Beyond
the madness of the capitalist system there lies a great prospect. In
place of a world driven by competition and conflict there is the
prospect of a united humanity. Instead of being driven by the
economic laws of an exploitative system there lies the prospect of a
society that would work democratically in the interests of all
people. This is the prospect of a new society based on common
ownership, democratic control and production solely for needs.
Socialism
would be organised solely for the interests of all people and would
operate with a combination of vital freedoms; the freedom to apply
all useful resources to providing for needs; the freedom to make
democratic decisions about the priorities of community action and the
freedom to carry out those decisions in the most efficient way.
The
first task of socialism will be to solve the great social problems of
capitalist society. This will be co-operation to produce more food,
to provide housing, sanitation and clean water for the hundreds of
millions who endure sub-standard conditions or who live in squalor;
to provide health services; to construct a safe world energy system,
to stop the despoliation of the planet and the pollution of its
atmosphere, seas, forests and lands; to provide for education,
enjoyment and world contact. These are the great projects for which
world socialism would release the immense resources of useful labour
that are now exploited, misused or wasted by the insanities of the
profit system.
Socialism
will operate with one simple and ordinary human ability which is
universal; the ability of every individual to co-operate with others
in a world wide community of interests. For this, co-operative labour
must have free access to all the means of production, distribution
and the earth's resources which are our common inheritance. As well
as its abundant natural wealth everything in this inheritance has
only one source which is useful work in all its variety. This has
been the work of arts and crafts; science and technology; mining and
industry; tool making and manufacturing; building, farming,
transport; services such as health and education. All these skills
represent the accumulated power of useful labour. Wherever we look
throughout the world we see the best things it can do once it can
flourish in freedom for the needs of all people.
Useful
labour is a power that is shared in common between all humanity,
rising above the differences of race, culture and language and the
various routes through which communities have emerged from history.
From this diversity and in co-operation, useful labour can enrich all
human experience. In every world problem, in every common hope that
remains unrealised, and in every common experience of failure and
disillusion, is the voice of useful labour demanding its free
expression. Properly defined and set out as a clear objective world
socialism provides its political direction. Once
the genius of our species is allowed to flower for the benefit of all
people, the work of solving our problems will be not just materially
rewarding but will also provide the utmost enjoyment. In carrying out
this great project it is certain that the present era will in time be
regarded with scarce comprehension of how misguided and self
destructive our species can be whilst a better world might so easily
have been created
Communities
in socialism must stop people dying from hunger and could do it
immediately. Beyond this a choice of good quality food would be
produced for all people. This would require increased world food
production.
Socialism
must also house the world's population in comfort, providing for the
basic necessities of piped clean water, drainage systems, cooking
facilities and other domestic amenities. In addition socialism must
establish a safe world energy supply, stop pollution and adopt
techniques able to work within the natural systems of the environment
in non destructive ways. There is a need to bring into balance the
world distribution of means of production, transport systems and
storage facilities. There is a need to extend health and education
services and further develop communications of every kind. For all
these great projects, socialism would begin with a structure of
production, inadequate for the supply of these needs. This would
require a rapid expansion of production.
These
aims would have to be accomplished in stages in an order of
priorities, doing what was manageable at first, monitoring the
progress made and then going on. As we have said, this anticipates a
stage of development in socialism when pressures of necessity will be
eased with the result that communities will have wider options on how
to live. In these circumstances, no doubt, various philosophies of
needs will be widely debated leading perhaps to a great diversity of
life styles. But given the present state of things, our desperate
need is to solve our problems.
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