgages. Lawyers must do the same. Dentists, stockbrokers,
accountants, and developers as well must look to themselves and to their own
futures in the onesidedly individualistic society. Such a prospect is the
source of much white collar crime. Solid middle class citizens, regular church
goers, concerned parents and responsible citizens as they are, daily must deal
with their prospects for the future. They must protect that future for
themselves, their spouses and their children's children. It is in the capitalist
system that one finds the dynamics of white collar crime not in the genes, the
race, the childhood trauma, or in interaction with pathological criminals. These
are decent people who steal from their workers, clients and customers. They went
to college, they worked hard, they have lives of regular habit and are
thoroughly ordinary. They commit crime.
The necessity to accumulate also
fuels much corporate crime. Not only do stockholders depend upon and demand
growth of profits and assets but top managers too must protect the position of
the corporation in an increasing hostile world. Foreign competitors, organized
workers, consumer interest groups, environmental protection groups,
thirdworld suppliers as well as tax hungry legislatures all try to use the
legal system or the market system to their individual advantage. The corporate
officer on the make must engineer growth or else be replaced by another more
ruthless, cunning, unscrupulous and effective manager. Such an officer must
increase market share, manipulate price levels, increase income and reduce costs
as a percentage of gross proceeds. To grow in such a savage environment is to
control the law making process. To fail to grow is to die in the corporate
world. Violations of the law forfend against failure.
In the pursuit of
profit and growth, the corporation routinely violates labor laws, worker safety
laws, consumer protection laws, tax laws, currency regulations, campaign
contribution laws, environmental protection laws, trade laws, price fixing laws,
and conflict of interest laws. The capitalist corporation is a habitual,
hardened criminal. The corporation houses and protects professional thieves,
scofflaws and cheats. Corporate crime is a product of a specific mode of
production. The modern corporation is a device by which those who benefit from
its illegal activities may escape justice. The most successful corporations,
those which accumulate the most are those which are the most criminal and the
most adept at becoming above the law. One cannot explain corporate crime on the
basis of genetics, molecular biochemistry, differential association or control
theory. It is the logics of capitalism which compel white collar and corporate
crime. The drive to accumulate a private estate compels the rich to commit crime
on an everyday basis.
Proposition 7.
Capitalism Destroys Community. The less community, in a social sense, there
exists among a given population, the more crime there is. It is not
industrialization or poverty or population density which produces high crime
rates in an urban area. It is industry without community, poverty without
community, physical proximity without community which promotes crime. Capitalism
destroys community. Feudalism, slavery, communalism and socialism promote
community. Capitalism destroys community.
Capitalist dynamics funnel
resources to high profit lines of production and distribution. Low profit lines
of production or nonprofit lines of production are neglected. Low energy, low
tech, labor intensive lines of production are starved for resources. It is just
those kinds of labor which produce social relations, which produce community and
collective well being and which are neglected in thoroughly capitalist systems.
Child care and socialization, nursing and holistic healing, public transport and
recreation, pastoral counseling and student centered education are all displaced
by high profit mass production models of child care, health care, education,
religion, and recreation. The individual and the community both get lost in such
a costefficient system.
One can see that high profit, high tech,
high energy systems of transport, therapy, warfare, banking, recreation or
lodging garner the resources of a society. Developers build large, energy
inefficient separated single family dwellings away from the crime, squalor, and
pollution of the city. The rich don't care to live face to face with social
problems they create. Manufacturers cater to the 30 or 40 percent of the
population who have discretionary income while the information needs, the
transportation needs or the health needs of the poor are given over to mass
production tactics at school, play, or hospital where the interpersonal
histories as well as social needs of the patient are inconvenient to the
hustling physician, the harassed teacher or the competitive coaching staff.
In the control needs of the capitalist firm and the capitalist state
agency, one finds the sources of mass society. Workers, poor people, criminals,
students, patients, clients and citizens are easier to control if they come
before the boss, the cop, the clerk, the judge or the professor one at a time.
If there were community between workers, they would act collectively for the
welfare of each and all and thus be unmanageable. The same is true of prisoners
in concentration camps, jails and work farms. Should students ever become
organized as a collective, professors who teach badly would lose their jobs.
Bureaucracies are the typical unit of social control in elitist societies. The
structure of a bureaucracy provides control over workers, objectives, rules, and
routines to a small elite. The rules require the individual confront the bureau
and its rules as individuals rather than as collective.
Capitalism
destroys community also by the tendency to transform all solidarity supplies
into items for private use. Sex, drugs, alcohol, gambling, violence as well as
special kinds and forms of food are used as solidarity supplies in all societies
to elicit and sustain community. When one or more of these are used
collectively, they help the persons assembled to transform profane, everyday
life into a sacred gathering. Such supplies in conjunction with music, dancing,
costume and ritual constitute a sort of social magic by which members of the
natural world elevate themselves into a supranatural world...that of a
human community.
In capitalist economies, these solidarity supplies
become transformed into privatized commodities. Organized crime develops to
produce and distribute such socially important resources for private use and
private profit. The logics of capitalism do not stop at the boundaries of sacred
social spacethey intrude everywhere. The profanation of life is the
natural consequence of the commodification of production and distribution. In
such a society even religion becomes privatized and becomes a moneymaking
enterprise.
Capitalism and other elitist formations also use solidarity
supplies for political and economic reasons rather than for social and cultural
reason. Patriotism, holidays, athletic spectacles such as the Olympics, the
World Series and the N.F.L. playoffs generate a thin, shortterm
solidarity which scarcely lasts beyond the game's end. Charity, personal
tragedy, heroic feats and saintly actions are used by politicians and
corporations alike to manage the abiding disquiet of a lonely life in which each
is separated from all. The whole social process is subverted by market and by
managerial usages of solidarity supplies.
The alienated use of such
supplies, again, can bring a thin solidarity to a limited number of persons. The
privatized use of food, drugs, alcohol, sex or risk and offer escape from a
hostile workplace, a deadening classroom or a spiritless marriage. A few young
males can find short term solidarity in drinking or in a visit to a brothel.
Sports and sports violence can bring a city together for a while on Sunday
afternoon on a sort of spurious solidarity. Drugs can create a destructive
solidarity among young people. Therein lies some of the appeal of violence to
alienated workers, students, men as well as women. Organized crime parasitizes
on the remnants of and needs for solidarity in a mass society. Organized crime
is the underground cousin of capitalist corporation. It produces drugs,
gambling, violence and pornography for private use whether collective values
suffer or not.
Proposition 8. Capitalism Tends
Toward Fascism. There are several features of a capitalist society which
encourage the growth of the state. These features require the capitalist state
to control more and more of the private lives of its citizens. The boundary
between public life and private life is obscured while the public sphere is
displaced by state policy. These include: 1) the need to manage the surplus
population; 2) the need to protect the social base of the capitalist class; 3)
the need to regulate the worst excesses of big business and industry; 4) the
need to coordinate among sectors of production; 5) the need to protect national
capitalists from foreign capitalists; and 6) the need to control dissent and
protest at inequality among the political intelligentsia.
While I focus
on the actions of the capitalist state against its own citizens in this section,
I want to mention that most repression in a capitalist society occurs in the
private sector. The corporate bureaucracy closely controls what employers say
and do and to whom they speak. A wide array of electronic devices monitor the
productivity, organizing, and the socializing of employees, customers and
competitors. A growing army of private police are busy creating and using a
modern technology of repression. The capitalist state may escape criticism if
repression is in the private sector. And, if a capitalist economy can bring
profits and goods from Third World countries to share out to its working class,
there is little dissent to repress. But as we shall see, the capitalist state
today in the U.S.A. does indeed use fascist tactics.
In the effort to
manage the problems below listed created by capitalist appropriation of surplus
value from the working class, the state resorts to criminal activity. It
violates the law and the Constitution to maintain order. A wide range of
political underground structures and practices are used to manage resistance in
the democratic state. In the authoritarian state (and most capitalist economies
entail authoritarian states), there is very little state effort to regulate
capitalism therefore very little need to secretly regulate the citizens of the
state. Today, in the U.S.A., there are more than 35 federal agencies using a
wide variety of new cheap electronic devices to snoop, monitor, bug and spy on
citizens without probable cause. According to the Office of Technology
Assessment, twentyone government agencies say they are now using night
vision systems, 19 say they are using miniature transmitters and radio scanners,
while 13 said they use vehicletracking beepers. Twelve agencies said they
use electromagnetic or acoustic sensors to monitor movements, seven said they
monitor telephone transmissions, one reported intercepting electronic mail, and
one said it was using a satellite for surveillance. The Border Patrol is using
infrared nightvision devices and sensors to track illegal aliens crossing
the border.
The agency using the widest number of new snooping
technologies is the FBI, followed by federal agency inspector general offices
rooting out fraud, waste and abuse in government programs. Other agencies are
using stateoftheart eavesdropping machines that monitor
computerized mailings, satellite transmissions and conversations over radio
phones. The survey of federal agencies excluded activities by the CIA and
supersecret National Security Agency (Scripps Howard News Service, 25 Oct. 85).
All these illegal activities and more described in a series of books on
the F.B.I. and the C.I.A. are made necessary for the reasons presented below:
1. The Surplus Population. All those disconnected or poorly connected to
the means of distribution must be managed. Many will turn to welfare, kinship
and charity in some varying combination to survive in a consumer society. Most
need a huge and growing welfare system with all sorts of investigations and spot
checks to control cheating. Some will turn to crime to reunite production and
distribution. The variety of crime as well as the opportunity for crimes are so
great a huge and growing police capacity is needed. Today that police capacity
is labor intensive with police, telephone, automation and jails. Tomorrow the
police capacity will be hightech capital-intensive with T.V. monitors,
computer monitors, remote sensing and remote control as well as behavioral
modification technology. Drugs are used to control children with behavioral
"disorders" in elementary and junior high schools now. Certain sexrelated
offenders are required to take drugs as are alcoholic and drug users who are
processed by the criminal justice system.
Currently there are about 24
million in the surplus population. There are about 34 million aged. There are
about seven to ten million disemployed and more underemployed. Capitalism
systematically disemploys people in order to reduce labor costs and thus
increase profits. But the surplus population subjected to advertising and imbued
with a privatized ideology needs to reunite production and, one way or another,
they will do so. In a culture of violence, the forcible reunification seems
sensible.
2. Small Capitalists. The social base of the capitalist class
are small businesses, farmers and privileged workers. Small businesses must be
protected from the predations of street criminals as well as predations of large
corporations which treat them as cows to be milked. Boys in blue are needed now
for protection from street crime. Lawyers, inspectors, accountants, and
regulatory agencies by the thousands are needed for the corporate predation.
Workers and consumers must be protected from small capitalists, if the
capitalist system is to maintain its legitimacy in electoral politics. Should
small business, farmers and workers ever feel the full weight of competition and
free market practices, capitalism would lose its social base very quickly. A
federal control system makes sense in such a hostile world.
3.
Coordination of Production. Capitalist firms compete with each other for
workers, materials and markets. In order to make a profit, capitalists flood
high profit markets and abandon low profit but necessary production. Transport
companies abandon small towns. Doctors saturate high rent areas of the city.
Child care, nursing and education in their democratic form are unprofitable in a
class society. The state must enter into production itself to take over the
lemons of capitalist. It then must regulate its own suppliers and customers.
Strategic resources must be acquired from hostile foreign sources, stored and
rationed to industry. Funds must be provided for research and development.
Transportation systems must be coordinated as must communication and mail
systems. Private capitalist corporations cannot be entrusted to do it since
profit motives tend to exclude low profit but essential goods and services and
thus delegitimate the system.
In later stages of development, the entire
world capitalist system must be coordinated. State agencies must do
thisnot the market. The market is far too erratic and irrational to
coordinate all the needs of a society. Either the capitalist class must
coordinate production or the capitalist state. The free market can't and won't
no matter how insistent right wing economists are to the contrary. In both
illegal and legal sectors, the capitalist state must grow. All control tends to
be centralized. In the Reagan years, the agencies which regulate capitalist
class crime are dismantled and deregulated but this does not mean the end of
fascism, only the distorted use of fascism to regulate the poor, workers, the
surplus population. However, Reagan is a minor aberration in the political
economy of the democratic capitalist society. Sooner or later, the state must,
once again, intervene to regulate the capitalist corporations.
4.
National Capitalists. In the 20 or so rich capitalist societies, labor struggles
have provided better wages and working conditions. In the 120 or so poor
marginally capitalist societies, workers sell their labor power more cheaply.
Labor intensive production in clothing, electronics, shoes, steel, automobiles
is cheaper abroad. The capitalist state must protect its own capitalists for
several reasons. Such protection further increases the fascist role of the
state.
State functionaries have political debts to national industries.
Their workers call forth aid and protection. A balanced economy requires
protection. Changing animosities and friendships in the world capitalist system
threaten supplies of essential resources in the international division of labor.
Disemployment and disinvestment trends call forth state control of corporations
as capital deserts high wage areas. Agriculture, mining and fishing, energy
industries which can't be moved call forth regulation. The capitalist state must
grow and gather all power unto itself. The modern version of this control is
called corporatism . . . it is fascism.
5. Control of Dissent. Radio,
newspapers, universities, television, plays, cinema and politics all need to be
bent to the information needs and the ideological needs of a class elite. This
means thought control in a wide variety of direct and subtle ways. Ultimately
the iron fist of the state crushes critics of privilege, wealth and privatized
power. For the most part, the state does not use force or suppression in
controlling thought. Most of the time, in the democratic state, repression
occurs in the private sector. Reporters, professors, union officers and clergy
who criticize the class, race, gender or national chauvinism of a society are
fired or not hired. Most of the intelligentsia benefit greatly from their
favored position in the world capitalist system and defend capitalism. Most
critics practice self censorship knowing job, tenure and promotion depend upon
it. But there have been many waves of heavy handed police state tactics in the
U.S. After the revolutionary War, those loyal to the Crown were repressed. After
the Civil War, the South was repressed. In the 1880's union organizers and the
I.W.W. were heavily repressed. In the 1920's workers' organizers were repressed
as were their publications. In the 1950's we saw the McCarthy era. In the
1960's, the F.B.I. illegally repressed socialist movements, civil rights
movements, antiwar movements as well as women's liberation activists in its
illegal Cointel programs. Generally, in times of crisis, the capitalist state
represses...all other times repression is left to the private sector which
freely represses dissent in factory, shop, and store.
Summary of Part III. The general rule is that the 20 rich
capitalist countries are liberal when times are good. Most of the routine
repression is done by managers, bosses, supervisors, deans and colleagues in
anticipation of reward or wrath from higher management. When times are bad, the
state steps in, activates the militia and uses it on behalf of class, race and
national privilege. It is not that police, soldiers, bosses and colleagues are
hardened criminals; that they have associated with right wing thugs in other
countries or corporations; that they have an excess of X or Y chromosomes or
that they live in a culture of poverty. Rather they are thinking, judging human
beings who act within the logics of racial and class privilege and repress in
order to reproduce those structures.
In order to control the very real
dangers of pretheoretical resistance and rebellion, especially in the form of
predatory street crime, the capitalist state must adapt a tactic of more police,
more prisons, speedier trials, easy standards on rules of evidence, of search
and seizure laws, more invasion of privacy as well as tough sentencing and close
supervision of paroled convicts. The Bill of Rights must be subverted. Given a
commitment to unjust, exclusionary forms of economic, political and social life
in these times, fascism for the poor and disemployed becomes reasonable. The
U.S. simply cannot tolerate the forms of street crime found in Washington, D.C.,
Los Angeles, Detroit, Philadelphia, Boston, New York, or Houston. Capitalist
states with electoral politics are pushed to control street crime else lose
legitimacy. They are pushed by voters to control capitalist corporations. The
incumbent regime do so or will be rejected at the polls. Such a situation calls
for draconian measures. All sorts of theories and technologies are developed to
facilitate fascism. It is not an Italian, German or Spanish trait to prefer
fascism. It is an elitist imperative. Fascism is a reasonable tactic when the
larger strategies of progressive social change begin to work in politics; begin
to defeat power and privilege.
In societies without electoral politics,
the state can rule by decree, deploy police violence at will and terrorize
progressive social groups. Brazil, Chili, Guatemala, Korea, Indonesia, the
Philippines, South Africa and Saudi Arabia serve up a different kind of justice
to pretheoretical resistance and rebellion. Theoretically informed resistance is
even more dangerous to the state without electoral politics. Such prepolitical
states must call in help from the more developed countries since the state
itself rather than the citizen is threatened. It is to the everlasting shame of
the U.S. that it responds so generously to such repressive states to the postwar
era. In the Reagan years, the U.S.A. has become a criminal state in the
international scene in arms dealing, in subverting the political process in
Third World countries and in withdrawing from the rule of international law.
Any society which reproduces social privilege in a conflict context must
use force to do so. Slavery, feudality, capitalism as well as some forms of
socialism define a monopoly of force for the state and use that force to
suppress emancipatory social movements. Capitalism is a social formation which
requires freedom from social controls for the capitalist corporation while at
the same time heavy policing of workers, customers, the surplus population and
social critics is necessary.
At home, the U.S. has developed a
lawmaking and lawenforcement system which locates most of the policing
of workers, customers, creditors, and white collar criminals in the private
sector. Capitalist corporationsbanks, retail stores, accounting firms,
factories and private universities are left largely unpoliced by the state
sector. Under the Reagan administration, law and order for the capitalist class
is set aside. Sector after sector of the market is deregulated. Such a
distortion of law making and law enforcement is not an accidental feature of the
capitalist system but rather an integral feature. The ordinary approaches of
American criminology to crime ignores these discontinuities since
structuralfunctional theory cannot handle them readily. Marxian theory
easily accommodates them.
The tendency of a profit oriented economy to
disemploy people results in a surplus population. The desperate needs, real and
false, of those disconnected from productive labor leads to pretheoretical
resistance and rebellion. This tendency is a factor of great importance in the
genesis of street crime. It also fuels the tendency of the state to exclude
people from the political process since such participation would tend
to eliminate privilege and power advantages. The exclusion of people from
politics in an age of democracy generates political crime. Both forms of
political crime, the state against its own citizens and citizens against their
own state is made probable by the structure of capitalist economy. In summary,
capitalism tends toward fascism for the reasons given above. Fascism is also
called forth by the wide variety of crime endemic to capitalist logics.
Capitalism constitutes a privatized way of producing and distributing
the forms of human culture. In so doing capitalism creates the objective
conditions for five kinds of crime. These are predatory crime in which the
weaker are victim to the robbery, theft, rape, assault and exploitation of the
more greedy. Capitalism creates the conditions for corporate crime in which the
welfare of workers, customers, suppliers and competitorsindeed the
political process itself are sacrificed.
Capitalism also provides the
dynamics in which white collar crime thrives. Considerations of life style,
animosity at employers, financial crises, as well as an insatiable drive for
private accumulation drives otherwise decent people to violate the trust of the
office or job they hold or professional service they offer. Doctors, lawyers,
secretaries, professors and police alike violate the trust accorded them by
others.
Organized Crime produces the solidarity of supplies and
distributes them to create a thin and false solidarity for an alienated
population. Sex, violence, gambling, drugs, money, protection, pornography as
well as illegal control of everyday supplies constitute a second economy which,
each year, grows in capitalist societies. Organized crime figures simply extend
to sacred supplies, the same commodity mentality which long ago the respectable
capitalist applied to food, housing, clothing, transport, and other mundane
resources.
Capitalism creates two kinds of political crime. There is
first the crime of the state against its citizens more or less openly to
maintain an inequitable and unbalanced mode of production. There is, as well,
the crime of citizens against the state apparatus in more or less theoretically
informed resistance and rebellion. The role of the state in preserving an unjust
system makes it the target of morally informed critique, peaceful resistance as
well as direct physical assault.
The Social Location of Justice. In
addition to the tendency of the forms of crime above to increase, capitalism
must have separate and unequal systems of justice through which to process the
many criminals it creates. American criminology, to its great discredit,
concentrates on the criminal justice system to the exclusion of a full and
adequate sociological analysis of the forms and locations of alternate justice
systems. Just as capitalism needs parallel economic systems with which to
externalize its negativities, just as it needs parallel and illegal control
systems, capitalism also requires parallel justice systems within which to hide
its essential injustice. Few standard American textbooks in criminology bother
to examine these parallel systems. Still less is there any analysis or theory
provided to explain why these systems exist in a putatively democratic and
egalitarian society. There is a harsh and punitive criminal justice system for
those who violate the laws of private ownership. Private corporations are
treated gently for the many kinds of crime they commit. They are processed
through an administrative or a civil justice system in the unlikely event they
are policed, indicted or tried. Middle class professionals demand exclusion from
the criminal justice system as well. They use a peer review or a medical justice
system when they are found out. The criminal justice system is for the poor and
the inept criminal. For the poor there is also a meager and meanspirited
welfare system which restores a little social justice.
And capitalism
requires a huge private police force under control of the various private
corporations. The intrusion of a publicly created police force into corporate
affairs is far too dangerous to the everyday criminal activities which the
managers and administrators of corporate capitalism commit on the public, the
worker, the consumer or upon each other. In this system, there is no due
process, no trial by peers or presumption of innocence. Workers, customers, and
competitors are policed and disciplined.
Entirely new crimes, new laws,
new justice systems, new policing forms and new kinds of control tactics arise
and are peculiar to the capitalist mode of production. The most comprehensive
proposition in a Marxian theory of crime is that the mode of production
determines, significantly, the amount and kinds of crime found in each. It is
absolutely essential that American criminology and the American public come to
appreciate that low crime societies exist and that they are low crime societies
because they are organized more for social justice and community needs than for
punishment, control and private accumulation. A brief survey of these
characteristics should help lay the foundation for a more comparative
criminology.
PART IV. STRUCTURAL FEATURES OF
LOWCRIME SOCIETIES. The features of lowcrime societies listed
may serve as a basis for social policy. Features of concretely existing
societies taken in some coherent and serious political project can serve the
U.S. and other high crime societies well. Among the more important features I
would include these:
1. A definition of crime which is oriented to a theory of human rights. Antisocial behavior, personal as well as institutional, necessarily must be repressed. I have elsewhere offered a set of Human Rights which might be helpful in such a task.
2. A secure and significant relationship to the means of production for every person in the society. This means jobs for those who can work and resources for those who are too young or too old.
3. Production and distribution must be oriented to enhance community. This means that communal accumulation preempts private accumulation. Private accumulation based on merit should be continued but not that of exploitation.
4. Production and distribution must be oriented to low energy, low polluting authentic needs. False needs and the advertising to generate false needs are inimical to a decent and rational political economy.
5. The top priority in a low crime society must go to the socialization of the young people of a society. Military expenditures, elite life styles and surplus production are low priority. In a society oriented to social justice, national defense is redundant. The highest priority must be our children . . . our children understood collectively.
6. Democratic participation and authentic political participation of all sectors of the population is necessary to a society which aims for reduction in political crime. Authoritarian societies with heavy emphasis on religion can lower crime rates but probably cannot free itself from political crime. The strong democracy of democratic socialism must replace the weak democracy of congressional or parliamentary democracy (see Barber's new book, Strong Democracy).
7. Policing needs to be located in the community at large with minimal division of labor. The suggestions of Peter Iadicola are helpful here. He argues for a change oriented community crime control program. Rehabilitation oriented programs are necessary transitional programs. Repressive policing won't work. The better solution is a society that combines control with progressive change.
8. The dialectic between the individual and community must vary in such a way as to promote solidarity, enable creativity, embrace autonomy and discourage parasitism. The Hutterites, the Muslim societies, as well as many other religious societies, are low crime societies but the necessary freedom of the individual to create and transcend is diminished.
9. Prevention of crime through social justice programs is preferable to a criminal justice proceedings. Jobs, low cost health care, housing, education, mass transit as well as noncompetitive recreation should be promoted over efforts to imprison and punish.
10. Corrections activity should be oriented to productive labor, pro-social behavior and community supervision. Punitive systems of correction do not work nor are specialized parole and probation officers of much use in rehabilitation. Coworkers, supervisors, family and neighbors must work together.
Hutterites, Amish, Muslims and many other societies oriented to prosocial religions have low crime rates. Societies changing to a community oriented economy such as China, Cuba and Nicaragua have significantly lowered crime rates. Societies with adequate policing together with programs of social justice such as Sweden and Switzerland are low crime societies. Societies which exclude advertising and the expansion of false needs such as Muslim and Buddhist societies have low crime rates. Societies which use food, drink and psychogens for sacred instead of the private use have little substance abuse. These are low crime societies. They are either inspired by holy teachers or by socialist teachings. They have in common an emphasis on community and selfdiscipline. These societies offer the promise of a good and decent society in the U.S. However radical changes are necessary in the political economy of the U.S. in order to become a LowCrime society. One day, the successes of crime as well as the failures of the criminal justice system will force us to consider such radical changes. I trust this presentation will be useful to such a task.