Publication information |
Source: Freedom Source type: magazine Document type: editorial Document title: “The Dilemma of Authority” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: October 1901 Volume number: 15 Issue number: 161 Pagination: 59-60 |
Citation |
“The Dilemma of Authority.” Freedom Oct. 1901 v15n161: pp. 59-60. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (international response: anarchists); the press (criticism); William McKinley (criticism); society (criticism); anarchism; Leon Czolgosz (execution: international response); law (criticism); anarchism (public response). |
Named persons |
Gaetano Bresci; Hall Caine; Leon Czolgosz; Martin Dooley; Emma Goldman; Mr. Hennessy; William McKinley; George Washington. |
Notes |
Click here to view a newspaper editorial by Hall Caine expressing sentiments identical to those credited to him below. |
Document |
The Dilemma of Authority
McKinley’s death calls for little comment from
us, so much having already been written upon it. That what has been written,
as concerning Anarchists and the movement, is filled with falsities does not
alter the case. Truth wears a grim face and is not beloved of penny-a-liners.
It might be well, however, if the glib journalists who strive so eagerly to
gull the public mind could for once appreciate the difference that lay between
McKinley, private citizen, and McKinley, President of Trusts. McKinley, private
citizen, may have been, possibly was, a blameless individual. Now, it is only
the Newspaper Anarchist who kills the blameless individual. The bullet that,
probably aided by his physicians, finally ended McKinley’s career, was not aimed
at the blameless individual, but at McKinley—unscrupulous imperialist and crafty
politician—at McKinley, ignorer of the rights of working men, defender and supporter
of the infamous Trust system of the United States—at the President of a “Free”
Republic, who, spurning the title of monarch, possessed more power than all
the autocrats of the world rolled into one, and never in one single instance
used that power other than to foster the privileges of the rich—to ameliorate
the condition of his less fortunate countrymen seems never to have entered his
thoughts.
A George Washington as ruler is never likely to
have a shot aimed at him except by some disgruntled politician. Presidents of
the Washington type are not foisted into the White House on the back of a bank
cheque; Washington was not the embodied representative of the greed of monopoly
that today, under the cloak of commercialism, grinds down the American workers
and rouses the bitterest animosity against a system and a class of which the
human mind is capable. Hall Caine’s contention that the worker who struck this
latest blow at capitalism was but fulfilling a natural law, is just. America,
he further remarked, like every State, must in its turn reap the fruit of the
centuries of oppression that have devastated the nations. A few as serious-minded
men write in a similar strain. For Time brings its own revenge, and the militant
Anarchist of our day is only one of the instruments by which its insistent hand
adjusts the pendulum of Justice. “Anarchists,” says our far-sighted friend Mr.
Dooley, “is sewer-gas,” and implies to “Mr. Hinnissey,” that there would be
no such gas if it wasn’t for the sewers. [59][60]
Exactly; but for the gross abuses festering the
earth—abuses of power, wealth, position, commerce—abuses patent to all but their
blind and hardened purveyors—there would be no militant Anarchists. Fill in
the sewers and you will have no deadly gases; drain the swamp and malaria ceases;
remove the wrongs under which millions of men and women hopelessly struggle,
and you destroy at once the breeding-places of discontent and rebellion. But
what do capitalists care about the suffering upon which they batten? What does
militarism care for the slain upon whom it treads to earldoms and incomes—or
clericalism, what recks it of the human intellects paralysed by its blighting
grasp? But the Anarchist thinker and worker does care—cares at times so much
that as has been proved, one might say to excess, he is ready at the bidding
of a resistless impulse to face death in the expression of his fierce indignation
at wrongs that can be remedied but are never remedied until the sufferers weary
of suffering revolt. Czolgosz dies, as the American judge put it, to teach a
class of people that the law must be supreme, a class which must be given, “a
terrible example of the majesty and irresistible force of the law that they
would tear down.” Oh, most blind judge! How many “terrible examples” has this
“class” not had, and what has been the result but an increased contempt for
the majesty of “law” that never since it fell into the hands of Authority has
worn other than a smile for the rich and a scowl for the poor.
Death!—Rest. No, Judge, the majesty of
your “law” thus translated has little terror for the Anarchist. Were you to
reverse the process and electrocute a few of your Trust fiends, your wheat cornerers,
your municipal boodlers, your senators who do not believe in educating the negro,
but make an eloquent plea in justification of lynching him—were you to kill
off a few of these noble upholders of the law we wretched Anarchists have the
courage to despise—it would do your soul good to see how terror might inspire
honesty in the ranks of the rich. Anarchist literature may be suppressed, Anarchists
themselves throttled off the face of the earth in groups or singly, but Anarchism
will live and grow. We are tired of repeating this. But as Emma Goldman once
wrote: “What makes the work of propaganda so hard is fighting the prejudice
against Anarchy, that popular belief so eagerly spread by police and press that
Anarchy means Beer and Bombs. It is difficult to get people to understand that
Anarchy as a philosophy has nothing to do with either. Lately,” she continues,
“I addressed a meeting of liberal thinkers, and they told me that what I expounded
as Anarchy was Socialism, not Anarchism, because as they were taught to understand
the principles of Anarchism, these meant Violence and Destruction. I am doing
my best to disperse these nonsensical notions.” She has always done her best
to do so. But the rapid spread of Socialistic ideas throughout the world is
terrifying princes, churchmen, and bureaucracies alike. Anarchists do not make
plots in these days; they know that in every case where bomb throwing is advocated
the suggestion comes from a police pupil or a police dupe—that is, from men
in the pay of those who know that the breath of Liberty is in the air, that
Liberty spells loss of power and empty pockets to them. Thus Authority will
fight for all it is worth, will not only not put out one finger to right the
wrongs of the people, but will not even expend a thought on them until compelled
by force of fear, preferring to misrepresent the opinions and acts of their
enemy rather than buy a penny pamphlet on Anarchism, with a view to understanding
or explaining a philosophy that inculcates a hatred of tyranny and injustice
in all their forms. Cleanse your sewers, Capitalists and Kings, for death lurks
within their slimy depths, and Time the Avenger, when it means retaliation,
is not particular in its choice of instruments. If the rights of the rich are
many—the wrongs of the poor, who shall number them? Men like Bresci, Czolgosz—and
when they lose their heads over the sum.........??