Tuesday, September 17, 2024

In other words (1975)

From the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

The Guardian is by and large (we are not saying they are consistent or that any capitalist rag can have such profitless burdens as principles) a paper that supports Labour. It is therefore the more significant to read the following passage in their leading article on the economy of July 17: "Whatever Mr. Healey may say in public, he is relying on rising unemployment to give a real bite to his anti-inflationary policy.” This is no doubt clear enough but perhaps we can put it into even simpler terms: “What the Labour government says to the working class who are stupid enough to follow their leadership is a pack of lies. What the government want is not cure unemployment, as they always say in their election addresses. They actually want to worsen unemployment as they find this necessary and desirable for the running of British capitalism (which is their job). And they want it for the purpose of giving a real bite. Out of what? Out of the living standards, of the working class.

We do not suggest The Guardian is aware of the force of what they write. But that only proves their own stupidity. What they said was true enough. Which makes a nice change.

In East London (1975)

Party News from the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

Hard work by a small number of members and sympathizers, and the interest created by the lectures held at Centerprise, now offer the prospect of reforming a Branch of the Party in East London. To do so would be of great importance. There has not been a Branch in this area since, after many misfortunes, Hackney closed down; yet the highest vote by far for an SPGB candidate in a General Election was at Bethnal Green in 1959. We want to hear from Central Branch members, sympathizers, and readers of the Socialist Standard anywhere in East London. Please get in touch with Paul Bennett, 85 Goldsmith’s Row, Bethnal Green, London E.2.

50 Years Ago: The Illusions of Anti-Militarists (1975)

The 50 Years Ago column from the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

When the masses are converted to socialist ideas and organised, and in control of the political machine, the armed forces will be under their control. While socialists welcome the acceptance of Socialism by any and every member of the working class, we do not delude ourselves with the notion that any rapid and widespread conversion of the army and navy is possible. Soldiers may tire of prolonged war or be driven to stop fighting by lack of food, but that is not a conversion to the revolutionary policy of Socialism.

Anti-militarism does not denote an acceptance of Socialism. Pacifists and Liberals, Anarchists and Quakers, may all be anti-militarists, opposed to all wars, sighing for perfect peace, yearning for brotherly love, but they are dreamers and ignore the nature of the system under which we live. Armed forces are required by ruling classes to keep the subject classes in slavery and wars are inseparable from a system of private property.

Socialists, therefore, go to the roots of the matter. The system depends upon the ignorance of the masses of workers and therefore until the workers obtain real knowledge of the causes of their conditions and organise in agreement with that knowledge — there is no possibility of abolishing the effects of the system.

(From an article “The Illusions of Anti-Militarism”, by Adolph Kohn, in the Socialist Standard, September 1925.)

The Powers of Government (1975)

From the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

Marx called the State “the concentrated and organized power of society”, and the society he was speaking of was of course capitalism.

Among the factors which gave rise to the organized Socialist movement in the 19th century, a considerable one was the growth of State power and the consequent conviction — which also animated reformers of every kind — that through Parliament anything might be achieved. A marked difference is seen between the attitudes of those who formed the SDF and the Fabian Society, looking keenly to the use of political power, and the attitudes of men who are thought of as pioneers of Socialism before Marx — for example Thomas Hodgskin and Robert Owen — who paid no attention to the idea of using Parliament.

In further contrast, the “new left” of recent years has largely rejected parliamentary methods. But what this conveys is not the shortcomings of those methods but the inanition of the Left past and present. Socialists continue to advocate parliamentary action as the only means to change society.

At the beginning of the Socialist Party’s existence the trade unions were seeking political expression, and this was a question on which the founders were anxious to formulate and declare their attitude as quickly as possible. What must be understood is that this attitude was not simply to the trade unions as such, but to the whole question of capitalism and the State and the attainment of Socialism. The importance of taking such a position can be seen if it is compared with that of the then-strong ILP. One of the objects of the ILP from its foundation in 1893 was to secure trade-union representation in Parliament; but see the attitude to the class struggle put forward by the ILP’s leading spokesman Keir Hardie. In a main article in the Labour Leader in September 1904 — shortly after the SPGB was founded — he said:
I claim for the ILP that its Socialism is above suspicion, and its independence unchallenged and unchallengeable; and yet in the platform speeches and in the writings of its leading advocates the terms “class war” or “class conscious” are rarely if ever used.
The early members of the SPGB saw clearly that the unions’ “politicization” in the Labour Party would compel them to support other parties and compromise wherever possible to obtain concessions; and this has been the history not only of the Labour Party but of other attempts at political action by the unions.

At the same time the founders of the SPGB used in their principles the comprehensive-sounding phrase “machinery of government”, but they very quickly made it clear that this meant Parliament and local councils and nothing else. Up to about 1910 questions were sometimes sent to the Socialist Standard putting hypotheses such as what would be the Party’s strategy if Socialists found themselves in a country with no parliament, or if representation and suffrage were abolished in Britain. These questions disappeared simply because the many new nations which have come into existence have all established for themselves parliaments, making plain that this legislative machinery is essential to capitalism. Indeed, this is so firmly planted in people’s minds now that the question is replaced by another one which says Socialist society would not work without a government.

To illustrate the point about the need for parliamentary machinery, the late John Strachey gave an account of being in Poland in 1956 at the time of rioting and a change in the government. He was taken aside by a politician and asked: “You, Mr. Strachey, are a well-known democratic theorist. We require your advice. We are extremely anxious to conduct absolutely free and democratic elections in our country. But if we do so, how can be ensure that the Government’s candidates will be at the top of the poll?”

It may be of interest to mention another matter concerning Parliament which arose in the SP’s early years. The members of that period were full of optimism and expected quite rapid progress towards Socialism, and one question they considered was what would happen when the first Socialists were elected to Parliament and were faced with the Oath of Allegiance to the Crown before they could take their seats. The Party Conference was hard-headed about this and said we were not going to let meaningless constitutional forms stop us carrying out our intentions, but some members immediately left — convinced that the Party was on the slippery slopes of compromise and confusion. Events in the 65 years since then have shown the good sense of the attitude taken, and the meaninglessness of that particular constitutional form. In 1937 a Parliament which had sworn allegiance to the King unanimously sacked him for disobliging them.

Fundamentally, the State is an executive for the ruling class, and this is what it was literally in its early days (comprising only well-established members of the ruling class). The different sectional interests of the ruling class produced (as they continue to produce) a division of parties within the executive. And, still at a relatively early stage, governments found they must have the consent of the ruled to some degree. The alternative would have been the permanent risk of civil disorder and the need to maintain too big a burden of suppressive legislation and force. Therefore democracy was pressed on the working class — to become eventually its invaluable weapon because it offers the means to control of the governing machinery.

Differences between parties remain, to a large extent as differences over how the money collected by taxation to finance the State is to be obtained and used. The Socialist Party’s unique long-standing attitude to taxation is that, despite all the appearances, it is not a matter of any consequence to the working class. Where the main form, direct taxation, is concerned workers are in one sense aware of this, in that they correctly see their wages not as the theoretical gross payment but as what they actually get after deductions. In practice taxes are collected not from the workers but from the capitalists and, as has been said, the pro-capitalist parties are in dispute largely over the most fruitful methods.

In speaking earlier of the growth of State power, what was meant was not that the State has been more and less strong at different times but the widening of what it has to deal with. Since the 1890s all governments have had to legislate and provide for an expanding education system, housing, road traffic, town planning, and innumerable other fresh things; and this is all effected and controlled through local government. As the needs have changed and grown, local government has had to be reorganized repeatedly, including the very recent alterations. It is natural to pooh-pooh local councils as puny beside the might of central government, but in fact they are its branches; their function is simply to execute the policies of central government. Their position is formulated by the Acts establishing them — they have no other powers and are further connected to central government by the system of financial support.

Those engaged in this machinery have then no choice but to comply with what is in the interests of capitalism. The two standard excuses of government reflect this — first that they were “having to clean up the mess”, i.e. put right the errors of their predecessors, and second that "public money” (or “the taxpayers’ money”) has been used for the wrong purposes. One other point often raised reflects a built- in safeguard to the British parliamentary system. It is often asked why experts, i.e. people with a specialist knowledge and lifelong interest, are not put in charge of the appropriate departments. The answer is that they have to function as members of the government as a whole and a special concern or passion would mean an imbalance.

During the Socialist Party’s lifetime our case about government has been confirmed again and again. Parties and individuals who were going to engage in running capitalism but try to do so in the working class’s interests instead of capital’s have failed without exception, and there have been continual let-downs for the workers who believed them. In times of crisis — wars and major depressions — the parties have flown to their common ground and united to defend capitalist interests. There has also been agreement on types of legislation — e.g. welfare-ism — and economic theories — e.g. Keynesianism — which appeared to support capitalism’s interests best.

Our case has been confirmed also by the history of those who set themselves against the State, refusing to accept that its coercive force backed by the electorate was firm. Examples are the direct-actionists at various times, the Angry Brigade, and “rebel” councils who have refused to apply legislation as directed.

Reform movements have by their nature continually to apply to governments for concessions and improvements, and we are often urged to support them. Part of our case about reforms is that what has to be judged is not the broad appeal at the outset but the legislation eventually formulated. The fact is that governments legislate not for theoretical — i.e. moral or humanitarian — reasons but for practical ones, and this is why reformers are so often disappointed and the realization of their hope turns sour.

Finally, it must always be realized that the powers of government are coercive. Behind the clerks and administrators and the most inane politicians stand prisons and armed force as the ultimate sanction for the capitalist system and what it thinks it needs. Majorities of the electorate give their consent and support because they support capitalism. (Even dictatorships require majority support.) A movement to change society through the use of Parliament is realistic only when it begins by realizing that support, and seeking therefore to muster an electorate which no longer supports capitalism but wants it abolished. Such an electorate can send its representatives to parliament with a new kind of mandate, not to run capitalism but to abolish it. We are often told that the capitalist class would not let that happen. This is the whole point — for the Socialist working class to go to where the coercive machine exists and is controlled, so that no other will than that of this conscious majority can prevail.

The above article is from the Party Conference Lecture given at Conway Hall at Easter, 1974.


Blogger's Note:
Though this article/transcript was unsigned, according to the March 1974 issue of the Socialist Standard, Robert Barltrop and Edgar Hardcastle were listed as the speakers at the 1974 Annual Conference Friday Night Meeting . . . and the title of their meeting? The Powers of Government.

Letter: Immediate demands (1975)

Letter to the Editors from the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

Immediate demands

What is wrong with groups of people pressing for and winning “immediate demands” and thereby ameliorating certain bad conditions for a time? True, that wouldn’t be socialism, but we have got to improve life today — for the living. “Democracy”, which you prize so highly — wasn’t that an “immediate demand” at one time, which had to be fought for and won — and not necessarily at the ballot box?

And the right to the ballot box itself which you prize so highly — wasn’t that also an “immediate demand” at one time, which had to be fought for and won — and certainly NOT at the ballot box?

There is no contradiction between pressing for socialism and pressing for “immediate demands”. In fact, when used together, the two aspects are complementary and reinforce each other.
J. J. Sternbach
New York


Reply:
In the main the “certain bad conditions” you refer to affect only the working class. This becomes clear when you consider that they consist almost entirely of the effects of poverty upon the majority of men and women throughout the world. This continuing poverty is no accidental state of afFairs which can be eliminated (or effectively ameliorated) by “careful planning”. It results directly from capitalist society. It follows that to eliminate the problem, the cause must be abolished. This is the only “immediate demand” worth working for, because it is the only one which tackles the problem. You lose both time and understanding when trying to move for temporary solutions — and which in fact cannot fulfil even that role.

Consider who pays for the amelioration of “certain bad conditions”. The workers? No. You have elevated the fulfilment of immediate demands to the status of having been “won” although we would not place that sort of victorious interpretation on the introduction of reform legislation. The answer is that the capitalist class as a whole must meet this cost. Their object in doing so is to smooth out some of the more blatant effects of capitalism thus ensuring its continued hold and growth. Should you disagree with our conclusion, consider where the logical application of your view leads — it would seem to say that the most revolutionary Socialists are in fact the capitalists.

Concerning your comments on “Democracy”, while the workers in this country are relatively free to organize politically compared with fellow workers in other countries, it is important to remember that this “freedom” is only permitted within certain limits. The Democracy which we “prize so highly” can only be brought into being in a society where the means of production and distribution are owned in common, and therefore where every individual stands as an equal to all others.

You describe the "right to the ballot box” as an immediate demand, but you should note the nature of the “groups of people” instrumental in propagating this object. We cannot enter into a historical analysis here, but in brief it may be said that it was the movement of the new capitalists (the growing industrialists) striving for political representation against the older landed aristocracy which expounded the ideas of “equal rights and individual liberty” together with its underlying theme — “the rights of property” — taken up by the working class in the nineteenth century. Workers were rallied to this cause because they believed that representation could alleviate their poverty. The result however of four decades of struggle culminated in the Reform Act of 1832 in which the new capitalists were enfranchised, but the workers were not. It was not until the second Reform Act of 1867 (passed by the Tories) that the large mass of town workers were enfranchised, and 1885 that agricultural workers received the vote.

The enfranchisement of workers who accept the principle of private property ownership has proved to be a bulwark for capitalism. While workers continue in this belief, the ruling class here and abroad recognize the stunted democracy which now exists as the most stable and effective method of continuing working class exploitation.
Editors.

Letter: If and when (1975)

Letter to the Editors from the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

If and when

In the May Socialist Standard, page 93, in the article “Is Socialism Inevitable?”, "Socialism is inevitable because men will seek and gain Socialist knowledge” as stated in the article seems to me to have an air of fatalism about it. If you said “Socialism is inevitable if men will seek Socialist Socialist knowledge”, I agree.

The Western Socialist No. 2, 1975, page 10, agrees with my position when it states: “So the road to Socialism is a clear road if our fellow workers will simply blink the fog from their eyes and rub the nonsense from their ears.”

Anyway, there is nothing to say the atomic bomb won’t beat us all and devastate the world.
Edwin A. Watkins,
Victoria, Australia


Reply:
The argument of “Is Socialism Inevitable?” is that the forms of society are not static. The social systems of history have existed for as long as they matched the development of man’s consciousness and productive powers. Ceasing to do so, each was supplanted by another; and the nature of every such change has been the transfer of ownership of the means of living from an old ruling class to a dynamic new one. It can therefore be said that capitalism must give way to another system, and the only form the new system can take is the establishment of Socialism by the working class.

You say “if the working class”, etc., and quote our companion journal the Western Socialist. However, the Western Socialist does not mean what you mean. Its “if” says that the working class, by blinking the fog from their eyes, can establish Socialism tomorrow; failing that, we have to wait a little longer.

The atomic bomb is not an entity outside society, but part of — vide Marshall McLuhan — the message inherent in the capitalist medium.
Editors.

Letter: The Moneyless Society (1975)

Letter to the Editors from the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

The Moneyless Society

I read the Socialist Standard for the first time with considerable interest.

One thing puzzles me. How can any society run without some token of exchange, be it cowrie beads or pieces of metal? This is not a frivolous question. I really want to know as I cannot see a way round the difficulty myself. Is there a book which could help?

Best wishes to the paper. I shall continue to take it.
Winifred Manson,
Horsham


Reply:
Your letter reminds us that it is some time since we had an article on this subject, and we are pleased that you have written to us about it.

The basic question to be considered is: what is the motive of production under capitalism, and what will it be under Socialism? In capitalist society, production takes place for sale and profit only. The opening words of Marx’s Capital are: “The wealth of those societies in which the capitalist mode of production prevails, presents itself as an immense accumulation of commodities” — commodities being articles for sale.

Unless they can be sold, goods and services are not produced. This is why we have trade depressions and, to use the old phrase, “poverty in the midst of plenty”. Labour-power, the worker’s ability to work, is itself a commodity which has to be sold on the market and often cannot find buyers. In this situation the function of money as a means of exchange is obvious; it is also a measure of value, showing the proportions in which commodities can exchange for one another. Obviously, too, in a society which runs like this money dominates all of man’s activity. Human worth is assessed by it: without money, one is nobody.

But that is capitalism. In the social system which preceded it, feudalism, production took place largely for use. Its products were for the peasant or craftsman and his family and associates; the landlord appropriated some, and any surplus was taken to market to be — usually — directly exchanged. The use of money was very restricted. Please understand that we are not commending feudalism. Life in it was “mean, brutish and short”. We are explaining that until commerce grew and commodity production became general, money was commonly not necessary.

Production in Socialism will be for use. That does not represent a designed policy; it proceeds naturally from common ownership, just as production for profit is the consequence of class ownership. The produce of agriculture and industry will be, to reduce things to their simplest terms, put or sent there for people to take. Since the means of production belong to everyone, so will the products (our term is “free access”). Thus, exchange will cease. One reason why some people are astonished by this is simply conditioning by capitalism and the conviction that there must be something wrong in having things without paying for them.

Your question “can any society run” without exchange indicates more practical kinds of uncertainty, possibly whether everyone’s requirements can be met. We say they can. Our economic criticism of capitalism is not that it maldistributes wealth (the “cake” argument of the Fabians) but that — precisely because it is directed by sale and profit — it obstructs production. At the present time factories are closed down and workers are unemployed, yet millions of people need the things they could produce. At any time, production is limited to “the market”.

To add some other considerations, huge numbers are in non-productive occupations generated by capitalism; for instance the armed forces and employment — banks, insurance, advertizing, etc. — made necessary by the use of money. They are a labour force now wasted that will be available for Socialist production. There is also the fact that production is the reproduction largely of inferior goods, either shoddily made for people with too little money or deliberately given a short life to keep the market going. The resources of the modern world, rationally organized, can sustain a system of free access without difficulty.

You ask if there are books which would clarify the view of a moneyless society. It is possible to be misled, as from time to time proposals have been made for eliminating the use of money within capitalism. We suggest that you read our pamphlets World Socialism and Questions of the Day, and apply for a selection of back numbers of the Socialist Standard. If you are able to visit a Party branch they would be ready to discuss this or any other question with you.
Editors.

Letter: Intellectuals (1975)

Letter to the Editors from the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

Intellectuals

As socialism like death is inevitable, can we not sit back and wait for it? If it is determined by the materialist conception of history then surely it will take its course and arrive when capitalism reaches its zenith or utmost point of development. Under these circumstances, how can we hurry it? Can we hurry the rise of the sun before the laws of the universe are obeyed?

I am of course open to correction, as you so kindly did when I stated that Hitler gained power by coercion and bully-boys. You proved by figures that a majority voted for him. Will you do the same service for your member who wrote “Why I joined the SPGB”, wherein he says Hitler held fake elections and polled 99% of the votes.

I shall be grateful if you will define “intellectual”. “Ivan” describes Crossman as a glamorous one. Does it mean one of high intellect; good education; deep knowledge of politics, economics, so enabled to discern one system from another? If such a person then fosters or preaches that which is not compatible with his learning, can he qualify as intellectual? Is he as with MPs who, too modest to call themselves honourable, allow others to append the distinction? Or are they covered by the words of Tom Paine — “When a man has so corrupted and prostituted the chastity of his mind as to subscribe his professional belief to things he does not believe he has prepared himself for the commission of every other crime.”

The point is: What is an intellectual?
R. Rellenck
London S.E.


Reply:
On your first point, perhaps you have seen the letter and reply headed “An evolutionary view” in the August Socialist Standard. The materialist conception of history does not hold that society unfolds inexorably in perpetual motion. This was not the attitude stated in “Is Socialism Inevitable?” It emphasized on the contrary that men make history.

Your question about Hitler involves a misunderstanding of the two items you put together. The first, which we are glad to learn was illuminating to you, concerned how Hitler and his party gained political power in Germany. The statement in “Why I joined the SPGB”, that Hitler held fake elections in which he got nearly all the votes, referred to when he was established in power.

Last, what is an “intellectual”? We might have used the inverted commas, or said “self-styled”, to make our attitude clear. Your remarks are to the point. The intellectual posture is of having higher knowledge and being altogether superior to the common herd. The article on Crossman was intended to show what a sham this is.
Editors.

Letter: By their works we know them (1975)

Letter to the Editors from the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

By their works we know them

Although I appreciate the candid openness of the article "Why I joined the SPGB” in the July Socialist Standard, it must be said that on a few points it verges on the naive. For example, his assertion in paragraph 8: “Lenin’s books (I’ve read the complete works) are little more than a verbal attack on Kautsky, on Bernstein, and of course any Russian who opposed him. Hitler’s Mein Kampf is also a tirade of abuse against Jews and Communists.

It must be pointed out that Lenin’s works differ both in quality and quantity from Hitler’s works or work, which in Mein Kampf is a short tirade against Communism, with a few short superficial chapters on Germany’s defeat in the first world war. On the other hand, Lenin’s works range from the twenty-odd books in his Collected Works. These range from dozens of speeches to Russian workers and peasants, to hybrid works such as Imperialism the Highest Stage of Capitalism and The State and Revolution. This comparison can be made in any good public library.

On the positive side, I would agree with his personal revulsion with the degeneration of the Russian Soviet State and the political culmination of this process in trials of the old Bolshevik guard in 1936-38. The result being Stalinism for decades after this period.
Mike Whalen, 
Edinburgh


Reply:
We think that in the context of the article, where the writer summarizes what he chiefly found in Lenin, the statements are adequate.

You appear to believe that “Stalinism” was all the trouble in Russia. The writer of the article said nothing about “the degeneration of the Russian Soviet State”. We hold the different view that the Bolshevik revolution led inevitably to the growth of state capitalism in Russia; indeed, we — alone — said so from the regime’s earliest years. In a one-party state the rivalries and struggles for power take place among individuals instead of political parties, and this was the cause of the purges in Russia in the nineteen-thirties and in Russia and other countries since then. It was not degeneration but development, once the capitalist basis was established.
Editors.

Letter: Nothing left ? (1975)

Letter to the Editors from the September 1975 issue of the Socialist Standard

Nothing left ?

Has it ever occurred to any of your members that when Socialism is established Man will have reached the peak of his endeavours?

There will be nothing left to work for and we will be obliged to wreck our society every few years in order to build it up again.

The capitalists do the same thing now, but for different reasons.
I. Hunt
London W.1


Reply:
In the absence of real arguments against Socialism critics give silly reasons for not helping to achieve it.

In [a] Socialist society we human beings will need to grow and process food, build homes, make clothes, furniture, machinery, we will run transport and communications systems, produce heat and light, have a water supply, carry out research; then there will be books, music, sport, etc. Or did you imagine that all of society’s needs would be provided by magic?

Viewed as a stage in man’s social evolution Socialism will be a superior system to any previous one. A step up, if you like. All of the problems caused by capitalism will be solved but this does not mean that we will not have challenges to meet. The difference is that in solving problems human ingenuity will not be fettered by financial considerations.

The establishment of Socialism will not be the peak of man’s endeavour but will give him the opportunity to scale exciting new heights in social development.
Editors.


I. Donaldson (Fife): Correspondence now closed, but we are glad to note you prefer our views to Mr. Smith’s.