Sunday, October 24, 2021

The Future We Want


 Environmental destruction is always a consequence of capitalism. The only sure cure for the climate crisis is the replacement of a society based on accumulation for a profit with one based on production for need. It is the mad drive of capitalists to accumulate capital that is now threatening the very thing on which human life depends - our planet’s health.

In the fierce commercial war where businesses compete with one another, the blind drive of capitalists to keep ahead of each other, the collateral damage is the environment’s eco-systems. People attending COP26 hope the 'great and good' will listen to reason and many wait patiently for the solutions. Many eco-activists trusts that capitalism can control carbon emissions but a socialist understanding of the economic system might help enlighten them a bit more. None of the solutions on offer will save the planet or stop climate catastrophes.

Climate change causes species extinction on a scale hitherto unknown and it is costing lives across the world. malaria, dengue, tick-borne diseases, zoonotic plagues related to Covid are spreading. Changes in climate are resulting in more numerous and intense hurricanes, droughts and floods inflicting increased suffering and misery. The huge devastation and death is being wreaked upon people around the world. The extreme weather is being caused by the capitalist system, largely by burning fossil fuels, which has made storms far more potent and powerful. Sea levels are on the rise, vast regions may be too hot for human habitation and millions of climate refugees can be expected to be on the move. Thus, for good reason, socialists often emphasise a “dystopian” future if capitalism is not replaced, rather than an emancipatory vision of the future that the socialist movement once espoused.

 Capitalism has simply proven incapable of stopping or limiting the detrimental impact of global warming. The engine of capitalism is profits, competition and the need for each business to grow and expand. “Accumulate, accumulate, that is Moses and the prophets” as Marx said. It is an inherent law of capitalism.

Capitalism is driven by its hunger for profits. Investment decisions are made on the basis of what will make the greatest return in the quickest time. Capitalism is based on the cheapest and fastest exploitation of labour and nature and the endless expansion of exchange value. The business-as-usual pursuit of profits and growth is destabilising life on earth and is no longer something we need to read about in scholarly journals. We witness the signs unfolding before our very eyes. 

Lifestyle changes and campaigns against consumerism miss the point. It is not about consuming less for most of us. It is about ensuring capitalism doesn’t consume the planet. The World Socialist Movement is trying to win over environmentalists to revolutionary change. Our civilisation is being sacrificed for the opportunity of a very small number of people to continue making enormous amounts of money. Our biosphere is being sacrificed so that rich people can live in opulence. It is the sufferings of the many, which pay for the luxuries of the few.

A global economy that requires constant expansion of markets and increased production, has to be transformed at its roots. We’ll have to develop an economic structure fundamentally different and more equitable than we have now. Until we start focusing on what needs to be done, rather than what is politically possible, there is no hope. Solutions within the system are implausible and so we should change the system itself.

Too often many green-minded activists advocate de-growth and austerity, rejecting technology rather than acknowledging society’s capacity for the abundance that could abolish poverty and offer freedom from drudgery and toil.

 The WSM hold that the potential of prosperity and abundance is the key to mobilising our fellow workers to the socialist cause, not depictions of compulsory rationing. Socialism means the goal is to transform the relations of production, to usher in new relations of consumption. We place the environmentalist shaming about overconsumption into perspective for the deprived slum-dwellers and poverty-stricken around the world where so many endure lives based on under-consumption.

 Nor is socialist abundance about the “abundance” of material goods and mere objects, but the relationships between work and the individual to acquire more free time for social interactions concentrating resources upon healthcare, childcare, and care for the elderly and infirm, making care a primary purpose of society.

We have not come to COP26 in Glasgow to beg world leaders to care. They have ignored us in the past and will ignore us yet again. They have run out of excuses, and we are running out of time. 

We have come here to let you know that change is coming, whether you like it or not. The real power belongs to working people. We cannot achieve a socialist zero-growth steady-state economy simply by citing the latest climate science statistic and hope that will be sufficient to awaken the need for change. The World  Socialist Movement needs to convince people of a more inspiring and positive future where the basic premise that our universal access to our basic needs (food, energy, housing, healthcare, companionship, leisure) can still be built by organising production integrated with our ecological knowledge.

What can the Socialist Party do?

 

ABOLISH WAGE SLAVERY 

The aim of the Socialist Party is to help make a social revolution and put an end to capitalism. Standing in the way of socialism is the capitalist class. In making the social revolution, the capitalist class is our main enemy. It is the ruling class that holds state power and is principally responsible for the hardships facing working people. Against this minority stands the vast majority of the rest of the population. Capitalism is characterised by the division of people into classes according to their role in the production and distribution of social wealth. In a capitalist society, the capitalist class and the working class are the two basic classes. The capitalist class owns the means of production and holds state power. Through their ownership and control of the means of production they control the economic life and live off the profits they squeeze from the working class.


The working class is composed of all wage-earners - mental and manual, urban and rural - whether in basic industry, manufacturing, service, farm, sales, domestic, clerical, public or other jobs. The working class is composed of skilled and unskilled, employed and unemployed.


Although the capitalists rule, they do not do so through open violence and terror. Working people enjoy a wide range of democratic rights - we can vote in regular elections, we can organise trade unions and political parties, we can set up protest groups, publish newspapers and leaflets, go on strike, hold meetings and demonstrations, and travel freely around the country. If we get arrested for anything, we are not held in detention without trial and we have the right to legal defence. These rights are vital for the working class to defend and promote its interests. Without the rights to form trade unions and to strike we would be at the absolute mercy of every whim of the employers.


But these rights have not always existed. Nor were they generously granted by the employing class. They have been fought for with great effort and sacrifice by many generations of working people in a struggle that goes back to Chartism and the reform campaigns and the formation of trade unions. Despite the importance of the democratic rights that we have won over the years, the working class can never achieve complete political freedom under capitalism. In this society, only the capitalists have the money, time, knowledge and influence to use capitalist democracy to the full. The government of today serves the interests of the ruling capitalist class. No matter which party is in power, the state apparatus - parliament, government departments, the courts, prisons, police and armed forces - protects capitalist private property and administers the capitalist economy. In every major industrial dispute, the state has taken sides with the bosses against the workers. The State organises infrastructure - roads, airports, communications, ports - funds research and development and manages economic conditions inflation, interest rates, exchange rates - to promote capitalist accumulation, "the economy". From control and manipulation of the media to the education system, the State spreads an ideology of respect for private property, individualism and the law, that the rich are entitled to their wealth and that the government should be left to govern.


The Socialist Party is internationalist. We are carrying out the socialist revolution in Britain and elsewhere to make our contribution to the struggle of the workers of the world to bring about the dawn of cooperative commonwealth.


Parliamentary elections provide an opportunity for the capitalist class to test their ability to deceive the masses of the people. Every few years we are asked to choose between capitalist parties offering minor variations of the same diet of falling wages, reduced social services, poverty and desperation for many, and support for imperialist wars., many people feel obliged to support one of the capitalist parliamentary parties as “ the lesser evil. This is mistaken, however, as it strengthens those forces that are trying to defeat us. The Socialist Party does not shy away from the electoral struggle, however. We do not seek salvation in the false promises of the capitalist parties. We see the election as an opportunity to criticise capitalism, but not with empty phrases.


Every political party defends the interest of one class or another in society. On all questions, in every battle, the Socialist Party defends the interests of the working class and works to prepare its victory over the capitalists. The Socialist Party’s role is to educate, organise and mobilise the working class. 



Saturday, October 23, 2021

Deadline Glasgow

 


Capitalism is an enormously wasteful system of production, which is geared towards competition in the market, and to making profits. Corporations engage in practices that destroy the environment as they need to make the maximum profit possible. Apart from the legal obligation to do so on many companies, the capitalist system enforces the imperative that corporations must grow or die.  We have witnessed decades of climate conferences passing pious resolutions to halt global warming and environmental destruction yet both remain serious issues requiring urgent action because capitalist production is for profit and capitalists will not reduce carbon emissions if that reduces profits. The truth is that only through abolishing capitalism and building a society that produces for human needs instead of profit, does humanity have any chance of thriving. Only in a society where the means of production are social property and production is for human need, where states and borders are abolished and control is by a system of working people themselves can we begin to reverse the terrible damage which capitalism has inflicted on the planet.

 

 Capitalism is an economic structure based on private property, wage labour and production for profit that has become a fetter preventing humanity from addressing the urgent problems facing the whole planet. Capitalism's relentless pursuit of profit at the expense of the wider welfare of people and their natural surroundings. Things are only going to get worse as long as capitalism carries on.  The ruling will never find answers to the ills of this profit-driven system. And as well-intentioned as many of the campaigners on the streets may be, their whole strategy comes down to lobbying politicians to repair the unfixable. The protesters’ demands fall upon deaf ears because their appeals run counter to  the basic laws of the capitalist system itself, which is to make a profit

 

Some of the more radical elements demand that the government legislate the Green New Deal, government investment in green businesses, incentives for renewable energy, and tax breaks for those who engage in carbon off-setting and trading carbon credits on the stock market. Even if capitalism could somehow be successfully reformed to curb climate change, the decision would have to be made globally and agreed by all countries to have any effect – something that individual nations have not been able to fully accomplish domestically, much less regards rival competing national economies.

 

 Furthermore, as Michael Moore’s movie “Planet of the Humans” points out, many of the solutions favoured by the green movement involve environmental destruction and pollution themselves and much of the alternative ‘green’ technologies require scarce resources and are manufactured conventionally using methods that contribute to global warming. Unless the fact that capitalism requires continual growth and each company and country is in competition to gain a competitive advantage over its rivals is accepted as the chief cause of global warming, then environmentalists are chasing their own tails with lobbying governments.

 

The planet will not be saved without getting rid of capitalism. No meaningful changes under capitalism can be achieved which will curb climate change. It cannot be stated often enough that capitalism is only concerned with short term profits.  For CEOs, it’s more important to accumulate capital and make profits than for children to grow up in a healthy world.


The World Socialist Movement insists that only a world society is based on the production of human needs instead of profit. Humanity lives in a relationship with nature, and capitalism threatens that existence. Attempting to reform elements of capitalism while production for profit remains can only lead to failure. We need to start producing for human needs in a globally planned way. This means the overthrow of this insane economic system.

Capitalism. A System of Injustices

 


A handful of capitalists control the world’s economy and make vast profits on the labour of the working people and the natural resources of the planet. All the major means of production - the factories, forests, farms, fisheries and mines are in the hands of a few corporations and several hundred capitalists who lord over huge personal fortunes accumulated from the backs of the working class. Capitalism is a system of exploitation. A handful of parasites live off the backs of the workers and could not care less about their situation. This is how they come to pocket billions in profits. Every bit of the capitalists' vast wealth was stolen from the working people. The capitalists get rich from the fruit of our labour.


Working people make up the overwhelming majority of the world's population. But in nearly every country they are the oppressed majority, labouring to support the luxury of a handful of exploiters. More than 800 million people are on the verge of starvation, while the gap between rich and poor is widening. The problems of capitalism - exploitation, the anarchy of production, speculation and crisis, oppression and the whole system of injustice - arise from the self-interest of the tiny group of monopoly capitalists


At the end of the week, a worker collects their pay and the capitalists and their flunkey economists claim this is a fair exchange. But it is highway robbery. In reality, workers get paid for only a small part of what they produce. The rest, the surplus-value, goes straight into the hands of the capitalist class.


The bosses get rich, not because they have "taken risks" or "worked harder," as they would have us believe. The more they keep wages down and get fewer workers to do more work, the more they can steal from us and the greater their profits. If the bosses think they can make more profit somewhere else, they just close their factories and throw the workers out on the street. Capitalism is a system of international exploitation and investing their capital abroad, as "transnational" corporations. They penetrate foreign markets and plunder the natural resources of developing countries. They also attempt to dominate other countries politically and to a degree militarily. This international exploitation brings enormous profits for the big corporations and wretched lives for the people of the developing world.


Capitalism is a system of economic anarchy and crisis and is plagued by periodic economic crises, such as recessions, which are becoming more serious and complex. It is the very nature of each business to try to maximise its profits. Economic crises are aggravated by speculation, hoarding and other schemes of the bankers, financiers and industrialists. Each tries to profit in the short run, but their individual greed eventually throws the whole system into turmoil, leading the working class and people to suffer. This anarchic system wastes a great deal of social wealth. Capitalism is an obstacle to the further advancement of the material well-being of society. It is unjust, wasteful, irrational and increasingly unproductive. In the face of economic crisis, capitalism has always tried to put the burden of the crisis onto the shoulders of working people. It has tried wage freezes, social contracts, cuts in benefits, increases in taxation, cuts in expenditure on health and education, and bail-outs to business. For working people the future is less and less certain. Wages fall or remain stagnant while hours increase and working conditions deteriorate.


Capitalism means an insecure and uncertain future. People live in misery so a small number of very wealthy individuals can live in luxury. The idea that everyone can get rich under this system is a lie invented by the rich themselves. Under capitalism, the only way to get rich is to trample on someone else. There is only room for a few capitalists - at any time the great majority must work and be robbed.


The elderly and the disabled are also treated unfairly. The elderly toil their entire lives, but after retirement, they lead lives of fear and worry. Capitalism has no regard for its senior citizens; once it has squeezed the working life out of the workers they are tossed away. The capitalist society also callously mistreats disabled people because everything is geared to the drive for profits. For the young, access to higher education is becoming increasingly restricted.


This exploitative and oppressive system, where profit is master, has choked our entire society with economic crises, political reactions and social decay. The drive for profits holds thousands hostage to hunger and want; it has poisoned the very air that we breathe and water that we drink; it spawns cynicism and violence, substance abuse, and crime.


This is why workers have only one choice: either submit to this wage slavery or fight it.


Capitalism has created the economic conditions for socialism. Today the whole system of production is socially interdependent, but it is controlled by private owners. In place of private control of social production, there must be common ownership if society's problems are to be addressed.


Socialism will be won through the political power of the working class. Having overcome the capitalist class, the working people will take over the economic forces developed by capitalism and operate them in the interests of society. Socialism will be a better society, one which will present unprecedented possibilities for the improvement of common peoples' lives. Because working people will control the great wealth they produce, they will be fundamentally able to determine their own futures. The end of exploitation of one person by another will be a resounding liberating and transforming force. Socialism will not mean government control. Today we often hear of government control or intervention as "creeping socialism". But the State serves the interests of the ruling class.


The economy will be planned to serve human needs rather than simply profit and luxury consumption by the rich. This will release the productive capacity of the economy from the limitations of profit maximisation. A great expansion in useful production will occur. Rational planning will replace anarchy and will aim at building an economy that will benefit the people. With socialism, goods and services will be distributed on the basis of from each according to their ability, to each according to their needs. Transforming productive enterprises from private to common ownership will allow workers to manage democratically their own workplaces through workers' councils and elected administrators, in place of the myriad of bureaucrats and management consultants today. In this way, workers will be able to make their workplaces safe and efficient places that can serve their own interests as well as society. Socialist democracy would be far broader than what is possible today because the voices of the people would be heard, not simply those of the rich.



Friday, October 22, 2021

Buses to Glasgow COP26 March

 


Edinburgh Coach Tickets for the Glasgow March for Climate Justice Sat 6 Nov Tickets, Sat 6 Nov 2021 at 09:30 | Eventbrite


This is what we want

 


We want peace instead of violence and destruction.

We want security instead of insecurity and the terror of not knowing today whether or not we will have a job tomorrow.

We want to be able to raise our families in decent homes and good schools.

We want comfort instead of low living standards, slums,  unemployment and hunger. We want democracy and freedom, instead of regimentation and bureaucracy.

But we don’t have them. We live in a modern world with vast industries all over the land. We have undreamed natural resources. We have trained and skilled workers. We can produce in one day. what it took our ancestors years to produce. Yet we do not have universal prosperity. Instead, we produced the most terrifying means of destroying life, destroying wealth, destroying whole peoples and nations; bullets and bombs. Capitalism works very well indeed to wage war, to kill and maim, to destroy and devastate. Capitalism is at its best when it is at its worst.

It is the capitalist social system that stands in the way. Under that system, a handful of employers and owners control all the wealth and power. This handful possesses industry, banking, mining, transportation. Whoever owns all these things, controls our lives, the lives of you and me and all others. That’s the best that capitalism offers you. That’s how practical and realistic capitalism is. That is what capitalism offers you. If that is what you want.

We in the Socialist Party believe there is an alternative. The alternative to capitalist exploitation and government is socialism. We want to take over the industries built by us – by us and nobody else. We want to take over the wealth produced by us – by us and nobody else. We want to, and we can run industry to produce for us, for the needs and comforts of the people, and not for the swollen profits of the corporations. Without capitalism and capitalist profit, we can put an end to these horrible wars. They are caused by economic rivalry and by the lust of every capitalist to dominate the wealth of the world. Our marvellous machinery performed the terrible miracles of war production. We can make it perform far greater miracles to provide plenty for all, homes fit to live in, comforts and prosperity, self-respect and human dignity.

Those are the things we all want. They are the things socialism stands for. They are the things that we, the Socialist Party, stand for.

 A load of nonsense masquerades as 'socialism'.

The Labour party is not now and never was a socialist party. It is a party of capitalism with reforms. They are a capitalist party of government and all government is over the people in the interests of ruling class elites. The Labour party has not proved an exception to this fact.

Capitalism can not be reformed. It has to be replaced. The rules of the economy — the capitalist economy — cannot be “rewritten” to stop profits and profit-making having to have priority.

Where you have got class ownership of productive resources and production for sale with the aim of making a profit, definite economic laws come into operation which acts with the force of laws of nature and impose themselves on governments, whatever governments may want to do (or have pledged).

Governments do not control the way the economy works; it’s the other way round. Governments have to conform to the imperative of allowing profit-making to continue unless they want to provoke an economic downturn. In the end, all governments are compelled to recognise and act on this. A Corbyn government (if it ever happens) would discover this is within a couple of years.

Capitalism simply cannot be reworked so that it works for everyone. It is a profit-making system that can only work in the interest of the few who live off profits.

Socialism is an advanced, post-capitalist society, run by us all, locally, regionally, globally, in administration over resources and not a government over people.

It is not in the power of political parties to bring in socialism. Socialism properly understood, is not in the gift of politicians in some top-down arrangement. None of the political parties of government represents the interests of the immense majority worlds working class. It is a fallacy that changing the demographic make-up of any of those parties will make this so. The existence of any government whether democratic or dictatorial implies the existence of a ruling class elite in whose interests all government is exercised over the electorate in the management of social discontent at home, by breaking heads or minds as required, by use of the repressive and or ideological apparatus of the state, and to wage wars abroad in the procurement of, or defence of, trade routes, raw materials, markets and spheres of geopolitical advantage. The notion that the working class can ever have its interests represented by parties aspiring to govern over them is absurd, regardless of the sincerity of any of the individual political aspirants.

Socialism is revolutionary. It is not a ‘reformist’ nor a ‘statist’ version of capitalism that retains wage slavery in any form.

Socialism is an advanced, post-capitalist society, run by us all, locally, regionally, globally, in administration over resources and not a government over people.

It is a market-free, money-free, production for use (not for sale), free access (not rationed access) commonly owned,(not private, corporate or state-owned) revolutionary permanent break with the present capitalist one.

It has never existed anywhere. It will not be a social experiment but a social revolution.

It is not a ‘reformist’ nor a ‘statist’ version of capitalism that retains wage slavery in any form.

It is the mature, politically conscious task of the immense majority to make it happen and not the minority vanguardist led actions of pseudo-revolutionaries.

“The organising tenet will be from each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs.”

If there are wages and salaries, it is not socialism/communism.
State ownership is not socialism/communism.
Social programs are not socialism/communism.
Socialism/communism means democracy at all levels of society, including the workplace.
Socialism/communism means a wageless, moneyless society.
Socialism/communism means voluntary labour.
Socialism/communism means free access to the goods produced by society.