The
socialist revolution that will put an end to capitalist exploitation
and all the forms of oppression that inevitably accompany it. Since
human communities have become class-divided communities through the
accumulation of wealth in the hands of a minority of people who
constitute themselves as the ruling class, class struggle has been
the motor of history, and it will remain so as long as the class
division of society has not been abolished. Capitalism to-day must
answer to the charge of blocking the wheels of progress.
The
Materialist Conception of History is one of the fundamental
principles of socialism. It is the view of history which ascribes the
ultimate cause and the great moving power of all events in the
history to the economic development of society, to the changes in
production, distribution and exchange, to the resulting division of
society into classes and to the struggles between these classes. This
generalisation was first formulated by Karl Marx. Also Lewis Morgan,
an independent inquirer, arrived at the same conclusion. Marx’s
interpretation does not imply that only economic motives and no
others have any weight. There can be no fundamental change in the
living conditions of the people while a minority holds economic power
in the natural resources and in the right to exploit the majority for
individual advantages.
The Socialist Party insist that the basis of
exploitation — the use of men and women for personal profits and
power — lie in the capitalist system. Reforms do not remove the
villain of the piece from the scene of action while he holds economic
power the people. The Socialist Party does
not want any bloody revolution. Revolution means change. There have
been social revolutions in art, industry and social relations which have not
caused bloodshed. There
can be no real democracy while wealth weighs the scales against the
interests of the people.
We
often speak of the individual employer as a “robber.” No single
employer can lessen exploitation and continue to exist. It is the
system as a whole that must be judged. Private property for the
labourer is but a farce, since the class that preaches most of the
virtues of private property is the one that takes from the producing
class all that it produces except a scanty subsistence. The socialist
sees that he can further his or her own interest only by working for
that of his or her class. While a social organisation depends on the
existence of two classes, one following its self-interest, the other
a code of morals serving to maintain it in subservience, there can be
no reconciliation of the interests of all the individuals composing
society with the interests of the social whole. This is conceivable
only in a society of individuals to whom equal economic opportunity
is assured. The ruling class has followed as a motive its
self-interest, restrained only by the fear of rebellion on the part
of the class of slaves, serfs or wage-earners. The subservient class,
on the other hand, has been lulled into acquiescence in its
enslavement through the persistent inculcation of the “virtues”
of self-sacrifice, humility, reverence, docility, frugality and
patriotism. The blindness of class antagonisms, will be solved by the
abolition of these antagonisms in the co-operative commonwealth, the
reorganisation of society on the basis of ownership by the working
people of the land, mines, factories, means of transport, as well as
the health, educational and cultural services required to fulfill
their needs.
The Socialist Party believes that the fundamental basis
of a true socialist society must be change from a capitalist system
of ownership, exploitation and control to one of ownership,
administration and control of the affairs of a nation by the men and
women who produce its wealth.
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