| The Safety of the President  THE dastardly and now thrice-repeated assassination of a President 
              of the United States, and the terrible circumstances attending the 
              crime, have filled the popular mind with shock and trepidation. 
              This has given rise to a universal demand among our citizens that 
              at this late day something more shall be done by way of protecting 
              the life of our Chief Executive than is accomplished by the deterrent 
              effect of the conviction and execution of the miserable and loathsome 
              creatures who strike the fatal blow. This demand is intensified 
              by the fact that even the restraint that follows this exhibition 
              of stern retributive justice is lost if the foul deed happens to 
              be committed within the jurisdiction of a State whose laws do not 
              denounce the crime of murder with the punishment of death. Thus 
              the chance is by no means remote that our Chief Executive may be 
              assassinated and a great nation be staggered by direful fear and 
              apprehension, and yet that the foul life of the murderer may be 
              saved, to heroize assassination in the imagination of the enemies 
              of social order and to become a centre of sympathy and pity among 
              those who disseminate vicious discontent. It is at this time a perfectly 
              natural and justifiable cause of satisfaction that the hopeless 
              and self-convicted perpetrator of the infamous crime which now darkens 
              with mourning every honest American household can anticipate nothing 
              more gratifying to his brutal self-conceit, and nothing more heroically 
              notorious or sensational, than a shameful death under the law.Our people have not forgotten that 
              hardly more than a year ago a plot was hatched on American soil 
              which culminated in the assassination of a European King; and now 
              that the continuance of such plotting has forced the poisoned chalice 
              to our own lips, it is insisted on all sides with an earnestness 
              that will not subside with the present acute excitement, that not 
              only should such terrible crimes be adequately and certainly punished 
              in all their branches of execution, instigation and encouragement, 
              but that the opportunity for murderous conference should be prevented, 
              and the bloody counsels of assassination be placed under the ban 
              and watchfulness of the law. It is hardly conceivable that our countrymen 
              will long condone a failure on the part of those intrusted with 
              national interests to take such steps in this direction as will 
              indicate the solicitous care of our people for their constituted 
              Government, and express their determination that the faithful discharge 
              of the highest public duty shall not provoke the peril of violent 
              death.
 It is suggested that the safety of 
              the President can be much increased by curtailing his accessibility 
              to the public. It is even said that the custom which has always 
              permitted to the people large latitude in meeting and greeting their 
              Chief Executive, by taking him by the hand, is absurdly dangerous.
 A radical diminution of the popular 
              enjoyment of those privileges would be much more difficult of accomplishment 
              than at first blush is apparent. The relations between all the decent 
              people of the land and the President are very close. On the part 
              of the people this situation is the outgrowth of their feeling that 
              they have a more direct proprietary interest in the Presidential 
              office than in any other instrumentality of their Government. They 
              have determined by their united and simultaneous suffrages who the 
              President shall be. In his high office they regard him as the representative 
              of their sovereignty and self-government; and, as the administrator 
              of laws made for their welfare and advantage, they look upon him 
              as their near friend—alive to their needs and anxious for their 
              prosperity and happiness. Closely allied to these sentiments and 
              perhaps directly resulting from them there is an immensely strong 
              band of attachment between all good citizens and their President 
              which, though difficult to define, is nevertheless unmistakably 
              real and distinctively American. In the minds of all law-abiding 
              people, excepting an insignificant minority whose love of country 
              is selfish or who make party scheming an occupation, this attachment 
              overreached party affiliations and crowds out of memory the exciting 
              incidents of party strife. It may be said to rest upon a feeling 
              of sincere and generous good-fellowship or comradeship which includes 
              the idea that, though the President has been clothed with high honor 
              by his fellow-countrymen, he is still one of the people, that he 
              still needs their support and approbation, and that he is still 
              in sympathy with them in every condition of their daily life.
 This attachment and affection of our 
              plain and honest people for their President is not only manifested 
              by their desire to see, hear and greet him, but these kindly sentiments 
              are stimulated and strengthened by every indulgence of this desire. 
              When danger is charged against this indulgence let us remember that, 
              while only one of our three Presidential assassinations can be in 
              any way related to a public opportunity for the people to greet 
              the President, such opportunity has in many millions of honest hearts 
              rekindled wholesome Americanism, and made more deep and warm patriotic 
              impulse. Against one miscreant who, with a desperate foolhardiness 
              that can hardly be again anticipated, has through access to the 
              head of our Nation accomplished a murderous purpose, we should not 
              forget the countless numbers of those who in the privilege of like 
              access would prevent such accomplishment with their lives. All things 
              considered it is a serious question, even at a time when all are 
              aroused to the need of better protection of the President, whether 
              a serious limitation of the people’s public access to him is justified 
              as either necessary or effective.
 It is not amiss to add that in discussing 
              the curtailment of the privileges long accorded to the public in 
              this regard the President himself must be reckoned with. We shall 
              never have a President who is not fond of the great mass of his 
              countrymen and who is not willing to trust them. His close contact 
              with them is inspiring and encouraging. Their friendly greeting 
              and hearty grasp of his hand, with no favors to ask and no selfish 
              cause to urge, bring pleasant relief from official perplexities 
              and annoying importunities. The people have enjoyed a generous access 
              to their President for more than a hundred years. Weighing the remote 
              chance of harm against the benefit and gratification of such access 
              both to himself and the people, it can hardly be predicted that 
              a project for its abolition would be sanctioned by any incumbents 
              of the Presidential office.
 It is by no means intended to suggest 
              that this access should be unregulated and entirely free from all 
              precaution. Those charged with care for the President on such occasions 
              should never in the least degree tolerate the idea that there can 
              be a harmless person of unsound mind; nor should they relax their 
              watch for such persons and for all others that may properly be suspected 
              of a liability to do harm. Every doubtful case should be determined 
              on the side of safety and all suspicious movements or conduct should 
              challenge prompt and effective caution. Such precautions can be 
              taken quietly and [3][4] unostentatiously. 
              It may be safely said, however, that among the millions interested 
              in having such precautions for Presidential safety adopted, the 
              President himself will be the least anxious concerning them. This 
              will always be so.
 The fact is not overlooked that we 
              have fallen upon a time when the danger of Presidential assassination, 
              growing out of conditions and causes to which our thoughts have 
              been somewhat accustomed, is nearly forgotten as we are confronted 
              face to face with another menace more dreadful in intent, more secret 
              in machination, and more cunning and unrelenting in execution than 
              any other. We can no longer doubt the existence and growth of a 
              spirit of anarchy in our midst. It seems to need no especial exciting 
              cause to rouse it to deadly activity, but deliberately plans murder 
              in high places—senseless and useless except to indulge its love 
              for blood and its hatred of every agency of human government. Though 
              of foreign parentage it has been permitted to pass our gates, and 
              has been too long allowed to construe American freedom of speech 
              and action as meaning unbridled and destructive license to disseminate 
              the doctrines of hate and social disorder, and to teach assassination.
 Our people in their grief and indignation 
              are asking why this should continue; and they are inquiring whether 
              their belief in free institutions compels them to tolerate the deadly 
              infection of anarchy. They have been taught that nations, like individuals, 
              possess inherently the right of self-defense. They see this right 
              exercised by the exclusion from our country of diseased persons 
              and of criminals and persons under contract to labor here to the 
              detriment of our workingmen. They have seen substantially the entire 
              Chinese race excluded from our shores upon grounds that seem almost 
              trivial in comparison with the reasons that cry out against the 
              admission of anarchists. It appears to them perfectly palpable that 
              when the personal character and behavior of aliens seeking to mingle 
              with our population may involve our peace and security, it would 
              be only a wise safeguard to exact evidence of their previous decent 
              life and orderly disposition as a condition of their reception.
 Nor will these questioners be satisfied 
              with mere relief from the future importation of the dangers of anarchy. 
              They are asking if our popular Government would be subjected to 
              monarchical taint if strong and effective remedies were applied 
              to the suppression of the machinations of anarchists who have already 
              a foothold among us. They see vagrants, common gamblers, suspected 
              criminals and disorderly persons in the hands of the law for the 
              harm they may do of a feeble kind and within narrow limits; and 
              they cannot understand why anarchists, whose diabolical character 
              and teachings are or ought to be well known, are allowed to plot 
              and conspire until bloody assassination strikes down the embodiment 
              of beneficent rules and shakes the foundations of lawful authority. 
              Our people love liberty and are devoted to every guaranty of freedom 
              to which their Government is pledged. In dealing with anarchy, however, 
              they impatiently chafe under the restraint which bids them to wait 
              for the tragedy it prepares, and to content themselves with visiting 
              retribution upon its worthless and miserable tools. If to suppress 
              and punish those who directly or by suggestion incite assassination 
              savors of monarchy, they are prepared to take the departure.
 A serious and thorough consideration 
              of the peril which has so shockingly broken in upon the peace of 
              our national life would be incomplete in its lesson and warning 
              if it failed to lead to an honest self-examination and a frank inquiry 
              whether there are not causes other than anarchistic teachings, and 
              perhaps near our own doors, whose tendency, to say the least, is 
              in the wrong direction. Have not some of our public journals, under 
              the guise of wholesome criticism of official conduct, descended 
              to such mendacious and scandalous personal abuse as might well suggest 
              hatred of those holding public place? Has not the ridicule of the 
              coarse and indecent cartoon indicated to those of low instincts 
              that no respect is due to official station? Have not lying accusations 
              on the stump and even in the halls of Congress, charging executive 
              dishonesty, given a hint to those of warped judgment and weak intellect 
              that the President is an enemy to the well-being of the people?
 Many good men who are tearful now, 
              and who sincerely mourn the cruel murder of a kindly, faithful and 
              honest President, have perhaps from partisan feeling or through 
              heedless disregard of responsibility supported and encouraged such 
              things. They may recall it now and realize the fact that the agents 
              of assassination are incited to their work by suggestion, and this 
              suggestion need not necessarily be confined to the dark councils 
              of anarchy.
 Not the least among the safeguards 
              against Presidential peril is that which would follow a revival 
              of genuine American love for fairness, decency and unsensational 
              truth.
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