Many
on the Left continue to see the immediate struggle for civil and
human rights and against fascism and racism as having top priority.
Other activists continue to argue that we have to lead with an
all-consuming effort to eliminate fossil fuels and environmental
destruction. The threat was, is and always has been capitalism. A
well-functioning capitalist economy depends on maintaining large,
competing pools of vulnerable docile and compliant labour force and
on
the continuously increasing exploitation of energy and natural
resources. It has been obvious for decades that we can have either
capitalism or a liveable planet but not both. We know that we can
have either capitalism or economic democracy but not both. For most
of us, there’s no dilemma there; only for capitalists themselves
does the need to preserve capitalism warrant ruining the Earth for
human habitation or having the majority of our fellow human beings
live in misery. But in coming years we will have to face this
question - are we prepared to make changes to the way the world
is run. If folk continue to elect supporters of capitalism, the
consequences will be terrible. Within a couple of decades, millions
of people around the world will have lost their homes to flooding,
and others will be going hungry because of crop failures. Socialism
will ensure that you have access to sufficient food, basic goods, in
a cleaner, healthier world.
Where
do you go from here as regards politics. The
Socialist Party's answer is unequivocal: the full programme of
socialism. A money-free, state-free, and classfree society based upon
the production of use-values rather than exchange-value, and from
each according to his or her ability, to each according to his or her
needs. And moreover this programme is to be carried out at a
planetary level.
Our
first task is to seek a
better understanding of the world, in order to change it.
The
world we live in is a world of contradictions. The environment is in
a state of decline, yet industry continues to pump pollutants into
the atmosphere whilst non-polluting technologies are neglected.
Thousands starve, while food stocks remain unused. We can communicate
with strangers from all around the globe, yet no-one knows their
neighbour. Automation could free us from labour, yet we are chained
to the machine. We live amongst vast material possibilities, yet
poverty is the universal experience - not just in the narrow economic
sense but also in terms of the quality of lived experience.
Never in history has there been such a glaring contrast between what
could be and what actually exists.
Central
to all these contradictions and reshaping all previous antagonisms is
the global commodity-capitalist system. A system characterised by the
production of commodities, wage labour and
the market economy. A commodity is what is produced by the
worker under capitalist conditions, its purpose to reproduce and
enlarge capital (stored-up labour). The pursuit of ever increasing
profits is the driving force behind the whole process – the
fulfilment of peoples needs is a secondary and not always occurring
result.
Commodities
are only available in exchange for other commodities, money being the
universal commodity and measure of all others. Since all goods have
been turned into commodities and access to non-commodified materials
restricted , those without the means of producing anything to
exchange must sell the only thing they have, their physical or mental
labour-power. The logic of the market economy treats this labour like
any other commodity; to be bought, sold and discarded as the market
dictates. In effect the worker becomes a commodity. This
transformation of living activity into an object creates an
alienated or estranged world in which humankind does not
recognize or fulfil itself, but is overpowered by the dead things and
social relations of its own making.
Capitalist
society is therefore split into two camps, the bourgeois or
capitalist class (those who own and control the means of production –
the land, equipment, machinery, buildings and raw materials necessary
to create the things we need and use every day) and the proletariat
(those with “nothing to lose but their chains”). However, both
classes are subject to the laws of the market economy - our concern
is with the social relation capital not the individual
capitalist - the functionaries of capitalism are more and more
disposable as individuals. While the rag wearing classical
proletariat of Marx’s time has all but disappeared, at least in the
developed countries, the fundamental division remains; power and
wealth are becoming more rather than less concentrated under the
control of a small minority. The modern proletariat is almost
everyone; it is the working class which must destroy both alienated
work and class.
The
“official” history of the working class’s struggle against
capitalism is an inversion, what is presented as its greatest
triumphs are in reality its most bitter defeats; Leninist “Communism”
in the east and reformist “Socialism” in the west where both
expressions of a general movement towards state-capitalism.
The greatest tragedy of these times is that in the minds of the vast
majority of workers the project for the dissolution of the commodity
economy became associated with its exact opposite.
Though
the call for a new society was never thoroughly extinguished; small
and often profoundly isolated groups and individuals argued the case
for a social reorganisation to bring free access and control of the
means of production into the hands of the whole of humanity. “From
each according to ability, to each according too need!”
The
creation of such a society has two preconditions; firstly that
technological production techniques have been sufficiently developed
to be able to fulfill the material needs of the whole of society and
secondly, that the majority of the population have an understanding
of what needs to be done and want to carry it through.
Revolutionaries are painfully aware that the first requirement has
long since been reached but that the second is still far from being
realised.
If
we are to avoid repeating the mistakes of the past it will be
necessary to develop a theory of revolutionary practice, a theory
which seeks to “get to the root of all things” and improve them.
It is not a matter of choosing from one of the pre-existing
ideologies of the old workers movement and basing our world view
around it, but a matter of finding the “moment of truth” in all
the theories of the past and synthesising this with our experience of
the present.
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