The
fight for a social democracy, to replace capitalism is the real road
to peace and security. Instead we have some who advocate
the idea of a world government, a global federal state. We in the
Socialist Party are for
the
goal of a world administration, which would eliminate the obsolete
national boundaries into which the Earth is divided. We
enthusiastically agree that only
under
a world body can decisions be made and carried out on such things as
climate change, disease and world hunger be achieved. The Socialist Party is entirely for the end of the nation-state and its defence of the
profit system and the sacred rights of private property.
One
unified world has been socialist thinking for well over a century.
One world is not merely a necessity to prevent war – it is an
economic necessity for the fullest flowering of economy in a world
where economy is worldwide, a world economy. But it is promoted
within the context of a revolutionary change to what we produce and
distribute. Surely no-one can propose a cure for conflicts and
nationalism without holding an understanding about their cause. The
slaughters today does not result from regrettable and avoidable
misunderstandings and blunders. Two dogs do not want to fight one
another over a bone; they merely want the bone.
There
is no point in wasting energy trying to persuade the capitalist class
each country that a united planet is in its
interests. We believe in building a socialist movement to take the
government out
of the hands of this capitalist class in order that the great aims
of both peace and security shall be achieved. Why should people
anywhere entrust their fate, their very lives, to fools and liars
who promised us everything and anything in the full knowledge that
they could not and would not keep their promise?
Security
means freedom from economic uncertainty for the working people. It
means the guarantee of the many good things of life that our highly
advanced technology can produce that so easily can be enjoyed by all.
The guarantee that the future of the family, especially of the
children, can be assured with confidence for the years ahead. Why
should this security be so difficult to achieve in the world with the
highest productivity of labour and the greatest production capacity?
Yet
families enjoy no such security. How many
of us feel confident that our standard of living will continue at its
their present level? How many are sure they will still be in a job a
year or even six months from now? Millions of workers are already
unemployed or under-employed with part-time or uber-jobs in the gig
economy where contracts are not worth the paper they are written on.
How can we feel free from fear under such circumstances? How it is
possible to plan the life of the family, to build a home, to think of
higher education for the young, when economic conditions are so
uncertain and precarious?
We
have no real security. The promises politicians keep making to us
are fraudulent. They talk
endlessly on the fine promises about what it will do, some day, to
tackle the scandals of the shortage of teachers and nurses, the
inadequacy of schools and hospitals. Their promises always remain
promises. Yet the politicians do not hesitate to vote more and more
billions of investment for armaments, for the most terrifying weapons
of mass destruction. Could the bitterest critic of capitalism make a
more annihilating indictment of it than that? What good is any
prosperity that piles burden of misery and suffering upon the
people, especially upon the shoulders of those least capable of
bearing it? What good is the prosperity bought at the price of the
happiness? The lives of millions of people perish like cattle in a
slaughter-house, whose homes and industries and entire cities
devastated and destroyed and now very civilisation itself is
imperilled by climate destruction.
How
can any person claiming to be thoughtful rest content that this is
only the prelude to the most horrible holocaust the world has ever
seen, which will surely engulf whole nations and leave not one of
them untouched or intact? What
comfort can the plain people get from the assurance of governments
that they can solve the global warming crisis? We
promised policies and action that will slow down and reverse
greenhouse gas emissions. The promises have remained promises. What
comfort can we get from the scientific experts who assure us that it
will not really destroy our species but will leave a few million of
us to adjust and adapt?
Capitalism
is robbing us of whatever security we have and of the possibility of
achieving real and lasting security. If
people are to live and prosper, capitalism must be end. All over the
world, the capitalist class concentrate more and more economic power
into its hands. Correspondingly, it concentrates more and more
political power and control over the lives of the people. More and
more, decisions are made without the knowledge of the people and
against their expressed wishes. The economic power and the political
influence are exercised for the profits and power of the privileged
elite who possess a stranglehold over the people through their
possession of the State machine.
The
whole future of world depends upon working people. The working class
must awaken to a realisation of its power and its ability to steer
its own destiny. It
could organise the economic and political life not in the interests
of the employers and bureaucrats, but in its own simple interests of
all the people, who want to oppress nobody, to exploit nobody, to
wage war on nobody.
It
could organise production not for the profit of a handful of
capitalists but for the use and enjoyment of all. It could build
homes, instead of bombs to destroy homes; it could provide for the
health and life of all, instead of supplying armies for the
destruction of life. It could be a living example of well-being and
democracy that no tyrant could withstand. For
this, the working class needs nothing but the consciousness of its
task in society and awareness of its power to perform this task. Up
to now, however, the working class, has been content to leave its own
fate in the hands of the pro-capitalist politicians, in return for a
few miserable scraps tossed to us occasionally. We could win anything
we want by our own strength and effort, but we submit to the whims
and wishes of capitalist politicians. Workers needs their own
political power. It cannot express it without having its own
political party – a socialist party.
We
in the Socialist Party have no other interests save those of the
working class itself. Our aims are uncompromising socialist. We seek
nothing more than to be part and parcel of the workers' movement, to
give it a coherent voice to the socialist goal of international
brotherhood and international emancipation.
The
Socialist Party is convinced that great and stirring days are ahead.
We are convinced that the working class will soon start its mighty
march along the road towards socialism. We are and we remain
socialists – independent socialists. We are independent of
capitalism, of all capitalist governments, of all capitalist
politics. We are democrats, consistent and thoroughgoing democrats,
because we are consistent socialists. The working class, and we as
part of it, need democracy, widening and deepening democracy, and we
shall fight for it without compromise. The
victory of the working class can come only by winning the battle for
democracy. The enemy of the working class is at the same time the
enemy of democracy. That holds for capitalism and the capitalist
class. The fight for democracy cannot be fought effectively and
cannot be won except as it is the fight for world socialism.
To
all those who are dedicated to the fight for socialism, the Socialist
Party holds open its doors. To all those who refuse to resign
themselves to helplessness and hopelessness, to the barbarism of
capitalism the Socialist Party is your organisation. To all those who
have a confidence in a socialist future the Socialist Party extends
its welcoming hand of comradeship. To those who seek the security of
the future of mankind, join us in the elimination of the threat to
the continued existence of our civilisation.