Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Crime And Capitalism
TV programmes and the national press are fond of depicting the police as dealing successfully with the problem of crime, alas that is a complete fallacy. The advent of cheap heroin in Chicago has led to an increase in crime undreamt of by Al Capone and his contemporaries. 'In the 1920s, 227 gangsters were said to have been killed in the city in the space of four years. Last year there were 424 murders in Chicago, most of them said to be gang-related.' (Times, 9 February) An increase of almost double in a quarter of the time. Some progress. RD
A Modest Lifestyle
Jeff Greene is a billionaire who took a private jet to this year's World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, along with his wife, children and two nannies, and then told Bloomberg that "America's lifestyle expectations are far too high and need to be adjusted so we have less things and a smaller, better existence." (Yahoo Homes, 23 January) His idea of a "smaller better existence" is difficult for a worker to understand as Green owns a $195-million palace in Beverly Hills with 23 bathrooms and a rotating dance floor, two other Los Angeles mansions, a mansion in Palm Beach, a mansion in the Hamptons, and a 145-foot party yacht. RD
Socialism Changes Everything
Capitalism has failed. Across the entire world increasingly
desperate conditions exist for the vast majority—mass unemployment, poverty,
indebtedness, ever declining wages—are combined with the most fantastic levels
of wealth. CEOs make more in a day than their workers make in an entire year,
and hedge fund managers make more in an hour than most Americans make in their
entire lives. At the root of all the problems of modern society is capitalism,
in which everything is subordinated to the interests of a tiny elite. Under
capitalism, this tiny capitalist class dominates society by dividing the
working class and derives its vast wealth from the extraction of profit by
paying workers less than the value they produce. Every capitalist is committed
to raising productivity – increasing the amount of capital that can be squeezed
from each worker and confiscated by the employer. As more wealth is extracted
from the working class and concentrated in the hands of the one percent,
society becomes increasingly unequal. Counter-measures can slow the twin
process of capital accumulation and growing inequality, but it can be stopped
only by eliminating capitalism. Individual capitalists might see the value of a
fairer society, but any who chose to slow the rate of capital accumulation
would be replaced by others with no such concern. Capitalism has socialised
production and distribution i.e. commodities are produced socially by many
people, while the products and the value from their sales are privatised, appropriated
by the owners of the means of production. Socialism merely balances out the situation,
that is to say, production is still socialised, but the appropriation of the
value that is produced, including surplus value, is also socialised – all
people have a claim upon the goods. Thus society benefits as a whole from
common ownership.
Socialism means the extension of democracy to the foundation
of all of society for the general improvement of humanity. Many today wrongly
assume that the struggle for democracy in much of the world has been won. States
that claim to be democratic are taken at their word, or at least those with
universal suffrage and ‘free’ elections of representatives. This is because
democracy is conflated with elections, which are equated with democracy (while
occasionally paying lip service to referendums.) If people cannot gather in
assemblies to act directly, they can at least elect representatives to act on
their behalf: this is called “representative democracy”. The reality is quite
different. It replaces the rule of the people, by the people, for the people
with the rule of the self-proclaimed representatives of the people. Neither the
expansion of the electorate through universal suffrage nor electoral reform (of
the voting system, campaign finance, nomination rules, ballot access, media
access, etc.) changes the underlying oligarchic logic of elections. This does
not mean that socialists should oppose it but take cognition of its flaws.
Socialists argue that capitalism undermines democracy.
Human beings in a given society produce wealth, in various
forms, and this wealth is distributed among the members of society via various
institutions, laws and mechanisms. However, to speak about how and to whom
wealth is distributed inevitably leads to asking questions as to who produced
that wealth in the first place. Speaking about distribution without mentioning
production is simply useless. Capitalism is an exploitative mode of production
in which the capitalist class extracted "surplus value" from the working
class. For the first time in human history, labour power itself was sold as a
free commodity on the market. Workers are free to sell their labour power to
whatever capitalist chose to employ them. But the asymmetry of power in this
alleged "free exchange" is that while the capitalist class owns the
means of production, the working class only has their labour power to sell.
This asymmetry means that while capitalists pay labour a "living
wage," the value of this wage (the value of labour power) is always less
than the value of the commodities produced by the workers' labor -- if capital
could not make a profit it would not employ labour. Under capitalism, private ownership of the
means of production such as factories, machines and raw materials is what
determines the ownership of not only the commodities produced via those means
of production, but also the proceeds of the sales of the commodities. In other
words, shareholders and proprietors appropriate commodities they did not
produce, and pocket the profit from their sales. Workers' needs under
capitalism are always subordinate.
Realistically, there’s only one way to achieve workplace
democracy across the whole of society – a global working-class revolution that
takes collective control of production and eliminates the two-class system of
capitalism. Socialism is something far more comprehensive than a simple
redistribution of wealth but entails the expropriation, the seizure, of the
means of production by the working class. Then we could build a truly
cooperative society in which everyone is equally worthy to share life’s work
and life’s rewards.
Monday, February 09, 2015
Our Aim is True
We live surrounded by inequality. Some have wealth, health,
education, satisfying occupations. Others get poverty, ill-health and drudgery.
Social mobility scarcely exists. Wealth is funneled to those on top. It is not
so much true that “power corrupts” as it is a fact that easily corruptible persons
gravitate toward exercise of power. Is this the type of society we want? What
does it mean to fight against inequality? The problem of gross inequality in
capitalist society is not fundamentally a problem of inequality within our
class, between the unemployed and destitute workers and the so-called
‘middle-class’ in relatively more secure jobs and on higher pay. The
fundamental problem of inequality is inequality between the capitalist ruling
class and the working class.
This inequality between the employing class and the wage
workers is taken for granted as a given and is rarely questioned. The income of
the capitalist class comes from the unpaid labour of the workers in the form of
profit, or surplus value. Everything created by the workers belongs to the
bosses. And everything created by the workers contains unpaid labour time in
it. The bosses sell goods and services and get the money for the unpaid labour
time of the workers — that is, profit. They keep part of it for themselves and
become rich. The other parts they pay their banker his interest or their
land-owner his rent, the rest they re-invest so that they can get richer in the
next cycle of production and selling.
The income of the workers, on the other hand, comes from the
sale of their labour power to his or her employer. The workers receive wages or
salaries and the amount is always kept somewhere within the range of what it
takes to survive. Some workers are paid somewhat more than that and can have a certain
degree of comfort, even luxury. Many workers, more and more these days, receive
just about enough to get by on in a life of scrimping and saving while others
barely get enough to survive. Wages under capitalism are basically what it
costs a worker to subsist and to keep the family going so that the bosses are
assured of the next generation of workers to exploit. Workers have to struggle
to preserve whatever they can through the ups and downs of capitalist crises
and periodic unemployment.
No worker can ever get wealthy on wages, no matter how
high-paid he or she may be. But the capitalist class as a whole automatically
grows richer, (even if a particular capitalist goes bankrupt.) The employing class
continuously reinvest their capital and keep alive the ongoing process of the
exploitation of more and more labour. The capitalist’s children and
grand-children, as a rule, get richer and richer from generation to generation
and become family dynasties.
It is in this context, that socialists ask those who are for
genuine equality, the question what exactly are you fighting for. If the
ultimate goal is to reform the tax code, or to reduce corporate money in
politics, or to regulate the predatory capitalist class and the greedy
bankers then it may reduce the obscene excessive
levels of inequality a little but most definitely, these palliatives won’t end
inequality itself. Class inequality is built-in to the system of class
exploitation. The profit system spreads misery and it is time to expose
capitalism.
Under capitalism, products and services are only produced
and distributed if they can make a profit for the capitalists – those at the
top of the system who own the means of producing and selling goods and
services, like the factories and the shopping malls. Even when the capitalist
system is “working”, when it’s “fine”, it creates massive inequalities between
rich and poor. All profit generated by the capitalists always has to be
reinvested (as “capital”) to make more profit. Capital never sits still – it’s
always moving. Products are made in factories, then sold on the market
(exchanged for money), then some of that money pays the workers their wages,
while the capitalists pocket the rest as profit. And then the “circuit of
capital” begins again. Workers are always short-changed, they never realise the
full value of their labour power that they put in because the capitalist always
takes out the profit. All the capitalists bring to the table is their legal
ownership of the factories, companies and private property in general. Thanks
to this or that piece of paper – a share ownership certificate or credit note
in their possession – the capitalists are able to make “legal” claims on the
profits generated by working people’s labour. The rule of capital is the rule
of a crazy market, which creates massive wealth at one pole only to create
misery at another.
There is an alternative. If only the system wasn’t run for
profit, if only it was democratically controlled by working people, then we
could run it on the basis of the need of all – not the profit of a few. That’s socialism
– and it is really worth fighting for.
Tax Dodgers
If a worker tries to dodge tax or fiddles his expenses it is a terrible crime, but the old adage "never steal anything small " seems to apply when the owning class rip-off millions in tax dodges. According to a huge cache of leaked secret bank account files HSBC's Swiss banking arm helped wealthy customers dodge taxes and conceal millions of dollars of assets, doling out bundles of untraceable cash and advising clients on how to circumvent domestic tax authorities,. 'The files "obtained through an international collaboration of news outlets, including the Guardian, the French daily Le Monde, BBC Panorama - and the Washington-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists - reveal that HSBC's Swiss private bank routinely allowed clients to withdraw bricks of cash, often in foreign currencies of little use in Switzerland.' (Guardian, 8 February) RD
China And USA Conflict
Newspaper reports of the proposed visit of the President of China Xi Jinping to the USA portray it as a friendly journey, but in fact beneath the surface it is anything but friendly. 'International relations experts expect the international community to watch how the two powers work through thorny issues in the Asia-Pacific region and reduce, if not eliminate mutual distrust. (CHINADAILY.Com.CN, 9 February) It is expected that hot-spot issues such as disputes about cybersecurity and shipping and trade in the Western Pacific region will be discussed. Whenever capitalists rivals have "friendly meetings" - beware. RD
A Deadly System
The Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt has revealed plans to reduce the number of "avoidable deaths" in English hospital. 'Mr Hunt said an annual review of 2,000 cases of patients who later died would allow hospitals to be ranked according to avoidable mortality rates. Mr Hunt said there were about 1,000 avoidable deaths in the NHS per month.' (BBC News, 8 February) 1,000 deaths per month in order to save expenditure on medical care. That is how capitalism operates. RD
Sunday, February 08, 2015
Beyond a dream
Imagine ALL humans living in peace and in harmony with nature
in a world of plenty.
As long as capitalism has existed there has been a movement
in opposition to it known generally as socialism. Socialism is based on the
maxim “from each according to their ability, to each according to their needs”
– in other words, a society in which people cooperate voluntarily (without
coercion in the form of wage or monetary systems) to produce what is necessary
to live and enjoy life, and in turn all would be free to take what they need
from what is available. Production would be carried out to provide for human
needs, not to make a profit, as is done under capitalism. The first task at
hand for us is the education of all working people, the raising of political consciousness;
we must all become teachers and teach our brothers and sisters until we develop
a class conscious critical mass, i.e., a majority. To accomplish this goal we
must utilize all forms of media and spread our ideas – that is the essential
first step. Also agreed upon is that systems of organization must be in place
before the revolution – industrial unions and worker’s councils, community and solidarity
networks.
Socialism is money-less economy, an economic system for the
world. Socialist economic system would consist of an organization of production
to directly satisfy economic demands and human needs, so that goods and
services would be produced directly for use instead of for private profit
driven by the accumulation of capital. Accounting would be based on physical
quantities, a common physical magnitude,( or some others suggest a direct
measure of labour-time) in place of financial calculation. In this system there
will no kind of money. All products and services will be available for free.
That means you will work free to give your services and you will get everything
free, whatever you want. One of the goals of socialists is an economy in which
all goods are available to all regardless of family, wealth or occupation. The
goal of such an economy is an entirely money-less society in which goods are
free for all. Socialists wish to replace the State with a society self-managed
by the people, and replace capitalism. Socialism is a money-less system in
which the means of production are owned and controlled by the workers and the
people of the community, rather than by capitalists. The creation of a
socialist society would mean that production would be carried out for human
need, instead of for capitalist profit; and that every person would have access
to that which is necessary for a happy life. In today’s world production is
carried out to make money, not to provide for all the people with needs — this
is why millions of people starve when there is plenty of food. The end of
capitalism would mean the end of poverty, hunger and of economic strife between
nations – the root cause of war.
In socialism all people will be cared for and provided with
what is necessary to live a good life; all will be free to pursue happiness and
their life’s fulfillment in any way in which they choose. A socialist society
would have the immediate goal of doing away with all forms of hierarchy: and classes.
Socialist society would eliminate nationalist concepts like borders and
nation-states, instead being made up of inter-connected communities. Socialists
not only advocate democratic self-management of society, rather than state
control, but also place a emphasis on the freedom of the individual. As a
general rule socialists feel that one should be free to do as they wish as long
as they are not harming anyone else. Additionally, association with any
community would be completely voluntary and one would be free to dissociate
oneself if they chose to do so. As Peter Kropotkin wrote: “Anarchist communism
maintains that most valuable of all conquests, individual liberty – it does not
ask the individual who has rejected god the universal tyrant, god the king, and
god the parliament, to give himself a god more terrible than any of the
preceding – god the community – or to abdicate upon its altar this
independence…No society is free so long as the individual is not so.” Socialists,
however, believe that some sort of administrative body is necessary to direct
production and distribution so as to enable the workers to achieve the full
material benefits and leisure that modern scientific advances allow us.
In a socialist society work would not be compulsory and no
one would be required to work away much of their day as they are forced to do
under capitalism. Workers are required to toil for 8 or more hours a day under
capitalism because capitalists need them to do so in order to generate surplus
value, i.e., to make a profit for the capitalists. This also entails employing
the fewest number of workers possible to maximize profits for the capitalist
owners. In capitalism many workers produce nothing of value or provide no
service of real value, instead they are managing buying and selling and other
relations that are only necessary under capitalism. That means under socialism
the workforce would enlarge drastically as this unproductive work is
eliminated. Socialism could handle unpleasant or dangerous work in a number of
ways: it could be incentivized in order to compensate workers; it could be
shared between many individuals, so that degrading work is minimized; it could
be automated – done by machines; or it could be done away with completely.
Automation and the inclusion of more workers in the workplace would greatly
shorten the workday. Capitalism, and not socialism, encourages laziness, by
forcing us to perform work that is often only "necessary" to
capitalist interests. Work under capitalism is very often irrelevant to our
personal interests and talents, and is done merely because we have to do so to
survive. We have many socially useless jobs that serve no other useful function
to society at large or purpose. Considering the nature of work under
capitalism, is it any wonder at all that so many people choose to avoid work
under such conditions, and that people often hate their jobs even if they are
lucky enough to find a job.
In socialism, however, rewarding work would be available and
people would work in jobs that they possess a talent for. The unpleasant jobs
would be shared by all. For example, there would be no professional garbage
workers forced to do the drudgery all of the time. Everyone would have to occasionally
get their "hands dirty", though much of such work could be completely
mechanized. Furthermore, the purpose of work would not be personal enrichment,
but the betterment of the society we live in, and to produce and distribute all
of the things that we need and want. Everyone would have to work, no one would
be allowed to "earn" simply by "owning" as in capitalism,
but the amount of work we each had to contribute would be a fraction of what it
is today, since everyone would be employed all of the time. As a result, work
and leisure under socialism would be indistinguishable, unlike under
capitalism, where we very often hate our jobs and look forward only to our time
off.
Many will argue that socialism won't succeed because of
"human nature?" because human beings are naturally selfish and
amoral. This is perhaps the most common attack made against the viability of
socialism. This is also one of capitalism's most effective social myths in
making people believe that socialism is simply “pie in the sky”.
Actually, psychology, sociology and anthropology believe
that human “nature” isn't inherantly bad. People are naturally pro-social, not
anti-social. Our violent, aberrant and anti-social behavior stems from our
living in a socio-economic system that encourages malevolent selfishness,
competition, and makes the majority of us live in constant want and
anxiety. Human behavior is known to be
adaptable, and the environment we live in greatly influences our thoughts and
actions. Human beings do not possess natural "instincts" in the same
sense as other animals do. Rather, we possess the ability to reason, to adapt,
or consciously modify our behavior according to need or according to what our
immediate environment demands of us. When the social framework for greed,
violence and competitiveness is removed, our correspondingly aberrant behavior
will likewise vanish. It should be pointed out that human beings lived in
peaceful cooperation for hundreds of thousands of years in humanity's first
economic system, often called primitive communism.
Now thanks to modern technology of production, we will have
an opportunity for relative abundance. With modern technology now able to
produce an abundance for everyone, and not just a fortunate few, thus making it
possible for everybody to contribute to the advancement of society, the ruling
class has now become obsolete, and has now become a completely idle class that
does nothing whatsoever to benefit society but simply lines its own pockets
with the vast majority of the wealth produced by the working (i.e., slave)
class. Hence, it's these specific economic conditions, and not some nebulous
notion of human nature, that created class-divided societies. When socialism is
brought about, human nature (i.e., behaviour) will adapt itself to these
changes, and anti-social attitudes such as greed, violence and criminal
inclinations will be all but excised from the public mindset.
Genuine socialism has NEVER been tried in any country. In
fact, socialism is a system that will be worldwide, and isn't intended to
function in just one country. Furthermore, socialists firmly believe that
socialism will be brought about by working class organization, and by no other
means. It will never be brought about by politicians, whose purpose is to control
the working class on behalf of their capitalist masters, not to liberate the
working class from oppression, or to meet the needs of the working class.
Anyone who states that genuine socialism has been achieved in any country is
either seriously misinformed or an outright liar, usually the former.
Socialism can only be established through a world-wide
revolution led by a majority of the working class. Socialists categorically
reject the position known as reformism, that is, the position that capitalism can
be reformed into a humane system or that socialism can be established through
gradual reforms. We view reforms as offering only temporary and partial
solutions to capitalism’s endemic problems. While certain reforms which benefit
the working class may be a worthy short-term goal, they are never a solution.
Therefore our ultimate goal will always be the establishment of libertarian
socialism, as soon as possible. We also reject Leninism or vanguardism – the
view that a professional revolutionary elite must establish a self-serving
hierarchy and lead the revolution. Only the organized working class fighting
together in solidarity, without leaders or rulers, can win freedom for all
people.
Is it really possible to consider the democratic control of
something as complex as society? The answer to this question of course is 'Yes
it is' - by the democratic principle of delegated authority which a
self-managed society would use without having to go to meetings all the time
just to keep things going.
A Fortune In Stamps
Capitalism is a crazy system that can condemn working men and women and their families to starvation for the want of a few pounds while this madness occurs. 'A few stamps which lay together in a cigar box in a dusty attic for a century are set to fetch £250,000 when next auctioned.' (Sunday Express, 8 February) Scraps of paper worth more than human existence. Crazy! RD
London Homeless
London may have some of the most expensive housing imaginable but that doesn't stop scores of people sheltering in doorways every night.'But as temperatures dropped below zero over the past week, conditions on the street became life-threating for the UK's homeless population, and emergency measures, known as homeless people sheltering Severe Weather Emergency Potocol (SWEP), were triggered across London. This is to ensure that no one dies on the street due to the severe weather.' (Independent, 8 February) Many of the homeless are shivering outside beautiful houses that lie empty. Madness! RD
We can have what we need
The Socialist Party holds no hope that those who endeavour to
try and manage capitalism will ever get in touch with their supposed sincere better
selves to build a world free of exploitation and injustice. Capitalism cannot
be reformed or changed into something beneficial. It has to be destroyed to
permit human progress. In many ways, the Socialist Party is the messenger who
bring the bad news that nobody wants to hear. We try not to deal in fantasy but
in facts. People don’t read anymore, don’t learn anymore. History and the
knowledge of our past is disappearing. People talk about living for the moment
as if it is a virtue. History is something boring that you had to endure in
school and then you go on to college you drop to study business management. The
Socialist Party purpose is straightforward, and we do not hide it. We want to
re-establish the genuine meaning of socialism. It is politics which determines
how words are used and abused. Over the last hundred years or so, the word,
socialism, has been drained of all utopian
content and no longer serves, as it once did, a catalyst and inspiration. The
struggle for justice, for true freedom, and above all, for the survival of
humanity, is becoming increasingly urgent. Language and terminology has been
totally perverted or at least thoroughly confused. Authoritarian governments
are called ‘democracies’ while terms like ‘socialism’ are constantly smeared.
If socialism means the social ownership of the means of
production and the fruits of production, so too does communism. The terms
'socialism’ and 'communism' are used interchangeably on this blog. For the
market to exist, some sectional interest (an individual, a joint-stock company,
a nationalised concern, a workers' cooperative and so on) has to be in control
of part of the social product, which it then disposes of by entering into
exchange relations with others. Exchange cannot take place when society, and
none other, controls the means of production and the social product. Far from
socialism being compatible with exchange and the market, the generalised
production of goods for exchange on the market is the hallmark of an entirely
different type of society - capitalism. The word 'socialism' has taken on the
spurious meaning of state enterprises employing wage-earners in order to
produce goods for sale on the market. The mere absence of the market is not the
sole defining feature of socialism. On the contrary, socialism is not merely a
marketless society; it is also a stateless society, a classless society, a
moneyless society and a wageless society. Socialism would necessarily be on a
world scale. In the society envisaged by non-market socialists, the people of
the world would own the global means of production in common and would operate
them communally for the benefit of humankind as a whole. Socialism in one
country, or even one part of the world, is impossible. Since capitalism today
is a global society which encompasses all parts of the world, the socialist
alternative to capitalism must be equally global in its scope. Socialism is a
global solution to the global problems which have accompanied the rise of world
capitalism.
The aim of socialist planning by what Marx calls “the
society of associated producers”, is not just to socialize the process of
exchange and distribution of goods but to develop the productive forces to the
degree that the necessary labor-time for all workers can be reduced to a
minimum. This leaves maximum time for and all those good things in life which
is the birthright of humanity. There is no known process of the market that can
achieve this aim, for the logic of the market is blind to the process of
production, and concerns itself exclusively with private accumulation and
consumption. As long as we are subject to the coercive pressure of competition
and accumulation, each other’s eternal counterparts, we cannot fully realize our
talents and potential as individuals. Socialists do not seek to socialise
capital, but not abolish it. We do not wish socialised exploitation, but its
abolition.
The socialist vision is one of people working together,
cooperatively, to build methods of production, service provision, and create
well-being while integrating ecological care, justice, and long-term planning
to the best of diverse communities’ abilities. The key for the socialist movement is to mobilise now. If people join
together and take action, we will win. This is a battle between people power
and capitalist power. It is essential for every issue we care about that we do win.
It is a class war the people have to win, and that’s the plain truth of the
matter.
Saturday, February 07, 2015
A Strange Sort Of Communism
According to the Hurun Global Rich List 2015 the world now has a record 2,089 billionaires - and for the first time, India has more of them than Britain or Russia. 'The list charts every dollar billionaire currently living in the world. It shows an additional 222 billionaires were created last year, almost a third of whom were in China. The US still holds the crown for most mega-wealthy residents, at 537. But China is not far behind with 430, having acquired 72 new billionaires in 2014.' (Daily Telegraph, 5 February) Somewhat comically the Chinese government still claims to be communist. RD
Friday, February 06, 2015
Socialism Will Be A Far Better World
At one time, economists and politicians were intoxicated by
illusions of an ever expanding capitalism, which guaranteed full employment and
a continuous rises in real wages yet still permitted growing profits and
increasing dividends. The world possessed the knowledge and the technical means
existed to conquer hunger and disease and to satisfy the basic social and
cultural needs of our whole planet. Yet science has been subordinated to the
narrow imperatives of short-term profit expectation. Humanity does not need
less science or less technology. It needs more science that is in harmony with
an awareness of long-term social interests, technology that is subject to conscious
decision-making based on the knowledge of men and women, the collective
understanding and control of the associated producers. But now, social inequalities
have erupted and ecological catastrophes threatens to engulf us all. The
convulsions of capitalism grow ever more chaotic. There is no viable cure and
ever more reformers are resigned to failure. We are bombarded with the idea
that there is no alternative, that capitalism is the natural order of things.
We are told that as much as capitalism has problems, any attempts to get rid of
it will make things far worse.
There are people hankering for an alternative to this
system. Who want to do something meaningful for humanity with their lives.
Humanity can move beyond exploitation and social division. It can move to a
classless society and a world of freely associating human beings—socialism. The
apologists for the status quo tell us anything that fundamentally challenges
capitalism is a pipe dream and an unworkable utopia. We are told to try and
make a revolution and building an economy and society that promote and serve
the common good violates human nature, economic logic, and the very flow of
history, that capitalism is the end point of social evolution. Capitalism is
not the end of society’s development. It is actually the chief impediment to
realizing the potential for a different world. Lies and slanders about
socialism are repeated endlessly and become accepted as self-evident truths. We
live in a world in which hundreds of thousands die each and every day of war,
hunger and disease. We live on a planet whose eco-systems are threatened by the
blind workings of an economic system. The question socialists pose is this one:
Do we have to live this way? Socialists answer we can really radically change
things for the greater good of all. If you want to understand and decide
whether socialism is an idea whose time has come, first you need to know what
it is: its aims and its foundations. Socialism is not a big welfare state that
looks after people. It is not the old capitalist economy simply taken over by a
state. Socialism is about the great majority of society, consciously
transforming the economic structures, social relations, and ideas that
perpetuate social and class division. It is about unleashing the creativity and
initiative of those who had been on the bottom of society.
Picture a world where people consciously learn about and
transform the world, where people are no longer imprisoned by the chains of
tradition and ignorance, where people not only cooperatively work to produce
the necessities of life, but engage in art, culture and science, where a scientific
outlook inspire, where there is a diversity of opinion and far-ranging discussion
over the direction and development of society but no longer stamped by social
antagonism, where people interact with each other based on mutual respect,
concern, and love for humanity. A world that cares about and takes care of the
environment. That is socialism, a worldwide society in which all class
distinctions have disappeared; all exploitation abolished; all oppressive
social institutions and relations of social inequality, like racism or sexism
has vanished. Socialism is a world of abundance, where people together hold all
of society's resources in common. It is yet to be achieved but it is possible.
Socialism is not some sort of wishful dream or utopia but a
feasible and practical choice for people to make. The productive forces of
society—not just machinery, equipment, and technology but also people and their
knowledge—have developed to a level that can allow humanity to overcome
scarcity, to provide for people's basic material needs, and beyond that to have
a large surplus left over to devote to the all-around and future development of
society. These productive forces of society are highly socialized. They require
millions working together to produce the things—whether we are talking about
clothing or computers—that are used by people throughout society. And these
productive forces are highly interconnected on a global level: raw materials
and machine tools produced in one part of the world enter into the production
process in other parts of the world. But these socialized productive forces are
privately controlled. A capitalist class of owners appropriates the results of
production as private, capitalist property. This is the fundamental problem in
the world. And this is what socialism solves. Socialism brings about a
radically different way of organizing production and society as a whole. The
socialist revolution establishes a new economy based on social ownership of the
means of production and social planning; on people cooperating to solve
problems and to meet social need; and with a whole new set of economic and
social priorities. A socialist revolution creates a new kind of economy. The
means of production are no longer the private property of a minority of
society. They are placed under society's collective control. Social production
is no longer carried out without planning or social purpose but is now shaped
according to consciously adopted aims and coordinated as a whole, to meet the
fundamental needs and interests of the people. With socialism, people are
unleashed to run and transform society. The people on the bottom of capitalist society
have been locked out of the realm of producing ideas. Capitalism is a society where a few engage in the realm of
thinking, while the great majority of humanity is exploited and prevented from
pursuing intellectual activity. Socialist society transforms this situation. It
will enable people to take up all kinds of questions and participate in society
in an all-around way.
We now have an added urgency that previous generations of
socialists were never faced with – the likelihood of planetary disruption and
upheaval from global warming. We can change that and another breathtakingly
different world is possible but the socialist movement has to accomplish more
and go further than ever before. We have to do a lot better than what we have
been doing.
Ukraine Crisis
As the conflict increases US Secretary of State John Kerry, who was is in Kiev, said the US wanted a diplomatic solution, but would not close its eyes to Russian aggression. 'Moscow is accused of arming pro-Russian rebels - a claim it denies. Russia also rejects claims by Ukraine and the West that its regular troops are fighting alongside the rebels against Ukrainian troops in the eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Clashes - which have intensified in recent weeks after a rebel offensive - have left nearly 5,400 people dead since April, the UN says.' (BBC News, 6 February) Accusations and counter-accusations, but we still have 5,400 dead. RD
This Is A Democracy?
The USA like to boast about they have a wonderful democracy but in practice it is very rich people looking after the very rich people. 'The median net worth of a member of Congress was $1,029,505 in 2013 "a 2.5 percent increase from 2012" compared with an average American household's median net worth of $56,355. Once again, the majority of members of Congress are millionaires - 271 of the 533 members currently in office, or 50.8 percent.' (OpenSecrets.org, 12 January) RD
Make this world ours
The definition of socialism is fairly wide and open for
interpretation. Part of the problem is a distorted conception of socialism,
which remains the popular view of what we believe. The most common definition
of socialism is a form of government that owns, regulates, and administrates
the production, distribution and exchange of goods and services. Another common
definition of socialism is a form of government that attempts to reduce social,
economic, medical, and political inequalities among its people. Neither are
what the Socialist Party means by socialism. What then do we mean by socialism?
Socialism means a global system of social organisation based on common
ownership, democratic control by all, production for use, and free access. With
the natural and technical resources of the world held in common and controlled
democratically, the sole object of production would be to meet human needs.
This would entail an end to buying, selling and the use of money.
Socialists believe that humanity is basically good but is
shaped by the society it lives in. A socialist society is run by the people for
their own benefit so it will in our interests to make sure it works. We want to
be all that we can be and we want this not only for ourselves but also for our
families and friends and neighbours. We want to be able to develop all of our potential.
Socialism is something we ought to want to have. And if we ought to want to have it, then we
ought to try to find some way of making it work for us once we get it. We can
imagine a world in which hunger and poverty cease to exist.
Defining socialism also requires defining what it was not.
It does not mean the tyrannical rule of a bureaucratic class which once existed
in in the Soviet Union (or China or Cuba). Nor does it equate with
nationalization or a centralized command economy. Socialist are unequivocal. It
is the people of the world who should exercise control by means of a more
advanced democracy in all aspects of life: political, social, and economic.
Political democracy, for socialists, is the necessary framework and
precondition for other rights and liberties. All the people of the world should
be involved in the process of transforming our societies and promoting new hope
for humankind. Real socialism is, by definition, democratic. It is economic as
well as political democracy.
Under capitalism, working people are forced to work, we
literally have no choice but to, otherwise we’d go without the means to
survive. We are compelled by the logic of capitalism to sell our labour and, as
such, capitalists command, not the people who produce the wealth in society.
Huge amounts of products are created under capitalism but it is in the hands of
a tiny minority, which is why are in a state of poverty. We have the side of
capitalists and the side of workers. For the capitalists, all that matters for
them is the growth of their capital. Capitalism requires people who must sell
their ability to work (labour power) in order to get the money to buy the
things they need. The class division and profit motive of capitalism is at the
root of most of the world's problems today. This includes everything from
starvation and war, to alienation and crime. Every aspect of our lives is
subordinated to the worst excesses of the drive to make profit. In capitalist
society, our real needs only ever come a poor second to money.
Capitalism will not change its inhuman drive for profits at
the expense of our existence as a species. The rights of the capitalists to make
a profit are in direct conflict with our basic rights. In this sense, the
capitalist system has become a threat to humanity. Since environmental
destruction is a global concern, it requires all of humanity to act
collectively, in our overall interests for our survival as a species, to
correct the problem and to remove the obstacle of capitalism. It requires a
society where humanity has social, economic, and political control over the
entire environment. Such a society, a socialist society, is needed to ensure
that all decisions affecting the environment are under the democratic control
of humankind so that the production of goods will be done for the needs and
survival of humanity instead of the production and the destruction of humanity
and other species for profit. Only socialism can save mankind from barbarism. With
common ownership of the means of production, and common control and protection
of all property and wealth, science and society will be in harmony with the
ecosystem and humanity’s
future. It is true that some people are gravitate toward a radical critique of society
during times of heightened insecurity and inequality, but economic crisis
alone, however, is not the sole cause of revolutionary change. The idea of economic breakdown followed by
"the revolution" should be retired. It should be replaced by an
understanding of a more protracted and complicated process of class
consciousness.
Socialism is, as correctly said, must be the product of an
engaged, united, and politically aware majority and it doesn't follow automatically
that such a majority will simply emerge out of everyday struggles. Nor can it
be brought about by the will of a determined and radical enlightened minority. There
is no way to win social democracy without a broad labour movement with
clear-cut aspirations of what it wishes to achieve for itself. “Revolutionary”
formulas, simplistic-sounding slogans are of little help. Practical engagement
in everyday struggles is an absolute necessary. But at the same time, that is not
enough, and never will be. Socialism distinguish itself at the level of ideas
as well as practice. It has to fight an ideological battle too. People do not
live by bread alone; they also need ideas, understanding and inspiration –
socialist theory.
The Socialist Party does not offer brilliant insights to
become guides to action. That responsibility falls upon the working class as a
whole to determine. For the sake of humanity, the future is socialism.
…Together,
We can take everything:
Factories, arsenals, houses, ships,
Railroads, forests, fields, orchards…
And turn 'em over to the people who
work.
Rule 'em and run 'em for us people who
work.
"Good Morning, Revolution"
by Langston Hughes
Thursday, February 05, 2015
Both the Streets and the Seats
The future demands a new rise in class consciousness. We can’t just wait for capitalism to destroy the world and then build socialism anew on the ruins. Instead we are going to destroy the basis upon which capitalism is built, a system that viciously sucks of the economic power from everybody in society except the rich. It is not that nobody is listening. Some people are listening. But most definitely political leaders are not listening and it is they who make the decisions that influence all our lives. They know what's going on, they know why it's happening, they know how serious things are going to get and still after so many years, yet they are still doing practically nothing to stop it. The reasons are much as they have always been. Eighty or so capitalists own half the world’s wealth but more importantly they also own all of the elected officials. People repeatedly say they want change but always the politicians offer more of the same. It is not some sort of complicated and perplexing question why our political representatives do not act in our interests and for the general well-being of all…it is not in the puppet-masters’ interests to act for the benefit of the majority.
Socialists believe people are capable of amazing things and this political disconnection that many feel today will be reversed. We simply hope it happens in our lifetime. Socialists don’t look forward to our children and grandchildren complaining it was our generation’s inaction that were culpable for the increased environmental destruction and the accompanying suffering and misery of billions. Socialists want to say we were the generation that fought back and won and were the generation that learned how to live in harmony with one another and our planet. We are always hopeful there will be enough committed people that we can change the path of humanity.
If you could change anything, what would you change? What you wouldn’t want to do, we are sure, is to keep everything the same as it is. What the Socialist Party keeps saying is that we shouldn’t spend the rest of our days trying to dampen down and dousing all the social problems that have ignited around the world one by one. No piecemeal solution will succeed. Instead, we need to rethink everything as workers who create everything and have real power (even if we don’t hold any right now). Social democracy takes “We the People” seriously, understanding that democracy is something that can always be improved, not somewhere we’ve already arrived. Calling what we have a democracy is not strictly accurate. Many do not need to be told that for they possess their own feelings of disillusionment and alienation. We feel it; we know it. We witness the decline in personal engagement in our work life and community structures, all the things we built ourselves. We are at an all-time low in terms of community involvement.
When faced with the social problems of inequality rising rates of preventable diseases, widening income gap, stagnating economy, global climate change and its threat to ecological systems which demand a response, a plan and action, instead of traveling further down the more participatory and democratic road, we are retreating, withdrawing into our atomized selves. All of this points to the need to revolutionize how we make decisions and how we can regain the trust of our co-workers and neighbours. Real democracy might sound impractical but experiences from people all over the world shows that far more is possible than we might imagine.
Using democracy, citizens administer their communities both locally and further afield, discuss potential solutions for various issues and manage resources. In democracy, ideas are provided via listening and reflecting in conversations with others. It is not based on an expectation that all citizens will reach agreement on all important issues; rather it creates opportunities for people to learn, expand and sharpen their preferences, while building knowledge of and empathy toward their fellows. It is learning to sometimes figure out "what you can tolerate" in order to avoid endless disputes over trying to get everything that everyone "wants." Social democracy is an alternative that allows us to decide and act on the most complex issues of the day, calling upon people power. We must all take an active role in our democracy. We must do democracy. That goes far beyond simply casting your vote. We must all actively champion the common good. Democracy in socialism will seek to organise the system so that communities can participate in the decision-making, can see the ecological risks and benefits to choices and can respond collectively and accordingly. The future is all ours if we want it to be.
Detroit Decline
I mentioned passing by Detroit last month. According to the Toronto Star ( December 13), there are opportunities for young entrepreneurs there as real estate is dirt cheap and that's an upside of the city (?). From a population of 1.5 million in 1970, there remains just 684,799 while the job market has shrunk fifty per cent. 70,000 properties foreclosed between 2009 and 2013 and there are currently 78,000 abandoned structures The 316 homicides in 2013 made Detroit the highest murder rate in the country. Almost 40% live in poverty. The city filed for bankruptcy in 2013 being $18 billion in debt. Even by capitalist standards, the decline of a once great and rich city is astonishing. John Ayers.
Anti-Semitism Increase
Capitalism is a system full of conflicts and hatreds as shown by Anti-Semitic incidents reaching a record level in the UK last year, according to the Community Security Trust. A report by the trust, which provides security for Britain's Jewish community and monitors anti-Semitism, said the number of incidents had more than doubled to 1,168 in 2014. 'Anti-Semitic reactions to the conflict in Israel and Gaza" were the biggest factor behind the rise, the trust said. It recorded 314 incidents in July - the highest ever recorded in a single month. .....The report said the increase was most marked in London - where the number of incidents rose by 137% to 583 - and in Greater Manchester, where the number rose by 79% to 309. It said there were 81 violent anti-Semitic assaults across the UK in 2014.' (BBC News, 5 February) RD
Political Influence
A recent enquiry has been thrown on the Conservative Party's close links with the hedge fund industry, as research showed that around half of the wealthiest fund managers in Britain have given money to the Tory party. 'The research into hedge fund managers' political donations, which was compiled by the Labour Party based on public disclosures, found that of the 59 wealthiest asset managers included on the most recent Sunday Times Rich List rankings 27 had made a combined £19m in donations to the Conservatives, with £10m flowing into Tory coffers since the 2010 general election alone.' (Independent, 4 February) So much for the notion that we have a democracy, when the very rich influence politics so powerfully. RD
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