Our
aim is socialism, which we define as a world-wide society in which
the Earth's resources will be the common property of all humanity
under democratic control at world, regional and local level as
appropriate. It will be a society where we shall work voluntarily as
best we can, as far as our ability goes, to suit our joint needs, as
part of a co-operative society. It will be a society in which the
state, as the public power of repression at the disposal of a ruling
class, will have been abolished and replaced by a participatory
democracy. This is our immediate aim, not some long-term goal.
We
are workers who don't see ourselves as a group doing anything for
other fellow workers other than putting before them the basic
socialist propositions that under capitalism there is an
irreconcilable conflict of interest between capitalists and workers;
that capitalism can never be reformed so as to work in the interest
of workers; that what is required is a society of common ownership,
democratic control and production for use not profit.
If
workers want such a socialist society this is something they must do
for themselves without following leaders or relying on benefactors.
We can't establish it for them. As we say in our declaration of
principles "the emancipation of the working class must be the
working of the working class itself".
We
don't suffer from the illusion that existing MPs and local
councillors can do anything to further the cause of socialism. Their
job, and in fact aspiration, is merely to run the political side of
capitalism in Britain, and capitalism can only be run as a profit
system in which priority must always be given to making profits over
meeting needs. We also agree that there can be no real democracy
under capitalism in the sense of a situation in which everybody has
an equal say in deciding what should be done and in which those
decisions can be implemented without hindrance. This is not the case
today. Having
said this, in many parts of the world including Britain a sufficient
degree of democracy exists for a socialist majority to be able to use
existing elective bodies, such as parliament, to win control of the
state machine through the ballot box. Of course, to work, this
presupposes a socialist-minded and democratically organised majority
outside parliament standing firmly behind the delegates they will
have sent into parliament with the single mandate to take the formal
steps to stop the state supporting capitalism.
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