The class struggle is the ceaseless struggle which goes on
from day to day in every country and between the same combatants, the masters,
the capitalist class and the slaves, the working class. The Socialist Party did
not invent human aspirations for a just, egalitarian and free society. Mankind
have cherished this dream for a very long time.
Capitalist society is like a huge market. The capitalist brings his money, and the
worker brings his or her labour power.
The worker sells the labour power in exchange for some money which will
bring the subsistence of life. But it
must be remembered that the commodity of labour power is free, that is to say,
that the worker has no personal ties like the feudal serf or chattel slaves. We can either sell our labour power or
withhold it; but our well-being depends on the things we must eat and drink and
where we dwell. The capitalist has
already accumulated these necessities which he sells by means of his money,
consequently the free labourer with empty stomach is forced to sell the labour
power in return for the commodities without which we cannot live. The wage labourer therefore is in the grip of
a system that can beat us down to the lowest bare subsistence. The supporters of this system are those who
have gained control of it and control of the means of production, all those
whose interests are bound up in it. The
system is capitalism, and those who control it are capitalists. To manage it effectively and to their
interests they must have a group of people to assist them and to operate the
machinery. The section or class who
assist must be subject to their controllers or, in other words, must be
slaves. In return for their slavery they
receive only sufficient money to enable them to continue operating the
machinery from day to day, and to perpetuate their class. It would be a catastrophe to the capitalist
system if slaves did not breed more slaves.
From this we see that for any material advantage one class
must take from the other class. This
attempt to take, be one form the other, goes on all over the world, day in and
day out. It is like a tug of war and
imagine your bread and butter in the form of a rope – with the capitalists at
one end and the workers at the other.
The more of the rope that is won, the more material comfort is acquired.
This is the class struggle. Economic power is—and always has been—the
foundation of political power. Those who control the peoples’ means of living
rule. Capitalism has now placed us in a trajectory to possible self-extinction—a
future with no winners, rich or poor. Marx described it as the mutual
destruction of the contending classes. We must now seek a path that intends to restore
equity, material sufficiency, peace, and abundance for all—exactly the opposite
of the capitalists drive to secure the power, privilege, and material excess
for themselves. This makes socialism far more than just a good idea; it is now
an imperative. In our complex and interconnected world, socialism will global administration,
responsive to the people’s will and well-being, that supports cooperation and
sharing among communities, but the real power will be dispersed locally. There
would be ample room for competition among local communities to be the most
beautiful, healthy, democratic, creative, and generous. There is no place for
predatory institutions. These communities will feature common ownership of
enterprises recognising shared responsibility to care for the environment.
The power of the capitalist depends on keeping members of
our class divided against one other along gender, racial, national or other
fault lines. The goal is to divert our attention from themselves so that they
can maintain their power and continue to amass wealth. The problem is not that
the capitalist corporations are “out of control,” the problem is that the capitalist
corporations are very much “in control.” Capitalism has ruled over us for three
hundred years. We have far less time to come up with social democratic
alternatives. That search must quickly become the focus of debate and discussion.
Reformism talks the language of legislative regulation, not socialist
revolution. No one is going to save us. How do we save ourselves? It is
impossible to know in advance, with any certainty, which tactic or strategy is
best. However, the Socialist Party argues that its case for socialism offers
the most suitable path toward socialism for this country and others like it. Elections
do matter but we also acknowledge that there are many other struggles which
must accompany it as complementary methods of revolutionary change. Voice must
be given to mass movements to defend the planet and realise its promise. We
want the whole of the people fighting for the a whole of the Earth.
Wage Slaves! Think about
it! The time has come for the abolition
of the wage system.