What
was once small activist actions are spreading into an ever-growing
global environmentalist movement that the mainstream media and
ruling-class establishment can no longer ignore. We find it inspiring
that so many people have turned out for Fridays for Future and
Extinction Rebellion's protests. The Socialist Party has
sympathy with their objectives. We understand their analysis of
capitalism as a system that can only put profit before people and
planet. However, no matter how well-intentioned, the goal of those
who reject capitalism should be to break the consensus that supports
capitalism and organise politically – democratically – to a
replace private ownership with common ownership. It’s the
profit system that is the problem. It brings pressure to bear on
economic decision-makers to opt for the cheapest methods of
production on pain of being driven out of business altogether. If
consideration of what is in the general human interest is to prevail,
then the profit system must go. It must be replaced by a
production-for-use system—which can only exist on the basis of the
common ownership and democratic control of productive resources by
the whole community. In a genuinely socialist system The tyranny of
the market and competitiveness will have gone and we’ll be free to
employ the most appropriate methods of production and transport.
It
remains a short-coming of the environmental movement that it still possesses
no real vision of a future society to replace capitalism. A thoroughgoing
change to a world without classes, nations, governments or profit is
needed. Sadly, the green eco-warriors despite their sincerity and
effectiveness of much of their critique of capitalism, have yet to find the genuine alternative. Nevertheless,
they have raised the question if people are just to stand passively
by, looking on, while the world around them descends into dystopian
disasters, as something inevitable beyond their control. Instead, they stand up and act together for climate justice.
The
shortest distance between capitalism and an alternative society is a
straight line. Let’s campaign for the abolition of capitalism
and not misdirect our energies in trying to humanise capitalism,
which can only – as you recognise – put profit before people.
That’s why socialism is so important. Yes, it is, as we are often
told, a ‘nice idea’. But when it takes hold of people's
imagination, it could become much more than that and blossom in a
world beyond capitalism, a world fit for humanity. The present
discontent over climate change unrest could be the first signs a
positive movement in the broader class struggle. The liberation of
humankind must be the work of the people themselves and must be
majoritarian and democratic. No elite can substitute. To succeed the
socialist revolution must be essentially non-violent and democratic
involving the vast majority of the population. To
attempt a social revolution without such majority support almost
inevitably results either in a counter-revolutionary regime or in a
revolutionary dictatorship which destroys the goals for which the
revolution was undertaken.
The
Socialist Party does not
get involved in conventional politics or seek to form the government.
We cannot agree that we should engage in the day-to-day struggle as
well as agitate and organise for Socialism. To do so runs the great
risk of becoming yet another conventional political party since
engaging in the day-to-day struggle of people under capitalism
necessarily involves advocating reforms. A reform programme would
attract people who want a palliative rather than a cure. In a
democratic party as we are, such people would come to dominate it and
turn it into an instrument for trying to get reforms rather than for
carrying out the social revolution. The best way to avoid this danger
is for the Socialist Party, while not opposing sound reforms and
always being on the side of the oppressed against the oppressors, is
not to advocate them.
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