To-day all wealth, the largest and most fruitful tracts of
land, the mines, the mills and the factories belong to a small group of private
capitalists. From them the labouring class receive a scanty wage in return for
long hours of arduous toil, hardly enough for a decent livelihood. The
enrichment of a small class of employers and investors is the start and end of
present-day society. It is to change this capitalist world which is the purpose
of the Socialist Party. All social
wealth, the land and all that it produces, the factories and the mills must be
taken from their exploiting owners to become the common property of the entire
people, placing them under social control. To-day production in every
manufacturing unit is conducted by the individual capitalist independently of
all others. What and where commodities are to be produced, where, when and how
the finished product is to be sold, is decided by the individual capitalist
owner. Nowhere does labour have the slightest influence upon these questions. We
are simply the robots to do the work. In socialism all this will be changed.
Private ownership of the means of production and distribution must disappear.
Production will be carried on not for the enrichment of a few individuals but solely
to supply the wants and needs of the working class. Accordingly, factories,
mills and farms must be operated upon an entirely new basis, from a wholly
different point of view. Production will be carried out for the sole purpose of
securing to all a more humane existence, of providing for all plentiful food,
clothing and other forms of subsistence. The productivity of labour will be
increased. Farms will yield richer crops, the most advanced technology will be
introduced into the factories. It follows, therefore, that we need not, and
will not deprive the small farmer or handicraft artisan of the bit of land or
the little workshop from which he or she ekes out an existence by their own
hands. As time goes by, he or she will realise the advantages of shared socialised
production over private ownership.
Bountiful provisions, a decent education for the children,
comfortable care for the aged and the infirm – these form the all-important
part of the socialist system. Waste such as we find to-day must cease. Society
will be more rational in the use of its products, its ways of manufacture and
its deployment of labour power. The production of armaments will pass out of
existence, for a socialist society ends war. Instead the raw materials and the
enormous amounts of labour power that were devoted to this purpose will be used
for other more useful production. The manufacture of costly luxuries for the of
wealthy will stop. Work itself must be completely altered. Today employment in
industry, on the farm and in the office is usually a torture and a burden. Men
and women work because they must in order to obtain the necessities of life. In
a Socialist society, where all work together for their own well-being, the
health of the individual worker, and the joy in work must be conscientiously
fostered and sustained. Short hours and less days of labour will be
established: recreation and leisure merged into the work process, so all may do
their share, willingly and joyously. Today hunger drives the worker to the
factory or the farm-owner, into the business office. Everywhere the employer
sees to it that no time is wasted. With socialism all working people are free
and on an equal footing, working for benefit and enjoyment, tolerating no waste
of social wealth. To be sure, every socialist enterprise needs its technical
superintendents who understand its technology, who are able to administer production
so that everything runs smoothly, to assure the implementation of the most
efficient methods. Workers inside socialist industrial democracy will must show
that we can work decently and diligently, without capitalists and slave-drivers
but of own volition.
No comments:
Post a Comment