Climate change is here right now and it will only get worse.
Extreme weather events are happening more and more frequently around the world
—forest fires, heat-waves, hurricanes and super storms, droughts in one region
and floods in another, melting glaciers, unprecedented cold freezes and rising
sea levels. Runaway climate change caused by soaring greenhouse gas emissions
threatens the survival of life on the planet. If we're not worried by all this,
we're not thinking straight.
One thing that is clear is that there is no realistic way to
reform or control capitalism. The capitalist response to these challenges is
business as usual. The solution to climate change is known and simple: rapidly
phase out the use of fossil fuels and make a mass-scale switch to renewables.
But gigantic economic interests at the heart of the capitalist system have
massive investments in coal, oil, gas and nuclear power and will not change. The
switch to renewable energy across the board is being blocked by those who
profit from the polluting industries. The sole operating imperative of the big
corporations is to secure the greatest possible profits — regardless of the
consequences to the planet and its people. It is the Green Party’s view that
through legislation the excesses and abuses of the system can be reined in.
However, there is absolutely no evidence that this will ever really happen. Even
if there are reasonable well-intentioned laws on the books, they are flouted,
ignored or simply not enforced.
Fewer and fewer ordinary
people have any confidence about the future — how could they? The all-pervasive
ruling-class propaganda machine is ceaselessly promoting scapegoats in an
effort to divide ordinary people and forestall or weaken any effective
resistance. Refugees, Muslims, benefit claimants on welfare, public housing tenants
with a 'spare' bedroom, petty criminals — all are pressed into service by the
media and the politicians to distract ordinary people and displace their anger
away from the actual system which is destroying our lives.
The labour of working people creates the wealth of society.
The rich are wealthy not because of their genius but because they are able to
appropriate the toil of the masses. The bosses are able to do this because they
own the means of production. We have no alternative — we have to work for them.
We get wages, they get the surplus — the profits. The economy is a social
enterprise, a product of the work of the mass of the people yet it is
controlled by a handful of people the 1% and is run solely to make profits for
them. That is the source of all our problems and it has to be confronted. We
can't duck or fudge this issue. The corporations control the economy, on which
we all depend. Bringing capitalism under social control is the big unspoken
taboo. Shouldn’t the means of life be owned by society. As someone once said,
people can more readily envisage the end of the world than they can the end of
capitalism.
We need a system of social democracy that empowers people. Apologists
for capitalism have long devoted enormous efforts to campaign against
socialism. They constantly try to prove that it is a completely utopian
exercise, flying in the face of human nature; that it will never work. Of
course, the idea that society will only function if we have a system of
organised, institutional greed — that is, capitalism — is completely ludicrous.
Our current problems have arisen precisely because we have such a society. To
save ourselves we need change. Fighting to get rid of this rotten system and
replace it with a socialist society of peace, solidarity and plenty remains the
most urgent task facing progressive humanity. Socialists argue that the only
way this can happen is if the economy is brought under social ownership and
control. With the economic levers in our
hands we could elaborate a conscious plan focused on meeting human needs.
Combating climate change and building a sustainable economy would be the most
urgent priority. Plans would be democratically decided. Workplaces would be
controlled by producers. This is the socialism. Capitalism, on the other hand, treats
the workers like possessions — things to be used like other machinery in the
factory in the process of making a profit. In the process, the workers humanity
is sucked out of them. It destroys the ability of the workers to live a
productive life with love. They live the life of a commodity, or an animal, to
be exploited, used, and discarded.
Elections are always a very important moment, a time that
encourages discussion on the future. Socialists participate in the electoral
process to present socialist alternatives. By fielding Socialist Party
candidates in elections at all levels of office, we educate the voters about
socialism and its radical solutions. We also promote the independent political
organization of working people in direct opposition to the capitalist parties.
Our party knows that a socialist revolution is necessary when workers become
conscious that the power of the capitalist bosses must be replaced with the
power of the people. This is the message that the Socialist Party has promoted
in its 2015 election campaigns. Our participation in the elections has given
people the opportunity to question our candidates and to vote for a party that
is already fighting in their interests. There is access, albeit limited, to the
media which enables us to show that we are here. Despite all the difficulties
and inequities of the electoral process, in terms of time and coverage we are
managing to gain an audience.
Most Green activists want to keep the market. They accept
that private property and competition for profit are natural and good even
though they add many of their own caveats to that. There is nothing ecological
about private property, capitalist competition, or the profit motive.
Naturally, human beings, their work, their societies, are communal. Primitive,
tribal society was communist. As human society developed the capacity to create
a surplus, various forms of property and privatization arose, so that an elite
class could claim that surplus for itself, and thus exploit the labour of the
rest of us. In primitive society, human beings recognized the simple fact that
since we all work together, since we are interdependent, we ought to share the
fruit of our labour.
Private property is a story of exploitation and oppression:
even though you worked to create the surplus, “I get to keep it. It is mine, not yours, because my class owns the
state”. In ancient society “I own you,
your body itself, as a slave.” In feudal times because “I am lord of the manor, because of my aristocratic social status, I
have the right to collect, from my serfs, a substantial portion of the
agricultural surplus.” In capitalist society, private property comes into
its own, so to speak, as the culmination of this historical process of class
exploitation. It meant, first, that aristocrats and the gentry got to enclose
the commons as their private property, and kick the serfs off of it. When they
lost their land the peasants moved to the cities in massive numbers. Thus they
became prey to the industrialists. Because the industrialists owned the
factories, they were the only people who could give workers any livelihood. So
they could force the workers to work for very low wages in horrible conditions.
“I am the robber industrial baron, now,
your new master, and you are a wage-slave to furnish me with the surplus value
you create”
Propertarians would argue that this gives small businessman
a bad rap—that many employers are kindly and benevolent. Perhaps so. But to be
sustainable, every single small capitalist would have to be a saint, would have
to give away his profits to his competitors and to the community if he started
winning too much at their expense. That is impossible. And if we talk about
workers' cooperatives, or the various utopian schemes put forward by the left
reformists the same problem applies. With competition for profit, most such
cooperatives will eventually go under, while a few will survive. Competition
always intensifies, because the rate of profit tends to fall. Capitalists, big
or small, cooperative or corporate, compete with each other on the market, and
they do so by cutting their prices. The best way to do this is to replace their
workers with machines. This works out for the first capitalist who gets the new
technology: he can undercut his competitors. But then his surviving competitors
get the same technology. Since profit is based upon human labor, profits, in
general, fall, as they get squeezed between falling prices and higher
technological costs. As profits fall, competition for profits intensifies. As
competition intensifies, there will be a strong temptation for relations even
within cooperatives to become hierarchical, for a few "elite" members
to drive the rest to work harder, so that the cooperative can compete better,
externally. In the case of both small businesses and cooperatives, as they
compete with other concerns for survival, their decisions will be based upon
profit and survival rather than upon what is good, in the long term, for the
environment, the larger community, or even for their own workers and their
smaller shareholders.
The only alternative to capitalism is socialism. And we will
use every forum to keep saying that until our message begins to sink in.
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