Consciousness changes in struggle, but there is no
preordained level, or particular content, that rising consciousness
automatically takes. Socialist consciousness emerges as the movement matures.
Until then consciousness takes many different forms, including ideas that turn
out to be dead-ends, or which can derail a movement before it ever attains
socialist consciousness. There are no inevitable lessons people mechanically
learn from class struggle. There has to be discussion, debate and a discourse over
lessons of past fights and what is the best way forward, in which various
arguments contend for influence. Workers are not blank slates whose heads are
waiting to be filled up. They carry ideological baggage from their past and
they are influenced by the clash of contending opinions. Different political
currents, from left and right, contest for the direction of the movement.
Whether or not their ideas are appropriate or beneficial, most believe that
what they are proposing is in the best interest of the workers’ movement.
The Socialist Party is one contender among others to prove
their ideas and perspectives of the movement. If socialists don’t struggle for
a set of political ideas to shape that movement, others will. Political movements,
like nature, abhors a vacuum. Our ideas are based on our principles. Socialism
can only occur by people determining their own fate. We reject elitism and
vanguardism yet we do not bow down to the current level of struggle nor
opportunistically flatter the movement, by saying: “Whatever you’re doing,
that’s alright, that’s fine.”
The task of socialists in this situation is not simply to
offer an alternative ideology, a total explanation of the world, but to draw
out the class consciousness that makes such bigger ideas realistic. We do not
proceed from some faceless idea of the working class. The roots of worker
self-activity and self-organisation in opposition to the employer lie, in the
first place, in the reality of exploitation; i.e., the wage relationship—the
very heart of capitalist accumulation, expansion, and growth. It is in the
workplace, in the basic social relations of production, that the fight over the
extra product of productivity occurs most sharply on a regular basis, and where
even perceptions of bigger events can be shaped in a class perspective. The
workplace is also, of course, where workers have the most power to act on their
class consciousness, whatever its source may be.
Imagine a society in which the worker, instead of working
for the profit ends of a private owner, works instead for the benefit of other
people. In socialism, the products of social labour are enjoyed directly by the
community themselves as a class. So, rather than working for someone else’s
profit ends, or competing for more bread-crumbs than your neighbour, you are
working for your own benefit in the context of broader society. Why is this so?
It is because your work (along with everyone else’s) will work to increase
overall production in society, whose rewards will be enjoyed by the society as
a whole. As a member of that society, as a worker in socialism, you are
entitled to work and share in the products of that work. It is in this way that
socialism will work to meet the needs and wants of all members in society in a
way that capitalist exploitation cannot.
The capitalists would be quick to denounce such a thing as
Utopian because according to them people are too motivated by self-interest to
be interested by these abstract altruistic benefits. To them, the only way to
encourage hard work is to have a carrot and stick, with material wealth being
the carrot and abject poverty being the stick. Their understanding follows that
capitalism is a true meritocracy; that the wealthy are wealthy by virtue of the
value of their work, and if their ability to accumulate wealth is harmed, they
will have no incentive to contribute this work to the social good. The example
of a doctor is frequently given. Why work hard, go through many years of
education, to become a doctor if you won’t make more money doing that?
But studies of human behaviour reveals remuneration is not
the sole incentive for hard labour, in that many undertake care work without
the same monetary incentives enjoyed by your average doctor. In any hospital,
there are technicians, nurses and other workers who are not as well paid as
doctors (yet do the same work, if not more work, than your typical doctor) that
do their jobs very well without this fiscal incentive. In addition to paying
the bills and providing some funds for personal maintenance and enjoyment,
people undertake such jobs to reap other benefits, in that they may actually
enjoy the work that they do or the feeling they get for helping others. These
benefits fall under the meeting of human needs for production, in both the
material and social sense. There is another force which will compel workers
under socialism: the broader social need for certain types of labor to be done.
In capitalism, where the profit ends of an ownership class decide what work is
done for what pay, compensation and the social need for work rarely coincide.
For instance, teachers are vastly more important to all members of society than
models, actors or television spokespersons. Education is a vital social need,
yet educators are paid very little for their work being that they aren’t in the
more lucrative position of advancing a capitalists profit motive. The very
people who build society are very meagerly compensated for their essential
work, while those who aid the parasites in their exploitative adventures make a
king’s ransom.
In socialism rather than capitalism’s carrot and stick, the
necessary risk of unemployment under capitalism to force workers to take on work
which is inadequately compensated (and therefore, undesirable) compared to the
decadence enjoyed by those who best help advance the ends of capitalist profit,
the emphasis in socialism is on the work that it needed for the betterment of
social conditions. The bottom line is that every worker in socialism has their
individual interests invested in the success of socialism. In order to protect
these individual and collective interests, the worker is encouraged to take up
that work that best suits current social needs. The force which would provide
this encouragement is socialist consciousness, the understanding that one’s
personal ambitions coincides with those of other members of society if anyone
is to meet their needs.
It is here where the capitalists assert the “self-made man”
theory and argue that it is irrational to put any other person’s needs above
one’s own. This argument completely ignores the entirety of the human
experience. It ignores the fact that human beings are social creatures, who
fundamentally depend on one another’s labor for mutual survival. It ignores the
fact that we have a fundamental relationship with the all the peoples of the
world simply by living in it. Consider the clothes we wear, the food we eat,
the car we drive. Where did these things come from? What force made them
possible? The answer is labour; the labour of our fellow human being. To defend
ourselves from exploitation, we must be willing to defend one another. It is
only rational to do so, being that we depend on one another anyway for our
continued material and social production, to protect oneself and one’s fellow
person, compromises will need to be made between individual and social desires
and needs. Yet, such compromise is already a fact of social life. We already
accept on some level that we need to limit ourselves and make sacrifices for
the benefit of others. Consider the situation of a crowded subway car, where a
pregnant woman is in need of a seat. Will not two or three people stand in
order to allow the woman to get off of her aching feet? Now, consider a more
serious sacrifice, say in the face of a natural disaster. Aren’t there always
those people who sacrifice their own time, efforts and even safety to help
one’s fellow man and woman? This socialist consciousness is already, in one
form or another, a component to our social selves.
Just as the ruling class works tirelessly to maintain their
dictatorship over the workers, workers will work every bit as hard to maintain
the social order in which workers control. They will work to defend the gains
of their revolution, to defend themselves and every member of society from
exploitation by working to meet collective needs and advance social ends. We
already work to defend ourselves and our loved ones from poverty and the worst
forms of exploitation, yet in socialism, the products of that labour will go to
defend all people collectively.
The essential reality is that in a system construed around
the profit motive, the success of the few is predicated on the suffering and
loss of the many. We need one another, yet the current mode of production
requires that the vast masses of workers be subjected to some of the worst
conditions imaginable. Can we continue to live in a world characterised by such
oppression? Can we call ourselves human if we can look away? The answer should
be no. In order for anyone to be free of the forces of exploitation and
alienation, everyone must be free of these forces.
It is these benefits that will guide the individual worker
in what he/she desires to do for work in socialist society, rather than the
avoidance of poverty. The question changes from “how can I make a profit” or
“how can I make ends meet” to “how can I help, while enjoying what I do?” This
change in the essential question that guides work is brought about through the
construction of socialist relations to the means of production, as well as the
consciousness of workers in society. As people no longer have to worry about
going hungry doing the work they do, they are allowed to decide for themselves
what work they want to undertake.
A socialist party is measured by the enemies it makes and
the friends it makes.
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