As the 20th September Global Climate Strike approaches why
do we say that the alternative to socialism is barbarism? Why
revive a phrase that seemingly was consigned to history?
Socialism
is not inevitable and if the socialist movement fails, capitalism may
well in all probability destroy modern civilisation. We argue that
the continuation of capitalism would lead to the collapse of
civilised society and the coming of a new Dark Age, similar to Europe
after the fall of the Roman Empire:
“The collapse of all
civilisation as in ancient Rome, depopulation, desolation,
degeneration — a great cemetery.” (Luxemburg, The Junius
Pamphlet)
She also declared, “Humanity is facing the alternative:
Dissolution and downfall in capitalist anarchy, or regeneration
through the social revolution.” (A Call to the Workers of the
World.)
That isn’t a new concept, “The history of all hitherto
existing society is the history of class struggles…that each
time ended, either in the revolutionary reconstitution of society at
large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes.” (Marx and
Engels, The Communist Manifesto.)
The present possibility of
barbarism in the 21st Century is no more a far-fetched speculation.
Climate change is a threat to humanity as a whole. The scenarios
being presented by respected experts are a breakdown in agricultural
systems, crop failures, water shortages, deforestation and wildfires,
mass migration from coastal regions because of sea-level rises, the
increased spread of diseases and climate wars over declining
resources. If capitalism continues with business as usual, 21st
Century barbarism will be a reality.
We
reject the euphemistic softening of the greenwashing of the brutal
ecological consequences of capitalism. We believe that the present
capitalist system cannot regulate, much less overcome, the global
warming crises. It cannot solve the ecological crisis because to do
so requires setting limits upon capital accumulation—an
unacceptable option for a profit system predicated upon the rule:
Grow or Die! The
logic of capitalism defines the strategies of CEOs and politicians.
All want their money assets to grow.
“Externality”
is a term capitalist economists use when capitalist corporations
don’t pay for the damage they cause. Pollution is the perfect
example — individual corporations pollute, but society as a whole
bears the cost. Adam Smith’s invisible hand, which supposedly
ensures the best of all possible worlds, doesn’t work on
externalities.
The
popular capitalist solution to market failure is to create more
markets via carbon trading and carbon taxes. Sweden’s Dag
Hammerskold Foundation shows not only that emissions trading doesn’t
work, but that it actually makes things worse, by delaying practical
action to reduce emissions by the biggest corporate offenders. What’s
more, since there is no practical method of measuring the results of
emissions trading, the entire process is subject to massive fraud.
Emissions trading has produced huge windfalls for the polluters —
it instantly increases their assets, and does little to reduce
emissions. Another “market-driven” approach proposes levying
taxes levied on corporate greenhouse gas emissions. But if the
“carbon taxes” are too low, they won’t stop emissions — and
if they are high enough, corporations will shift their operations to
countries that don’t interfere with business-as-usual. In any
event, it is very unlikely that capitalist politicians will actually
impose taxes sufficiently punitive that would force their corporate
backers to make real changes.
Most
scientists, politicians, and business leaders tend to put their hope
in technology. there
is a widespread expectation that new technologies will replace fossil
fuels by harnessing renewable energy such as solar and wind. Many
also trust that there will be technologies for removing
carbon dioxide such as cap and capture
and for geoengineering
the
Earth’s climate. Technology although possibly a valuable tool is
not a magic wand to save modern civilisation. But doubts about
profitability have discouraged investments.
Any
reasonable person must eventually ask why businesses and their
governments seek to avoid effective action on global warming other
than superficial cosmetic changes when they do accept the dire
threats of what the future holds. The answer is that the problem is
rooted in the very nature of capitalist society, which is made up of
thousands of separate corporations, all competing for investment and
for profits. If a company decides to invest heavily in cutting carbon
emissions, its profits will go down. Investors will move their
capital into more profitable investments. Eventually the green
company will go out of business. Capitalism is anarchic and its
unplanned growth isn’t an aberration, or an externality, or a
market failure. It is the nature of the beast.
Socialism
still stands for the replacement of capitalism, a task now given an
added urgency for the survival of civilisation itself. We say that
capitalism is inherently unsustainable and will break down into the
barbarism if our effort to build socialism proves unsuccessful. It is
humanity's obligation that the struggle for socialism succeeds.
Socialism is emancipatory, embracing the goal of transformation of
needs, a shift toward use-values over exchange-values—a project of
far-reaching significance grounded not in the sense of imposing
scarcity, hardship and austere consumption. It is a society of freely
associated producers, a world society in ecological harmony with
nature, unthinkable under present capitalist conditions. Socialism
will be worldwide and universal, or it will be nothing. Air and
water doesn’t stop at borders. So long as capitalism remains the
world’s dominant economic system, positive changes in individual
countries will be undermined by countermoves in other countries
seeking competitive advantage. Change must be all-encompassing.
Extinction
Rebellion and the rest of the climate movement are demanding
something should be urgently done but believe that reforms and
legislation is compatible with profits and global markets. Our goal
is to overthrow the capitalist mode of production. The problem is
capitalism and its emphasis on growth. For the planet to stand any
chance, the world's production and distribution system must be
redesigned.
The
Socialist Party's seeks to bring the cooperative commonwealth into
existence. Only an economy that is organised for human needs, not
profit, has any chance of slowing climate change and reversing the
damage that’s already been done. Only democratic socialist planning
can overcome the problems caused by capitalist chaos. Socialism did
not triumph in the 20th Century. Today We will either see the fabric
of civilisation unravel under the onslaught of an increasingly
unstable climate events— or else we will construct a new society
forged on a new set of global relationships. Echoing Marx and Engels
and Luxemburg, we say that humanity’s choice is Socialism or
Barbarism. There is no other way.
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