Low Wages and Capitalism
What About Socialism?
Young people today face a future of low wages and corporate domination
of their lives. To secure any sort of decent life, we need to organize
to force our bosses to give up some of the wealth he is stealing from
us. Along with fighting in our own workplace, we also need to educate
ourselves about how this whole system works, and what our interests are
as workers.
It’s not just us that are facing low wages. Workers across the
country and internationally are seeing their living standard under attack.
Why in the richest country in the world, are we facing this kind of a
future? You won’t find the answer in the corporate-owned mass media.
The reason is that it’s the system itself that is causing the crisis.
Capitalism on a global scale has been in decline since the mid-1970s.
Capitalism is defined by Websters dictionary as: “the economic
system in which all or most of the mean of production and distribution
as land, factories, railroads, etc. are privately owned and operate for
profit, originally under fully competitive conditions; it has been generally
characterized by a tendency toward concentration of wealth, and in its
later phase, by the growth of great corporations.” At least Websters
doesn’t try to sugar-coat reality. The owners of these ‘great
corporations’ that dominate our lives are determined that the costs
for this crisis in their system be put on the back of workers.
Where does that leave us as workers? The answer is that we are going
to be driven down even further while this system still exists. The big
capitalist owners openly admit that they will not tolerate any challenge
to their control of the workplace or society. Yet, that is our task as
workers, to challenge this control, not only of the workplace, but also
in society. We believe the interests of the more than 100 million workers
in this county should have priority over the narrow interests of these
few rich owners.
There is an alternative to capitalism, and it has been embraced by large
layers of workers here in the US, and internationally, when they have
moved into struggle – it is called socialism. Once again, Websters
give us a more honest description of socialism than you will hear in the
corporate-owned mass media. “The theory or system of the ownership
and operation of the means of production and distribution by society,
or the community, rather than private individuals, with all members of
society or the community sharing in the work and the products.”
Since around 500 huge corporations dominate 80% of our economy, that means
ending the domination of our lives by these rich individuals, and putting
the over 100 million workers, and their families, in charge of running
society. No wonder you never hear that mentioned in the mass media.
Previous generation of young workers were forced into struggle by greedy
corporate owners in the mining, auto, transportation, and hospitals. Workers
took on these bosses, formed unions and transformed their lives through
struggle. The battleground today is in the service industry, especially,
fast food. We need to build a powerful movement of fast food workers who
will be able to help each other out and take on these corporations.
As members of Socialist Alternative, a democratic socialist group active
in the Seattle/Tacoma area, we have been involved from the beginning in
helping organize the union drive at Pizza Hut. Our aims were identical
with its workers: to attempt to enable it to be as strong and powerful
as possible. We have published pamphlet to provide help and support to
further union organizing in the fast food industry. Through it we also
seek to clarify the real economic interest of workers to fight the bosses
and this system that they used to enslave us, as workers.
We urge anyone interested in these ideas and conclusions, whether related
to union organizing or our socialist ideas, to contact us. As Karl Marx,
the pioneer of the working class and socialist movement, wrote: “Workers
of the world unite - they have nothing to lose but their chains. They
have a world to win.”
The End
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