Publication information |
Source: Free Society Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “Excommunication Rejected” Author(s): Isaak, Abraham, Jr. Date of publication: 9 March 1902 Volume number: 9 Issue number: 10 Pagination: 2 |
Citation |
Isaak, Abraham, Jr. “Excommunication Rejected.” Free Society 9 Mar. 1902 v9n10: p. 2. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response: anarchists); McKinley assassination (personal response: criticism); Wat Tyler; Leon Czolgosz (mental health); Walter Channing; Leon Czolgosz (psychiatric examination: criticism). |
Named persons |
Michele Angiolillo; Gaetano Bresci; Sante Geronimo Caserio; Walter Channing; J. Sanderson Christison; Leon Czolgosz; Luigi Luccheni; Wat Tyler. |
Notes |
Click here to
view the article by Wat Tyler that the piece below is written in response
to.
Click here
to view J. Sanderson Christison’s “Epilepsy, Responsibility and the Czolgosz
Case” as it appears in the January 1902 issue of Kansas City Medical
Index-Lancet.
“Abe Isaak Jr.” (p. 2). |
Document |
Excommunication Rejected
Notwithstanding Wat Tyler, I am not inclined
to recede from the position I have taken in considering Leon Czolgosz’s act
of political significance. If the acts of Caserio, Angiolillo, Luccheni, and
Bresci can be said to have any political significance (and they certainly can),
that of Czolgosz appears in the same light. The attempt to brush the latter
aside on the grounds of alleged insanity, remains to be proven. Dr. Channing
does not even positively assert him to be insane, but simply that his case “furnishes
more grounds for diagnosis of insanity.” This is certainly very weak evidence
on which to declare a man a lunatic, in view of the fact that Dr. Channing failed
to examine the most important witness—Czolgosz himself.
The reliability of the evidence on which this
hypothesis rests may well be questioned. In a pamphlet on “Responsibility and
the Czolgosz Case,” by Dr. J. Sanderson Christison, based on “personal investigation,”
and announced to be the leader of the “theory that Czolgosz was insane,” several
questions of fact contradict Dr. Channing’s results. On whom can we rely?
Besides these experts show a tendency to prove
the world insane on no matter what ground. One of the reasons for Czolgosz’s
insanity is stated to be as follows:
Moral Chaos, e. g., He declared that he did not believe in government, nor in law, nor in marriage, nor in God.
This probably puts Wat Tyler in the direct way of being declared a lunatic. Certainly all Anarchists come under this head. “Wat Tyler” bears a rather suggestive pseudonym to be engaged in the attempt to excommunicate Leon Czolgosz. I reject it utterly and entirely.