Publication information |
Source: Free Society Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “The Chicago Martyrs—and After” Author(s): Tufts, Helen Date of publication: 21 December 1902 Volume number: 9 Issue number: 51 Pagination: 2 |
Citation |
Tufts, Helen. “The Chicago Martyrs—and After.” Free Society 21 Dec. 1902 v9n51: p. 2. |
Transcription |
excerpt |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response: anarchists); Leon Czolgosz (mental health); William McKinley; society (criticism); William McKinley (legacy). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; William McKinley. |
Notes |
Click here to view remarks written in response to the excerpted article below. |
Document |
The Chicago Martyrs—and After [excerpt]
It is with surprise and shame that I see this
year’s commemoration of their death inaugurated in F
Whatever force the act eulogized might acquire
had it been performed by a person in full possession of his faculties, it loses
every vestige of significance before the well-established dementia and irresponsibility
of the perpetrator.
But suppose it were true that Czolgosz was a “self-poised
man.” Can the notion be for a moment entertained by any sane mind that his act
was helpful to the cause of progress! (5) McKinley was no bloody tyrant. He
was a tool. Moreover, he was the representative of the majority in this country.
It was for the interest of capital to bamboozle that majority into accepting
him as their representative; but the fact remains that the great mass of the
people of the United States regarded McKinley as their representative and they
supported the atrocious acts of his administration.
They were perfectly agreeable to the theft
of the Philippines; they applauded the headlong rush of this country
toward financial inflation; they viewed with pride the suicidal policy
of the man they had elected. No matter that the people of this country were
the mere puppets of a ring of capitalists, they are the ones with whom
a Czolgosz must reckon, and it is folly to imagine that they will ever see any
point in murder. As a matter of fact, McKinley has become a saint, and in his
dramatic death at the climax of his career, he exerts a more insidious influence
than if he had been allowed to live and reap the harvest of his sowing. The
forces of government have profited, and have in every way recruited strength
to oppress. I denounce every attempt to drag the Chicago martyrs into companionship
with Czolgosz.