Showing posts with label Democratic Socialists of America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democratic Socialists of America. Show all posts

Sunday, March 08, 2009

The Demise of World Capitalism and the Future of Socialism


Capitalism is facing its greatest crisis since the Great Depression: a housing crisis, a credit crisis, skyrocketing unemployment etc. As in every such crisis, liberals have to step in and try to salvage the mess created by the speculators and the greedy corporate rich who blindly followed their religious faith in the "free market." Just like FDR in the New Deal, Barack Obama is being labelled a "socialist" by conservative opponents of economic democracy. Will this time be any different?

Because so much government intervention is necessary to "stimulate" the capitalist system, there is a lot of talk of "socialism" in the mainstream media, usually from anti-socialists who want to scare the public away from the programs of Barack Obama and the Democratic Party. Glenn Beck and Fox News has even had the current directors of the Democratic Socialists of America and the Communist Party on to be a punching bag. Newsweek proclaimed on a recent cover story, We Are All Socialists Now!

The problem is that the mainstream media has accepted the right-wing anti-socialist definition of "socialism" to mean "bigger government," so anything connected with government, especially "wasteful" spending, is labelled "socialist." But would Karl Marx have advocated that "we the people" (the government) bail out the corporate rich? No, socialists were opposed to the bailout of banks, though many support most of the trillion dollar "stimulus" that will go mostly to the working class. The real difference between "capitalism" and "socialism" is that capitalism favors distribution of wealth from the bottom to the top, and socialists fight to redistribute wealth from the rich to the working class and poor. That is a big difference.

While right-wing critics like to link socialists to Joseph Stalin (the discredited Communit dictator who actually killed his communist and socialist critics!), the better examples of democratic socialism would be Martin Luther King, who brilliantly articulated the democratic socialist view that the U.S. was spending too much on the military (especially Vietnam) and not enough to help the poor. Before his murder, MLK was prepared to launch a "class war" against the corporate rich and American capitalism.

The basic premise and fundamental value of socialism is actually found in the teachings of Jesus Christ and the early Christians. "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need," was not only a Marxist idea, it was a gospel preached by Jesus Christ and his early followers.

Some socialists are speaking out, including in the new issue of The Nation:

Reimagining Socialism, Barbara Ehrenreich & Bill Fletcher Jr.

Immanual Wallerstein, Follow Brazil's Example

Tariq Ali, Capitalism's Deadly Logic

And from the Washington Post, Harold Meyerson Who You Calling a Socialist?

Whatever is happening right now, there is no doubt that captitalism is going to end up on the ash heap of history along with Stalin's bastardization of Communism. What will take its place is the subject of a class struggle going on as we speak between those who defend the accumulation of wealth and power in the hands of a corporate elite, and those on the left who are fighting to extend democracy from mainstreet to Wall Street. Socialism is still a struggle to pry the hands of a powerful economic elite from the control of society and put the majority of working class people in control.

The question is, can the Democratic Party be the instrument for this democratic revolution, or is it time for the workers of America to unite and form their own political party?

The two answers to that question can be found in the fractions of what remains of the Socialist Party in the U.S.:
Democratic Socialists of America
and
Socialist Party USA

Friday, February 06, 2009

DSA Economic Recovery Plan

DSA's Economic Recovery Plan  
 
Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) has been gravely concerned that politically motivated tax cuts, largely sweetheart deals for business that benefit the very financial institutions whose high-flying speculation created the economic crisis, have been inserted into the Economic Recovery Act. The House passed legislation is now being voted on in the Senate. So far amendments to increase spending on infrastructure have been defeated while additional tax credits have been added to the bill. It is expected, although not certain, that the Senate will finish voting on the bill today.
 
DSA has issued a recovery plan that calls on the government to spend $1 trillion to stimulate the economy and includes no  business tax credits.  We believe the federal government should minimally allocate:

$200 billion in block grants to state and local governments to make up for the annual loss in state and local revenue
$100 billion to pay for half of the increased Medicaid costs states will face
$100 billion to pay for COBRA coverage for laid-off workers and to allow people over 55 to buy into Medicare
$50 billion to increase unemployment insurance and expand eligibility. (Currently only one-third of unemployed workers receive unemployment insurance!)
$100 billion to increase Pell grants and expand the number of its recipients.
$450 billion to the Social Security Trust Fund so that workers would receive a one-year holiday from paying the regressive FICA tax. Such a measure would radically stimulate consumer demand.
DSA's recovery plan and the accompanying analysis are presented in a short, 4-page document that has been posted on our Website. To read or download a copy click HERE. Additionally, we have updated the two-page hand-out, originally released last week, that details our perspective on the economic crisis. The redesigned flyer is much more attractive than the previous version.  To read or download the updated flyer click here.
 
It is critical that Congress hear from those opposed to tax cuts for business if there is any hope of redirecting those resources to job-generating infrastructure spending. You can reach your senator or representative through the Congressional switchboard by calling 202-224-3121 or 800-828-0698. If you don’t know who is your Representative, you can find out by clicking here. Let your Representative know your views, as the bill will come back to the House for a final vote. House members can still pressure their leaders who will negotiate with the Senate on the final version. When you call, be sure to say you are calling about the Economic Recovery Act and that while you support the act, you are both against its tax-cuts-for-business provisions and believe that there should be more direct spending on infrastructure. You should also say that you are opposed to the E-Verify provisions.
 
In solidarity,
Frank Llewellyn
National Director