The first condition of success for socialism is that its
adherents should explain its aim and its essential characteristics clearly, so
that they can be understood by everyone. We must do away with many
misunderstandings created by our adversaries (and even some created by
ourselves.) Socialism was born in 19th century Europe as a movement
of protest against the problems inherent in capitalist society.
The main idea of socialism is simple. Socialists believe
that society is divided into two classes by the present form of property-owning,
and that one of these classes, the wage-earners is obliged to work for the
other, the capitalist, in order to be able to live at all. Workers effectively possess
nothing. They can only live by their labour-power and since, in order to work,
they need an expensive equipment, which they have not got, and raw materials
and capital, which they have not got, they are forced to put themselves in the
hands of another class that owns the means of production, the land, the
factories, the machines, the raw material, and accumulated capital in the form
of money. And naturally, the capitalist, the possessing class, taking advantage
of its power, makes the working and non-owning class pay a large forfeit. It
does not rest content after it has been reimbursed for the advances it has
made, and has repaired the wear and tear on the machinery but continues to
extract a surplus from the workers – which is their profit and supposed reward
for being employer. A worker can neither work, nor eat, clothe or shelter him
or herself, without paying a sort of ransom in the form of sweat and toil to
the owning capitalist class. All this misery and injustice results from the
fact that one class monopolises the means of production and of life, and
imposes its laws on another class and on society as a whole. The capitalist
wage slavery relationship inflicts a physiological effects, conditioning the
working class to a submissive mentality in the workplace. This submissive mentality then manifests into
passive behaviour in the political lives of the working class.
Socialism aims to liberate the peoples from dependence on a
minority which owns or controls the means of production. It aims to put
economic power in the hands of the people as a whole, and to create a community
in which free men and women work together as equals. Socialism seeks to replace
capitalism by a system in which the public interest takes precedence over the
interest of private profit. We, in the Socialist Party appeal to all who
believe that the exploitation of one person by another must be abolished. Socialists
aim to achieve freedom and justice by removing the exploitation which divides
men under capitalism and strive to build a new society in freedom and by
democratic means. Without freedom there can be no socialism. Socialism can be
achieved only through democracy. Democracy can be fully realised only through socialism.
One man is a master and the other a wage slave, one enjoys riches and the other
obeys order, no amount of purely electoral machinery on a basis of 'one man one
vote' will make the two equal socially or politically. Elections have become
beauty contests between "charismatic" leaders struggling to attract
the attention of the electorate in order to implement policies constituting
variations of the same theme: maximisation of the freedom of market forces. There
is little better description of democracy as the one that declares it to be the
government of the people, by the people, for the people. While the guiding
principle of capitalism is private profit the guiding principle of socialism is
the satisfaction of human needs. Planning in socialism does not mean that all
economic decisions are placed in the hands of the state or central authorities.
Economic power should be decentralised wherever this is compatible with the
aims of planning. The workers as the producers must be associated
democratically with the direction of their industry.
The ecological crisis is the direct result of the continuing
degradation of the environment that the market economy and the consequent
growth economy promote. Humanity is faced with a crucial choice between two
different proposed solutions, what we can call the "conventional
environmentalist" and the "eco-socialist ". The green movement has
lost much of its radical potential by being integrated into the existing social
system and is engaged with those in the corridors of power to enact legislative
palliatives. Another section with an almost irrational mystical approach to the
ecological problem prefer a strategy of lifestyle changes, building
"communes", food co-ops etc., instead of a direct challenge on the
political field. However, this approach, although helpful in creating an
alternative culture among small sections of the population and, at the same
time, morale-boosting for those who wish to see an immediate change in their
lives, does not have any chance of success ―in the context of today's huge dominance of capitalism. The fact that the
main form of is economic power, and that the concentration of economic power
involves the ruling elites in a constant struggle to dominate people and the
natural world, goes a long way toward explaining the present ecological crisis.
To understand the ecological crisis we should consider the capitalist
production relations. The eco-socialist solution seeks the causes of the
ecological crisis in a social system that is based on the economic exploitation
of human by human and not just mankind’s endeavours to dominate nature. If
capitalism can’t be reformed to subordinate profit to human survival, what
alternative is there but to move to some sort of globally planned economy? Our
present political leaders can’t help but
to choose to make wrong, irrational and
ultimately suicidal decisions about the
economyand the environment. Socialism is an attempt to provide an alternative
to what Marx called capitalism’s ‘destructive progress’. Capitalism can never
be made to serve the common good and so for the sake of social harmony and
ecological sustainability we must look to an alternative system altogether.
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