What
is socialism? If we are socialists, what are we actually fighting
for? This question, long a subject of debate on the left, is
receiving even more attention today.It is also a perplexing one for
revolutionary socialists. Some say socialism is simply public
ownership of the means of production, or a government welfare system
and other criteria are irrelevant. Socialism can seem quite
complicated and daunting to a lot of newcomers, as its an idea that is
very different from our current system. We need a more profound
understanding. While it would be impossible to describe exactly what
this new social system will look like we can offer general features
of it.
The
fundamental position of the Socialist Party is our rejection of
wages, market, and money system. We claim to constitute the only real
alternative to capitalism's exchange economy and seek to create a
livable world and we argue against the very notion that capitalism can
be significantly reformed in the permanent interests of working
people. To avoid social, environmental and economic collapse, the
world needs to move beyond capitalism.
Our
current task is the patient winning of ones and twos to the idea of
socialism, perhaps of small groups, but certainly not the creation of
a mass party, which is not possible at the present time. To attempt
to shout louder than one’s voice merely results in a sore throat
and the loss of voice altogether. First, we have to establish
ourselves as a presence within the labour movement. Ours is not a
strategy of opportunism or adventurism which results in defeats,
despair and cynicism, leading to the feeling that the real world will
never change, but one of education, agitation and organisation. We
endeavour to fertilise fellow-workers with the ideas of Marxism. The
most vital requirement is a proper sense of proportion. Our present
strength and resources are extremely small. That has been the curse
of the epoch, made little better byt he defeats experienced by the
working class movement which have led to a low level of struggle.
The dominant ideas continue to be the ideas of the ruling class which
all the time hammers it into our heads the idea that socialism is
impossible to achieve. One way to combat this is education in Marxist
ideas. People who are new to the idea of socialism need to understand
the rudiments of the Marxist analysis of how society has developed
and can be changed, to learn the lessons of past working class
struggles, how we can understand the modern world, and the basics of
the analysis of the capitalist economy. Existing socialists need
continually to deepen their understanding of these matters, so that
they can cope with all the arguments thrown against them.
There
are many who promote all manner of regulated capitalism to tame it
and advocate such things as 'fair trade" and "green
capitalism" and these have been quite successful in deluding
people into devoting their energies and resources to hopeless
struggles for minor palliatives. But there is no such thing as "fair
trade", when the workers who produce the commodities that are
"traded" are exploited in every country by virtue of their
condition of wage slavery; unfairness is ineradicable under
capitalism. Without a critique of the inherent unfairness at the very
root of capitalism, reformist leaders of the "anti-globalization
movement' appear to be primarily concerned with getting the
capitalists and ruling elites of undeveloped nations a better deal
from their bosses in the industrialised countries.
A
"fair wage" or a "living wage" or even a
universal basic income won't eliminate exploitation. "Debt
relief" won't solve the problem of Third World poverty; "generic
drugs" won't end the crisis in health-care; "political
campaign contributions reform" won't either; nor will reform of
corporation taxation. All of these reforms together fantasised by
their most passionate advocates, would hardly slow the destruction of
the world by capitalism. And how would these reforms be implemented
and enforced? Through the further increase in the controlling powers
of the State. The "anti-globalisation" movement are,
whether they admit it or recognise it or not, statists. The solutions
they propose and the reforms they seek all presuppose an increase in
the interventions of states into social life.
The
socialist revolution, then, is the necessity of the times, and it is
essential to get prepared now. The prospects for the future of the
workers' movement appears bright. This year could bring about a
revitalised struggle on the part of people around the world.
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