I agree with Comrade Mxolisi's clarification of both extremes, and convinced
that the ANC YLs' call for nationalisation is located within a revolutionary
premise. ANC YL President Julius Malema's contribution on why
nationalisation said:

"Our call for nationalisation of mines is in such a manner where the State
will own mineral wealth and mines as a custodian of the entire South African
population, and not a custodian of few big-businesses. All South Africans
should equitably benefit from State owned and controlled mines and we are
not mistaken when we make the call for the nationalisation of Mines. We are
vividly aware of the Minerals and Petroleum Resources Development Act
(MPRDA) which retains State control of all mineral rights, but what we are
calling for is State ownership and control of both the mineral wealth
beneath the soil, and the extraction and production of these mineral
resources in Mines thereof".


My interpretation of this assertion is that it affirms the national
democratic revolutionary path towards attainment of the Freedom Charter
objectives (SACP's minimum political programme). The YL's main reasoning
behind the call is that we should without delay, achieve the Freedom Charter
aims, but also lay a firm basis for the development of productive forces
through beneficiation of mineral wealth and diversification of the economy
in a labour-absorptive fashion, which in the immediate addresses our
unemployment (and to some extent poverty) crisis. In addition, the State's
control and ownership of minerals will bring to a complete halt, what the
South African Road to Socialism calls "dependent development", because SA
will no longer be solely the producers and exporter of natural resources and
importers of finished consumer goods and services. But it also tests the
State capacity to technically manage the strategic sectors of the economy,
which will be necessary under socialism.


Whatever discussion we enter into should never loose sight of the reality
that Progressive Communists' struggles for a socialist future are not
de-linked from the struggles to resolve the national and gender
contradictions. The NDR is our route to socialism, meaning in simpler terms
that the attainment of NDR objectives (Freedom Charter) lays a firm
foundation for an uninterrupted transition to socialism. Our revolution is
not an adventure, nor a debating society, but a theoretically and
ideologically grounded battle for the emancipation of those who do not won
the means of production, the black majority and Africans in particular.


The temptation to dismiss State control of the key means of production will
always exist, because comrades are rather paranoid of the realities that
characterised other States and governments, and should raise these issues
when we discuss the modalities of nationalisation, which will happen.

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