Although previous societies have inflicted local
environmental damage on the planet which sometimes was so severe that it led to
their extinction, as in the case of the Easter Islanders, the present scale of
degradation is of an entirely different order. It is global and affects
everyone. The world’s ecology is currently in a dire condition and capitalism
is at fault. It is clear that capitalism, as an economic system, cannot save
the planet from global warming and the consequences of climate change. We must lay
to rest that capitalism can solve these problems. It must be apparent that we
face an urgent crisis yet the ruling representatives of capitalism have greeted
all the above with indifference. Environmental lobbies, such as Friends of the
Earth, think that capitalism can end the destruction to the Earth’s eco-systems
without any fundamental change to capitalism if only our political leaders
would wake up. This is a common view amongst environmental activists; a view
which sees capitalism moving towards sustainability and zero growth. The idea
that capitalism can be reformed to become the charitable and green system is
fairly typical of the environmentalist movement. In this model of capitalist
society the basic structures of capitalism remain intact but the distribution
of the social product is changed to end inequality. Institutions of capitalism,
such as multi-national corporations become social organisations. Lifestyles
change and social structures are reformed while technical green advances are
applied worldwide. The market becomes harnessed to sustainability. Some sort of
world ‘government’ under the main international institutions of global capitalism,
UN, World Bank, IMF, WTO or whatever is brought about to police the system.
This is all shallow wishful thinking.
We argue that such a scenario completely ignores the way
capitalism operates, and must operate, as a system and is therefore hopelessly utopian.
The present world system is driven by the struggle for profit which leads to
competition, nationalism and imperialism. These are the characteristics of
capitalism. Yet all of these have been eliminated in the green capitalist
world. The present system’s need for infinite growth and the finite resources
of Earth stand in contradiction to each other. Successful operation of the
system, which in the terms of capital means growth, or accumulation of capital,
means that on the one hand nature as a resource is to be exploited ruthlessly. There
is a clear causal relationship between global capitalism’s search for
profitable accumulation and global warming and it is for this reason that reformers
aim to create a “no growth” capitalist economy. On the one hand they admit that
the present order of states, dominated by an economy exploiting the working
class, struggling for profits, operating with relentless competition and
backing all this up by imperialism, cannot possibly lead to their utopia, since
it specifically excludes these things. On the other hand by excluding these key
characteristics of capitalism they admit their utopia is in certain fundamental
respects non-capitalist, admitting this utopia is not achievable without a
break from capitalism. Yet this is something they are not prepared to
countenance. They maintain their humane capitalism is a type of capitalism
worth fighting for. The present destruction of the planet is rooted in the
capitalist system of production and cannot be solved without a complete break
with capitalism. We need to create a higher form of social organisation before
the present system destroys us all. The entire system of production based on
wage labour and capital needs to be replaced with a system which produces for
human needs. All the half measures of converting aspects of capitalism to
social purposes, while the fundamentals of capitalism remain in place, are just
wishful thinking; and to pretend they could solve our problems is pure
deception.
The capitalist class, of course, appoint their top
economists, rather than environmental scientists, to advise them on the
ecological crisis. What these economists do not appear to realise is that,
while starting from the assumption that the ecological crisis can be solved
within the capitalist system, their calculations, which show the required costs
would be unsustainable, prove the opposite, namely that this crisis cannot be
solved within capitalist relations of production. It is obvious that the
demands of the capitalist system, namely profits via cheap energy are being
followed in preference to any strategy which could ensure the long term
survival of life on the planet. Why are we doing exactly the opposite of what
rationality should dictate? Capitalism is a productive system which produces
for profit not for human needs. The capitalist system requires continuous
accumulation of capital. If capitals do not accumulate they will collapse, and
there is therefore a general struggle for accumulation of capital, which means
growth and expansion of markets, throughout the entire system. This drive for
accumulation is derived from the internal functioning of the system and cannot
be avoided. As Marx noted, for capitalism, the watchword was:
“Accumulate,
accumulate! That is Moses and the prophets!”
The means of production need to be converted from capitalist
class property to social property before an equitable system of distribution
can be achieved. Instead of the present system in which workers are alienated
from the means of production and from the products of their labour, a free
association of producers producing for the needs of humanity, is required.
Instead of the interchange with nature being determined by capitalist profit,
this interchange needs to be collectively planned and regulated by all. Only
after such changes can we achieve a balanced exchange with nature. We call a
society of socialised property and freely associated producers, producing for
human needs, “socialism” or “communism”. It will be a society which will
inscribe on its banners:
“From each according
to their ability, to each according to their needs”.
A society where the free development of each will be the
condition for the free development of all. Such a society will differentiate
itself from capitalist in a myriad of ways, but the principal differences will
be that it is a society without state, without money, where the mass of
humanity participate in the planning and running of society. It will be a
society without wage labour and commodity production and without classes. For
the first time in human history it will be possible to collectively plan the
future of the human species. Humanity will have a common interest and will be
able to work towards achieving it. Working time will be reduced and the mass of
the population will be drawn into the running of that new society. All will
have a common interest in solving the ecological problems inherited from
capitalism. With the abolition of capitalist society, all its waste, its
cruelty, its wars, together with the misery, agony of toil, ignorance,
brutality and mental degradation it inflicts on the working class, will be
ended. Socialist society will draw on the abilities of all and produce for the
needs of all. It will be able to balance these needs with sustainability. It
will then be possible to roll back and repair the dreadful damage capitalism
has inflicted on the planet in the few centuries during which it has been the
dominant system of production.
The choice facing the world is one of the ruin of
civilisation or the construction of world socialism. We address ourselves to
those who agree that the capitalist society must be replaced with a free
association of producers and citizens. We, in the Socialist Party, are
committed to building a world that prides itself on having a sustainable
environment and society that co-exists in relative harmony with undeveloped
areas of the planet. We insist that our environment not be sacrificed on the
altar of profit — either in the form of corporations devouring our forests and
waters, or in the form of urban sprawl and unnecessary development. We, in the
Socialist Party, seek to build a society where the barriers between rural and
urban are broken down through the reorganization of society for the benefit of
all life on the planet. We, in the Socialist Party, understand that we are not
isolated from the world community. On the contrary, our internationalism allow
us to understand how what we do has an effect on what happens across and around
the world. We, in the Socialist Party, are committed to building a society that
will be beacon of democracy and social justice. The demands the Socialist Party put forward
are based on what working people need if they are to live any sort of a decent
life. They are not based on what the capitalist system says it can afford. Our
intention is to provide a guide and plan of action, and, at the same time,
assist working people in becoming aware of their power to reconstruct society
so that it serves the interests of humanity. Our demand is the aim of revolution and the
establishment of a democratic socialism. The tactics, methods and forms of
struggle may necessarily change over time, depending on the development of the
conditions. But, at all times, these tactics, methods, forms, and aims employed
by the Socialist Party are developed with the same objective— the advancing of
the struggles of working people for their immediate and historic interests.
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