Publication information |
Source: Commoner Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “The Cure for Anarchy” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Lincoln, Nebraska Date of publication: 20 September 1901 Volume number: 1 Issue number: 35 Pagination: 2 |
Citation |
“The Cure for Anarchy.” Commoner 20 Sept. 1901 v1n35: p. 2. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response); anarchism (dealing with); government; anarchism (laws against); anarchism (causes). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; Victor Hugo; Thomas Jefferson; William McKinley; Pericles. |
Document |
The Cure for Anarchy
It is natural that the wanton and brutal assassination
of the President at Buffalo should lead to a discussion of ways and means for
driving anarchy out of the United States, and it is important that the subject
should be dealt with in a broad and comprehensive way. Czolgosz had no personal
animosity; he was not seeking revenge for any wrong that the administration
had done him; he was aiming a blow at the government of which Mr. McKinley was
the official head. No considerable number of the American people can have any
sympathy with the murderer or with those who entertain his views in regard to
government. That there should be laws giving all possible protection to our
officials everyone will concede; the only question open for discussion is how
to apply an effective remedy. The suppression of anarchy is only a temporary
relief: we should seek not merely the suppression but the permanent eradication
of anarchy. Stealing can and should be suppressed by law; but stealing cannot
be eradicated until people are convinced that it is wrong to steal. So, anarchy
can and should be suppressed by law, but it cannot be entirely eradicated until
all are convinced that anarchy is wrong. Free government, springing as directly
as possible from the people and made as responsive as possible to their will,
is the only permanent and complete cure for anarchy. The arbitrary governments
of the old world have tried suppression but have not succeeded. They have lessened
anarchy just in proportion as they have extended civil liberty and participation
in the government.
Stern measure must be invoked for the suppression
and punishment of every manifestation of the anarchistic spirit, but beyond
this remedy there must be education. All must be taught that government is an
absolute necessity and that our form of government is the best ever devised.
Then our government must be made as good as intelligence and patriotism can
make it.
There is in every human heart the love of justice
and to this love of justice every government should appeal. Victor Hugo described
the mob as the human race in misery. No government can afford to make its people
miserable—not even a small part of its people. Let a man believe that he is
being justly treated by his government and he will endure almost anything, but
let him feel that he is being unjustly dealt with and even a slight wrong will
rankle in his bosom.
In a government deriving its powers from the consent
of the governed men will endure much because they hope for a remedy at the next
election. Jefferson understood this and among the things urged in his first
inaugural address was “a jealous care of the right of election by the people—a
mild and safe corrective of abuses which are lopped by the sword of revolution,
where peaceable remedies are unprovided.”
A man is never dangerous so long as he has hope
of relief from an evil, whether fancied or real, but when despair takes the
place of hope he becomes a menace to society because he feels he has nothing
to lose.
While we are legislating to prevent any manifestation
of the anarchistic spirit on American soil, we should avoid those things which
breed anarchy. Partiality in government kindles discontent; the exaltation of
money above human rights, the fattening of a few at the expense of the many,
the making of artificial distinctions between citizens and the lessening of
the sacredness of human life—all these in their full development encourage the
anarchistic spirit. We cannot give full protection to our officials merely by
passing laws for the punishment of those who assault them; neither can we give
them adequate protection by closing our gates to those known to advocate anarchy.
These remedies, good as far as they go, are incomplete. We can only bring absolute
security to our public servants by making the government so just and so beneficent
that every citizen will be willing to give his life if need be to preserve it
to posterity. When Pericles sought to explain the patriotism of his countrymen
who fell in battle, he described Greece and then added: “It was for such a country
then that these men, nobly resolving not to have it taken from them, fell fighting,
and we their survivors may be well willing to suffer in its behalf.”
We shall fail to do our full duty as citizens
unless we bend every energy toward the reform of every governmental abuse and
the enactment of such laws as are necessary to protect each citizen in the enjoyment
of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and to restrain every arm uplifted
for a neighbor’s injury.