Editorial from the February 1913 issue of the Socialist Standard
Several
correspondents having recently asked questions with regard to the
future revolutionary economic organisation, an attempt is made to deal
generally with the matter in the following article.
In
the first place the position of this party has always been, no matter
whether it is the economic organisation or the Socialist Commonwealth
that is in question, that all matters of detail most be left to those
upon whom the necessity to consider and arrange them is imposed by
social development. Social development does not impose this task upon
the Socialist Party at the present day. In every walk of life the broad
scheme comes first. No organiser ever proceeds from the particular to
the general—from the detail to the whole.
That
which has been placed before the working-class intelligence to-day is
the need for the broad, undetailed social system based upon the common
ownership of the means of life. We know that from that basis certain
broad conditions must arise. Those conditions are of such vast
importance as to dwarf all matters of detail into the elusive diminutive
of “nothing,” just as the corresponding conditions which arise out of
the present social basis (wage-slavery, for instance) are of such
overwhelming moment, as to reduce all other matters to insignificance.
The
Socialist, as the member of society upon whom the need for this change
in the social base has been borne, accepts these broad conditions which
he knows will arise as sufficient. He is aware that such changes may
take place as will prevent the establishment of common ownership in the
means of living (though he regards the contingency as so remote that it
does not worry him), and in that case the whole and the detail would be
equally vain. But he is convinced that, whatever changes may take
place, or unforeseen circumstance arise, if such happenings are not of
sufficient magnitude to prevent the social base being established, then
all the effect of those changes must fall upon the details, and cannot
affect the broad outline of the new social scheme.
In
regard to the revolutionary eoonomic organisation the Socialist
position is identical. That such an organisation will be called for as
part of the organisation of the working class for the achievement of
their emancipation must be admitted by every Socialist. That such
organisation, since its aim is the organisation of the working class, must be upon class
lines, is the simple logical implication of the facts. That such an
organisation, since its object is revolutionary, must hare a
revolutionary basis and be composed of revolutionaries admits of no
dispute. But beyond certain general conclusions clearly arising from the
given premises, and which no changes that do not first disestablish
those premises can alter, the Socialist, and in an added degree the
Socialist Party, is not called to pronounce.
The
work the Socialist has before him is to make Socialists—to make
adherents to the Socialist whole, not to any conglomeration of Socialist
detail. The details can have no significance to the person who does not
understand the whole, and to the person who does understand they do not
matter. For the first thing that happens to the man who does understand—to the Socialist, that is—is that he perceives that his only hope lies in his class. If his class is not equal to taking every step necessary for their emancipation; if his class is not capable of considering and deciding every matter of detail when the necessity arises; if his class is not of sufficient mental calibre to lightly throw off the dead hand of any notions and determinations we might seek to impose upon them, then the working class is doomed.
Why,
then, should we trouble ourselves with details that we are not called
upon to face? We could only consider them in the light of our present
environment, and that, we know, is changing every day. It is a very
essential, a fundamental, part of our Socialist position that our
environment is changing every day. Upon our conception of the broad
tendency of that change we base our general policy, but it is the
details of that environmental change that must affect and determine the
details of the future policy, and as to the details of the change which
will take place in the multitudinous conditions that surround us, we are
supremely ignorant.
This,
however, we do know: before we can have Socialism we must have, not
merely Socialists, but a Socialist working class; and before we can have
even the Socialist economic organisation we must have the Socialist
material with which to form it. It is a significant fact that those who
claim to be able to form a revolutionary economic organisation with non
revolutionaries are the same who have succeeded in framing a Socialist
(!) political organisation without Socialists.
In the knowledge, then, of what we do
know; of what we are sure will be necessary in spite of all changes
that are not of sufficient magnitude to touch the fundamentals of our
position, we concern ourselves with the work that is at hand—the making
of the material necessary to the establishment of Socialism. And we do
this, whether that material is to be used in the economic field or the
political—or both—without imposing on the future the dead hand of unripe
judgments—unripe because they must necessarily be formed in an untimely
environment.
But
as for the specific questions put by one enquirer, we may hazard a
reply. The questions are: “How could the economic organisation work in
complete unison with the political party if it was kept separate and
apart by non-affiliation?” and secondly : “If the economic organisation
is to consist of the same units which compose the political
organisation, what structure will it (the economic organisation) take so
as to debar from membership the non-revolutionary?”
The
question of affiliation, as was pointed out in a former answer, is
largely a matter of definition. What is certain is that between the
economic organisation of the working class and the political there must,
since they each will exist for the same revolutionary purpose, and will
each be necessary to that purpose, be such close co-operation as will
secure the end in view. There is no mystery about this. Just as the
capitalist on the economic field and on the political field, can take
consistent action in his own interest without affiliating his economic
self with his political person, so can the Socialist. Whatever form of
words may be used to designate the organisations, since they will, after
all, simply be the revolutionary working class organised on the
industrial and the political fields for the same object, they will in
effect be different sides of one organisation. Nothing can keep them
apart, and if there is no definite act of affiliation it will be because
none is needed. For example, the workers, in their economic
organisation, will be anxiously waiting for the opportunity to go to
work on the co-operative basis, but being Socialists, they will know
that they cannot do so until, in their political organisation they have
taken certain steps. It is hard to believe that, politically, they can
take certain conscious steps and, economically, not know they have done
it.
Regarding
the last point, it certainly seems that provision for sound membership
might be made in the same way that the S.P. secures it: by a declaration
of principles—and discipline.
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