Capitalism
 
Capitalism is not simply trading goods and services (which was widespread  
prior to the origin of capitalism), but rather an economic and social system 
 where trade is embedded within class domination and exploitation. Workers 
sell  their ability to work, and this ability then becomes the property of 
the  capitalist who uses any and all techniques to maximize profits in 
production.  Wages, or the price of labor power, reflect the cost of sustaining 
the worker,  whereas the proceeds of labor belong to the capitalist. Workers 
themselves do  not realize the benefits of their labor, yet must work or face 
homelessness and  hunger. Capitalism as a social system is one in which one 
class enriches itself  at the expense of another class, and where workers 
get only what they  collectively are able to fight for. 
 
Capitalist relations of production consist of a labor force with no means  
of support other than their ability to work, and capitalists who own land, 
raw  materials, tools and technology. The capitalist class buys labor power 
and owns  what is produced for sale. The principle law of capitalism is the 
law of maximum  profit, which compels each capitalist to lower costs of 
production or risk being  taken over by another capitalist. 
 
The capitalist class and working class had their beginnings in  
pre-capitalist merchant trading and small-scale artisan production, and in the  
violent 
destruction of pre-capitalist societies and peoples. The rising  capitalist 
class stole land and labor. With their growing political power, the  
emerging British capitalist class succeeded in privatizing communal Irish lands 
 
and driving formerly self-sufficient peasants into the city as a starving 
labor  force. They stole the land of the native American peoples. They enslaved 
the  people of the African continent. The African slave trade and slavery 
in the New  World became the foundation on which all of early capitalism 
rested, and was  essential to the expansion of industrial capitalism in Europe 
and the New World. 
 
Technical innovations during the 1790s, most notably improvements in steam  
engine technology, transformed capitalism from its early manufacturing  
beginnings into industrial capitalism. Industrialization was centered in 
Britain  and characterized by mechanically animated means of production that 
allowed for  rapid increases in labor productivity and profitability. 
Industrialization was a  gigantic lever in the hands of the capitalist class to 
create 
unparalleled  productive power, and thereby ignited a global scramble for 
wealth. The law of  maximum profit dragged the entire world into a maelstrom 
of world trade, world  wars, and imperialist intrigue. The British Empire was 
eventually brought down  by national liberation movements and the slaughter 
of its young men in  imperialist war, and by the superior economic power of 
the United States. Today,  using a combination of military, economic, and 
political means, the U.S. is the  world’s sole superpower. 
 
Today, another technological revolution marks the final stage of  
capitalism. Developments in computers, biotechnology, robotics, and related  
technologies are now animating the means of production with relatively little  
labor. In the hands of the capitalists, these tools are used to maximize  
profits, and the consequence is displacement of the industrial proletariat. A  
new 
social class is arising that is economically superfluous to production. This 
 new class cannot buy and sell the means of life, and, as it develops, 
becomes  compelled to fight for a society that distributes the means of life on 
the basis  of human need. 
 
The inevitable development of a communist class within capitalism spells  
the end of capitalism. The communist class is developing in the abandoned  
industrial towns of the American Midwest, and in the lives of its sons and  
daughters who must choose between indebtedness, jail, or the armed forces. In  
the East, it is developing in China’s 300 million plus agricultural 
workers, who  are superfluous to modern agriculture, yet cannot be absorbed by 
industry which  downsized at least 15 million workers between the middle 1990s 
and 2002 due to  rapid productivity increases and the curtailment of state 
supported employment.  The communist class is international and must organize 
itself as such. 
 
As the economy moves toward laborless production, the industrial phase of  
capitalism comes to a close. While some workers continue to work, others 
lose  their ability to work, and join the communist class. Capitalist 
competition is  not just killing capitalists, it’s creating its own antithesis. 
Laborless  production demands a new social system where the means of life are 
distributed  not on the basis of buying and selling, but on the basis of human 
need.  Capitalism was born out of the expropriation of small, scattered 
private  property, and its conversion into capitalist private property. The 
capitalists  are ruthless and will stop at nothing to hold on, but they cannot 
stop the  inevitable flow of history. We are moving toward a day when the 
means of  production will be controlled by the class that will use it not for 
private  accumulation, but rather for the benefit of the human race and our 
planet. 
 
 
 
August.2008.
Vol18.Ed4 This article originated in Rally, Comrades! P.O. Box 477113  
Chicago, IL 60647 _rally@lrna.org_ (mailto:ra...@lrna.org)  Free to  reproduce 
unless otherwise marked. Please include this message with any  reproduction. 
 
 
 
 
 

_______________________________________________
Marxist-Leninist-List mailing list
Marxist-Leninist-List@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxist-leninist-list

Reply via email to