People v. Gitlow

195 A.D. 773, 39 N.Y. Crim. 120, 187 N.Y.S. 783, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4835
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 1, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 195 A.D. 773 (People v. Gitlow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Gitlow, 195 A.D. 773, 39 N.Y. Crim. 120, 187 N.Y.S. 783, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4835 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

The manifesto condemns the Socialist party and moderate Socialism for confining their advocacy of the overthrow of government to constitutional amendments brought about by the exercise of the elective franchise, and it repudiates that method as wholly inadequate to accomplish the purposes of the Left Wing and asserts that they can only be accomplished by a revolution brought about by a mass strike of the proletariat. It does not definitely define who constitute the proletariat but it evidently means those of the working classes who have no property, for it states, in effect, that the concentration of industry and social developments generally “ conservatized the skilled workers ” and developed the proletariat of unskilled laborers massed in the basic industries,” and that this proletariat, expropriated of all property ” and denied access to the American Federation of Labor Unions, required a labor movement of its own, which became a revolutionary industrial unionism, which was a recognition of the fact that extra-parliamentary action was necessary to accomplish the revolution, that the political state should be destroyed and a new proletarian state of the organized producers constructed in order to realize socialism.” It further states that the Socialist party repudiated the form of industrial unionism and still more emphatically repudiated its revolutionary political implications, clinging to petty bourgeois [778]*778parliamentarism and reform; ” that the dominant Socialism in the Socialist party united with the aristocracy of labor and the middle class and necessarily developed all the evils of the dominant Socialism of Europe and abandoned the “ immediate revolutionary task of reconstructing unionism, on the basis of which alone a militant mass Socialism could emerge,” and stultified “ working class political action,” by Mmiting such action “ to elections and participation in legislative reform activity; ” that the effect of this was to draw more and more proletarian masses in the party, who required simply the opportunity to initiate a revolutionary proletarian policy,” and that the war and the proletarian revolution in Russia provided the opportunity; that under the impulse of its membership, the Socialist party adopted a militant declaration against the war but its officials sabotaged this declaration and adopted a policy of “ petty, bourgeois pacifism,” and the bureaucracy of the party united with the bourgeois People’s Council, which accepted the Wilson peace and betrayed those who opposed the war. It then condemns those in charge of the Socialist party for their reactionary policy in repudiating the policy of the Russian and German Communists and “ refusing affiliation with the Communist International of Revolutionary Socialism,” and states, in effect, that owing to the aggrandizement of “ American Capitalism ” by the war and its preparation to meet the crisis in the days to come, the immediate task of the Left Wing is modified but its general character is not altered, and that this is the moment of “ revolutionary struggle ” but “ not the moment of revolution ” because “ American capitalism ” is developing a brutal campaign of terrorism against the militant proletariat, and that these conditions “ will necessarily produce proletarian action against capitalism ” and that “ strikes are developing which verge on revolutionary action, and in which the suggestion of proletarian dictatorship is apparent, the striker-workers trying to usurp functions of municipal government, as in Seattle and Winnipeg.” The article then denounces the. Socialist party and labor unions for favoring relief to the working classes only through lawful constitutional methods an,d states that there is a tendency on the part of workers,“to initiate mass strikes,” and that such strikes will be the, .determining [779]*779feature of proletarian action and they must be used to broaden the strike and “ to make it general and militant,” first using it for political objectives, finally developing “ the mass political strike against Capitalism and the State.” It next advises “ the militant mass movements ” in the American Federation of Labor “ to split the old unions ” and to break their power, and the organization of the “ mass of the unorganized industrial proletariat,” thereby “ developing reserves for the ultimate conquest of power.” It then states that a class struggle of a political nature is first to be waged for “ immediate concessions ” and the final conquering of power “ by organizing the industrial government- of the working classes,” but that “ the direct objective is the conquest by the proletariat of the power of the State,” and that this is to be done not by capturing “ the bourgeois parliamentary State ” but by conquering and destroying it, and, therefore, “ Revolutionary Socialism ” repudiates the policy of introducing Socialism by legislative measures on the basis of the existing State. It also states that it is necessary for the proletariat to “ expropriate all these by the conquest of the power of the State ” all the political power, the army, police, industry and the press, “ before it can begin the task of introducing Socialism,” because as long as the bourgeois State exists “ the capitalist class can baffle the will of the proletariat,” and that “ Revolutionary Socialism ” proposes to conquer the power of the State “ by class action of the proletariat,” but that parliamentary action is necessary “ in the process of developing the final action,” and that the conquest of the power of the State “ is an extra-parliamentary act ” and will be accomplished not by “ legislative representatives of the proletariat but by the Tnass power of the proletariat in action,” and that the “ supreme power of the proletariat inheres in the political mass strike.” It further states that it is necessary to organize a new State in the form of “ Communist Socialism — the government of the producers ” in which “ the proletariat as a class alone counts” and which is “based directly upon the industrial, organized producers, upon the industrial unions or Soviets, or a combination of both.” The article points out that both anarchists and revolutionary Socialists intend to abolish the State, but that the anarchists in eagerness so to do fail to [780]*780realize that the State is necessary “ in the transition period,” and that the revolutionary Socialists intend to conquer the State by revolution starting with strikes of protest, developing into “ mass political strikes and then into revolutionary mass action ” and the “ annihilation ” of the State and' the introduction of “ the transition proletarian State functioning as a revolutionary dictatorship,” which is necessary to coerce and suppress the bourgeois,” and that during the period of such coercion and suppression the proletarian dictatorship represents the proletariat as the ruling class “ which is now supreme,” and the full conditions of Communist Socialism will be developed and when all industries are nationalized, a new government is developed, “ which is no longer government in the old sense,” for it “ concerns itself with the management of production and not with the government of persons,” and that “ out of workers’ control of industry, introduced by the proletariat dictatorship, there develops the complete structure of Communist Socialism — industrial self-government of the communistically organized producers,” and the bourgeois having been completely expropriated “ economically and politically,” the dictatorship ends and in its place comes the full and free social and individual autonomy of the Communist order.” The manifesto closes by stating that

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Bluebook (online)
195 A.D. 773, 39 N.Y. Crim. 120, 187 N.Y.S. 783, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gitlow-nyappdiv-1921.