President Roosevelt
T President of the United States, Mr
Roosevelt, is not only a good ruler, as recent events have shown,
but a very plucky fellow, both morally and physically. He has been
under fire pretty often as a soldier, and has evidently decided
that the best way to deal with Anarchists is to defy them. He declines
consequently to have a special guard or any police protection, and
walks to the houses of his friends, or rides in public with a single
companion, without escort, or armed men stationed at supposed dangerous
points. His argument is “That nobody can protect you from an enemy
who will give his life for yours, and that men less fanatic rarely
succeed in their attempts.” There is this to be said also, that
if an assassin could get away finally he would remain unknown, and
the grand object of his crime, which is to frighten rulers with
the Anarchist spectre, would, as a matter of course, be frustrated.
A year or two will show which plan succeeds the best, for Mr McKinley,
who was murdered, was always surrounded by detectives, but we fancy
that Mr Roosevelt will be more fortunate. In the old days in Ireland
it was often said that the safest landlord in the country was the
man who did not ask for police protection but was perfectly certain,
if only wounded, to shoot the assassin dead. It must be remembered,
however, that there was a vast difference between the two classes
of crimes and the motives or causes which led up to them.
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