The Promise of a Socialist Society
Workers Vanguard No. 1025
|
31 May 2013
|
|
TROTSKY
|
LENIN
|
The Promise of a Socialist Society
(Quote of the Week)
In the selection below, Friedrich Engels makes plain how
proletarian revolution opens the road to an emancipated future in which the
productive powers of humanity are unleashed for the benefit of all
mankind.
Their political and intellectual bankruptcy is scarcely any longer
a secret to the bourgeoisie themselves. Their economic bankruptcy recurs
regularly every ten years. In every crisis, society is suffocated beneath the
weight of its own productive forces and products, which it cannot use, and
stands helpless face to face with the absurd contradiction that the producers
have nothing to consume, because consumers are wanting. The expansive force of
the means of production bursts the bonds that the capitalist mode of production
had imposed upon them. Their deliverance from these bonds is the one
precondition for an unbroken, constantly accelerated development of the
productive forces, and therewith for a practically unlimited increase of
production itself....
With the seizing of the means of production by society, production
of commodities is done away with, and, simultaneously, the mastery of the
product over the producer. Anarchy in social production is replaced by
systematic, definite organisation. The struggle for individual existence
disappears.... Man’s own social organisation, hitherto confronting him as a
necessity imposed by nature and history, now becomes the result of his own free
action. The extraneous objective forces that have hitherto governed history pass
under the control of man himself. Only from that time will man himself, with
full consciousness, make his own history—only from that time will the social
causes set in movement by him have, in the main and in a constantly growing
measure, the results intended by him. It is humanity’s leap from the kingdom of
necessity to the kingdom of freedom.
To accomplish this act of universal emancipation is the historical
mission of the modern proletariat. To thoroughly comprehend the historical
conditions and thus the very nature of this act, to impart to the now oppressed
class a full knowledge of the conditions and of the meaning of the momentous act
it is called upon to accomplish, this is the task of the theoretical expression
of the proletarian movement, scientific socialism.
—Friedrich Engels, Anti-Dühring (1878)
No comments:
Post a Comment