What are we out for? Nothing less than a social revolution,
a complete transformation of human society. That is no little thing. It is about the
biggest job that anybody have ever set their minds to. And what are our means -
people like ourselves. The emancipation of the working class must be the work
of the working-class themselves. There is no other way. It is in that of
building up a class-conscious Socialist Party that we bend our efforts towards.
Agitate! Educate! Organise! Are we, as is sometimes alleged, too purist, too
sectarian or too intolerant? Are we too antagonistic, not to enemies, but to
would-be comrades? Do we seek to distance people rather than to win them over?
These are searching questions to which it may be worthwhile to give some consideration.
In things doubtful, liberty of thought; in things essential, unity; and in all
things, charity. Our task is to disarm hostility and to bring together all potential
comrades into a united harmonious Socialist Party.
Capitalism is where the people are herded into factories and
offices to get the wherewithal to live, while the product of their labour is
appropriated by the industrial barons and the lords of capital who possess the
right to exploit, the right to rob, the right to over-produce and cause crises,
the right to compete, and cause wars. This is the cause of all social ills, and
the answer is the abolition of private property, and instead the common
ownership of the means of production, so that all may enjoy the fruit of their
labour. We want to see society changed. We want to see it transformed from a
thing of wars and recessions, to a real brotherhood of man. Sociaists work for
the improvement of the conditions of the people. Our understanding of society
and history teaches us that improvement can only be attained by changing basic
social relations, by a shift in ownership and control from the few to the many,
an all-embracing socialization of the means of production and distribution.
Capitalism having enormously developed the productive
processes on a social basis, has reached the stage when, because of the private
ownership of those processes, the system has become a fetter on production
itself. The day has passed for patching up the capitalist system; it must go.
Because only a small section of the population controls production and is not
answerable to the rest of the community and because this section is competing
within its own ranks and with similar classes abroad, it means either the
excruciating suffering of repeated slumps or the ultimate threat of total
annihilation for the whole world. Our answer to this threat of total
annihilation is socialism. Substituting a programme of reforms within
capitalist society for the abolition of capitalism and the establishment of
socialism is surrender and political suicide. This is betrayal of the socialist
objective harking back to the Second International. Reformists put forward
utopian demands for the reconstruction of the capitalist economic system in
order that the replacement of the capitalist mode of production will be
unnecessary and capitalist society itself can be saved. Socialism does not
involve re-distribution and any sharing out of the means of production and
exchange. It is the socialisation of the whole economy. Today we face the
choice between “a revolutionary reconstitution of society” or “the common ruin
of the contending classes.”
The essence of the capitalist system is the ownership and
control of the materials and tools of production and distribution by a small
class whose legal title to the lands, forests, mines, railroads, quarries,
mills, factories, and other industrial and commercial utilities and plants
gives them control over the lives of the working masses. The workers subsist in
a new form of slavery, wherein labor power is paid for by wages, and the bare
chance to live depends upon employment by some capitalist master. Employment
depends upon the production by the worker of a margin of value over and above
what he receives for his labour power. The capitalist master has no liability
on account of the wage-worker, except that of payment for labour-power on a
time or piece basis. Capitalism has nothing to offer the large majority but
uncertainty for tomorrow, unemployment, environmental disasters, poverty and
war.
Capitalism knows no national boundaries and encompasses all
the world’s countries and peoples. The ruling class of the different states
fight for control and hegemony to exploit countries, people and resources all
over the globe. The struggle of the working class is also international, even
if the working class of each country first must do away with their own
bourgeoisie. The working class is the only revolutionary class under
capitalism. It is the historical task of the working class to put an end to
capitalist exploitation and oppression.
Capitalism inevitably produces exploitation and poverty,
war, poisonous environmental pollution, and waste of human and natural
resources, none of which can be consistently eliminated without the socialist
transformation of society. Like all the other political parties which exist the
Socialist Party is the political party of a definite class. It is the political
party of the working class and works in its interests as opposed to others
which are parties of the rich and which work for the continuation of capitalist
exploitation and wage-slavery. The goal is to overthrow the dictatorship of the
ruling class and establish socialism, thus ending the exploitation of man by
man.
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