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We
analyse social affairs in class terms. We approach problems
in the field of economics and politics from a consideration of what
we see as being the real interests of the world working class. It is
our contention that there are only two classes in present day
society. Firstly, the working class, who collectively produce the
wealth of society and who, in order to live, have to sell their
ability to work for a wage or a salary. Secondly, the capitalist
class who accumulate profit through the economic exploitation of the
working class.
This
situation leads to an inevitable conflict of interests and the
generation of social and economic problems that cannot be solved
while capitalism of whatever form continues. Commodity production
(production of wealth for sale with a view to profit) inevitably
brings conflict over access to markets and sources of raw materials,
and for the control of trade routes, and for strategic point around
the globe. Attempts are made to resolve these conflicts through
discussion and diplomacy. Where diplomacy fails there remains the
threat of force of arms to get what is wanted. >From time to time
this clash of interests breaks out in armed conflict. For the
Socialist Party “capitalism and war are inseparable. There can be
no capitalism without conflicts of economic interest.” ( SPGB: War
and the Working Class. 1936. p.1)
Within
a year of our founding the Party published an article putting forward
our view on war. In it the author wrote:
“I
do not think it will be questioned by any socialist that it is his
duty to oppose the wars of the ruling class of one nation with the
ruling class of another, and refuse to participate in them.” (‘The
curse of national prestige.’ Socialist Standard, August
1905.)
This
has been our consistent view ever since. So long as the working class
continue to support capitalism so long will its wars, and
preparations for war, continue. Before the mass slaughter of the
First World War we argued that because wars were the outcome of
economic and strategic conflicts between the capitalists of the
various nations any attempt to abolish war while those economic
conflicts remained was bound to be futile. International meetings
passing pious resolutions aimed at achieving “universal
disarmament” were doomed to failure. This is what one early member
wrote in December 1910 about a pre-World War I peace campaign:
“[That]
the ‘anti-war campaign’, as such, is, from the working class
standpoint, absurd. Just as the class struggle cannot be abolished
save by abolishing classes, so it is impossible for capitalist
nations to get rid of the grim spectre of war, for Capitalism
presupposes economic conflicts which must finally be fought out with
the aid of the armed forces of the State.” (‘Socialism and the
anti-war campaign.’ Socialist Standard, December 1910.)
The
only solution to war and the myriad other problems that face the
workers of the world is to abolish capitalism and replace it with
socialism. This involves democratic political action by a majority of
the working class who understand the need for change and know how to
bring it about.
We
do not call for people to love one another (though we are not opposed
to that of course) rather we appeal to the workers of this and other
countries to recognise their common class interest and to organise
consciously and politically to gain the political power necessary to
dispossess the owning class – to strip them of their right to own
the means of life – and to put in its place a system of common
ownership and democratic control of the means of wealth production –
socialism.
Socialism
will be a classless, propertyless and moneyless world community of
production directly for use without the mediation of buying and
selling. Nothing else will suffice. Abolition of class ownership
will result in the abolition of conflicts of interest both between
the owners and the non-owners and also between competing national
groups of owners organised politically into armed nation states. We
can conceive of no situation in which we would give our support to
either side in any of capitalism’s armed struggles.
The
role of the Socialist Party in helping bring socialism about is one
of agitation and education. We are an instrument to be used by a
conscious working class once the need for a revolutionary social
change is recognised. Because they don’t stand for socialism, we
are “hostile to every other Party”, even to those which claim to
have socialism as their goal.
Much
of our argument with the left-wing revolves around their demands for
reforms. Most radical left-wing parties say (or in the case of the
Labour Party used to say) that their goal is “socialism“.
However they also pursue reforms of capitalism as “stepping stones”
to socialism. Any political party doing this soon find themselves
saddled with the problems inevitably associated with the running of
capitalism.
In
an article written in the Journal of Modern History on the eve
of the Second World War the historian Harry J. Marks dealt with the
collapse of the German Social Democratic Party as a revolutionary
party in 1914. He encapsulated and highlighted the dangers to a
working class movement inherent in the pursuit of reforms. The
author wrote that:
“By
accepting the policy of the German Government on August 4, 1914, as
fundamentally its own, the role of this enormous organisation as an
independent factor in world history sank to insignificance and became
no more than that of a cog to gear the labour movement into the
German war machine.” (Harry J. Marks: ‘Sources of Reformism in
the SDP of Germany 1890-1914.’ Journal of Modern History XI
(1939) p. 334.)
Our
hostility therefore is no mere semantic quibble. It goes to the heart
of our case against adopting the “something now” approach to
problems, including the problem of war. Unlike those on the left who
are choosy as to which wars they object to, we in the Socialist Party
are against all of capitalism’s wars. Nor do we single out one or
two aspects of war – atomic weapons, or land mines, or poison gas,
or the use of child soldiers – we oppose the system that give rise
to these things.
Both
the established capitalist class and those intent on joining them by
force of arms need these weapons to defend and advance their
interests against threats from competing groups of capitalists also
armed to the teeth to defend their interests. The working
class on the other hand have no such interests to defend. The workers have
no country. What they do have is a common
interest in
making the world the common heritage of all who live in it.
GWYNN
THOMAS
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