Capitalism, you hear the word everywhere, but what is it?
The simple answer is: it’s the system we live in. Today, everything we need to
live our daily lives has to be paid for. Water, gas, electricity, housing,
transport, food and clothing – the principle is the same: if you have no money
, you can’t have any. Teachers, politicians and the media try to portray this
as a “natural” state of affairs: “it’s always been like this, and it always
will be”, they say. But they’re wrong. Early human societies were communal:
they weren’t divided into rich and poor and they shared property instead of
having to buy and sell the things they needed. By common ownership of the means
of production we could begin to construct a society not based on profit but
based on human need. A utopia? No. It’s a necessity.
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 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 and we would abandon
it at our peril. 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 and Fourier and others in the process. Let
us not forget the socialist in the hearts of workers since the Diggers of
seventeenth century England. Today new movements such as Zeitgeist have
reformulate old ideas in new ways and it is those Leftist sects who try to
explain to you why genuine socialism is a fantasy. Scarcely surprising since
their own ideas and activity are so remote from socialist ideals and principles,
leaving many young anti-capitalists activists blissfully ignorant of what actual
socialism is in fact. Many are aghast when it is explained that we can live
perfectly well in a society without wages or money. We can see that John Lennon
with Imagine could inspired millions and Martin Luther King’s I Have Dream continues to motivate, but the truth is
the Left inspires absolutely no-one outside of their brain-dead members, press-ganged
on to the walking dead protest marches. They present themselves as “socialist”
yet often their programmes and slogans are virtually indistinguishable from
radical bourgeois reformist parties. These “socialists” distort socialist principles
into vague and meaningless soundbites. Instead of fighting for an end to the
system of wage slavery, these “socialists” prop it up by sowing illusions in
the advantages that come from a higher minimum wage. They may end their
speeches with clenched fists and appeals for “socialism,” and “revolution” but
the radical posturing and wishful thinking cannot measure up against what these
“socialists” end up doing in the real world. It would be both dishonest and
unprincipled to portray the Left’s liberal reformism as something
“revolutionary.”
The Socialist Party stand in capitalist elections, with
three goals in mind: first, to promote the idea of socialism, secondly, to
publicly gauge the level of support for socialism and, finally and most importantly,
to end capitalist exploitation and its proxy political system.
Marx cannot be faulted in his analysis of why a market
economy in the modern world contains the seeds of its own destruction, assuming
that the ownership of the means of production remained concentrated in too few
hands and workers had only their labor to sell in direct competition with
labor-displacing technology or with workers willing to work for lower wages. Capitalism
holds no future for the humanity other than the destruction of the environment,
poverty, disease and war. Capitalism’s not natural and it need not be permanent.
But that’s up to you.
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