LGBTQ students at the University of British Columbia say they no longer feel safe on campus after a pride rainbow flag was burned on Tuesday, February 9, that caused the cancellation of a march in support of transgender people A coordinator for UBC's Pride Collective said that emotions are running high for the student-run society after learning that the flag was set on fire. Capitalism is a society where pressure to conform is tremendous. Consistent with that is the divisiveness it creates as races, religions and non conformists are pitted against each other. There may be a million differences, but it simply means that at any given time or place, someone is superficially different and must not be tolerated. It is clearly evident that a society whose effects create hate is long overdue being put in the dumpster. A common purpose in in a common ownership society would be a good start. John Ayers.
Sunday, April 10, 2016
From the Commons to Common Ownership
An American academic invented a new anti-socialist argument
which he called the "Tragedy of the Commons" which has been doing the
rounds ever since. It went like this: where you have common ownership of some
natural resource, say grazing land, people with access to it, say to graze
their cattle, will abuse it. Because it would be in the economic interest of
each individual to use the common land to graze as big a herd of cattle as they
could, they would all try to do this and eventually the land would be overgrazed.
Conclusion: common ownership won't work and land and natural resources should
be privately owned.
Socialists spotted the flaw in this straightaway. The
academic assumed that only the land was owned in common whereas the cattle
remained in the private ownership of individuals seeking to maximise their
economic gains. Whereas, of course, socialism would mean the common ownership
of both the cattle and the land and the aim of production would be to satisfy
people's needs rather than to make profits. Having said this, the argument is
quite a good description of what happens under capitalism when there's no
ownership of some resource such as still today the oceans -- they get
overfished.
But the argument was also completely unhistorical. The
commons in England did not come to an end because they were over-exploited by
the commoners taking too much firewood or trapping too many birds or rabbits or
anything like that. They came to an end because some landlords wanted to extend
their domains and used parliament and the law which they controlled to enclose
the commons as their private property, either for agriculture or later for
building houses on.
As a popular street ballad of the time put it:
"The law condemns
the man or woman
Who steals the goose
from off the common,
But lets the greater
villain loose
Who steals the common
from the goose."
The grasping landlords fortunately didn't always get their
way, otherwise there'd be no public parks in London. Socialists stand for
common ownership. Not just of land and other natural resources but also of
human-made industrial resources. On this basis, we (society) could produce and
distribute what was needed in accordance with the principle "from each
according to their abilities, to each according to their needs". That, in
fact, is what socialism is. And to help get people to realise that this is the
only basis on which wealth production can be geared to serving human welfare
rather than profits.
We make no promises. All we ask is that you join a
democratic movement filled with conscious workers who understand and want
common and democratic ownership of their own world, and are prepared to go and
get it. So far as we're concerned, it's the quality not the quantity of the
votes that count. Votes gained by leftist confusions of socialism, we can do
without. We socialists are not advocating a redistribution of wealth from the
rich to the poor. That's not our programme at all (and doesn't and can't work
anyway, given capitalism). What we are saying is that the means of wealth
production should be owned in common by the whole community, i.e. shouldn't
belong to anybody, but should simply be there to be used under democratic
control to turn out what people need instead of as present to make a profit for
the tiny minority who own and control then. That -- common ownership,
democratic control, production for use not profit -- is what socialism means. It's
the only framework in which current problems of transport, education,
healthcare, insecurity and destitution can be tackled and cleared up. Trying to
reform capitalism to make it work in the interests of all, as proposed by all
the other candidates, is an exercise in futility.
Saturday, April 09, 2016
Changing Everything
The class war is the basis and hallmark of socialist
politics. The Labour Party has always shied away from accusations of class
warfare, aiming to speak for the whole community. Socialists contend, though,
that where the community is divided by class it cannot be treated as a whole.
Inevitably, government policies will benefit one side or another in the
struggle between the tiny minority who own the wealth of society, and the vast
majority who only own their ability to work.
When we talk of class warfare, we are not talking about
rioting in the streets, attacking ‘middle class’ people or anything of the
sort, but the continual day to day struggle to secure access to the means of
living for millions of people. So far as we are concerned, there is no middle
class, no separate privileged mid-layer between the workers and the capitalists,
only a vast army on different pay scales being exploited by the same bunch of
owners.
Once we accept this, we cannot conscience co-operation with
parties that advocate policies to the betterment of the ruling class. We are
hostile to them - Labour, Liberals, Tories, nationalists - and seek to
frustrate their ends by building a socialist movement to abolish the system
they prop up. Workers run society from top to bottom, it's time they ran it in
their own interest.
Capitalism can be seen as the mass production of the working
class, by the working class for the benefit of a tiny minority of parasites, it
is the domestication of humans into a working class. Socialists work for the
time when there are no classes just humans. Socialists stand for a social
revolution - that is a fundamental change in the way our society operates -
where a tiny minority own the means of production and the rest of us slave upon
them. There was a time when, if you mentioned revolution, people immediately
thought of guillotines from the French revolution, or gulags from the Russian.
The modern world though, is changing that. Year on year we
are being treated to popular uprisings and mass movements bringing down
unpopular regimes. General strikes and streets full of demonstrators have been
able to topple the mighty and powerful.
Of course, socialists are far from satisfied with these revolts - often
instigated by splits within the ruling elite, or for nationalist causes - we
want more. They are often hijacked by the professional politicians who take
control and return to almost business as usual after the fireworks have died
away. So long as they leave the fundamental aspect of ownership of the
productive wealth in a tiny minority's hands, so the effects of these revolts
will be a new elite.
But we take heart that they show that it can be done, that
peaceful radical changes could be made. They are a part of the learning curve
for all humankind, and we can look to the day when we take to the streets to
secure democratic control over the means of production, to back up our
democratic organisation, and we can do without elites entirely.
Today the Government uses new anti-terror legislation giving
the authorities more powers of surveillance. They say they are motivated by
their duty to protect citizens. The reality, though, is that irrespective of
the legislation - which is dubious at best - state power can and will be used arbitrarily
in the interests of the ruling elites anyway.
During the miners’ strike the Thatcher government established an
unlawful national police force, unofficially suspended freedom of movement and
used arbitrary arrests to break the miners.
Judges have never been any help in the past. Hide-bound and caught up in
their support of deference and power, they defend the establishment - and are
no more likely to protect people from arbitrary arrest than a Home Secretary
would. These powers, though, are part of a war being fought between the
capitalists of Britain and Middle-Eastern capitalists, wannabe capitalists and
their respective camp followers. It is a war of power, control and oil. The
threat of terrorism cannot be removed by ever greater use of power, but by
removing the source of the conflict - greedy men seeking to own the riches of
the Earth.
The Socialist Party unequivocally opposes the war. War is
completely unnecessary. We are living in a world that has enough resources to
provide plenty for all, to eliminate world poverty, ignorance and disease, to
provide an adequate and comfortable life for everyone on the planet. Yet under
capitalism resources are squandered on armaments, of individual as well as of
mass destruction, and, as now, in actual war. We place on record our horror
that capitalism has once again provoked the orgy of death and destruction known
as war. We extend the hand of friendship to our fellow workers in Iraq who our
political masters have designated as targets for destruction. We pledge to do
all within our means to bring the slaughter to an immediate end. We pledge
ourselves to continue to work for the establishment of a world socialist
society of peace and cooperation. We
call upon fellow workers everywhere to join in the struggle for world
socialism. We believe that we can peacefully and democratically build a world
of common ownership, and oppose all wars in capitalism as against the interest
of the working class. Constant war only weakens the workers everywhere. We are
against all rulers, all national boundaries, and are for a world co-operative
commonwealth. You have the choice of supporting these aims, or supporting the
slaughter of capitalism's wars.
Extortion?
Here is a nice confrontation to report.
The ubiquitous use of ads on computers slows down their ability to operate efficiently, apart from being offensive to the brain of anything above an amoeba. Consequently, ad-blocking software grew by 41% last year to the consternation of the $50 billion advertising industry. A spokesperson for The Interactive Advertising Bureau had the unmitigated gall to describe the ad blockers as, "...an unethical, immoral, mendacious coven of techie wannabes." and called the ad blockers action as 'extortion'.
Presumable, he said this with tongue in cheek!
John Ayers
The crumbs or the bakery?
“Private capitalists
inevitably control, directly or indirectly, the main sources of information. It
is thus extremely difficult, and indeed in most cases quite impossible, for the
individual citizen to come to objective conclusions and to make intelligent use
of his political rights.” Albert
Einstein.
Politics today is a game in which gangs of professional
politicians compete with each other to attract votes, the gang securing a
majority of seats in parliament assuming responsibility for running the
political side of the profit system. To win votes the politicians have to
promise -- and be believed -- to improve things both for the population in
general, as by managing the economy so as to avoid slumps and crises, and for
particular groups within the population.
When the economy is expanding or even just ticking over the
incumbent party in power have the advantage. They can claim that this is due to
their wise statesmanship and prudent management. Such claims are false as the
economy goes its own way -- expanding or contracting as the prospect of profits
rises or falls -- irrespective of which gang of politicians is in office. But
making such claims can backfire as, when the economy falters, the Opposition
can blame this on the incompetence and mismanagement on the Ins. But that's not
true either since politicians don't control the way the economy works.
Throwing crumbs to the people (or to carefully targeted
sections of the people whose votes could swing things) is not the main purpose
of government. Marx once wrote that the government is "but a committee for
managing the common affairs of the whole bourgeoisie". And it's still
true. The function of any government is to manage the common affairs of the
capitalist class as a whole. This involves a number of things. Sustaining a
context in which profit-making can continue. Spending the money raised from
taxes (that are ultimately a burden on the capitalist class) in a prudent way
on things that will benefit the capitalist class as a whole, such as providing
them with an educated, relatively healthy and so productive workforce.
Maintaining -- and if need be using -- armed forces to protect sources of raw
materials, trade routes, investment outlets and markets abroad. That's what
most government spending goes on, and balancing this against income from taxes
is what budgets are essentially about.
It is only because wage and salary workers, active or
retired, have the vote that, occasionally if there's a small margin of money
spare, a few crumbs are offered to some section or other of the electorate. No
doubt, the pensioners, the home buyers and the families offered a few hundred
extra pounds a year will accept these crumbs cast before them. Hopefully, they
won't accept them as bribes to vote for his particular gang of politicians, but
simply because it would be stupid not to pick them up.
Nowadays most people have learned by experience and are,
rightly, just as cynical about the politicians and their promises -- and crumbs
-- as are politicians about how they get people to vote for them. But cynicism
is not enough. This should be turned into rejection. The politics game is to
decide which gang of professional politicians should manage the common affairs
of the capitalist class, only continues because most of us agree to take part
in it. But by voting for them we in effect give them the power to keep the
capitalist system going. And that, not which particular gang of politicians
happens to be in office, is the cause of today’s problems since built-in to
capitalism is putting making profits before satisfying people’s needs.
Socialists are only too well aware that most people put up
with capitalism, and go along with its political game in the hope of getting a
few crumbs out of it, because they see no practicable alternative. Politics
should be more than individuals deciding which politicians to trust to deliver
some crumbs that they think will benefit them individually. It should be about
collective action to change society. About taking over the whole bakery.
You are again faced with a bunch of politicians who can only
be distinguishable by the colour of their rosettes, and you may already be of
the opinion that there is little that separates the mainstream parties and have
no intention of voting. Millions of people are not prepared to support any of
them. Indeed, recent elections have resulted in the lowest turnout since World
War II and the trend is repeating itself across the globe. It is particularly
to those members of the electorate who are not prepared to follow leaders, who
think they are all tarred with the same brush, and unwilling to put their faith
in the promises of politicians.
Many know little about The Socialist Party or our idea,
unless you are a regular reader of our literature or visitor to our web site.
Certainly many people have heard the word “socialist” and imagine it has
something to do with the nationalised industries or with countries like China
and the former Soviet Union. It is understandable that many people regard
socialism as just another political cliché, once used by Labour politicians to
win votes, but having very little meaning.
The Socialist Party stands solely for socialism because we
do not think that the present social system – capitalism – can ever be made to
work in the interests of the majority of the people. This is not the fault of
government policies, but the present social system in which they are operating.
Capitalism always puts the needs of a minority who own and control the
factories, farms, offices, mines, media, the means of wealth production and
distribution before the needs of ourselves, the working class.
It is a hard but undeniable fact that no political party –
including The Socialist Party – can legislate to humanise capitalism or make it
run in the interest of the working class. That is why it is important that the
working class stops giving its support to politicians who support the profit
system. None of them can solve unemployment or crime or any of the other social
problems we face today, despite their proclaimed recipes for success. None of
them will prevent tens of millions starving to death each year. None of them
will provide decent housing for everyone. None of them will end the threat of
human annihilation as a result of war, because militarism is inevitable within
a system based upon the ferocious competition for resources, markets and trade.
Why waste your time voting for parties that cannot make any of these urgently
needed changes? Why go on in the hope that some miracle will happen and end the
insanity of the profit system?
So what’s the alternative? We say that the resources of
society must be taken into the hands of the whole community – and by that we do
not mean the state, but all of us, organised together, consciously and
democratically.
In a socialist society we will produce for use, not profit.
This means producing food to feed the world’s population, not to dump in the
sea if it cannot be sold profitably. Producing for use means ending the
colossal waste of resources on armies, armaments, trade, banking and insurance
and all the other social features which are only necessary within capitalism.
By running society on the basis of common ownership, democratic control and
production for use we can all have free access to all goods and services.
Two points should be clear by now:
Firstly, this is no ordinary political argument. We have
made no false promises; we have not patronised you and neither do we beg for
your support. Indeed we do not ask for your support unless you are convinced
that the case for socialism is a rational one and in your interest Socialism,
if it is to be the democratic and sane society that we envisage it will be, can
only be established when a majority of the people understand it and want it, so
there is no point in seeking support on any other basis.
Secondly, what we are advocating is different – it has never
existed. The Tory have-beens have nothing new to offer. The Labour Party, if
re-elected, will continue its futile exercise of trying to run a system based
upon exploitation in the interest of the exploited.
Do you agree with the following statements:
1) Capitalism
puts profits for the few before the needs of the many.
2) Labour
governments, “Communist” states and proposals to reform the present system
cannot establish socialism.
3) Socialism is
yet to exist.
4) Socialism
means a society of common ownership and democratic control, where production is
solely for use.
5) Socialism
means a world without buying or selling, where people give freely of their
abilities and take according to their needs.
6) When a
majority - including those who have previously abstained – understand and want
socialism, the new system will be established.
If you think the above statements are correct then it is
time for you to join us.
Schools falling down
Seventeen schools in Edinburgh (plus a few other buildings) are to be closed indefinitely
from Monday amid safety concerns about their construction. The schools were all
built as part of the city's private finance programme around a decade ago.
It said Edinburgh Schools Partnership (ESP), which
constructed the buildings and manages them on behalf of the council, was unable
to give assurances that buildings built under the Public Private Partnership 1
(PPP1) were safe.
Council leader Andrew Burns said: "Clearly we have
every right to expect these schools to have been built to a good standard and
in accordance with industry practice. We now know this isn't the case. ESP have
let the council down but more importantly they have the let children, parents
and staff of this city down.
Signed in 2001, Edinburgh's Public Private Partnership deal
for schools was worth £360m. In return for 30 years of fixed payments from the
council, a private consortium designed, built and managed the schools. The four
Edinburgh schools closed last month were all built by Miller Construction,
which was acquired by Galliford Try in 2014. Inspections have been taking place
in Glasgow, Fife and Inverclyde of other schools built by Miller Construction.
We can fully expect in the future various legal claims to take
place in the courts with all the accompanying denials and counter-claims as those
involve pass the blame and responsibility to others. But clearly at the root of the scandal will be business
profits rather than safety being the prime concern.
Friday, April 08, 2016
Say it loud, Say it proud
We in the Socialist Party only want the votes of those who
want socialism (a worldwide society of common ownership and democratic control
where things are produced to meet people's needs not to try to make a profit).
If you are just against "illegal" wars and would be in favour of a
"legal" one or if you are against war but not against capitalism
(i.e., are against the symptom but not against the cause), please vote for one
of the other candidates. But, be warned, in voting for them you'll be voting
for capitalism and capitalism is the root cause of wars, preparations for war
and threats of war because built-in to it are conflicts between rival groups of
capitalists backed by their governments over sources of raw materials, trade
routes, markets and investment outlets. Normally, this competition is
commercial and diplomatic but, when push comes to shove, the conflicts are
settled by forces of arms. This is why Britain and America (or, rather, America
and Britain) invaded Iraq where the former regime represented a threat to their
supply of oil, a key raw material. Capitalism means war, so the only consistent
anti-war stance is to work to get rid of capitalism.
Very few people would deny that the present state of the
world leaves a lot to be desired. Humanity staggers from one crisis to the next
-- from war to famine to slumps to repression.
Capitalism has developed a huge productive capability but its social
organisation and relationships cause extremely serious problems and render it
incapable of meeting the basic needs of its people.
A vast amount of the world's resources is expended in the
production of weapons of war, from bullets and bayonets to nuclear and chemical
weapons. Alongside these weapons are the armed forces which every state
organises, clothes, feeds, trains and deploys. This is a massive waste of human
effort; it is all intended to be destructive and none of it to create anything
useful to human beings. In a world which could produce more than enough to feed
and care for its population millions are homeless and tens of millions die each
year because they don't have enough to eat or for lack of proper medical
treatment. None of this is necessary. It happens while farmers in Europe and
North America are being paid to take land out of cultivation; from time to time
even food that has been produced is destroyed or allowed to rot. This makes
sense to the profit motive; in terms of human interests it is wildly insane.
The environment is increasingly under threat from pollution
and from the destruction of some of its natural, ecologically vital features.
We hear well-informed warnings of an ultimate impending disaster unless we act
to eradicate the problem but these warnings are always met with the objection
that to save the environment can be a costly, profit-damaging business. Yet it
is not necessary for industry and agriculture to pour out noxious effluents
into the air, the earth, the rivers and the seas. They do this today because
pollution is seen as being cheaper, which means more profit-friendly and to a
society where profit is the dominant motive for production that is
justification enough to override human welfare.
These are a few examples of how capitalism works against the
interests of the world's people. In contrast, socialism -- real socialism, that
is, not the obscene caricatures we've seen in Russia and elsewhere -- will have
fundamentally different social relationships, motives for production and
concepts about the interests and security of human beings.
All the programmes now being daily advanced by the
professional politicians for dealing with the problems of capitalism through
reforms must fail because of their essentially piecemeal approach. They attempt
to treat symptoms instead of going for the basic cause. That is why, after a
century or more of reformism the problems the politicians claim to deal with
are still here. A far more radical, fundamental change is needed to create the
framework within which they can be solved: the common ownership and democratic
control of the means of producing wealth so that production can be geared to
meeting people's needs, not making profits for a wealthy elite.
Because of we have endless problems of poverty, poor
services and all the issues politicians love to spend time telling you they can
solve, if only given the chance. We don't believe any politician can solve
these problems, as long as the flawed basis of our society remains intact. In
fact, we believe only you and your fellow workers can solve these problems. We believe
that it will take a revolution in how we organise our lives, a fundamental
change. We want to see a society based on the fact that you know how to run
your lives, know your needs and have the skills and capacity to organise with
your fellows to satisfy them.
You know yourselves and your lives better than a handful of
bosses ever can. With democratic control of production we can ensure that
looking after our communities becomes a priority, rather than something we do
in our spare time. We all share fundamental needs, for food, clothing, housing
and culture, and we have the capacity to ensure access to these for all,
without exception. Together, we have the capacity to run our world for
ourselves. We need to build a movement to effect that change, by organising
deliberately to take control of the political offices which rule our lives, and
bring them into our collective democratic control. We make no promises, offer
no pat solutions, only to be the means by which you can remake society for the
common good.
NEITHER LEADERS NOR FOLLOWERS.
NEITHER THE MARKET NOR THE STATE
No Resistance to Higher Profits.
Clean energy is progressing as we expect it to. That is, it's going backwards right now. The British Electric Company, SSE, has recently restarted a shuttered power plant that runs on fossil fuels because cheap fossil fuels are undercutting renewables, and the former is now more profitable.
In other words, as we have said over and over again, capitalist production is incapable of resisting higher profits no matter what the human or environmental cost.
John Ayers.
A New Competitor
Home Decor stores in Canada have a new competitor, the US on line retailer, Wayfair, that launched a Canadian web site in January. It claimed to offer more than seven million suppliers. The move into Canada will pit Wayfair against Ikea, Winners, Homesense, and Home Outfitters, owned by Hudson's Bay. Orders will be shipped form Wayfair centres in Kentucky and Utah. Shipping is free on orders over $75 and the average order is triple that according to a spokesperson.
Such stiff competition will result in the loss of Canadian jobs, so another promising distribution idea that should benefit all society, simply brings problems to workers in some areas.
John Ayers.
DIY Revolution
Imagine that all the people in the world made a set of
informed, collective and democratic decisions about what kind of system would
best meet their needs and solve global problems. Would they choose a money and
property system that forced nearly half their total number to try to survive on
a dollar a day? Or would they prefer to organise production and distribution of
goods and services on the basis of what they need, without the profit system?
Would they, if and when given the chance to vote, do so overwhelmingly for
candidates who -- whatever labels they attached to themselves or their parties
-- stood for the continuation of some form of capitalism? Or would they elect
delegates, from among their own number, to initiate the process of setting up
and running a fundamentally new form of world society, a system based on the
common ownership and democratic control of the means of wealth production and
distribution? Would they embrace nationalism, involving armed forces paid to
kill and injure other groups ("the enemy") with whom they have no
quarrel? Or would they regard themselves and behave as citizens of the world,
regardless of any geographical, cultural or philosophical attachments they may
feel? Would they divide themselves into classes, rich and poor, leaders and
led, privileged and unprivileged, dominant and submissive, superordinate and
subordinate, master and servant, powerful and powerless? Or would they, despite
individual differences in abilities, personalities, interests, tastes, likes
and dislikes, think and behave as members of the one human race, not perfect,
sometimes fallible or irrational, but never deliberately cruel or anti-social?
Whatever words they use to explain or sloganise their
ideologies, all parties except the Socialist Party stand for the continuation
of some form of capitalism. From their point of view, a vote for their own
candidate is best; a vote for one of their competitors is second best. Not
voting could be a worrying sign of alienation from the system. Worst of all, a
vote for the Socialist Party candidate -- or, where none stands, writing
"Socialism" across the ballot paper -- would indicate the beginning
of a resolution to replace capitalism with socialism.
Support for socialism isn't a matter of campaigning to make
the poor rich in today's terms of material consumption. That wouldn't be
environmentally sustainable. The socialist aim isn’t even equality in the sense
of sameness, like amounts of work contributed or goods and services consumed.
Socialism is essentially about social equality, encouraging and enabling every
human being to realise their full potential as giver and taker, not buyer and
seller, in the context of society itself moving towards reaching its full
potential.
We put forward an alternative to capitalism and the madness
of the market – a society of common ownership and democratic control. We call
it socialism. But real socialism. Not the elite-run dictatorships that
collapsed some years ago in Russia and East Europe. And not the various schemes
for state control put forward by the old Labour Party. For us socialism means
something better than that. We're talking about:
A world community
without any frontiers where the Earth’s resources would be the common heritage
of all.
Wealth being produced to meet people's needs and not for
sale on a market or for profit
Everyone having access to what they require to satisfy their
needs, without the rationing system that is money.
A society where people freely contribute their skills and
experience to produce what is needed, without the compulsion of a wage or
salary.
World socialism, where all the resources of the Earth,
natural and industrial, would have become the common heritage of all Humanity,
is, quite literally, the only way to have a world without wars, the threat of
war, and preparations for war. In such a world the resources now wasted in this
way could be used to contribute to the satisfaction of people's needs, so that
no man, woman or child in any part of the world goes without proper food,
clothing, shelter, education or health care.
If you don't like present-day society ... if you are fed up
with the way you are forced to live ... if you think the root cause of most
social problems is the profit system, then your ideas echo closely with ours. We
are not promising to deliver socialism to you. We are not putting ourselves
forward as leaders. This new society can only be achieved if you join together
to strive for it. If you want it, then it is something you have to bring about
yourselves. Nobody can do it for you.
Thursday, April 07, 2016
Don't support something you don't want
The Socialist Party is an independent political party that
has been going since 1904. We stand for socialism as a society of common
ownership, democratic control and production for use not profit. Socialism has never
been established anywhere and certainly not in Russia. We are a single issue
party and try to put information out to convince people of the merits of
socialism. We're going to parliament as rebels and not reformers, changing one
law here or there is ineffectual, especially and until we have a mass movement
for the abolition of capitalism and the wages system. All politicians assume
that capitalism is the only game in town, although they may criticise features
of its unacceptable face, such as greedy bankers, or the worst of its excesses,
such as unwinnable wars. They defend a society in which we, the majority of the
population, must sell our capacity to work to the tiny handful who own most of
the wealth. They defend a society in which jobs are offered only if there is a
profit to be made.
The Socialist Party urges a truly democratic society in
which people take all the decisions that affect them. This means a society
without rich and poor, without owners and workers, without governments and
governed, a society without leaders and led. In such a society people would
cooperate to use all the world’s natural and industrial resources in their own
interests. They would free production from the artificial restraint of profit
and establish a system of society in which each person has free access to the
benefits of civilisation. Socialist society would consequently mean the end of
buying, selling and exchange, an end to borders and frontiers, an end to
organised violence and coercion, waste, want and war. You can support those
parties who will work within the capitalist system and help keep it going. Or
you can show you want to overturn it and end the problems it causes once and
for all. When enough of us join together, determined to end inequality and
deprivation, we can transform elections into a means of doing away with a
society of minority rule in favour of a society of real democracy and social
equality.
The most common reaction to elections is "it doesn't
make any difference anyway who gets in". Which corresponds with our
analysis and shows that workers are not stupid: a lot of them do realise what's
going on. Only they don't think they can do anything about it, so they just
abstain and don't bother to vote at all. It is highly likely that, tomorrow,
the abstainers will be the absolute majority. So, why if it makes no difference
who gets in, do we in the Socialist Party stand? First, to use a period of
heightened interest in politics to put across our case for a society of common
ownership, democratic control, production for use, and distribution on the
basis of "from each according to their ability, to each according to their
needs". And, second, because if workers use their votes intelligently in
their own interest they could change things, they could use the vote to help
get rid of the profit system and bring in socialism. It's voting for leaders to try to run the
profit system in the interests of the majority that makes no difference, not
voting in itself. That's why, where there's no socialist candidate, instead of
abstaining we go to the polling station and vote, even if it's only a write-in
vote. A way of keeping a potential weapon sharpened for the time when a
majority are ready to use it in their own interest. Where there is a socialist
candidate standing, we vote for them. Remember, we are the party that makes no
promises - it's you that makes the promise when you cast your vote to say
"I am a socialist, I will work for common and democratic ownership and
control of the wealth of the world between me and my fellow workers." We
don't want passive voters, but people to join us, or at least join the debate.
Politics should be a two way process, not the passive spectator sport of the
professionals in the mass media.
It's no wonder that people feel no pragmatic connection
between their voting preferences and the outcomes; and no wonder that people
feel so little connection with any of the parties. All these become are
technocratic career structures for advancing politicians, a platform from which
to project policy ideas to be reflected off the undifferentiated mass, which
has no control over what is projected, beyond passive reflection. This process
of “mass culture” has, of course, been assisted by the spread of the mass
media. The social relationship is the same, a few technocratic
broadcasters/media barons, projecting images and ideas to be passively
reflected by a land mass of consumers. Indeed, representative politics follows
the same course. Instead of abstractedly measuring response in terms of money,
it reads response in terms of flat votes, formally equal but failing to
register differences in value or quality.
Socialism is a world-wide community with common interests.
Where the land, and all the means of production will be owned by mankind as a
whole, with democratic control. Where the sole motive for production will be
the satisfaction of your needs. Simply put, bread will be baked because people
want to eat it—just that. Money will play no part at all in this society
because there will be no need for money. Decisions by the community will be
taken on their merits. The wages system will be abolished along with all the
other stupid trappings of the present system. Socialism will be a system of
co-operation; where each will give according to ability and take according to
need. Mankind with its knowledge, harnessed to the riches of the earth, is
capable of producing abundance. Why be satisfied with a world of shortages?
Socialism cannot be introduced by waving a magic political wand. It will be the
outcome of understanding and hard work; your understanding, your hard work.
Property Is Theft
On January 27, an article in "The Metro News" focused on the reappearance of an old crime, cattle rustling! Police say that it is on the rise in Alberta and Saskatchewan, driven largely by ranch hands stealing livestock when prices are high, "It's still a problem today. It's like any other property, if there is value to it people are going to steal it. In recent years the value of cattle has approximately doubled." said an RCMP spokesperson. The value of a cow varies from $1,500 to $2,000 and in 2015, six hundred were missing, presumed stolen in Alberta, and one thousand disappeared in Saskatchewan.
So, clearly, nothing changes under capitalism and wherever there is private property there is value, hence theft. In fact, property is theft from the common ownership of the earth, so let's call it that and be done with it.
John Ayers
Lack Of Commitment In Life's Natural Path
In 2015, the overall unemployment rate in Toronto fell by 0.5% whereas the that rate for youth rose from 18% to 22% according to Toronto Youth Employment Services. Their explanation was that when there is a lot of choice for employers they will choose older, more experienced workers over youth. Obviously, this makes getting experience a tougher job. It means that our youth face a bleak future unless they learn to organize for socialism and put an end to the capitalist system.
Against this backdrop, it is reported that many young women are disappointed with finding life partners these days. Not surprisingly, young men don't want the commitment of raising a family and buying a home in an uncertain world where well-paid jobs are scarce and companies come and go at the drop of a hat and job security is low.
So, capitalism is not just adept at ruining existing marriages with the economic pressure of low pay and unemployment but is now preventing many even getting started on life's natural path. Great job!
John Ayers
That Man to Man, the world o'er, Shall brothers be for a' that
Socialism can't promise infinite riches. Socialism isn't a magic wand. There exists a style of boss politics - vote for me and "I'll get things done for you." A kind of gift relation, we give our votes, they give us public service. Someone once asked asked our candidate 'What are you going to do about the potholes in the roads?' It was suggested giving the guy a shovel. That's not far off our attitude, not necessarily dig it yourself, but you can organise yourselves, and if you have a problem, get it sorted, without asking the boss man to do it for you. Anyone can go around saying 'I'll do my best for you' and promise to nag officials to do their jobs but we're interested in that. Our view on political power is so long as the mechanics are in place so that a majority of workers can organise to effect socialism, then it doesn't matter precisely how you count the votes. So far as we're concerned, it is the movement of the vast majority in the interest of the vast majority that matters. Getting a technical victory by counting one more nose than the rest isn't what we're about. What we remain more concerned about is the rights of minorities to try and become majorities, which are hampered by the mainstream media focusing on the existing parties and making it difficult for candidates to be heard on the stages where they need to be in order to make their case. We hold that there is a political decision to be made about the type of society we are living in, and that is the platform we stand on.
In a world that has the potential to produce enough food,
clothes, housing and the other amenities of life for all, factories are closing
down, workers are being laid off, unemployment is growing, houses are being
repossessed and people are having to tighten their belts. And for once the main
parties are being honest in offering more of the same, competing with each
other as to which of them is going to impose the most “savage cuts”. Inconsistency
and sacrifice of principle for the sake of votes marks most of the political
parties. “Be all things to all men” might be the watchword of all the political
leaders. All the other the parties serve capitalism, in one way or another.
Capitalism in relatively "good" times is bad
enough, but capitalism in an economic crisis makes it plain for all to see that
it is not a system geared to meeting people's needs. It’s a system based on the
pursuit of profits, where the harsh economic law of "no profit, no
production" prevails. The headlong pursuit of profits has led to a
situation where the owners can't make profits at the same rate as before. The
class who own and control the places where wealth is produced have gone on
strike – refusing to allow these workplaces to be used to produce what people
need, some desperately. So, as in the 1930s, it’s poverty in the midst of
potential plenty again. Cutbacks in production and services alongside unmet
needs. Why should we put up with this? There is an alternative.
But that's the way capitalism works, and must work. The
politicians in charge of the governments don't really know what to do, not that
they can do much to change the situation anyway. They are just hoping that the
panic measures they have taken will work. But the slump won’t end until
conditions for profitable production have come about again, and that requires
real wages to fall and unprofitable firms to go out of business. So, there's no
way that bankruptcies, cut-backs and lay-offs are going to be avoided, whatever
governments do or whichever party is in power.
What can be done? Nothing within the profit system. It can‘t
be mended, so it must be ended. But this is something we must do ourselves. The
career politicians, with their empty promises and futile measures, can do
nothing for us. We need to organise to bring in a new system where goods and
services are produced to meet people's needs. But we can only produce what we
need if we own and control the places where this is carried out. So these must
be taken out of the hands of the rich individuals, private companies and states
that now control them and become the common heritage of all, under our
democratic control. In short, socialism in its original sense. This has nothing
to do with the failed state capitalism that used to exist in Russia or with
what still exists in China and Cuba.
African American
‘Soledad Brother’ George Jackson explains socialism:
"Consider the
people's store, after full automation, the implementation of the theory of
economic advantage. You dig, no waste makers, no harnesses on production. There
is no intermediary, no money. The store, it stocks everything that the body or
home could possibly use. Why won't the people hoard, how is an operation like
that possible, how could the storing place keep its stores if its stock
(merchandise) is free?
Men hoard against
want, need, don't they? Aren’t they taught that tomorrow holds terror, pile up
a surplus against this terror, be greedy and possessive if you want to succeed
in this insecure world? Nuts hidden away for tomorrow's winter.
Change the
environment, educate the man, he'll change. The people's store will work as
long as people know that it will be there, and have in abundance the things
they need and want (really want); when they are positive that the common effort
has and will always produce an abundance, they won’t bother to take home more
than they need.
Water is free, do
people drink more than they need?"
Wednesday, April 06, 2016
What’s wrong with politics?
Mocking politicians is alright to a certain extent but it can give rise to the mistaken idea that it is because of corrupt and self-seeking politicians that we suffer from the social problems we do. It's not. It's the fault of capitalism. Even if all politicians were saints they still couldn't make capitalism work in our interest. Nor is it true that all elections are a joke and a waste of time. While what the professional politics who currently dominate politics get up to at Westminster and the antics they engage in to get votes do deserve to be mocked, especially as the media give them so much publicity, there is a serious side to elections.
Elections are ultimately about who controls the government
and who gets to make the laws. Ever since most electors have been wage and
salary workers the capitalist class has needed to persuade workers into voting
for politicians who will support their system. This is what elections are
about: tricking workers into voting for pro-capitalist politicians. It is right
to expose this, but wrong to conclude that this means we should never have
anything to do with elections. The response should be, as Marx once put it, to
transform universal suffrage "from the instrument of fraud that it has
been up till now into an instrument of emancipation". Which is one of the
points we are trying to make in contesting this and other elections.
Universal suffrage came into being partly as a result of
pressure from below. From the 1760s the elections were associated with radical
politics: demands for reform of the political system and protests against the
economic hardships and lack of liberty for the labouring classes began to
appear in the speeches. But what was reform of the political system if not the
extension of the suffrage and its use to gain access to political power to try
to improve the situation of the labouring class, such as the Chartists later
campaigned for? And what did the Suffragettes want if not to extend the suffrage?
Was this wrong? We say no, the extension of the vote to workers is a gain and
is a crucial difference between today and the situation in 1700s. Certainly, at
present the vote is not used wisely -- in fact it is used very unwisely -- but
that doesn't mean that it can't be used when once workers have woken up to the
fact that capitalism can never be made to work in their interests. To try to
speed up this awareness is another reason why we contest elections.
Any suggestion to try to disrupt the elections, is
completely irresponsible is probably just anarchist bombast. If anybody really
tried it, they should remember the song "I fought the Law...And the Law
Won".
Political parties invariably try to give us confidence that
this time promises will be kept, regulations will be tightened and adhered to,
unemployment will be tackled and reduced (figures can be manipulated). A minor
change here, a cosmetic tweak there, but the status quo will endure regardless.
When reading or listening to the election promises and then thinking back rationally
to other, similar pledges by previous candidates and recalling the reality of
U-turns, excuses and failure to deliver over the years, how could anyone doubt
the absolute imperative of addressing the question of what’s gone wrong with
politics with the utmost seriousness? If we simply moan and complain from our
armchairs what will change? A compliant, too passive electorate is repeatedly
defrauded.
If you think you've been cheated over the years, you're
right; capitalism is nothing but a racket. The proof of the failure of the
world capitalist system to meet the needs and aspirations of the majority of
the population of every country of the world is there for all to see, clear and
manifest, if only they will open their eyes wide and acknowledge the overwhelming
evidence. Politics, the activities
associated with how a country or an area is run, is something which should
engage the interest and activity of every citizen worldwide as it bears
directly on all aspects of life. The reason for contempt or indifference
towards politics comes from a history of being excluded, the expectation of
being excluded and the acceptance of being excluded. To be heard, to be
considered, to be represented honestly we need to be involved in the
decision-making processes, not to be told what is in our best interest by
self-serving professional politicians. We need a system that works for us all,
of which we're all an integral part, a system we're prepared to work to attain.
What we need is socialism.
Capitalism's Wild West
In China, a mountain of debris collapsed into apartment buildings killing 69, reported the New York Times, January 24. On examination, it was discovered that duplicity, doctored documents, and approvals ignoring safety rules were the culprit in the tragedy.
Not only is China NOT a communist country, it is the wild west of capitalism.
John Ayers.
Not only is China NOT a communist country, it is the wild west of capitalism.
John Ayers.
Equalilty, Just A Myth
A Toronto Star article of January 25 reports Milwaukee as the most segregated city in the US. Apart from strictly white and black neighbourhoods, the numbers tell a tale. White employment rate is 88%, Black 58%; white poverty rate 8%, black 39%; whites living in extreme poverty areas, `1.6%, black 33%; white incarceration rate 0.9%, black 12%; median white household income $62,100, black $26,036.
One may think this is difficult to believe over 50 years on from the freedom marches but we can easily believe that any equality under capitalism is just a myth.
John Ayers.
It is up to you
No politician can help you. It’s their system of making goods and services to sell for profit that led directly to the crisis. So long as we have this production for profit, we’ll have periodic crises and politicians wringing their hands over them. The only way out is to change the rules of the game: to change the system by putting an end to minority ownership by replacing it with the democracy of common ownership by and for everybody. Enough resources, know-how and skills exist already to provide comfortably for everyone. It’s the profit system that prevents this. We need to do away with it and instead produce and access goods for needs.
At the moment so many people think that there’s no
alternative that they are shrugging their shoulders and hoping for the best. If
a few of us stand up and say “we will not put up with this, we want something
better” then the idea that resources should be owned in common and used to
satisfy people’s needs can get on the agenda as the only genuine alternative to
capitalism and austerity. We need to organise to bring about a world where the
Earth’s resources have become the common heritage of all and where every man,
woman and child on the planet can have free access to what they need to lead a
decent and satisfying life.
Most politicians blame our problems on lack of money, but
this is not true. Money doesn't build hospitals, schools decent housing and a
healthy environment. The things that make a good community can only be created
by the work of the people. We have an abundance of skills and energy. If we
were free from having to work for the profits of employers we would be able to
work for the needs of everyone. The profit system is oppressive; it dominates
our lives. It plagues us with bills. The rent and mortgage payments, the food
bills, the rates, gas, electricity, water and telephone bills. Money is used to
screw us for the profits of business. If we don't pay, we don't get the goods.
Without the capitalist system, a socialist community would easily provide for
all of its members.
The chief characteristic of capitalism is private ownership
of the means of wealth production: Socialism implies common ownership.
Therefore there can no penalisation of or discrimination against any person or
groups of persons in socialism. Today we have a class society—a community
divided into groups, economically speaking. This division has nothing to do
with biological characteristics. It is largely an accident of birth that makes
one a capitalist. What determines his or her place in society is their economic
position; and everything follows from that. Our habits, manners, speech,
customs, ethics, all follow from this is division. Therefore class society
means grinding inescapable poverty for the working class. People can be in a
state of poverty without going short a meal or clothes. We live in a class
society and cannot escape from poverty.
The Socialist Party has only one objective and that is the
need to establish socialism as a society based on common ownership and democratic
control where goods and services are produced to meet people's needs instead of
for profit. This has never been tried (and certainly not in Russia or China)
and can only come about democratically when a majority want it. This system of
society which we propose is entirely different from what we know today. After
taking over the means of production the characteristics of capitalism will
disappear. Exchange will cease, for socialism will replace sale by free
distribution. Socialism will put into practice "From each according to his
ability, to each according to his needs." Stock Exchanges, Banks,
Insurance offices will all disappear. There will be no question of what to do
with the man or woman who won't work; most people want to work; most would be only
too glad to do a sensible job of work. Socialism will succeed by the enthusiasm
and determination of the socialists who have brought it into being to make it
successful. We stand for a system which will be world-wide, democratic, and
based on a community of interest of the individual and society. The Socialist
Party’s platform is for socialism (common ownership, democratic control,
production for use not profit, and distribution according to need not money)
and nothing but. We are not advocating reform of capitalism. Reforms trying to
permanently redistribute income from the rich to the poor has been tried many
times and has always failed because it is undermined by the way the capitalist
system works and has to work. It would be more effective to work for a society
in which there will be neither rich nor poor.
Socialists are working for a different and better world.
This is a message to those who are fed up –
• with the failures of this dreary system
• with leaders and the false promises of career politicians
• with poor hospitals, poor schools, poor housing and an
unhealthy environment
• with having to live on a wage that struggles to pay the
endless bills
• with serving the profit system and seeing poverty amidst
luxury
The world we want is a one where we all work together. We
can all do this. Co-operation is in our own interests and this is how a
socialist community would be organised – through democracy and through working
with each other. To co-operate we need democratic control not only in our own area
but by people everywhere. This means that all places of industry and
manufacture, all the land, transport, the shops and means of distribution,
should be owned in common by the whole community. With common ownership we
would not produce goods for profit. The profit system exploits us. Without it
we could easily produce enough quality things for everyone. We could all enjoy
free access to what we need without the barriers of buying and selling. Most
politicians blame our problems on lack of money, but this is not true. Money
doesn't build hospitals, schools decent housing and a healthy environment. The
things that make a good community can only be created by the work of the
people. We have an abundance of skills and energy. If we were free from having to
work for the profits of employers we would be able to work for the needs of
everyone. The profit system is oppressive; it dominates our lives. It plagues
us with bills. The rent and mortgage payments, the food bills, the rates, gas,
electricity, water and telephone bills. Money is used to screw us for the
profits of business. If we don't pay, we don't get the goods. Without the
capitalist system, a socialist community would easily provide for all of its
members.
The challenge now is to build a world-wide movement whose
job will be to break with the failures of the past. It won't be for power or
money or careers. It will work for the things that matter to people everywhere
– peace, material security and the enjoyment of life through cooperation. This
is the challenge that could link all people in a common cause without
distinction of nationality, race or culture.
We in the Socialist Party reject the view that things will
always stay the same. We can change the world. Nothing could stop a majority of
socialists building a new society run for the benefit of everyone. We all have
the ability to work together in each other's interests. All it takes is the
right ideas and a willingness to make it happen.
The poor shut out of higher education
In some parts of Glasgow, a child is more likely to end up
in prison than win a place at Glasgow University. In 2015, fewer than five
students from Easterhouse, won a place at Glasgow University. That’s two fewer
than the seven who were sent to Polmont Young Offenders Institution. These
numbers give us a glimpse into the level of educational inequality in
Scotland’s biggest city. Other working-class communities in Glasgow do equally
badly. Fewer than five new students come from Bridgeton, in the east end, and
seven from Possilpark. In each of the past four years, more young people from
Possilpark, one of Glasgow’s most deprived neighbourhoods, have gone to jail
than to Glasgow University. In 2014, 17
new inmates at Polmont had a Possilpark postcode. That was more than three
times the five students who made it to Glasgow University that year. Last year,
seven of the university’s new undergraduates came from Possilpark; 10 young
people from the area were imprisoned at Polmont.
More Glasgow University students come from the affluent
south side community of Newton Mearns than anywhere else in Scotland. Last
year, this prosperous suburb provided 57 undergraduates. It was closely
followed by neighbouring Clarkston with 54 new students, and Bearsden, on the
north of the city, with 52. Each of these well-to-do neighbourhoods sends more
than 10 times as many young people to Glasgow University as Easterhouse.
Strathclyde University revealed that it admitted 103
first-year students from Newton Mearns last year and 102 from Bearsden, but
just seven from Easterhouse.
Former Glasgow University student and cultural commentator
Pat Kane describes how it is both a world-class and a local institution. "The
other role it should play is as a symbol of aspiration for the ambitious,
talented children of Glasgow, no matter what their background is. These figures
show that it’s failing on that front - but it can’t in any way be entirely the
blame of the institution itself. It matters hugely that, according to these
statistics, Glasgow University is effectively closed off to so many kids from
the poorer parts of the city."
Patrick Harvie, Glasgow MSP and co-convenor of the Scottish
Greens, said: "Unequal access to higher education is a clear reflection of
the deep inequality that tarnishes our society more generally.”
Tuesday, April 05, 2016
Not A Benefit For Employees
The winter edition of the CAA magazine ran an article about the future manufacture of cars using the 3D printing method. A spokesman for Local Motors, a small vehicle maker based in Phoenix, said, "It takes thirty hours to make a car, but in a year or two, using this method, we can get it down to ten."
The technology is incredible and would be a wonderful benefit to humanity in a socialist world to reduce time spent on producing necessary goods, bur under capitalism, where profit rules, it can only lead to unemployment and more misery for the workers.
John Ayers.
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