The
Socialist Party views capitalism as one whole cloth which, although
woven into different patterns, and sometimes of mixed materials,
nevertheless has one basic texture—the exploitation of the workers
by a class that lives on the surplus, over and above that which the
worker receives as his or her wages.
WORLD
SOCIALISM is a society without frontiers, classes, property or
rulers. Only democratic political action by the working class,
without leaders or dogmas, will lead to the of a socialist society. A
conscious majority, using delegates and not leaders, must take
control of the state and abolish its coercive functions and the
profit system in all its forms.
Will socialism need to use the state
machine to combat a counter-revolution, begun perhaps, by former
members of the ruling class? The answer, in a word, is "no."
But how can we be confident of this? If a majority of women and men
has decided to abolish the social relations of capitalism and
establish a classless society (and the only way that it can be
established is by the democratic action of the majority), then a
bloody-minded contingent of financiers, aristocrats or factory owners
who refused to yield up to society what they once jealously guarded
as theirs could be very easily immobilised without violence. In order
to be effective, any counter-revolutionary force would need a variety
of resources which the majority of us would have to make sure it did
not get. It would need electricity, petrol, food, drink and most
essentially workers who are soldiers.
Is it a reasonably foreseeable
prospect that after the factories, offices, media, transport systems
and so forth have been taken by the community, a significantly large
number of soldiers will still be willing to turn their backs on their
fellow workers and engage in violence to wrest the factories from the
community and put them back into the hands of a minority? When a
"revolution" is nothing more than a change of president or
regime (because some murderous bandit or junta of professional
killers has violently ousted the last lot in a coup) then you can see
why, from the point of view of the would-be leaders, a
counter-revolution would make sense.
Counter-revolutions can be
enacted in this way without the majority of workers even getting the
chance to discover the original revolution. In socialism, anyone who
seriously entertained the idea of dissuading the majority from
operating the means of life in the interests of all and giving back
the farms, factories. offices and media to a minority to operate for
profit would certainly have their work cut out, probably for the
first time in their life.
One
objection to a society of common ownership is that there is just not
enough wealth in the world to sustain a system of free access. But
this idea is nurtured today by the artificial scarcity created by the
profit system: goods and services are only produced if there is a
market for them. On the face of it. goods are scarce; potentially,
however, there is no shortage at all. Sometimes it may be too costly
to, say, extract a mineral from the ground or irrigate barren land.
Socialism would do away with all the restrictions of a private
property society.
Socialists
are confronted daily by those who believe that the answer to social
ills is to reform society a little at a time, and a section in the
pamphlet is therefore devoted to the issue of reformism. What emerges
clearly is that there is no common ground between reformism and
revolutionary action: if you seek reforms you openly accept the
political and economic structure of society and limit your activity
to effecting superficial changes. By opting for revolutionary action,
on the other hand, socialists are aiming solely at a fundamental
alteration in social relationships.
Socialists
possess no blueprint as to how administration will be conducted
within a system of common ownership and democratic control, but two
points are quite clear. Firstly, socialism will not be a centralised
society. After all, we are talking about a world society (socialism
cannot be established in one country or city) and it is inconceivable
that there will be a single global administration. Secondly, it is
very likely that there will be plenty of opportunities for local
community involvement in decision-making in a socialist society, with
local bodies and global bodies feeding ideas and initiatives into one
another on the basis of dynamic democracy. But not until society and
everything in it belongs to the people who inhabit it can we speak of
genuine democracy.
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