Today we are faced with multiple interrelated crises, for
example the threat of catastrophic climate change or equally catastrophic
thermonuclear war, and the threat of widespread famine. These threats to human
existence and to the biosphere demand a prompt and rational response; but we
are failing to take the steps that are necessary to avoid disaster.
A serious weakness among activists in movements for social
change has been a lack of understanding of the true nature of the system they
live under. Instead of naming capitalism as the problem activists often use
vague populist terms like “the 1%,” “the rich,” “banksters,” or “greedy
corporations.” But the problem runs much deeper than the corruption of any
particular individual or institution. It lies in the structural foundation of
the entire way of life that currently dominates the globe. This is an integral
part of Socialist Party’s function; to educate people on the complex and long
history of capitalism. We need to understand how it works and what the nature
of the crisis is and the nature of the different moments that it passes through
so that we can identify its vulnerabilities and weaknesses. We ask ‘What’s the
labor theory of value?’ and say of those militant protesters ‘How can you call
yourself a socialist if you don’t even know what the labor theory of value is,
one of its basic concepts?” The labor
theory of value means that the exchange value of a product is based on the
socially necessary amount of labor power that is generally required to produce
it. But under capitalism, one of the key ingredients is surplus value. And
under capitalism, the buyer of labor power — the capitalist — appropriates the
surplus value generated in the process of commodity production. But theoretical
clarity for its own sake is pointless intellectualism; instead, it should be a
guide for action. Mastering Marxist political economy is tough enough. But
putting it into action is even harder.
One increasingly urgent reason to abolish capitalism is its
prominent role in harming the planet. Capitalism possesses an inherent growth
imperative. This means that the normal functioning of capitalism is causing
water shortages, polluted oceans, destroyed forests and ruined depleted topsoil.
But even if the pending ecological catastrophe weren’t upon us, capitalism
would still need to be dismantled because it’s based on exploitation. There’s
no reason why the social result of production needs to be in private hands and
that only a few people should own what everybody produces.
Critiques of capitalism have entered the mainstream debates,
with Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century and Naomi Klein’s
This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate as notable examples. Both
authors, however, approach capitalism from a reformist stance and hold up
social democratic versions of capitalism as viable alternatives. For sure, it
is worth defending the social safety nets and more enlightened views on
environmental issues. But it has to be kept emphasized that capitalism, in
whatever form, is inherently destructive because it converts the natural world
into commodities. And it’s inherently exploitative because profit always comes
from the exploitation of workers. It doesn’t matter if you give them healthcare
or a higher salary; you’re still exploiting them for private gain.
The problem with Piketty and Klein is that regardless of
intention are complicit in promoting the supremacy of capitalism which remains
unchallenged questioned. They no matter
how reluctantly only offer a framework that exists within the system. Their
debate has to be inside that framework. Nothing can exist outside. It is not
unlike when Thatcher said, ‘There is no alternative. It’s hard for people to
imagine that there could be any alternative. People think this is all there is.
This is the only way humans can behave. Capitalism is natural. The level of
political consciousness within the working class is very low. And that didn’t
happen by chance. It is by design and it’s by indoctrination and conditioning.
The capitalists and their representatives in government are adept at finding
new ways to squash and tamp down threats to their control. So the socialist
movement has to keep evolving our tactics as well. The Occupy movement provided
a glimpse at what’s possible. It made people realize they can rise up and take
collective action. It was very inspiring to people for that reason. It made
people feel good that they weren’t alone and it showed the potential of what
could happen. But Occupy also was a learning experience. It expressed the
discontent, it showed the weakness and the need to be stronger. But if we’re
actually going to go up against the system, it can’t just be a spontaneous
gathering of a bunch of people. It has to be organized — planned and strategic.
Many are pessimistic about the prospect of a socialist
revolution, probably with a certain amount of justification, and they know that
eradicating capitalism is a long shot. But it’s our only shot. The reason that socialists
are politically active is because there’s nothing else. The only other
alternative is to give up, surrender and submit to a slow death for ourselves
and our planet. When we accept things
the way they are we’ll end up in a worse situation. If a person really
understands what’s going on, he or she cannot stand idle. It’s a matter of
human dignity and it becomes part of our historical social responsibility to
try and change things. Accepting things the way they are would mean allowing 10
million children under the age of five to die annually because, under the
normal functioning of global capitalism, it’s not profitable to save them. It
would mean continuing to accept racism, which has always been central to
capitalism’s divide and rule manner of domination and control. It means the
acceptance of capitalism’s expansion and the unremitting accumulation of
capital.
We should never forget that we are potentially stronger than
they. We outnumber them. But equally important, we have right on our side.
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