Publication information |
Source: Truth Seeker Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “Roosevelt as a Sociologist” Author(s): Pentecost, Hugh O. Date of publication: 28 December 1901 Volume number: 28 Issue number: 52 Pagination: 819 |
Citation |
Pentecost, Hugh O. “Roosevelt as a Sociologist.” Truth Seeker 28 Dec. 1901 v28n52: p. 819. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
Theodore Roosevelt (first annual message to Congress); anarchism (personal response); anarchism (government response: criticism); McKinley assassination (personal response: criticism); Theodore Roosevelt (criticism); anarchists; assassins; assassinations (comparison); McKinley assassination (public response: anarchists); government; anarchism (criticism); Theodore Roosevelt (presidential policies); McKinley assassination (personal response); society (criticism); economic system (impact on society); Theodore Roosevelt (personal character); trusts; freedom of speech (restrictions on). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; James A. Garfield; William Goebel; Elbert Hubbard; Jesus Christ; Peter Kropotkin [misspelled below]; William McKinley; Thomas Paine; Peter; Pierre-Joseph Proudhon; Theodore Roosevelt; Henry David Thoreau; Leo Tolstoy. |
Notes |
The bracketed text in paragraph 15 (below) is part of the original
text (i.e., not an editorial inclusion).
In the original source, the article includes 5 misspelled words, all resulting from a replicated typographical error. This problem has been corrected below. |
Document |
Roosevelt as a Sociologist
“The President’s Eyes Are Closed by the Fat of Prosperity That Attends His Career”—Not All Anarchists Are Assassins, Nor Do All Soldier’s [sic] Shoot a Fleeing Enemy in the Back—The Deed of Czolgosz Repudiated by Opponents of Invasive Government.
I take it for granted that all of you know that
in his recent message to Congress President Roosevelt devoted about a newspaper
column and a half to the discussion of the death of his predecessor, coupled
with the subject of Anarchy and Anarchists.
I have postponed comment on this portion cf [sic]
the message until it was nearly two weeks old in order to avoid that heat of
feeling that is so fatal to reasonable discussion.
What surprised me was that the President should
consider Anarchists of sufficient importance to justify such prominent attention.
The kind of Anarchists he has in mind are few in number and, as a rule, very
poor, so that when the President speaks of them as a menace to the nation it
is almost amusing. But having elected to devote so much attention to them it
is strange that he did not more fully inform himself of his subject. It is plain
that our President has no more conception of what Anarchism and Anarchists are
than he had of the real character of Thomas Paine when he called that great
prophet of human liberty and profound believer in a personal God and the immortality
of the soul a “filthy little Atheist.” If it had not been for Thomas Paine and
such men as he Mr. Roosevelt would not be our President, for there would have
been no presidency, but all that Mr. Roosevelt can say of Paine is that he was
a “filthy little Atheist;” and he is equally ignorant and unjust with regard
to Anarchists and Anarchism.
It is true that there are some assassins who call
themselves Anarchists, but it is no more true that all Anarchists are assassins
or apologists for assassins than it would be true to say that all Republicans
are assassins because a Republican, as a Republican, shot President Garfield,
or, more recently, Governor Goebel of Kentucky.
Is it not a little strange that the assassination
of a public official by a man who calls himself an Anarchist is so much more
shocking than the assassination of a public official by a Republican or a Democrat?
It is no more true that all Anarchists are assassins
or apologists of assassins because a particular murderer calls himself an Anarchist,
than it is true that all soldiers are assassins because one particular soldier
shoots a fleeing enemy in the back, or that all the apostles of Christ were
assassins because Peter with a sword attacked an officer in the performance
of his duty.
The probability is that the man who slew President
McKinley, and his deed, are more revolting to most Anarchists than to most non-Anarchists,
for intelligent Anarchists, like all other intelligent people, have grown out
of the barbarism of deeds of violence. Anarchists do, indeed, understand that
the government is the agent of the predatory rich, by means of which they are
enabled to despoil the poor, but they are not so gnorant [sic] as to suppose
that the government can be killed by killing rulers. They know that the government
exists not at the Capitol, nor the City Hall, but in the people’s minds, and
that it will never cease until it is eliminated from the human mind.
Now let us glance at some of the President’s sayings:
Here is one: “Anarchy is no more an expression
of ‘social discontent’ than picking pockets or wife beating.” Certainly not;
but the two crimes mentioned are precisely expressions of “social discontent.”
Were society equitably organized there would be no pocket-picking nor wife-beating.
Only the discontented do these things.
“The Anarchist is a criminal whose perverted instincts
lead him to prefer confusion and chaos to the most beneficent form of social
order.” This is an expression of the grossest ignorance. No man is a criminal
until he violates the law; and if the President does not know that Proudhon,
Count Tolstoy, Prince Krapotkin, Elbert Hubbard, and other Anarchists are the
advocates of a social order beside which our present governments are “confusion
and chaos,” he should not have touched the subject.
“His protest of concern for workingmen is outrageous
in its impudent falsity, for if the political traditions of this country do
not afford opportunity to every honest and intelligent son of toil, then the
door of hope is forever closed against him.” In this connection it is interesting
to turn to another part of the message and read as follows: “Not only must our
labor be protected by the tariff, but it should also be protected so far as
it is possible from the presence in this country of any laborers brought over
by contract, or of those who, coming freely, yet represent a standard of living
so depressed that they can undersell our men in the labor market, and drag them
to a lower level. I regard it as necessary, with this end in view, to reenact
immediately the law excluding Chinese laborers and to strengthen it wherever
necessary in order to make its enforcement entirely effective.” Here is a striking
commentary on the “opportunity” that “every honest and intelligent son of toil”
has in this country. What opportunity has the negro or the Indian? What opportunity
has any son of toil to become anything but a son of toil, or an exploiter of
other sons of toil?
Every sensible person knows that it is a silly
crime to kill a President for the benefit of working men, but every sensible
person also knows that opportunities are owned in this country by the few, as
they are in all countries—land, money, machinery, houses, opportunities to labor
and to live are all owned by the few, and if any “son of toil” ever gets the
advantage of these opportunities he doesn’t do it as a “son of toil,” but as
a clever legal thief of one kind or another.
If opportunities are so great in this country
how is it that crime and pauperism, two symbols of despair, are increasing faster
than population?
The President’s eyes are closed by the fat of
prosperity that attends his career as if he were some chosen son of the God
of Success.
I will refer to but one more of the President’s
utterances on the subject in hand, viz.: “He [the Anarchist] is in no sense,
in no shape or way, a product of ‘social conditions,’ save as a highwayman is
‘produced’ by the fact that an unarmed man happens to have a purse.” This is
smartly said. The sentence is catchy. But, like many smart sayings, it isn’t
true. I take it that every style of man we have is a product of social conditions:
The priest and the politician, the saint and the sinner, the thief and the policeman,
the ruler and the assassin of the ruler. To suppose that every sort of person
but the Anarchist is the product of his environment is foolish. Even the highwayman
is produced, not, indeed, by the fact that an unarmed man has a full purse,
but by the fact that most full purses are full by reason of the emptiness of
the empty purses.
Mr. Roosevelt is no more shocked and horrified
by the deed of a person who could shoot another as President McKinley was shot
than I am, but he is mistaken when he says that these misguided fanatics are
nothing other than common murderers; quite as mistaken as he would be if he
should say that a man who shoots his foe on the battlefield is a common murderer.
However much all enlightened people must reprobate the act of an assassin, no
well-informed, unprejudiced person can fail to see that there is a difference
between a fanatic who knows that he himself is going to certain death for an
idea, and a common murderer. His idea may be erroneous, but he dies for it with
a courage and devotion which is wholly lacking in the act of a common murderer.
I very much question whether, if he had known he was going to certain death,
Mr. Roosevelt’s patriotism would have led him to Cuba.
Not only does the President fail to understand
the political assassin, but he utterly fails to discriminate between those bloody-handed
king-killers who call themselves anarchists and Anarchists like Tolstoy, who
become such by trying to follow the teaching of Jesus, or like Thoreau and Elbert
Hubbard, who become such by intellectual and emotional illumination far beyond
that enjoyed by any armed hunter of man or beast. I am not surprised that the
President does not understand the subject or the people of whom he writes, for,
being a man of politics and a son of battle, he is in a stage of development
which renders him incapable of knowing what manner of people real Anarchists
are. Men of politics cannot understand men of ideals. Sons of battle cannot
understand the children of peace.
Every one who knows anything knows that the least
danger that threatens this nation is that from so-called anarchist assassins,
for among all the Presidents we have ever had only one has been slain by a so-called
anarchist, but the President magnifies this little danger and expends his rhetoric
upon it. Mark you now how gently he deals with a real danger, viz., the existence
of the predatory trust. The sugar trust alone, with its legal larceny from the
poor of $36,000,000 per annum, is an enemy of the nation that might well call
for special and caustic attention, but on the subject of trusts Mr. Roosevelt
roars you like a sucking dove. Observe his opening sentence on that theme: “The
mechanism of modern business is so delicate that extreme care must be taken
not to interfere with it in a spirit of rashness or ignorance.” If the predatory
trust magnate ever had any fear of what the President intended so [sic] say
about trusts, that single sentence would have banished all his terror. Stamp
out the Anarchist, who strikes at an individual once in a hundred years! Deal
gently with the trust that eats the vitals of the whole people every day and
hour!
What harm did the wretched, crazy Buffalo murderer
do to this nation? Mr. Roosevelt himself says: “His deed worked not the slightest
dislocation in our governmental system, and the danger of a recurrence of such
deeds, no matter how great it might grow, would work only in the direction of
strengthening and giving harshness to the forces of order.” The plain meaning
of these words is, “Let the Anarchist rage. He cannot harm the government. He
can only strengthen it.” But the predatory trusts can destroy the nation, and
will destroy it unless it destroys them. That gang in Wall street [sic] who
stack the cards and load the dice in the game they play, impoverish thousands
and fill suicides’ graves every year. There is for them, however, nothing but
honeyed words or gentle cautions in the message of the President. Hang the Anarchist,
whether he practices or preaches, but foster the predatory trust by a protective
tariff and subsidy bills!
The President may not have meant it so, but his
message is but an echo of the agitation that broke out immediately after the
lamentable death of President McKinley for the suppression of all criticism
of things as they are. It is not assassins that are feared; it is criticism,
hence the President says: “Anarchistic speeches, writings, and meetings are
essentially seditious and treasonable.” It is a fact that at the present time
every publication in this country that advocates unconventional doctrines, religious,
political, or sociologic, is having more or less trouble with the United States
authorities. Under the pretense of reducing the quantity of second-class mail
matter there appears to be an attack all along the line on radical publications.
The strongest attempt for a hundred years to stifle free speech is now being
made, and such an attempt always indicates irritation on the part of the powers
that be at fair and honest criticism.
If any one fancies for a moment that I have any
fellowship with assassins, of course he wholly misapprehends my meaning. Or
if any one imagines that I mean to attack the President, he is equally mistaken.
The President is a very bright man, whose attention has been so much occupied
by politics and war that he has not had time to study sociological questions
as viewed by individualists; and all that I have tried to do is to show you
that in his misapprehension of the true situation he set up a Krupp gun to kill
an Anarchist fly all the while that he was warming in his bosom a predatory
trust, a serpent that is destined to bite him.