ABOLISH WAGE SLAVERY |
Working people are waging and will continue to wage
struggles on many issues, including wages, health, industrial accidents, social
services, unemployment, political rights, etc. These struggles put them in
direct opposition to various sectors of the ruling class– this or that
capitalist, manager, government minister, municipal politician or whatever.
Workers know very well who their immediate enemy is and where their immediate
interests lie in such conflicts. It is not the job of the Socialist Party to substitute
itself for the peoples’ protests. Its role is to point out what all these
struggles have in common, to point out that the cause of these problems and the
misery that workers have to endure under capitalism is one and the same, to
identify the class enemy hiding behind each specific, individual enemy and to
indicate the only path that will enable us to solve these problems once and for
all. In opposition to those who promise “socialist” reforms as a way of
eliminating the exploitation of man by man, the Socialist Party puts forward
the revolutionary struggle, the overthrow of the bourgeoisie and the
establishment of the socialism. We defend the slogan, “The emancipation of the
workers will be accomplished by the workers themselves”. This is how we carry
out our tasks associalists; not as reformists, but as conscious revolutionaries
who go against the tide – against the nationalists divisions between immigrant
workers and indigenous workers maintained by the ruling class; against the idea
that capitalism can be gradually improved until it becomes a society free from
exploitation. These are the ideas that we sow and cultivate. Experience has
proven that unless our ideas triumph in the working-class movement, socialist
revolution is impossible.
The aspiration of Marx and Engels was a society based upon free
association of completely free men and women, where no separation between
‘private and common interest’ existed: a society where ‘everyone could give
himself a complete education in whatever domain he fancied’. For ‘man’s
activity becomes an adverse force which subjugates him, instead of his being
its master’ when there is ‘a division of labour’; everyone must then have a
profession, that is a ‘determined, exclusive sphere of activity’ he has not
chosen and in which ‘he is forced to remain if he does not want to lose his
means of existence’. In their socialist society, on the contrary, a man would
be given ‘the possibility to do this today and that tomorrow, to hunt in the
morning, to go fishing in the afternoon, to do cattle breeding in the evening,
to criticise after dinner’, as he chose (‘The German Ideology’.) It is clear
that there is not the slightest relation between their vision and the
conception of Lenin’s Soviet Union. The future world of Marx and Engels is a world
where will be no exploiters or oppressors, no landlords and capitalists nor
will there be any oppressed and exploited people, or any of the darkness,
ignorance and backwardness resulting from the system of exploitation. In such a
society the production of both material and moral values will develop and
flourish mightily and will meet the varied needs of all its members. Today, our
task is constantly to advance the cause of socialism so as to make it a reality
as soon as possible. It is the greatest cause in human history, for it will
eliminate exploitation and classes once and for all, emancipate mankind and
bring humanity into a world of happiness such as it has never known before.
The aim and purpose of the Socialist Party is to replace the
world capitalist economy by world socialism which will abolish the class
division of society, i.e., simultaneously with the abolition of anarchy in
production, it will abolish all forms of exploitation and oppression of man by
man. Society will no longer consist of antagonistic classes in conflict with
each other, but will present a united commonwealth of labour. For the first
time in its history mankind will take its fate into its own hands. Instead of
destroying innumerable human lives and incalculable wealth in struggles between
classes and nations, mankind will devote all its energy to the struggle against
the forces of nature, to the development and strengthening of its own
collective might. After abolishing private ownership of the means of production
and converting these means into social property, socialism will replace the global
market, competitive and blind processes of social production, by consciously
organised and planned production for the purpose of satisfying rapidly growing
social needs. With the abolition of competition and anarchy in production,
devastating crises and still more devastating wars will disappear. Instead of
colossal waste of productive forces and spasmodic development of society-there
will be a planned utilisation of all material resources and a painless economic
development on the basis of unrestricted, smooth and rapid development of
productive forces.
The abolition of private property and the disappearance of
classes will do away with the exploitation of man by man. Work will cease to be
toiling for the benefit of a class enemy: instead of being merely a means of
livelihood it will become a necessity of life: want and economic inequality,
the misery of enslaved classes, and a wretched standard of life generally will disappear;
the hierarchy created in the division of labour system will be abolished
together with the antagonism between mental and manual labour; and the last
vestige of the social inequality of the sexes will be removed. At the same
time, the organs of class domination, and the State in the first place, will
disappear also. The State, being the embodiment of class domination, will die
out in so far as classes die out, and with it all measures of coercion will
expire.
The development of the productive forces of world socialism will
make it possible to raise the well-being of the whole of humanity and to reduce
to a minimum the time devoted to material production and, consequently, will
enable culture to flourish as never before in history. This new culture of a
humanity that is united for the first time in history, and has abolished all
State boundaries, will, unlike capitalist culture, be based upon clear and
transparent human relationships. Hence, it will bury forever all mysticism,
religion, prejudice and superstition and will give a powerful impetus to the
development of all-conquering, scientific knowledge. In socialism no social
restrictions will be imposed upon the growth of the forces of production.
Private ownership in the means of production, the selfish lust for profits, the
artificial retention of the masses in a state of ignorance, poverty-which
retards technical progress in capitalist society, and unproductive expenditures
will have no place in a Communist society. The most expedient utilisation of
the forces of nature and of the natural conditions of production in the various
parts of the world, the removal of the antagonism between town and country,
that under capitalism results from the low technical level of agriculture and
its systematic lagging behind industry; the closest possible co-operation
between science and technique, the utmost encouragement of research work and
the practical application of its results on the widest possible social scale;
planned organisation of scientific work; the application of the most perfect
methods of statistical accounting and, planned regulation of economy; the rapid
growth of social needs, which-is the most powerful internal driving force of
the whole system-all these will secure the maximum productivity of social
labour, which in turn will release human energy for the powerful development of
science and art.
“From each according to his abilities to each according to
his needs!”
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