Saturday, August 15, 2020

Socialism - A Very Different Future

 Capitalism can be characterised by the fact that by and large all human needs can be bought and sold in the form of commodities. Among other commodities the worker sells his labour-power to the boss who employs him. Now by capitalist law, whatever the worker produces belongs to the employer, who in return pays the worker only part of the value of his product in the form of wages. The value retained by the capitalist in this exploitive process is called surplus value. Under capitalism the class struggle centers about the relative portions of the value produced by the worker that go to the worker in the form of wages and to the capitalist as surplus value. Profit is derived from unpaid labour time. Workers’ labour power is purchased on the market by the owners of capital. Put to work, on average in half the working week, it produces values sufficient to cover wages to maintain a worker and family. The value produced in the remainder of the working week constitutes surplus value, the source of profit. The commodities produced by workers’ socialised labour are privately appropriated by capitalists.

Socialism will be a world of peace and plenty, the ideal of the poor since time immemorial, the cooperative commonwealth for all who toil. No bosses, no landlords, no bankers, no loan sharks, no armament makers, no unemployment; no child labour; no sex trade or prostitution; no unfinished education; no broken old age; no long hours; no speed-up; no rich, no profiteers, no capitalism. Our aim is a communist, class-free society. It is inevitable that sooner or later these social conditions will impel people to organise to end the conflict between the socialised labour process and private ownership of the decisive means of production, the big factories, mines and corporate farms by the establishment of socialism. With socialism, production takes place for people’s use.

The working class revolution is the first to be carried out by the lowest social class in society, a class that has little economic power and little social wealth. We can compare the rise of the capitalists against the feudal system. The capitalist class was economically dominant by the time it sought political control of society.

The workers revolution is the first revolution aimed at a consciously planned overthrow of existing society. That is, it does not seek to return to a previous era, like the slave, nor does it seek to merely legalise its political domination of society in a situation where an economic transfer of power has already taken place, as had occurred in England in the seventeenth century and in France in the eighteenth century.

Like other revolutions, the working class revolution grows out of class antagonisms, overthrowing all existing human relationships and brings the whole working class into self-activity, and when classes begin to disappear it extends this process to all members of society. It is only in revolution itself that the vast majority of the oppressed can liberate themselves from the ideology of the ruling class. Ideological control by the ruling class is not simply exercised by education, television and the press but continually flows from the daily reality of working class life, as everything is produced and judged for its profitability.

Under capitalism, the commodity seems to be determining human relations and human labour is seen solely as a disposable commodity. Also, the alienating and increasing division of labour isolates workers and produces all sorts of mystifications. Only in a revolutionary situation of mass activity outside the confines of alienated labour can this deep ideological control be really broken.

Although political class consciousness can develop fully only during a revolution, it can only do so if it has begun to develop before the revolution. No matter how concentrated and centralised, capitalist economy always remains dominated by the anarchy of production, and no efforts at planning can fundamentally alter this. The Socialist Party has learned the brutal and murderous character of capitalist rule, to defend the profits of the few, to keep the workers in subjection, to perpetuate capitalism, the modern slave-holding class resorts to the most violent means at its disposal.

The prerequisites of a socialist society have been as follows: The abolition of exploitation of men by men, the obliteration of the division of society into classes, the destruction of the conditions from which they arise, i.e., the abolition of private property in the means of production, and the establishment of a class-free socialist society. In accordance with this, private ownership of the means of production and distribution has been abandoned, with all the practical consequences that this implies.

But what about the socialist society proposed by Marx and Engels — didn’t it miserably fail? No, in the same way as the teachings of Jesus cannot be equated with the subsequent misdeeds committed by the various churches in the name of his supposed teachings.

Our aim in the Socialist Party is a society free from exploitation and oppression, in other words, a class-free society. Socialism will also remove the enormous waste inherent in capitalist production with its duplication of effort - the manufacture of numerous but essentially similar products. It will put an end to the massive resources devoted on advertising and production of superfluous luxuries for the rich. Socialism will bring about a phenomenal development of the productive forces which will make it possible to provide adequate food, clothing and shelter – the necessities of life – for everyone on the face of the planet and will lay the material basis for a completely class-free society. Never again will any person die of hunger or a preventable disease, achieving a decent standard of living for all through the free distribution according to need. Socialism will increase the production of an ever wider range of goods to the point where supply exceeds demand - a cornucopia of abundance. Buying and selling will cease and  distribution of goods based on need.  The people as a whole own the means of production (factories, mines, etc.). Production is for people’s use, not for private profit. The principle of the operation of socialism is “from each according to ability, to each according to needs”. Production is of such a high level that there are abundant commodities for every member of the community and each member helps oneself according to needs. 

The desire for socialism as a just social system, runs deep among workers. That desire may be latent, but it is always present. It ignites whenever there is crisis in society and the people are involved in struggle. That can be any intense struggle such as campaigning for peace, for preservation of the environment or during a strike and in many other circumstances. The socialist message in such conditions may receive a receptive response, encouraging hope among the working people. 


Friday, August 14, 2020

The Cruelty of Grouse Shooting

A quarter of a million animals are killed each year on Scottish shooting estates to allow grouse to thrive so they can then be shot for the blood “sport.”

260,000 animals were killed each year in an attempt to totally eradicate foxes, stoats, weasels and crows to increase the number of grouse for so-called sport shooting. 57,000 killing devices are deployed each day in Scotland.

Nearly half of the animals killed are “non-target” species such as hedgehogs, dippers and mistle thrush.

The study also found that failure to comply with existing codes of practice is widespread on Scottish grouse moors. Guidelines produced by professional organisations that represent the shooting industry appear to serve “little useful function.” 

The League Against Cruel Sports (LACS), Robbie Marsland, said: "It gives an illustration of the grim reality of Scotland’s grouse moors. Our report leaves us in absolutely no doubt that managing such large parts of Scottish moorland for an industry which makes a woefully low contribution to the economy is entirely misguided and outdated.”

https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/b/quarter-million-animals-killed-year-scotland-increase-grouse-numbers

Community Ownership

 Wanlockhead, the highest village in Scotland have voted in favour of plans for a community buyout.
They were balloted over a bid to take ownership of nearly 4,000 acres of land in Dumfries and Galloway from the Duke of Buccleuch. 

The Socialist Answer

The hope for a class-free society is a very old idea The stoics of the the 3rd century BC believed in a "world city" where all were brothers. They were the first to condemn all kinds of slavery and to talk about the oneness of the whole human community regardless of national and ethnic differences.

 Some say that early Christianity was originally ‘socialist’ where the expression “to each according to their need” should not be credited to Marx but to “Acts of the Apostles” in the Bible.

 In the 13th Century the preacher, John Ball, was telling peasants:
 “ye good people, the matters goeth not well to pass in England, nor shall do till everything be common, and that there be no villains nor gentlemen, but that we are all united together, and that the lords be no greater masters than we. What have we deserved, or why should we be thus kept in servage? We be all come from one father and mother, Adam and Eve: whereby can they say or show that they be greater lords than we, saving by that they cause us to win and labour for that they dispend?”

By the 17th Century, Gerard Winstanley was writing about  the abolition of money.
 “Every tradesman shall fetch materials… from the public store-houses to work upon without buying and selling; and when particular works are made… the tradesmen shall bring these particular works to particular shops, as it is now the practice, without buying and selling. And every family as they want such things as they cannot make, they shall go to these shops and fetch without money.”

We hear much about the“dignity of work” especially from those who do not toil.They instruct us to be content with our lot in life. To say that we should rise above meaningless drudgery and wage-slavery makes us socialists agitators and rabble-rousers.The term “labour or job market” expresses the fact that in capitalist society a worker is merchandise to be bought and sold for a price.It means little if the person is skilled or unskilled, works with ones hands or brain. It simply makes the price paid different.The mission of the Socialist Party is to abolish the wage system, in it entirety.Society needs to be reconstructed upon a new foundation, and the working class alone — the only class without which society would perish — can accomplish the task.The working class holds  the power at the ballot-box to end the tragedy of toil and modern technology  will become our servant, not our master.

Socialism is not an authoritarian creed. It is a society without a government. It is a free society; a society without rulers and ruled, nor leaders and led, without masters and slaves. Socialism is not only on the side of freedom but is equivalent to freedom, standing opposed to hierarchy, bureaucracy , regimentation, oppression, repression and submission. Any movement towards freedom is a movement towards socialism. The Socialist Party does not intend to lead the masses towards a free and classless society because we are a part of the masses themselves and adhere to the motto of the First International: The emancipation of the workers is an act of the workers themselves. If our fellow-workers wait for a revolutionary vanguard party” to lead them to the free society, they will neither be free nor classless.

 No socialist can be a socialist in a non-socialist society. The socialist know it and, therefore, tries to bring about a socialist society. Our goal of socialism is a class-free society offering abundance for all.  The class character of society cannot be achieved by machinations and manipulations at the top. It can only be done by a revolution which is followed by a fundamental change in property relations. 


Thursday, August 13, 2020

The Only Hope for Civilisation 

The Socialist Party advances the theory of socialist revolution. It does not promote this goal as Utopian, a mere vision of what would make working people happy, but as a practical aim to be attained. Capitalism has nothing to offer but uncertainty for tomorrow, economic insecurity, environmental disasters, and wars. Society is more and more divided.

Global warming and the environmental crisis is one of the greatest challenges facing humanity. The relentless exploitation and unsustainable waste of resources by capitalism is the source of this disaster.  Short-term hunt for profit and the abuse of science under capitalism is destroying the world’s environment at an accelerating speed. Technology can be positive and beneficial to society, but private property and the priorities of the ruling class create these great problems. Our answer is that the working class must organise to overthrow those who threaten the survival of the people of the world. Only a planned socialist economy will remedy the current climate catastrophe. It is the task of the working class to put an end to capitalist exploitation and oppression. Capitalism knows no national boundaries. It encompasses all the world’s countries and peoples. The working class is also international, even if the working class of each country first must first do away with their own capitalists. 

Socialism is the power of the working class. This class sets out to reclaim the people’s property from the owning class. Socialism is the sensible use of the resources. Production will be planned on the basis of what serves society, not what yields the most profit. The producers themselves will decide what to produce and how – not “the market”.

 A class-free society is the goal of the Socialist Party. Only when classes and the state have ceased to exist, can people attain full and unlimited freedom. Only then the principle “From each according to ability, to each according to needs” can be fully realised.

The source of oppression lies in the private ownership of the means of production. The capitalist system is the enemy of men and women, and it is only through a socialist revolution and the abolition of the private ownership of the means of production that the oppression and exploitation can disappear. Socialist revolution creates the basis for the participation of working people at all levels of society. While there seems nothing wrong with giving support to political movements in favour of defending a particular sector of the oppressed, the Socialist Party has stubbornly clung to the basic concept of Marx, that only the working class, i.e. the mass of all those forced to sell their labour power in exchange of wages, unites the objective and subjective conditions for building a socialist, i.e. class-free society. We have defended that idea throughout our existence and when it was  less fashionable than it is today. Socialism, on Marx’s view, would be born out of capitalism. But it would be the society of true freedom. Socialists  believe that our fellow-workers, in their misery, yearn for freedom, that they reject servility as we ourselves have rejected them and won’t be bought off with ameliorated conditions, promises  of future rewards or greater opportunities for the worker to ‘better’ oneself. Reformism is a matter of negotiation and bargaining for improved conditions and more security within existing conditions. The reformists are bound to fail, since palliatives under capitalism cannot last, they are not permanent.

Liberty is not something that can be brought to the worker by leaders or saviours. The bringing of freedom to somebody is not a free but a despotic conception. The abolition of the State seems the necessary precondition for the emancipation of the proletariat. The free society will be a federation not of nations but of groups or communes where  production will be placed under the direction of a well-organised administration. To expect from the government of the propertied class that it will help by its mighty hand the strivings of the proletariat towards victory, means to expect the impossible from it. The power of the government reaches only so wide as the interests of the ruling class permit it. It can by a clever see-saw game between parts of the ruling class to obtain particular privileges and power. This rivalry for power however disintegrates the moment when it wants it faces its common enemy, the working class.

Political parties are the product of the class struggle. In a classless society which has rid itself of the remnants of class interests and ideology there will be no political parties. They will be unnecessary. But we have not reached the class-free society. We are in the midst of a society torn apart by class war, and the political parties of necessity express and reflect the interests of classes in this conflict. The more fierce the class struggle becomes, the more society is divided into two camps, when the class antagonisms take the form of the capitalist and landlord class versus the working class. It is this class is the custodian of socialism, of the evolution of mankind. The capitalist class is no longer a progressive class. It cannot lead mankind forward but only backwards. Based upon private property, it has long-since fulfilled whatever progressive role it had to play in the development of society. Capitalism now is a fetter upon the productive forces of society and will lead to desolation and catastrophe.  Unless the changes in society from one social system to another takes place, then mankind will still live in a primitive society.  We want a conscious organised working class which will dare to use its political strength to advance to socialism.