Since Marx first called for a
society "from each according to ability, to each according to need"
this vision has been a driving force in history. But it has also raised the
problem: how do we win, how do we build a revolutionary movement capable of
creating socialism? Despite the many setbacks, we remain convinced the working
class will understand its revolutionary potential. Socialism is closer today
than we recognise. If there is a single word to characterise our time, that
word is change.
Everyone knows the economy is undergoing a profound change.
This change is fundamental and irreversible; it is so great it is causing great
change in every aspect of life. The content of the change in the economy is the
replacement of human labour by new and ever expanding automated technologies,
the core of which is computer-controlled robotics. Every employer understands
that the surest way to increase profits is to have the worker produce more for
the same amount of wages. Huge sections of the population are locked into
“McJobs” or permanent joblessness. The new poor includes the throw-away workers
— temporary staff with no benefits, the part-time workers on zero hour
contracts.
In the history of this planet such
fundamental changes in the economy have always forced revolutionary changes in
the social system. Economic revolution
has always precipitated political revolution. Social reorganization becomes
inevitable because basic necessities of life must be paid for with money. We
make money by going to work. If the robots do the work, then how will we get
the food, housing and clothing we need? If there is going to be production without
wages, then there must be distribution without money! We must guarantee that
the change result in a better life for the people. We must guarantee the new
technological revolution reach the potential for common good through common
ownership. Can we who understand today visualise tomorrow with enough clarity
to accept the historic responsibilities of revolutionaries?
Under capitalism, the capitalists
own the means of production. Workers are forced to sell their labour power and
the capitalist exploits them. In socialism, the means of production are owned
by the working class. The technology exist to produce all that we need. For the
first time in history, a true flowering of the human intellect and spirit is
possible. The Socialist Party fight is to reorganise society. Our vision is of
a new, cooperative society of equality, and of a people awakening. Important in
understanding socialism is understanding what it is not. Distortion upon lie
upon distortion have been piled so high that genuine socialism is now buried
underneath a pile of deceit. There are now so many people with diametrically
oppose socialist ideas who nevertheless claim to be socialists that the term
has become almost meaningless. Socialism is not a movement of reformist social
legislation while the workers play either a passive or merely supportive role.
The real socialist tradition rejects the identification of socialism with the
actions of small minorities in which a few hundred or even several thousand
armed insurrectionists liberate the masses on their behalf.
Socialism rejects the establishment
of one-party state bureaucracies, or the gradualist approach that asks the
working class to put its faith in well-meaning politicians. Ordinary people
must themselves organise, creating their own institutions of struggle and of
administration. The emancipation of the working class must be the work of the
workers themselves is a principle which means our class needs independent
organisations it controls in order to secure its liberation. Self-emancipation
requires that the working class gain power in society. A self-managing society
needs a structure through which the people make and enforce the basic rules of
the society and defend their social order.
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