Publication information |
Source: Evening Star Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “Brazen Anarchists” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Washington, DC Date of publication: 9 December 1901 Volume number: none Issue number: 15221 Pagination: 4 |
Citation |
“Brazen Anarchists.” Evening Star [Washington, DC] 9 Dec. 1901 n15221: p. 4. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
anarchism (Cleveland, OH); anarchism (Chicago, IL); anarchism (personal response); anarchism (dealing with); anarchism (laws against). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; Emma Goldman; Carter H. Harrison, Jr.; Abraham Isaak [misspelled below]; Johann Most [variant first name below]. |
Document |
Brazen Anarchists
The police of Cleveland are to be
commended for their action yesterday in preventing the holding of a meeting
of the “Liberty Association,” an organization of avowed anarchists. It was this
band of reds that taught Leon Czolgosz the doctrines which later led him to
assassinate the President. It is considered a dangerous body and has been watched
closely by the police since the tragedy of September. Its effrontery in seeking
to hold public meetings is, perhaps, to be accounted for by the fact that thus
far the law has been unable to reach the reds in any city, save in New York,
where John Most was sentenced to a short prison term for publishing an inflammatory
editorial in his journal. Chicago was impotent to hold Emma Goldman and her
associates, and since their release they have participated in more than one
meeting at which the radical beliefs of the anarchists were freely expressed.
The climax of this impudent defiance of the public patience was reached the
other night, when at a meeting of the central body of Chicago anarchists the
man Isaaks, who was arrested with Goldman after the assassination, declared
that he held himself below Czolgosz, whereat there were cheers for the assassin.
If the law is so lax as to permit such an exhibition
of exultation over a deed which has horrified humanity, its amendment is a matter
of the most urgent necessity. If on the other hand there are laws and ordinances
in force in Chicago to prohibit disorderly assemblage, or utterances calculated
to incite riot or crime, as surely there must be, why were they not applied
instantly upon the utterance of these sentiments, which called forth the clamor
of praise for Czolgosz? The leaders of the meeting were all notorious anarchists.
To permit them to continue unmolested to defy public decency and the principles
of order is to encourage them to more flagrant outbursts of contempt for government,
perhaps even to sow the seeds of murder in many hearts. Chicago’s mayor is the
son of a man who, holding the same office, was killed by a “crank,” a man without
respect for authority, whose dastardly inspiration came, in all probability,
from the “red” company he had been keeping. This country would respect Carter
Harrison far more than it does today if, at the first whisper of treasonable
applause for the assassin of the President, he had caused the arrest of the
leaders in the demonstration and their immediate prosecution under any applicable
statute or ordinance.