Publication information |
Source: Union Boot and Shoe Worker Source type: journal Document type: editorial Document title: “The Stampers Out” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: October 1901 Volume number: 2 Issue number: 10 Pagination: 5-6 |
Citation |
“The Stampers Out.” Union Boot and Shoe Worker Oct. 1901 v2n10: pp. 5-6. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (public response: criticism); anarchism (dealing with); liquor and liquor traffic. |
Named persons |
William McKinley. |
Notes |
In accordance with the original source, the spelling of the word “stamper-outs” is given inconsistently below. |
Document |
The Stampers Out
Whenever a great crime is committed, like the
assassination of President McKinley, the stamper-outs are heard from in their
full strength and [5][6] weakness, and it is proposed
to “stamp out Anarchy” in short order. Educating or cultivating it out is too
slow and too uninteresting and expensive. “Stamping it out” has a sound of power
which befits the powerful minds that propose it. Quick! Lynch it! Down with
it! B-z-z-z!
And Anarchy is gone.
It is so easy to stamp out things. Nihilism was
so easily stamped out in Russia, and Anarchy in Italy, Austria and France. For
Russia has always been a great stamper out, with her press censor, her prohibition
of radical foreign books, her system of government spies, and her Siberia. Anarchy
and Nihilism had to go before such vigorous measures.
And the liquor traffic, for instance, how easily
that has been stamped out in Kansas and Maine. Wiped completely out, long, long,
ago. And so extremely easy and quick. What sense would there have been in trying
to educate or cultivate the liquor habit out of people when the “traffic” would
be “stamped out” quickly?
Great are the stampers out. They have some honorables
and reverends among them, and they sometimes fill the Sunday newspaper with
their tremendous stamping.
There is another class of people, however, who
believe in a different method of eliminating the evil from society. They believe
that better food and shelter make stronger, wiser, and better men, that education
and leisure to think and read also improves them, that lectures, music, museums
of art, history, etc., libraries, public parks and other places of innocent
amusement and instruction, compete with the liquor saloon and the Anarchist
club, and win followers away from them.
The class, whose belief this is, do not get into
print so quickly as the stampers-out. They at first attract no attention, whatever,
because the stampers out always arrive first on the field and raise a great
storm of dust with their terrific stamping, and nothing can be seen till it
settles. When it settles, the stampers-out have retired from the field to rest
and get ready for the next stamp. And the quiet workers remain in possession,
and they resume their work with the same slow method, seemingly unconscious
that the evils they oppose have already been stamped out by the mighty and energetic
tribe of the Stampers-Out.