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Socialist
Party National Committee Minutes: September 2008
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Meeting
of the National Action Committee
Held by e-mail ballot
on September 27-29, 2008
Attending: Andrea Pason, Jerry Levy
(by mail), Peter Moody, Greg Pason, Jerry Stastny and William Wharton.
Motion: To pass the following
statment on the Wall St. bailout. Motion
passed unanimously
NO TO THE WALL STREET
BAILOUT!
The current "financial crisis" is not just a temporary setback because
of the lack of regulation in the financial sector. The collapse of the
financial sector is indicative of the total failure of the capitalist
economy. In recent years, the leading recipients of this proposed
bailout have attempted to justify their “Washington consensus” of
decimating
social safety nets, massive cuts to wages and benefits, and
privatization of public services, in the name of mercilessly strict
adherence to the “tough love” and “sacrifice” of the “free
market.” This deregulation and
dismantling of any social protections was a logical step for the
capitalists represented by the Republican and Democratic Parties. The
call now for regulation of the markets is a hypocritical call by those
who continue to promote the free market as the solution to everything.
In demonstrating the cynical facade behind the unwaivering economic
ideology they've peddled for decades, these same power brokers and
politicians who demanded the near complete deregulation of the
financial sector under "free market" principles, are now calling upon
all tax-paying U.S. workers to "come together as Americans" and take
"collective responsibility" for their boundless greed and ultimate
financial failure under the very standards they themselves imposed.
Congressional Democrats, through continuous pledges to reach a
"bipartisan" solution to the financial meltdown, have predictably
fallen over themselves to reaffirm their reliable role as one of the
two great parties of capital. As Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
proclaimed on September 26th, "We will not leave until legislation is
passed that will be signed by the president. The markets [sic] need a
message from us that we're acting." Barack Obama, whose $25 million
dollars in campaign contributions from the financial industry in this
election has exceeded the amount received by John McCain, has likewise
urged bipartisan passage of the bailout package, "in the spirit of
cooperation on behalf of the American people.
As socialists, we understand that there can no longer be any rational
debate on the question of pursuing the "free market" as an alternative
to the compelling urgency for a socialist transformation of society.
The need of the largest capitalist firms to wipe out competition has
already led to the centralization of economic power, but in the form of
private ownership of an unaccountable ruling class of professional
speculators, not of working people.
If we the people are now to publicly socialize the costs of our ruling
class' disastrous practices, as our corporate politicians demand, what
justification can be given for handing the very pillars of our economic
security back to their private and unaccountable ownership, once
resurrected?
The Socialist Party rejects the bail-out plan. Instead, we propose that
the government take over the financial sector, and then delegate the
distribution of home loans to a decentralized network of non-profit
credit unions. These institutions are far less likely to push bogus
loans than the white-collar criminals which control the current
financial
institutions.
While opposing the bail-out we also call for programs which will
provide support to, and help empower individuals, families, and working
people as a whole to take power away from the corporate powers that be.
We support building millions of units of low-density. high quality, and
low-cost housing.
We support a federally funded socialized healthcare system which would
eliminate health insurance companies and be controlled by locally
elected community health committees.
We support elimination of anti-workers laws and give all workers the
right to organize through card check off and the right to strike.
We support laws that would encourage the creation of worker-owned/ run
institutions.
We support massive investment into mass-transit and alternatives to
fossil fuels.
And finally we call for the immediate withdrawal of all troops from
Iraq and Afghanistan (which includes thousands of national guard
troops which have been taken away from their families and jobs to fight
oversees), slashing our military budget by at least 50% and
establishing a steeply progressive federal income tax system.
The above actions would improve working people’s lives, bring the
thousands of troops overseas home, raise hundreds of millions of
dollars and take the tax burden off of low and moderate income
individuals and families.
The real solution to the vast majority of these problems would be to
move rapidly to a socialist society, one in which housing is provided
to all as a basic right, the financial sector and commanding heights of
the economy
are made publicly accountable through social ownership and worker
control of the economy, and production is oriented toward the needs of
working people, rather than maximizing the profits of an obsolete
ruling class of
multi-millionaires and billionaires. We, the majority who work for a
living, can no larger afford to produce and relinquish all that
maintaining the private profits for our ruling class entails!
E-Mail ballot ended
September 29, 2008
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