“If you form the habit
of going by what you hear others say about someone, or going by what others
think about someone, instead of searching that thing out for yourself and
seeing for yourself, you will be walking west when you think you’re going east,
and you will be walking east when you think you’re going west. This generation,
especially of our people, has a burden, more so than any other time in history.
The most important thing we can learn to do today is think for ourselves.”
– Malcolm X
We live in a deeply destructive world and the Socialist
Party exists because of a trust in the potential of the working class to change
that. We, the workers, have much more power than we realise. Common action has
won great things for humanity in the past and now it is time again to carry
that legacy forward, to take it to the next level. We do not need reforms, but
a whole new system. Obama has been accused, among many things, of being
“socialist” If Obama—who spent obscene amounts of money bailing out criminal financial
institutions, who staffed key government positions with former Wall Street
executives, and who expanded covert military operations beyond Bush—can
seriously be classified as a socialist then it truly distorts socialism’s
message of solidarity to the detriment of the average working person. Socialism
suffers the burden of the past. The Soviet Union proclaimed itself both
democratic and socialist yet it was neither. The right-wing media ridiculed the
USSR’s claims to democracy, but saw fit to accept its supposed socialism to
discredit the idea. From another quarter, supposedly dissident progressive
academics and intellectuals, tied the public’s perception of socialism to the
brutal Russian regime, declining to mention the fact the average worker was just
as abused in Russia as in the United States.
The world about us is falling to pieces. The need for
revolution is widely realised. Today humanity faces a global crisis stemming
from the incredible rapaciousness of the capitalist system. Catastrophic climate
change threatens to end life on our planet, then there is endemic endless wars
plus mass poverty and hunger accompanied by a ruthless assault on working
people everywhere. Capitalism will destroy the human race. It is absolutely
clear that the wealthy will continue to put the drive for corporate profit
ahead of everything, even our own future as a species. It is incapable of
changing. Even when it recognises the danger it cannot stop doing what it does.
Under capitalism, the working class is a ground-down, deeply divided mass — it
is simply fodder for exploitation by the bosses in the workplace. Workers are
forced to compete against each other for jobs. They are divided by nationality,
ethnic background or skin colour; by skill and type of work (blue collar, white
collar, etc.); by their wage and general conditions of work; and by age and
gender. These divisions are skilfully exploited by the capitalist class to keep
the workers disunited and turned in on each other. And, of course, through the
all-pervasive mass media workers are constantly inundated with consumerist
advertising, offering a fantasy view of what is desirable and never actually
possible for them of acquiring. If capitalism is not overthrown, humanity is
most likely doomed. The only question is the time-table of this apocalypse. The
only way out is the abolition of capitalism and its replacement by socialism.
Socialism is rule by the people. Working people will decide
how socialism is to work. This was how Marx and Engels defined socialism. The
task of the Socialist Party therefore is to help take power from capitalists
for working people to have. Marx and Engels made no attempt to proclaim in
advance how a socialist society is to be developed but declared that the builders
of a socialist society will be the workers and it will be they who will decide
what a classless society is to be like. Capitalism is maintained by class power
and will only be displaced by other class power. If the working people want
power they will have to take it. It will not be given to them. We have to
remember that all politics is about power. The revolutionary calls for power
for the working people while the reformist hypocrite prepared to exercise power
on behalf of the oppressor, and who claims to do a little good on the side. Capitalism
is always shadowed by its nemesis — its gravedigger —the working class. It is
the sole authentically revolutionary class. It has no interest in setting up a
new system of class oppression but can only end its alienation by destroying
the whole edifice of class domination.
To use the word “socialism” for anything but working
people’s power is to misuse the term. Nationalisation is not socialism, nor
does this constitutes a “socialist” sector of a mixed economy. Nationalisation
is simply state capitalism, with no relation to socialism. Nor is the “welfare
state” socialist. Socialism will certainly give high priority to health,
education, the arts, science, and the social well-being of all. That is why it
exists, that is its purpose. But “welfare” under capitalism is simply to
improve the efficiency of the government as a creator of profit. It too is not
socialism but a form of state capitalism. It can be an improvement on
capitalism with no welfare, just as a 40-hour week is an improvement on a
60-hour week. But it is not socialism. The “Welfare State” inevitably turns
into the means-testing.
The working class is essential for the operation of the
social means of production but itself owns none of it. Its conditions of life
make it cooperative and collectivist in outlook. Its objective interest is to
collectively appropriate these means of production and establish a classless
society. This makes it revolutionary — at least potentially
What truly is socialism? The socialist revolution is unlike
anything ever before seen in history, something radically different. The
oppressed class — the class at the very bottom of the social pile— struggles
for political power in order to construct a socialist society where all forms
of oppression and exploitation are eliminated.
Socialism is the greatest thing in all the world today. It
seeks to undo capitalism’s many wrongs, which are becoming more severe and
threatening. As we look about us today we see that the world is filled with
suffering and despair. Socialism implies that the means of production are under
the control of the community, and people themselves democratically shape the
community in which they live. In these hard times especially does socialism
show itself to be not only agreeable but necessary. The Socialist Party says there
have got to be change. We say that the world is big enough for all the people
that are in it, with plenty of room to spare, there is land enough to go around
without crowding; that there are farms enough, or can be easily provided, to
raise all we can eat, so that no child in all the world need to go hungry; that
there is plenty of natural resources in the earth; that there are forests and
mountains and water galore; that there are mills and mines and factories and
ships and railways and the power supplied free by nature to run them all; that
there are millions of men and women ready to do all the work that may be
required to build homes, raise crops, bake bread – and cake too –and everything
else that is necessary for everybody, and have time enough besides to build
schools and hospitals to make this earth a
paradise.
Why should not just these things come to pass and why should
not you not help us speed the day when they shall come to pass? Everything you
can possibly think of to make this earth sweet and beautiful and to make life a
blessed joy for us all is within our reach. The raw materials are at our feet;
the forces to fashion them into forms of beauty and use are at our finger tips.
We have but to put ourselves in harmony with nature and with one another to
sing loud and clear the song of life. Socialists not only dream of the good day
coming when the world shall know that men are brothers and that women are
sisters to each other, but they are at work with all their hearts and all their
heads and hands to make that dream come true. If you want to know what the
plans of the Socialist Party are in detail attend our meetings and study their
literature. If you're upset about the way things are going — then do something.
Get active in the socialist movement, get involved — or get more involved.
You'll feel better and — far more importantly — what you do will make a
difference. Nothing is more worthwhile and more satisfying participating in the
struggle for the communist future of humanity. People cannot live without hope
for the future.
The Socialist Party inspires workers with confidence that the
future will be better if only they strive to make it so. The power of the
socialists derives from the fact that they give a rational basis to the impulse
of the masses to make a better world, an assurance that social evolution is working
on their side; that the idea of socialism, of the good society of the free and
equal, is not a utopian fantasy but the projection of future reality. When this
idea takes hold of the people it will truly be the greatest power in the world.
When you organise, you can win. Our power is in our numbers. We will use that
strength to wrest our world back from the capitalist class, from the bankers
and billionaires who put profits before people. Hope can inspire a bottom-up
grassroots movement to make the world a better place to live and work in. No
child should go hungry. Health care should be a right, not a privilege for
those able to pay for it. Catastrophic climate change is a clear and present
danger. The power of food production systems is concentrated in few corporate hands.
But another way—a better way—is possible. Locally-produced and affordable agro-ecological
food should be the backbone of a food system that increases our food
sovereignty. The 'business-as-usual' model can no longer be considered an
option for a well-functioning food system in the future.
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