Sunday, January 18, 2015

Capitalism must go

Socialism has gone beyond the patchwork of anti-capitalist slogans, utopian proposals, and romantic hopes. One group of workers co-opting a factory in a capitalist society doth not a revolution maketh. Let's imagine a single factory closes down, and is occupied, taken over and self-managed by its workers. This may or may not be a good thing; Even those most critical of self-management would not begrudge workers trying to survive, although some may argue occupying to demand a higher severance package would be a better approach than assuming management of a failing firm. But a single act like this doesn't challenge the totality of capitalist relations, it would just swap a vertically managed firm for a horizontally managed one, leaving the 'totality' of the system unchanged.
 However, if factory takeovers were happening on a mass scale, such that they could start doing away with commercial/commodity relations between them; and at the same time there were mass refusals to pay rent/mortgages and militant defence of this resistance from the States subsequent coercion subsequent... And if this was happening across several countries then we might be looking at a social movement at the level of toppling state power, superseding commercial relations, making possible social reproduction (housing, food, health) without mediation by money, self-management of the activities necessary for this (rather than self-management of commodity production and wage labour). This would only be the case to the extent the movement grows and extends; if it was contained within a couple of countries say, then the movement could go into reverse and the acts may lose their revolutionary transformative character.

Self-management of production within capitalism can be seen as an integral part of the revolutionary process only if it becomes part of a greater social political movement where capitalism is challenged in other ways and only if there are as soon as possible moves made to abolish wages and markets. Self-managed industry operating under a market system by definition does not involve the undermining of exchange relations, value - workers are continuing to sell their labour-power on the market; their relationship to capital is little different to if they worked for a private capitalist.

Another argument which comes up when discussing struggles against the closure of workplaces due to unprofitability or capital flight is that the conditions that made the business unprofitable doesn't vanish, so long as the workplace still exists to sell stuff on the market (and workers continue to sell their labour-power on the market). The most that can be achieved by occupying and self-managing the workplace in such a context is to keep on working, competing with other producers on the market, subject to the same market conditions that made the workplace close in the first place only with workers enforcing pay cuts and job cuts on themselves, rather than a boss doing it.

Defenders of capitalism often say that socialists fail to recognise gains under capitalism that make socialism unnecessary. This sort of criticism is considered superficial, not because its claim to progress under capitalism is unfounded but because it fails to meet the major point of socialism that, whatever the record of economic progress under capitalism, the existence of private property and the profit motive inherently limit the potential of capitalism to serve human needs in an adequate way.

Socialism tends not to offer a blueprint of the future organisation of society and hold the belief that working people, once given the chance, are able to democratically choose their own path. Socialism remains an impossible dream only to those who denounce it as utopian even though every advance in technology and science turns the potential into more of a reality that is possible to realise. Today's production of goods in abundance and the accompanying knowledge, have transformed the utopias of an earlier time into practical alternatives to our everyday existence. The trouble with capitalism is that in this system production is for exchange not consumption. The merchants offer food to sell, not for people to eat. If you've got money to buy this food then you won't starve. If you have no money you will. This explains famine in Africa and the slow increase in malnutrition starting to show itself in Europe. It's a shortage of money not a shortage of food.

Inside a socialist society the major aim initially will be to produce enough food to feed everyone. That's all of us; the whole of humanity, all over the globe. Planned production worldwide will do away with malnourishment and starvation forever. Capitalism could never achieve this spectacular improvement in everyday life if they lasted another hundred years, because they only produce things to sell. That is the sad heart of this miserable life destroying system called capitalism. It's just production for exchange, so the ruling class can collect the profits contained in the commodities they sell. They have no interest in people's needs. Just their own greed for profit. We need is more and more planned production, so that all human needs can be satisfied and humanity grow, mentally and physically, so that its enormous and as yet untapped potential can begin to be realised. It's the same with health and education. With communism we will produce more hospitals and better schools so that everyone can have a proper chance to grow. We will produce better people and a better society!


Saturday, January 17, 2015

Neither the Saltire or Union Jack but the Red Flag (video)

We may take issue with Maxton and Hardie being included in the ranks of Marxists but the anti-nationalist sentiments of the song, can be shared by many in the Socialist Party .

British Threat

After raids on a Jihadi cell which appears to have been planning to murder officers There are fears that  the British police may be the target of an attack similar to that which was narrowly averted in Belgium. 'Worryingly for authorities fears that, the suspects had police uniforms and radios in their possession. The elevation of the threat level brings the police service in line with the general threat level which has been at severe for some time.' (Daily Telegraph, 16 January) There are just as many crazy terrorists in Britain as in France or Belgium. RD

More Platitudes

In a new book edited by the Archbishop of York, the Archbishops of Canterbury and York have called for an end to "income inequality" in the UK, warning that some people and communities are being left behind. 'In his essay collection, called On Rock or Sand? Firm Foundations for Britain's Future, the Most Rev John Sentamu says the country is facing "a new poverty". Dr Sentamu writes: "The poor in this 'age of austerity' experience what I call a 'new poverty', where many of the 'new poor' are in work. "Once upon a time, you couldn't really be living in poverty if you had regular wages. You could find yourself on a low income, but not living in poverty. That is no longer so." (BBC News, 15 January) Men of the cloth are forever uttering platitudes about poverty but of course they all support the system that produces poverty. RD

Whisleblowers Beware

A paramedic whistleblower has been banned from two hospitals after he reported overcrowding in A&E. Stuart Gardner, of West Midlands Ambulance Service, received the ban after  telling the BBC under-pressure emergency units were "not safe". 'He said the chief operating officer (COO) of Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust has told him he was "not welcome" on either of its sites. The trust said the ban was imposed as Mr Gardner's comments had upset staff.' (BBC News, 15 January) Things have come to a strange conclusion when whistleblowers are disciplined for doing what their job dictates they should be doing. RD

For a social revolution


One of the successes of the capitalists is convincing us to accept the status quo as normal - inevitable even - and forgetting just how absurd a system it is. Inequality is at grotesque levels. 1% owned 40% of all wealth and the top 10% owned 85%. Meanwhile, the poorest 50 percent--half the world's population--own barely 1% of all wealth. It is impossible to justify such vast wealth when 800 million people go to bed hungry every night. This is getting to the heart of what is so crazy about capitalism, the gap between what is possible and today’s reality. Take food production. There's enough food produced in the world to make everyone fat, yet millions of people starve. The logic of the system is that the food must be destroyed rather than given away at a loss, or otherwise profits would suffer. When they say socialism will never work, socialists simply ask: Exactly how is capitalism working? With capitalism this is as good as it gets. But it's not enough to just hate the capitalist system. We need to believe a better world is possible.  A socialist world, is possible, not to mention necessary if we want to survive as a species.

One way to see the potential of a future society is to look at the workers’ movements of the past that have shaken capitalism. Another kind of society is possible. And the reason we can say this with certainty is a series of historical experiences of struggles and movements that have shown--if only for a brief time--what amazing things are possible when the working class take control of society. Most of the time, as individuals, we're powerless to control most things in our lives. This is often described as apathy, but it's a pretty understandable response. Everything changes when people get a taste of their collective power. Suddenly, politics become relevant in a way they never were before. There are countless examples to show that workers are perfectly capable not only of shutting down production, but also of running things for themselves.

Socialism can only be established on a worldwide level. Capitalism is international; no country today is economically independent from the world market and thus no workers’ government would have on its own all the resources needed to produce an abundance of goods. Socialism is premised on abundance, and worldwide there is an abundance of resources to take care of everyone. In a socialist society, we would have time to focus on the things that really matter to us. We'd also have the time and energy to actively participate in making decisions about how society is run. The communications technology and corporate media that is now used primarily to sell things and perpetuate the ruling ideas of capitalism could be turned loose under public control to facilitate the most widespread and varied debate. All borders will be open and all individuals, regardless of their country of birth, will be free to live and travel wherever in the world they please. And, eventually, all our existing borders and nation-states will fade away. Human solidarity will encircle the globe and conquer it. The state will wither away because it will cease to have any role to play. Who would need to be repressed in a society without exploiters and exploited? The government over people (military, police, courts, prisons) will be replaced by the administration of things (coordination of services, distribution of goods.) A classless society is possible is that the economic and technological potential exists today to produce more than enough goods and services for everybody on this planet — an abundance. It is impossible to overstate the importance of this point. All the enormous cultural changes can only proceed from a dramatic rise in society’s economic productivity, through the use of technology to produce more quality goods, more efficiently and more sustainably. Socialism cannot be created from will alone. For millennia, people have dreamed and fought for an egalitarian social order, but all such past movements were faced with the insurmountable obstacle of the material poverty of their society. No matter who was in power there was still not enough wealth to go around. A democratically planned world economy, even with today’s level of economic development, could guarantee a decent standard of living for everybody on the planet.


Imagine growing up in a world in which you've never known exploitation or oppression, nor deprivation, a world in which the needs of people and the planet come first. Imagine living in a world where you don’t have to worry about how you will pay the bills or whether you will still have a job next month. Imagine a society freed from capitalism’s straightjacket on technology and production.
The potential for exponential progress is truly amazing — a small mobile phone today can process more data than the most powerful computer on the planet 40 years ago. A society of abundance is completely reachable — but we can’t get there until we get rid of capitalism. Imagine if you can simply walk into a well-stocked community “store” and take what you need for free (you could take more than you needed by hoarding but the only impact this would likely have is that the store would have to restock its supply.) Imagine if the principle, “From each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs.”

Friday, January 16, 2015

Who owns Scotland

400 people own half the privately held rural land in Scotland.

Having to beg for a morsel

A record number of adults and children relied upon food banks in Scotland in December, according to new figures obtained by the BBC. Nearly 10,500 people visited the Trussell Trust's 48 food banks for the first time in the charity's history.

The data also reveals a third of users cited low income - and not welfare benefit delays - for their predicament. 3,005 people (28%) said they used a Scottish food bank due to low income in December, closely followed by 2,527 (24%) because of a benefit delay, and 1,555 (15%) due to a benefit change. The Clyde, Avon and Nethan food bank reported that 77% of people given a food package in December cited low income as the main contributing factor. Many users visiting the food banks at Airdrie and Lochaber also blamed low incomes (50% and 48% respectively.)

The figure is a 13% increase from the 9,263 people who used a Trussell Trust food bank in December 2013. In December 2014, 10,489 people visiting Scottish food banks were given a three day supply of nutritionally balanced food by the charity - a third of them children. The charity underlined that the final figure for December visits is likely to be even higher as food bank staff continue to input data into their system.

Ewan Gurr, the charity's network manager for Scotland, said he was concerned that many low income families were forced to face hunger in the run-up to Christmas due to financial difficulties. He said: "Every day we are hearing working people describe the devastating reality of sustaining their families with static incomes and unstable employment against consistently rising costs of essentials like food and rent. In the most harrowing accounts, we hear from the families choosing whether to prioritise heating their homes or feeding their families and parents losing weight because they overlook their own health and wellbeing to feed their children."

The Trust, which partners with churches and communities, currently operates more than 1,200 food distribution centres across the UK. The Trust's figures also reveal Dundee had the highest number of adults (3,750) using food banks in the last year, while south east Glasgow had the highest number of children (1,975).


A government document published last month suggested low income families may face increasing financial difficulties in the future. According to the report, approximately 820,000 people were living in relative poverty in 2013 - an increase of 110,000 from the previous year. This increase in relative poverty - where someone lives in a household that receives less than 60% of the UK average income - was attributed to a continued fall in incomes. The report concluded: "Low wage growth (particularly for those in less skilled employment), changes in the labour market, and tightening of eligibility and conditionality under welfare reform have resulted in lower median income."

Belgian Intervention

Belgian authorities have thwarted plans for massive attacks on police stations, one week after 17 people were killed by Islamist gunmen in France. Police have shot dead two members of armed group and arrested another in a shootout on Thursday in the eastern city of Verviers .  'Police said the three were Belgian citizens and some of them had returned from Syria. Prosecutors said the group was about to launch attacks on a grand scale, and that they raided about 10 locations including some in the capital, Brussels, to block the plan.' (NHK WORLD News, 16 January) RD

Money Money Money

Capitalism distorts everything in modern society. Fine arts are judged by the prices they can command, sport is  evaluated by transfer fees and salaries. Reading a football report today is like studying double-entry book-keeping. Speculation about the possible transfer of Lionel Messi of Barcelona is a case in point. 'Messi's buyout clause from Barcelona is £250 million. He has more than three years left on a contract that is worth £16.3 million a year. Taking the salary and transfer fee together, then, the overall cost of any deal could be well in excess of a quarter of a billion pounds.' (Times, 14 January) To show how crazy some of these deals have become it is reported that Manchester United have a ten-year kit deal with Addidas worth £750 million. RD

Mere Doggerel

MERE DOGGEREL?                                         
Although some may dismiss it as just a piece of doggerel I remember it as being quite memorable when I first heard of the case for socialism and somehow this old burlesque rhyme has stuck with me. 'The banker calls it interest and heaves a cheerful sigh. The merchant calls it profit and winks the other eye. The landlord calls it rent as he tucks it  in his bag, but the honest old burglar simply calls it swag!'   RD       

More Prejudice

There has been an increase of 20 per cent in the past year of Jews emigrating to Israel because of antisemitic attacks and other incidents. 'The Jewish Agency said that there were 620 immigrants from Britain last year compared with 320 in 2013. This coincided with an increase by  by almost 40 per cent of recorded antisemitic incidents in Britain.' (Times, 14 January) Capitalism breeds hatred and prejudice and the main sufferers are always the workers. RD

Capitalism Must End


Today we are faced with multiple interrelated crises, for example the threat of catastrophic climate change or equally catastrophic thermonuclear war, and the threat of widespread famine. These threats to human existence and to the biosphere demand a prompt and rational response; but we are failing to take the steps that are necessary to avoid disaster.

A serious weakness among activists in movements for social change has been a lack of understanding of the true nature of the system they live under. Instead of naming capitalism as the problem activists often use vague populist terms like “the 1%,” “the rich,” “banksters,” or “greedy corporations.” But the problem runs much deeper than the corruption of any particular individual or institution. It lies in the structural foundation of the entire way of life that currently dominates the globe. This is an integral part of Socialist Party’s function; to educate people on the complex and long history of capitalism. We need to understand how it works and what the nature of the crisis is and the nature of the different moments that it passes through so that we can identify its vulnerabilities and weaknesses. We ask ‘What’s the labor theory of value?’ and say of those militant protesters ‘How can you call yourself a socialist if you don’t even know what the labor theory of value is, one of its basic concepts?”  The labor theory of value means that the exchange value of a product is based on the socially necessary amount of labor power that is generally required to produce it. But under capitalism, one of the key ingredients is surplus value. And under capitalism, the buyer of labor power — the capitalist — appropriates the surplus value generated in the process of commodity production. But theoretical clarity for its own sake is pointless intellectualism; instead, it should be a guide for action. Mastering Marxist political economy is tough enough. But putting it into action is even harder.

One increasingly urgent reason to abolish capitalism is its prominent role in harming the planet. Capitalism possesses an inherent growth imperative. This means that the normal functioning of capitalism is causing water shortages, polluted oceans, destroyed forests and ruined depleted topsoil. But even if the pending ecological catastrophe weren’t upon us, capitalism would still need to be dismantled because it’s based on exploitation. There’s no reason why the social result of production needs to be in private hands and that only a few people should own what everybody produces.

Critiques of capitalism have entered the mainstream debates, with Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century and Naomi Klein’s This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate as notable examples. Both authors, however, approach capitalism from a reformist stance and hold up social democratic versions of capitalism as viable alternatives. For sure, it is worth defending the social safety nets and more enlightened views on environmental issues. But it has to be kept emphasized that capitalism, in whatever form, is inherently destructive because it converts the natural world into commodities. And it’s inherently exploitative because profit always comes from the exploitation of workers. It doesn’t matter if you give them healthcare or a higher salary; you’re still exploiting them for private gain.

The problem with Piketty and Klein is that regardless of intention are complicit in promoting the supremacy of capitalism which remains unchallenged questioned.  They no matter how reluctantly only offer a framework that exists within the system. Their debate has to be inside that framework. Nothing can exist outside. It is not unlike when Thatcher said, ‘There is no alternative. It’s hard for people to imagine that there could be any alternative. People think this is all there is. This is the only way humans can behave. Capitalism is natural. The level of political consciousness within the working class is very low. And that didn’t happen by chance. It is by design and it’s by indoctrination and conditioning. The capitalists and their representatives in government are adept at finding new ways to squash and tamp down threats to their control. So the socialist movement has to keep evolving our tactics as well. The Occupy movement provided a glimpse at what’s possible. It made people realize they can rise up and take collective action. It was very inspiring to people for that reason. It made people feel good that they weren’t alone and it showed the potential of what could happen. But Occupy also was a learning experience. It expressed the discontent, it showed the weakness and the need to be stronger. But if we’re actually going to go up against the system, it can’t just be a spontaneous gathering of a bunch of people. It has to be organized — planned and strategic.

Many are pessimistic about the prospect of a socialist revolution, probably with a certain amount of justification, and they know that eradicating capitalism is a long shot. But it’s our only shot. The reason that socialists are politically active is because there’s nothing else. The only other alternative is to give up, surrender and submit to a slow death for ourselves and our planet.  When we accept things the way they are we’ll end up in a worse situation. If a person really understands what’s going on, he or she cannot stand idle. It’s a matter of human dignity and it becomes part of our historical social responsibility to try and change things. Accepting things the way they are would mean allowing 10 million children under the age of five to die annually because, under the normal functioning of global capitalism, it’s not profitable to save them. It would mean continuing to accept racism, which has always been central to capitalism’s divide and rule manner of domination and control. It means the acceptance of capitalism’s expansion and the unremitting accumulation of capital.


We should never forget that we are potentially stronger than they. We outnumber them. But equally important, we have right on our side.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Capitalism Is Unpredictable

All sorts of self-styled experts claim that they can predict how capitalism operates, but recent developments in the North Sea illustrate how wild that boast really is. Energy firms are pulling the plug on billions of pounds worth of investment in the North Sea, as industry leaders prepare to meet ministers to discuss mounting jobs crisis caused by plummeting oil prices. 'In the latest blow for Scotland's oil industry, the Edinburgh-based global consultancy firm Wood Mackenzie said nine projects that had been earmarked as requiring £2 billion of investment over the next two years and had been awaiting final approval could be axed as a direct result of the dramatic decline in global prices over the last six months. (Herald, 14 January) Capitalism's booms and slumps leave the so-called experts clueless. RD

Anti Semitism

Capitalism is a society based on competition and conflict so it comes as no suprise to learn that anti-semitic views that seem outdated are being revived by recent events. A YouGov poll showed that 45 per cent of Britons agreed with at least one of four anti semitic statements put to them. 'Some 25 per cent agreed with the idea that "Jews chase money more than other British people" while one in five accepted as true that "Jews'  loyalty to Israel makes them less loyal to Britain than other British people". A further 13 per cent said of those surveyed in the poll commissioned by the Campaign Against Anti Semitism (CAA) agreed that 'Jews talk about the Holocaust too much in order to get sympathy'. (Independent, 14 January) All of this nonsense splits workers apart.  RD

Housing Shortage

After World War Two the UK used to build more than 300,000 new homes a year, but recently it's managed about half that. Consequently the country is facing up to a major house building crisis. 'A decade ago, the Barker Review of Housing Supply noted that about 250,000 homes needed to be built every year to prevent spiralling house prices and a shortage of affordable homes. That target has been consistently missed - the closest the UK got was in 2006-07 when 219,000 homes were built. In 2012-13, the UK hit a post-war low of 135,500 homes, much of which was due to the financial crisis.'  (BBC News, 13 January)Needless to say the main sufferers of this housing shortage are once again the working class. RD

Looking Forward

Growing numbers of people are concerned about the state of the world and the fate of the planet. Do things have to be this way? No, there is a real world alternative: socialism. Granted none of us will live to see Socialism, and like millions before us we will probably die without seeing that really better world we long and struggle for. The vision of a socialist Utopia was around long before Marx and continues to this day, although today it exists only by a thread. We all know that Marx founded “scientific socialism” in order to replace “Utopian socialism”, but as a matter of fact, he had some pretty complimentary things to say about Owen, Fourier and Co. We all know that for Marx the foundation of socialism was not the counterposing to the real of an imaginary Utopia, but rather a critique of existing social conditions. This is the great contribution that Marx made to the world. There are people hungering for an alternative to this system. We are bombarded with the idea that there is no alternative, that capitalism is the natural order of things. We are told that as much as capitalism has problems, any attempts to get rid of it will make things far worse.

We live in a world in which 35,000 children die each and every day of malnutrition and preventable disease. We live in a world system in which the three richest Americans control assets exceeding the combined gross domestic product of the 40 poorest countries in the world. We live on a planet whose ecosystems is threatened by the blind workings of an economic system that takes profit as its measure and motor of development. The question is: Do we have to live this way? Can you really radically change things? But it is a problem if people think they have a basis for an opinion about the desirability or viability of socialism, first you need to know what it is. Imagine a society where people consciously learn about and transform the world...where people are no longer imprisoned by the chains of tradition and ignorance...where people not only cooperatively work to produce the necessities of life, but get into art and culture and science—and have fun doing it...where the scientific outlook and the flight of imagination strengthen and inspire each other...where there is unity and diversity, far-ranging debate, and ideological struggle over the direction and development of society—but no longer stamped by social antagonism...where people interact with each other based on mutual respect, concern, and love for humanity. A world that cares about and takes care of the environment. That is socialism.

Socialism is a worldwide society and a community of freely associating human beings — and it is yet to be achieved—in which all classes and class distinctions have been overcome; all systems and relations of exploitation abolished; all oppressive social institutions and relations of social inequality, like racial discrimination and the domination of women by men, put an end to; and oppressive and backward ideas and values cast off. Socialism is a world of abundance, where people together hold all of society's resources in common. Socialism is not some sort of wishful and airy dream or utopia. The productive forces of society—not just machinery, equipment, and technology but also people and their knowledge—have developed to a level that can allow humanity to overcome scarcity, to provide for people's basic material needs, and beyond that to have a large surplus left over to devote to the all-around and future development of society. The productive forces of society are highly socialized. They require thousands and ultimately millions working together to mass-produce the things—whether we are talking about clothing or computers—that are used by people throughout society. And these productive forces are highly interconnected on an international level: raw materials and transistors and machine tools produced in one part of the world enter into the production process in other parts of the world. But these socialized productive forces are privately controlled. A capitalist class of owners appropriates the results of production as private, capitalist property. This is the fundamental problem in the world. And this is what socialism solves. People are unleashed to run and transform society. This is a society in which you want and need. People must feel that they have room to disagree with those in authority. And socialist society must make available the resources and outlets, so people can express these views. Socialist society is organized to achieve the goal of abolishing all classes and class distinctions; overcoming all systems and relations of exploitation; overcoming all oppressive social institutions and relations enabling people to cast off all oppressive and enslaving ideas and values.

We should not assume that such a future socialist society would be without conflicts between people or without problems. Socialism don’t make all problems disappear and create a perfect world; they only solve those problems which stem from class-based society and specifically, capitalism. Mankind already faces many challenges which are not a direct result of capitalism, yet cannot be solved because of capitalism’s peculiarities. Socialism does not automatically solve these issues, but rather it merely removes the barriers to solving them. There are some who wish to sell the workers an ideal Utopia. The Keynesians believe free-market principles plus prudent government intervention and regulation will simultaneously delivering hefty profits to the capitalist class and social welfare benefits to the poorest. While others of the more right-wing “libertarian” variety promise that the elimination of virtually all government interference with the market will lead to widespread prosperity, an idea which is not much more ludicrous than the previous. The more progressive of the dreamers offer us future communities based on state ownership, both national and municipal, plus cooperatives and worker-owned enterprises , with little explanations as to how they will be achieved and with few ideas of how to put such into practice that can put a dent in capitalist global domination.

We must dream socialist dreams. It’s the dreams of the future that give us the strength to fight in the present. The goal of socialism and of the struggle of the working class is freedom. Freedom from hunger and poverty, freedom endless toil, from exploitation, freedom from war, from racism and sexism, freedom to live without the supervision of the state - these are the freedoms.


The purpose of production in socialism is to produce products to meet the needs of the people. Thus, socialism represents a fundamental change in the capitalist relations of production: it is the opposite of capitalism which exists to make profits for the few. State ownership simply means that the state has effective control over the means of production and in no way implies a change in the relations of production. Marx distinguished judicial change of ownership from real change in the relations of production. He cared little of who actually had the property deeds to an enterprise which was merely the legal aspect, not the real form. There is also a myth that in the capitalist countries there is a "free enterprise system" which solely relies on the market mechanism to function. Planning is not the opposite of market, the two complement each other in a capitalist system. State participation in economic planning is extensive. Government intervention either through ownership or planning, cannot, however, change the fundamental nature of capitalism. Many reformists have the wishful thinking that the state can play a major role in altering the purpose of production from capital accumulation to meeting the needs of the people. They fail to realise that capital accumulation is fundamental to the capitalist system; it cannot be altered at will. Instead, the state plays an important role in facilitating the accumulation of capital.

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

How they own....from your labour


Health Threat

A charity is warning that poor diabetes care in England is leading to avoidable deaths, record rates of complications and huge costs to the NHS, . 'Diabetes UK says the disease is the fastest growing health threat of our times and current care models are not working to get on top of the problem. The NHS spends a tenth of its budget on diabetes, but most goes on managing complications not preventing them. Diabetes is a chronic condition and, if poorly managed, can lead to devastating complications, including blindness, amputations, kidney failure, stroke and early death. (BBC News, 14 January) Another example of the ruthless disregard for the health of the workers. RD

Terminally Ill Left To Die

A NHS report disclosed that 57 patients died after their calls were downgraded after a decision to not to send terminally ill ambulances. 'More than 50 patients have died after an NHS trust introduced a secret policy to downgrade 999 calls and not send ambulances to terminally ill patients. managers at East of England ambulances were accused of "the most cruel form of rationing imaginable" after admitting that 8,000 patients had been affected by the changes.' (Daily Telegraph, 13 January) This callous treatment is typical of how the working class are treated. RD

Coalition Split

As the general election approaches the Liberal Democrats are distancing themselves from Tory spending plans. According to them these cuts beyond 2017-18 will lead to "Dickensian" public services, the Liberal Democrat chief secretary, Danny Alexander, said in comments exposing coalition splits over public spending and the deficit. 'Alexander said that "as a country we should not be wedded to austerity for austerity's stake", adding that he thought the UK would not support an ideological drive for an ever smaller state." (Guardian, 13 January) The coalition was committed to eliminating the current structural deficit by 2017-18, a target that would require cuts of £30bn, he said, but it would be "grossly unfair" to try to reach that figure by spending reductions alone, with £12bn of those cuts coming from welfare. Despite all the fine words both parties are committed to gigantic welfare cuts. RD

Peering into the Future


What does the socialist society of tomorrow look like?

Many who advocate a socialist system are hesitant to talk about what such a society might look like, however, the discussion on how socialism will work is as old as the workers’ movement. Marx once said it was not for socialists to describe “the recipes of the cookshops of the future”, that a future society must emerge from those who are actually creating socialism and not from a wishful imagination. In general this aversion to drawing up blueprints has been healthy, in the respect that we cannot predict the specifics of the revolutionary situation and it is not the business of socialists at this moment in time to tell those who will be engaged in the socialist revolution how they should construct their post-revolutionary economy. We're not going to get a blueprint of socialism from Marx who knew that something would come after capitalism...
… Yet he did make some predictions about what it could be like, and those are the very famous pieces of his speculations about future society that he divided into two phases where the first involved labour tokens and an accounting system to determine how much workers would get paid. But they're very small compared to the majority of his work, which is just about understanding capitalism. What socialists should decline to do is to lay down detailed instructions for every minutia of daily life in socialism. It may be difficult to draw up our vision of future society and a degree of confrontation with differences of opinion. But if we're serious about revolution, we have to be serious about what we want and how we propose to get there. The important thing is that a practical alternative is shown. We can easily alter it on the way taking into account new experiences and the new lessons to be learned from them.
A socialist economy would for the first time give people, as producers and users, the chance to control every step of production, take initiatives and experiment without being strangled by profit-driven competition. Each productive enterprise is managed by those who work there. Workers are responsible for the operation of the facility and organisation of the workplace. Though workers manage the workplace, they do not own the means of production. These are the collective property of the society. But it is invariably asked, "Will a self-managed firm do so as well as a capitalist firm? Are workers sufficiently competent to make complicated technical and financial decisions? Are they competent even to elect representatives who will appoint effective managers?" it is strange that these questions are raised in a world where that prides itself on its democratic commitment. And which already deems ordinary people sufficiently competent to select local councils and national governments. We regard ordinary people capable of selecting representatives who will decide their taxes, who will make laws which, if violated, consign them to prison, who might even send them off to kill and die in wars. Should we really ask if ordinary people are competent to elect their bosses? Nevertheless we can answer the question directly from actual study. Research from 1973, which concluded: "In no instance of which we have evidence has a major effort to increase employee participation resulted in a long-term decline in productivity" (United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare) A later by Jones and Svejnar (1982) report: "There is apparently consistent support for the view that worker participation inmanagement causes higher productivity.” In 1990 Princeton economist Alan Blinder reaches the same conclusion. Levine and Tyson (1990), in their analysis of some 43 separate studies, found: “Our overall assessment of the empirical literature from economics, industrial relations, organizational behavior and other social sciences is that participation usually leads to small, short-run improvements in performance, and sometimes leads to significant longlasting improvements…There is almost never a negative effect…”

Lastly, of course, there is also the empirical evidence of the continued existence of tens of thousands of viable co-operatives around the world that demonstrate that worker self-management is any less competent than their conventional counterparts. Not even the most pro-capitalist critics of cooperatives argues that worker incompetence in selecting managers is the problem. It is not so surprising that worker self-managed enterprises should be efficient since workers' well-being is tied directly to the financial health of the enterprise, all have an interest in selecting good managers. Bad supervision is not hard to detect by those near at hand (who observe at close range the nature of the overseeing and feel its effects quickly), incompetence will not likely long be tolerated. Moreover, each individual has an interest in seeing to it that co-workers work effectively (and not appearing themselves to be slackers), so less supervision is necessary. The conclusions of Henry Levin (1984) after several years of field study “There exist both personal and collective incentives in cooperatives that are likely to lead to higher productivity. The specific consequences of these incentives are that the workers in cooperatives will tend to work harder and in a more flexible manner than those in capitalist firms; they will have a lower turnover rate and absenteeism; and they will take better care of plant and equipment. In addition, producer cooperatives function with relatively few unskilled workers and middle managers, experience fewer bottlenecks in production and have more efficient training programs than do capitalist firms.” [http://www.luc.edu/faculty/dschwei/economicdemocracy.pdf]

 “Our economic system and our planetary system are now at war,” Naomi Klein writes in her book ‘This Changes Everything’, that changing our relationship to nature is inseparable from changing our relationship to each other by transforming our economic system. The immediate threat to the earth “changes everything” in the sense that just adding “the environment” to our list of concerns is not good enough. The sheer scale of the problem necessitates a politics that can take on capitalism. We must do away with any notions, Klein asserts, that the environmental crisis can be contained and eventually rolled back through policy tinkering; geo-engineering technical fixes or through  market-based solutions Klein is critical of the existing environmental and social movements. People hunker down into a "survival bubble" in the attempt to ride out economic hardships they face and this weakens social bonds that are essential to political engagement. Significant numbers abandon reason and are more susceptible to simplistic populist slogans and political messages based on falsehoods. Creating a vacuous political environment, and framing issues in the simplest manner possible, avoiding complexity  becomes the  political strategy driving mainstream election  campaigns. Democracy is not defined as "we" but "me", denying the common welfare and the public good in preference for the personal advantage and individualism.  The Socialists endeavour to seek frameworks that reinvigorate democracy for all.   There is the tendency of many in the movement to mistakenly identify structures themselves as part of the problem. There is no going forward, however, without the most serious development of institutions that can deal on a mass scale with resources, coordination, generational continuity, leadership development, outreach, popular education, and, especially, the accountability structures to make complex and difficult collective choices and to keep wayward leaders in check. As Klein writes, “The fetish for structurelessness, the rebellion against any kind of institutionalization, is not a luxury today’s transformational movements can afford… Despite endless griping, tweeting, flash mobbing, and occupying, we collectively lack many of the tools that built and sustained the transformative movements of the past.” Klein also insists that the struggle against climate change cannot be won by fear alone. “Fear is a survival response. It makes us run, it makes us leap, it can make us act superhuman. But we need somewhere to run to. Without that, the fear is only paralyzing.” Calling for a more austere lifestyle only reinforces the austerity pushed by capitalist states. The issue is not just living with “less” but living differently — which can also mean better. It is about an alternative society. The tactic is to point to a long series of issues directly linked to the environment — housing, transportation, infrastructure, meaningful jobs, collective services, public spaces, greater equality, and a more substantive democracy — and work to convince people that “climate action is their best hope for a better present, and a future far more exciting than anything else currently on offer.”

 But more importantly to take on capitalism we must be clear about what this means, to ensure what “anti-capitalism” really means. For many it is not the capitalist system that is at issue but particular sub-categories of villains: big business, banks, multi-nationals corporations. There is no “neoliberal” capitalism, “deregulated” capitalism, “unfettered” capitalism, “predatory” capitalism, “extractive” capitalism – only one capitalist system. It is capitalism — not a qualified capitalism that is the enemy and the concept of a “green” capitalism is an oxymoron. Capitalism does of course vary across time and place, and some of those are far from trivial. But in terms of substantial fundamental differences we still have capitalism that is inseparable from the compulsion to indiscriminate growth, commodification of labour power and nature and consumerism. A social system based on private ownership of production can’t support the kind of planning that could avert environmental catastrophe. The owners of capital are fragmented and compelled by competition to look after their own interests first, and any serious planning would have to override property rights — an action that would be aggressively resisted. Arundhati Roy is quoted as saying: “There’s really no such thing as the ‘voiceless’. There are only the deliberately silenced, or the preferably unheard.”



Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Class Room Crisis

Council leaders warn that the cost of creating places for the 880,000 extra pupils expected in England by 2023 could push schools to breaking point, . 'The Local Government Association fears the demand for school places could soon reach a tipping point with no more space or money to extend schools. The LGA wants the government to fully fund the cost of all the extra places, calculated to run to £12bn.' (BBC News, 13 January) Official government figures, published last year, project that by 2023 there will be a total of 8,022,000 pupils in England's schools - up from 7,143,000 in the current academic year. This increase has no budget to deal with the problem. RD

Cuts In Cancer Treatment

Health chiefs have announced that twenty-five different cancer treatments will no longer be funded by the NHS in England, . 'NHS England announced the step after it emerged the £280m Cancer Drugs Fund - for drugs not routinely available - was to go £100m over budget in 2014/15. Some drugs will be removed and others restricted - a move charities say could leave some without crucial treatments.' (BBC News, 12 January) Another example of government cuts coming before essential treatment for the working class. RD

US Military Hacked

A group claiming to back the Islamic State have hacked the Twitter and YouTube accounts of the US military command. 'One message said: "American soldiers, we are coming, watch your back." It was signed by Isis, another name for the Islamic State. Some internal military documents also appeared on the Centcom Twitter feed. Centcom said it was taking "appropriate measures".' (BBC News, 12 January) The Twitter account, which usually provide updates on strikes against IS, was later taken down. If the IS has access to the US military's secrets it is a real cause for concern. RD

The (Sur)realpolitik of Capitalism


 Capitalism is fundamentally flawed – obscene built-in inequality with ourselves at the bottom , toiling at mindless, dead-end jobs, while massive corporations full of unfettered greed, propped up by a corrupt governance and hollowed-out democracy, supported by endless propaganda spewed by lickspittle media, undermine what crumbling the social fabric remains. Even where working-class have achieved some victories, capitalists lie in wait always keen to reverse these and turn back the clock. Capitalism is increasingly incompatible with democracy and now possibly human existence. As socialists we understand that socialism to be a system where the vast wealth of society is controlled democratically and put to constructive collective purposes; it is not controlled by a narrow sliver of society to do with as suits them. Marx’s assessment of capitalism's fatal flaw applies today more than ever: The problem with capitalism is ultimately that it radically increases the productive capacity of society but it keeps control over the wealth in the hands of profit-driven individuals and firms, who control how this potential will be developed to suit their own interests. So it is that the productivity of the average worker is many times greater today than it was 50 years ago. But that increase in productivity has not translated into higher living standards or a shorter working week. Instead we see living standards in decline, inequality mushrooming and infrastructure in varying states of collapse, while there is a record number of billionaires.

People all over the world used to dream and desire things like solidarity, beauty, love, justice for all, equality and brotherhood. Knowledge was supposed to have one and only purpose: to give people the intellectual tools to build better societies. Now, education is conditioning with young people crushed under the deadly weight of student debt. Healthcare little more than a well-remunerated business, with pharmaceutical companies engaged in plundering instead of curing. People arescared that they might get sick one day; not because of illness itself, but because they would not be able to pay their medical bills. Great science is locked up behind the doors of corporate laboratories as lawyers secure their patents for profits. Instead of advancing humanity. The best scientific brains are working for the military, or they are busy developing ‘products' for markets. The Arts has been reduced to mostly indistinguishable soulless entertainment. Instead of inspiring people to revolution, instead of making them aim at something higher, artists have been reduced to the level of cheap providers of pap. Hardly anyone reads. Hardly anyone thinks. Ideals are being spat on. Nobody seems to be happy. People are miserably atomized, lonely and lost.  Only consumerism, and commercialism are glorified. There is nothing that encourages people to dream of a much better world, or to struggle for a new, just and egalitarian society. Instead of creating beautiful music and poetry, instead of building public parks and ecological cities, we are choking our urban centers with cars; we are murdering millions of people over access to natural resources. We live for over-production and over-consumption, while billions are dying in the gutter.

Most of the people have been made to forget that human beings are essentially optimistic, sharing and loving creatures. Most people have been made to forget, or were never allowed to know, that building better societies is much more glorious and fun than living in some extreme individualistic nightmare. Living for humanity, not for profit, not for a ‘me-me-me-goes first' dogma, is fulfilling and actually gives meaning to one's existence. People want life to have meaning again… and to be full of beauty, of hope and dreams! These are clear signs of an economic system that no longer plays a productive role and needs to be replaced. The idea is becoming increasingly popular. It is an idea whose time has come. With the beginning of 2015 we enter a journey to the end of the night. The major task for the social movement is to build People Power together. We build together because our issues are all connected and unified power is when we are strongest. Global trade agreements, rigged for big business interests seems distant but it has impacts at the local level, adversely hurting workers. 

We should all engage in this fight because the stakes are high. We will create the world in which we want to live and one that increases the chances of a livable future. One truly lives only when he or she is  marching forward and aiming at a better world. The priority now is for humanity to survive – to survive as free people, not as wage-slaves. Let us unite and shout:
“We Want Our Planet Back!”

That should be the demand on our banners, our battle-cry. Not everyone is for sale, neither is everyone willing to be a slave.

Monday, January 12, 2015

The National


Troop Mobilisation

TROOP MOBILISATION                                            
In Paris last week France seventeen people were killed in attacks at the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, on a police officer, and at a kosher supermarket. So France is mobilising 10,000 troops to boost security after last week's deadly attacks, and will send thousands of police to protect Jewish schools. 'Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said troops would be in place from Tuesday evening in sensitive areas. It is the first time troops have been deployed within France on such a scale. On Sunday, an estimated 3.7 million people took to the streets to show solidarity with the victims, including 1.5 million people in Paris.' (BBC News, 12 January) RD

Cancelled Operations

The sharp rise in the number of procedures hospitals are at present postponing has prompted the leader of Britain's surgeons to warn that patients affected will suffer "considerable distress". 'Unprecedented demand has led to a third more elective (planned) operations being cancelled in England this winter than last year, latest figures show. A total of 12,345 were called off at short notice between 3 November and 4 January, a rise of 32% on the 9,320 seen in the same period in the winter of 2013-14.' (Observer, 11 January) Cancellations included some 3,771 procedures such as hernia repairs and hip or knee replacements in the three weeks before and during the festive season RD

Is Britain Next?

According to the Sunday Express the elite Special Forces have joined counter-terror police and 1,900 Army personnel in the biggest security operation since the 2012 London Olympics. 'The news comes as Al Qaeda warned that France was only its third preferred target after Britain and the US.  Most of the Special Forces will be wearing civilian clothes, while some have donned police uniforms to accompany police officers who visit the homes of persons of interest in response to intelligence leads by MI5.' (Sunday Express, 11 January) The Sunday Express has learned that a 30-strong SAS team, divided into smaller groups, has been allocated to the Police Counter Intelligence Unit by the regiment's inner sanctum, dubbed the Kremlin. RD

Powerless Capitalism

After gale force winds brought down power lines on Friday, almost 10,000 people in the north of Scotland are still without electricity. The worst-affected areas are Inverness-shire, the Western Isles and rural parts of Wick and Dingwall. 'Poor weather over the weekend has hampered efforts to re-connect homes with engineers working in "treacherous and worsening conditions". Trains between Inverness and Perth have had to be replaced by buses. Several ferry services have been cancelled with the disruption expected to last until late on Sunday.' (BBC News, 11 January) Despite political promises capitalism still cannot deal with the usual winter conditions. RD

Success is Socialism

There exists no definition of socialism that is generally understood and accepted. The dilemma of socialism today is first of all the dilemma of the meaning of socialism, because the term has been applied to such an all-encompassing range of persons, parties, philosophies, states, and social systems, often completely antagonistic to each other, that the very term ‘socialism’ has become virtually meaningless. ‘Socialism’ has become another name for another form of capitalism. The temptation is strong to abandon the label entirely, to adopt some new term to indicate the kind of social change we propose. But to do so would be to attempt to side-step the problem. Since the main challenge to capitalism has always come from that which called itself socialism, the intellectual harlots of capitalist ideology empty the word of all meaning and purpose, denying the very possibility of an alternative to this system, hoping to bury of all its revolutionary content. We have to take the word ‘socialism’ back, for without words there can be no concepts, and where there is no language of freedom, there can be no dream of liberation. We cannot simply abdicate the terminology of socialism and arbitrarily invent new labels. To do so would be futile, because any new terms will be similarly sucked dry if they acquire popular recognition. Words such as ‘socialism’, ‘revolution’, ‘democracy’, and ‘freedom’ do contain within themselves a critique of the existing order. That critique can be realized only by reconquering it and giving it new life, not by abandoning it and searching for another. For this reason, we continue with the term ‘socialism’, but ensuring that we give its proper meaning so people understand exactly what we mean by it.

Today humanity faces a global crisis stemming from the incredible rapacity of the capitalist system. There is catastrophic climate change which threatens to end life on our planet.  Socialism offers the best hope for humanity. We think a society run by people themselves, freed from both bosses and bureaucrats, would be far more democratic and liberating than capitalism ever has been.  We think that a society premised upon the enhancement of life rather than the perpetuation of profit would stand the best chance of putting a halt to the environmental devastation now ravishing the globe. Socialists often talked about capitalism's ‘contradictions’ but never have they been more painfully in evidence than right than now.  Millions find no work while manufacturing plants lie idle.  Fortunes are spent on high-tech weapons to bomb homes while homeless people sleep in doorways. The hungry rummage through garbage bins outside of supermarkets with well-stocked shelves. People starve while big grain corporations hoard their surpluses in their storehouses. White-collar criminals in the banking and finance industry are rewarded with huge bonuses. Agri-business pushes millions of small farmers and peasants off the land, destroys life-sustaining topsoil, creates vegetables without taste or nutritional value, and sprays farmworkers with carcinogenic pesticides. The result is system ruled by insanity, obsessed with acquisition and accumulation that it will leave the planet a wasteland. It may be hard to believe, but there is a method to this madness: it lies in the basic dynamics of capitalist society, which is organised for profit above all else.

Socialists use the term ‘social revolution’ in a very precise way. Whereas reforms are changes within an existing social and economic system, social revolutions make a sharp break from one social system to another. A socialist revolution would end the private ownership of the factories, mines, transportation and offices by a tiny clique of capitalists. Some politicians imagine that changing the tax code or campaigning for finance reforms will fix the ill of the social system.  But the cause is much deeper than bad policy or poor decisions, and will not be solved by tinkering around the edges. Nor is the problem an evil plot, as some on both left and right have alleged.  Powerful people frequently benefit from social inequality, economic waste and ecological degradation, but under capitalism such things happen whether or not anyone plans them.  At fault is not a calculating conspiracy but the very driving force of capitalism: the relentless pursuit of private profit. Capitalism is a generalized regime of commodity production characterised by market exchange, including the purchase and sale of labor power.  Production under capitalism is organised for private profit, which is extracted from workers' labor and realised in the sale of goods at the highest allowable price. This system of social and property relations works to benefit a ruling class made up of owners, financiers, merchants and executives who control key institutions of production and exchange: banks, insurance companies, stock exchanges, service concerns such as airlines and trucking, extractive industries such as coal and oil, and manufacturers and distributors of commodities like cars, computers and toothpaste.  This ruling class appropriates the surplus of the value created by the working class - the majority of us, whose living comes not from owning capital but from working for those who do. By virtue of its dominant social position the ruling class has a common and basic interest in defending private property and maximising profit rates.  But it is not a giant conspiracy. Sometimes real differences emerge in its ranks.  Sectors of capital clash over appropriate measures for the maintenance of profit rates, and they enter into political contest by underwriting different candidates in elections and lobbying for different public policy measures.  Precisely through the open expression of such differences, consensus is established within the dominant class. The capitalists may feel the effects of crises and competition but as a class, capitalists continue to do well and they rarely suffer like those of us at the bottom of society.

Although to many people the prospect of a revived socialist movement seems but a pipe dream, capitalism is showing its impracticality and obsolescence in a host of ways. A rebirth of socialism is possible, just as periods of calm in the past have been interrupted by resurgences of radicalism and militancy. Many reservations that people hold about socialism are the result of a perfectly reasonable revulsion against the monstrosities which have masquerades as ‘socialism’. Around the world, countries ruled by single parties and dictatorial autocrats draped themselves with the trappings of Marx, minuscule groups announced themselves ‘the vanguard’ of the working class with  some supposedly standing for equality, worshipping authoritarian leaders and stifling democratic norms under the name ‘democratic centralism’. Socialism is a vision of a new world, based on one central conviction: that human beings can construct a society without exploitation and oppression through, and only through, the maximum extension of democratic control. The emancipation of humanity from capitalism will only come about when workers act in the offices, factories and streets on their own behalf. It cannot be achieved through any shortcut, though many have been tried.

The paradox of reformism is that it's not the way to win reforms, especially in periods of crisis, when the system's ability to absorb demands is minimal, substantial social gains can only be won through the militant collective action of working people and mass movements aiming at the democratic conquest of social power.  The aim of socialism can be sacrificed at crucial moments to the error of moderation and gradualism. We don't object to reformism because it advocates reforms, but because it has such a sorry record for obtaining them.  We have no callous desire to ‘bring the system down’ by letting people starve, as is sometimes attributed to revolutionaries.  On the contrary, we aim to show people that by organising and struggling, they can win. We try to generate a common political orientation. The main reason to join a socialist organisation, of course, is work for socialism. The abolition of class rule and establishment of workers' democracy will not come about unless there are socialists organised to push for it. Through debate and analysis, socialists help one another understand what's happening in the world. We need your participation, talents and ideas. Join us.



Sunday, January 11, 2015

The Winners Will Become Losers And Vice Versa.

Capitalism is defined by competition and there will always be winners and losers in any transaction that takes place between two parties. The drop in oil prices is a case in point. Firstly, the price has dropped mainly because too much oil has come on stream, largely because the Americans have started exporting shale oil. The Americans did not stop to consider this possibility and could not care a damn about it anyway. They would become self- sufficient and gain valuable export dollars anyway. The Saudis refused to cut back on production believing that the cost of producing shale oil would deter its continued and growing production. In Canada, the oil producing provinces such as Alberta and Newfoundland are feeling the economic pinch, but Ontario comes out a winner. Oil for transportation and industry will be cheaper and the resulting lower dollar is good for exporters. Not too far in the future the tide will turn and winners will become losers and vice versa. Makes a lot of sense, right? John Ayers.

2000 Avoidable Deaths

Air pollution in Scotland's towns and cities has created a public health crisis, according to environmental campaigners. The claim by Friends of the Earth Scotland came after an analysis of official data for two toxic pollutants. The group said the figures showed pollution levels were continuing to break Scottish and European limits. 'Air pollution in Scotland's towns and cities is creating a public health crisis, according to environmental campaigners. High levels of NO2 are linked to asthma and other respiratory problems.......Last April, Health Protection Scotland (HPS) said air pollution may have been responsible for 2,000 deaths in Scotland in a single year.' (BBC News, 11 January) Inside capitalism business is much more important than pollution. RD

A Depressing Society

Capitalism with its threat of unemployment, rent arrears or mortgage payments is a depressing society. How depressing is shown by the latest figures from the Health and Social Care Information Society about the use of antidepressants. 'Almost one in ten people in Britain is taking antidepressants with GP prescriptions for them almost doubling in ten years. Doctors last year issued 55 million prescriptions for pills such as Prozac, up from 50 million the year before and nearly twice the 2004 amount.' (Times, 6 January) Last year £280 million was spent on the drugs. RD       

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Our Aim is Socialism


It is not enough for socialists to decry the reformists’ abandonment of any meaningful socialist meaningful policies. Is neither enough to speak in general terms of the need for radical and socialism. The Socialist Party must be more specific and it is high time to spell out concretely what should be done. It is not utopian of us to imagine what a socialist society would appear like. Obviously, a more detailed elaboration will be clearer closer to the time but we can still offer a vision of what socialism is.

The purpose of the Socialist Party is to achieve world socialism in which the social ownership of the means of production shall replace the existing capitalist system. Our world is rich in natural resources and is capable of producing everything necessary for a good life for all. Our planet could be truly a paradise for everybody but it is not a paradise for the people. Folk are starving while food rots. Wars are raging with a barbarity that shames our species. In Britain and elsewhere the social services being cut to the bone. Why is this? The fundamental reason of all this suffering is that the world is capitalist, ruled for and by capitalists for their profit and interests. It is divided into rich and poor—a tiny handful of rich (1 per cent of the population own more than half the nation’s wealth). It is a system of exploitation where a tiny handful of people own the “means of production” (the land, the mines, factories, the machines, etc.) and living off the sweat and toil of other people. The problems of capitalism - exploitation, anarchy of production, speculation and crisis, and the whole system of injustice - arise from the self-interest of this tiny group of capitalists.

The essence of exploitation under capitalism consists in this — that the workers, when set to work with raw materials and machinery, produce far more in values than what is paid out by the capitalists in wages. In short, they produce a surplus which is taken by the capitalists and for which they are not paid. Thus they are robbed of the values they produce. This is the source of capitalist profit. It is on this surplus, produced by the workers, that the capitalist lives in riches and luxury. Capitalism has created the economic conditions for socialism. Today the whole system of production is socially interdependent, but it is controlled by private hands. In place of private control of social production there must be social ownership if society's problems are to be addressed.

Only socialism can solve the problems facing the people of the world. No longer can some men (the capitalists) by virtue of the fact that they own the means of production, live off (exploit) the labour of others (the working class). No longer are the workers compelled to sell their labour power to the capitalists in order to live. The workers are no longer property-less proletarians. They now own the means of production and work them in their own interests and in the interests of society. For society is now composed or workers by hand and brain, i.e. of an associated body of wealth-producers.

Socialism will be a better society, one which will present unprecedented possibilities for the improvement of 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. 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 and the wealth of society will become useful. Proper planning and cooperative coordination will replace the chaos of commerce. With socialism, goods and services will be distributed on the basis of from each according to their ability, to each according to their needs. Workers will manage democratically their own work places through workers' councils and elected delegates, in place of the myriad of supervisors and overseers today. In this way workers will be able to make their work places safe and efficient places that can serve their own interests as well as society's with the way cleared to achieve a decent meaningful and productive life for all working people. Such a democratisation of industry would not work unless the mass of the working class itself was imbued with a consciousness of its necessity, prepared to struggle for it, and prepared to participate in its functioning. What will not be developed under socialism are the massive government bureaucracy and repressive state apparatus (police, prisons) which are used to control the people and defend the privileged position of the ruling class. Socialism will not mean government control. Today under capitalism the state serves the interests of the capitalist class. With socialism the state will "wither" away, and a new era of human freedom and prosperity will arise.

Single-issue campaigns and protest movements have played an important role in mobilising social activists and raising awareness about issues. But protest and campaigning can only take the class struggle so far. We can’t just keep on campaigning against things. We have to also campaign for things. If all the aroused and the enraged can see is an unresponsive brick wall of party bureaucracy misnamed ‘democratic centralism’ with leaders who make promises they don’t intend to carry out, they it can easily result in demoralisation and apathy. There is a democratic instinct among working people. They know that majority control is in their interests as opposed to domination by unrepresentative minorities or vanguards. The healthy rejection of leaders, opportunism and careerism should not mean a rejection of organisation. A mass movement of workers has to have a purpose. For sure it should defend and protect the exploited and oppressed, the targets and victims of capitalism. But these are only defensive struggles within the system and can only take us so far. Social movements should plan for replacing the existing system with something radically better and be committed to the democratic socialist transformation of society, a society where decision-making permeates its complete essence and where the majority collectively own and control the economy. We need peoples’ power that encourages debate and has nothing to fear from the open and free flow of ideas and information, but everything to gain. Working people clearly appreciate that unity is strength, especially in the face of capitalist wealth and power. That in division lies defeat. One united movement has a far greater chance of succeeding than one divided up into a series of competing groups but this cannot be based upon a ‘broad church’ of contradictory aims but has to be formed with a common goal yet providing ample forums in which all the different ideas and strategies for changing society can be debated and decided upon. Past experience has shown that the fight for reforms can all too easily become an end in itself, with the aim of the democratic socialist transformation of society relegated to celebratory speeches and pious resolutions. The system has demonstrated that it cannot deliver reforms and cannot even retain past gains.

Our political work now must be one of preparation, linking up with who want to fight back. We are merely making the road clearer and easier to travel down so that working people’s efforts to transform society have a better chance of success.

Andrew Kliman writes critically “On the anticapitalist left, the typical view of how to transcend capitalism can be summarized as follows. First, you change people’s consciousness, or their consciousness changes through their participation in new forms of organization. The change in consciousness allows us to increase our side’s political power, to the point where we take control, either through elections or by seizing power.  And once our side has political power, we can then change the nature of the economy and the state simply by deciding to put “people before profit” and implementing what we decide. We need the right political forms, forms of organization, to accomplish this—and there’s a whole lot of debate about what are the right forms of organization. But if we do have the right forms of organization, then overcoming capitalism is a simple matter. We decide, through these forms of organization, what should be produced and what shouldn’t, we decide how to distribute resources and goods fairly, we decide on other social priorities, and then we just put these decisions into effect. This picture of social change is in the minds of almost the whole of the anticapitalist left, from vanguardists to anarchists.” He goes on to say “despite your intentions–in order to compete effectively, there will be a continual stream of unintended consequences that you won’t be able to eliminate through experimentation. A country that tries to improve the standard of living of its workers too much will not be competitive. State-run banks that try to pursue public policy objectives instead of maximizing profit, and worker-run banks that try to enhance the workers’ well-being instead of maximizing profit, will lack the funds to do so. And so on. The problem here isn’t that you’ve made mistakes…The problem is rather that, despite your good intentions, and despite the new priorities, new forms of organization, new forms of ownership, new laws, and the new name you give your society, it remains capitalist. It remains capitalist because the economic laws that govern capitalism continue to govern your society. And they continue to govern your society because new priorities, new forms of organization, new forms of ownership and so forth are not enough––by themselves––to overcome the economic laws of capitalism.”

They would merely be capitalism in a different form or they would be unviable and lead back to capitalism.  And the reason why they wouldn’t work is that these supposed alternatives to capitalism all try to get rid of capitalism without getting rid of its mode of production. The proposals won’t work because it tries to change the capitalist system by eliminating its effects, but not the causes of these effects. Changes in political and legal forms, and changes in consciousness, are not themselves changes in the relations of production. If only they are changed, not the relations of production, the changes will not succeed in changing the character of the society. Capitalism is based on its mode of production; socialism is based on the socialist mode of production. If there is a third kind of society in between them, what is its mode of production?

We live in a world where technological achievements unimaginable in previous societies are within our grasp. For the first time in history we can produce enough to satisfy the needs of everyone on the planet. Yet millions of lives are stunted by poverty, destroyed by disease and military conflict devastate lives. New technology gifted with the wonderful power of shortening and fulfilling human labour, offers unemployment or over-work. The domination of commodities in our society is so pervasive that it seems to be an inevitable, natural state of affairs. All our achievements, everything we produce, appear as commodities. The creation of exchange values and the circulation of commodities requires a commodity which can represent all other commodities, through which all other commodities can be compared and money is the universal pimp. Money can buy everything - it is the most powerful commodity in existence. The role of money in the circulation of commodities shapes the consciousness of human beings involved in that process. Money takes on the value of the objects it represents, it appears to be the force which can create value itself. Money twists our human potential, transforms our feelings into false feelings and manufactured needs, and changes us into different people, alienated, atomized  human beings who lives somebody else’s life — not our own life. In the capitalist system, the worker work for money, to survive and the accumulate things. The worker does not experience work as free life. It deeply effects the social relations of the worker to the husband/wife, lover, children, friends, and the worker’s well-being; the psychological damages from the stress of work can last for a life-time.

We say we human beings being social beings have the ability to determine and direct our own futures (within certain limits). When the workers own the means of production, William Morris explained, they will be able to concentrate on a beautiful artistic production. Similarly, with more leisure, they will have more desires and so a desire for beautiful things. We entered into a society of abundance many decades ago, but capitalists must invest seemingly forever to secure wealth, the fruit of that abundance, for themselves. Technology does benefit society by creating unprecedented material abundance. This abundance, while generated by greater productivity, has to be hidden in plain view from the people. This is the great capitalist scam: the owners of technology convince the workers that the machines, dead labor so to speak, not their living labor, produce wealth. The bosses have largely convinced us that we must service the machines at low wages, not the other way round. An abundant society is not defined by the size of your plasma television but by the quality of life that ensues when basic needs – food, shelter, health and conviviality – are satisfied. When the time that we devote to directly supplying those real needs reverts back to us, when our days are filled with the things we want to do and that immediately sustain us, and not the tasks of the paymaster, then we can begin to truly live.

A line of thinking like this is dismissed as fanciful, as utopian, in the sense of unattainable. But, to mention only one area, the accelerated pace of our current drive to despoil the environment in quest for oil and natural gas is praised as eminently practical. Where is the folly here? Is imagining a world free of exploitation more harebrained than the headlong pollution of our planet? What sort of society could evolve if everybody had free access to the world’s wealth to meet his or her basic needs of food, shelter and health?

It is necessary to persist in speaking about an abundant society and counter the popular confusions, because there is no other way to reverse the perspective of power – a perspective that demands sacrifice and scarcity to keep us all subservient.