WORKERS POWER |
We cannot achieve economic and social freedom by merely
wishing it. And to see what is wrong with capitalism and what is right with
socialism is still not to see how to pass from one to the other. The
participation of every person in the decision-making process which guides his
life is a condition of freedom, it follows that until the working class find
this way no one else can find it for them. Socialism is not a society of
regimented individuals, regardless of whether there is equality of everyone,
and regardless of whether they are well-fed, well-clad and well-shod. It is not
a society in which people are subordinated to the state-machine and its bureaucracy.
The aim of socialism is to create a form of production and an organisation of
society in which mankind can overcome alienation from its product, from its
work, from fellow men and women and from nature thus becoming one with the
world. Mankind produces in an associated, not competitive way; produces
rationally and in an unalienated way, which means that bringing production
under control, instead of being ruled by some blind power. It means that the
individual participates actively in the planning and in the execution of the
plans; it means, in short, the realisation of political and industrial
democracy. The aim of socialism is freedom in a much more radical sense than
the existing democracy conceives of it. Socialism is a society which serves the
needs of humanity. Socialism is the abolition of human self-alienation, the
return of man as a real human being.
We live in a world where technological innovations unimaginable
in previous societies are within our grasp. Yet never before have we felt so
helpless and vulnerable. We can produce enough to satisfy the needs of everyone
on the planet. Yet millions of lives suffer from poverty and are stunted by
hunger and blighted by disease. Our society is dominated by feelings of
insecurity, of isolation and of loneliness. Socialism has been best able to
analyse the reality of society in its evolution but seeks not only to explain
but to change the world, to bring the social organisation into harmony with mankind’s
needs. Men and women working on a social basis of production, at a minute
division of labour, producing an infinite number of commodities, has in effect
socialised the forms of production. But we live with the paradox of private
property, private profit and private accumulation which is a form inherited
from past class systems, but can no longer be adjusted to present forms of
production. So long as this paradox endures, we will have wars, crises, poverty
and the final terrible agony of humanity on a world scale. End the vested
interests and their centralised domination over man’s wealth and resources;
eliminate the capitalist class which have within their hands tremendous wealth,
and who prevent the living standards of the mass of the people from keeping
pace with the output of the productive plant. Organise our economy on a socialised,
planned basis and then the foundations will be laid for the withering away of
the state as an agency of repression.
The Socialist Party aim is to sharpen our fellow-workers views
to draw the central lesson of their class struggle: that the capitalist class
as a whole is the enemy, its politicians included; that the capitalist system
must be destroyed; and that the world working class has the social power to
accomplish this. We point out that the working class needs to unite its various
struggles against the capitalists to win real gains—and above all show the
working class the real power it has when it unifies to challenge the system. Against
the reformist palliatives, we point to the only way to actually solve the crises
we all face is socialist revolution. Capitalism maintains its profits solely on
the basis of lowering and worsening the standards of the workers. The
capitalists, faced with increased productive power and a shrinking market, can
only look for the solution in fiercer competition, in restricting production,
in cheapening their own costs of production, in cutting wages against their
competitors, in increasing their own competitive power, in fighting to enlarge
their own share of the market. But these measures are pursued by the capitalists
in every country. Although one set or another set may gain a temporary
advantage for a short time, the net effect can only be to deepen the crisis.
The net effect of every advance of technique, of every wage-cut, of every
cheapening of costs and intensification of production, is to intensify the
world crisis.
Only Socialism can bring
the solution. Only Socialism can cut through the bonds of capitalist property
rights and organise production to meet human needs. Once capitalism is
overthrown, then and only then can production be organised in common for all,
and every increase in production bring increasing abundance and leisure for
all. This is the aim of the working-class revolution. Only the organised
working-class can fight and destroy the power of the capitalist class, care
drive the capitalists from possession, can organise social production. Many
workers placed their hopes in the Labour Party to bring the solution. They have
seen the need of basic social change; the Labour Party spoke of basic social
change, of socialism, and promised to realise it. Every time a Labour
Government has been installed, swift disillusionment has followed. The Labour
Party acts and will continue to act, as the representative of capitalism —
because its basis is capitalism.
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