Working
people are being victimised by an array of absurd contradictions.
Getting
something for nothing is what capitalism is all about. That is what
capitalists do best. Indeed, that is all they do. Capitalists do not
earn, or create, or build anything. They live by profiting from the
work done by others. They live off the labour of the working class.
The names these two classes bear tell the story. Workers work and
capitalists capitalise on the work that workers do. Capitalism exists
and can only exist as a system of exploitation. Capitalists are the
exploiters and workers are the exploited. Capitalism condemns
millions to lives of poverty and despair just to enhance the
worthless lives of a few. It is not the welfare queens or the
work-shy who bleed leech off others. It is the capitalist vampire
that is sucking the working class dry.
Basic
needs remain unmet while goods and products that could satisfy these
needs sit in warehouses or storage lots, inaccessible to the working
people who need but can’t buy them. Billions of dollars are being
spent on armament industries while schools, hospitals, public
transport and other social services are curtailed or eliminated for
“lack of funds.” Workers have demanded too much improvement in
the quality of the environment, too much job security safety, too
much retirement protection, too much health care, too much equality,
too much housing, too much pay, etc. Less pay for workers, less
spending for job safety, less investment for pollution controls mean
more profits for the capitalist owners of industry. Less spending for
education and social services generally means more tax cuts for the
capitalists, more money to invest in business expansion. Placing
blame upon the greed of the workers diverts attention from the
underlying causes - profit-motivated production and private ownership
of the economy, policies which are fostering increased competition
among workers for the limited number of jobs and social services
capitalism has to offer. In this way, the ability of workers to mount
a unified defence against enforced austerity is crippled.
Even
when a capitalist economy is relatively healthy, the needs of workers
are never met. This is so because the capitalist economy does not
operate to meet workers’ needs. It operates for capitalist profit.
That profit is generated through the exploitation of working
people—that is, by paying workers wages that amount to only a
fraction of the wealth they collectively produce. In a socialist
economy based on common ownership of industry, the workers’
condition would be the reverse of what it is today. Production would
be for social use instead of for private profit. Through elected
delegates, they would democratically administer the industries and
make all economic decisions. Resources would be allocated and
production would be carried out on the basis of social needs and
wants. A socialist economy would thereby free society of the
limitations now imposed by capitalism. Such a society will not, of
course, come into existence by itself. If the working-class majority
is to become master of the nation’s economic forces, rather than
its victims, workers must organise to wrest control from the
capitalist class and to lay the foundation for a socialist society.
Specifically, working people must break with the political parties of
the capitalist class and organise politically around their common
class interests. The Socialist Party goal is the transformation of
the present economy into a socialist economy run by, and in the
interests of, working people.
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