Every few years you have your occasional ration of democracy
with the opportunity to vote for a political representative. It's all very well
having a vote - but are you normally given any real choice? Let's face it, if
it wasn't for the picture on the front of the election leaflet, could you tell
which party was which? It's tempting, in the absence of any real alternative,
to get drawn into the phony war that is political debate today. It always
amounts to the same thing – they offer no alternative to the present way of
running society. Do you really think politicians make any difference to how you
live? Do politicians (whether left-wing, nationalist or right-wing) actually
have much real power anyway? OK, they get to open supermarkets, but it's
capitalism and the market system which closes them down.
REALITY CHECK
Do any of the political parties address any of the real
issues:
Why is there world hunger in a world of food surpluses?
Why are there unemployed nurses, alongside closed-down hospitals
and waiting lists?
Why are there homeless people in the streets and empty
houses with "for sale" signs?
Why do some people get stressed working long hours while
others get stressed from the boredom of
unemployment?
SO WHAT'S THE
ALTERNATIVE?
You have a real choice.
THE SOCIALIST PARTY puts forward an alternative to capitalism and the
madness of the market:
A society of common ownership and democratic control. We
call it socialism. But real socialism, not the elite-run dictatorships that
collapsed a few years ago in Russia and East Europe. And not the various failed
schemes for state control once put forward by the Labour Party. For us
socialism means something better than that.
We're talking about a
world community without any frontiers. About wealth being produced to meet
people's needs and not for sale on a market or for profit. About everyone
having access to what they require to satisfy their needs, without the
rationing system that is money. A society where people freely contribute their
skills and experience to produce what is needed, without the compulsion of a
wage or salary.
SO WHAT NOW?
If you don't like present-day society . . . if you are fed up with the way you are forced to live . . . if you think the
root cause of most social problems
is the market system, then your
ideas echo closely with ours. If you want to vote for our party
we're delighted. But we don't really
want votes based on a misreading of
what we are about. We are not
promising to deliver socialism to
you. We'll be making the case for socialism. Nor is it the number of votes we
get that counts, it's the number of people our message reaches. We are not
putting ourselves forward as
leaders. This new society can only
be achieved if we join together to
strive for it. If you want it, then it
is something you have to bring about yourselves.
2 comments:
Down to some 300 members. You must have your own definition of 'strong'. Fact is, there will always be enough of the deluded to keep organisations like the World Socialists ( such grandiose titles for parties with infinitesimally small memberships) 'ticking over'. Rather like the religious sects who never go away.
The 'mass' delusion is that capitalism is forever, or can be reformed of its concomitant capacity for war and poverty both absolute and relative and keeps slavish workers such as yourself powerless and sleepwalking into the next conflagration.
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