Our world is full of stark and bewildering contradictions.
Governments mock the pledges of liberty, justice and equality. Despair and
degradation prevail globally. Poverty and economic insecurity exist alongside
extravagance. The capitalist class has one basic goal: to make more and more
profits, and they accomplish this by dominating the economics, politics, and
cultural life of the country. Employers will throw workers out into the streets
to starve, promote violent racism, and build a military arsenal that can
destroy the world several times over – anything for profits. This is an
irrational and unjust system.
The quality of life is deteriorating. Life does not have to
be this way. Exploitation, violence, racism and war strangles our lives. Capitalism
thrives on the control of society’s wealth and production – production
involving the interconnected efforts of millions of working people. We can
improve our lives and society, and we can eliminate exploitation and capitalist
injustice, by overturning the monopoly capitalist system. We can replace
capitalism with a rational and humane system – socialism. Socialism is a social
system where social wealth is genuinely controlled by society and for the
benefit of society; where the common good, not profits, becomes the chief
concern; where the everyday working people become the rightful masters of
society. Such an economic and political transformation will be radical, but a
radical solution is what it will take to bury the miseries of capitalism. There
is no other choice today but for the working people to organise to struggle
and, one day, achieve socialism. Each person is faced with the choice of either
enduring the suffering of un/underemployment, brutalisation and war; or taking
the path of struggle – joining with others who are dissatisfied and know that a
better society is possible. Women and men, young and old, and people of all lands
are realising we must unite and struggle to survive, to be able to work, eat
and live as decent human beings.
Environmental pollution and poisoning of communities are
inevitable because of the inherent drive by Big Business for maximum profits,
where operations and conditions are governed by the anarchy of the market and
competition. Capitalism must be abolished. Working people need to throw the
capitalist parties out of office and fundamentally transform society. The
entire apparatus of government, set up to defend the interests of the
corporations, must be replaced. The needs of working people can only be met by
creating a planned economy, where ownership and control are taken from the tiny
minority of capitalists and placed in the hands of the working people, to be
run democratically.
Today we must look ahead to the future where socialism, as a
more advanced social system, will be built on the powerful productive
capacities now stifled by capitalism. Socialism will replace capitalism, just
as capitalism replaced feudalism. If the working people, and not the corporations,
controlled the great resources of our society, we could improve all our lives. We
could end environmental risks and dangers and guarantee a long healthy life for
all. We could have a society not preparing self-extinction. We could have a society
where the foundation is established for complete emancipation. These are the
hopes and dreams of socialism. Reorganised on a socialist basis, the world can
be free of poverty, economic insecurity and exploitation. When the vast
resources available to us are used to serve the needs of all instead of the
profits of the few, we will have won a world
socialist commonwealth. Such a society is worth fighting for.
The Socialist Party often hear the comment that
"Socialism is a good idea but it’s not practical." But today it’s
becoming more apparent than ever that it is the present system — capitalism —
that is impractical and unworkable. Reforms will not change the condition of
working people. Our aim is to build a revolutionary party on a world scale, to
replace capitalism with a socialist world order. A socialist system today would
alter not only who controls the means of production but also what kinds of
goods should be produced. It would put those who are currently exploited in
control of their own products and environments.
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