I don't believe Gandhi is overrated at all. How many people have the personal strength to lead a movement like he did? I don't value his wisdom simply because he was successful in his endeavors; that is almost a secondary point. I value it for its own sake. He had so much to say and so much to give to his community, it astounds me. I would respect him just as much if he and his followers had been "mown down" because they were fighting for a benevolent cause in a sanctified manner.
But the point is to make change, not to feel good about the change that might have been made. Gandhi (sic) was a political genious to utilize the moment when his enemies were weak, when he could implement his program without fear of violent reprisal. However, his effect on world movements for change has been overal destructive. People try to apply his formula for change to situations where the State
is able to respond with violence. Consequently, they are unable to effect change, and some of our best minds become little more than martyrs. The only practical lesson we can learn from Gandhi is to wait for our moment, seize it, and don't let it go.
And let's look at Mohandas' primary disciples: Martin and Mandela. Martin (Luther King Junior, obviously) was able to pull off nonviolence only because the United States was engaged in a cold diplomatic war, and not passing certain legislation could have seriously harmed the United States' image in the former colonies. Without the passage of the Civil Rights Act, we would probably have seen a few more Cubas, a few more Angolas, a few more Vietnams in this world; the Act was PR for the United States government. Nothing more.
Mandela used the same situation. At the time he was active, South African troops were repressing national liberation movements in Namibia, as well as engaging MPLA and Cuban forces in Angola. This same situation was what allowed the Bantustans to gain federal status in the first place; South Africa was simply too busy.
*WARNING* The following paragraph contains spiritual opinions that may be deemed offensive or just plain irregular. Pacifism tends to upset people.
That being said, I agree that class warfare often benefits society and makes the world a better place.1 However, I would not participate in it personally or support it in any way because I believe it would be damaging to my soul and to that of other people. Human beings do not have the right to make the decision to end another's life. No matter how wrong or "evil" someone is, they have a chance to change. It may not be bloody damn likely, but it can happen and they deserve that opportunity. The state of the body is temporary and if we must endure hardships here on Earth to keep from committing the greatest possible evil (i.e. killing people) I feel it is both necessary and worthwhile. I cannot help but place higher value on souls than on the condition of the world.2
There are many ways to participate in class warfare. One of the easiest and most effective is the general strike. Now, this is supposed to be similar to Gandhi's program of nonviolent direct action, but what actually happens is that the State intervenes with military force. What began as direct action at the point of production (yes, I
IWW) ends either with a general bloodbath, or with the strikers defending themselves. Class warfare doesn't have to start out violent; in a very few cases, it may progress without violence. However, the class in power often
makes it violent, and I believe that the working class has the right and duty to defend itself. To follow your example, the people in power make the decision to end peoples' lives; defending your life against such aggression is what makes class war successful. Otherwise, you just get martyrs.
That being said, it could be argued that the system of production itself constitutes a war upon the working class, which should resist it by any means necessary.
However, I do sometimes sway from the black-and-white argument I just made. Sometimes killing one person (or a small number of people) can save the lives of many others and I am as yet unsure what I believe is right in such a situation. Probably neither course. To have the chance to rid the world of someone who causes much suffering and fail to take it seems wrong, but I cannot find it in my heart to condemn anyone to death. This is a moral quandary for me and I won't state an opinion on it as I do not yet have one. Any thoughts? I'm almost positive everyone will say it's okay to do it, but I'm curious.
If you're using violence in self-defense, and you by some chance kill your attacker, does it not follow that it was the attacker who condemned himself to death? Just as the bourgeoisie forges the weapons that will destroy it, an aggressor condemns himself, eventually, to be the victim of somebody who strikes back. I'm not posting anymore, as this post is long enough as it is.