The
supposed obstacle placed by unchanging human nature in the way of
work and progress is a myth. Human knowledge and understanding and
with them human conduct have changed, are changing, and will continue
to change. With the development, through human agency, of mankind's
control of natural forces and the power of producing wealth in
greater abundance the potentialities of human co-operation have been
more and more understood and consciously fostered. Co-operation was
never entirely absent, though in the past much of the work of human
beings was individual and it was possible to think and act in terms
of individual effort and personally benefit from it. Now that the
productive powers of co-operative effort have reached gigantic new
levels it has become a possibility for each individual to benefit
enormously from the conscious reorganisation of society on a
socialist basis. All that will be needed is that the individual shall
intelligently appreciate the place he will occupy in the life and
work of society as a whole. The worker to-day who understood nothing
of political organisation might refuse to take part in an election on
the plea that one vote counts for nothing in an electorate of tens of
millions. So also under socialism he might lack incentive to work if
he knew nothing of the part he or she plays in co-operative
production and the benefit he and every other person will derive
therefrom. Yet the understanding voter uses his or her vote and the
understanding worker will gladly and enthusiastically play his part
under socialism.
“Liberty”
has ever been the cry of our rulers, but the cry for “ Liberty ”
is to exploit and plunder the workers. Clear the fog from your minds
and study socialism. You cannot have “Liberty” within a system
that enslaves you, neither can it be benevolently bestowed upon you.
It is the power which private ownership gives to a handful of men
over the remaining millions of society—our class. Whether we shall
work or not, and consequently whether we shall have enough to eat or
not or house ourselves, depends the capitalist: and, being at work,
we expect with certainly that at every opportunity our wages will be
forced down, our hours extended, our pace sped up. If the capitalist
pleads that he himself is in the grip of circumstances, that
competition in the world market makes it necessary for him to
dispense with men wherever possible, and get the utmost out. of those
who remain, we know that it is just because things are privately
produced, with a view to sale, that this scramble for orders is
possible. Here are we, on the one hand, needing all manner of things
to keep us alive and make life happy; here, on the other, are the
land, the factories, the transport systems that could satisfy these
needs. We could produce in such abundance that no one need go short.
We do
produce
even now enough to give us all such a standard of life as no worker
enjoys. Why aren’t we getting it? Why are multitudes of us not
working at all? Why do those who are in work live so meagerly? And
how is it that such an enormous part of what we make goes to the
upkeep of the masters, who did not work in its making?
We
know why. We don’t create goods out of nothing. We work upon raw
materials, and they come from the earth, and the masters own it. We
work with tools and machines in workshops; and the masters own them.
Consequently, the products when they are finished belong to them too.
The only condition on which we are permitted to work is that this
product can be sold at a profit. A profit can only be made when the
goods fetch a price which will pay wages and leave a margin for the
employer. In order to compete with his rivals, the capitalist will
always try to fix his price below theirs; and since he is naturally
unwilling to reduce his rate of profit, he will always reduce costs
when he can.
We
should take those things that are indispensable to the life of the
community out of private hands, and make them the common property of
the workers. That done, the task of supplying
food for the hungry, or houses for the homeless, will have become
relatively simple. The fine details do not matter. The
particular working out of each part of the plan will no doubt be best
done by the workers concerned in our farms, factories, offices, and
so on, as the case may be. In its general outlines, the scheme of
production can be shaped by the general legislative assembly,
elected, as it will be, by workers, for the supreme purpose of
co-ordinating all the varied activities of social life. This new
character of the legislative assembly will be the reflection of the
new character of society—a community of workers with full ownership
of their means of livelihood. Many means will
suggest themselves by which each worker, having performed his or her
share of the necessary labour, will receive what is needed from the
common store. There might be depots, similar to shops, where people
would make their choice of goods. If so, the actual machinery for
distributing goods would not differ greatly from that of to-day : the
difference—the revolution—will be in the basis of production. The
goods which are made will be made for the direct and sole purpose of
satisfying the needs of the makers. Society will have organised
itself for co-operative production. It will be the day of the
workers, taking possession of and controlling the vast instruments of
wealth production which all this time we have operated for the
benefit of the masters.
When
the means of life are socially owned, the State, which grew up with
private property, will give way to something better. Direct control
by the workers, all officials being elected, responsible to those who
elected them, and capable of being recalled if they prove inefficient
or unscrupulous. Needless to say, under capitalism the world is
turned upside-down. Instead of being ordered and driven by
taskmasters appointed from above, and rewarded at the end with a
fraction of the value they produce, they should be able to decide by
vote their working conditions, elect their officials, and have their
needs richly satisfied, that is very midsummer madness! To the
revolutionary worker it is a sane and obvious thing: the righting of
a world which is already upside-down. The time has gone for both the
private ownership and the state ownership control of industry. It is
only on the basis of common
ownership
and
direct democratic control that we can build the free and comradely
life for which we have waited too long.
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