Publication information |
Source: Free Society Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “The Experts and Their ‘Facts’” Author(s): Austin, Kate Date of publication: 9 March 1902 Volume number: 9 Issue number: 10 Pagination: 4-5 |
Citation |
Austin, Kate. “The Experts and Their ‘Facts.’” Free Society 9 Mar. 1902 v9n10: pp. 4-5. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response: criticism); Leon Czolgosz (mental health); Leon Czolgosz (psychiatric examination: criticism); Czolgosz family; McKinley assassination (personal response: anarchists). |
Named persons |
L. Vernon Briggs; Walter Channing; Leon Czolgosz; Carlos F. MacDonald [misspelled below]; Edward A. Spitzka; Wat Tyler. |
Notes |
Click here to view the article by Wat Tyler that the piece below is written in response to. |
Document |
The Experts and Their “Facts”
In F
It may not be out of place to remark that all
the people I know do these things, myself including. Nearly all the people I
know have faith that certain things forecasted in the Almanack “come true.”
They are practical people for the most part, and [4][5]
their sanity unquestioned. Dr. Briggs further learned that Czolgosz prepared
and ate his food apart from the family. These are the main points gathered by
this latest scientific investigation, the summing up of which led Dr. Channing
to declare “indicated a considerable degree of mental impairment, probably amounting
to actual disease.”
Now, it is a well known fact among radicals that
there are comrades who are considered by their relations to be insane or depraved
because of the strange views they hold, so at variance with popular tradition.
The fact that Czolgosz’s family practically deserted him in his extremity, that
they were Catholics, while he had repudiated religion, shows that the ties of
kinship as well as sympathy had long been broken between them. This, coupled
with ignorance and fear for their personal welfare, make [sic] their testimony
weak, and the weakness extends to the conclusions drawn by the learned gentlemen.
Moreover, we learn by another scientific investigation thru material evidence
gained in a post mortem, that mentally and physically Leon Czolgosz was in perfect
health, if anything the brain being better than the average. It matters not
that these experts added a postscript to the effect that the subject was “socially
diseased,”—physically and mentally, they demonstrated by a careful examination
that he was sane and healthy. I will call their decision Scientific Demonstration
No. 1[.] Drs. Briggs and Channing, by holding a post mortem over a lot of gossip
and second hand [sic] information in the shape of opinions gathered from “Tom,
Dick, and Harry,” give us Scientific Demonstration No. 2, viz: that “a considerable
degree of mental impairment[”] existed, “probably amounting to actual disease,”
and that Czolgosz’s act was the culmination of insane delusions. When scientific
experts thus differ and contradict each other’s conclusions, it is well to be
a little modest in regard to things being “positively demonstrated.” The words
a typical regicide convey about as much meaning as does socially diseased.
It is enough to make one weep tears of wrath and pity, when we consider how
so-called learned men, in the name of science, tax human credulity in the effort
to prove a king-slayer either insane or a natural fiend. But
who ever desired to hold a post mortem over the rulers who slay thousands in
invasive wars to satisfy the lust of conquest and greed? The public executioner,
who expresses so much pleasure over his neat method of killing a fellow being,
and the harmonious details connected with the proceeding, never interests our
savant. A great naval officer who speaks of a sea fight he took part in, where
hundreds of poor men lost their lives, as “the most beautiful sight he ever
saw,” they silently ignore, and so long as they do, thus ignore licensed murderers,
and express not the slightest interest in discovering why the ruling
class kill and take pleasure in killing, I shall regard with contempt
their scientific (?) researches that demonstrate, by their very onesidedness
[sic], what fools, knaves, and hypocrites these searchers [sic] are. Had Messrs.
Spitzka, McDonald, Channing and Briggs, held a post mortem over the industrial
condition of this country and the crimes of those in power instead of dissecting
the remains of Leon Czolgosz and a lot of gossip, they might have demonstrated
a few facts that would prove those conditions responsible for human explosions
like that at Buffalo. As it happened they preferred to ignore social conditions
and assume that Czolgosz was either insane or a fiend incarnate. In regard to
those “Anarchists who tacitly accepted Czolgosz at his own estimate,” being
mistaken in such acceptance, I heartily concur with Comrade Tyler. A
rebellious workingman who deliberately gives his life in exchange for that of
a worthless hulk of a ruler has such a very modest estimate of his own value,
that I for one would not dream of taking it. While I mourn for every noble life
that has thus been given, I recognize and accept the act as the supreme protest
of a brave and generous heart against “the curse of government.”
Caplinger Mills, Mo.