“The Ultimate of Anarchy”
The power of the press—especially
the daily press, since a large part of the people read no other,
is probably greater, for good or ill, than any other single agency.
Of the great Chicago dailies the “Chronicle,” classed as “Democratic
Independent” by its friends, has seemed most fair and rational in
its treatment of Anarchism and the Anarchists, so-called, and for
this reason I have quoted more frequently from its columns than
from any other, and now to show how far off the mark the fairest
and apparently the most honest and honorable of these dailies can
be, when defining Anarchy and its objects, I herewith insert the
first half of [308][309] the leading
editorial of last Friday’s issue—September 27. Under the head, “No
Legislation Needed,” The “Chronicle” says:
A law journal has discovered
a reason why congress should legislate for the protection of
the federal executive and other officials charged with responsibility
under the general government.
It is that the Anarchist dreads
nothing but death and that in certain states the penalty for
willful murder is only imprisonment for life. Had President
McKinley been assassinated in any of those states his assassin
could not be subjected to the death penalty, and, by inference,
an adequate lesson would not be taught to those inclined to
like crime.
It is erroneous to assume that
the Anarchist dreads nothing but death. To the Anarchist reason
is wholly wanting. There is no starting point from which a sane
mind can proceed with an Anarchistic mind to the end of a logical
argument upon any subject.
The fundamental proposal of the
Anarchist is that there shall be no government on earth. The
word “anarchy” comes from the Greek. The “arch” part means government
or rule; the prefix “a” is privative and the combination signifies
“without rule.”
Every human being who adopts this
fundamental believes that he or she has a natural right to do
anything and everything he or she believes it right to do. There
is to be no other standard, moral or legal.
Brought down to practice, it means
that should A and B enter each upon a path broad enough for
only one each would have the right to throw the other down the
abyss if the path happened to be between mountains and they
approached each other from opposite directions or either undertook
to catch up with and pass the other. How shall sanity argue
with insanity?
Annihilation is the ultimate of
Anarchy. Were its professors logical they s ould [sic] annihilate
themselves. If they were generous they would leave life, liberty
and the pursuit of happiness to their fellow men who find existence
precious and its responsibilities binding.
These paragraphs show as plainly
as words can express, either that the editor does not read the literature
of philosophic Anarchy or that his object is to mislead his readers.
To show what the logic, the “ultimate,”
of Anarchy really is, let any impartial investigator read the pamphlet
“Thomas Jefferson,” by the late Gen. M. M. Trumbull of this city,
in which pamphlet it is clearly shown that the author of the Declaration
of Independence was an Anarchist—in theory though he found it impracticable
to carry out his theory in practice. The world of mankind was not
yet ripe for the adoption of the highest and best in the science
of human government, which highest and best is well stated in the
definition of Anarchy given by the “Century Dictionary,” namely:
“A social theory which regards the
union of order with the absence of all direct government of man
by man as the political ideal; absolute individual liberty.”
The world was not ripe for the practicalization
of Anarchy in Jefferson’s time and the privileged classes—the political
leaders, the clergy and the lawyers, have taken good care since
then to make Jefferson’s maxim, “that government is best which governs
least,” still more impracticable if not impossible.
Does any man in his right mind believe
such talk? It is because the logic of Anarchy is the exact opposite
of this and because Anarchy is the only cult that leaves to all
the right to “life, liberty and pursuit of happiness” that causes
it to be so thoroughly hated and misrepresented by its enemies.
The ultimate of Anarchy is well expressed by Herbert Spencer in
his Dat[a] of Ethics, wherein he says:
“Each has the right to do as he pleases
so long as he invades not the equal right of others;” the practicalization
of which ethical maxim would remove all necessity of government
of man by his fellow man, and this again discloses the true inwardness
of the hatred and misrepresentation of Anarchy and Anarchists as
now voiced by the press, the pulpit and by all the agencies controlled
by the machinery of church and state, including, of course the public
schools.
.
If the “Chronicle” has said “It is
erroneous to assume that the murderer dreads nothing but death,”
and that hence the infliction of the death penalty would not tend
to lessen the crime of murder, he would have talked rationally.
But because an ignorant, uneducated man—uneducated except in the
lore of the Catholic church whose record is one of murder and assassination
since its organization as a church, because this product of bad
heredity and environment, unknown to Anarchist societies, suspected
of sinister designs by those to whom he tried to introduce himself
as a friend of Anarchy—because this man, Leon Czolgosz, whose brother
declared him to be “too lazy to read and study,” chose to seek notoriety
by killing the President of the United States, the whole country
goes insane with rage and fear lest their government and institutions
are all to be destroyed and its privileged classes deprived of their
right to rob and murder their fellowmen according to law!
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