Publication information |
Source: Rural Californian Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “Cause and Cure of Anarchy” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: December 1901 Volume number: 24 Issue number: 12 Pagination: 457 |
Citation |
“Cause and Cure of Anarchy.” Rural Californian Dec. 1901 v24n12: p. 457. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
anarchism; anarchism (criticism); McKinley assassination (public response); anarchism (dealing with). |
Named persons |
William McKinley; Johann Most. |
Document |
Cause and Cure of Anarchy
CHARACTERISTICS and sentiments are largely the products of conditions
and environments. This fact is made apparent in the differences among nationalities
and classes. Abnormal and vicious as the anarchistic sentiment is it sprang
from the belief that government is the cause of the evils from which its devotees
suffer. Anarchism is most prevalent and deeply rooted among people where governments
have been most oppressive to the peasant or lower class. It is said not to be
American, and it is not a plant indiginous [sic] to this country, and for the
reason that here is greater individual freedom, and there has never been such
oppression in the United States as to develop the feeling that relief can only
come from obliteration of governmental authority.
There are anarchists in this country but they
are importations; only now and then has an American by birth and rearing imbibed
the sentiment. The most prolific fields of anarchism are Italy, Poland and Russia.
The governments of those countries have for centuries been oppressive in that,
the lower classes have been taxed and kept in poverty not only to support government,
but privileged classes from which they receive no benefit in return.
This has been and is the condition in those countries,
and there has been nothing done or even promised, to relieve from the distresses
which the poor classes have suffered from generation to generation since the
mediæval ages. The intelligent anarchist, if there be such, doubtless thinks
he is a philosopher, but he is not. It does not seem possible that any can be
so ignorant as not to know that to assassinate one ruler does not remove government
or make it less forcible or more humane. Violence begets violence which was
shown in the much talk of all manner of vengeance upon the assassin of Mr. McKinley.
It is inevitable that when a crime of such character, which is an assault upon
the whole people of the country, that acts will follow that make public opinion
and the presence of government more impressive.
Social necessity requires the use of means that
will preserve peace and order, and safety to life and property. There cannot
be any social condition of any value to the human race without law and its faithful
enforcement. Anarchistic sentiments will not die out in Italy, Poland and some
other nationalities till general conditions are made more tolerable to the classes
that bear the burdens of the state and those imposed by the privileged classes.
This is not said in justification nor palliation of the crime of assassination,
whether of officials or private persons. Organized revolution is justifiable
when that is the only remedy left, and there is reasonable prospect of its being
successful.
The mistaken idea that the absence of government
will be a panacea for all or any ills is harmless if the corollary of violence
did not naturally spring from it. Were all men a law unto themselves government
would not be necessary. To abolish all human government and law would hardly
bring about that happy condition.
Assassination of a president or other public official
is not the only anarchistic display. Every mob, every crime is a manifestation
of anarchism. Were one to burglarize the housc [sic] of Herr Most it would only
be giving him a prescription of his own medicine.
If Italy, Poland and the countries where anarchism
flourishes should be governed on the same principles that dominate in this country
for a third of a century, anarchistic sentiments would die out with the younger
generation of the present day for want of nutrition. This country will not be
anarchistic if the commodity is not imported, or, unless such conditions are
finally created here as have promoted the growth of anarchy elsewhere.