A Matter to Consider
The attempted murder of the President
of the United States, which so lately horrified the civilized world,
constitutes a foul blot upon this land of freedom. The bullet evidently
was not aimed at Mr. McKinley as an individual simply, but rather
at the executive head of a great nation, because in him was exemplified
the governmental idea, with which anarchism is not in sympathy.
The shooting furnishes an episode, graphic and acute, calculated
to excite profound reflection as to the underlying causes that led
to the action of the scoundrel who perpetrated the hideous deed.
It calls for the exercise of wise legislation that shall result
in the enactment of laws which, in their operation, shall effectually
reach, eradicate and stamp out, wherever found, the treason to humanity
and disloyalty to government, alien in its origin, that has taken
root and found accursed expression in this country by certain persons
of foreign birth, or whose immediate ancestry is exotic.
The liberty of these hospitable shores,
of speech and of action thereon, have been mistaken in their meaning
and ideals, and degraded by false interpretation into unrestricted
license. Emanating from low conditions of birth and surroundings,
influenced by ignorance and baseness, fostered in the saloon and
nurtured by idleness, it is a shame and a disgrace that this nation
should be terrorized, threatened or disturbed by the ravings and
outbreaks of anarchism. The demand that has sternly gone forth made
by an outraged people, that anarchy in this country must be cleared
from its midst, must be heeded. More than that, it must be kept
out, and emigration laws to this end must be revised, made more
strict and be more faithfully administered. America should no longer
tolerate the swarming to its shores of the vast and unregenerate
scum of Europe. The undesirable should be carefully winnowed from
the desirable. Our tariff laws are designed to protect us commercially:
emigrations [sic] laws should protect us in our moral and political
welfare.
The situation that confronts the American
people in this regard is most serious and rises far above the level
of partisan politics; it demands the exercise of an energetic and
lofty patriotism that shall unite the intelligence and thrift of
the country in a common cause against the most diabolical ideas
and festering unrest of modern times.
|