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Capitalist Trade Pacts [Editorial, U.S. socialist newsweekly The Militant, 7 May 2001, Vol.65/No.18]
Working people are bombarded
with arguments to make us accept the notion that "we"
have a stake in one or another set of U.S. government and employer
trade policies. These range from "protecting" the "American
worker" with tariffs and other measures that increase the
cost of imports to so-called "free trade" policies
that will give U.S. companies an advantage on the world market.
Workers and farmers are subjected to such arguments from the
employers, government and trade union officials, the big-business
media, and various organizations that claim to speak in the interests
of working people.
Accepting this framework--in
any of its guises--for how to confront the effects of the growing
world capitalist economic crisis is a deadly trap for all working
people. The bosses and their two parties, Democrats and Republicans
alike, present the false notion that "we" in the United
States have a stake in one or another of their proposals. This
disguises the fact that the United States, Canada, and Mexico
are class-divided and that we--workers and farmers--have nothing
in common with them--the capitalist exploiters and landlords.
Capitalism has been "globalizing"
since its very birth more than two centuries ago. There is no
point in trying to make the capitalists organize their economy
in a different way, as some "antiglobalization" opponents
of "free trade" policies seek to do. The real question
to address is what we as workers and farmers can and must do--and
that is to join together across borders and fight for solutions
that advance our common needs as a class.
Millions of working people
around the world are discovering as they enter into struggle
the fact that we are an international class and have common interests.
In contrast with proposals that foster competition among ourselves
for jobs and other basic rights, the only course that serves
working people in the cities and countryside is one of joining
together in a united struggle against our common enemy: the employers
and their government, above all Washington.
Decades of struggles by working
people have demonstrated that the only way to prevent the employer
class from deepening its assaults and ultimately imposing fascism
and world war on working people to resolve the deep-going crisis
of the outmoded capitalist system--their solution twice before
in the 20th century--is through revolutionary struggle by working
people against the capitalist rulers and their government. The
international fight for socialism does not start from a good
idea. It begins with the most basic needs of the producing classes
to defend ourselves from the assaults, brutalities, wars, and
oppression by an outmoded and violent system.
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