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Introducing
The Socialist Party
The Socialist Party is like no other
political party in Britain.
It is made up of people who have joined together because we want to get
rid of the profit system and establish real socialism.
Our aim is to persuade others to
become socialist and act for themselves,organising
democratically and without
leaders, to bring about the kind of society that we are advocating in
this
journal.
We are solely concerned with building a movement of socialists for
socialism. We are not a reformist party with a programme of policies to
patch up capitalism.
We use every possible opportunity to
make new socialists.
We publish pamphlets and books, as well as CDs, DVDs and various other
informative material.
We also give talks and take part in debates; attend rallies, meetings
and demos; run educational
conferences; host internet discussion
forums, make films presenting our ideas,
and contest elections when practical.
Socialist literature is available in Arabic,Bengali, Dutch, Esperanto,
French,German, Italian, Polish, Spanish,Swedish and Turkish as well as
English.
The more of you who join the SocialistParty the more we will be
able to get our ideas across, the more experiences we will be
able to draw on and greater will be the new ideas for building the
movement which you will be able to bring us.
The Socialist Party is an organisation of
equals. There is no leader and there are
no followers. So, if you are going to join
we want you to be sure that you agree
fully with what we stand for and that we
are satisfied that you understand the
case for socialism.
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Wrong
about Kenya?
Dear
Editors,
We
have the following observations on the article “Kenya Referendum
farce” (Socialist Standard, December).
The struggle
for a new Constitution has been going on since Moi took power in
1978. In 1982, the fear by Moi of the setting up of the Kenya
Socialist Alliance led the Moi government to convert Kenya into a one
party dictatorship. During the 80s, the struggle around the
Constitution mainly focused on changing the document to allow for
political pluralism. Moi gave in and allowed alternative parties in
1990. But the struggle for a new Constitution continued as Moi
continued to use the document to abuse power.
We agree with
much of your views that the Constitution will not put food on the
table for the exploited workers and the oppressed in Kenya. Our view
within the Kenya Socialist Democratic Alliance and which we have
repeated several times in the past is that the Constitution is a
piece of paper which will be violated by the ruling class if their
interests are at stake.
From a Socialist perspective, the
Constitution can only matter if the power to implement it rests on
the hands of the working class, not the thieving ruling class. Even
if another "democratic Constitution" is drafted and passed,
it will not solve the problem of mass unemployment, mass poverty,
exploitation of workers and peasants in Kenya, collapsed health care
system and other social and economic maladies brought about by the
rot and decay of the deformed capitalist system in our country.
The
"Yes" and the "No" bandwagons have no political
alternative because parties represented on both sides are
fundamentally liberal. We take the position that the real solution to
the crisis in Kenya rests on the establishment of a
"Workers/Socialist Party" in the country. At the moment,
the unworkable system of capitalism is not facing any
confrontation.
Our support for the "Orange team" was
strategic. Kenyans need to do away with "the problem of the
Constitution" so that they can realize that a New Constitution
is actually not the solution to the political and economic crisis
brought about by the thieving ruling class.
You could have
come out clearly in the article to assert that Kenya needs a
Socialist government or a "Workers Party" armed with a
revolutionary socialist Program for change and transformation instead
of talking about a "system which has no frontiers".
Your
article is good. But your writer should also have attacked capitalism
directly instead of talking about a system "where money is being
worshiped". By leaving out the dimension of "Socialism"
and "Capitalism" in the article (referring to them
indirectly) your writer squandered an opportunity to pit Socialism as
an alternative against capitalism which needs to be overthrown in
Kenya.
We believe that it could have been wrong for us to
support the "Yes" side or to sit on the fence as your
writer did because the struggle for a new constitution is part of the
democratic struggle in our country. While participating in the
process, we utilized every opportunity to point out that the
Constitution is not the answer to the crisis in Kenya while at the
same time pointing out the limitations of the Orange camp which will
not be able to go beyond the Constitution to challenge
capitalism.
Needless to say, our Comrades on the ground
managed to introduce "Mapambano", our Newsletter, as the
official slogan of the Orange campaign. Since the Orange leaders will
not be able to deliver even if they came to power, a new force will
have to come into play and this is the period we are preparing for.
Okoth
Osewe, Secretary, Kenya Socialist Democratic Alliance
(www.kenyasocialist.org
)
We
don’t understand the logic of your position: why vote for something
you know is pointless? We suspect, though, that you have a
“vanguardist” approach and were just opportunistically using the
No campaign to attract a following and that by “socialism” you
mean some sort of national state capitalism - Editors.
Right
about Venezuela
Dear
Editors
I read your November issue about Venezuelan president
Chavez. I think the left is wrong to support Chavez. He and his
supporters want to keep capitalism but reform it so that the part
played by state is increased. Their ultimate goal may be establishing
a Cuban-style state capitalism in Venezuela accompanied of course by
political dictatorship.
I think socialists should expose this
reformist bourgeois leader and his supporters and call for working
class power in Venezuela. A multi-party socialist state in which the
working class rules over the society and expropriates capitalists and
petty bourgeoisie and establishes common ownership of means of
production and distribution of wealth is the only revolutionary
answer to all the poverty, inequality and political dictatorship that
capitalism causes at the present time in all countries of the
world.
I also condemn those members of the murderous
capitalist ruling class of the United States that plan for terror on
Chavez.
Down with capitalism! Freedom, equality, worker power!
Siamak
Haghighat (by email)
We
generally agree except that we wouldn’t talk about a state or the
working class existing in socialism - Editors.
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