The Genocide of Calfornia’s Indigenous Peoples

Scholars estimate very conservatively that at the time the Spaniards first arrived in California in 1769 to begin colonizing the land, there were at least 310,000 Indigenous people living here, and they were organized into as many as 500 or more different individual political units, individual groupings.



California’s Indigenous population plunged perhaps from 150,000 people to just 30,000 survivors between 1846 and 1870 and certainly, diseases, dislocation and starvation caused many of these deaths, but what I found was this was not the near-annihilation of a people simply based upon the unavoidable result of two civilizations coming into contact. It was, in fact, genocide, sanctioned and facilitated by California officials.



California’s first legislature convened in 1850, one of the very first things that it did was to ban all Native Americans from voting, and then they banned Indigenous people with one-half of Native blood or more from giving evidence for or against whites in most civil and criminal cases, and they denied Indigenous people the right to serve as jurors. Then they banned Native Americans from serving as attorneys and justices, so when you think about what that means, in combination, these laws largely shut Indigenous people out of participation in (and protection by) the state legal system, so this amounted to a virtual grant of impunity to would-be Native-killers. That’s kind of the first stage, and that’s similar to some other genocides — that targeted victim groups are denied protection or participation in the legal system and are stripped of any political rights as well.



Then in that same year, 1850, the government legalized unfree Indigenous labor; this led to a truly genocidal slave system. It had multiple genocidal impacts. First of all, when slave raiders would arrive at a village, they would typically kill anyone who resisted, anyone who tried to run away, and many of the older men and women, and then people would be marched away to be sold, and anybody who tried to escape or resisted during that process also was usually killed. Once people got to the place where they were going to be sold, they were scattered, so it would be very difficult for the community to reproduce itself either biologically or socially, and finally, when people reached the places where they would work as unfree laborers they were often treated as disposable and worked to death.
Between 1850 and 1870, Los Angeles’s Indigenous population fell from 3,693 to just 219 survivors. Slavery played a huge part in this genocide, but there was also a state-sponsored killing machine, and it was built by state legislators, so what they did was to authorize no fewer than two dozen separate state militia expeditions against California Native people between 1850 and 1861 which killed at least 1,340. They paid for this by passing three different bills in the 1850s that raised over one-and-a-half million dollars — a huge amount of money at this time in history, both for past and future militia operations. It was important because this policy transcended the number of people that it killed directly, by demonstrating that the state government would not punish killers but instead actually reward them.



These militia expeditions and the policies that supported them helped inspire huge numbers of vigilantes to go out on their own killing sprees, and they took the lives of an absolute minimum 6,460 Indigenous people in California between 1846 and 1873. The U.S. Army and its auxiliaries also killed at least 1,680 Native Americans in California during these years, and that institution was of course directly funded by Congress, but Congress also reimbursed the state of California for most of the money that it spent on hunting Indigenous people through its militias.
FULL ARTICLE AT:

https://truthout.org/articles/californias-indigenous-history-is-a-story-of-genocide-and-resistance/

The Dirty Air Death Toll

More than 160,000 people could die over the next decade from strokes and heart attacks caused by air pollution,  the British Heart Foundation (BHF) has warned. 
That is the equivalent of more than 40 heart and circulatory disease deaths related to air pollution every day.
There are an estimated 11,000 deaths per year at the moment, but that this will rise as the population continues to age. 
Current EU limits – which the UK comfortably meets – for fine particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution are 25μg/m3 as an annual average. The WHO limits are tougher, at 10μg/m3 as an annual average. The BHF said PM2.5 can have a “seriously detrimental effect to heart health”, increasing the risk of heart attack and stroke and making existing health problems worse.  BHF wants the UK to adopt World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines on air pollution and meet them by 2030. In July 2019, the Department for Environment and Rural Affairs published a study showing that meeting WHO guidelines on air pollution was “technically feasible” in most areas of the UK by 2030.



Jacob West, executive director of healthcare innovation at the BHF, said: “Every day, millions of us across the country are inhaling toxic particles which enter our blood and get stuck in our organs, raising our risk of heart attacks and stroke. Make no mistake, our toxic air is a public health emergency, and we haven’t done enough to tackle this threat to our society. We need to ensure that stricter, health-based air quality guidelines are adopted into law to protect the health of the nation as a matter of urgency. Clean air legislation in the 1950s and 1960s, and more recently the smoking ban in public places, show that government action can improve the air we breathe.” 

NHS medical director Professor Stephen Powis said: “The climate emergency is also a health emergency, with thousands of avoidable deaths and hospital admissions every year linked to air pollution, which is why the NHS is playing its part by taking action to reduce carbon emissions, including cutting traffic by reducing the need for millions of hospital appointments through better services. With air pollution contributing to around 40,000 deaths a year and four in 10 children at school in high-pollution communities, it’s clear that tackling air pollution needs to be everyone’s urgent business.”

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/jan/13/air-pollution-kill-160000-next-decade-report
















Roger Scruton and the Socialist Party

The conservative philosopher and government adviser Sir Roger Scruton has died of cancer at the age of 75.

The writer – author of more than 50 books on morals, politics, architecture and aesthetics– lectured at Birkbeck College, University of London from 1971-1992, and was a chairman of the government’s Building Better, Building Beautiful Commission. Scruton was appointed to the role as a housing adviser in November 2018, but was sacked in April 2019 after he was judged to have made racist remarks during an interview with the New Statesman. He was then reappointed in July 2019 after the magazine apologised and said that his views had been misrepresented.

A debate took place between him and the Socialist Party on Friday, 9 December 1983 at the Woodbridge Road Sports Ground Pavilion, Guildford. The title of the debate was ‘Is Socialism compatible with freedom?’ 

From the May 1984 issue of the Socialist Standard







Roger Scruton arrived early to debate with the SPGB in Guildford. The debate wasn’t due to start till 8pm, so one of the members suggested I take him to the pub across the road for a drink.





He ordered Irish Whisky and we started to talk. I was interested to see the human side of a man I only knew from difficult-to-read books on politics and philosophy, a highly reactionary weekly column in the Times and highbrow discussion programmes on radio and television. I’d read in the press that he was arrogant, conceited and intolerant. I found him modest and likeable and the more we chatted the less accurate the press descriptions seemed to be. I asked what had made him accept our challenge to debate and he said that he thought that opinionated people like himself should be called on to defend their opinions in public.







He hadn’t made any detailed preparation for the debate and asked me if I’d tell him about the Socialist Party and what my arguments were going to be. I did, and he admitted that it wasn’t what he’d expected. He said he’d make a few notes to speak from and did this while I went to the bar for more drinks. As we walked back to the hall he said he thought he’d got the message about the Socialist Party, but wouldn’t a fully democratic socialist society be an impractical proposition because of the time and effort involved in people voting democratically on absolutely everything? I told him that everyone wouldn’t have to vote on everything but only on those things that directly concerned them.







The swirling rain made me think we wouldn’t have much of an audience. And when we entered the hall, there were about fifty—fewer people than could have been expected for a meeting with a “celebrity”.







Scruton was introduced by the chairman as a leading conservative philosopher and editor of the Salisbury Review. He was answering no to the question: “Is Socialism Compatible With Freedom?” He opened with a joke—a funny one. He said he understood that the Socialist Party no more supported the countries that called themselves “socialist” than those which are openly capitalist, and this reminded him of an old, East European joke: “Under capitalism man exploits man; under socialism it’s quite the other way round”.





On the subject of freedom he started off on a tack that he said would probably seem unusual. He talked about love. He said that love between two people placed limitations on their freedom but that nobody would say that this was a bad thing because they were limitations that had been freely chosen and desired. In the same way, he went on, capitalist society limited people’s freedom in some areas but this was with their consent. They consented to it because they realised that these limitations—those involved in wage labour—were necessary in order to be able to enjoy the other freedoms and choices that capitalism gave them. Capitalism he claimed, with its markets, wage labour and money system, gave the maximum freedom available, and gave far more of it than previous societies such as feudalism.







He spoke fluently along these lines from the sparse notes he’d made in the pub, showed an accurate knowledge of Marxist ideas, and ended by stating that if socialists thought a different kind of society could be more free that the present one, then the onus was on them to describe and define it. But the “facts of human nature”, he insisted, were on his side and all attempts so far to put socialism into effect had, far from increasing people’s freedom, ended up restricting it.







This last point, I felt, was one below the belt as Scruton had earlier recognised and accepted the Socialist Party’s description of countries like Russia, China and Cuba as not socialist but state capitalist. I began, therefore, by pointing out that Scruton couldn’t reasonably damn the idea of socialism because of what had happened under state capitalism and because the state capitalist rulers happened to call their regimes socialist. I pointed to the openly repressive features of such regimes—one-party rule, political prisoners, press censorship, state-run trade unions—and agreed that by comparison countries like Britain, the USA, Germany and Japan appeared to enjoy considerable freedom. But, despite appearances, they did restrict personal freedom in an absolutely fundamental way—in operating the system of employment.







This meant that most people were bound for most of their lives to a set place of residence, set living conditions and a set job—whether they liked it or not. The job they did was not necessarily one they found pleasant or satisfying but one they needed to do to have money to live. The employment system was shared by countries on both sides of the Iron Curtain. So in both East and West people were denied freedom by needing to work for wages or salaries and therefore by not having control over what they did with their own lives.







Despite his lack of preparation Scruton had timed his contribution to exactly the agreed twenty minutes. Looking at my watch I realised that I’d have to rush if I didn’t want to run over. The chairman had already started putting slips of paper in front of me. I breathlessly tried to take up Scruton’s challenge to describe and define a freer society than capitalism. It was clear, I said, that enough resources now existed potentially to satisfy people’s needs the world over if production of goods and services could take place directly for need and not for sale and profit. This was the basis of the “freer society: Scruton wanted defined. It would be a worldwide moneyless system of free access—”the supermarket without the bottleneck at the cash desk”. And the shelves of the supermarket would be kept full by the voluntary co-operative work of people for whom work would not be compulsory toil for money but conscious, freely chosen activity to satisfy their own needs and those of society as a whole. In a society of common ownership and democratic control no one would be able to compel others to do work in conditions they found unacceptable. In this society people would value work, as they often value leisure today, for the creative or pleasurable activity it represents, not for the money it earns them. I sat down just as the chairman was about to make me.







The question time was interesting. Scruton, although he didn’t say so, must have been surprised by the friendly atmosphere and the cordiality of the audience. Any visions he’d had of meeting wild lefties must have been completely dispelled as contributors from the floor addressed him without hostility and with a clear desire to exchange ideas. It was he who became heated when it was put to him that rather than compare the amount of freedom in capitalism to the amount in feudalism, he should be comparing capitalist freedom to the kind of freedom there could be in a future society—socialism—where modern technology could be maintained and used but in a quite different setting. Scruton, argued the questioner, had presented no solid theory of “human nature” to show that such a society was not possible. Scruton went a bit wild, said the debate had been forced on him and referred to my own description of what socialism would be like as “a lot of air”. My reply to this was that he lacked imagination in not wanting to contemplate anything beyond the narrow confines of present reality.







He soon cooled down as more questions came from both socialists and non-socialists in the audience. One was about whether you could organise society without leaders. I said you could. Scruton said that “little points control” would always develop and that seeking power over others was fundamental to human nature. Another question was about how in a society of free access people would be able to distinguish between “need and greed”. Scruton thought they would not. I argued that people were quite capable of responsibly determining their own needs of they didn’t live in conditions of rationing and scarcity as they did in capitalism where they were rationed by their wage packet.







At the end we had five minutes each to sum up. Again I tried to say too much and had to rush. My thrust was that at one time in history people (Greeks and Romans) had used intellectually sophisticated arguments to assert that chattel slavery was inevitable and eternal. Aristotle had said that it was a fundamental feature of civilised life. Scruton, I went on, was using the same kind of arguments to defend a different kind of slavery, but slavery nonetheless—wage slavery. Historically wage slavery was no more inevitable or eternal than chattel slavery had been and when the majority of people wanted to get rid of it and bring in a non-slave society in which no man or woman was subordinate to any other, they would do so. Then we would have socialism.







Scruton would up by stating that he was the only one who’d taken account of history, for the whole of history gave evidence that people sought power over others. For socialism to be set up fundamental human desires would have to be abolished. He said that the discussion had, however, been a “most instructive” one. He denied there was any proof that the pursuit of profit on the part of the few was a limitation on the freedom of the many and concluded by stating that he had not, that evening, heard a formula for what everyone, himself included, would like to achieve but what was unachievable—freedom from necessity.







He told me he’d enjoyed the occasion and asked if I could try to get the library of the institution I’d told him I was a teacher in to subscribe to his Salisbury Review. “A serious journal:, he called it. I promised I’d have a go.







As we left the hall he was approached by an excited gentleman who’d been taking photographs during the meeting and who, as I read later in a cutting sent me from a Guildford paper, was a local Greek-Cypriot businessman complaining about a pro-Turkish article on Cyprus which Scruton had written in the Times.







Over in the pub Scruton eased himself away from Mr Demosthenous only to be taxed by a very hairy teenaged socialist on the subject of pre-capitalist societies—tribal ones—which had operated with far greater freedom than capitalism on a basis of common ownership and democratic participation. Didn’t this show that human beings weren’t naturally power-seeking or grasping? Scruton must have been a bit nonplussed by an articulate argument from what he thought was an unlikely source because he didn’t put up much resistance.







As I left I asked him if he thought private property itself was fundamental to human nature. He said he did and that he’d argued the point “very rudely” in one of his books. I felt like saying that the point got argued very frequently and very rudely too by visitors at my local branch meetings but that, despite his learning and sophistication, his arguments for it had been no more convincing than theirs. All the evidence, I said to myself as he vanished out the door, was in the other direction. But then he had taken a Socialist Standard away with him and if he read it maybe he’d find some of that evidence there. Come to think of it, maybe I should have asked him to subscribe to the Standard? After all my library’s now agreed to take the Salisbury Review.



Howard Moss





Protests in Iran Begin Again

Protests against the government has resumed in Iran with two days of demonstrations in the streets. Iranian security forces have reportedly fired shots in the air and used tear gas to disperse the crowds



  “Our enemy is right here,” one group of protesters chanted. Others were shouting  anti-government slogans such as, “Down with the dictator.” Some called for “Death to the liars”, in reference to the initial denials that the Ukrainian jet was shot down by Iran’s missile defences.



Demonstrations against a hike in fuel prices turned political last year, sparking the bloodiest crackdown in the 40-year history of the Islamic Republic. About 1,500 people were killed during less than two weeks of unrest that started in mid-November.





The 2020 Emancipation Proclamation

OUR 2020 VISION Emancipation Proclamation

By the Wage Slavery Abolitionists



In 1855, Frederick Douglas, a former slave, wrote:

 “The difference between the white slave, and the black slave, is this: the latter belongs to ONE slave-holder, and the former belongs to ALL the slave-holders, collectively. The white slave has taken from his, by indirection, what the black slave had taken from him, directly, and without ceremony. Both are plundered, and by the same plunderers”.



He understood so why can’t others understand?



The modern slave-owner has no such interest in his slaves. He neither purchases nor owns them. He merely buys so much labour-power – physical energy – just as he buys electric power for his plant. The worker represents to him merely a machine capable of developing a given quantity of labour-power. When he does not need labour-power he simply refrains from buying any. Wage slavery is the most satisfactory form of slavery that has ever come into existence, from the point of view of the masters. It gives them all the slaves they require, and relieves them of all responsibility in the matter of their housing, feeding and clothing.




We’re the ones who build things, make things, provide services, make things work, provide the ideas. But though we build the world around us, it does not belong to us. Everything that has been built around us is the result of our work and yet we don’t work for ourselves. We produce not for ourselves, but at the behest’s and whims of others. Worker is compelled to labour for the purpose of producing something to satisfy the wants of others who, holding the things necessary for their lives, thereby control them. They are, therefore, still a slaves.



We are the ones who are told what to produce, how to produce it, how much, and how fast. We are the ones who receive a pay cheque, be it high or low, not for selling what we produce but for selling our power to toil. With that pay cheque we try to buy back what we make. The source of someone else’s profits comes from our sweat and stress.



Capitalism is based on wage-labour. Capitalism is identified with private control of markets organised on  profit and loss economics. Propertarians, espouse not liberty but wage slavery. Capitalism is capital accumulation. Capitalism breeds inequality. Wage slavery has become the only option for the majority to sustain itself. The capitalist system originated through acts of theft and murder.



The capitalist class argue that waged work isn’t slavery when free and just conditions exist.” If only that were the case.



Workers sell their labour power to capitalist enterprises for a wage as stated above in earlier post. As a commodity, labour power has an exchange value and a use value, like all other commodities. Its exchange value is equal to the sum total of the exchange values of all those commodities necessary to produce and reproduce the labour power of the worker and his or her family. The use value of labour power is its value creating capacity which capitalist enterprises buy and put to work as labour. However, labour power is unlike other commodities in that it creates value. During a given period it can produce more than is needed to maintain the worker during the same period. The surplus value produced is the difference between the exchange value of labour power and the use value of the labour extracted by the capitalists. In capitalism, however, the wage-worker is a “free” agent. No master holds a person as a chattel, nor feudal lord as serf. This modern worker is free and independent: he or she has choices. We can dispose of our services to this or that capitalist owner, or we can withhold them. But this freedom is ephemeral. We must sell our working ability to some employer or other or face deprivation. In a capitalist society workers have the option of finding a job or facing abject poverty. Little wonder, then, that people “voluntarily” sell their labour and “consent” to authoritarian employment conditions. They have little option to do otherwise. So, within the labour market workers can and do seek out the best working conditions possible, but that does not mean that the final contract agreed is “freely” accepted and not due to the force of circumstances, that both parties have equal bargaining power when drawing up the contract or that the freedom of both parties is ensured. Our slavery is cloaked under the guise of wage-labour.



When the worker has found a master he or she receives in return for labour a price known as wages which represents on the average what is necessary for sustenance so that he or she can reproduce the energy to go on working, and also produce a new generation of workers when their working days are over. During their day in the factory or office or whatever, the worker produces wealth equivalent to that for which is paid as wages, but this does not require all the time of the working day. In providing for their own keep workers have also produced a surplus and this surplus belongs to the employer. This may eventually be split into profit to the manufacturer, rent to the landlord, and interest on capital invested by a financier. As capitalism develops the time in which the workers produces their own keep decreases while the surplus accruing to the capitalist increases. During this development the productivity of labour increases at an accelerating tempo: The worker continually produces more with less.



So when someone sells his or her labour power a number of hours for a certain wage, the amount of necessaries to produce his or her wages is always smaller than the amount of labour which the employer receives, the difference between what the workers receives as wages and what their labour power produces during his working time, constitutes the sole source of unearned income, i.e., capitalist profits. So profits exist because the worker sells themselves to the capitalist, who then owns their activity and, therefore, tries to control them like a machine.



Wage levels will vary with “the respective power of the combatants” as Marx puts it and in the long run this will determine the value of labour-power and the necessaries of life. From the point of view of wage-labour, wage levels and the value of labour-power depends on the balance of class forces, on what workers can actually get from their employers. As wages are also regulated by the relation of supply and demand, a surplus of labour power (the unemployed) is necessary to prevent wages swallowing up all profit. Therefore the unemployed reserve army is a vital necessity to capitalist production, and there can be no solution under capitalism.



It would be wrong to confuse exploitation with low wages. It does not matter if real wages do go up or not. The absolute level of those wages is irrelevant to the creation and appropriation of value and surplus-value. Labour is exploited because labour produces the whole of the value created in any process of production but gets only part of it back. On average workers sell their labour-power at a “fair” market price and still exploitation occurs. As sellers of a commodity (labour-power) they do not receive its full worth i.e. what they actually produce. Nor do they have a say in how the surplus value produced by their labour gets used.



The worker goes into the labour market as an article of merchandise, and his wages, that is, his price, is determined like that of any other article of merchandise, by the cost of production (i.e. the social labour necessary), and this in the case of the worker is represented by the cost of subsistence. The price of labour power fluctuates by the operation of supply and demand. There are generally more workers in the market than are actually required by the employers, and this fact serves to keep wages from rising for any length of time above the cost of subsistence. Moreover, machinery and scientific applications are ever tending to render labourers superfluous, with a consequent overstocking of the labour market, decrease of wages, and an increase in the number of the unemployed. Under these conditions relative poverty is necessarily the lot of the working-class.



We have the worker entirely dispossessed of the means of getting a living except by selling himself as an article of merchandise to the owners of the means of living. This is wage-slavery. While capitalists are as a class against the workers as regards the ownership of the wealth produced by the working-class, they, the capitalists, are also antagonistic to one another in the endeavour to get the larger share of the markets. It wasn’t just Marx but also Fourier who pointed long ago that this competition could only end in monopoly, and we do see concentration an going on in every branch of industry.



Many seek a capitalism with the rough corners smoothed out, the utopian aspiration of a tamed capitalism. What is really required is a fundamental change of the economic basis of society. Many seek an idealised world and call for governments not to interfere in the operation of the market, to let market forces operate unhindered – laissez faire – and that the detrimental effects of the capitalist system can be eliminated by taming global corporations. For as long as capitalism has existed state “interference” or state “intervention”, in the economy has always existed. A corporation-dominated government is really the logical outcome of a class-divided society where the state must serve the owning minority. Individualists attack socialism because they fear the whole of the wealth of society shall be owned by a number of persons incorporated into a State or a bureaucracy, instead of being, as at present, owned by private individuals. They maintain that the right of the individual is supreme, and condemn any action on the part of a State or collection of individuals, that interferes with their desires. But socialists are not statists, that if the working class was compelled to work for a State instead of for individual employers then wage-slavery is not abolished, but is intensified.The worker to-day, while compelled to work for an employer, still has some sort of a choice among those masters, but with the State as the only employer he is compelled to work for that employer and under all of that employer’s conditions, or take the only other alternative – starvation. State-capitalism (or as some like to call it State Socialism) would intensify slavery, but state-capitalism is not socialism.



People completely misunderstand Marxism if you believe that the solution is to have GOVERNMENT-OWNERSHIP of the means of production and the Marxist object is to simply just to REDUCE the power of the capitalist because he wished a mere re-distribution of wealth between capitalists and the working class. Socialists stand for the the ABOLITION OF THE STATE and stand for the ABOLITION OF CAPITALISM (not its replacement by capitalism in another form). Critics of Marxism should go to the source and forget what the state-capitalist Leninists or Trotskyists say and understand that Marx was in favour of the abolition of the state and its replacement by an “association of associations”, i.e. by a co-ordinated network of neighbourhood councils and producer-controlled production units. 




Marx made quite clear when he said, “The existence of the state is inseparable from the existence of slavery…”





Socialist Standard No. 1385 January 2020

A Good New Year To One And All

Once again it is January the First, the beginning of a new year and governments and the capitalists find themselves in the midst of a worsening climate crisis. Each new report reveals the weakness of capitalism, as all the basic contradictions in the system exacerbate the emergency. This new year may well be the decisive one.



Capitalism is a system of society which divides people rather than unites them — capitalist from worker, men from women, blacks from whites, nation from nation. It teaches us competition not co-operation competition for jobs, housing and something that approximates to a bearable standard of living. The division between capitalist and worker is inherent in capitalism — their interests are totally opposed and can never be reconciled. But the divisions between workers are not inherent —they are encouraged by the conditions in which we live and work but could be overcome through a recognition of our common class interests, our mutual inter-dependence and, above all, the need for radical change. It would be nice to think that people throughout the world will write their New Year resolution to make 2020 the year that they will organise democratically with their fellowworkers to abolish capitalism and bring about a society in which we can all start to become healthy, happy and wise. But unfortunately our New Year prediction is capitalism will continue through 2020 and it is s a constant source of astonishment to us that our fellow-workers rather than make a wonderful world are prepared to endure a world full of misery. 2019 was not a happy new year, nor was 2018, 2017, 2016…We need to do more than wish one another with the platitude that things will get better. We have the power to change the world and the ability to run it in the interests of the human race. That is our New Year message to all our fellow-workers.



Is our message so hard to understand? No! It is the very essence of simplicity. The workers produce the wealth of the world, the capitalists own it. Just as the workers hand over what they produce to-day to the capitalists, they could keep it for themselves if they wished to do so. The capitalists perform no useful task in wealth production, they are just drones. They take the fruits of the workers’ labour because the workers let them and the workers let them do so because they are bemused by the myth that drones are necessary. It is not remedies for particular social diseases that we need but the removal of the source of all social disease—the legal figment that enables the idle-rich to live off our toil. The aim of the capitalists is to force or cajole the workers into the submissive attitude of willing slaves, heaping up wealth for others to enjoy, and flattery and promises, cant and hypocrisy will be instruments used to secure this end.



So we deliver the same New Year message as we have before. Working-people can control their destinies once they shed their delusions and cast off the useless burden of capitalist privilege that they have borne upon their backs for so long. But the work they have to do must be done by themselves. With leaders they drift, leader-free they progress.  The only path is knowledge of what we are, wealth producing slaves of capital, and what we can be, freely associated workers owning in common our means of production and using them to supply the needs of all, without distinction of any kind except youth, old age or sickness, freeing of suffering humanity from the source of its sorrows!