
|
It’s
the System, stupid
|
“£1
a Litre? BASTARDS!” So reads a recent
Class War sticker (well, actually, not so recent, as petrol is now
well over a £1 a litre). Amusing but typical of the populism
they go in for. People don’t like having
to pay more for their petrol, so blame the petrol companies for
putting up the price. It’s the same with
their campaign against the estate agents, Foxtons. People don’t
like estate agents, so let’s target the
one with the worst reputation.
But
is this the message that people who are supposed to be against
capitalism as a system should be wanting to get across? Calling the
petrol companies “bastards”
suggests that their decision to raise prices is a personal one on the
part of those in charge of them; that they had some other choice, but
deliberately chose this one. But did they? They are probably not very
nice people (nobody who has clawed their way to the top of a
corporate hierarchy is likely to be), but, whatever their personal
traits or views, they are acting in this context as what Marx called “functionaries of capital”.
As people in charge of capitalist corporations, they have to seek to
maximise profits, in this case by fixing the price of petrol at what
they judge the market will bear.
What
does Class War expect them to do – or
rather, what is the interpretation those who see their sticker and
share its sentiment are likely to give it? That it would be nice if
the petrol companies sacrificed this chance of maximising their
profits? That this is an option within the capitalist profit system?
That it wouldn’t be such a bad system if
only capitalist corporations wouldn’t
behave as bastards?
The
campaign against Foxtons, too, gives a wrong message. Foxtons have
acquired a reputation for sharp practice. Targetting them gives the
impression that what is being criticised is not the capitalist system
as such but only the excesses which some capitalist firms engage in.
If these excesses were eliminated or suppressed then things would be
OK.
Both
main
parties have played this game, and still do. The Labour Party used to
criticise certain capitalist firms for "profiteering”, i.e.
making too much profit, being too ruthless in pursuing profits.
Presumably if only they’d be satisfied with normal profits, that
would be alright. And it’s what Ted Heath did when, as Tory Prime
Minister, he described the behaviour of Tiny Rowlands – a
particularly predatory capitalist – as the “unacceptable face of
capitalism”. Which suggests that there is an acceptable face of
capitalism. Which of course is what he believed – and which,
unfortunately, is the same message that the Class War campaigns will
convey to people.
Robert
Tressell got it right in The Ragged
Trousered Philanthropists when he
wrote:
“They
all hated and blamed Rushton. Yet if they had been in Rushton’s
place they would have been compelled to adopt the same methods, or
become bankrupt; for it is obvious that the only way to compete
successfully against other employers who are sweaters is to be a
sweater yourself. Therefore no one who is an upholder of the present
system can consistently blame any of these men. Blame the system”
(chapter 21).
|