Publication information |
Source: Independent Source type: magazine Document type: editorial Document title: “Anarchism and the Law” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: 12 September 1901 Volume number: 53 Issue number: 2754 Pagination: 2187-89 |
Citation |
“Anarchism and the Law.” Independent 12 Sept. 1901 v53n2754: pp. 2187-89. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
anarchism (dealing with). |
Named persons |
Marie François Sadi Carnot; Elizabeth; Joseph E. Gary; Humbert I; William McKinley; Leo Tolstoy. |
Document |
Anarchism and the Law
T[2187][2188] long
as the anarchist only talks, and until he does something, he cannot be
molested.” This has been our creed.
Whether the assassination of President McKinley
by an avowed anarchist, following so closely upon the taking off of Carnot,
the Empress Elizabeth and King Humbert, will bring the American people and their
legislative bodies to a severer view it is not easy to predict; but there are
indications, in the attitude of the press, and in the utterances of public men,
that give some hope of broader and more courageous thinking. The first wave
of indignation will expend itself in threats of “extermination,” and similar
violent language, and that is on all accounts to be desired. We are already
quite prone enough in this country to substitute irregular punishments for due
process of law. What the situation calls for is a sober, thoughtful reconsideration
of the whole problem of the relation of anarchism to a republican government,
an exhaustive discussion of all its possibilities by clear-headed leaders of
public opinion, and the adoption of a policy that shall be at once lawful, rigorous,
prompt and efficient.
The first step in such a policy is to make clear
to the people the difference, which is not generally recognized even by the
better newspapers, between a creed of peaceful anarchism and the propaganda
of criminal anarchism. There are men against whom no breath of reproach has
ever been uttered who believe as an article of philosophy that all government
of man by man is morally wrong. The Society of Friends, while not going quite
to this length, holds doctrines that very closely approach the denial of the
rightfulness of human government. Count Tolstoi, we suppose, while not calling
himself an anarchist, is almost or quite an anarchist in philosophical conviction.
But philosophical anarchism, when combined with a literal interpretation of
the injunction to “resist not evil,” is harmless to the community. There can
be no possible objection to allowing men to argue that all employment of force
in the relations of man to man is morally indefensible; and, if they derive
from this principle the conclusion that governments, making use of guns and
bayonets and policemen’s clubs are wrong, they can harm nobody so long as they
also teach that forcible resistance to government likewise is wrong.
Absolutely different is the anarchism that is
essentially criminal, and that often develops into actual crime. When one-half
of the creed of philosophical anarchism—that, namely, which denies the rightfulness
of government—is adopted by fanatics, neurotics, and instinctive criminals,
while the other half—namely, the gospel of non-resistance—is ignored or discarded,
the result is an exceedingly dangerous product which, by its very nature, is
bound to assume a criminal character, and, unless watched and restrained by
the community, to grow into murder and revolution.
The second step in a sound policy toward anarchism
must be a clear recognition that certain forms of insanity cannot be dealt with
on the easy-going plan of laisser faire. Criminal anarchism has received
much aid and comfort from well meaning men, some of a scientific and some of
a sentimental turn, who have protested that the anarchist who counsels violence
is prima facie an unbalanced and irresponsible person. On this whole
subject of a right relation of the law to irresponsible characters there is
endless confusion in the public mind. Irresponsibility is a sufficient reason
for withholding those punishments which imply a judgment of guilt, and which
contain an element of vengeance, or retribution. It is no reason whatever for
allowing the irresponsible person, or faction, to go at large, to the deadly
peril of useful and law-abiding men, and a continuing menace to the social order.
Let it then be granted that anarchists of the blood-thirsty sort are irresponsible
creatures, if science so declares. A way must be found within the forms of law
to prevent them from putting their creed of violence into practice.
And this brings us to the third step which must
be taken in any rational policy of dealing with criminal anarchism. We have
had quite enough of the nonsense of waiting until the criminal anarchist murders
somebody before taking him in hand. Too many valuable lives have been sacrificed
already, and our constitutional liberty has been subjected to an altogether
unnecessary peril. Criminal insanity is a medico-legal [2188][2189]
phenomenon that has long been recognized in the statutes and by the decisions
of the courts of all civilized countries. The criminally insane may be and are
deprived of liberty upon proof of criminal conduct, altho their acts have proceeded
from irresponsible impulses, or from delusion. It is for the law-making power
to say what acts shall be construed as criminal, and what evidence shall be
deemed sufficient to establish the fact of criminal insanity. Is it necessary,
then, to wait until the criminal anarchist has shot some one, or thrown a bomb,
before placing him safely behind the bars? We think that it is time to recognize
and to define by law as criminal all advocacy of assassination as a political
method, all participation in meetings in which violence is approved, and all
expressions of satisfaction in deeds of violence already committed. Proof of
such expressions, or advocacy, or participation, in connection with a plea of
irresponsibility by the defense, should then be declared sufficient evidence
of criminal insanity, and restraint in a safe place of detention should be provided
for those found guilty.
In the policy here suggested there would be no
violation of any rational principle of liberty. It is a policy demanded by common
sense to meet a serious and growing evil. The alternative is a frequent recurrence
of assassination.
Let us, then, have a legal recognition of the
criminality of murderous anarchism, and a law providing restraint for life for
all who preach or glory in assassination, whether they plead insanity or not.