Reykjavík Grapevine


Reykjavík Grapevine - 19.05.2017, Síða 13

Reykjavík Grapevine - 19.05.2017, Síða 13
Ground up; not top down We e m p h a s i s e that the follow- ing points are still in the formative stages. But SPI’s platform makes it very plain how they see the lay of the land: T h e S o c i a l i s t Party of Iceland is the party of wage e a r n er s a n d a l l those who suffer from want, invis- ibility and abjec- tion. The opponents of the Socialist Party of Iceland are the capitalist class and its functionaries. The terrain of the Socialist Party of Iceland is a broad class struggle that rejects compro- mise and false dialogue. As one could guess, this invariably means that SPI calls for the people to seize power in all spheres of society, rather than just win votes in Parlia- ment: “Workplace, union, school, neigh- borhood, municipality, village,” as they put it, “all these domains should be un- der egalitarian control where the popu- lar interest is prioritized.” This point is crucial: in a socialist so- ciety, the people do indeed control these spheres. Rather than the standard re- formist approach—that is, hoping that if a socialist party wins enough seats in parliament, they will radically trans- form all of society from the top down— SPI’s aim seems to be more from the ground up, and with a broader base than simply the legislative. So what’s the plan? The SPI would seem to be on the right track in terms of how they see the ter- rain of class struggle. Which brings us to SPI’s “initial campaign causes”: 1. Decent living conditions for all citi- zens, whether they are wage earners, unemployed, pensioners, students, or homemakers. 2. Access to secure and affordable housing. 3. Access to free healthcare, to free edu- cation on all levels, and to a free wel- fare system that meets everyone’s dif- ferent needs. 4. The shortening of the work week, to improve quality of life for the people and to facilitate their ac- tive participation in shaping society. OK, so far so good. These are not utopian ideas; they are ex- pressly socialist, in that all citi- zens are publicly provided with all of life’s essentials, at no cost to themselves. Socialism does this by the workers directly controlling the means of production. They own the workplaces, they own the services they provide, they own the public institu- tions that they run. Which is why it is jarring to then read: 5. Reconstruction of the tax system, with an eye to making the wealthy pay an adequate share in common ex- penditures but alleviating the burden of others. So are we then to assume that there will still be wealthy people to tax? You can’t have wealthy people without capitalism, and you can’t have capitalism in a so- cialist country. Shifting the tax burden from the poor and onto the rich is laud- able, but it isn’t socialist—it’s social- democratic. The social democrat counts on capitalism to function well because the social democrat needs wealthy peo- ple to tax to pay for the bulk of the social welfare system. The more successful they are, the more revenue they make for the state. A socialist, by contrast, would abolish capitalism altogether, seizing the means of production from the hands of the wealthy and expropri- ating their wealth for the common good. Gunnar Smári expanded on this part of the platform by saying, “We have, as a society, fallen into a hole in the ice; a hole we could call neoliberalism.” Get- ting out of this hole requires finding the funds to develop the social welfare system to the degree by which it can ful- fill these platform points. “When we’ve taken that step, we can then consider what our next steps should be, how we can increase power to the people over their communities, and in what form we manage offices, companies and in- stitutions. It’s not good to decide this while we’re still in the hole; first, we need to get on dry land.” Tossing out the “damned beast” To do so requires a very broad base of action, as Gunnar Smári repeats the party’s aim: “We do that by empower- ing class struggle, increasing political participation in all areas, we have to re- store the labour movement as a tool for fighting on behalf of the public interest, we have to gain power in Parliament, in municipalities, in all foundation insti- tutions of society. We need to clean out the entire system.” When all is said and done, after socialists have managed their way into majority posi- tions on every level of Icelandic government, then the ruling class can be overthrown. "The ruling class contends that families cannot function unless they sit at the end of the table and control everything,” Gunnar Smári says. “So the family stands up, tosses the damned beast out, and everyone has a much better life after that." As a grassroots movement with grassroots praxis, the Socialist Party of Iceland has its work cut out for it, but this is the paradox of all grass- roots movements: complete revolution means revolution in all spheres of soci- ety, which takes an extraordinary long time. Vanguard revolutions take much shorter, but can lead to reactionary im- pulses and oppression. Time will tell whether the Socialist Party of Iceland can remain cohesive throughout the struggle—a challenge every revolution- ary movement must eventually face. “We have spent the past 30 to 35 years under the reign of neoliberalism, as horrible an ideology as there is. It claims to be based on science, but is more or less some kind of ridiculous religion.” AKUREYRI OFFICE + 354 497 1000 WHALES, PUFFINS & REYKJAVÍK DEPARTURES 2017 - 19.990 ISK WHALES, EYJAFJORD & AKUREYRI DEPARTURES 2017 - 19.990 ISK April 15th - May 31st. May 15th - June 15th. 10:00, 14:00 10:00, 14:00 REYKJAVIK OFFICE + 354 497 0000 str and gat a HOF Lundargata Fró ðas und Eið s Gra nuf elag sga ta Hofsbot Brekkugata Hafnarstræ ti ave gu rOd dag ata Skipagata G rerárgata Grundargata eyjargata TICKET OFFICE WHALE SAFARI Æg isg arð ur Gei rsg ata Geirsgata No rð ur stí gu r Nýlendugata Mýrargata Hlé sga ta Rastargata Vesturgata Miðbakki Suðurgata Ægi sga rðu r Ægi sga rðu r TICKET OFFICE WHALE SAFARI Re yk jav ík O ld H arb ou r #CLOSERTONATURE • #THEULTIMATEWHALEWATCHING • #WHALESAFARI +354 497 0000 • WHALESAFARI.IS • INFO@WHALESAFARI.IS THE ULTIMATE WHALE WATCHING TOURS FROM REYKJAVÍK & AKUREYRI CLOSER TO NATURE CERTIFCATE of EXCELLENCE “ONE OF THE MOST FUN ACTIVITIES IN REYKJAVÍK ” Reviewed July 2016 “THE ONLY WAY TO SEE WHALES” Reviewed August 2015

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