Library:Toward Soviet America

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This is the full text of William Z. Foster's 1932 publication, Toward Soviet America.

Preface

THERE is a great and growing mass demand in this country to know just what is the Communist party and its program. The masses of toilers, suffering under the burdens of the crisis, are keenly discontented and want to find a way out of their intolerable situation. They are alarmed at the depth, length and general severity of the crisis. They begin to realize that “there is something rotten in Denmark,” that there are fundamental flaws in the capitalist system. Their growing realization of this is further strengthened as they see the spectacular rise of Socialism in the Soviet Union. The masses are beginning rightly to sense that Communism has an important message for the human race, and they want to know what it is.

Capitalism is deeply anxious that the masses do not get this message. Hence, from the outset it has carried on a campaign of falsification of the Russian revolution entirely without parallel in history. There has been a veritable ocean of lies in the capitalist press against the U.S.S.R. The American Federation of Labor leadership and the Socialist party, defenders of the capitalist system, have outdone even the capitalists themselves in this wholesale vilification. The effort of the capitalists and their labor lieutenants has been to set off the Communists as willful enemies and destroyers of the human race. But the masses begin to see through this misrepresentation and they want to know the truth.

The present book is an attempt to meet this mass demand by a plain statement of Communist policy, avoiding technical complexities and theoretical elaboration. It outlines simply the program, strength, strategy and perspectives of the Communist party of the United States. It undertakes to point out what is the matter with capitalism and what must be done about it. It indicates where America is heading and it makes a practical application of the lessons of the Russian revolution to the situation in this country. Its central purpose is to explain to the oppressed and exploited masses of workers and poor farmers how, under the leadership of the Communist party, they can best protect themselves now, and in due season cut their way out of the capitalist jungle to Socialism.

WM. Z. FOSTER

New York City

May 1, 1932

I. The Decline of Capitalism

The Present Economic Crisis

The Mass Impoverishment of the Toilers

Capitalist Fear and Confusion

Cyclical Crises

The General Crisis of Capitalism

The Decaying Capitalist System

The War Danger

The World-Wide Revolutionary Upsurge

The Revolutionary Perspective

II. The Rise of Socialism

Flourishing Bolshevik Industries

The Revolution in Agriculture

Outstripping the Capitalist Countries

Real Prosperity for the Toilers

The Cultural Revolution

Accomplishing the Impossible

Socialism and Communism

The Dictatorship of the Proletariat

The Communist Party of the Soviet Union

III. Capitalist Attempts to Liquidate the Crisis

Quack Capitalist Economic Remedies

The Rationalization of Industry

The American “New Capitalism”

Trusts and Cartels

The Movement for Capitalist Planned Economy

The Question of an Organized Capitalism

Futile Efforts to Quench the Class Struggle

From Social Reformism to Social Fascism

The Fasciszation of the American Federation of Labor

The Fasciszation of the Socialist Party

The “Left” Social Fascists

The Bankruptcy of Social Fascism

The Futility of Fascism

IV. The Revolutionary Way Out of the Crisis

The Conquest of Political Power

The Revolutionary Forces in the United States

The Communist Party; the Party of the Toilers

The Present-Day Tasks of the American Revolutionary Movement

The Communist Party Program of Immediate Demands

A Program of Class Struggle

The American Workers and the Revolution

V. The United Soviet States of America

The American Soviet Government

The Expropriation of the Expropriators

The Improvement of the Toilers’ Conditions

The Liquidation of Capitalist Robbery and Waste

The Reorganization of Industry

The Collectivization of Agriculture

The Liberation of the Negro

The Emancipation of Woman

Unshackling the Youth

The Cultural Revolution in the United States

Curing Crime and Criminals

The Abolition of War

Socialist Incentive

Collectivism and Individualism

Building a New World