World
Socialism Pamphlets 1
How
the drive for profit devastates our environment
From
the Alberta tar sands and the mutilated hills of West Virginia’s
mining country to Australia's dying coral reefs, from the radioactive
ruins of Fukushima and the seas clogged with plastic trash to the
shrinking glaciers of the Andes and Himalayas, the devastation of our
environment is plainly visible to all who have eyes to see. But how
and why does this devastation occur? This pamphlet exposes some of
the numerous links between devastation of our environment and the
overwhelming drive for profit that animates the capitalist system. It
brings together articles on environmental issues by members of the
companion parties of the World Socialist Movement in the United
States, Canada, and Britain. Following a brief introduction to the
politics of the World Socialist Movement in Chapter 1, the articles
that make up Chapter 2 focus on the looming peril of climate change.
Other chapters discuss the emergence of new diseases, the
despoliation of natural landscapes by real estate development, and
the continuing massive pollution of the air, soil, and water by
mining operations and the chemicals industry. Taken together, the
material reveals the same forces at work throughout the world.This is
the first in a new series of pamphlets planned for publication by the
World Socialist Party of the United States, one of the organizations
that make up the World Socialist Movement.
World
Socialism Pamphlets 2
Employment
-- a form of slavery?
This
pamphlet – the second in our new series – is about employment.
That is, the relationship between employer and employee, boss and
worker. Or, in collective terms, between the capitalist class and the
working class. Employment is a basic and pervasive institution of our
society. Most people take it for granted. Politicians never question
its continued existence, nor do the mass media. Even so-called
‘communist’ regimes have never abolished it, merely replacing old
bosses – private capitalists and their representatives – by new
ones – state-appointed directors and officials. In our heart of
hearts we – employees – hate employment. We hate being at the
beck and call of a boss. After all, the word ‘employ’ means ‘use’
– to employ a tool means to use it. An employee is a person used as
a tool by another person – his or her employer or user. Why is it
that we beg to be someone’s tool? We enter into this humiliating
arrangement only because the sole practical alternative – being
unemployed, i.e., unused – seems even worse. We are driven to seek
employment in order to obtain a livelihood. It is slavery all the
same. Not full-time or chattel slavery, where whole human beings are
property, but part-time slavery – what socialists call wage
slavery. That is one of the main reasons why socialists look forward
to a new society without employment – a society in which the class
division into employers and employees, capitalist class and working
class, has been overcome – the society that Marx called a ‘free
association of producers.’ Chapter 2 aims to clarify the concept of
‘wage slavery’ by analyzing the similarities and differences
between wage slavery and chattel slavery. Chapter 3 presents a few
short pieces in which socialists express their attitude toward
employment and the basic division in society between employers and
employees. Chapter 4 looks at a crucial aspect of employment –
working hours and their tendency to rise in recent decades. Chapter 5
discusses the physical dangers that employment often entails.
Chapters 6 and 7 look back a century to an earlier period in labor
history – the first part of the 20th century. Chapter 6 is devoted
to the memory of two notable figures from that period – trade union
organizers and socialists Eugene V. Debs and Joe Hill. Chapter 7
recalls the Ludlow Massacre of 1914 – part of the violent response
of the Colorado coal bosses to the attempts of their wage slaves to
improve their miserable working and living conditions. Most of this
pamphlet focuses on the United States and (to a lesser extent)
Western Europe and Canada. Chapter 8 glances at a few other parts of
the world and describes what some workers, poor farmers, and landless
people do to survive in three countries: Malawi (East Africa),
Kyrgyzstan (post-Soviet Central Asia), and Indonesia (Southeast
Asia).
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ReplyDelete