Socialism is not a salve to rub on the wounds of injured
slaves to make their burden easier to carry. It is not a movement for high
wages only. It is a movement with an ideal that reaches over the bounds of
capitalism. It asserts the system cannot be patched up so the workers will get
what is coming to them. The wage system is a slave system that supports more
idle parasites, and keeps them in greater luxury, than any system of society in
the past. Socialists say it must go, to make way for a system based on freedom,
on equality, on mutual aid, on cooperation. The Socialist Party teaches workers
the power of united effort and awakens a desire for a change to a better system
of economics. Those who benefit by the system are very well satisfied to let it
stand as it is. A system that keeps them in power and idleness and luxury,
undreamt of by even the kings of the past, is quite good enough for the lords
of the land, and the lords of industry and commerce, and the lords of the law.
Where did the master class get its power and wealth? By robbing working people.
Some of you say, no, he got it by honest means. We socialists say no. He got it
by the sweat and toil of the men and women working in his factories. It’s
up to us to arouse the working class to fight for its own emancipation. They
have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to gain.
Socialism is based upon the concept of “We, the People”. Socialism
is not a utopia but a reasoned human answer to the problems humanity faces. Socialists call for radical thinking and
political action that must go to the root causes. We are fighting the current
system: capitalism that imposes commodification of everything for new sources
of profit. It depletes natural resources and it disrupts the climate. We point
at the real culprits of that system: the global corporations, governments chained
to the interests of business and their lobbyists, the green-wash reformers.
Socialism is the alternative where human interests and sharing wealth is the
foundation of the new economy based on real needs, preserving the ecosystem and
its biodiversity. Humanity is an integral part of the ecosystem in which they
live even the two cannot be separated. We reject the deception of a vision of
ecology which would make it compatible with capitalism. Green capitalism still searches
for maximum profits and feeds short-term accumulation. Socialism wants to put
the economic and productive systems at the service of human needs. Socialism
challenges the dictatorship of vested interests and of the private ownership of
the means of production. As it is a revolution to change the forms of
ownership, the institutional system and the hierarchy of legal, social and
environmental standards which organize both society and the economy, it is therefore
a citizens’ revolution, because it intends to empower every person, not in the
interest of a particular social category but for the good of all humans. We
refuse to accept that despair and anger turn into hatred. We want neither an
enlightened vanguard nor benevolent dictators but support the democratic path
of the citizens’ revolution. People are not the problem, they are the solution.
The worst damage that could be wrought by the current crisis would be that
humanity proved unable to open itself up to a new future. Socialism can be a
new future.
Right now the political prospects for socialism future looks
bleak and foreboding but as they say, it is always darkest before the dawn. There
are flickers of hope every now and then. In 2011 there was Occupy Wall Street
and the many offshoots it spawned, itself inspired by the Arab Spring. In
Europe, like-minded expressions of outrage arose, such as the Indignados, directed
against austerity politics and the finance-driven capitalism of our time. The
hope was real, but what sustained it was wishful thinking. Many not swept away
by the enthusiasm of a leaderless movement aimed at taking their own affairs in
their own hands, realised that with prevailing political systems rigged in favour
of entrenched power and wealth, and with the vast majority, the ninety-nine
percent, having no idea what to do next and no way to get it done even if they
did, the revolutionary potential was bound to pass. It is the same with the
wave of protests now. We can expect a few mainly cosmetic reforms to result.
But, on matters of substance, these latest eruptions of people power are likely
to have about as much effect as Occupy Wall Street did. To realise the
aspirations of people in motion, real democracy is indispensable. Mass protests
and popular mobilisation can be part of the process but much more is required. Attacks
on workers’ rights, increasing inequality, and austerity politics and the
continued resistance are still the causes of our hope. Ultimately, though, real
democracy is what it is all about - the people in power. If we have learned
anything over the years it is that there is a sleeping giant out there,
yearning for a constructive purpose, that, if properly organised and with
purpose and direction, has the power to remake the world. We won’t get the change
we need if we rely on elected officials to enact it for us. That will take an
independent movement that isn’t beholden to any party or special interest.
Building it will be a major challenge, and nobody else will do it for us. It
won’t be easy.
2 comments:
It's good in theory but not in application.
When has it ever been applied for you to make this judgement? Socialism is a 'post-capitalist' society.
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