Capitalism is a sick society and we do not hesitate to say so. Nor do we
hesitate to say that Tony Blair and David Blanket from the Labour
government  (or alternatively William Hague and Ann Widdecombe from the
Conservatives) could double the number of police on the streets and
quadruple the number of people "stopped and searched" under current
legislation without it having any noticeable effect on the violent crime
and disorder eating away at the fabric of society. New Labour came to
power famously promising to be �tough on crime and tough on the causes of
crime� but if you are seemingly unaware of what the causes of crime really
are how can you be �tough� on them?

It does not take a leader-writer for the Daily Mail to know that serious
crime is at the highest levels it has been in living memory, and pretty
much right across the "developed world" too. Neither do you have to be a
seasoned criminologist to be aware that where the lawless American inner
cities and ghettos have led, so have London, Manchester and a whole host
of other cities followed.

Catching criminals in modern capitalism is like the labours of Sisyphus, a
never-ending task. This is because crime is overwhelmingly committed by
the poor, the disenfranchised, and the cynical, in short the people
without a stake in society. And it is capitalism�the system which commands
the unwavering support of Blair and Hague alike�which creates such people
by the bucketload.

All social systems adopt a code of morals, laws and regulations
commensurate with the economic structure of that system and capitalism was
no different. The codes that developed alongside the market economy were
those entwined with notions of the sanctity of private property, the value
of "enterprise", and the importance of a stable hierarchy in society.
Unfortunately for the system, it is the spread of the competitive buying
and selling relationship into every aspect of human existence together
with the �every-man-for-himself� culture that this promotes that has
undermined the basis of the social stability that capitalism has previous
been able to claim for itself. Nowhere is this expressed more obviously
than in the nihilism and lack of respect for "authority" and "convention"
in all its forms that has been a developing feature of youth culture, in
particular, over recent years.

When community relationships break down, when individuals treat one
another as stepping stones to social advancement rather than as equals,
and when drugs to numb the pain of the daily rat race become the norm,
then society is in serious trouble. Indeed, as it eats away at the fabric
of its own existence, capitalism is in especially deep trouble because it
knows no other way out of this problem other than more of the same. This
means more competition, more rampant individualism, more big sticks and
gang warfare (of both the legal and illegal varieties) and more social
dislocation as a result.

The dispossessed youth of the inner cities and sink council housing
estates are right to think there is no hope within the present system, but
wrong to sit back and wallow in its excesses. Socialists say that society
can be better than it is. The many people of this world needn't be its
unwilling and repeated victims. But to change things people have got to
organise and organise with a purpose�to overturn the relationships and
values that capitalism so ruthlessly and cynically promotes.

In other words we need to create a society where a real community exists
once again that is truly fit for humans to live in. That can only mean a
society of equality, built upon participation and mutual respect. 

And we contend that in turn that can only mean socialism, where a real
community of interests based upon common ownership and democratic control
can be established to eradicate most crime and anti-social activity at
root, to be established with agreed rules and regulations necessary for
resolving any hangovers from the destabilising and dehumanising days of
capitalism.

We argue that today we stand at a juncture in history where only socialism
can provide the framework for the eradication of the current malaise
society finds itself in. For without socialism, tackling the �causes of
crime� will mean nothing other than more empty words and broken promises,
fuelling another, destructive, cycle of cynicism.

Jt

www.worldsocialism.org


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