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CHAPTER XIII
Socialism
When you ask this question, the Socialist tells you:
'Vote the Socialist ticket. Elect our party. We'll abolish
capitalism and establish Socialism.'
What does the Socialist want, and-how does he propose to get it?
There are many varieties of Socialists. There are Social
Democrats, Fabian Socialists, National Socialists, Christian
Socialists, and other labels. Generally speaking, they all believe in
the abolition of poverty and unjust social conditions. But they
disagree very much as to what would be 'just' conditions and, still
more, how to bring them about.
These days even mere attempts to improve capitalism are often
called 'Socialism,' while in reality they are only reforms. But such
reforms cannot be considered socialistic because true Socialism does
not mean to 'improve' capitalism but to abolish it altogether.
Socialism teaches that the conditions of labor cannot be essentially
bettered under capitalism; on the contrary, it shows that the lot of
the worker must steadily get worse with the advancing development of
industrialism, so that efforts to 'reform' and 'improve' capitalism
are directly opposed to Socialism and only delay its realization.
We have seen in preceding chapters that the enslavement of the
workers, inequality, injustice, and other social evils are the result
of monopoly and exploitation, and that the system is upheld by the
political machine called government. It would therefore serve no
purpose to discuss those schools of Socialism (improperly so called)
that do not stand for the abolition of capitalism and wage slavery.
Just as useless it would be for us to go into allegedly socialistic
proposals such as 'juster distribution of wealth', 'equalization of
income', 'single tax', or other similar plans. These are not
Socialism; they are only reforms. Mere parlor Socialism, such as
Fabianism, for example, is also of no vital interest to the masses.
Let us therefore examine that school of Socialism which treats of
capitalism and the wage system fundamentally, which deals with the
worker, with the disinherited, and which is known as the Social
Democratic movement.* It considers all other forms of Socialism
impractical and utopian; it calls itself the only sound and
scientific theory of true
Socialism as formulated by Karl Marx, the author of Capital,
which is the gospel and guide of all Social Democrats.
Now, then, what do the Socialist followers of Karl Marx - known as
Marxian Socialists, and whom, for the sake of brevity, we'll call
simply Socialists - propose?
They say that the workers can never become free and secure well
being unless they abolish capitalism. The sources of production and
the means of distribution must be taken out of private hands, they
teach That is to say, the land, machinery, mills, factories, mines,
railroads and other public utilities should not be owned privately,
because such ownership enslaves the workers as well as mankind in
general. Private possession of the things without which humanity
cannot exist must therefore cease. The means of production and
distribution should become public property. Opportunity for free use
would do away with monopoly, with interest and profit, with
exploitation and wage slavery. Social inequality and injustice would
be eliminated, the classes would be abolished, and all men would
become free and equal.
These views of Socialism are also in full accord with the ideas of
most Anarchists.
The present owners - Socialism further teaches- will not give up
their possessions without a struggle. All history and past experience
prove that. The privileged classes have always held onto their
advantages, always opposed every attempt to weaken their power over
the masses. Even to-day they fight ruthlessly every effort of labor
for betterment. It is therefore certain that in the future, as in
the past, the plutocracy will resist if you try to deprive them of
their monopolies, special rights, and privileges. That resistance
will bring about a bitter struggle, a revolution.
True socialism is therefore radical and revolutionary.
Radical, because it goes to the very root of the social trouble
(radix meaning root in Latin); it does not believe in reforms
and makeshifts, it wants to change things from the very bottom.
Revolutionary, not because it wants bloodshed, but because it clearly
foresees that revolution is inevitable; it knows that capitalism
cannot be changed to Socialism without a violent struggle between the
possessing classes and the dispossessed masses.
'But if a revolution', you ask, 'then why do the Socialists want
me to vote them into office? Is the revolution to be fought there?'
Your question is to the point. If capitalism is to abolished by
revolution, what do the Socialists seek office for, why do they try
to get into the government?
Here is just where the great contradiction of Marxian Socialism
comes in, a fundamental contradiction that has been fatal to the
Socialist movement in every country, and that has made it ineffectual
and powerless to be of any use to the working class.
It is very necessary to realize that contradiction clearly in
order to understand why Socialism has failed, why the Socialists have
gotten into a blind alley and can't lead the workers to emancipation.
What is that contradiction? It is this: Marx taught that
'revolution is the midwife of capitalism pregnant with a new
society'; that is, that capitalism will not be changed to Socialism
except by revolution. But in his Communist Manifesto, on the
other hand, Marx insists that the proletariat must get hold of the
political machinery, of the government, in order to conquer the
bourgeoisie. The working class- he teaches must grasp the reins of
the State, by means of the Socialist parties, and use the political
power to usher in Socialism.
This contradiction has caused the greatest confusion among
Socialists and has split the movement into many factions. The
majority of them, the regular Socialist parties in every country, now
stand for the conquest of political power, for the establishment of a
Socialist government whose business it will be to abolish capitalism
and bring about Socialism.
Judge for yourself if such a thing is possible. In the first
place, Socialists themselves admit that the possessing classes will
not give up their wealth and privileges without a bitter fight and
that it will result in revolution.
Again, is the thing at all practical? Take the United States, for
instance. For over fifty years the Socialists have been trying to
elect party members to Congress with the result that after half a
century of political work they have now just one member in the House
of Representatives in Washington. How many centuries will it take at
that rate (and the rate is declining rather than growing) to get a
Socialist majority in Congress?
But even suppose that the Socialists could some day secure that
majority. Will they then be able to change capitalism to Socialism?
It would require amending and altering the Constitution of the United
States, as well as in the individual States, for which a two-thirds
vote would be necessary. Just stop and consider: the American
plutocrats, the trusts, the bourgeoisie, and all the other forces
that benefit by capitalism; would they just sit quietly and permit
the changing of the Constitutions in such a manner as to deprive them
of their wealth and privileges? Can you believe that? Do you remember
what Jay Gould said when he was accused of getting his millions
illegally and in defiance of the Constitution? 'To hell with the
Constitution!' he replied. And so every plutocrat feels, even if he
is not as frank as Gould. Constitution or no constitution, the
capitalists would fight to the death for their wealth and privileges.
And that is just what is meant by revolution. You can judge for
yourself whether capitalism can be abolished by electing Socialists
to office or whether Socialism can be voted in by the ballot. It is
not hard to guess who'll win a fight between ballots and bullets.
In former days the Socialists realized this very well. Then they
claimed that they meant to use politics only for the purpose of
propaganda. It was in the days when Socialist agitation was
forbidden, particularly in Germany. 'If you elect us to the
Reichstag' (the German parliament), the Socialists told the workers
then, 'we'll be able to preach Socialism there and educate the people
to it.' There was some reason in that, because the laws which
prohibited Socialist speeches did not apply to the Reichstag. So the
Socialists favored political activity and took part in elections in
order to have an opportunity to advocate Socialism.
It may seem a harmless thing, but it proved the undoing of
Socialism. Because nothing is truer than that the means you use to
attain your object soon themselves become your object. So money, for
example, which is only a means to existence, has itself become the
aim of our lives. Similarly with government. The 'elder' chosen by
the primitive community to attend to some village business becomes
the master, the ruler. Just so it happened with the Socialists.
Little by little they changed their attitude. Instead of
electioneering being merely an educational method, it gradually
became their only aim to secure political office, to get elected to
legislative bodies and other government positions. The change
naturally led the Socialists to tone down their revolutionary ardor;
it compelled them to soften their criticism of capitalism and
government in order to avoid persecution and secure more votes.
To-day the main stress of Socialist propaganda is not laid any more
on the educational value of politics but on the actual election of
Socialists to office.
The Socialist parties do not speak of revolution any more. They
claim now that when they get a majority in Congress or Parliament
they will legislate Socialism into being: they will legally and
peacefully abolish capitalism. In other words, they have ceased to be
revolutionists; they have become reformers who want to change things
by law.
Let us see, then, how they have been doing it during the past
several decades.
In almost every European country the Socialists have secured great
political power. Some countries now have Socialist governments, in
others the Socialist parties have a majority; in others again
Socialists occupy the highest positions in the State, such as cabinet
offices, even those of Prime Ministers. Let us examine what they have
accomplished for Socialism and what they are doing for the workers.
In Germany, the mother of the Socialist movement, the Social
Democratic Party holds numerous government offices; its members are
in the municipal and national legislative bodies, in the judiciary,
and in the Cabinet. Two German Presidents, Haase and Ebert, were
Socialists. The present Reichskanzler (Chancellor), Dr. Herman
Muller, is a Socialist. Herr Loebe, President of the Reichstag, is
also a member of the Socialist Party. Scheidemann, Noske, and scores
of others in the highest positions in the government, in the army and
navy, are all leaders of the powerful German Social Democratic Party.
What have they done for the proletariat whose cause the Party is
supposed to champion? Have they brought about Socialism? Have they
abolished wage slavery? Have they made the least attempt toward those
objects?
The uprising of the workers in Germany, in 1918, forced the Kaiser
to flee the country, and the reign of the Hohenzollern was at an end.
The people put their trust in the Social Democrats and voted them
into power. But once secure in the government, the Socialists turned
against the masses. They combined with the German bourgeoisie and the
military clique, and themselves became the bulwark of capitalism and
militarism. They not only disarmed the people and suppressed the
toilers but they even shot and imprisoned every Socialist who dared
protest against their treachery. Noske, as Socialist chief of the
army during the Revolution, ordered his soldiers out against the
workers and massacred them wholesale - the very proletarians who had
voted him into power, his own brother Socialists. At his hands
perished Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, two of the most devoted
and loyal revolutionists, coldbloodedly murdered in Berlin on January
16, 1919, by army officers, with the secret connivance of the
Socialist government. The Anarchist poet and thinker, Gustav
Landauer, and scores of the best friends of labor shared the same
fate all over Germany.
Haase, Ebert, Scheidemann, Noske, and their Socialist lieutenants
did not permit the Revolution to accomplish anything vital. The
moment they got into power they used it to crush rebellious labor.
The open and stealthy murder of the truly revolutionary elements was
but one of the means used by the Socialist government to subdue the
Revolution. Far from introducing any changes for the benefit of the
workers, the Socialist Party became the most zealous defender of
capitalism, preserving all the prerogatives and benefits of the
aristocracy and master class. That is why the German Revolution
accomplished nothing except to drive out the Kaiser. The nobility
remained in possession of all its titles, holdings, special rights,
and privileges; the military caste retained the power it had under
the monarchy; the bourgeoisie has been strengthened, and the
financial kings and industrial magnates lord it over the German
toiler to-day with even greater arbitrariness than before. The
Socialist Party of Germany, with many million votes behind it, has
succeeded - in getting into office. The workers slave and
suffer as before.
The same picture you find in the other countries. In France the
Socialist Party is strongly represented in the government. The
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Aristide Briand, who had also held the
post of Prime Minister, was formerly one of the greatest lights of
the Party in France. To-day he is the strongest champion of
capitalism and militarism. Many of his former fellow-Socialists are
his colleagues in the government, and many more present-day
Socialists are in the French Parliament and other important offices.
What are they doing for Socialism? What are they doing for the
workers?
They are helping to defend and 'stabilize' the capitalistic regime
of France; they are busy passing laws increasing the taxes so that
the high government officials may get better salaries; they are
engaged in collecting the war indemnity from Germany, whose workers,
just as their French brothers, have to bleed for it. They are working
hard to help 'educate' France, and particularly her school children,
to hate the German people; they are aiding to build more warships and
military airplanes for the next war which they are themselves
preparing by cultivating the spirit of jingoism and vengeance against
their neighbor countries. The new law mobilizing every adult man and
woman of France in case of war was introduced by the prominent
Socialist, Paul Boncour, and passed with the aid of the Socialist
members of the Chamber of Deputies.
In Austria and Belgium, in Sweden and Norway, in Holland and
Denmark, in Czecho-Slovakia, and in most other European lands the
Socialists have risen to power. In some countries entirely so, in
others partly. And everywhere, without a single exception, they have
followed the same course, everywhere they have fore sworn their
ideals, have duped the masses, and turned their political elevation
to their own profit and glory.
'These men who rose to power on the backs of labor and then
betrayed the workers are scoundrels,' I hear you say in just
indignation. True, but that is not all. There is a deeper reason for
this constant and regular betrayal, a greater and more significant
cause for this almost universal phenomenon. Socialists are not
essentially different from other men. They are human, just as you and
I. And no man turns scoundrel or traitor over night.
It is power which corrupts. The consciousness that you
possess power is *self the worst poison that corrodes the finest
metal of man. The filth and contamination of politics everywhere
sufficiently prove that. Moreover, even with the best intentions
Socialists in legislative bodies or in government positions find
themselves entirely powerless to accomplish anything of a socialistic
nature, anything of benefit to the workers. For politics is not a
means to better the conditions of labor. It never was and never can
be.
The demoralization and vitiation take place little by little, so
gradually that one hardly notices it himself. Just visualize for a
moment the condition of a Socialist elected to Congress, for
instance. He is all alone, as against several hundred men of other
political parties. He senses their opposition to his radical ideas,
and he finds himself in a strange and unfriendly atmosphere. But he
is there and he must participate in the business that is being
transacted. Most of that business - the bills brought in, the laws
proposed - is entirely foreign to him. It has no bearing whatever on
the things the Socialist believes in, no connection with the
interests of the working class voters who elected him. It is just the
routine of legislation. It is only when a bill of some bearing upon
labor or on the industrial and economic situation comes up, that our
Socialist can take part in the proceedings. He does, and he is
ignored or laughed at for his impractical ideas on the matter. For
they are indeed impractical. Even at best, when the proposed law is
not specially designed to grant new privileges to monopoly, it deals
with matters involved in capitalist business, with some commercial
treaty or agreement between one government and another. But he, the
Socialist, was elected on a Socialist ticket, and it is his business
to abolish the capitalistic government, to do away with the system of
commerce and profit altogether, so how can he speak 'practically' on
the submitted bills? Of course he becomes a butt of ridicule to his
colleagues, and soon he begins to see how stupid and useless his
presence is in the halls of legislation. That is why some of the best
men of the Socialist Party in Germany turned against political
action, as did John Most, for instance. But there are few persons of
such honesty and courage. As a rule the Socialist remains in his
position, and every day he is compelled to realize more and more what
a senseless role he is playing. He comes to feel that he must find
some way to take a serious part in the work, express sound opinions
in the discussions and become a real factor in the proceedings. This
is imperative in order to preserve his own dignity, to compel the
respect of his colleagues, and also to show to his constituents that
they did not elect a mere dummy.
So he begins to acquaint himself with the routine. He studies
river dredging and coast improvement, reads up on appropriations,
examines the hundred and one bills which come up for consideration,
and when he occasionally gets the floor - which is not very often -
he tries to explain the proposed legislation from the Socialist
standpoint, as he is in duty bound to do. He 'makes a Socialist
speech.' He dwells on the suffering of the workers and the crimes of
wage slavery; he informs his colleagues that capitalism is an evil,
that the rich must be abolished and the whole system done away with.
He finishes his peroration and sits down. The politicians exchange
glances, smile and joke, and the assembly goes over to the business
in hand.
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