The Assassination of the President
With unspeakable grief and horror we heard the sad and terrifying
news, “The President is shot,” as it was clicked from wire to wire
and spoken from mouth to mouth throughout the length and breadth
of the land until the whole nation quivered under the electric shock.
That any being in this wide land should harbor a murderous design
against the kindly, courteous gentleman who has been twice chosen
to the first office in the government of our republic is past belief.
That the dastardly hand of the assassin was raised against the office
and not the man makes the assault all the more deadly, and while
we mourn for his illustrious victim our hearts are filled with impotent
rage against the pestilential sect of anti-social fanatics of which
Czolgosz is a member. Anarchy, which strikes its venomous blows
at the best-ordered and most firmly established governments of Europe,
finds easy prey in a republic where the safeguards which elsewhere
hedge about the ruler of the state are traditionally disregarded.
Society as at present organized affords but slight protection against
political assassins who work singly or in small groups, and the
spread of a political cult whose believers hold their lives cheap
as against an injury which they may inflict upon the social order
is a danger so insidious as to justify extreme measures against
the evil, if indeed extreme measures are of any avail. The stringent
laws of Germany and Russia have thus far failed to extirpate anarchy
in those countries, although it is possible that these laws have
operated to increase the emigration of anarchists to our shores
and so have heightened the danger for us. If it were possible to
establish an international penal colony in some remote part of the
earth, to which all governments might send the avowed anarchists
living within their borders, and there leave them to their own devices
without control of any kind, providing only that there should be
no escape, the practical example would be salutary. Unfortunately
such a scheme is impracticable. Much might be done, however, even
in free America for the suppression of the anarchistic propaganda
by making inciting to crime a penal offense whether followed by
an overt act or not, and by readjusting penalties for crimes of
violence on a basis which should furnish the greatest possible protection
to society by giving due weight to the intentions of the criminal.
Wherever the homicidal mania has shown itself, even though the crime
committed be but a trifling offense, the criminal should be incapacitated
for further mischief. A few changes in the statutes and in the criminal
procedure of the states, a swifter and sterner enforcement of existing
laws against violence, whether of mobs or of individuals, that endangers
human life, together with a strict surveillance of known anarchists
would do much to protect society from such crimes in the future.
But the real cure for the evil must wait for the slow process of
assimilation and education of alien and untutored races pouring
in an ever increasing deluge on our shores. An extension of our
Chinese exclusion acts to include, for a generation at least, all
foreigners of the laboring class would be a justifiable measure
of self-protection, and it might remedy other ills besides the spread
of anarchist doctrines in free America.
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