The working class are the creators of all wealth in society.
Under the rule of the capitalists, there can be no freedom for the workers –
only freedom to be exploited as wage slaves. The Socialist Party says plainly
that mere reform of our existing society is impossible, or if possible,
useless. When the foundation is insecure, and the edifice is crumbling, there
is nothing for it but to build anew. We in the Socialist Party are
revolutionists, not reformers in that we have no confidence in any measures of
amelioration. We shall not throw our lot in with silly or self-seeking
charlatans nor waste another moment in considering their contemptible social
reforms. The emancipation of the
wage-slaves will not fall, like manna, from heaven. Nor yet will they be led
into freedom, as into the promised land, by inspired leaders of mankind. The
workers will only be freed by those whose interest it is to do so—the workers
themselves.
Wherever people work for wages, they have been robbed of the
land, the mines, the factories and so on; and they are steadily robbed of
everything they produce, because it doesn’t belong to them when they have made
it. It doesn’t make any difference if
the state nationalises some, or all, industries — as we know in this country —
the people still don’t own them. That is why they have to sell their energy and
skill to those who do own them — and the state can be a more powerful and
ruthless boss than private companies. In socialism it will belong to them. The
land and factories will belong to the whole people. But that doesn’t exist
anywhere in the world yet. It is the next stage in the evolution of society —
the system to supersede capitalism. The sooner we make the change-over the
better.
Every time a war ends, they say, “Never again.” Every time
trade picks up after a slump they say, “It won’t happen again. We learned the
lessons.” They try trade agreements, altering the bank rate, juggling with
currency rates. None of it works: recessions still happen, just as there is
always a war going on somewhere these days. If things improve, the government
takes the credit. If things go bad they blame the previous government or
another country. The truth is that they have no control at all over the
economic convulsions of capitalism, because they are uncontrollable. Recessions
and wars are essential phases in its progress. They restore a sort of balance
for a few years. But what a ramshackle way of organising the production and
distribution of goods in the world. Their computers are never programmed to
tell us how world socialism, with production for use not for profit, would
employ the earth’s resources. They assume that production for profit will go on
forever, and then argues that this system must be reformed to prevent it from
destroying mankind’s habitat. Better surely to argue for an end to capitalism,
since it is a system which generates waste and seeks constantly to increase the
quantity of materials processed, year by year.
Everywhere the capitalist “mode of production” prevails: we
see men and women who possess no land, no tools, nothing, who are driven by
fear of want to sell their labour-power by the week or the month, mortgaging
their lives in instalments so as to survive till the next pay-day. We see them
producing goods galore, “an immense accumulation of commodities”, all their own
work, yet they remain unable to afford most of what they need. We see human
toil and human skills diverted from man’s real needs — food, clothing, health,
housing, culture — to pander to the aristocracy of Big Business, the wasteful
war-machine, the accountants, the luxury resorts, and so on.
This is what the Socialist Party oppose: the global system
of exploitation of the many by, and for the benefit of, the few. A system which
combines wanton waste with wasteful want.
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