Publication information |
Source: Weekly People Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “Ex[p]loiting Murder” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: New York, New York Date of publication: 21 September 1901 Volume number: 11 Issue number: 25 Pagination: 4 |
Citation |
“Ex[p]loiting Murder.” Weekly People 21 Sept. 1901 v11n25: p. 4. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response: socialists); McKinley assassination (public response: criticism); capitalism; the press (criticism). |
Named persons |
Chauncey M. Depew; William McKinley. |
Notes |
The 21 September 1901 and 28 September 1901 issues of Weekly People
both designate themselves as issue number 25.
The word “practices” is spelled two different ways below, in accordance with the original source. |
Document |
Ex[p]loiting Murder
A human being, distinguished moreover as the
Chief Executive of this nation, lies bleeding in Buffalo from homicidal wounds
inflicted upon him, and with his life trembling in the scales. Does his pitiful
plight evoke compassion from the Capitalist Class of the land? Does his dire
condition, perchance, as much as chasten the habitual ribald-ruffianism of the
capitalist press? Or does it, if but for a moment, turn the minds of both that
class and its mouth-piece from its everyday dishonorable pursuits? Just the
reverse: the one and the other are exploiting murder.
Straddling the cruelly wounded, blood-stained
body of President McKinley, the obscene capitalist press, acting for the obscene
Capitalist Class, puts its obscene trumpet to its obscene mouth, and brays its
obscene language into the air: Every capitalist, whose mill is a death trap
to his employees; every expansionist capitalist, whose hands are red with the
blood of innocent men, slaughtered because they prefer death to slavery; the
whole rabble-rout that clung to Depew, when he cracked ghastly jokes at the
corpses of seven employees burnt to death by the Company’s negligence in the
New York Central Railroad Tunnel; every capitalist whose miners are periodically
blown up into tatters by mine explosions; every capitalist whose fraudulent
failures and fraudulent fires bring devastation into the homes of the people;
every capitalist whose adulterated food saps the life of the masses;—the whole
cormorant crew sees in the misfortune that befell the President only their chance
to exploit murder. The howl they are raising against Socialism and Socialists,
the news they are forging on the subject, is the means to their contemplated
end.
The thief, detected, will cry “Stop thief!” But
his purpose is to escape: the cry is not intended to afford him a longer lease
for his thieving practises, least of all to afford him a freer hand. With the
anti-Socialist howl, now set up by the capitalist press, it is otherwise. The
cry is meant to give the thrice-convicted Capitalist Class increased opportunities,
increased freedom, increased facilities to ply its nefarious practices. It is
meant to raise a dust under which this gentry may continue their criminal practices
with impunity. It is meant to rid the Capitalist Class of its dreaded foe, the
Socialist Labor Party. In short, it is an a[t]tempt to exploit crime in the
interest of crime.
Nor does the stupidity of the idea extenuate the
act. On the contrary. The idea that, in this 20th Century, the Cause of Human
Redemption from the criminal yoke of Capitalism could be stayed by an increase
of capitalist crime and cruelty, can have for its effect only the hastening
of its downfall.
“Speed the day!” is the cry of the human race.