Saturday, June 16, 2018

Socialism is the ONLY answer!


Few can deny that the world today is in a constant state of chaos and upheaval, full of turmoil and conflict throughout the world. The fact that such conditions prevail generally throughout the world, and have prevailed for a long time, logically suggests the presence of a dominant common social factor. That common social factor, the Socialist Party has repeatedly demonstrated, is the capitalist system that does not and cannot work in the interests of the majority.   It is a social system in which society is divided into two classes—a capitalist class and a working class. The capitalist class consists of a tiny minority—the wealthy few who own and control the instruments of production and distribution. The working class consists of the vast majority who own no productive property and must, therefore, seek to work for the class that owns and controls the means of life in order to survive. The relationship between the two classes forms the basis for an economic tyranny under which the workers as a class are exploited of the major portion of the social wealth that they produce.

The defenders of this economic dictatorship never tire of declaring it the "best of all possible systems." Yet, today, after decades of new deals, fair deals, third ways, wars on poverty and drugs, civil rights legislation, environmental regulations and a host of other reform efforts, capitalist society presents an obscene social picture. Millions who need and want jobs are out of work despite the official claims that unemployment is at historically "low" rates. Millions more are underemployed, working only part-time or temporary jobs though they need and want full-time work. Millions aren't earning enough to maintain a decent standard of living for themselves and their families despite the fact that they are working.

The malignant evils of racism an nationalism are on the upsurge with its contemptible discrimination against minorities. The educational system is a mess and getting worse. The health care system fails to meet the needs of the people across the globe. Widespread pollution of our environment continues. Crime and corruption are pervasive at every level of capitalist society. Slums abound and millions of homeless men, women and even children live on our streets. Thanks to falling real wages, poverty continues to grow. Even the foregoing fails to give a full picture of the wide-ranging plague of social and economic problems modern-day capitalism is imposing on society.

When the Socialist Party was founded, there was no space travel, no jet planes, no computers, no internet. But there was widespread poverty, racial prejudice and discrimination, spreading urban blight, brazen violations of democratic rights, the material and economic conflicts that contain the seeds of war, and a host of other economic and social problems. All of those problems still plague the working class—but have grown to even more monumental proportions. These long-standing problems and the failure of seemingly unending reform efforts to solve or even alleviate them to any meaningful degree have imposed decades of misery and suffering on millions of workers and their families. The working class stands perilously poised on the brink of yet another nightmare of INCREASED joblessness and poverty.

Against this insane capitalist system, the Socialist Party raises its voice in emphatic protest and unqualified condemnation. It declares that if our society is to be rid of the host of economic, political and social ills that for so long have plagued it, the outmoded capitalist system of private ownership of the socially operated means of life and production for the profit of a few must be replaced by a new social order. That new social order must be organised on the sane basis of common ownership and democratic administration of all the instruments of production, all means of distribution and all of the social services. It must be one in which production is carried on to satisfy human needs and wants. In short, it must be genuine socialism.

That is precisely the mission embodied in the Socialist Party's Declaration of Principles—a call for both political organisation and action. Thes principles are based upon the recognition and unqualified acceptance of the fact that the revolutionary change to socialism must be the class-conscious act of the workers themselves.

Accordingly, the Socialist Party calls upon the workers to muster under its banner for the purpose of advocating revolutionary change and building class consciousness among workers. Despite the many threats to workers' lives, liberty and happiness today, despite the growing poverty and misery that workers are subjected to, a world of peace, liberty, security, health and abundance for all stands within our grasp. The potential to create such a society exists, but that potential can be realized only if workers act to gain control of their own lives by organising, politically and industrially, for socialism. The Socialist Party calls upon all who realise the critical nature of our times, and who may be increasingly aware that a basic change in our society is needed, to place themselves squarely on working-class principles. Join us in this effort to put an end to the existing class conflict and all its malevolent results by placing the land and the instruments of production in the hands of the people as a collective body in a cooperative socialist society. Help us build a world commonwealth in which everyone will enjoy the free exercise and full benefit of their individual faculties.

Friday, June 15, 2018

Record Levels Of Debt


The world's debt has reached a record $164 trillion dollars(US), that will make it harder for some countries to deal with the next recession. 

The International Monetary Fund, in its semi-annual report, said global public and private debt swelled to 225 per cent of global domestic product in 2016, the last year for which they had figures. 

High levels of national debt will make it difficult for governments to refinance when their debts reach maturity, especially if financing conditions tighten, the IMF said. 

This is just another insane situation created by an insane system and hardly causes any feelings of optimism for the future.

For socialism,

 Steve, Mehmet, John & contributing members of the SPC.

There Is Only One Solution – Socialism!


Is the socialist society a Utopian dream? The Socialist Party completely rejects this. We believe that people can and do draw conclusions which are fundamentally socialist in content. There can be no real future for humanity in an exploiting society. The path to freedom lies through the socialist revolution. The resentment of people today against the stifling and degrading relations imposed upon them by class society provides a strong driving force towards the socialist future.  The methods of struggle decided by the working class will to a large extent mould the workers' movement - providing the organisation sees itself as the instrument of these struggles and not as some sort of self-appointed "leadership". Future events may show us the need to modify or even radically alter many of our present conceptions. This does not worry us in the least. Capitalism seeks to coerce people into obeying its will. It denies them the right to manage their own lives, to decide their own destinies. The real challenge of socialism is that it will give men and women the ability to master their fates.


It seems quite obvious to us that the socialist party must be run by its members, in a spirit of free association. Without democracy the revolutionary organization will be unable to develop the required originality of thought and the vitality, the initiative and determination to challenge capitalism. Self-appointed and self-perpetuating leaders, selected because of their ability to "interpret" Marx's writings and relate them to today's events becomes superfluous. All our fellow-workers need is a good memory,  a knowledge of history and well-stocked library to bring an understanding of today's reality. The Socialist Party rejects the idea that matters of great importance to our class requires tactical decisions by a central committee meeting in a secret conclave. We consider it important to bring to workers information and reports of the struggles of other workers - both past and present - reports which emphasize the fact that workers are capable of struggling collectively and of rising to the greatest heights of revolutionary consciousness. The revolutionary press must help break down the conspiracy of silence about such struggles. It must bring to the working class the story of its own past and the details of its present struggles. But it must disseminate information.  We do not bow to spontaneity. We argue for their own ideas and try to convince people of the wider implications of their struggles. Socialist Party  members actively participate in many movements, but with ambitions of gaining control.  We are dependent on workers agreeing with us. The immediate struggle of the Socialist Party is to establish socialism. he vast creative potential of the millions of working people will be unleashed with their direct participation in organising and operating socialism. Our aim is to replace the world capitalist system with world socialism. Exploitation, oppression, and degradation will not exist in socialism. Commodity production, that is, production for sale or exchange on the market, will not exist. The system of wage-slavery will be abolished and the guiding principle will be “from each according to ability, to each according to need.” The means of production will be held communally and private property will be eliminated. With the abolition of classes and class distinctions, all social and political inequality arising from them will disappear. The conflicts of interest between workers and farmers, town and country, manual and intellectual workers will disappear. As classes will not exist, the state will not be necessary as an instrument of class rule and will wither away. There will no longer be the struggle between opposing classes and socialism will propel the development of human society forward. 


Refugees are fellow-workers

Refugee Festival Scotland Opening Day is on Saturday 16 June at the Hidden Gardens in 25a Albert Drive, Glasgow with free entry. Wednesday, 20 June is World Refugee Day.

People living in other countries which are not the land of their birth are grimly accustomed to invectives like "fucking foreigner"; "parasite"; "free-loading scrounger", etc. and it appears matters have been getting out of hand in recent years. Xenophobia is on the rise. "Patriotic" citizens are quick to assert, nationalistically, that the "aliens" have come to take over their country, their resources, their jobs, their culture, and what have you. The Socialist Party does not speak of ‘we’ and ‘us’ in relation to so-called nationality in where we happened to have been born. 

In order to ward off unrest, various tactics are employed by governments. One of them is creating divisions among the suffering masses by, for instance, blaming foreigners and whipping up nationalistic feelings. This diverts attention from misrule and mismanagement. Secondly, and in response to the official lies, the masses who are hungry, sick and illiterate are taken in by the government's ploy. Now, since a hungry man is an angry man and since anger is emotional and overpowers reason, the least provocation can result in misdirected violence vented against vulnerable fellow citizens or be turned loose on the "aliens". This is the real cause of xenophobia - the rich pitting the poor against the poor. Our ruling class has opened a Pandora's Box of nationalist rhetoric around migrants and allowed a space to open up in groups and individuals influenced by fascist and racist ideology. 

 The Socialist Party condemns nationalist ideas. They are stumbling-blocks to working-class understanding of socialism. This above all is why we find such attitudes pernicious and repugnant.  The nationalist seeks only the crudest and superficial explanation of social problems. They need a scapegoat to explain the loss of what they called “national identity”. For the working class, national identity has always meant congested decaying slums, insecurity poverty and, very often, the dole-queue. National identity is a cunning political device by means of which the working class, who own no country, are duped to identify with their exploiters, the capitalists, who own virtually everything. 


 Capitalism divides because the means of production are owned by a few. Socialism will embrace all mankind because the earth will be owned in common.  We stand together as friends, work colleagues and members of our communities. We stand side-by-side and will not allow a wave of xenophobic nationalism and racism to threaten our lives and well-being.
 

Thursday, June 14, 2018

Scotland needs newcomers

Scotland's birth rate has sunk to a 15-year low, while the number of deaths are at a 32-year high, official figures have revealed. Deaths outstripped births by 7,600 in the year to the end of March - this is up by more than 5,000 on the same time last year, according to the figures released by the National Records of Scotland.

The ageing population is behind the trend and again underlines the country's reliance on immigration to keep the population growing.

https://www.scotsman.com/news/scotland-s-birth-rate-sinks-to-15-year-low-1-4753801

This is what we want to happen

It is nationalism that divides the workers so that the workers of one nationality are struggling against the workers of another nationality for a few illusory crumbs the rulers throw out exactly for that purpose! It is nationalism that pits groups of workers against each other.  What is socialism? If we are socialists, what are we actually for? Socialism is not the rule of bureaucrats over the people.  Marxism has clarified many perplexing problems in philosophy, sociology, history, economics, and politics. Its supreme achievement is the explanation it offers of the key role of the working class in history. It is ironical that young rebels who reject conformism to big business mimic its low opinion of the working class. One reason for this attitude is a limited historical vision. They acquire so one-sided a view of the wage-workers by conceiving of them, not as the chief agents of production, but primarily as consumers motivated by suburbanite culture.  The reactions of the workers are primarily and ultimately determined by what happens to them in the labour market and at the point of production. That is where they encounter speed-ups, short time, lay-offs, discrimination, insecurity, wage reductions, and other evils of exploitation. This class can be roused from its slumber by events beyond anyone’s control. That is why any drastic fluctuation in their economic welfare can quickly alter their tolerance of the existing state of affairs.

Marxism is the theory of the socialist revolution. In a revolution, the power and wealth of society change hands. They are transferred from one class to another. In our time, there are two fundamental classes in society, the working class, and the capitalist class. The minority class owns the wealth, profits from it, keeps down the standard of living of the majority class which has no wealth.  Marxism formulates the goal of the socialist revolution – the abolition of private property, the abolition of exploitation of man by man, the social ownership of the means of production and their planned use for the benefit of the whole of society, leading to abundance. The Socialist Party does not put forward this goal as a utopia, as a mere vision of what would ideally satisfy people’s needs and make them all happy, but as a goal the practical attainment of which is made necessary by the actual conditions of modern society. Socialism will only be gained by waging the working-class struggle. And to wage this struggle and achieve the conquest of power, the working class must have its own independent political party. If the working class cannot be counted on to dislodge the capitalists, who else can do that job? It would be exceedingly difficult to point out another social force that could effectively act. The struggle against capitalist domination then looms as a lost cause and socialism become a Utopia. Socialism is not inevitable. What has been termed its ‘inevitability’ consists in this, that only through socialism can human progress continue? But there is not and cannot be any absolute deterministic inevitability in human affairs since man makes his own history and chooses what to do. What is determined is not his choice, but the conditions under which it is made, and the consequences when it is made. The meaning of scientific socialism is not that it tells us that socialism will come regardless, but that it explains to us where we stand, what course lies open to us, what is the road to life.


Socialism is a society dedicated to the interests of the working people, who make up the vast majority of the population. The basic means by which society produces its wealth – factories, mines, and farms – are transferred from private/state property to common ownership, and exploitation is for the most part eliminated. Socialism unleashes the creativity of the common people, who are capable of tremendous advances when not labouring under a system of exploitation. The working class has colossal tasks ahead of it. It confronts the most formidable and ferocious of adversaries. There is a need for socialist campaigns and angry denunciations of capitalism.  But there is also a need for inspiration, for a vision of the goal which makes the struggle worthy. The theory of the Socialist Party is that if the enormous wealth of society, controlled by the few, were controlled by the majority of the people poverty could be eliminated, an end could be made to the mass murder of war, and mankind could live in peace and plenty. To achieve its final goal, this revolution would be necessary on a world scale. The Socialist Party stands for the abolition of the profit system, peace and plenty for all. The real solution to the many looming disasters is the socialist revolution.  

Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Smart Meters. Who Benefits?





My attention was drawn to an advert in the Metro (Wednesday, June 13) posing the idea that “If we all get a smart meter we could save enough energy to power every home in Aberdeen, Cardiff, and Manchester for 365 days.”
Capitalists are always trying to get workers to identify themselves with their interests. The additional comments prove this.
“With a smart meter, you could save an average of 354kWh of energy a year. Because when you’re using, you can make a few small changes and use less of it. Save your energy for powering cities.”
On examining these words from a class point of view, I would point out that the need not to pay wages to people reading meters would benefit the capitalist selling electricity. The small changes I make would if made, probably save me some money (not my energy to save) it would not be used by me to power cities. We don’t sell electricity, We buy it.
The advert has a night time picture showing a massive lit-up city. Shareholders in electricity companies evidently are making money even while they sleep. Workers don’t get paid while they sleep.
Many workers are in need of heating but use very little of it, the result of poor wages, unemployment etc. so this idea that (we could save enough energy to power every home in Aberdeen, Cardiff, and Manchester) is nonsense.
When we own the means of production in common, we will mean everyone not the shareholders of a capitalist enterprise.

YFS
PH

 

Prevention Is Better Than A Cure


On May11 Justin Trudeau and Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard announced plans to build a 12.8-kilometer by-pass at Lac-Megantic.

 In 2013 a train carrying crude oil came of the track, exploded, killed 47 people and destroyed most of the downtown area. This was in blatant violation of safety regulations so they could save a few bucks. 

The bypass has been estimated to cost $133 million; the federal government will pay 60 per cent and the provincial one 40 per cent.

 A typical capitalist situation caused by putting a price tag on everything and then having to pay more money because an ounce of prevention wasn't worth a ton of cure. Boy! what a system.
For socialism,

 Steve, Mehmet, John & contributing members of the SPC

Our Red Flag Keeps Flying

Though cowards flinch and traitors sneer
We'll keep the red flag flying here

Contrary to the aims of the anti-capitalist activists, the old social order cannot simply be removed. Its removal is dependent upon its replacement by socialism. The anti-capitalists who know that capitalism is the enemy, but who cannot make time for building a revolutionary socialist party because they are too involved in the campaigns for immediate reforms has not yet grasped this fundamental. They deplore the chaos in the world, the chaos in the radical movement yet there remains the chaos of their own political positions. Fortunately, there is the Socialist Party which fights for socialism and is able to devote themselves single-mindedly to the building of party dedicated to socialism. Let the cowards flinch and the traitors sneer but we reiterate our trust in our fellow-workers and dedicate ourselves again to the emancipation of ourselves from wage-slavery.

Capitalism has shown conclusively that it cannot advance civilisation, but only drive it further along the road of human degradation and ruination. The working class, even those sections of it that have been most cruelly oppressed, has shown a power of recuperation from defeat and powers of resistance to the capitalist class.

The working class is struggling daily to improve their living conditions, defend and expand their democratic rights, and achieve social progress. The history of mankind can be described as the history of the efforts of human communities to free themselves from the constraints always imposed by the necessity of meeting their daily survival needs and reproducing the species. The history of humanity is the history of human communities involved in the struggle for their existence. Unless we understand the implications of this, we cannot wage a systematic and effective struggle. The purpose of socialist revolution is to provide today’s society with a form of organisation that corresponds to the material possibilities open to us today. Socialist principles lay bare the conflict of interest between the owners of the means of production and the workers. Organised society came into existence as the result of experience that taught the lesson of mankind’s common problem and of the realisation that its solution is more likely to be attained through the cooperation of all having a common aim. Standing in the way of social progress and socialism is the capitalist class.

The Socialist Party calls upon the workers of the world to unite. In fact, it is held that it the most famous thing Marx ever said. The Socialist Party seeks to unify the workers across national borders. The International Workingmen's Association, or "First International", was a step toward such a thing as is our own World Socialist Movement. The new workers' movement must be imbued with the spirit and principles of socialism for the building of a genuinely revolutionary socialist party. The zigzag path of the world revolution will emerge more clearly. To change society and end exploitation, we need a plan to get from where we are now to liberation - a strategy that will work. Identifying our real friends and our real enemies is the first step. The capitalists are the powerful enemy and it will require protracted efforts to overthrow them. These capitalists are very wealthy and live off the exploited labour of others. Members of the Socialist Party believes that to be a part of the working class is something to be proud of. The working class constitutes the majority. When socialists look at the issue of class we see that every kind of society, from ancient times until now, is organised around its tools - it means of producing things that satisfy people's needs and wants. Ownership of the means of production is basic. Classes are large groups of people, who have a defined relationship to the means of production, such as ownership. The result of these differences in who owns what and where one fits into the social division of labour, means a difference in who gets how much wealth.

Capitalism is a doomed system whose continued existence stands in the way of all social progress. Huge corporations and financial institutions are headed by a wealthy oligarchy that dominates the political and economic life of this country, blocking the path to prosperity for the vast majority. The ruling class is like a vampire that sucks the blood of the workers. They live off the labour, land and natural resources of others driven to achieve the highest possible rate of profit. The capitalists have accumulated untold wealth based on the exploitation and robbery of the world's working class. We need to turn things around. This means a revolution that advances the cause of the exploited. Workers need political power. as the means to reorganise society in our own interests.


Socialism or barbarism! With the whole world, hard pressed by advancing barbarism to make the choice of socialism must the decision for civilization to survive and to flower. capitalism is objectively ripe for replacement by socialism which is another way of saying that capitalism has become an obstacle in the path of social progress. The Socialist Part faces the struggle for the socialist future with full confidence.   And we bring to this struggle the determination to work for the common good of all.  It is true that the humanity is indeed confronted with a problem of survival on this planet. But in order to survive, mankind will do away with the social system which threatens its survival. The goal is in sight. Socialism will win the world and change the world, and make it secure. 
 

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

Statistically Insignificant ?


The latest from Stats-Canada is wage growth in April reached its highest level in six years and the unemployment rate stayed at 5.8 per cent, its record low.

 The report issued on May 11 said wages were 3.6 per cent higher than this time last year, but the economy lost 1,100 jobs. You may wonder how this didn't change the unemployment rate; this was explained away by saying that, ''the decline in jobs last month was too small to be statistically significant.'' So according to these brilliant federal employees, everything is just great.

However, we still have unemployment and wages which limit how much of the world's wealth one can enjoy. Why not a society where neither would exist?
 For socialism, Steve, Mehmet, John & contributing members of the SPC.



Fan The Flames of Revolution

The aim of the Socialist Party is to replace world capitalist economy by world socialism.  To change the world and to create a better one has always been the goal of the Socialist Party. The hope that tomorrow's world can be free of today's inequalities, hardships and deprivations, The people can shape the world to come. But clearly, everyone's image of an ideal world is not one and the same, nevertheless, throughout history certain ideas have always come to the fore such as principles of freedom, equality, justice and prosperity. Socialism  is the movement for changing the world and setting up a free, equal, human and prosperous society, a movement that reflects the vision, ideals and protest of a vast section of the people.  Socialism is the revolutionary movement of the working class for overthrowing the capitalist system and creating a new society without classes and exploitation. The history of all societies has been a history of class struggle. An uninterrupted, now open and now hidden, struggle has been going on between exploiting and exploited, oppressor and oppressed classes in different epochs and societies. This class struggle is the chief source of social change and transformation. Modern capitalist society, has greatly simplified class divisions. Present society as a whole is organised around two main opposing class camps: workers and capitalists. Capitalism is based on the exploitation of direct producers — the appropriation of a part of the product of their labour by the ruling classes.   Under slavery not only the slave's product but he himself belonged to the slave- owner. He worked for the slave-owner, and in return was kept alive by him. In the feudal system the peasants either handed over part of their produce to the feudal lord, or performed certain hours of forced and unpaid labour. Under capitalism the workers, are free; they don't belong to anyone, are not appendages of any estate or lord. They own and control their own body and labour power. But workers are also 'free' in yet another sense: they are `free` from the ownership and possession of means of production, and so in order to live, they have to sell their labour power for a certain length of time, in exchange for wages, to the capitalist class — i.e. a small minority that own and monopolise the means of production. The workers have to then buy their means of subsistence — the goods they themselves have produced — in the market from the capitalists. The essence of capitalism and the basis of exploitation in this system is the fact that, on the one hand labour power is a commodity, and, on the other hand the means of production are the private property of the capitalist class.

In capitalism labour power and means of production are shut off from each other by the wall of private property; they are commodities and their owners must meet in a market. On the face of it, the owners of these commodities enter into a free and equal transaction: the worker sells his/her labour power for certain periods, in exchange for wages, to the capitalist, i.e. the owner of the means of production; the capitalist employs this labour power, uses it up and makes new products. These commodities are then sold in the market and the revenue begins the production cycle anew, as capital. However, behind the apparently equal exchange between labour and capital lies a fundamental inequality; an inequality which defines the lot of humanity today and without whose elimination society will never be free. With wages, workers only get back what they have sold, i.e. the ability to work and to show up in the market once again. By its daily work the working class only ensures its continued existence as worker, its survival as the daily seller of labour power. But capital in this process grows and accumulates. Labour power is a creative power; it generates new values for its buyer. The value of the commodities and services produced by the worker at any cycle of the production process is greater than the worker's total share and that portion of the products which goes into restoring the used up materials and wear and tear. This surplus value, taking the form of an immense stock of commodities, belongs automatically to the capitalist class, and increases the mass of its capital, by virtue of the capitalist class's ownership of the means of production. Labour power in its exchange with capital only reproduces itself, while capital in its exchange with labour power grows. The creative capacity of labour power and the working class's productive activity reflects itself as the birth of new capital for the capitalist class. The more and the better the working class works, the more power capital acquires. The gigantic power of capital in the world today and its ever-expanding domination of the economic, political and intellectual life of the billions of inhabitants of the earth is nothing but the inverted image of the creative power of work and of working humanity.  Exploitation in capitalist society takes place without yokes and shackles around the ankles of the producers,  through the medium of the market and exchange of commodities. This is the fundamental feature of capitalism which distinguishes it in essence from all earlier systems. The surplus value obtained from the exploitation of the working class is divided out among the various sections of the capitalist class essentially through the market mechanism and also through state fiscal and monetary policies. Profit, interest and rent are the major forms in which the different capitals share in the fruits of this class exploitation. The competition of capitals in the market determines the share of each capitalist branch, unit and enterprise. This surplus pays whole cost of the state machinery, of its ideological and cultural institutions, and the upkeep of all those who, through these institutions, uphold the power of the master-class. By its work, the working class pays the cost of the ruling class, the ever-increasing accumulation of capital and the bourgeoisie's political, cultural and intellectual domination over the working class and the entire society. With the accumulation of capital, the mass of commodities which make up the wealth of bourgeois society grows. An inevitable result of the accumulation process is the continual and accelerating technological progress and rise in the mass and capacity of the means of production which the working class sets in motion in every new cycle of the production process. But compared to the growth in society's wealth and productive powers, the working class continually gets relatively poorer. Despite the gradual and limited increase, in absolute terms, in the workers' standard of living, the share of the working class from the social wealth declines rapidly, and the gap between the living conditions of the working class and the higher living standards that is already made possible by its own work widens. The richer the society becomes, the more impoverished a section the worker forms in it.

Technological progress and rise in labour productivity mean that living human labour power is increasingly replaced by machines and automatic systems. In a free and human society, this should mean more free time and leisure for all. But in capitalist society, where labour power and means of production are merely so many commodities which capital employs to make profits, the substitution of humans by machines manifests itself as a permanent unemployment of a section of the working class which is now denied the possibility of making a living. The appearance of a reserve army of workers who do not even have the possibility of selling their labour power is an inevitable result of the process of accumulation of capital and at the same time a condition of capitalist production. The existence of this reserve army of unemployed, supported essentially by the employed section of the working class itself, heightens the competition in the ranks of the working class and keeps wages at their lowest socially possible level. This reserve army also allows capital to more easily modify the size of its employed work force in proportion to the needs of the market. Massive unemployment is not a side-effect of the market or a result of the bad policies of some government. It is an inherent part of the workings of capitalism and the process of accumulation of capital.

A socialist society will abolish the class division of society, i.e., simultaneously with the abolition of anarchy in production, it will abolish all forms of exploitation and oppression of man by man. Society will no longer consist of antagonistic classes in conflict with each other, but will present a cooperative commonwealth of labour. For the first time in its history mankind will take its fate into its own hands. Work will cease to be toiling for the benefit of a class enemy. The road to the emancipation of the workers, and with them, of mankind, is the social revolution. Humankind will be organised into a free federation of producers’ and consumers’ communes. The socialist revolution is the most profound of all revolutions in history. It initiates changes more rapid and far-reaching than any in the whole experience of mankind. The workers striking off their age-old chains of slavery, will construct a society of liberty and prosperity and intelligence. Socialism will inaugurate a new era for the human race, the building of a new world. The overthrow of capitalism and the development of socialism will bring about the immediate or eventual solution of many great social problems, among them war, superstition, famine, pestilence, crime, poverty, drug and alcohol addiction, unemployment, illiteracy, race and national chauvinism, the suppression of woman, and every form of slavery and exploitation of one class by another. The revolution will eventually liquidate these handicaps to the happiness and progress of the human race. Only socialism can fully uproot and destroy all these social evils. As long as there have been class divisions there will be struggles for social mastery. Socialism would prevent the evils of class division, subjection, and exploitation. Although there is little hatred for the capitalist system in the abstract many workers hold a burning anger and disgust for every successive calamity which comes to them as a matter of course. It is a call of every worker who has heart enough to feel a hatred for the wrongs and agonies of the capitalist system to realise the possibility of an alternative.

The capitalist system is behind all the ills that burden humanity today. Poverty, deprivation, discrimination, inequality, political repression, ignorance, bigotry, cultural backwardness, unemployment, homelessness, economic and political insecurity, corruption and crime are all inevitable products of this system. No doubt pro-capitalist philosophers will respond that these have not been invented by capitalism, but have all existed before capitalism, that exploitation, repression, discrimination, women's oppression, ignorance and prejudice are more or less as old as human society itself. What they disguise is the fact that, firstly, all these problems have found a new meaning in this society, corresponding to the needs of capitalism. These are being constantly reproduced as integral parts of the modern capitalist system. The source of poverty, starvation, unemployment, homelessness and economic insecurity at the end of the 20th century is the economic system in place at the end of the 20th century. The brutal dictatorships, wars, genocides, and repressions that define the life of hundreds of millions of people today draw their rationale from the needs of the system that rules the world today and serve specific interests in this world. Women's oppression today is not the result of medieval economy and morality, but a product of the present society's economic and social system and moral values. Secondly, it is the capitalist system itself continually and relentlessly resists people's effort to eradicate and overcome these ills. The obstacle to workers' struggle to improve living conditions and civil rights is none other than the capitalist class and its governments and political parties. Wherever people rise to take charge of their lives, the first barrier they face is the armed force of the local and international ruling class. It is the State, its enormous media and propaganda machinery, the institution of religion, traditions, moralities and educational system which shape the prejudiced attitudes among successive generations. There is no doubt that it is capitalists who stand in the way of the attempts by the people, more or less in possession of a clear outline of a society worthy of human beings, to change the system.


At the height of capitalism's globalisation and in the midst of the greatest technological development, humanity finds itself facing bare physical survival. The dream has given way to the permanent nightmare of war, hunger, and disease.  The miserable promise of the welfare state has resulted in massive U-turns with the resurgence of austerity policies and the abandoning of the livelihood of millions, old and young, to the mercy of the free market. The capitalist system and the primacy of profit have exposed the environment to serious dangers and irreparable damages. This is the reality of capitalism today, boding a horrifying future for the entire people of the world. 

Monday, June 11, 2018

Sylvia's suggestions


With socialism, we shall all satisfy our needs from common storehouses, according to our desires. Everyone will be able to have what he or she desires in food, in clothing and travel. The abundant production now possible, and which invention will constantly facilitate, will remove any need for rationing or limiting of consumption. Every individual will be secure from material want. Material anxiety being removed, and the rat-race for wealth and status eliminated. There will be no class distinctions since these arise from differences in material possessions — all such distinctions will be swept away. There will be neither rich nor poor. Money will no longer exist. There will be no selling, because there will be no buyers, since everyone will be able to obtain everything at will, without payment. The possession of private property, beyond that which is for actual personal use, will disappear. There will be neither masters nor servants, all being in a position of economic equality — no-one will be able to become the employer of another. Theft and all other economic crimes will disappear, with all the coercive law-enforcement institutions for preventing, detecting and punishing them.

As soon as people are working together some sort of organisation of work and of distribution becomes inevitable. Production cannot be carried on without organisation. In each industry, the workers concerned in the work must form and control the organisation, directed by the community an society as a whole. The various industries are interlinked in interest and utility; therefore the industrial organisations must be interlinked. When wages have disappeared, when there exists economic equality, when the position of manager, director, supervisor, etc., brings no material advantage, the danger of oppressive behaviour by the management will be largely nullified and organisers and administrators will be chosen and workers will be free to change him. Co-operation for the common good is necessary. Since co-operative work and mutual reliance on mutual aid render some kind of organisation necessary, the best possible form of organisation must be chosen: the test of its worth is its efficiency and the scope for freedom and initiative it allows to each of its units. Committees and delegates, built up from the base of the workshop and local assemblies, presents the best form of organisation yet evolved; it arises naturally when the workers are thrown upon their own resources in the matter of government.  We live always, however, in a state of flux, and there is and happily can be, no permanence about human institutions; there is always the possibility of something higher, as yet undiscovered.

Consider the position in London with capitalism abolished; the tubes and buses, the mainline stations, the docks, the waterworks, the power stations require to be operated. Millions of people are waiting for their food and groceries requirements to be brought to them. If any of these things cease, then people will be deprived of accustomed necessaries. Thus everything has to be reorganised and built upon a new basis; production for use, not for profit, and capitalism is overthrown. Everyone, both as worker and consumer, has new hopes and desires and new claims upon life, for has not the socialist revolution come? Everyone demands more leisure and more relaxed work , improved food, better clothes, more pleasant housing. Everyone is demanding a share in deciding how things shall be done. The only people who could deal with the great new situation would be the people who already do the work and who produce. All inter-connected as they are in this busy hive of activity. Workers and consumers would come together and talk the matter over; appoint one of their number to take stock and to coordinate supply and delivery. All this will be done purely by way of managing affairs so that all may be, as far as possible, satisfied that the needs of all may be explained and understood by those who have to supply them. But there should be no compulsion; some people may say: “What the majority decide is good enough for me.” Others will say: “I like to have a voice in it.” As a rule, when things affecting a group of people who are working together come up for decision everyone of the group will join in and give his or her opinion, and generally the thing will be decided by mutual agreement. Compulsion and coercion are repugnant to the socialist ideal. No-one may make a wage-slave of another; no-one may hoard up goods but the only way to prevent such practices is not by making them punishable; it is by creating a society in which no-one needs to become a wage slave, and no-one cares to privately hoard goods when all that is needed is readily supplied as required from the common storehouse. To recapitulate, workers’ and community councils structured in interlocking levels, will form the administrative machinery for supplying the needs of the people in socialist society. 

Socialism necessitates the creation of initiatives which shall animate the entire people. Under capitalism, people are like a flock of sheep shepherded by their owners. With socialism, on the contrary, they will be free co-operators, producing, inventing, studying, not under the compulsion of law, or poverty, or the incentive of individual gain, but from deliberate choice and with an eager zest for achievement. Socialism will provide the material conditions which will make voluntary co-operative labour possible. Only by willing service and intelligent initiative can true socialism develop. The establishment of the socialism entails a complete breach, both in practice and in ideas, with capitalism. There are no half-way compromises. 

Abridged and adapted from here
https://www.marxists.org/archive/pankhurst-sylvia/communism-tactics/index.htm


Sunday, June 10, 2018

Lavish And Totally Socially Useless Spending

While watching a recent program about Leonardo Da Vinci I found out something I had missed at the time. 

In October 2017, at an auction in New York, a Saudi prince bought his, ''Salvatore Mundi'', for 400 million American dollars. 

Some may defend this on the grounds that it will be in a museum for all to see, but, nevertheless, it says something very loudly about an economic system, where such lavish and totally socially useless spending can occur when millions live in abject poverty.
 For socialism,
Steve, Mehmet, John & contributing members of the SPC.

A New Vision for the Working Class

The motivating aim of capitalism is not satisfaction of people's needs, but profitability of capital. The essence of the socialist revolution is abolition of private ownership of the means of production and their conversion into common ownership of the whole society. A socialist t revolution puts an end to the class division of society and abolishes the wage-labour system. Thus, market, exchange of commodities, and money disappear. Production for profit is replaced by production to meet people's needs and to bring about greater prosperity for all. Work, which in capitalist society for the overwhelming majority is coercive and compulsory gives way to voluntary, creative and conscious activity to enrich human life. Everyone, by virtue of being a human being and being born into human society will be equally entitled to all of life's resources and the products of collective effort. From everyone according to their ability, to everyone according to their need — this is a basic principle of socialism. The development of each person will be the condition of development of the society. Socialist society is a global system. National boundaries and divisions will disappear and give way to a universal human identity. Socialism will be free of religion, superstitious beliefs, and archaic traditions and customs that strangle free thought. In socialism the state withers away, society is a society without a state. The administrative affairs of the society will be managed by the cooperation, consensus and collective decision-making of all of its members. The wage-labour system, that is the daily compulsion of the great majority of people to sell their physical and intellectual abilities to others in order to make a living, is the source of the social violence which is inherent of this system and applied against anyone who stands up to any oppression. In this system, thanks to the rivalry of capitals and economic blocs, war and genocide have assumed staggering proportions. The technology of war and mass destruction is far more advanced than the technology used in production of goods. The global arsenal can annihilate the world several times over. This is the system that has actually used horrendous nuclear and chemical weapons against people.

Can such a system be swept out of the way of human liberation?  Law is the will and interest of the ruling class made to bind all. The ruling ideas in every society are the ideas of ruling class. But the extent of intellectual, cultural and moral domination and control of the bourgeoisie over the life of society today is now unprecedented. The scientific and technological advances and the powerful mechanism of the market transcends all national, tribal, political and cultural barriers, and today provides the wealthy with enormous ideological power on a world scale.  In this society, self-interest and competition, i.e. the rationale behind the capitalist's behaviour in the market, are portrayed as human nature as such and sanctified as exalted human values. Here the relations among people are a reflection and an extension of the relations among commodities. People's worth and status are measured by their relation to ownership. The bourgeoisie broke up the local and narrow arrangement of the old society and organised nation-states. Tribalism and parochialism gave way to modern bourgeois nationalism and patriotism as the heaviest ideological yoke ever put on the shoulders of the working people. The mass media is now indoctrinating and controlling minds, intimidating and isolating people, countering critical and dissident ideas. These institutions and the modern forms of thought-control are pillars of political stability, particularly in times of crisis, uncertainty and popular unrest. A critical requirement for the progress and victory of the social revolution is to put forward a revolutionary perspective before the working class. Capitalism is a world system, the working class is a worldwide class, workers' conflict with the employing class is a daily struggle on a global scale, and socialism is an alternative that the working class presents to the whole of humanity. The socialist movement must also be organised on a global scale.


The immediate aim of a socialist party is to organise the social revolution of the working class. A revolution that overthrows the entire exploitative capitalist relations and puts an end to all exploitations and hardships, the immediate establishment of socialism; a society without classes, without private ownership of the means of production, without wage labour and without a state; a free human society in which all share in the social wealth and collectively decide the society's direction and future. A socialist world is possible this very day. 


Votes for women commemorated

Women marking the 100th anniversary of the Representation of the People's Act, which gave some women the right to vote, will march through Edinburgh. The procession is due to start in The Meadows at 14:00 BST and finishes in Queens Drive in Holyrood Park. The march will see participants follow in the footsteps of Scottish suffragettes, who marched along Princes Street in 1909 during a demonstration arranged by the Women's Social and Political Union.

The People Act, which was passed by the UK Parliament in 1918, gave women over the age of 30 and who also owned property the right to vote.

Many find the Socialist Party's relationship to the suffragette movement unique. We opposed the suffragettes because their demands were against the interests of workers, women as well as men. Their proposals would have strengthened the political power of the capitalist class by increasing the proportion of rich people who had the vote. The movement, we stated, was “only a means of providing votes for the propertied women of the middle class, and faggot votes for the wealthy”. They wanted not votes for women, but more votes for property. We warned “the women of the working class are being used for the purpose of obtaining a limited suffrage in the interests of propertied women”. The Women’s Social and Political Union we denounced as “essentially a rich women’s organsation”. The Suffragette proposal to extend the Household Vote to women on the same terms as men and we opposed it for that reason. Universal adult suffrage was a different proposition. We were not opposed to this and frequently said so. We were of necessity Universal Adult Suffragists. However, we did not advocate universal suffrage or seek support on the grounds that we thought it useful. This was because there were already sufficient workers with the vote to win political power for Socialism if they were so minded. We held that in the political conditions of pre-1914 Britain there was no need to advocate extension of the franchise.

  The Socialist Party is not opposed to Adult Suffrage, but maintain that the working class have quite sufficient votes at their disposal to effect the revolutionary purpose when the class are sufficiently class conscious to make the time opportune. It is a question of education, not of extensions of the franchise (December, 1910).

   While Adult Suffrage would be a useful measure for the working class, to enable them to more quickly and completely take control of political power when they understand how to use their votes, yet as the working class have a franchise wide enough for the initial steps of their emancipation, it is not the business of a Socialist Party to spend time and energy in advocating the extension of that franchise, but to educate the workers in how to use the voting power which they already possess; hence the business of a Socialist Party is to advocate Socialism only (November, 1913).


If women are to do something about their place in society, they must first face the fact that most of them are workers, with labour power to sell, just like the majority of men. They must realise that their vote has solved nothing, changed nothing, because—again like the majority of men—it is a vote not backed by an understanding of society. But with that understanding the vote can do more than any Suffragette ever dreamed of — it can bring ". . .  the emancipation of all mankind without distinction of race or sex."