Reasons for Confidence
This country has passed through a severe
and painful ordeal during the past fortnight in the assassination
of President McKinley, whose death has left everywhere a sense of
personal loss, so greatly was he admired and esteemed. At no time,
however, did the feeling of consternation develop into panic, and
now that Mr. McKinley’s successor has been inducted into office,
the great onward movement of national affairs has been quietly resumed.
The firm condition of our financial markets is an evidence of the
stability of things and of faith in the continuance of that prosperity
which marked in general the whole period of Mr. McKinley’s presidency.
The foul murder by an anarchist of a man so universally beloved
would have justified serious perturbation in trade and industry,
but the very occurrence has only served to show how free our people,
as a whole, are from acceptance of the villainous doctrines of those
who see in social chaos a regeneration of mankind. And yet heaven
knows how sedulously the yellow press for years past has been preaching
discontent, hatred of wealth, dislike of work, enmity toward corporations,
and particular distrust of Mr. McKinley as an alleged “tool of the
trusts.” It has been sickening the past week to see how the same
papers, realizing at last how utterly out of touch they are with
real American sentiment, have turned around and tried to square
themselves by representing the martyred President as little short
of an archangel.
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President Roosevelt has already declared
his intention to maintain and carry on the policy of Mr. McKinley,
and this is in itself another reason for public confidence. That
policy found its last expression in Mr. McKinley’s speech, made
at the Pan-American the day before he was shot, and in that broad,
statesmanlike utterance was embodied the larger programme of trade,
shipping and international relationships, which may be summed up
in the two ideas of peaceful imperialism and progressive reciprocity.
In Mr. Roosevelt we have a man of the highest character, lofty courage,
extensive culture, and a capacity of intellectual growth—in short,
all the qualities that afford bright auguries for his administration.
The very impetuosity that has carried him far now becomes a pledge
of vigor and efficiency in every governmental department; for no
President yet had too much energy and activity for all the multitudinous
duties and responsibilities of his great office.
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President Roosevelt begins his administration
at a time when the country under Mr. McKinley’s beneficent rule
has enjoyed several years of prosperity, and there are pessimists
who hold that “good times” cannot go on forever. On the other hand,
it might be fairly asserted that the tide of prosperity has had
at least two ebbs even under Mr. McKinley, but that progress goes
on all the time. Since 1896, moreover, agencies have been set in
motion for the development of the resources of this country, which
will be long in exhausting their possibilities, and it is certain
that under Mr. Roosevelt we shall all lead the “strenuous life”
that lifts nations from higher to higher spheres of influence and
success.
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