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The
Socialist Party has also made its own contributions to socialist
theory, in the light of further developments, going beyond some of the
theories of socialist pioneers like Marx and Engels. We set out below a
number of these contributions:
1.
Solving the Reform or Revolution dilemma, by declaring that a socialist
party should not advocate reforms of capitalism, and by recognising
that political democracy can be used for revolutionary ends.
2.
Realisation of the world-wide (rather than international) character of
Socialism. Socialism can only be a united world community without
frontiers, and not the federation of countries suggested by the word
"inter-national."
3.
Recognition that there is no need for a "transition period" between
capitalism and Socialism. The enormous increases in social productivity
since the days of Marx and Engels have made superfluous a period, such
as they envisaged, in which the productive forces would be developed
under a State control, and in which consumption would have to be
rationed. Socialism can be established as soon as a majority of workers
want it, with free access.
4.
Rejection of any further progressive role for nationalism after
capitalism became the dominant world system towards the end of the 19th
century. Industrialisation under national State capitalism is neither
necessary nor economically progressive.
5. For the same reason,
rejection of the idea of "progressive
wars". Socialists oppose all wars, refusing to take sides.
6.
Exposures of leadership as a capitalist political principle, a feature
of the revolutions that brought them to power, and utterly alien to the
socialist revolution. The socialist revolution necessarily involves the
active and conscious participation of the great majority of workers,
thus excluding the role of leadership.
7.
Advocating and practising that a socialist party should be organised as
an open democratic party, with no leaders and no secret meetings, thus
foreshadowing the society it seeks to establish.
8.
Recognition that capitalism will not collapse of its own accord, but
will continue from crisis to crisis until the working class consciously
organise to abolish it.
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