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Workers Vanguard No. 957 |
23 April 2010 |
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TROTSKY |
LENIN |
The Liberating Goals of Communism (Quote of the Week)
In 1991-92, the Soviet Union, weakened by decades of Stalinist bureaucratic misrule, was destroyed by capitalist counterrevolution—a world-historic defeat for the proletariat. In the name of building “socialism in one country,” J.V. Stalin and his heirs in the Kremlin had trampled the liberating goals of Marxism in the mud. The 1938 founding document of the then-Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party explained that an egalitarian, stateless and harmonious society can be achieved only through international proletarian revolution.
With the provision of material abundance through planned socialist production, and the great educational and cultural advances thereby made possible, the socially useless and parasitic classes, as well as the remnants of capitalist ideology, will be eliminated. The entire population will be transformed into a community of free producers owning and controlling the total productive wealth and resources of society, and freely and consciously working out their own destiny. The need for the coercion and repression of socially alien classes will disappear with the disappearance of these classes, and together with them, of all classes. With it will vanish the need for a state machinery—even for the workers’ state. The state as an institution for the domination, repression, and coercion of men will be replaced by a purely technical administration for the handling of the general business of society. The noblest objective of the human race—communism, the classless socialist society—inaugurating a new era for all of mankind, will be realized.
The working class can build a complete socialist society only on the basis of a world division of labor and resources, and world cooperation. The revolutionary party in this country does not aim merely to lead the working class of the United States in revolution, but to unite with the workers of all other countries in the international revolution and the establishment of world socialism. Modern forces of production have compelled capitalism itself to transcend national boundaries; and the conflict between the world economy of capitalism and the outlived, constricting national political boundaries is a major source of the disastrous evils which confront the modern world. Capitalist imperialism cannot, however, achieve a harmonious society. World socialism is the only solution for the conflicts and disorders of the modern world, as well as for the major conflicts within a single nation. A socialist society will rationally and scientifically utilize the natural resources and productive machinery of the earth in the interests of the people of the earth, and will solve the conflict between the efficient development of productive forces and the artificial restrictions of national boundaries. It will grant the rights of free cultural self-determination to all nations. In these ways, world socialism will remove the causes of international wars, which under capitalism now seriously threaten to send mankind back into barbarism or complete destruction.
—“Declaration of Principles” (1938), reprinted in The Founding of the Socialist Workers Party (1982)
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