Organisers
said more than 8,000 people joined a Welsh independence rally in
Caernarfon.
Gwyn
Llewelyn, from the umbrella group AUOBCymru, said: "This is
really taking off as a real alternative to the stale politics that
has failed us so often before."
Socialists
in Wales would most vehemently disagree with that opinion. The
Socialist Party and nationalists see society from very different
points of view.
Plaid
Cymru claims that English domination is the cause of the social ills,
such as bad housing, poverty, unemployment and rural depopulation
from which the people of Wales suffer. Socialists see present-day
society as divided into two classes: a capitalist class who own the
means of production, and a working class who, having no property, are
forced to work for the capitalists. The interests of these two
classes are opposed and between them there is a class struggle. This
transcends nationality. The dispossessed, propertyless working class
has no country.
Socialism and nationalism are opposed. They are
irreconcilable. Nationalism is in fact one of the means which
capitalism uses to blind the workers to class society. It is a
delusion which socialists in Wales seek to dispel. For this reason
the Socialist Party is opposed to Welsh nationalism and does not
support the demand for Welsh independence. Poverty is a class problem
, not a national problem. It is a problem to be solved by class
emancipation not by national emancipation. Socialists consequently
hold that national independence is not the solution. Capitalism would
continue if Welsh nationalists succeeded and achieved an independent
sovereign country.
The
language question, however, is distinct from the so-called national
question. Welsh-speakers may well hold a grievance against the
English-speaking administration. Of course people should be free to
speak the language of their choice and, if they occupy a distinct
area, to have social affairs discussed and administered in that
language. This to a certain extent has now been largely resolved.
These grievances have been misdirected by the partisans of separatism
in Wales in accordance with the old nationalist slogan “no
language, no nation”. This is nonsense. Those who speak Welsh are
just Welsh-speaking human beings, not members of some imaginary Welsh
nation. Welsh-speaking socialists have long recognised that they are
Welsh-speaking world citizens.
In
Cardiff, on Queen Street (Newport Road end), there is a weekly
Socialist Party stall every Saturday, 1pm to 3pm, (weather
permitting.)
South
Wales Branch (Cardiff)
Meets
2nd Saturday 12noon, Caffè Nero, Capitol Shopping Centre, Queen
Street, CF10 2HQ
(January, April, July & October)
Contact: Richard Botterill, 21 Pen-Y-Bryn Road, Galbalfa, CF14 3LG
02920 615826
(January, April, July & October)
Contact: Richard Botterill, 21 Pen-Y-Bryn Road, Galbalfa, CF14 3LG
02920 615826
South
Wales Branch (Swansea)
Meets
2nd Monday 7.30pm, Unitarian Church, High Street, SA1 1NZ
(except January, April, July & October)
Contact: Geoffrey Williams, 19 Baptist Well Street, Waun Wen, SA1 6FB
01792 643624
(except January, April, July & October)
Contact: Geoffrey Williams, 19 Baptist Well Street, Waun Wen, SA1 6FB
01792 643624
No comments:
Post a Comment