We in the Socialist Party are not reformers but revolutionaries.
We do not propose to change outward appearances. We want to change the essence
of society. Reformism skims the surface. The socialist movement cannot exist unless
carried on by men and women because in the last analysis it is the human hand
and the human brain that serve as the instruments of revolutions. The only path
before workers is revolution. Only socialism can bring the solution and
organise production to meet human needs. Once capitalism is overthrown, then
and only then can production be organised in common for all, and every increase
in production bring increasing abundance and leisure for everyone. This is the
aim of the socialist revolution. Only the organised working-class can fight and
destroy the power of the capitalist class, can drive the capitalists from
possession, and can organise social production to create a free and equal
society. All production is directed solely to supplying people’s needs. It is
for use, not for profit. Therefore every expansion of production means greater
abundance and leisure for everybody. Because production is for ourselves and
administered by our own organisations, it will spur on initiative and enthusiasm
unattainable under capitalism. Through the rule of the people we can immediately
realise the fruits of the revolution and end the present reign of inequality —
inequality in respect of every elementary human need of food, clothing,
shelter, conditions of labour health, education, etc., and bring the material
conditions of real freedom and development to all. In this way we shall
immediately banish poverty, offering a new life for all. The capitalists hold
up the spectre that revolution means “starvation,” that the workers depend on
capitalism for their existence. The contrary is the truth. The workers can by
the method of social revolution, and by the method of social revolution alone
can rapidly reconstruct this redundant social system and win prosperity for all
of us.
Everywhere people are waking up and fighting against the
oppression and exploitation which is a daily fact of their lives. The lies of
the ruling class about “prosperity” are being further exposed everyday. There
is prosperity alright – but it is for a handful of rich capitalists – the
conditions of the working people are getting worse and worse. The situation in
health care, housing and welfare services is rapidly deteriorating. This system
of capitalism is set up with one thing only – to make the most profits possible
for a few people. It is the system under which we, and our parents and
grandparents before us, have done all the work. We mined the mines, built the
buildings, manufactured all the products: and then got just enough to live on –
if we fought hard enough for it! On the other hand, the capitalist class reaps
their huge fortunes from our toil and do no work themselves, except spending
the money that we made for them. Class consciousness means that workers come to
see that united in action they have enormous power—they can bring the entire
economy to a halt and stop profit-making in its tracks. Our class becomes
conscious of its true interests and the need for revolution not simply by
reading textbooks but through practical action. Mass action is the only way
even to defend past gains and to win new ones. Workers learn through
experience, through fighting the capitalists in the living class struggle. And
whatever the initial outlook of most of the participants, mass working-class
action always carries the potential threat of a revolutionary challenge to the
system.
There are other parties around that call themselves
“communist” or “socialist”. We have important disagreements with them. These
parties all have one thing in common – they all dress themselves up with
high-sounding revolutionary phrases, but underneath they are defenders of various
forms of capitalism. There are many who say that they are for socialism and claim
to be in favour of the emancipation of workers. However, we mustn’t be taken in.
Many of these “socialists” have abandoned the principles of Marxism.
Socialist revolution will put an end to capitalist
exploitation and all the forms of oppression that inevitably accompany it. Since
human communities have become class-divided communities through the
accumulation of wealth in the hands of a minority of people who constitute
themselves as the ruling class, class struggle has been the motor of history,
and it will remain so as long as the class division of society has not been
abolished from the surface of the globe. The Socialist Party always stand for
class solidarity in the course of workers’ struggle. We do not drop our support
for the fight against the bosses because we do not like particular trade union
leaders or their policies.
It is time no for to turn away from the capitalist system,
with its mounting mass misery, exploitation, war and terrorism, and look towards
socialism. Socialism abolishes the chaos and anarchy of capitalist production
and social organisation; it does away with the dog-eat-dog competition of
capitalist industry, breeder of commercial crises and war. It sets up instead a
planned system of economy in harmony with the worldwide character of modern
industry and social relationships. Capitalism robs the toilers of what they
produce. Under capitalism everywhere wealth piles up automatically in the hands
of the parasitic owners of the industries, while the masses of actual producers
live at the bare subsistence line. But in socialism this is fundamentally
different. Production is carried on for the benefit of all those in the
ommunity. There are no artificial limits placed upon production by the need to
sell. There can be no “exploited” when there is no ruling, owning class, no
class to get a rake-off from the worker’s production? With private property
abolished (but, of course, not in articles of personal use), with exploitation
of the toilers ended, and with the capitalist class finally defeated and all
classes liquidated, there will then be no further need for the State, which in
its essence, is an organ of class repression. The State will, in the words of
Engels, “wither away” and be replaced by a scientific technical “administration
of things.” The guiding principle will be: “From each according to his ability,
to each according to his needs.” That is, the distribution of life
necessities—food, clothing, shelter, education, etc.—will be free, without let
or hindrance. Production for use, carried out upon the most efficient basis and
freed from the drains of capitalist exploiters, will provide such an abundance
of necessary commodities that there will be plenty for all with a minimum of
effort. There will then be no need for pinch-penny measuring and weighing.
The road to this social development can only be opened by
revolution. This is because the question of power is involved. The capitalist
class, like an insatiable blood-sucking leech, clings to the body of the working
people and has to be dislodged.
2 comments:
Socialism is for losers. Plain and simple.
And you, naturally, are one of capitalism's winners, that you take time away from your other urgent pressing matters to comment on a 5-year old blog post without offering even a token reason or explanation for your dismissal of the idea of socialism.
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