The
Socialist Party platform is for the abolition of the system of
capitalism and the establishment or a socialist system of
production. All the material resources for a socialist economy are
present in abundance–raw materials, industrial plants,
energy-producing enterprises, transportation, highly developed
agricultural resources. The Socialist Party is accused of being
dogmatic. We are dogmatic in so far as we hold ideas that make us
strive to end capitalism, not to patch it up. We are dogmatic because
we explain economic theory such as surplus value, the source of rent,
interest, dividends, etc. We are dogmatic because we preach the class
war, asking our fellow-workers to cut adrift from the capitalist
parties and reforms. We fight for nothing short socialism, because we
believe that nothing short of that will save the workers. It is a
platitude that the struggle for socialism requires the broadest
possible working class unity. But unity on what basis, unity for what
ends
The
vast majority live by, or are dependent on, the sale of labour power
to industries and businesses owned or dominated by the few. The
natural resources and the means of production now in the hands of the
few, and which are the source of their economic and political power,
must be taken from them and become common property.
In
a capitalist society, the ruling class not only controls the
productive and state apparatus but also shapes and moulds the ideas,
attitudes and very sentiments of the people with remarkable success
and their ideologies suffuses whole of society. The more successful
the capitalist class, the more deceived the working class. Workers
must break with the patterns of thought and conduct which help to
maintain capitalist class relations. Reformism is based upon the
belief that there is no irreconcilable contradiction between labour
and capital and that compromise and the gradual transformation of
capitalism into socialism is possible. Socialism can only come about
through a successful overthrow of capitalism by a self-organised
working class. The Socialist Party will take possession of the means
of production (land, mines, factories, means of transport and
communication), which in the hands of the capitalists are the means
of exploiting and oppressing the working masses, and will make them
into social property. By suppressing the division of society into
classes, it will put an end to the exploitation of man by man. The
victory of the working class, the destruction of the economic and
social bases of the possessing classes, the putting into practice of
the principles of the planned production – all these will lead to
the creation of the class-free society, where there will be no
exploited or exploiters, nor class struggles, and all the efforts of
society will be deployed to the common good. Society will determine
for itself the forms of its confederations and its organisational
structure. The victory of socialism means the emancipation of all
humanity. Socialism will create not only the new economic and social
order, but also the higher civilisation of free mankind.
Our
party, which must still strive to get
a hearing
from the as yet indifferent working class. Socialism has nothing in
common with violence practiced by individuals or of small groups,
where individuals or minorities attempt to substitute themselves for
the the working class. Engels wrote, in his Introduction to Marx’s
Class
Struggles in France:
“The
time of surprise attacks, of revolutions carried through by small
conscious minorities at the head of the unconscious masses, is past.
Where it is a question of a complete transformation of the social
organisations, the masses themselves must also be in it, must
themselves already have grasped what is at stake, what they are going
in for, body and soul. The history of the last fifty years has taught
us that.”
A
socialist party which lacks a mass base as we ourselves presently do,
must reach out to our fellow-workers with patient explanations, and
pay no attention to premature demands for “action.” We confine
ourselves to campaigning designed to win over the majority. We do not
represent ourselves as pacifists. We are not pacifists. But we have
adopted the age-old maxim of the Chartists, “peacefully if
possible, forcibly as necessary.” We are organising, speaking,
writing, and explaining; in other words, carrying on propaganda
with
the object of winning over the majority
to
our case for social revolution and socialism. The Communist
Manifesto,
defined the movement of emancipation as follows:
“All
previous historical movements were movements of minorities, or in the
interest of minorities. The proletarian movement is the
self-conscious, independent movement of the immense majority, in the
interest of the immense majority.”
The
Socialist Party aims to make the social transformation with
the
majority and not for
the
majority.
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