It
is the division
of society into property owners and propertyless people
which lies at the root of the crisis of the capitalist world. One
of the fundamental. truths which a study of socialism teaches, and it
is a basic principle, is the existence of the class struggle. This
class struggle is based upon the antagonism of interests between the
propertyless working class, who are forced to sell their energy in
order to live, and the property-owning master class.
Millions
of workers extract raw material from the earth. They own neither the
land nor the machinery they use, nor the products they raise.
Millions of other workers manufacture the raw materials into finished
products. They own neither the machinery they use nor the products
they manufacture. These are the property of the capitalists and the
landlords. The vast majority of people in society to-day are thus at
the mercy of the private owners. They cannot organise the
distribution of the wealth which they and their comrades have
co-operated to produce, because they do not possess this wealth. It
is the property of the private owners.
Here
is to be found the fundamental reason why the socially necessary
goods are obtainable only in the market-place as commodities. The
private property owners have no other means for the disposal of the
goods others have made for them. They cannot give
the
goods to society, for that would be an abandonment of the right of
private property to extract profit. They cannot distribute the goods
according to the needs of the people, however vast and urgent those
needs may be, because private property production is governed by the
law of production for profit irrespective of the needs of the people.
The criterion of all capitalist enterprise is—does it make a
profit? When it ceases to make a profit it goes bankrupt—it is
finished and the workers are cast on to the scrapheap of
unemployment. Capitalism
is one big gamble. Since its fortunes hang on the tail of its
unpredictable market, it can never be sure of what to do to secure
its own interests. The
great tragedy is that the gambles are always paid off in working
class lives and their insecurity.
People
tell us, we will have socialism, but the world is not ready for it
yet. They argue with us that they are being “realistic.” We say
they’re not being realistic and their position isn’t coherent.
Other critics of our position are merely cynics. The cynic thinks
everyone is stupid. They accuse their fellow workers of never being
ready for socialism because they’re mean spirited as well as
stupid. They don’t want other people to have decent lives, they
want people to suffer, they want it so much that they will allow that
desire to over-ride their own individual self-interest. Most people
don’t realise the socialist ideas they oppose are in their own
interest. Believing that one day we will get socialism even though
people who like the idea but nevertheless are unwilling to vote for
socialists is not simply unrealistic – it’s fantastic. It’s
downright delusional. For the proponents of lesser evilism, winning
is everything. There is hardly anything more shameful after all, than
losing. Even cheating is acceptable if the cheater manages to win.
Lesser evil supporters are cowards, people who are incapable of
seeing the incoherence in voting for someone who opposes things they
profess to want, while persisting in believing that we will one day
get these things anyway, without having to vote for the party who
seeks them. If people want socialism, then they’re going to have to
vote for candidates who advocate it, rather than for candidates who
oppose it. It takes more than one person or one party to change the
world.
There
is no need to attach an adjective to the word "Capitalism",
as in "Casino Capitalism" "Crony Capitalism",
"Neo-Liberal Capitalism", "Financial Capitalism",
"Disaster Capitalism", "Shock Capitalism",
"Unregulated Capitalism", "Private-Equity Capitalism,"
or that old standby, "Greedy Capitalism". It is Capitalism,
pure and simple. There is no such thing as “Compassionate
Capitalism”. The vision of the world’s future appears completely
dystopian and has descended into the dark abyss where the
unimaginable has become imaginable. The politics of terror and the
culture of fear legitimises the militarisation and regimentation of
public life and society and fosters the criminalisation of social
problems. Brutal modern-day capitalism has released corporate and
military power and throughout the globe we witness particularly
savage, cruel, and exploitative regimes of oppression. The planet
itself is now under threat. Capitalism has made a virtue out of
self-interest and the pursuit of material wealth. Capitalism is
devoid of any sense of social responsibility and is driven by an
unchecked desire to accumulate capital at all costs. Money now
engulfs everything in this new age of disposability.
Moreover, when
coupled with a weakening of movements to counter the generated power
of capitalists, the result has been a startling increase in the
influence of predatory capitalism, along with inequities in wealth,
income, power, and opportunity. Such power breeds anti-democratic
tendencies.
In
place of the present economic system based on the class ownership of
the means of life and their consequent use to provide profits for the
owners, we are suggesting that the means of life be vested in the
community as a whole and be under its democratic management so that
wealth can be produced solely to satisfy human wants. Freed from the
barrier of profit, we shall be able to produce in abundance all the
things we need. Gone will be the absurd paradoxes of poverty
amid plenty, of food being burned while children starve, of building
workers being unemployed while people live in hovels. Naturally.
socialism can only exist on a world scale.
If
the Socialist Party grew strong enough and a majority of voters
backed us then we would not form a government, with a prime minister
and cabinet, to administer a system where workers and millionaires
would still exist. We do not seek political power in order to run
capitalism, but to abolish it. So that, if there were a Socialist
majority, steps would immediately be taken to end private property in
the means of production and to put in its place common ownership and
democratic control. The Socialist Party is made up of conscious
socialists organised on a democratic basis and so has no leader or
leaders.
We
have seen that a socialist majority would use its power to change the
basis of society from class to common ownership. This of course will
amount to a social revolution. But this doesn’t mean we’ll be
starling from scratch. Socialists have always maintained that
capitalism paves the way for socialism by, for instance, developing
the large-scale co-operative production that makes class ownership an
anachronism. This large-scale co-operative productive system,
including its administrative apparatus, will be the basis of
socialist society. The basic function of the state is to be the
public power of coercion and for this purpose it is organised as the
police, the armed forces, and the prison service. A public power of
coercion is necessary only in class society with its built-in class
conflict. In Socialism the state will no longer he needed and will be
dismantled. However, today the government has itself assumed other,
purely technical and administrative, tasks and this aspect of its
work is in fact part of the productive system. We have in mind the
old Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Transport, or the Ministry of
Power. No doubt the administrative apparatus that is these and other
ministries can be adapted for use as part of the socialist
administration of industry. We can’t go into details (that’s
something for the socialist majority) but we can say that the
adaptions will be far-reaching— everything to do with finance will
go, and the internal structure will have to be reorganised on a
democratic basis. What we say about these technical ministries
applies equally to the large corporations not part of the government
machine. Obviously, there'll be a certain continuity in institutions
between capitalism and socialism and at the start we'll have to make
do with what we’ve inherited. Common ownership and democratic
control will mean that everybody will be socially equal.
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