The point is that the capitalist system is not in business to
make people happy, to build houses for homeless people to live in, to produce
food for hungry people, or to care for the sick, the handicapped the old and
the very young. It is in business to make profits to keep accountants and
shareholders happy. Any coincidence with socially necessary or desirable
activities is just that — a coincidence. The real issue is whether we actually
want a society which operates according to an accountant s sense of values or
one which operates in terms of satisfying human needs. There is a real conflict
in capitalism between what is perceived as profitable, and therefore feasible,
and what is known to be necessary, desirable and useful but unprofitable, and
therefore impractical. That is why there are homeless, hungry and unemployed
people. And that is why socialists detest the capitalist principle which puts
profits before people. It is time to end this system and create a better world.
The only future the capitalist class seeks is one where
they make plenty of profits. Or, to be quite precise about it, one where we,
the workers, will make plenty of profits, to be handed directly to those who
monopolise the resources of the earth. They can only get richer out of the hard
work of suckers who are prepared to produce everything and then be thankful for
a wage or salary which enables us to buy the cheapest and shoddiest of goods.
The contented wage slave is the basic requirement of the contented capitalist.
Unless the producers produce the possessors will have nothing to possess.
Looking forward to a capitalist future is a bleak prospect. Capitalism's
problems do not stay the same. They become worse. Who can doubt that our
future will see more needless human misery. There’s been a lot of bad news
about climate change and the future of humanity with many foreboding dark
predictions. But as a species we’re smart and creative enough to fix
things. The alternatives are not
doomsday scenarios, ignorance and despair. The Socialist Party chooses hope.
Let us be visionary. Let’s dream big. Let’s fight for our children and grand
children and let’s strive together for their future.
Socialist change does not mean that the workers, like Oliver
Twist, should ask for just a little bit more. Nor is it asking for a lot more.
It means taking the whole lot. All of the factories, the farms, the offices,
the media, the means of transportation, the sources of energy — the entire
means and instruments of producing and distributing wealth will become the
property of the workers of the world. Who can deny that socialism is the only
practical hope facing working men and women in the years ahead?
Is the socialism too ambitious? No. We need to aspire to great
things. We have an opportunity to join
together as never before to form a working class movement to build political
power through strategies of solidarity, education and action. The Socialist
Party will encourage people to create socialist networks and become politically
active so to determine their own destiny. We need solutions that are agreed and
coordinated at the worldwide scale, not country by country. Consider civil
aviation, a triumph of globally coordinated engineering. In 2017, there were
almost 42 million flights without a single fatal passenger jet accident. The
civil aviation system works so well because
all countries use aircraft
manufactured by a few global companies and share standard operating procedures
for navigation, air traffic control, maintenance, and other operations. Other global systems are similarly
coordinated such as the Universal Postal Union, praised by the anarchist Peter
Kropotkin. More recently is the World Wide Web, where billions of daily internet
activities (also mobile phone calls) are possible because of shared protocols.
Both the scale and reliability of these globally connected high-tech systems
are astounding, and depend on solutions implemented internationally, not
country by country. Our capacity for cooperation definitely offers some hope.