Mc Kinley [sic] Shot
For the third time within the memory
of middle-aged men the telegraph flashes the startling news that
the Nation’s President is shot. President McKinley was shot while
at the Buffalo Exposition Sept. 6th, by Leon F. Czolgosz who claims
to be an anarchist. Assassination like lynching is an act which
receives the condemnation of every well balanced mind. In the public
mind the assassin’s failure to kill his victim would count but little
in mitigation of his offense. Already thousands of leading citizens
are expressing themselves as to the proper and best method of dealing
with anarchists. A few hot-heads put anarchists, Socialists, Populists
and even Bryanites into one basket and vociferously demand that
the whole outfit be deported to some desert island. These jingoes
forget that we already have as stringent laws as human ingenuity
can devise against all degrees of homicide. These hot-heads forget
that many of the states punish murder with death and that statistics
show that the death penalty diminishes very little if any the number
of murders committed. Some of the more conservative recognize the
fact that penal legislation cannot under any circumstances be safely
extended beyond overt acts. A few of the college professors and
more thoughtful have recognized the constitutional difficulty in
legislating against anarchists, basing the legislation upon the
man’s mere belief or opinions concerning government in the absence
of any overt act. In other words they hesitate about defining as
a crime a man’s opinion concerning government or religion. They
fear to form a precedent. They are afraid it would be “too expensive.”
Their fears remind us of the following
anecdote:—
A law once existed in England making
it a misdemeanor for any one to say “To hell with the King.” The
offence was punishable with £100 fine half of which went to the
officer making the arrest.
An Irishman somewhat groggy was sitting
in an alley and between his sleepy intervals was repeating to himself
with a flourish of his fist the offensive words “To hell with the
——,” [sic] An officer passing and noticing that Pat did not finish
his sentence tapped him on the shoulder and inquired “To hell with
who, Pat?” Pat looking up and thinking of the £100 replied, “Say
it yourself, mister, its [sic] too expensive.”
When these expert law makers [sic]
attempt to make laws that shall deport political factions be they
ever so small in numbers, they will find they “have put their foot
in it.”
Overt acts which amount to crime against
society are and of right ought to be punishable. A republic contemplates
the existence of political forces opposed to the policies of the
administration. These forces may be and often are a majority of
the voting population. When a minority administration adopts policies
that make it possible for Morgan, Schwab or Rockefeller to starve
or reduce to squalid poverty hundreds of thousands of their employes
[sic] and their families it can hardly be wondered at that some
of the oppressed should become perhaps unreasonably excited. Conservative
and rational citizens can see that such excitement should find expression
at the ballot box in a peacable [sic] overthrow of such administration.
All men are not conservativeo r [sic] rational, some men are cranks.
Some cranks shoot with guns and can be best dealt with under penal
legislation.
Other cranks shoot with their mouths
and it would be subversive of the fundamental principles of a republic
to attempt to subject these to a penal code.
We would suggest that the most efficient
legislation against the so-called Reds would be legislation imposing
a little wholesome and much needed restraint upon the robbing proclivities
of consolidated corporations.
When rulers of nations and all great
captains of industry call around them an army of private detectives
as a body guard [sic], such actions can hardly be construed as the
highest evidence of a clean conscience. Men who fear God and do
right have little fear of assassins. Governmental support of trusts
may yet prove in this country “too expensive.”
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