- Editorial: Hopes for the New Year?
- Pathfinders: Doing Something for Nothing
- Are Socialists Sadists?
- Too Much Ado About: Primitive Fables, Hallucinations, Dreams, Myths
- Cooking the Books: Another Reform Goes Wrong
- Material World: The Price of Oil and Fracking
- Greasy Pole: Who You Calling A Pleb?
- Little Children Suffer
- The War in Gaza
- A Page of History: the 1834 Canut Revolt in Lyon
- Cooking the Books: Pie-crust Pie-chart
- Mixed Media: Our Big Land
- Book Reviews: 'Things are Going to Get Worse and Why We Should be Glad', & 'Invisible - Britain’s Migrant Sex Workers'
- Theatre Review: 'England Arise'
- Proper Gander: Do Have Nightmares
- 50 Years Ago: Churchill's Birthday
- Action Replay: Football - The January Transfer Window
- Voice From the Back
- Cartoon: Free Lunch
Thursday, January 01, 2015
A New Year?
On behalf of the Socialist Courier blog, we send greetings
to the world’s working peoples for the New Year 2015, wishing them success in
the struggle against capitalism in the coming year. Happy New Year to all
comrades and friends in the spirit of working class solidarity.
People all over have been victims of attacks the like of
which they have rarely experienced. The recession affected every part of our
society. Every day still brings in fresh reports of business failures and
bankruptcies, strikes and lock-outs, wage-reductions and cuts in working
conditions and—as the most natural, though most terrible result—increased suicides.
Looking at these facts, the anticipations for the New Year would seem anything
but cheering. But it always the darkest before dawn. If there were no remedy
for these crushing social evil the outlook would indeed be black, full of doom
and gloom. But, fortunately, there is a remedy; though no one person can apply
it alone and that cure is socialism! The future can be ours.
2014 wasn’t exactly what you’d call a peaceful year. Wars
were fought in people's villages towns, and cities. We hope we’re wrong about
this but we confidently predict that many on-going wars will still continue in
2015 and that new conflicts will arise. Many are already simmering. Others are
temporarily off the boil and sitting on the back-burner. There’s some hope that
a few wars might end but in many cases that’s a tenuous hope at best. Wars are
murder on a massive scale. War and military spending is hardwired into
capitalism.
War didn't used to look like it does today. It did not used
to be the case that 90 percent of the dead were non-combatants, or as they say,
collateral damage. We still talk about "battlefields," but there used
to actually be such things. Wars were arranged and planned for like sports
contests. Ancient armies could camp next to an enemy without fear of a surprise
attack. Enemies negotiated the dates for battles. War's history used to be one
of ritual and of respect for the "worthy opponent." Sneak attacks
were not engaged in, not because nobody had ever had the idea, but because that
just wasn't the done thing for what a warrior to do.
Today the gloves are off. Despite all those Geneva
conventions on the rules of war and international war crime legislation, war is
nowadays organised mass killing sprees. The astronomic spending on wars and
preparations for could end starvation in the world, provide the globe with
clean water for all, etc. Governments could have saved millions of lives but
chose to kill millions instead. Billions budgeted for death and not for life.
At this time of the year, when “Happy New Year!” is on
everyone’s lips, in the midst of all the well-wishing, let’s be thoughtful and
consider what the prospects and promises are for this new year, if 2015 is to
be, for the working class, a truly happy one. We face another new year of
struggle in conditions where the socialist cause is only beginning to revive
after receiving setbacks and where confusion and disunity still afflict us. The
coming new year will be a time when the fortunes of capitalism can hardly be
expected to take a turn for the better, and indeed may well take a turn for the
worse, so hopefully opening up new opportunities for an advance in the
socialist case.
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Spend, Spend, Spend
We are constantly being reminded that the UK is going through an economic recession, but dire as these times might be it would seem that the owning class can still spend millions in the auction houses. 'A £40m van Gogh, £15m Patek Philippe watch and a £5m Stamp: How 2014 saw super-rich investors make series of world record purchases at auction houses. Very rare 19th century stamp from British Guiana sold for £5.6m in June . 114 bottles of Romanee-Conti Superlot sold for £1m - £1,100 per glass.' (Daily Mail, 30 December) People starving while some parasite spends over £1,000 for a glass of wine. Capitalism is crazy. RD
No Cuts Here
At a time when the government seems especially keen on making welfare cuts, witness the NHS, Old Folk's Homes and libraries there is one area that seems untouched by any cuts. SNP ministers have been accused of enjoying a luxurious lifestyle at some of the world's grandest five-star hotels. 'Among those to enjoy top treatment while on government business are Humza Yousaf, the minister for Europe and international development. He stayed at the Ritz Carlton in Qatar - which boasts its own inclusive island and the Middle East's largest chandelier, decorated with 2,300 crystals The stay cost almost £1,400.' (Times, 29 December) RD
An Unpredictable Society
Capitalism is an unpredictable society only a couple of years ago it was predicted that there was going to be an oil and gas boom, but this has turned out to be a complete fallacy. 'The oil and gas industry is set for a year of mergers and takeovers as a result of the plummeting oil price, a business consultancy has predicted. PwC said 2015 may bring the first hostile takeover in the sector in living memory. It warned of "uncertain times" for the estimated 440,000 people employed in the UK's oil and gas industry. The oil price has fallen from $115 a barrel in the middle of the year to about $60.' (BBC News, 29 December) Market forces dictate slumps and booms not the "experts". RD
A Dire Future
'Almost 7,000 homes and buildings will be sacrificed to the rising seas around England and Wales over the next century, according to an unpublished Environment Agency (EA) analysis seen by the Guardian.' (Guardian, 29 December) It is reckoned over 800 of the properties will be lost to coastal erosion over the next 20 years. The properties, worth well over £1bn, will be allowed to fall into the sea because the cost of protecting them would be far greater. But there is no compensation scheme in place for homeowners to enable them to move to a safer location. RD
The Goal of the Working Class
Slavery existed long before capitalism. When members of
competing tribes were captured, they often became slaves. A form of slavery still
predominates today. It is called wage-slavery. Workers are forced to sell
themselves (actually, their labour power) in order to survive. Economic
necessity prevents the overwhelming mass of humanity from being truly free. The
corporations and businesses own the economy — the factories, the transport, the
retail stores, etc. Workers own only their ability to work and the few personal
possessions they have been able to accumulate in a lifetime of toil. When some
read the word slavery, they think it couldn't possibly be that people are
literally slaves today - slavery seems like an outmoded form of life from
previous centuries. They blithely assume that "wage slavery" is
merely a metaphor. Whatever we feel, slavery is very much a fact of life for
all people in the world today. A person is a slave if he has lost control over
his life and is dominated by someone or something--whether he is aware of this
or not.
The reason why workers sell their labour to capitalists in
the first place is that they have no other choice. In a capitalist society one
needs money in order to purchase the essentials of life, such as food, shelter
and clothing. Thus in order to avoid starvation or at best extreme poverty one
must accumulate money. In order to accumulate money the vast majority of people
in a capitalist society sell their labour to capitalists in exchange for a
wage. This is because most people do not own capital or receive a large
inheritance with which to start a business. It is true that some workers manage
to create their own businesses and become self-employed but in order to do this
they must accumulate the money required to buy the necessary capital and means
of production for their business and thus at some point must partake in wage
labour. Therefore the vast majority of individuals who engage in wage labour do
so because if they do not they cannot purchase the goods and services required
to survive. Since workers engage in wage labour because they have no other
choice it follows that wage labour is not voluntary, a choice lacking a
meaningful alternative is no choice at all. Workers are dependent on the bosses
to live. They must sell their ability to do a job of some type to a capitalist,
day after day, month after month, year after year. If the bosses won’t hire
them or business falls off, then the workers are out of luck. They work at the
will of the owners. A wage slave can't quit an oppressive job to find a less
slave-like job, because in our present society, almost all jobs involve
wage-slavery. So the options are obey and stay, die of starvation, or become a
vagrant, which is illegal.
It is time to openly attack and expose capitalism and
advocate for its opposite, socialism. People suffer from the law of the maximisation
of profit, which drives capitalism. The management want to introduce new
technology and put in automation because they want to lower their labour costs
by laying off workers and then extracting more out of the workers who remain on
the job. Everyday life itself is more and more forcefully presenting workers with
the question: capitalism or socialism? The intensifying exploitation of the
working class is the inevitable product of capitalism. Socialism is the way
out. The necessity for socialism arises, in the first place, from the struggle
of the working class for emancipation from capitalist wage-slavery. Under
capitalism workers are looked upon solely as a means for enriching their
employers. The working class can only
emancipate itself by abolishing the capitalist system, stripping the tiny
minority of capitalist owners of the "right" to monopolise the
economic lifeline of society and of the "right" to exploit the labor
of the workers. By turning the means of production into the common, social
property of the whole society, socialism at once eliminates the exploitation of
the workers and creates the foundations for genuine social, economic and
political equality.
Economic inequality is at obscene levels. Mass suffering is
increasing as the stock market reaches new highs — despite its ups and downs.
Working-class debt of all types goes up as bank profits soar. People are living
in a state of financial insecurity, unable to meet an unexpected bill without
borrowing money or selling something. Millions are working at low-wage jobs,
are forced to work part time or are working two and three jobs just to make
ends meet. Student loans debt indentures the new generation to the banks. All
television networks, mainstream newspapers and major politicians leave out what the working class needs to
know above all, and it is that the problem is the capitalist system of wage
slavery — and the solution is socialism. The struggle against capitalism and
for socialism requires knowledge of the system of exploitation. Understanding
our enemy is a basic necessity for the working-class. Anyone who thinks even
for a minute about the enormous productive capacity of our society cannot but
ask: why is a world with such modern means of production unable to guarantee
the economic rights and well-being of the people? Why is the curse of
unemployment and the plague of falling wages and living standards undermining
the lives of hundreds of millions? We must work hard to understand just what
has led to our enslavement and what kinds of actions will be necessary to free
ourselves from these insidious chains of servitude. We first need to understand
the basics of our present economic situation. We must realize that our economic
situation at present--a very few obscenely rich people owning companies and
corporations and having illegally seized state and federal political power--is
one which we can and must change. Our current economic and political
circumstances are not written in stone; humans have lived under very different
political and economic conditions throughout our history. We must begin to
overthrow this present state of affairs where all workers suffer under
capitalist wage-slavery. The political system and the economic situation should
be directed toward the welfare of all, not just a few. We can bring about these
changes; it is not impossible.
The necessity for socialism is arising from every pore and
cell of our society. The most fundamental fact is that everywhere the social
character of our society is forcing itself to the surface, demanding
recognition but the capitalist system is blocking the way forward. It is the
capitalist system which is denying billions the right to secure a livelihood.
It is the system of private property in the means of production which exploits
human labour and creativity and turns society into an arena in which the rich
live off the labour of the poor. It is the system of private property in the
means of production which refuses to plan for the health of the population and
instead produces health care as a commodity available on the basis of who has
the most money. It is the capitalist system which is poisoning the air we
breathe and the water we drink. Even though modern science is able to know the
effect of human action on nature, capitalism – based on the anarchy of
production – willfully destroys the natural environment in the pursuit of
maximum profit.
"Rise like Lions
after slumber
In unvanquishable
number.
Shake your chains to
earth like dew
Which in sleep had
fallen on you—
Ye are many—they are
few."
Shelley
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Winter Of Discontent
It is difficult to imagine a more disastrous Christmas occurring. 'AirAsia Indonesia flight QZ8501 travelling from Indonesia to Singapore goes missing with 162 people on board, the company says.' (BBC News, 27 December) Snow and ice in the French Alps have stranded 15,000 vehicles, snarling up holiday traffic to and from ski resorts. Rail passengers have been told to expect delays at some London stations after thousands faced major disruption on Saturday. Overrunning engineering works meant trains in and out of King's Cross and between London Paddington and Reading were cancelled on Saturday. A fire has broken out on a Greek ferry leading to the forced evacuation of 460 passengers and crew. A far from Merry Christmas. RD
Cancelled Operations
The worsening of the NHS can be gauged by these alarming figures. 'More than 300 patients a day are having operations cancelled as the National Health Service runs out of beds, official figures show. Surgeons were forced to delay planned, "elective" procedures 3,113 times in the first two weeks of this month.' (Sunday Times, 27 December)This is an average of 311 each working day and a rise of almost 50% on the same period two years ago. The numbers are up 16% in the last year alone. Cancelled operations - it is difficult to think of anything more severe. RD
Boast Of ThenYear
"You've been driving a cab for ten years. I've been in the Cabinet, I'm an award winning broadcaster, I'm a Queen's Council. You think that your experiences are anything compared to mine?" Modest and charming David Mellors effortlessly alienates the UK's driving fraternity." (Independent, 26 December) Mellors sums up politicians' opinion of their all-consuming importance. RD
The Spirit Of Christmas
'A major in South-Western France has been accused of a shameful lack of Christmas spirit after banishing homeless people from the city centre by placing metal cages on public benches.' (Daily Telegraph, 26 December) It seems that 34 year-old Right wing major Xavier Bonnefont, Angouleme's major has little sympathy for the homeless. He believes the homeless will just use the facility for drinking alcohol. This sums up the contempt that many officials have for the working class. RD
Which side are you on?
Why can’t we ensure that everyone has good food to eat, that
everyone can access medical services, that all youngsters get the education
they desire, that our elderly live in security and dignity, that working
conditions are safe and that the environment is protected. The answer is that
we live under CAPITALISM – a global system based on the exploitation of the
majority by the minority. And the solution to all these problems is SOCIALISM –
a global system based on mass democracy. Socialism has nothing to do with state
control. The governments of the United States and China control a similar
proportion of their economies – about 30 percent – and neither nation is
socialist. Both the U.S. and China are capitalist nations with economies based
on the private ownership of production. Socialism is based on the collective
and democratic control of production. There are no socialist economies in the
world today, no nations where the working-class collectively controls
production. Not any – not even close. Socialism is not possible in one
workplace, one city, one state or one nation because only one class can rule.
The capitalist class and the working class have opposite
goals and conflicting values: Bosses want workers to produce more and faster.
Workers want to slow down to preserve their health. Bosses want lower wages so
they can boost profits. Workers want higher wages so they can pay their bills.
The drive for profit shapes values of the capitalist class – greed, corruption,
and the hunger for power. Mutual dependence shapes the values of the working
class – solidarity (an injury to one is an injury to all) and
self-determination (what we wish for ourselves, we want for all). The
capitalist class and the working class are like oil and water.
Who is better qualified to meet human needs: the capitalist
elite that produces only for profit; or the working people who produce the
goods and provide the services we all need? Who is more cooperative: the bosses
who compete for profit; or the workers who must pull together to get the job
done? Humanity has spent the vast majority of its history in cooperative,
sharing societies. Class-divisions appeared only about 10,000 years ago. Modern
socialism would differ from primitive socialism in two important ways: it would
be organized on a global scale; and it would be based on abundance, not
scarcity. It’s time that we organized to take back our world. The current
crisis is opening a space to discuss genuine socialism, a democracy where
ordinary people take collective control of the economy and direct it to meet
human needs. The material conditions already exist for such a society. Because
socialism is based on sharing, there must be more than enough to go around.
That is not a problem. Between 1800 and 2000, the amount of wealth produced
grew eight times faster than the global population. Only a few have benefited.
Most people do not view socialism as a viable alternative,
because they have been bamboozled into thinking that there is no alternative to
capitalism. This makes no sense. Human beings create society. We have changed
it many times in the past, and we can change it again. Most people would be much better off in a
cooperative society. However, capitalism cannot tolerate demands for a society
based on cooperation. The people in power must make “socialism” a dirty word
because, if the majority realized that they could solve their problems and meet
their needs without bosses and rulers, they would abandon capitalism in a
heartbeat. To make socialism a viable alternative, we must build socialist
organizations where workers can break free of the lies that bind and blind them
to capitalism, including the lie that they are too stupid or lazy to run the
world for themselves and one another. Where the capitalists divide in order to
rule, socialists connect individuals, causes, past events and future dreams
into a unified struggle for majority rule. Where the capitalists infect workers
with fear, pessimism and a sense of powerlessness, socialists link workers’
experience of individual suffering with their collective power to eliminate
that suffering.
Socialists believe in the working class, even when it does
not believe in itself. No one can know when the next struggles will erupt, or
what their outcome will be. One thing is certain. The needs of the capitalist
class will continue to clash with the needs of human beings. We have a choice.
We can continue to accept the insanity of capitalism, or we can organize a
socialist future. The time is now. Let us all go forward to build a global mass
democracy to end the rule of the few and the misery of the many – because
working people create all social wealth and have the right and the ability to
produce it for the benefit of all. As long as the working-class majority does
not believe in itself, it will accept the rule of the capitalist class. But as
soon as that changes, capitalism will torn asunder. The working class will
build a completely new society, a socialist society based on real democracy,
solidarity and self-determination. In the battle between capital and labor, one
must take sides. Which side are you on?
Monday, December 29, 2014
NHS Legal Costs
MPs are demanding that the NHS complaints system should be "completely overhauled" in the face of rising litigation costs that now take up a greater bill for clinical negligence claims. 'The NHS complaints system should be "completely overhauled" in the face of rising litigation costs that now take up a quarter of the annual £1 billion bill for clinical negligence claims, an MP is demanding. The amount paid out by the NHS Litigations Authority has already doubled in five years, with legal costs of £250 million. In 2009-10 the total bill for claims was £650 million, with £150 million of it going to to cover legal costs.' (Times, 26 December) The incompetence of the NHS is leading to an immense legal bill. RD
A Depressing Future
Failures in giving people with mental health problems the treatment they need are a significant factor in the growing pressure on accident and emergency departments, a minister has said. 'The care and support minister, Norman Lamb, who has long championed the rights of those with mental health problems, said patients with conditions such as depression and anxiety often still faced discrimination and often did not get the help they needed. As a result they added to the strain on hospital A&E departments, which have seen record numbers of patients waiting more than four hours for treatment, he said.' (Guardian, 25 December) Depression and anxiety should be easy targets for treatment in todays medical atmosphere. RD
Queuing For Treatment
A picture in the Daily Mail summed up the perilous state of the NHS. It depicted thirty patients standing shivering in a queue outside their GP surgery in the cold at dawn, in the desperate hope of getting an appointment. In the wake of our front page picture yesterday, readers have come forward with their own experiences of trying to visit a family doctor. 'In total, there were 37.4million failed attempts to book an appointment last year, affecting 4.7million people. Others are getting consultations lasting two minutes!' (Daily Mail, 24 December} RD
The Cost Of Cuts
As part of their cost-cutting the government have a completely inadequate nursing home for the elderly programme. One patient waited a full year to be discharged despite being well enough to leave hospital."Elderly people are being trapped in hospital beds for up to eight months after they have recovered because nursing homes places are unavailable. One patient waited a full year to be discharged despite being well enough to leave hospital. (Daily Telegraph, 24 December) Capitalism's cost-cutting leads to crazy situations. RD
A World in Common – A Future We Can Have
The co-operative commonwealth, common ownership, and the sharing of the commons are overlapping and sometimes poorly understood concepts. Socialism is one of the most complicated political ideas out there, not because it is so hard to understand, but rather because there are so many variety of interpretations of it. Private property is very different from personal property. People have always had personal-use items (homes, clothes, toys, tools, etc.) that they keep, share or trade, and this will always be so, regardless of the type of social system. The important question is who owns the natural resources, tools and technology that people need to survive. Is it privately owned or commonly shared? Common property is also confused with public property. Common property is not property at all, because no one owns it. It is shared or “owned in common.” In contrast, public property is private property that is owned by the State. Because the State claims to represent all the people, State or public property is assumed to be commonly owned. It is not. Common ownership means that common people are in control. Public ownership means that State officials are in control.
Many people think that socialism means government ownership.
It is not true. With socialism, all social decisions will be vested in the
people. Industry will be administered democratically from bottom to top by
those elected directly by the workers in each industry and subject to their
control. All delegates will be subject to recall at any time by those who
elected them. In each workplace (and in each school, hospital, etc.), the
workers will collectively determine workplace policies and will elect a
committee to plan the overall plant operations. In each sub-division of a
plant, the workers will participate in determining how best to implement the
plans of the committee and assure the efficient running of their economic unit.
Bourgeois (parliamentary) democracy fails to deliver such freedom,
predominately because capitalism subordinates the mass of society through the
process of wage slavery. These
capitalist relations not only create material inequality but also inequality in
terms of political influence. Political
power is stacked at the feet of capitalists who control production. The capitalist wage slavery relationship
inflicts a physiological effects, conditioning the working class to a
submissive mentality in the workplace. This
submissive mentality then manifests into passive behaviour in the political
lives of the working class.
The State’s role in the socialist project is not and never
was to nationalise industry and create a vast bureaucratic state-owned economy.
Rather, the workers parties were to be elected to the national government and
would expropriate the big capitalist enterprises. Political power would then be
decentralised and direct democracy introduced, the “withering away of the
state” that Marx and Engels talked about. Socialists seek a better world
founded on common ownership, equality and democracy. In this we see the means
to meet all mankind’s material needs and to personal and individual development
to the greatest possible height. Yet in the name of socialism we see common
ownership changed into state wage-slavery.
William Paul, a member of the De Leonist Socialist Labour
Party, and later member of the Communist Party of Great Britain explains in his
book, The State: Its Origins and Function, published in 1917:
"The revolutionary Socialist denies that State
ownership can end in anything other than a bureaucratic despotism. We have seen
why the State cannot democratically control industry. Industry can only be
democratically owned and controlled by the workers electing directly from their
own ranks industrial administrative committees. Socialism will be fundamentally
an industrial system; its constituencies will be of an industrial character.
Thus those carrying on the social activities and industries of society will be
directly represented in the local and central industrial councils of social
administration. In this way the powers of such delegates will flow upwards from
those carrying on the work and conversant with the needs of the community. When
the central administrative industrial committee meets it will represent every
sphere of social activity. Hence the capitalist political or geographical State
will be replaced by the industrial administrative committee of socialism. The
transition from the one social system to the other will be the social
revolution. The political State throughout history has meant the government of
men by ruling classes; the Republic of Socialism will be the government of
industry administered on behalf of the whole community. The former meant the
economic and political subjection of the many: the latter will mean the
economic freedom of all – it will be, therefore, a true democracy. Socialism
will require no political State because there will be neither a privileged
property class nor a downtrodden propertyless class; there will be no social
disorder as a result, because there will be no clash of economic interests;
there will be no need to create a power to make ‘order’. Thus, as Engels shows,
the State will die out…In the last analysis State ownership is more a mean of
controlling and regimenting the worker than of controlling industry ... The
attempt of the State to control industry is therefore the attempt of the ruling
class to dominate Labour”
Engels himself, in his "Anti-Dühring",
specifically warned against any vulgar equation of socialism with state
ownership:
"... since Bismarck adopted state ownership a certain
spurious socialism has made its appearance here and there even degenerating
into a kind of flunkeyism which declares that all taking over by the state,
even of the Bismarckian kind, is itself socialist. If, however, the taking over
of the tobacco trade by the State was socialist, Napoleon and Metternich would
rank among the founders of socialism. If the Belgian state, for quite ordinary
political and financial reasons, constructed its own main railway lines, if
Bismarck... took over the main railway lines in Prussia, simply in order to be
better able to organise and use them for war, to train the railway officials as
the government’s voting cattle, and especially to secure a new source of revenue
independent of immediate votes - such actions were in no sense socialist
measures. Otherwise the Royal Maritime Company, the Royal Porcelain
Manufacturer, and even the regimental tailors in the army, would be socialist
institutions."
Another great cause of confusion has been a
misunderstanding of the nature and significance of the regime which followed
the Russian Revolution of 1917, a regime which has probably done far more to
retard than advance the cause of the socialist movement as a whole as it has
been assumed that because the October Revolution was led by socialists who had,
by whatever means, retained state power, the society which resulted was in
some way a socialist one, and, as a result, an example, even a mandatory one,
for others to follow. The Russian economy nor that of its satellites in Eastern
Europe were not in any sense a model for the organisation of a socialist
society but shows how the job should not, in fact, be done.
The opposite of private property is socialism, or common
control of society. There are no genuinely socialist societies in the world
today, nor has there been. Not any. Real
socialism (as opposed to what the Bolsheviks erected under Lenin’s direction in
the former Russian Empire after their coup d’etat known as the October
Revolution) is not the end of democracy but the beginning of true
democracy. Without economic democracy,
political democracy is meaningless. Lenin never made any attempt to introduce
socialism to the Soviet Union. By his
own declaration, he and his disciples set up what he himself called state
capitalism. Leninism and all of its offspring (Trotskyism, Stalinism, Maoism,
Castroism, etc.) are an aberration from, not the fulfillment of, Marx and
Engels. The socialist movement found itself stunted in growth from the splits
within its own ranks caused by the hands of Lenin and his inner circle reaching
out to control the whole international movement with as iron a hand as they
controlled Russia. Until Lenin and his clique removed their cloaks and showed
their true colors, praise for their accomplishment in the October “Revolution”
(coup d’etat) was well nigh universal among socialists world-wide. Once news
began to trickle out about the lack of real democracy, the increasing
centralized control by the highest organs of the Party with no input from below
appreciated, various atrocities, and the emasculation of the soviets, the
councils of the people in whose name Lenin & Co. ruled with an iron heel,
genuine socialists became more vocal in their criticisms. Rosa Luxemburg was
one of the first, as, of course, was the Socialist Party.
There are times when social and economic problems become so
bad that people are forced to choose between the social system that makes their
lives difficult and a new one that will make their lives better. We face that
kind of choice today. Capitalism—the social system we live under—no longer
serves the interests of the people. It creates countless problems that it
cannot solve. It uses technology to throw people out of work and to make those
who keep their jobs work harder. It creates hardship and poverty for millions,
while the few who own and control the economy grow rich off the labor of those
allowed to keep their jobs. It destroys the cities that we built up. It is
destroying the natural environment that is the source of the food we eat and
the air we breathe. Technology that could and should be used to lessen the need
for arduous toil and to enhance our lives is used instead to eliminate jobs and
increase exploitation. Poverty is as widespread as it has ever been. Wages go
down even as productivity rises. Joblessness, homelessness, helplessness and
despair are spreading. Economic insecurity and social breakdown place an
unbearable strain on our families, our children and ourselves. Emotional
stress, crime, prostitution, alcoholism, drug abuse, suicide, and many more
signs of unhappiness and hopelessness, are on the rise. Is this what we want?
Should we keep a social system that is destroying the lives, the liberties and
the chance for happiness that our work and productivity make possible? Is it
really worth the price to keep a small and despotic class of capitalists living
in obscene wealth?
World socialism could stop the dying from hunger
immediately, and provide the conditions for good health and material security
for all people across the Earth within a short time. It would do this by
producing goods and services directly for need. World socialism will operate
with one simple and ordinary human ability which is universal: the ability of
every individual to cooperate with others in a world-wide community of
interests. For too long has indignation at human suffering been dissipated by
useless causes. How much longer must the price of failure be the misery of
countless millions? Only useful labour applied through world cooperation in a
system of common ownership can solve the problems of world poverty. We live in
a world which has the potential to adequately feed, house and provide clean
water and decent medical care for every single man, woman and child on Earth.
The resources exist to banish material want as a problem for members of the
human race. Yet millions throughout the world are malnourished, live in squalor
or are actually dying of starvation or starvation-related diseases.
The Socialist Party calls upon people to organise with a
view to substitute the present state of unplanned production, commercial
competition war and social disorder with the co-operative commonwealth for; in
which every worker shall have the free exercise and full benefit of his or her
faculties. Why socialism? Because the needs of the many outweigh the needs of
the few. The Socialist Party has never wanted to set up anything like a
“People’s Democratic Socialist Workers Republic” controlled by a party
“vanguard”. No, our idea is the
Cooperative Commonwealth. Much of the history of the past 200 years revolved
around a vision that life could be lived in peace and brotherhood if only
property were shared by all, eliminating the source of greed, envy, poverty and
strife. This idea is called "socialism" and it was mankind’s most
ambitious attempt at liberation
“What I mean by
Socialism is a condition of society in which there should be neither rich nor
poor, neither master nor master's man, neither idle nor overworked, neither
brainslack brain workers, nor heartsick hand workers, in a word, in which all
men would be living in equality of condition, and would manage their affairs
unwastefully, and with the full consciousness that harm to one would mean harm
to all - the realisation at last of the meaning of the word COMMONWEALTH.” William Morris, 1896
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Developing Depression Among The Young
Statistics Canada recently issued some interesting information on young people. Only one in five children in Canada who need mental health services ever receives professional help; about 3.2. million young people in Canada aged twelve to nineteen are at risk for developing depression; One in four will experience clinical depression by age eighteen; in Canada 75% of mental disorders develop by age 24, fifty per cent by age 14; suicide is the second leading cause of death for young people, after accident, accounting for almost a quarter of all deaths among 15-24 year olds. The pressures and insecurity of life under capitalism affect parents and children. Psychologists and other mental health workers do help patients to cope with the stress of life better but removing the cause would be preferable. Socialism offers security, stability and fulfillment. John Ayers.
Dying For Work
One of the illusions beloved by the media is that the working class are a work-shy, lazy bunch of parasites, but the facts completely contradict that notion. "At least 15 migrants die in "shameful" Calais conditions in 2014. Guardian investigations reveals death toll over 12 months with many desperate trying risky routes into UK to escape makeshift camps without sanitation at French port." (Guardian, 23 December) Workers in those Calais camps are so desperate for work that they risk their lives in pursuit of employment. RD
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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...