The world is in a deep economic, political and
social crisis. It is not the result of natural catastrophes, or forces beyond
our control, but of the capitalist system under which we live. The peoples of
the world are confronted today by ever-growing poverty and widespread
malnutrition and disease which afflict billions; war and the threat of nuclear
bombs; and the environmental climate change time-bomb, giving rise to fears
about the very survival of humanity and life on the planet. Today the utmost
struggle is needed just to maintain living standards and we have lost hope of
improving them. The trade unions, the main defence of working people, are under
attack. Millions of women and black people suffer discrimination on a daily
basis and new-comers to the UK are made the scapegoats for problems caused by
capitalism. The quality of life is constantly under increasing attack. Town-centres
become goldmines for property speculators rather than urban renewal
developments. The countryside is despoiled. Public transport is sacrificed.
Culture is commercialized. People are
denied the opportunity to develop their talents and abilities to the full.
Human relationships are distorted and sex exploited for profit. There are
frequent examples of corruption and financial scandals. Government is divorced
from the people. Bureaucratic control by the state has increased as local
democracy has been eroded. The ruling class tries to confine democracy to the
right to vote in elections, and deny the people real participation in
decision-making. Hard-won democratic rights are increasingly threatened by
authoritarian trends.
The root cause of all those problems is an economic
and political system in which effective power is in the hands of a tiny
minority of the people - the capitalist class. Capitalism’s motive force is not
production for the needs of society, but for the maximum private profit for the
employers and bankers. The basis of the economy is the exploitation of the
working class by the capitalist class. The workers by hand and brain - the
great majority of the population - own little but their labour power, their
capacity to work. In modern society production is a social process, but
ownership and control are predominantly private. Within the enterprise
production is planned; but in society as a whole it is not planned. The
capitalists always try to increase their profits, not just for their own
personal consumption, but to enlarge their capital so as to get greater
productive power and make still more profit. In general, the more they can cut
costs and limit increases in wages and salaries, the more profit they can make,
and the more capital they can accumulate. Capitalism’s contradictions are not
only in the sphere of economics. All human activities are seen as a source of
profit. While men and women are exploited at work, their cultural, sporting and
leisure activities are commercialised, and they are held to ransom as consumers
by the big business concerns which dominate the supply and distribution of the
goods they buy. The development of science is distorted, with its use for the
super-exploitation of workers, degradation of the environment and pollution,
and the development of weapons of mass destruction. The economic crisis of
capitalism is paralleled by a deep political, social and cultural crisis.
Capitalism’s legitimacy relies primarily on the fact
that millions of people believe that the capitalist system is the natural way
to organise society, that the present political system is truly democratic, and
that there is no realistic or better alternative. Every new generation is
influenced to accept this. The family and school often perpetuate and reinforce
capitalist ideas among children, while among adolescents and adults the media
and social and cultural activities increasingly assume importance. Most of
those in charge of the main information, social, educational and cultural
institutions of capitalist society accept its outlook and its values, and play
an important part in securing acceptance of capitalist rule. But all these
efforts have not been able to prevent millions of people entering into struggle
against the effects of capitalism, as a result of which they have won
improvements in the standard of life over the years. But these advances are
then attributed to the virtues of the system, and the belief is encouraged
that, despite temporary setbacks, people can continue in the long run to
improve their conditions within it. Thus, as a result of a combination of the indoctrination
efforts of the ruling class and of a seemingly rise in living standards there
is a large measure of voluntary acceptance of capitalist rule. To challenge
capitalist rule the working class and its organisations to overcome capitalist
ideas. The Socialist Party need to raise their political consciousness and
convince them of their common need to end capitalism and advance to socialism.
Experience of past decades has also shown that capitalism’s crisis cannot be
solved within the limits of capitalism. A new strategy of social change is
needed. It must be a strategy for a socialist revolution. Only socialism can
overcome the basic contradiction of capitalist society from which every aspect
of the crisis flows.
Socialism replaces private ownership by social
ownership. The social process of production is matched by social ownership of
the means of production. Production for private profit is replaced by
production for social needs. Socialism creates the best conditions for the development
of democratic control and popular initiative. Industrial democracy becomes a
reality with the development and extension of a new type of decision making and
self-management participation, and the democratic planning of production makes
possible the full use of modern scientific and technological advance to
eradicate poverty and raise the standard of living. The scandalous contrast of
extreme wealth for a few and hardship for millions can be ended. A new quality
of life, in relationship to work, the family and the whole environment, and a
common social purpose, can be achieved. Instead of power being in the hands of
a tiny minority, it is in the hands of the overwhelming majority. This is what
is meant by the socialist revolution. The advance to socialism can only take
place through the active democratic struggle of the great majority of the people.
The ingenuity of humanity which could be used to
improve the living conditions of working people are, instead, wasted in war
preparations or used to expand the profits of the giant corporations and banks
that dominate the economy and society. The Socialist Party is imbued with
confidence in the ability of the working class to overcome all opposition and
to transform our society and change the world. The essential feature of a
socialist revolution is capturing the state machine by the working class. This
can only be achieved when the great majority of people are convinced of its
necessity and prepared to use their strength and organisation to bring it about.
To achieve socialism, the working class must take political, economic and state
power out of the hands of the capitalist class.
At each stage of the class struggle,
our aim must be to win the majority of the people open the way to socialism. The
activity of the Socialist Party in parliament will need to be intimately linked
with the mass struggles outside, each reacting on the other. To democratise
power and extend democracy is not just a question of the freedom to express
opinions and vote in elections, important though these are. Democracy concerns
the extension of control by the people over every aspect of political, economic
and social life. This can only be fully realised as socialism is built, but a
start must be made in the process of fighting to achieve socialism. We are in a
world in which social change is taking place on an unprecedented scale. We have
the opportunity to carry out social transformation in conditions in which environmental
destruction and endless wars can be prevented and without the social collapse
and human destruction such catastrophes would bring. The advance to socialism
can only take place through the active democratic involvement of the great
majority of workers.
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