We
make no apology for returning to the question of the revolutionary
change. The world is in the midst of revolutionary change. The
smokestacks and assembly lines no longer dominate our landscapes. The
jobs we once knew are slowly disappearing. We are being replaced by
robots, computers and other new technologies in our workplaces. And still the
system can no longer feed and house us or provide us with jobs.
The
Socialist Party must help develop the fighting capacity of the
exploited through education and organisation. At every opportunity we
must expose the capitalist system and uncloak our class enemy. We,
the dispossessed, must fight back if we are to survive. We have no
choice but to create a world free of exploitation and want. In order
to do so, we need an organisation that can educate. Hardly anyone but
Marxists nowadays retain trust in the anti-capitalist striving and
sentiments of the working people or believe that they can in time
participate in a mighty movement oriented toward socialist
objectives. For adhering to these convictions and being guided by
them, the Socialist Party is looked upon as political fossils,
relics of a bygone era, who dogmatically cling to outdated views.
Unfashionable as it may be, the Socialist Party holds substantial
reasons for their persistence to their principles. Our convictions are
not an affirmation of religious-like faith but a reasoned analysis of
the decisive trends of our time, and an understanding of capitalist
development. No sooner has the ideas of Marx been dismissed for the
hundredth time by academics and intellectuals than it returns with
increased confirmations. Those who deny any latent radicalism in the
workers must ask if the working class cannot dislodge the
capitalists, who else can do that job? Once the workers have been
cancelled out as the bearers of social progress, the question is
insistently posed, who will take their place? If the professors and
commentators deem the struggle against capitalist domination to be a
lost cause and socialism becomes a Utopia.
People who seriously
envisage such a perspective despite the capitalist rulers' arrogant
faith in the longevity of their system and their perpetual dominion,
must logically reconcile themselves to the eventual destruction of
civilisation by the climate crises or some other consequence of the capitalist system.
The
Socialist Party does not succumb to such sentiments of hopelessness.
The world has hardly been a model of social peace. The gap between
rich and poor keeps widening on a global scale. There is no longer an
unlimited confidence in the longevity of capitalism. The prophets of
gloom may easily mistake the recharging of the energies of the
working class after austerity for their complete exhaustion. The self-reliance
of the workers was so weakened that they do not realise they can say
“no” to capitalist domination or escape from the status
quo. A defeat in a battle is not losing the war.
Capitalist production
cannot do without an ample labouring force, no matter how many are
unemployed, because profit-making and the accumulation of capital
depend upon the consumption of large quantities of labour power which
creates value in the form of commodities. Although this or that
segment or individual may be squeezed out of jobs temporarily or
permanently, the work force as such is not expendable, no matter how
fast or how far automation proceeds under capitalist auspices. The
working class is far from obsolescence and cannot be conjured away.
During the lulls of militant activity, people come to believe that
they can never generate rebellious moods and radical movements in
their time. Sudden shocks can cause the oppressed to spring to life
which confounds the skeptics and surprises the participants
themselves. Workers seldom suspect what they are capable of achieving
under the extraordinary motives.
The
Socialist Party answer is that exploited wage slaves will make their
struggles increasingly incendiary and will fight to the finish against
capitalist domination. Who else can become the motor-engine for the
new society? To understand this and act upon it distinguishes
the Socialist Party from become the Bolshevik vanguards. The working
class is not an extinct volcano but possesses potential eruptive and explosive energies still simmering in its depths.
Workers are not fated to
remain servile wage-slaves nor to kowtow to their employers. The
working class has colossal tasks ahead of it. It confronts the most
formidable of adversaries yet it possesses the potential strength of a giant.
This class will be roused from its slumber by events beyond anyone’s
control.
The Socialist Party does not believe that our
fellow-workers can be summoned into battle on anyone’s command.
Working people can launch mighty offensives on their own initiative
once capitalism goads them into action. The will to win is an
indispensable factor in the way to win. The working class can go
forward to victory only as they become convinced that the profiteers
are not born to command, that they are leading the world to climate
catastrophe, that they are not omnipotent and unbeatable, that their
system of exploitation is not ever-lasting but has to go and can be
abolished.
This is the message of the Socialist Party. It teaches
that the workers are qualified to supplant the plutocrats and become
the pioneers of the first truly human society.
No comments:
Post a Comment