PRODUCTION FOR USE AND FREE ACCESS |
Many say socialism will never work but exactly where on this
planet is capitalism working except in the interests of the privileged few? Ask
yourself “Is this is as good as it gets?” Pro-capitalist apologists for the
system will often readily admit that capitalism is “far from perfect,” but as socialist
society is utopian, capitalism remains not only practical, but the best system
we could possibly have. The terms socialism and communism are also often
associated with the murderous dictatorships set up by the Bolsheviks in Russia
and later copied by their followers all over the world. Although these State
socialists talked of creating a free and equal communist society, their
authoritarian methods ensured that they ended up creating the opposite, a
totalitarian nightmare. The revolution will not be made by a socialist party.
The task is too complex to be accomplished by a minority. A free socialist
society needs the active participation of millions of people. And crucially
that participation can only happen voluntarily. Socialism cannot be imposed on
the people. It has to be a voluntary libertarian process. It does not matters
what term we use: we can speak of "communitarianism” and so forth; what
matters is its content.
If we are serious about achieving new society, then we have
to start about it now. It isn't going to fall from the sky. The longer we wait
to begin acting for ourselves the longer it's going to be till we achieve our
aim. Also many people are used to letting others run society for them. Sure
they might get indignant over corruption or a particular war, but it's fair to
say that their actual involvement in changing anything is pretty low. Much of
the time we're powerless to control things in our lives and our apathy is
understandable but it is a game changer when we, the people, get a taste of our
collective power. Suddenly, politics become relevant in a way they never were
before. The whole point of having a minority of brainy and benevolent leaders
is that they will do the difficult work for you. As such it follows that you
yourself don't need to change, to participate on an equal footing with
everybody else, to think about why we need socialism, you don't need to get deeply
involved in making it happen. This will be fatal for any revolution because the
new society will face tough times. But if people have a good understanding of
what they are fighting for and have made a deep personal commitment to
achieving it, it's unlikely that they are going to let it go easily.
There is a common criticism of the Socialist Party that we
just say we have to wait until socialism and then racism, sexism and homophobia
will all disappear. But there's no way we will ever see a successful socialist
revolution unless we fight against these oppressions in the here and now. Without
presenting arguments against such prejudices and promoting sympathy and solidarity,
scape-goating the disadvantaged and the vulnerable can appeal to people. It's one of a time-honoured tried and tested
strategies used by the ruling class to sow divisions between workers to keep us
from blaming them. Mankind faces many challenges which are not a direct result
of capitalism, yet cannot be solved because of capitalism’s peculiarities.
Socialism does not automatically solve these issues, but rather it merely
removes the barriers to solving them.
The system is capitalism. Under it a small minority rule in
fact if not in name, and profit is the be-all and end-all of economic life;
human needs come second—if at all. Freed from the clutches of the
profit-gougers, the major industries must be brought under common ownership and
the economy must be planned by the people themselves in their own areas of
work. The profit system cannot make use of automation for the benefit of
society; socialism will! The future society that will be constructed under
socialism will reduce work to an insignificant part of daily life and offer the
individual the fullest possibilities to pursue his own abilities and interests.
Socialism is governed by a logic of humanism and solidarity aimed at satisfying
human needs, rather than the pursuit of profit. For social wealth to satisfy
the needs of everyone in the country, it is essential that the fundamental
means of production are not monopolized by a few and used for their own
benefit, but are collective, social ownership. But social ownership is not the
same as state property. What happened in the Soviet Union and the countries
that followed its example was not real ownership of the production process by
the workers, but simply a nationalization of the means of production. The state
become the legal owner of the means of production. They ceased to be owned by a
few, to become property of the state supposedly representing the workers.
However, the production process itself underwent very few changes: a big
socialist factory differed little from its capitalist counterpart; workers
continued to be a mere cog in the machine; they had little or no participation
in decision-making at the work- place. This "state capitalism"
retained the hierarchical organization of production; the manager had
"dictatorial" power, and orders were transmitted from top to bottom.
Workers need to take in their hands (appropriate) the production process and be
involved in organizing it. Instead of feeling like one of many cogs in the
wheel; they can contribute with their ideas and knowledge acquired through
practice, combining thinking and doing, so that through work they reach their
full development as social human beings.
If the means of production are to be socially owned -- and
this means owned by all -- the products should satisfy the needs of the people,
and the surpluses thus obtained cannot be monopolized only by one specific
group of workers, but must be shared with the community. Who determines these
needs? It must be the people themselves who define and prioritize, through a
participatory planning process.
Socialism is all about producing abundance and worldwide,
there is an abundance of resources to take care of everyone. As the American
Trotskyist James Cannon explained:
“In the socialist society, when there is plenty and
abundance for all, what will be the point in keeping account of each one's
share, any more than in the distribution of food at a well-supplied family
table? You don't keep books as to who eats how many pancakes for breakfast or
how many pieces of bread for dinner. Nobody grabs when the table is laden. If
you have a guest, you don't seize the first piece of meat for yourself, you
pass the plate and ask him to help himself first.”
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