Publication information |
Source: North American Review Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “How the United States Curtails Freedom of Thought” Author(s): Crosby, Ernest Howard Date of publication: April 1904 Volume number: 178 Issue number: 569 Pagination: 605-16 (excerpt below includes only pages 613-16) |
Citation |
Crosby, Ernest Howard. “How the United States Curtails Freedom of Thought.” North American Review Apr. 1904 v178n569: pp. 605-16. |
Transcription |
excerpt |
Keywords |
assassination; presidential assassinations (comparison); anarchism (dealing with); United States (government: criticism); anarchism (compared with war); anarchism (personal response); McKinley assassination (personal response); Leon Czolgosz; society (impact on Czolgosz); society (criticism); society (mental health). |
Named persons |
John Wilkes Booth; Leon Czolgosz; Charles J. Guiteau; John Turner. |
Notes |
“By Ernest Crosby” (p. 605). |
Document |
How the United States Curtails Freedom of Thought [excerpt]
It is a fact that an unusual number of atrocious
crimes against the persons of kings and rulers have been committed in recent
years, and that many of them were committed by anarchists. Not all, however,
by any means. Such crimes have been most frequent in Russia, and there the assailants
have usually been merely democrats or constitutionalists. In England, these
crimes have been confined to Irish nationalists, whose only political creed
was separation from England. In the United States, three Presidents have been
assassinated—the first by a Democrat and Confederate, the second by a Republican,
and the third only by an anarchist. Each of these assassins was an American
born, and educated in our schools,—a fact which might induce us to judge more
leniently of foreign immigrants. But, after making allowance for the many crimes
of this nature attributable to non-anarchists, there remain a number of peculiarly
shocking ones committed by adherents of anarchism. It becomes, then, a matter
of importance to determine how best to prevent such crimes in future. To shut
out “beliefs” is not only unjust, undesirable and inexpedient, but it is impossible.
Beliefs spring up uncen- [613][614] sored and uncensorable
in the mind of every one of our eighty millions of population, and most Americans
do not arrive by way of Ellis Island. Booth and Guiteau and Czolgosz were native
products, and could not be deported whence they came. Then, again, beliefs travel
by mail more effectively than by steerage, and unless you examine every letter,
book and newspaper that enters our ports, you cannot shut out the beliefs which
they express. You may, however, by passing rigid statutes against idealists,
tempt cranks who sympathize with them to perform some overt act of violence,
for nothing makes a class so dangerous as to proscribe it. The large meeting
held at Cooper Union in New York to protest against the deportation of Turner
has been widely criticised as tending to encourage violence. Nothing could be
farther from the truth. The deportation itself was calculated to suggest violence
in reprisal, but the establishment of the fact that there were a considerable
number of “respectable” citizens ready to consider the wrongs even of anarchists,—nothing,
surely, could do more than that to restore to an equilibrium the unbalanced
minds of some members of that fraternity.
We are face to face with a peculiar symptom of
an obscure public distemper, and it cannot be cured by such crude methods as
deportation. The subject calls for the most careful study of statesmen, penologists,
economists and educators. What is it that produces crimes against rulers? We
seem to understand the matter clearly in Russia, and there we ascribe the trouble
directly to the governing class. Abolish autocracy and absolutism, we say, and
say rightly, and the revolutionist’s bomb will disappear. In Ireland, we have
no great difficulty in forming a diagnosis either. England has misruled that
country for centuries, we declare, and she has only reaped what she has sown.
Here, again, we trace the disorder back to a national wrong. What was the cause
of the three American assassinations? Booth’s crime was clearly one of the results
of the Civil War. It was the war-spirit, which we took no pains to exorcise,
that turned him into a murderer. Guiteau was an extreme expression of political
strife and hatred, the direct offspring of Stalwart and Half-Breed rivalry.
Czolgosz was no less truly the product of his times. The war-spirit was abroad
again. Revenge had been preached as a public virtue, and war deliberately chosen
by the nation in preference to diplomacy as the proper instrument of progress.
Again the awful crimes of [614][615] individuals
seem to hark back to a national cause; they are sporadic expressions of a general
infection. And our rulers are preaching the same doctrines in our name to-day,
and, so far as we support them, we are responsible for the results. A government
which assassinates one sister-republic in the Philippines and vivisects another
in South America, which bombards defenceless villages in Samoa, killing women
and children, in a cause afterwards pronounced by an impartial tribunal to be
absolutely unjust, such a government is setting an example of anarchy in the
worst sense of the word.
Political crimes, then, appear in some way to
arise from national pathological conditions; they are exhibitions of individual
lunacy growing out of a popular craze. The anarchist assassin is, to all intents
and purposes, insane, and he is doing all he can to injure his own cause. Longing
for a world good enough to dispense with policemen, prisons and electric chairs,
he does his best to prove by his act the impracticability of his dream. It is
really Czolgosz who is shutting Turner out of America, and if he had been in
control of his senses he might have foreseen the consequences of his act, by
which he made government stronger and discredited his own beliefs. His act was
an insane one, but no man can be insane alone, for none of us lives to himself,
and every man is, and must be, a social symptom. There is a public madness of
the war-spirit, a delirium of national pride and power, a general fever of money-getting,
which in some peculiarly distorted mind may take the form of unreasoning revolt
against all these things. The strenuous life has many shapes, and it may be
practised by devils as well as angels.
If there is any truth in this reasoning, the proper
cure for criminal anarchism lies in the direction of the cultivation of national
sanity. The European countries which produce the greatest number of assassins
are military-mad. They are busy pauperizing themselves and exhausting the healthy
blood of their people in the insane rivalry of armaments. The Italian statesman
who would send three-fourths of the army back to their homes and sink nine-tenths
of their men-of-war in the Mediterranean, would go a long way toward stopping
the production of political criminals. Our national disease shows the greatest
congestion and inflammation in the region of the dollar. The mad race to increase
wealth beyond all possibility of enjoyment, the crazy antics of [615][616]
the Stock Exchange,—we must study these things, before we can prescribe for
the nation. Our lunatic asylums are ever growing; more and more men and women
commit suicide each year; nervous prostration is becoming the rule rather than
the exception. How far is the dollar-cult responsible for all this? Excessive
wealth must find an outlet for investment, and hence the craving for the isles
of the sea, and for armies and navies and bloodshed; and who can wonder if here
and there a distracted individual goes off, like a stray revolver, the wrong
way, and kills a fellow citizen instead of a foreign foe?