‘Who
are the oppressors, but the Nobility and Gentry; who are oppressed,
is not the Yeoman, the Farmer, the Tradesman, and the Labourer? Your
slavery is their liberty, your poverty is their prosperity.’
Laurence Clarkson 1647.
WORLD
SOCIALISM?
No way! Face
it. Every country that used to be socialist/communist has gone
capitalist. We say socialism/communism has never been tried
The
Socialist Party says
to the workers: Unite into your own economic organisations, free from
the control and influence of your class enemy. Organise your own
political party. Challenge your enemy not only on the economic field
but also on the political. Send your own representatives into
Parliament to fight for your interests. We say, with Engels, that
“universal suffrage is the best lever for a proletarian movement at
the present time”. We say, with Engels, that “universal suffrage
is the gauge of the maturity of the working class”. We will
therefore do everything we can to raise the red line in that
thermometer which measures the maturity of the working class. “On
the day when the thermometer of universal suffrage reaches its
boiling point among the labourers, they as well as the capitalists
will know what to do.” The Socialist Party wants to make sure that
on the day the thermometer boils over – not today, not tomorrow,
but on that
day – “the labourers. .. as well as the capitalists will know
what to do”. We want to make sure that on that day the workers not
only have enough votes in their hands, but enough power to enforce
their will.
We
are fighting for socialist freedom, and in this fight we are now on
the defencive. The working class is on the defencive all over the
world. The Socialist Party rejects the panaceas of capitalism.
Society is in constant recurring crises. As
Marxists, we understand that the underlying causes of this crisis lie
within the capitalist system itself. The various economic
difficulties cannot be “reformed away” through Keynesian or
monetarist economic policies, because they flow from the fundamental
contradiction of any capitalist society: the fact that production is
social in character, yet the appropriation of social wealth is in
private hands. As
long as there remains capitalism people will suffer from
unemployment, low quality social services, high military budgets,
racial and sexual oppression, devastation of the environment, and all
the manifestations of the chaos of production under the capitalist
system.
As
Marxists we understand that the real solutions to the economic and
political difficulties of society lie in overthrowing capitalism and
establishing a socialist system, that force in the revolutionary
process must be the working class, owing to its position within
capitalist society, and its objective interests in destroying the
system which exploits and dominates it. Yet the working class remains
incapable of playing its revolutionary role. The
working class remains seriously divided, and dominated by ruling
class ideas of racism, nationalism and sexism. The basic economic
organisations of the working class are seriously under attack. Not
only is the working class weak in its economic position in
relationship to the bourgeoisie, but in the political field it is
weak as well. On the whole the majority of workers are still under
the influence of the pro-capitalist parties, primarily the British
Labour Party and the Democratic Party in America. The awareness of
the need for socialism will not come about spontaneously as a result
of people’s disillusionment. It is the task of the Socialist Party,
continually propagate for the socialist alternative. We argue for
socialism not as a Utopian alternative to the evils of capitalism,
but as the next logical step in human development. We continually try
to show now the people’s problems are rooted in capitalism and that
only a rationally planned economy, run by and for the working class,
can overcome the present difficulties. The question arises as to how
can the worker be transformed from a wage -slave, taught to obey the
orders of his master, to can develop class-consciousness. A worker
may live in extreme misery, yet his experience will not make him
conscious of his own social status and of the necessity for class
action. The conditions under which the worker becomes more or less
receptive to notions of revolutionary class-consciousness vary
greatly. When the worker opposes his or her exploiter and the state
it makes
it easy to open the workers' eyes and they become more susceptible
to the socialist message that they are part of a social class of
exploited and suppressed workers.
We
have listened to the capitalists' promises for years and years. We
shall listen no longer. Economic democracy and social justice are our
demands based, first and foremost, upon the abolition of the
capitalist system and exploitation, fully laying bare the innate
rottenness of that system. The Socialist Party spread the hope of a
world dedicated to peace and plenty.
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