Socialism maintains that there can be no fundamental change
in the living conditions of the people while a minority holds economic power in
the natural resources and in the right to exploit the majority for personal
gain. Socialists insist that the basis of exploitation — the use of men and
women for individual profit and power — lie in the capitalist system. Reforms
do not remove the villain of the piece from the scene of action. A true
socialist society must be change from a capitalist system of ownership,
exploitation and control to one of common ownership, administration and control
of the affairs by all men and women who produce its wealth. Socialists do not
want bloody revolution. Revolution means change. There have been revolutions in
art, industry and social relations which have not caused bloodshed. One of the
most widespread misconceptions about socialism is that it is a doctrine of nationalisation
and state ownership, where a bureaucracy controls everything – like it was in the
Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. This myth was also believed and encouraged by
many who call themselves Marxists who called countries like Russia and Poland
‘socialist’ simply on the grounds that their economies were owned by the
government.
The socialist movement has always aimed to take the means of
production and distribution out of the hands of individuals and to transfer
them to the ownership of the people as a whole, so that they can be used for
the common good. Social ownership is production to meet the people’s needs
instead of production for private profit. Social ownership means an end to the
chaos and wasteful competition of production for profit and the development of
new productive resources to provide what people really want. Socialism does not
mean the levelling down of living standards. Nor does it bring bureaucracy and
tyranny. On the contrary, socialism draws more and more people into planning
and making their own future, and frees their creative energies for great
economic, social and cultural advances. The scientific and technical knowledge
we already possess, when given free rein for the benefit of all, can bring a
far higher standard of living than we have today. But in order to build
socialism, the dominant position of the rich must be ended. Political power
must be taken from the hands of the capitalist minority, and firmly grasped by
the majority of the people, the working class. The change to socialism,
therefore, means that the industrial enterprises must be taken over by the
people, and production organised and planned not for profit but for use. Socialism
will be possible only when the workers, those who meet the needs of society,
decide that they are determined to lay down the foundations of a whole new future
of humanity. The class struggle is important and cannot be avoided because it
marks the road towards the class-less society. With the end of class oppression
the state disappears.
Parliament may have lost much of its prestige but its
control over the forces of law and order, the armed forces, education and a,
number of other services means that it cannot be ignored. The seeds of the
socialist society are growing right in the soil of capitalist society itself. Poverty,
unemployment, industrial crises and wars are not the product of the machinations of politicians but the rotten fruits of the capitalist system. They are the
stink weeds of the capitalist system. They smell to high heaven. Conditions
make the workers learn the lessons of socialism and conditions compel the
masses to strive for a better social system. Conditions have been the workers’
best teacher, and conditions have shaken the faith in the system. The
apologists of every social system that has passed into history have always
sought to justify its continuance by saying: “It’s the best yet.” Doubtless the
patricians of the doomed Roman Empire used that limping argument, also the
feudal lords, and now the whitewashers of capitalism. But human progress
continues only by mankind looking forward – not back. Socialism will be the
order of society but totally depends on what the working class does. Its
struggle for socialism cannot be postponed.
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