We live in a world rife with misery and oppression in
various forms. Hunger, poverty, unemployment, racial and sexual discrimination,
and many forms of repression, from the restriction of the most basic democratic
rights like freedom of speech and association to hideous barbarism like torture
and genocide, are still the lot of the majority of the people of the world. Now
even the existence of the human species has been put at risk by the rapacious
demands made upon the planet’s resources.
Far from lessening with the progress of science and technology, the
various forms of misery endured by the masses are growing and the gulf between
the rich and the poor, between the powerful and the dispossessed, is steadily
widening. Ever since the first class societies, the exploited have aspired to a
better life where the living conditions of all would be in keeping with
society’s ability to use the wealth of nature. They have yearned for a society
where all injustice would be banished forever, a society with no trace of
corruption, a society in which the weak would no longer be oppressed by the
strong, a society in which one class would no longer be exploited by another.
Humanity has reached a turning point in its history. The dreams of the past
have become real possibilities for a future that can already be foreseen,
because the material conditions necessary for achieving them are growing
steadily. Only a socialist revolution can put an end to the capitalist
relations of exploitation that are now the fundamental obstacle to further
progress for mankind. This is the meaning of the struggle for a society of
abundance, of justice and of freedom.
Capitalists have only one reason for existence – to
accumulate more and more capital. They are therefore always looking for ways to
increase the productivity of labour. Capitalists seek to increase the
productivity of workers. They impose speed-ups and compulsory overtime. They
multiply their attacks on the democratic rights of working people and
continually try to control their organizations and even to destroy them. The State is controlled entirely by, and in
the service of, the capitalist class. It results in a very keen competition
among capitalists themselves; many are reduced to bankruptcy, while a minority
get richer and richer. Capitalism has created the very conditions for its own
destruction. The spread of capitalist production has resulted in the growth of
the size, cohesion, and revolt of the working class, the only thoroughly
revolutionary class. With the abolition of capitalist exploitation, the workers
are the only class that has everything to gain and nothing to lose but its
chains. The working class cannot free itself without freeing all of humanity at
the same time, because the ultimate goal of its struggle is not to replace the
power of one class with that of another but rather to abolish all classes. This
is the only way to put an end to all the social divisions and inequalities that
have characterized class societies thus far. Capitalism, undermined by its own
contradictions, will inevitably be overthrown, just as all previous systems of
class exploitation, including slavery and feudalism, have been. The working
class has the mission of carrying this task out to its ultimate conclusion: the
abolition of class society.
The development of productive forces is fundamental to the
emergence of socialism. It will permit a steady reduction in the human work
needed to produce goods. Socialist society is based on the free association of
all individuals who work together to produce the goods necessary for their
collective well-being. All will work according to their capacities and their
needs will be fully satisfied. Thus, individuals will no longer be governed by
the division of labour and all opposition between city and countryside and
between manual and intellectual work will be eliminated. The abolition of
classes will also mean the elimination of the roots of women’s oppression at
last. Only socialism and the expropriation of the capitalists and the
socialization of the means of production will lead directly to the abolition of
society divided into classes with opposing interests. The abolition of classes
will in turn lead to the withering away of the State, and its extinction. The
State is not, and can never be, anything other than the instrument of
dictatorship of one class over others.
The fundamental interests of the workers are the same
throughout the world. The socialist revolution is inseparable from a world
revolution. Socialism itself is only possible in a world totally rid of capitalist
exploitation. After we have overthrown the socialism will mean the rule of the
people. It will put an end to the exploitation of man by man. It will bring
freedom to all those oppressed by capital and open up a new period of history
for all peoples. Gone will be the anarchy of capitalist production. Gone, too,
its resultant economic crises which today bring so much misery to workers. The
enormous waste of capitalism will be abolished. There will be no more billions
in profits squandered by the bourgeoisie. There will be no more destruction of
goods and productive forces as there is today in times of crisis. We will also
have socialist relations of production to replace the capitalist organisation
of labour. The repressive system of bosses and supervisors who today control the
workers, will be wiped out. Workers will participate in the running of their
work-places and factories by electing the administration and drawing up coordinated
plans via local, regional and worldwide advisory committees. Socialism
represents an enormous historical advance over capitalism. It is the future of
humanity, a radically new society where classes and the state will have been
completely eliminated. The state is simply an instrument by which one class
dominates another. It became a necessity when society split into classes. Just
as the ancient slave state served the slave owners to suppress the countless
slave rebellions, so too the modern capitalist state is a tool of the
bourgeoisie to maintain its dictatorship over the working class. No longer will
there be capitalists siphoning profits and no more destruction of the
productive forces.
Socialism is not an
end to human development but just the beginning – the beginning of a further
development of production, the people’s well-being and all facets of human
society.
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