http://www.wspus.org/2016/06/a-tv-program-the-sanity-of-socialism/ A TV program: The Sanity of Socialism by Joe Hopkins | posted: June 7, 2016 0 Comment ARCHIVE: This is the script of a television program produced by members of our party and aired in Boston in 1975, reproduced from the journal of the WSPUS at that time — The Western Socialist. We have published a number of radio scripts in these pages, as you know if you read The Western Socialist with any degree of fidelity. Now, we are pleased to put into print a script of a recent TV program that was aired live and in color on September 30 [1975] on Boston Channel 44 at 9 p.m. The show was of a half-hour duration with a panel of three speakers – Karla Ellenbogen, Mike Phillips and Len Fenton, all of Boston local, who, incidentally, all enjoyed the experience. What is of some special significance is that the idea for the script was international. The Socialist Standard of June 1975 (our sister publication in Great Britain), devoted its entire issue to the theme ‘Pollution — Population — Resources’ and we borrowed copiously from this material. Of course, we had to de-Anglicize it a bit. This journal, plus the pamphlet recently published by our comrades of the Socialist Party of Canada, entitled A World of Abundance, served as excellent source material. The short paragraphs of the script allow for ad lib improvisation as suits the individual speaker. So sit back, relax, and through the mind’s eye, watch the wide screen as the studio announces: ‘Tonight “Catch 44” belongs to the World Socialist Party!’ The camera shows three members sitting along a raised table, a close-up draws a bead on M. Phillips, who begins. As long as men have mined coal, they have suffered from pneumoconiosis or black lung disease. The coal dust they inhale accumulates over time, forming lesions in the lungs comprising the dust itself and the tissues it has killed. The disease inhibits breathing and the transfer of oxygen to the blood, eventually making heavy work impossible. It causes coughing, short-windedness and, in advanced cases, death. This may sound like ancient history. Actually, it is from the front page of a recent issue of The Wall Street Journal. Another instance of industrial hazards that beset working people is the class action suit filed against the Johns-Manville Company, the leading processor of asbestos, on behalf of a group of former employees who claim that they have been exposed to potentially deadly asbestos. The suit alleges that ‘the company failed to safeguard its employees and failed to alert them to the possibility that asbestos is deleterious, dangerous, poisonous and highly harmful to a person’s body.’ We contend that producing commodities like coal and asbestos under conditions that may lead to ultimate death of the workers producing these commodities is insanity. On a more widespread scale we are also concerned about the general contamination of our planet’s ecology. There must be a better way. We want to talk about the sanity of socialism. We shall approach our subject from three directions. Our first speaker will deal with pollution and the environment. The next speaker will deal with the topic of resources and answer the question: ‘Is there enough to go around?’ And finally we will discuss the fear of overpopulation. So here is Len Fenton to tell us about the ‘sanity of socialism.’