There
is a theory of good and bad capitalists and good and bad capitalism,
and we are asked to support the former and to struggle against the
latter. This theory of the "lesser evil" takes various
forms. It is false to conclude that the workers must support the
"good" exploiters against the "bad" exploiters.
We must oppose all exploiters. A
working class divided by nationalism, sexism or racism does not fight
a strong, united battle. Capitalism must go. Industry must be under
common ownership. If socialism means that the capitalist state is to
acquire all the industries — municipal, state, and national —
thus establishing state capitalism, it would be nothing short of
state feudalism, against which every socialist should fight, and
fight hard. Socialism is not government ownership or control of
industry, two things that are purely a capitalist expression.
Socialism struggles for the abolition of the state, not the
enlargement of its functions. There was a period when workers were
seduced by the idea of beneficial state and saw in parliamentary
legislation the means of expressing its class interests. But as
workers acquired political maturity, there was the realisation that
the state increases the powers for shackling the working people.
Socialism, in the words of Engels, is not the government of persons,
but the administration of things. The State, and its authority masked
as democracy, disappears.
The
only hope lies in revolution—the sweeping away of this rotten
system of exploitation. Socialism is the conscious and determined
struggle by a whole class to realise objectives clearly perceived and
understood. The objectives are not the artificial creation of the
socialists; they arise out of the development of capitalism itself.
The more the workers unite their forces and commence to struggle
against the capitalist offencive, the more the struggle becomes a
political struggle, not between the workers and any group of
capitalists, but between the workers and the capitalist state
representing the capitalist class as a whole. Although the global
capitalist system constantly plunges into crises we cannot therefore
conclude that it will collapse on its own. Capitalism will not grow
into socialism.
The
Socialist Party's aim is not to “improve” conditions or gain
reforms or stop corruption or accomplish any other end within the
framework of existing society. Its aim is to overthrow existing
social relations, to capture then abolish the existing state, and to
establish a new society. Capitalism is no longer a progressive but a
retrogressive force. Capitalism offers the people the prospect of
only continued and increasing poverty, hunger, unemployment, war,
insecurity, and political tyranny. The dominant class under
capitalism is the retrogressive and reactionary class. Unemployment,
hunger, war – follows necessarily from EVERY reform which
presupposes the continued existence of capitalism. Revolutionary
change comes about only by the overthrow of capitalism.
The
domination of the capitalist mode of production has posed before
humanity the alternatives: Socialism or Barbarism. The uncontrolled
disruption of the environment by anarchic capitalism poses a threat
to the continued existence of humanity itself. The only solution to
these problems is the elimination of capitalism and its institutions,
and the establishment of common ownership of the means of production
with rational economic and social planning. The fundamental task of
the Socialist Party is to build a revolutionary movement capable of
the overthrow of capitalism and the establishment of socialism.
Capitalism has developed as a world
economic
system. It is illusory to believe that the much higher development of
the productive forces that socialism entails can be achieved within
the framework of a single country. The construction of socialism can
be completed only on a world scale. The victory of the revolution can
occur only through the active participation of the overwhelming
majority of the population. Thus the Socialist Party rejects all
militarist, putschist, and terrorist illusions. The actions of a
small revolutionary minority cannot substitute for the revolutionary
mass action of the working class. Not only does the State wither away
with socialism but the necessity for a political party of the workers
ceases with the complete abolition of classes. The Socialist Party
will disappear when socialism ceases to be an object of struggle, and
the whole of society becomes socialist.
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