The Dream of Joe Hill lives on
It is right that the life of Joe Hill should be remembered still, for he
was a worker who sang with militant passion in favour of the interests
of his class and was framed by the American state on a murder charge for
doing so.
I.W.W. AND A.F.L.
Joe Hill was a member of the Industrial Workers of the World (the
IWW or Wobblies) which was set up in the USA in 1905 in opposition to
the traditional capitalist trade unions within the American Federation
of Labor (AFL). The AFL accepted the necessity of the capitalist system
and collaborated with the bosses to make the system stable, much as the
hacks who run the British TUC do today. The Wobblies were not out to win
a 'fair deal' from capitalism (that's like turkeys trying to win a fair
deal from Christmas), but to abolish the system which thrives upon the
poverty of the wealth producers.
Wages and Profit
Abolishing capitalism, as far as the Wobblies were concerned then,
and The Socialist Party is concerned today, involves nothing less than
abolishing the wages system. No longer should men and women be the wage
(or salary) slaves of a small minority who monopolise the major
resources of the earth. To sell our mental and physical energies to
employers for a wage is a symbol of our servitude. Only when we are all
free to work voluntarily according to our abilities and take from the
common store of goods and services according to our self-defined needs
shall we be really free. Profits come from the workers being robbed of
the wealth they produce; it is time to put an end to the profit system.
That was the message of Joe Hill, and even though The Socialist Party
would have differences with the Wobblies (which our party raised at the
time) we too advocate the abolition of the wages system.
Abolishing Wages
Abolishing wage slavery? When did you hear even the most radical
figure in the Labour Party advocate that? They do not because they are a
party of capitalist reform, out to tinker with the sick effects of the
system, not to abolish it. The basic position of The Socialist Party is
that we are out to achieve socialism and nothing less. The dream of Joe
Hill - and countless other forgotten workers who dared to reject the
inevitability of this crazy social system - must not be forgotten or
relegated to a romantic memory. Their struggle is our struggle: their
dream of a different kind of world is for us to take up and convert into
social reality.
No comments:
Post a Comment