RECIPROCITY |
Socialism is a much abused, frequently distorted and mostly
misunderstood word but expressing better than any other the purpose of
political and economic progress, the aim of the Revolution. The word implies
harmonious relationship. Socialism is the belief that the next important step
in progress is a change in man's environment of an economic character that
shall include the abolition of every power whereby the possessor of privilege
and holder of wealth acquires an anti-social authority to compel tribute. Socialism
must be voluntary — not coerced. Socialist seek to abolish the State, and
contends that government is tyranny. Those who wish to make the State, the
universal employer, the universal landlord and the universal banker are
mistaken giving the State control of all the means of producing and
distributing wealth and giving to each only according to his or her deeds. These
sort of proposal would only set up greater evils than those it proposes to
remedy. Socialism is not government control of the economy. Socialists want all
property to be held in common and each to receive according to his or her
needs. What socialists demand is the emancipation of the individual from all economic
bondage. Our political position can be described as cooperative socialism in
that we recognise that socialism by its nature can only be cooperative and voluntary.
We are not advocating cooperatives within capitalism. While
worker-run enterprises might very well provide a superior form of orthodox business
model, in many respects they would still face much the same problems as private
capitalists: if the decision-making done in a worker-managed
enterprise/cooperative is done by its workers, and there are thousands or
hundreds of thousands of such cooperatives making de-centralized
decision-making on production (even if this involves a democratic process
involving many people in each individual enterprise), then you would have
decisions on investment and production made in a decentralised manner that is
essentially private. If the economy uses money and has some types of financial
assets as a store of value, you have exactly the same problems that exist now.
The people involved would still be making decisions under subjective
expectations and fundamental uncertainty, and investment would, most probably,
be subject to fluctuation. Syndicalist society could so easily evolve into a
state-based system not that much different from the most radical forms of state
capitalism. Blanqui took a harder line than Marx on the idea of co-ops:
“As far as production societies are concerned, I take them
to be the most deadly trap that the proletariat could fall into. It is clear
that only a very small number of workers possess the necessary capacity for
such enterprises. It is thus the intellectual elite that will take this road.
Well, on this road, both failure and success would be equally bad. Failure is
ruin and discouragement. Success is worse, it's the division of workers into
two classes: on the one side, the great mass, ignorant, abandoned, without
support, without hope, in the underworld of wage-working; on the other side, a
small intelligent minority, concerned from then on only with its private
interests and separated for ever from their unfortunate brothers.”
In Capital, Marx summed up the essence of capitalist
relations: “The absolute general law of capitalist accumulation makes an
accumulation of misery a necessary condition, corresponding to the accumulation
of wealth. Accumulation of wealth at one pole is, therefore, at the same time
accumulation of misery, the torment of labor, slavery, ignorance,
brutalization, and moral degradation at the opposite pole, i.e. on the side of
the class that produces its own product as capital.”
Pro-capitalists are desperate to divide and rule. In
Victorian times the ruling class saw a division between the ‘deserving poor’
and ‘undeserving poor’. Today they still turn us against one another (private
against public sector, the old versus the young, employed and unemployed, male
and female etc.) through media attacks on benefits claimants, the unemployed,
public service employees with pensions, the disabled, and ethnic minorities and
migrants. A new vocabulary of denigration (“benefit scroungers”, “strivers
against skivers” etc) has been invented.
The stakes in the fight for a survivable and a secure future
are enormous. Socialism is the extension and preservation of democracy in all
realms of human activity, especially the economic arena. It is a political,
social, economic, cultural, and ethical project: a struggle to transform power
relations within a society dominated by a tiny minority to benefit the
overwhelming majority of working people. Socialism liberates human energy to
pursue its creative potential. Socialism cannot emerge from sentiment or wish
fulfillment. Socialism emerges because the working class, as it struggles
around everyday living comes to recognise socialism as a necessity. History and
contemporary reality do not yield a schematic blueprint for socialism. An
analysis of experiences in social struggle, combined with a critique of
objective circumstances, suggest some possible guiding principles for the
transition to a socialist democracy. Socialism’s fundamental building blocks
are already present in society. The means of production are fully developed and
stagnating under the political domination of finance capital. The work-force,
for the most part, is highly skilled at all levels of production and its
administration and direction. There is a broadly enfranchised electorate and socialism
will largely be gained by the class-conscious working class winning the battle
for democracy in society at large. There exists as well kernels of socialist
organisation scattered across the landscape in cooperatives, socially organised
human services, and widespread mass means of communication to relay
supply/demand data management. Our core communities – workplace, occupational
organisations, neighbourhood, community centres, schools, cultural and sports groups
– should be arenas to reach out to those looking for change. Coalitions of
organisations can be established around the common objective. Socialism will be
a society in harmony with the natural environment. The nature of global climate
change necessitates a high level of planning. We need to redesign communities,
introduce healthier foods, and rebuild sustainable agriculture—all on a global
scale with high design, but on a human scale with mass participation of
communities in diverse localities. We need intelligent growth in quality and
wider knowledge with a lighter environmental footprint. Socialism does not
simply reproduces the wasteful expansion of capitalism.
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