The Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety that includes 26 top brands such as Walmart, Hudson's Bay Company, The Gap, Canadian Tire, and The Children's Place, has closed or partially closed seven factories for remediation after inspectors found structural problems and safety concerns. Workers will be compensated for up to four months – commendable but a bit late for many who have already lost their lives or ability to work because of the companies' blatant lack of concern and blind pursuit of profit. John Ayers.
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
End Slavery
It is a sign of the times that people are discussing the meaning of socialism. There is also the beginning of a surge of militancy among workers. The working-class is composed of all those people who, divorced from the ownership or control of the means of production and forced to rely on the sale of their labour power (ability to work) for their. These workers and their families make up the vast majority of the population. For years the working-class has been a sleeping giant lulled to sleep by the ability of capitalism to expand and provide a gradually rising standard of living. Living standards of the majority of the working-class have been eroded and the system has been unable to raise real wages for the majority of workers or to prevent a drop in the living standards of workers. Each year, a larger share of production goes for profits, a smaller share for wages and other workers’ income.
There is a war raging between the capitalist class and the working class. The capitalist class are the handful of millionaires who own or control factories, mines, fields and banks. They are the class that owns and sells the products that we make and often can’t even afford to buy. We sell our labour to this class for a wage. The war between the capitalist class and the working class is due to the system of wage slavery. We can’t live without. Jobs. We have to eat. To eat we have to work. To work we have to work for the capitalists. To work for the boss we have to accept his terms. We are slaves of the wage system.
As the recent recession deepens the attack has been intensified on living and working conditions of all workers in order to sustain the maximum profit drive of the capitalist class. This renewed profit drive at home takes on many forms:
1. Replacement of workers by automation and mechanisation.
2. Speed-ups, redundancy and early retirement to eliminate workers.
3. Lengthening of the working day per family. This is done by means of workers having to take extra jobs and that there must be at least two job-holders if a family is to keep the bills paid.
4. Shifting of an increased tax burden from the capitalists to the workers, although this can only be on short term respite before the burden returns to the capitalist class.
5. Increasing attacks and the squeeze on millions of workers on welfare benefits.
6. Undermining of unions and union conditions by cutting wages, hiring temps in a process of casualisation such as zero hour contracts, or moving plants to unorganised and low-wage areas (right-to-work states in America) at home or out-sourcing abroad, as well as passing anti-union legislation.
Workers’ efforts to organise unions in order to raise wages, shorten hours, and improve working conditions go back to the earliest days of capitalism. Throughout history, the bosses have always tried to keep workers divided, unorganised and weak, in order to intensify their exploitation and thereby grab bigger profits. The capitalist class has never stopped – and will never stop – its efforts to destroy and weaken the workers’ movement. Bitter class battles have developed, and the outlook is for longer, more frequent and more bitter class warfare.
Despite a history of struggle to organise and to improve conditions, reforms have not resulted in a decent, secure life for working people. Every gain is continuously threatened and require defending. As long as the ownership of land and industry is under control of the capitalist class, the economy is run solely for the maximum profit interest of the bosses, and their state power is used to protect their capitalist system. Reforms only create illusions. Out of a misconception that socialism is not on the order of the day, reformists forget the very purpose of being revolutionaries. They fail to expose the nature of the capitalist state so as to avoid being “too left.” Out of fear of isolation, they abandon class struggle entirely.
Workers must be guided by the slogan, “An injury to one is an injury to all.” and advance solidarity in all battles against the capitalist class enemy. Unity of workers in a class struggle must begin from below through cooperation and coordination. To achieve the maximum possible labour unity, many groups besides union members must be involved, the wives, the unemployed, the local community – all those who are exploited by capitalism. Workers must also build toward independent political action by the working class.
The immediate aim of the socialist revolution is to overthrow the capitalists and the the creation of a classless and stateless society in which the guiding principle will be ’From each according to his ability, to each according to his need’. The working class abolishes capitalist relations of production and replaces them by non-oppressive, non-exploitive ones then the alienation characteristic of capitalism will begin to disappear. Productive activity will become a creative, fulfilling and truly human activity. The Socialist Party seeks no cut and dried Utopia. We challenge the system of wage slavery itself.
Monday, August 11, 2014
Casino-Like Practises
"Flummoxed by investment options? So are the'pros" was the headline in the Toronto Star Business section on June 30. The thrust of the article was, as the heading suggests, that fund managers just do not know where to invest. To quote, " They see treasury bonds vulnerable to the inevitable climb of interest rates and corporate and high yield bonds paying so little interest that there is not enough insulation to protect investors if the economy suddenly weakens, or if the investors get cold feet. After the unrelenting climb of stocks since 2009, the pros see a stock market so pricey that stocks appear vulnerable to any bad news from the economy or companies." The above clearly shows how uncertain the markets are and that no investor can feel secure. The most significant words in the article are 'cold feet'. Clearly, the economy is based on casino-like practices and outcomes. John Ayers.
Life Without Running Water.
The Toronto Star's "World Weekly Dispatches" included 'Life Without Running Water". No, this is not a report on a Third World country but Detroit, Michigan. In April, the city set a target of cutting off services to 3,000 customers a week who were more than $150 behind on their bills. In May, the water department sent out 46,000 warnings and cut off service to 4,531, i.e. they exceeded their target! Maybe someone will get a medal, or maybe they will cut off service to 5,000 customers as they get more efficient. The bankrupt city is currently owed $90 million from customers and nearly half the 300,000 accounts are past due. The city is located on the shores of the Great Lakes! Some have been without running water for six weeks and counting. In capitalism, if you do not have enough money, you can't have, even a basic human right such as clean water. John Ayers.
The Workers' Party
Socialism has been the goal of the working class political movement since before the time of Marx and Engels. The core elements of whose political ideas can be found in the Communist Manifesto, which is still relevant for today. Socialists foresee that humanity will do away with the system that threatens its survival with destructive wars and environmental destruction. Socialism will win the world and change the world, and make a planet of peace and freedom. Capitalism's economic problems are generating a ruling class offensive, designed to cut costly social welfare programmes and drive down wages, at the expense of the living standards of the working class. Although by no means certain, socialists are optimistic of a class struggle upsurge which will lead to actually challenging capitalism, (but again, this need not automatically follow). We are talking about the beginning of the radicalisation of the working class.
If the working class is destined to transform society then it must create its own political party within the framework of capitalist society to fulfill its historic mission which must be working class in composition and subject to the control of its members. Creating a party of the working class with the aim of establishing a new socialist society is very different and far more difficult than organising a union movement. But the two are related and will eventually be connected. Education is essential and comes through experience, but its essence is the grasping of ideas and not to feel intimidated in questioning authority or—as Marx once put it— “doubting everything.” That is why democracy and education must go hand in hand.
If an organisation’s principles are correct the tactics reflected must also be correct. If an organisation’s tactics are wrong, it is nearly certain that its principles can be nothing else but wrong. We must not be swept off our feet by fine sounding phrases. Obviously the workers cannot wait until the social revolution has stepped upon the scene and then organise. Tactics therefore dictate the organisation of the working class today, under capitalism, into an organisation whose primary purpose is to to create a new social order. The working class must organise today, under capitalism, in order to achieve its emancipation. Slogans will get us nowhere. What is needed is a class-conscious organisation of the working class on the political and industrial fields.
Some so-called socialists argue that the large mass of workers will never become socialist and will have to be led by an enlightened minority (the vanguard) which is willing to unite with any movement of workers, no matter how wrong this may be, in order that they will have some masses to lead, and who are frequently willing to barter away all its principles for the sake of being taken into the ranks of reformist organisations. In other words, numbers are more important than principles. In order to reach the masses, we find their manifestoes filled with all kinds of reforms and demands, simply to garner support. Marx and Engels lived and wrote in vain. Their teaching that the workers are robbed at the point of production and not at the point of consumption is not even grasped. The workers’ party that is of any use in our estimate is one that recognises that the workers are robbed by the capitalist, and understands how that robbery takes place; and is one that is organised to prosecute the class struggle politically until socialism is attained. Such would be a socialist party based on Marxian principles. All other parties, no matter how named, and of whom composed, are useless. The Socialist Party holds that the political party must be a party of no compromise. Its mission is to point the way to the goal and it refuses to leave the main road to follow the small side-tracks that lead into the swamp of reformism. Capitalism cannot be reformed. It must be overthrown.
The Socialist Party knows that no leaders are going to pull the workers into socialism. As Marx stated, “The emancipation of the working class must be the class conscious act of the working class itself.” A muddle-minded working class will never be able to act correctly or move in the proper direction no matter how insightful the leaders may be. “The day is past,” says Engels, “for revolutions carried through by small minorities at the head of unconscious ” yet some activists say the workers must arm themselves for the revolution and that mass action and armed insurrection are the means by which our emancipation is to be accomplished. These “revolutionaries” are a century behind the times resorting to such methods. If there is anything the capitalist class likes and which it tries to bring about, it is to have the workers engaging in these street-fighting tactics. After pointing out that the development of capitalism had rendered barricade fighting and armed insurrection obsolete, Engels goes on to say:
“Does the reader now understand why the ruling class, by hook or by crook, would get us where the rifle pops and the sabre slashes? Why, today, do they charge us with cowardice because we will not, without further ado, get down into the street where we are SURE OF OUR DEFEAT IN
ADVANCE? Why are we so persistently importuned to play the role of cannon fodder?”
The Socialist Party is opposed to violence or the advocacy of violence in the labour movement because it knows that such tactics are playing right into the hands of the capitalist class. It is not cowardice that dictates our position but common sense and it is not heroism or bravery that dictates the advocacy of violence but idiocy. In today’s protest movements, any who embrace violent resistance is either a lunatic or a police spy acting as an agent provocateur. The labour movement must not descend into a conspiracy behind closed doors. It must be fully transparent in its structure and operation. This the Socialist Party can proudly serve as an example of openness.
One argument made against the Socialist Party is that it is small, the Small Party of Good Boys, but when the time is ripe for the social revolution, it will be the organisation, no matter what its size, that has the correct principles and tactics that will be the rallying point of the working class. The Socialist Party never compromises truth to make a friend, never withholds criticism of error lest it make an enemy.
Sunday, August 10, 2014
“Together For All”
A few personal reflections by this blogger concerning organisation and the Socialist Party
We are all alienated under capitalism - alienated from the sort of work that might be meaningful, the sort of relationships that might sustain us, alienatated from the Earth and from the human community. We are also alienated from our own true selves. We want change but we don't want to see the world reproduced as it currently is. It is not just about dreaming up blueprints for a new society, though that can be important if we do that together. It's about transforming our social lives and relationships, transforming ourselves. It’s about challenging the lonely hopes of our fellow workers of winning the lottery to escape their misery, and of disillusioning others of their fantasies for violent revenge upon those who oppress us. We need to re-focus our aim towards the personal gain of collective struggle for common ownership, emphasising it is about working for ourselves yet not about individual survival. We have to succeed in tracing social and personal problems to their root - capitalism.
The recession and the State’s austerity policies has made the need for a radical re-thinking of our politics more urgent than ever. In fact the bigger picture is that we are literally destroying the Earth and billions of lives in the name of capitalist economic growth. The Occupy movement which emerged around the world with its camps tried to present alternative social relationships, political power and future possibilities. Protest movements need to promise a different, better world in both word and deed. They cannot limit themselves to offering seemingly practical palliatives, but must act as catalysts to advance and defend visions of a very different world. An expanding capitalist economy provides suitable conditions for reformism and for many decades reformist ideas have been dominant in the working class. However, the belief that the systems we live under can be reformed or tamed is hopeless idealism whereas the revolutionary approach is pragmatic and understands the only real way out of the exploitation we are living under. Bold declarations of radical aspirations ignites and inspires the imagination and and when combined with thoughtful organization, can change the world. Revolutions are not built purely out of love and cosy sentiments. Rather, movements need to possess structures where disagreement, argument and critical thinking can flourish and emerge from the differences between people, ideas, experiences and strategies. It is by working through conflicts of opinion, and not by glossing them over in the name of false unity or claims to party efficacy that contributes to our vitality. Making room for these disagreements, but ensuring they don't handicap the movement, is key.
Why does the Socialist Party exist? Nothing less than to help make a social revolution which is a complete transformation of human society and all its social relations. That is no small thing. It is about the biggest job that any body have ever set itself and the means at our disposal is simply other people like ourselves. The emancipation of the working class must be the work of the working-class themselves. There is no other way. We endeavour to organise a working-class political party, independent of, and hostile to, all capitalist parties, as an instrument for the political, economic and social emancipation of the working-class. It is in the direction of building up a class-conscious working-class socialist party that we have concentrated our efforts and energy. Agitate, Educate, Organise!
Perhaps, as some critics say, our methods are not perfect and we have never claimed that we haven’t made mistakes or that we should not engage in self-examination of our tactics or methods. We have no reason for complacency. But the Socialist Party does claim that the road we have marked out is the right road, and that no other political organisation has, as yet, discovered a better way. Whatever may or not be the faults that which we have to reproach ourselves, it is scarcely a failure to be placed at our feet if those to whom we make our appeal decline to take the path we point out to them, and persist in taking detours down every side-track and dead end in search of a short-cut. Where we could have missed opportunity is that in organising we could have failed to take advantage of new ideas and conceptions in communications. When we present our alternatives, we need to assess them on the basis of how well they allow us to confront and overcome systems of exploitation and oppression.
Not only have we not succeeded mustering the working-class to our banner, the fact is, many sincere socialists remain outside our party. Let us search for the reasons and if possible remedy them. Do we distance possible friends and allies rather than to win them over? There must be adherence to the party’s principles but also there should be room within it for every genuine socialist. There should be no hunt for possible heresies, no obsession about reaching full 100% agreement on non-essential points of difference but instead a celebration of the core points of consensus to bring all comrades into a united socialist party, a living, vibrant instrument for the emancipation of humanity! It needs to make common cause with others of like mind for a real, material transformation of the world. Our confidence and hopes are activated and animated when we encounter examples of new ideas. The sound of the class war drums become a common beat as we increasing engage in shared understanding. There needs to be the realisation that building solidarity is never-ending work.
Rather than a slogan of “Alone Against All” it should be “Together For All”
Who Owns the North Pole Part 72
The Canadian government said in a statement issued on Friday that two ice-breakers will be sent to the Arctic waters to gather scientific information to support a plan to extend Canadian territory up to the North Pole.
“Our government is committing the resources necessary to ensure that Canada secures international recognition of the full extent of its continental shelf, including the North Pole,” said Canada’s Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird.
The mission comes after Ottawa filed a UN application in December 2013, seeking to vastly expand its Atlantic sea boundary. If Canada’s claim over the territory is accepted by the UN body, its share of the potentially oil/gas-rich region would grow dramatically. The US Geological Survey estimated previously that the area could hold 13 percent of the world’s undiscovered oil and up to 30 percent of its hidden natural gas reserves.
Saturday, August 09, 2014
Pathetic Reflections
It has been widely reported that Henry La Croix had an accident three days into his intended bike ride from The Arctic to Argentina that prevented him from continuing. La Croix's plan was to raise money for Alzheimer's research. One may respect La Croix for his altruism but nevertheless it is a pathetic reflection on capitalist society where one would feel compelled to take such action because of lack of action by governments who should be tackling the problem adequately. In a socialist society such action by individuals would not be necessary. John Ayers.
Money Trumps everything
The first new town built in India after its so-called independence in 1947, Chandigarh, was designed by the famous Swiss-French architect, Le Corbusier. There was just one small problem, his plans did not include housing for labourers who were forced to live in shanty towns outside of town. In 2006, the city government introduced a scheme to construct 25,000 new apartments with water and electricity for the poor folk. The fact that the shanty- towns are being leveled so that the developers can build luxury homes for the rich is merely coincidental. Oh, and just one other small detail – some of the shanty towns are being leveled before the workers apartments have been built. In capitalism, money trumps everything! John Ayers.
World Without Borders
The U.N. estimates that 79.9% of children in Guatemala, 78.9% in El Salvador and 63.1% in Honduras live in poverty. In Honduras, rates of malnutrition reach 48.5% in rural areas, while almost half of Guatemalan children are moderately or severely stunted in growth. Honduras is the eighth most unequal country worldwide, and Guatemala isn’t far behind. According to a report from the Washington-based Center for Economic and Policy Research, since the Zelaya coup in 2009 the economy has plunged, poverty has increased, social spending on health care and education has been slashed, economic inequality has worsened, and 100% of all real income gains have accrued to the wealthiest 10 percent of Hondurans. The economic policies of the so-called “Washington Consensus” – centered around privatization, trade and financial liberalization, and diminished social spending. In Honduras and Guatemala the bottom 50% actually experienced a decrease in its income share during this period. Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala have been kept under the jackboot of murderous regimes, with U.S. support, for much of the twentieth century. Superimposed on this has been a devastating wave of gang violence. Honduras is now the murder capital of the world. El Salvador and Guatemala have also some of the highest homicide rates in the world. The immigrants eager to cross the US-Mexican border for security and sanctuary are refugees of inequality.
Nationalism and socialism are contradictory. Socialism must be international or it can not exist at all; it is a sham. In the end, not socialism but nationalism and the national State will have to disappear. The world is irresistibly being driven to internationalism and interdependence, the only race remaining, that of the human race as a whole. The capitalist system has freed people from the soil."Where I fare well, there is my home”. Workers journey often with their families in order to settle wherever conditions are most favourable. Everywhere, human beings are the same, no matter where they come from or where they go to in search of their bread and butter. He is but a nomad. They leave behind unemployment but only too frequently they find discrimination. They constitute a large section of the workers in transport and on building sites. They staff our restaurants, our laundries, work in factories. They also face hostility at work, in schools, in pubs, because of where they were born.
The new land is usually one in which the laws and their administration are more favourable to the workers than those of their original home. And co-workers have no motive for depriving them of what little protection they can get from the law the struggle against exploiting employers. Their interest lies rather in increasing everybody’s ability to withstand the common enemy. Prejudice, of which he or she allows him or herself to be made a victim, does as much harm as it does the newcomer. The capitalist artificially stimulates antagonisms in order to be able to control.
Intimidatory immigration controls has nothing to do with the specific characteristics of the foreign worker concerned, but rather is related to the need to secure the loyalty of the natives. It is a ruling class strategy of directing blame for the failures of capitalism onto the “newcomers”. While it is workers which leads the attack on foreign workers, the ruling class can sleep easy in their beds.
Over the years the demands of the working class for better living conditions have not been met and accusing fingers are pointing at the people who have emigrated from their home as if this were an answer to these demands. No doubt the world mobility of labour is a great hardship for the workers in countries where the standard of living is high and the conditions of labour are comparatively good. In such countries, naturally, immigration will exceed emigration. As a result the labourers with the greater standard of living will be hindered in their class-struggle by the influx of those with a lower standard and less power of resistance. Under certain circumstances this sort of competition, like that of the capitalists, may lead to a new emphasis on national lines, a new hatred of foreign workers on the part of the native born. But the conflict of nationalities, which is perpetual among the capitalists, can be only temporary among the proletarians. For sooner or later the workers will discover that the immigration of cheap labour is as inevitable a result of the capitalist system as the introduction of machinery or the forcing of women into industry. Wages always come down when two are after the same job. That’s the fault of competition, not of the person who cuts the price. When they say: - “The immigrants are taking your jobs,” we answer: - it is the capitalist system which causes unemployment.
It is also learned that the workers of each nation that their success in the class-struggle is dependent on the progress of the working-class of other nations. For a time this may turn them against foreign workers, but finally they come to see that there is only one effective means of removing the hindering influence of backward nations: to do away with the backwardness itself. German workers have every reason to co-operate with Asia’s workers in order that they may secure higher wages and a shorter working-day; likewise the English workers have the same interest in relation to the Eastern Europeans, and the North Americans in relation to Latin America. The dependence of the working class of one land on that of another leads inevitably to a joining of forces by workers of various lands.
The national hatred which the working class absorbed from the capitalists steadily disappears and the working-class frees itself from national prejudices. Working-people learn more and more to see in the foreign labourer a fellow-fighter, a comrade. How necessary is the international solidarity of the class-struggles was recognized in the beginning by the authors of the Communist Manifesto. This historic document is addressed to the workers of all lands and concludes by calling upon them to unite. The working class must remember that in their unity is their strength. That the strength of the working class is all powerful because it is based on the determination to end all oppression, all exploitation of man by man, and to oppose all subjection of man on grounds of nationality, colour, or creed. Unlike the unity of the capitalists it is based on a total and enduring unity of interests. But in the absence of working class unity, the strength of the capitalists is greatly increased.
Friday, August 08, 2014
A Deadlly Society
There is Power in the Union
Trade unionism is the organised refusal of the workers to submit meekly to the laws of supply and demand. The trade unions, in Marx’s phrase, were centers of resistance to the encroachments of capital. Neither the value of the workers’ commodity labour power, nor his standard of living in general are fixed automatically but by way of the class struggle. The first attempts to combine in trade unions encounters the savage repression by the State. Trade unions were declared an unlawful society and to strike, a crime. The propertied class today are just as hostile to trade unionism as they were generations ago. The present day capitalist class is once again engaged in the restriction of trade union activities. Statutes forbid the sympathetic solidarity strikes and places limitations upon peaceful picketing. The right to strike, if at all effectual, must carry with it the corollary right to organize the unorganised and persuade them to join the strike. Only a strike growing out of a trade dispute within narrow limits are “legal”and hanging over every union is the threat of employers legal injunctions and criminal proceedings. Yet unions which abandon their militant functions for defensive or offensive purposes, invite legal and governmental strangulation at the hands of a capitalist class. Whatever concessions have been wrung from the capitalist class in the past have been along the way of mass struggle. The “democratic” state is the political representation of the interests of private property and not of the working class.
The bubble burst. The collapse of banks and the stock market, the deep decline in industry, and the creation of a huge army of the un- or underemployed are having the effect of wiping out illusion in the minds of broad sections of the working class. Capitalism is revealed in all its frailties of its anarchic production for profit. The attempts of capitalism to exit the crisis by a re-adjustment of its industry for more effective competition on the world market, attempts which spell rationalisation, wage-slashing, and a general offensive upon the workers’ standards of living, can only further the process of disillusionment. Under the pressure of these developments, workers are moving away from their former passivity and moving away from acquiescence. There is a growing mood for struggle and militancy.
Once again there exists alarm among the wealthy at the “spectre” of communism. Employers are fully aware that as a result of unemployment and the pay-cutting offensive, and ending of the welfare state workers hitherto faithful to the traditions of capitalist politics will be radicalised by their increasing experience of misery and mounting exposure to inequality. The pressure upon the workers has become unbearable. For sure, the capitalist class of this country has not yet lost its confidence and its power to rule. There is no immediate revolutionary struggles on the horizon. But the necessary defensive resistance of the workers can become the starting point for revolutionary struggles in the future. Once started in that direction, we in the Socialist Party are confident that the momentum of the class struggle will be like an avalanche (or perhaps like an ever-enlarging snowball). Nobody can foretell the exact speed of events, but nobody has the right, to count on an even and gradualist course of the class struggle. The workers must be clear that even were the exploiters willing to grant them without struggle no mere palliatives or reforms will suffice any longer. You cannot serve both the wealthy and the workers without committing treachery.
The power of the plutocracy is great. But there is a power greater than theirs and that is the power of numbers. Organise!
Thursday, August 07, 2014
Saving Construction Costs
Next door, in India in the last weekend of June, there were two building collapses that killed at least twenty-two people. The Toronto Star news reporter said, " Most homes in that part of the capital (New Delhi) were built without permission using substandard materials." Building collapses are common in India because lax regulations and enforcement encourage builders to cut corners, add unauthorized floors, and use poor materials to save construction costs and increase profits. This will not end while the profit system is in place and until the workers end it. John Ayers.
To Late For Some
The Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety that includes 26 top brands such as Walmart, Hudson's Bay Company, The Gap, Canadian Tire, and The Children's Place, has closed or partially closed seven factories for remediation after inspectors found structural problems and safety concerns. Workers will be compensated for up to four months – commendable but a bit late for many who have already lost their lives or ability to work because of the companies' blatant lack of concern and blind pursuit of profit. John Ayers
For All Or For None
Every state is the dictatorship of some class over another. It is a body of armed men organised by the class in power to suppress the rights of those classes opposed to the continued rule of the dominant class. The economic system and the state structure, that prevails today is a capitalist economic system, a capitalist state structure — a reality that cannot be denied by any trickery of words. The government is an executive committee for managing the common affairs of the capitalist class as a whole. The State acts on the basis of the naked self-interest of the ruling class. The state is a machine for the oppression of one class by another. The fundamental political problem for the capitalists is to protect their class interests of the small exploiting minority while obscuring the true nature of its state from the great majority of the people. All the laws passed by the capitalists’ politicians have as their purpose the further enslavement and robbery of the masses and the protection of the unjustly acquired wealth of the rich, who produce nothing of value, but appropriate the product of the sweat and blood of the workers. No matter how fine-sounding these laws which will apply "equally” to rich and poor alike, they were only written to deceive people. The 1946 Employment Act and the 1978 Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act legally obligate the president and Congress to use all available means to achieve full employment. Reformists try constantly to get the masses to trust in the legal system and have faith in their “rights” granted by the capitalists to their wage-slaves. Appeals to paper promises and prattling on about a fake legal “right” awarded by the capitalist government are worse than pointless.
The interests of the capitalists and of the working class are irreconcilable. Pitiless exploitation and the anarchy of the market oppress working people in a thousand different ways. Capital must accumulate in order to survive. It grows by keeping for itself the surplus value produced by workers after they have reproduced the value of their labour power, their wages. Surplus value is the source of all profit. The unending search for surplus value, for profit, is the motive force of capitalist production. Capitalism can produce only for profit. It is forced constantly to seek new ways to achieve the maximum rate of profit. In its restless search for maximum profits, spurred on by ruthless competition, each capitalist company is bound to attempt to increase its productive strength to the full. The capitalists cut their costs of production mainly by stepping up their already vicious exploitation of the working class. They cut their wage bills by reducing wages and sacking workers. They also make the remaining workers work longer hours and they increase the intensity of labour. Capitalists also reduce their wage bill by buying more advanced machinery in order to produce the same goods with less labour. In times of economic recession the capitalists tell us to tighten our belts and toil harder for them, “in the national interest”. They try to increase exploitation so as to get the huge profit needed to start capital expanding again. Competition among the vying capitalists to minimise losses is fierce. In this battle the winners as well as the losers lay workers reduce living standards to offload their crisis onto the backs of the working class. The working class must fight all attempts by the capitalist to shift the burden of their economic crisis. We must resist all wage cuts, unemployment, speed-ups, tax rises, and cuts in government welfare services. We must make the capitalists pay for their own crisis rather than people being kept from working to keep wages low
Working is the exclusive means of income and occupies a great portion of time of workers. It is a source of dignity and achievement. Workers run and maintain machinery, build factories and homes, work up the various products for the market—in short produce and reproduce society. When there is a crying need for more services and products for people it is a tragedy that many are forced to be unemployed. It is the nature of the capitalist system itself behind this madness. unemployment results from the basic drives of capitalism. Labor power is a commodity brought to market by workers. To keep its costs down capitalism can either raise the supply by forcing new layers (e.g., migrants) onto the labour market, or it can lower the demand by automation of labour-intensive production processes. It does both. Capitalism has an inherent drive to introduce new technologies, to revolutionise production. The chief result is accumulation by reducing the proportion of living labour to “dead labour": machinery and materials. Marx made the striking observation that while generals win wars by recruiting armies, capitalists win their competitive wars by firing them. Under the impact of automation, workers are thrown into the street to form what he called the “industrial reserve army,” a mass of disposable labour which could be used in several ways. One is to supply masses of labor when and where the need arises without disrupting production elsewhere. Another is as a weapon against the employed workers, a constant downward pressure on wages and their militancy. Workers tossed on the streets are often confused and demoralised, while those with jobs are cowed and become protective of them.
Marx also noted:
1) the size of the reserve army depends on the needs and conditions of capitalist production; it does not indicate absolute overpopulation;
2) it varies with the cycles of capitalist development—smaller at the end of the boom period, larger in times of crisis—but its existence is constant;
3) it has an active element that Marx termed the “floating” section (including part-timers), a more destitute “stagnant” part, and a “latent” element composed of a population rendered superfluous by productive developments in agriculture and other spheres where capitalist methods were being newly introduced.
Work can now be transferred to different parts of the world with much greater ease, in order to seek cheaper labor or force workers to accept less. The result, along with a further concentration of capital, is the internationalisation of the reserve army. Alongside the automated factory, the sweatshop has re-emerged.
The working class must overthrow the dictatorship of the capitalist by socialist revolution. Our enemy is the capitalist class and all those in league with them. We place our hope in the people, helping them to raise their understanding of individual oppression to collective oppression, from collective oppression to class oppression, from awareness only of economic oppression to awareness of political oppression, and from awareness of the need for reforms within the existing system to awareness of the need for political struggles for socialist revolution. The politicians have shown time and again that they serve big business first. If we fight back, we can win but any gains or concessions acquired in the past were won because capitalism feared something greater: workers’ revolution. And now even these gains are being eroded and disappearing. If the aim of workers’ resistance is only to persuade politicians to grant reforms, and is not a struggle about making workers conscious of the need for all-out confrontation with capital then it will be all a futile effort that merely raise false hopes. To advocate struggles for reforms and expect the struggle itself to turn automatically into revolutionary demands would be equally illusionary.
The Socialist Party does, however, recognise the revolutionary potential created by the recession. There is a heightened awareness among workers that this system will never fulfill their needs nor grant their demands. Reformists simply no longer has very much to offer. Despite it being a long and difficult struggle, the fight for socialism is now very much worth engaging in, particularly knowing what the bleak capitalist future has in store for us all. That is why working people should join us in this effort.
Wednesday, August 06, 2014
Parasites And Poverty
Poverty In Indonesia
I got no flag. I got no country.
“The strongest bond of human sympathy, outside of the family relation, should be one of uniting all working people of all nations, tongues and kindreds." Abraham Lincoln
So the Yes and No camps have had their big TV spectacular. Salmond and Darling engaged in what was called a debate, exchanging facts and figures, throwing the occasional spanner into the other’s arguments, and hoping we all fall their respective spin. The Socialist Party members were not taken in by the clever sound-bites and many workers, too, will see through the charade.
No country is yours or mine. The ruling class use nationalism to side-track the aspirations of the workers. Nationalism is by no means struggles a way forward to the liberation of the working class but represents local capitalists wanting a larger slice of the profits from exploitation of local workers - “their” workers. Left nationalists preach class collaboration with proponents of private property, contributing nothing but division and confusion. Independence is an empty vessel which demagogues eager to fill with false and even dangerous content. They ally with the bosses. Their political principles can be summed up as: first independence, everything else after. “Everything else” is class struggle, revolution, and socialism. Those supposed radicals present the fallacious case that political independence would constitute a step which is not only necessary but revolutionary in and of itself. Nationalist demagoguery is still with us, here and elsewhere, to deceive the people.
How many peoples are now paying a heavy price for having put their faith in the pretensions of their nationalist leaders? In spite of their “independence”, countries are still governed according to the rules of capitalist exploitation. Once the nationalists are victorious, at the first important conflict we see the “national” police clubbing the “national” workers by order of the “national” state whose legality is maintained at all costs by the “national” judges and the “national” industrialists maintain their profit level and the “national” finance companies do a great business.
The nationalists have taught us well. We now all know who is responsible for all the economic troubles and political instability in Scotland. It isn’t capitalism at all but the 1707 Union! Scottish workers, however, understand only to well the different task before them. It is to unite to resist the attacks upon them, regardless of the passport of the employer. The class enemy of Scottish workers is identical with the class enemy of the working class as a whole. The global domination of capital means that a nationally-located socialism is an illusion, and so the only way to overcome this problem is through world revolution.
Since the days of Marx, socialists have challenged the capitalists’ national chauvinism with our own appeals for the international solidarity of the working class. We have opposed the attempts of capitalists to enlist the workers in their nationalist strivings with our own appeals for class struggle of the workers of all countries against world capitalism. History has proven that independence is not the objective interests of the working class. The workers will not win victories in the struggle against capitalism if it fights in dispersed formation against the same enemy. All it will do is make a “breach” in its own defences.
It is the slogan “world socialism” which must be raised by revolutionists from the first. This slogan serves not only to distinguish the Marxists from the nationalist fakirs of all shades, but also to express the deep-rooted aspirations of the workers movement. The Socialist Party is fighting for the victory of the working class and for a world society that will see an end to all artificial national boundaries. We are out to develop the international struggle of workers, and to unite workers, not to reinforce mistaken identification with the oppressor. Governments need nationalism to make people obey them. They use nationalism to make people think that they are not just obeying a particular group of men but that they are doing their duty to “the nation”.
The Ref..errr? ..end...ummm?
The left nationalist case invites Scottish workers to cast aside their historic solidarity with their English and Welsh allies, on the grounds that it is only possible to achieve progress towards socialism in Scotland. Collective action co-ordinated across all nations presents the best prospects of success. Our Left nationalists should stop playing with words. For starters, they should quit pretending that sovereignty would be a step towards working class emancipation and recognise instead that what socialists want is real independence. What we want is freedom from capitalist domination.
Love your little bit of what is called Scotland, your street, your neighbourhood, your town or village, but love the human family, all life, and the planet Earth more. There are no countries (or gods), just the human family and kindred species, sharing the fruits of one living biosphere. From the tiniest creatures to the global ecosystem, we are all part of the same natural evolutionary journey, and we must love all life like kin. It is absolute madness that the human family can't take responsibility for its actions and instead learn to share and live in peace in order to avert a possible and increasingly probable ecological apocalypse. The human family must come together globally or else all is lost. Capitalism is causing increased war, pestilence, poverty and the rise in authoritarianism. We face an unprecedented global emergency as life-giving ecosystems collapse. Either humanity immediately comes together to embrace liberty and socialism or we each face a violent end.
Whatever choice the Scottish people make, the Socialist Party will continue the fight for working class liberation, border or no border. What is the “independence” they yearn for, if it means being trapped within national borders - jail-cells inside the bigger prison of capitalism?
Tuesday, August 05, 2014
Labour Theory Of Theft
A recent attendee at one of our discussion meetings revealed that he worked in a fast food joint for $7 per hour. He would often make a sandwich in a few minutes that cost $7, so for the rest of the hour he was working for nothing – the labour theory of theft at work! John Ayers.
Nine To Five Drudgery
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Paternalism is a common attitude among well-meaning social reformers. Stemming from the root pater, or father, paternalism implies a patria...