Skip to main content

Capitalism's arsenal: A war against collective consciousness

By Bhabani Shankar Nayak 
The prevailing narratives surrounding capitalism's supposed invincibility persistently undermine all alternative systems, employing diverse tools and strategies of governance that not only domesticate daily life but also suppress the critical consciousness essential for societal transformation. Capitalism's ideological, cultural, social, political, and economic apparatuses promote ideas, policies, processes, and institutions designed to stifle both individual and collective awareness. It dismantles communitarian society in the name of individual freedom and individualizes consumption in the pursuit of personal happiness, utility, and satisfaction. These processes accelerate various forms of individual alienation, an intrinsic feature of the capitalist system. The separation of consumers from producers, justified by mythical free-market efficiency, is part of this commodification, reinforcing alienating structures that domesticate both.
Like alienation and atomization, crises are inherent to capitalism. However, many liberals and critics argue that the system is resilient enough to absorb shocks, crises, and dissent, even using them for consolidation. If this is true, why does capitalism so often rely on wars and conflicts? In reality, the capitalist system, with its imperialist and colonial foundations, manufactures wars and conflicts to domesticate the working masses. It creates crises and instills fear over lives and livelihoods to shock and weaken people, making it more difficult for them to challenge capitalism and seek alternatives. The destabilization of society, everyday life, and communities enables capitalism to survive challenges and overcome its inherent structural contradictions between labor and capital.
Capitalism institutionalizes precarity, risk, violence, and fear as everyday living conditions, where individual happiness through commodity consumption is solely defined by individual survival and the self-realization of happiness and freedom. This elusive nature of individual happiness and freedom shapes individual consciousness around an obscure notion of 'self-interest.' Such a narrow, manipulative, and unnatural construction of self-interest—as well as individual freedom, happiness, and the survival of the fittest (i.e., the rich)—is further entrenched by capitalist and colonial knowledge traditions.
Capitalism and its dominant Eurocentric knowledge traditions promote Cartesian duality in knowledge production and dissemination. This supercilious duality, along with its colonial and neocolonial universalization in the name of science and civilization, undermines decolonization, diversity, and the democratization of knowledge. It commercializes knowledge and skills for profit, while naturalizing and normalizing alienating and exploitative working conditions. Scientific knowledge and its emancipatory, secular traditions—aimed at promoting creative and collective consciousness—are structurally undermined by both educational processes and religious institutions.
Religions, abstract morality, family honor, caste dignity, racial purity, and other reactionary social and cultural norms have been promoted in the name of culturally relativist traditions to uphold capitalism. These ideals are central to both the passive and active domestication of individuals within capitalist society, normalizing capitalist values and traditions of inequality, exploitation, individualism, and hierarchy as natural. Capitalism, along with its institutions and processes, has embedded itself within all forms of reactionary, feudal, and authoritarian forces to ensure its survival at the cost of people and the planet.
The casino character of capitalism, along with its techno-feudal forms, works to dismantle collective cultures of empathy by promoting imperialist wars and conflicts under the guise of upholding national interests. War functions as imperialist politics of hegemony to sustain capitalism and eliminate alternative economic, political, and social systems. The death and destitution of Palestinians, Ukrainians, Russians, Afghans, and poor working-class lives are rendered distant and disconnected from the consciousness of people in other parts of the world. The division and erosion of individual empathy—based on region, religion, race, culture, caste, gender, sexuality, territory, and nationality—amounts to no empathy at all. This culture of no empathy is not only aligned with the structural demands of capitalism but also contributes to the normalization of barbarism as a mode of survival.
Capitalism has moved humanity into a culture that undermines cooperation, solidarity, and empathy. The revolutionary and romantic English poet William Blake, in his poem Auguries of Innocence, describes such a culture with the line: “A dog starved at his master’s gate predicts the ruin of the state.” This barbaric culture is being normalized by capitalism and imposed upon humanity. The situation echoes the prophetic words of The Communist Manifesto, where Marx and Engels present a stark choice: “either a revolutionary reconstitution of society at large or the common ruin of the contending classes.” As Karl Kautsky and Rosa Luxemburg later argued, the future lies either in advancing toward socialism or regressing into barbarism. The choice is clear. The collapse of human civilization is not an option; therefore, socialism stands as the only viable path for human progress and survival.
However, it is important to understand the weapons of capitalism in order to effectively fight it. Secular class consciousness is essential for understanding the various ways in which capitalism weaponizes institutions and processes to sustain and legitimize its culture of plunder—often in the name of stability, human freedom, progress, and prosperity. These fictitious dreams and the capitalist snake oil are sold to the masses every day to make people believe in the capitalist trap as the only available alternative. Therefore, collective class consciousness, class organization, and class struggles are central to resisting and defeating capitalism and all its reactionary ideas and projects—so as to ensure peace, progress, democracy, freedom, and socialism. People can write their own victory over capitalism only through actively resisting and fighting it.

Comments

TRENDING

From algorithms to exploitation: New report exposes plight of India's gig workers

By Jag Jivan   The recent report, "State of Finance in India Report 2024-25," released by a coalition including the Centre for Financial Accountability, Focus on the Global South, and other organizations, paints a stark picture of India's burgeoning digital economy, particularly highlighting the exploitation faced by gig workers on platform-based services. 

'Condonation of war crimes against women and children’: IPSN on Trump’s Gaza Board

By A Representative   The India-Palestine Solidarity Network (IPSN) has strongly condemned the announcement of a proposed “Board of Peace” for Gaza and Palestine by former US President Donald J. Trump, calling it an initiative that “condones war crimes against children and women” and “rubs salt in Palestinian wounds.”

India’s road to sustainability: Why alternative fuels matter beyond electric vehicles

By Suyash Gupta*  India’s worsening air quality makes the shift towards clean mobility urgent. However, while electric vehicles (EVs) are central to India’s strategy, they alone cannot address the country’s diverse pollution and energy challenges.

Gig workers hold online strike on republic day; nationwide protests planned on February 3

By A Representative   Gig and platform service workers across the country observed a nationwide online strike on Republic Day, responding to a call given by the Gig & Platform Service Workers Union (GIPSWU) to protest what it described as exploitation, insecurity and denial of basic worker rights in the platform economy. The union said women gig workers led the January 26 action by switching off their work apps as a mark of protest.

Jayanthi Natarajan "never stood by tribals' rights" in MNC Vedanta's move to mine Niyamigiri Hills in Odisha

By A Representative The Odisha Chapter of the Campaign for Survival and Dignity (CSD), which played a vital role in the struggle for the enactment of historic Forest Rights Act, 2006 has blamed former Union environment minister Jaynaynthi Natarjan for failing to play any vital role to defend the tribals' rights in the forest areas during her tenure under the former UPA government. Countering her recent statement that she rejected environmental clearance to Vendanta, the top UK-based NMC, despite tremendous pressure from her colleagues in Cabinet and huge criticism from industry, and the claim that her decision was “upheld by the Supreme Court”, the CSD said this is simply not true, and actually she "disrespected" FRA.

Stands 'exposed': Cavalier attitude towards rushed construction of Char Dham project

By Bharat Dogra*  The nation heaved a big sigh of relief when the 41 workers trapped in the under-construction Silkyara-Barkot tunnel (Uttarkashi district of Uttarakhand) were finally rescued on November 28 after a 17-day rescue effort. All those involved in the rescue effort deserve a big thanks of the entire country. The government deserves appreciation for providing all-round support.

Whither space for the marginalised in Kerala's privately-driven townships after landslides?

By Ipshita Basu, Sudheesh R.C.  In the early hours of July 30 2024, a landslide in the Wayanad district of Kerala state, India, killed 400 people. The Punjirimattom, Mundakkai, Vellarimala and Chooralmala villages in the Western Ghats mountain range turned into a dystopian rubble of uprooted trees and debris.

Fragmented opposition and identity politics shaping Tamil Nadu’s 2026 election battle

By Syed Ali Mujtaba*  Tamil Nadu is set to go to the polls in April 2026, and the political battle lines are beginning to take shape. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the state on January 23, 2026, marked the formal launch of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s campaign against the ruling Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK). Addressing multiple public meetings, the Prime Minister accused the DMK government of corruption, criminality, and dynastic politics, and called for Tamil Nadu to be “freed from DMK’s chains.” PM Modi alleged that the DMK had turned Tamil Nadu into a drug-ridden state and betrayed public trust by governing through what he described as “Corruption, Mafia and Crime,” derisively terming it “CMC rule.” He claimed that despite making numerous promises, the DMK had failed to deliver meaningful development. He also targeted what he described as the party’s dynastic character, arguing that the government functioned primarily for the benefit of a single family a...

Over 40% of gig workers earn below ₹15,000 a month: Economic Survey

By A Representative   The Finance Minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, while reviewing the Economic Survey in Parliament on Tuesday, highlighted the rapid growth of gig and platform workers in India. According to the Survey, the number of gig workers has increased from 7.7 million to around 12 million, marking a growth of about 55 percent. Their share in the overall workforce is projected to rise from 2 percent to 6.7 percent, with gig workers expected to contribute approximately ₹2.35 lakh crore to the GDP by 2030. The Survey also noted that over 40 percent of gig workers earn less than ₹15,000 per month.