The
world, we are told (by the propagandists), wants peace and the way to
guarantee peace is through the maintenance of a strong standing army.
A modern nation must be prepared to fight in order to meet its
economic requirements — fight or go under in the fierce dog-eat-dog
struggle of capitalism today. Modern war is the clash between nations
(or groups of nations) over the protection of existing economic
markets and the sources of raw materials.
All
wars have economic causes. Without a single exception, all wars are
wars for trade. They are caused by bankers, merchants and business
men. As business is the cause of wars, it may be well to say that
business is hell. Wars
are caused by conflicting commercial interests. In all countries
to-day, whatever may be the outward forms of their governments,
whether supposedly ruled by President, Mullah, or King, the real
rulers are those who control the industrial resources of the nations.
The stand of the Socialist Party is when we are robbed and the
robbers fight over the booty, that fight is none of our business.
When nations fall foul over the spoils, or over the wealth taken from
labour, the fight is none of labour’s business. This is a ruling
class quarrel and there is no interest at stake requiring that the
workers take sides. The duty of the working class is to line up in
the Socialist Party for the abolition of capitalism and the
establishment of socialism. Only then will wars and the prospect of
wars be ended. The
real cause of war cannot be found either in accident or in ideology.
There is a much more basic reason both for war and for the weapons
necessary to wage it and this reason can be summed up in two words,
economic rivalry.
It is the clash in the markets of the world, the mad scramble for
cheaper sources of raw materials, the attempt to oust each other from
spheres of influence, that is responsible for the mounted missiles of
destruction. Only by getting rid of capitalism in all of its forms,
with its need for markets and exploitation of labour can war be
eliminated from the world. Whether "accidental" or not, the
sole responsibility for the next war, as for all modern wars, is
capitalism.
We
can apply our understanding of the causes of struggle to an effort to
change the world. Rather than attempting to adapt to conditions in
the struggle for survival, the task is one of changing the conditions
in order that the conflicts and strife which are an everyday feature
of today shall be resolved. The question of nuclear weapons or
chemical and biological weapons as opposed to "conventional"
weapons is irrelevant. The only weapon required to save the world
from obliteration is the weapon of knowledge, in the hands and heads
of the majority. Search it out and obtain it, for with it we shall
begin to live as human beings rather than as pawns in a life and
death struggle for domination over the resources of the world. With
the proper application and use of understanding, these resources will
be restored to humanity as a whole. We, who are not consulted today,
shall with our knowledge and our political action decree that the
means of life shall be commonly owned by all mankind and that mankind
shall finally be released from the horror of war and the horror of
capitalism, in general. That's what we can do about it!
The
way to genuine peace lies through an awakening by the working class
of the world to its class interests. When enough working people
realise there is nothing but death, mutilation, and destruction for
them and their families in fighting their masters' wars, they will
take steps to organise a sane system of society — a system of
society based upon production for use rather than for sale on a
market. The working class in each nation, on the other hand, owning
nothing but its ability to produce and being forced to sell this
ability to the capitalists or the capitalist state, has nothing
tangible to gain from warfare. War is not in the interest of the
working people. No war is. The social forces which cause war are an
inexorable part of the economic competition associated with
capitalism. For a world without war, we must change from a system of
competition to a system of co-operation — socialism.
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