The working class is that element in capitalist society that
produces all wealth. It is the working class that feeds both itself and the
capitalist class. The mission of socialism is so to organise production so that
wealth can be so abundantly produced as to free mankind from want and the fear
of want, from the brute’s necessity of a life of arduous toil in the production
of the brute’s mere necessaries of life. The Socialist Party has made this
clear.
The capitalist class
misrepresents socialism as a scheme of society, whose adoption would destroy
individuality. Socialism its apologists declares would degrade us all to one
level regardless of individual aptitude or merit. Capitalism, on the other
hand, exalts the individual. Whenever the position of a defender of capitalism
against the attacks of socialism becomes desperate, he drags forth the inventor,
the genius who has created the great machines, apparatuses and devices which
make wealth and civilisation possible. Today the inventor is no longer an
isolated being, developing himself and his ideas in some dismal science lab. The
inventor is today the employee of a business or an educational establishment, where s/he specialises his/her abilities as a part of a chain of technical experts, men and
women rarely heard of outside their own spheres, who, with the finest technology
at their disposal, work in cooperative unison for the production of new
products, and the improvement of old ones. The poor lone inventor like all
myths, is adorned with the imagery of bygone ages. Like modern industry, modern
invention is social.
The inspired individual inventor had become as much of a
myth as the entrepreneur and captain of industry who, it is alleged, creates the
work of thousands of wage slaves. Today industry is so colossal, so complex and
so complicated that it is an impossibility for one man to direct it. Office
buildings of trained subordinates, junior and senior executive, in sales, R and
D, human resources and other departments meet in frequent consultation to
preside over the running and management of the corporations as majority
shareholder indulges in first-class travel and the luxury of 5-star hotels
around the world.
Capitalist society is built upon eternal war. War between competing
capitalist and capitalist, war between capitalists on the one hand and the
working class on the other. As capitalists are in one another’s throats at
home, they are at one another’s throats internationally
Workers suffer the pains and outrages of capitalism yet by
removing the system of wage exploitation upon which it is based, and
substituting therefor a system guaranteeing to them free access to the fruits
of their toil, workers could achieve their own emancipation from wage-slavery. Socialism
does not consist merely in the overthrow of private ownership. If such
overthrow of private ownership were socialism, then the present nationalised
industries under State-ownership or control would be socialism. Obviously, that
is not socialism. A limb of a human being is not a human being. Socialism is
that social system under which the necessaries of production are owned,
controlled, and administered by the people, for the people, and where accordingly,
the cause of political and economic despotism having been abolished, class rule
is at end. That is Socialism, nothing short of that. The only cure for
capitalism’s ills is to eradicate the cause of the evil by making the machinery
and technology of production and distribution common property, so that it may
serve as a blessing, instead of a means to profit private individuals, as at
present. With industry as common property, the hours of labour and the stress
of working-conditions will be proportionate to the progress of invention and
the general well-being of society. It has been estimated that four hours of
labour a week would be ample to supply the needs of men and women under a
proper social system employing automation and robots.
There exists a growing tendency to confuse socialism with
reform of one sort or another which compels the Socialist Party to draw clear
and true the old line of cleavage between socialism and social quackery,
between gradualism and revolution. It cannot be too strongly and repeatedly
stated that socialism means but one thing, and that is the abolition of capital
in private or State hands, and the turning over of the industries into the
direct control of the workers employed in them and the communities they serve.
Anything else is not socialism, and has no right to imposture under that name. Socialism
is not the establishment of a four-day week, not the abolition of the
gig-economy, not the enforcement of minimum wage laws. None of these, nor all
of them together, are socialism. They might all be done by the present government
tomorrow, and still we would not have socialism. They are merely reforms of the
present system to patch up our economic servitude with palliatives. Socialism
is the common ownership of the means of production.
While not opposing any beneficial reforms or improvements
which may be secured under capitalism, the Socialist Party steadfastly sets its
face against taking time away from its main battle in the class war for the
socialist revolution, in order to carry out campaigns for reforms. It refuses
to be manoeuvred into abandoning its main demand – the social ownership of the
tools and machinery of production by the producers, in order to fritter away
its energies and resources pursuing amelioration's of conditions. The Socialist
Party rejects the tempting bait to the working class away from our goal and side-track
them into and blind alleys. The one demand of the Socialist Party is socialism,
unadulterated and undiluted and the unconditional surrender of the capitalist
class
And while rejecting any re-interpretation of socialism which
would remove its anti-capital core, the Socialist Party insists that it still
remains the most humanitarian movement on earth. More so than all the philanthropic
and charitable foundations. The Socialist Party alone, carries within its principles
the highest humanitarian hopes and possibilities of humanity. All the other
movements are based on aspiration alone. The Socialist Party is unique as the
only one which will make the realisation of those aspirations an accomplished
fact. Socialism alone will supply the basis for any permanent improvement in
the condition of mankind.
The Socialist Party looks forward to the day when the red flag
flies over the ruins of capitalism’s institutions, binding humanity with the bonds of
cooperation.
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