Abhorrent Object Is Leon Czolgosz

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Abhorrent Object Is Leon Czolgosz frUU-KSDAY EVENING, S 12, , EPTEMBEE 1901. THE MINNEAPOLIS JOUKNAL. 3 the Cleveland police. "What Detective o'iLoughlln told th« local officers has stirred up things here ; and a new and invigorated 'policy of investigation will LIEUT. DABNEY, OF WASHINGTON, be carried on forthwith looking toward ADVANCETOWARDRECOVERY ABHORRENT the thorough sifting of all the stories to OBJECT SAYS: the effect that Cleveland was the scene of much of the plotting by the anarchists. By far the most sensational thing, how- ever,' accomplished • by the Buffalo man was the securing of affidavits concerning Not an Unfavorable Symptom in the President's "Pe=ru=na is a Substantial Tonic." the statements which Emma Goldman made in her inflammatory speech which Lieutenant Dabney's experience with IS LEON . Peruna exactly coincides with the experi- CZOLGOSZ she delivered here on May which 5 and Is Case Developed in the Night. said to have started Czolgosz on his des- ence of others. Peruna has, proved es- perate yes- pecially a favorite in military circles, be- course. The affidavits secured It is prompt action, terday by O'Loughlin will'figure prom- cause in Its lasting in its cures and never-falling In effective- inently in the preliminary hearing of ness. Emma Goldman. They consist of state- Buffalo, N. V., Sept. 12.—1t is believed words, we heard faintly but distinctly, Dirty, ments from members of the local detec- the ball has now become encysted in the portion of the Lord's Prayer. * Deputy Clerk Anderson of California Unkempt and Thoroughly Despicable, tive force and from several citizens who muscles of the president's back. Dr. " 'Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done,' heard Goldman's speech. All of the" day Mann, speaking in regard to this, said were the words we heard as he passed into Mr. Andree Anderson, Deputy County was spent by the two officers in hunting he knew a man who lived for years unconsciousness from which he might Clerk, Loulsabesbro Co., Cal., ex-Pott- the President's Assailant Passes Long down persons who had attended the now with a bullet in the muscles of his never emerge." master, Burnett, Cal.. writes: famous -lecture. Some of the affidavits heart. "No one seeing me to-day would think contain sensational matter, it is said, al- The attention of the physicians is now, "FREE SOCIETY" that I was at death's door a few years though they were spirited away and no therefore, mainly directed to tTfe care ago with pulmonary troubles. I had fre- Hours in His Dungeon. inkling given of their contents. and treatment of the wound caused by the Platform Thereof Famishes Incriin- quent bleeding from the lungs, my stom- incision made in the abdomen above the inntine Evidence. ach was out of order and when I came navel, operation was performed. PINKERTON PERPLEXED where the Sept. *&emtl&^ here for my health no one thought I would wound is progressing satisfactorily. Buffalo, 12.—The Courier Bays this This morning: Superintendent now recover. Mybrother in tfce East had been He passed on the road Bull has Albert J. Dabney, very Points Does Not Understand—An- Another milestone to his of instructions Lieutenant U. S. V., cured of a hard cold on the lungs recovery was yesterday in possession the code writes from Washington, by using archism Farreacbing-. the discontinuance imparted to the selected assassin, Czol- D. C. as fol- Peruna and he wrote me and ad- by the doctors of the figures showing res- lows: vised me to try it. I had little faith but Sun \u25a0 gosz. He Believes That the •Kite York Special Service piration variations in their official bul- , thought give President Is Dead and Is The platferm of the Free Society was "After the use oftwo bottles of I would it a trial. I noticed New York, Sept. 12.— there is one man letins. Pa- a change in my appetite the very first now and also added to the cumulative evidence of ruaa Iam fully convinced in this country who knows a lot about an- The president breathes deeply conspiracy yesterday. that it I*a week and found that Isoon began to sleep archists and ways normally, the addition of respira- the anarchistic This good remedy and I conscientiously their it is William A. and the document binds its members together to can well. Gradually I began to feel better Guarded Carefully Lest He May At- Pinkerton, tion record the bulletin was recommend your anyone Recovery head of the Pinkerton Detect- to considered work for the destruction of the existing medicine to and took on flesh. was slow ive Bureau. Mr. Pinkerton" is not san- valueless. The president's pulse v.as who i» in need ofa substantial tonic for was so far gone, but after seven guine slightly in social order and continues: I when discussing the probability of accelerated the afternoon, but privileged Itis also a vary cure ca- months' steady use of Peruna I was my change was not and "As in former times no class effective tor to unearthing a plot to kill the president. the deemed material relinquished tyranny, J. own self once more. tempt Kill Himself. his temperature remained practically sta- ever its no more can tarrh"~ALßßßT DABNEY. He said: we take it for granted that the capitalists now am The anarchists don't plot. They are not tionary at 100.6 from daylight until dark. It is rare indeed that two bottles of "I weigh 173 pounds, in fln» persons of improvement were of the present day will forego their priv- Perima is sufficient to anyone health and spirits and have been a well of action. They sit around and>,some- The evidences the authority com- convince years, body says somebody ought president's keen of the juice ileges and their without that Peruna is a good remedy. man for two thanks to Peruna. that to be put out relish beef punction. It is therefore self-evident that Once in of the way. One of the group announces that given him during the nightand the increase the household Peruna generally stays. "It certainly saved me from an un- Hmw Bpmolml he from one the fight of prelatorian against the upper More than one-half our are timely grave."—Andree Anderson. YorkSun Sarvfom ginning to turn up at the back of his neck. is going to do the deed, and when he does in his allowance to three tea- and the middle be of a ills due to it, nobody is more surprised spoonfuls and also the fact that the wound classes must vio- catarrh. By catarrh is not simply Stephen R. Buffalo, Sept. 12.—Nobody outside of Czolgosz made one request for a comb. It than the very lent character and that mere wage con- meant United States Senator Mal- was him, men who suggested his act. I say, is becoming "more healthy." catarrh of the nose or head, lory, Florida, a recent official circles sees Assassin Czolgosz, but denied and since then he has dis- will explained flicts can never lead to the goal. but catarrh from in letter played' though, that if there was a plot Chicago Dr. Mcßurney that the slight of the lungs, stomach, in fact, every Pensacola, Fla., says the it is be even a more not the slightest interest in his the "Force, the only remedy. organ written from said he has grown to personal appearance. police will dig it out. They are closer to irritation found still remaining should of the body. following: pass away "We know therefore that the ruling disgusting object than when he was first As he appears now, there are not very the anarchists than any policemen in tho within the next twenty-four Almost every disease begins at first country hours. class will not voluntarily relinquish its "/hay used your excellent remedy, locked up with his face battered and his many men who would be particularly de- and'have been ever since the Hay- prerogatives and will make no conces- with a catarrhal condition of some lighted to meet Czolgosz in by- market riot. If Chief O'Neill says he has President Lonesome. mucous A few of Pe- Peruna, and can recommend it, both clothes torn and bloody. He has not been a lonely sions to us. Under these circumstances membrane. doses way at night. There is a good deal the information leading him to believe that there The president continues in excellent runa in the beginning is sure to prevent cov- of was a plot, there is only one remedy left—force aa a tonic amd a safe catarrh remedy. permitted to shave and his face is animal in his make-up. The police say he there is something to It. spirits but he confessed to one of the at- platform simple as much sickness. " There are two points "Our is and divided ered with a growth of scraggy beard that has the phrenological characteristics com- about the shooting of tendants that he was getting lone- follows: Peruna acts as a tonic because pro- If you do not derive prompt and satis- mon President McKinley interest me. some. He he in it Perona, is not an ornament. It is said that he has to criminals of a low and degraded that One- requested that be placed "First—Destruction of existing class duces healthy mucous mejnbranes in the factory results from the use of class. is, where is the man who shook hands with another bed. A depression had in write at once to Hartman, giving face nor even an formed domination through inexorable revolution stomach and digestive organs.
Recommended publications
  • Anarchy! an Anthology of Emma Goldman's Mother Earth
    U.S. $22.95 Political Science anarchy ! Anarchy! An Anthology of Emma Goldman’s MOTHER EARTH (1906–1918) is the first An A n t hol o g y collection of work drawn from the pages of the foremost anarchist journal published in America—provocative writings by Goldman, Margaret Sanger, Peter Kropotkin, Alexander Berkman, and dozens of other radical thinkers of the early twentieth cen- tury. For this expanded edition, editor Peter Glassgold contributes a new preface that offers historical grounding to many of today’s political movements, from liber- tarianism on the right to Occupy! actions on the left, as well as adding a substantial section, “The Trial and Conviction of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman,” which includes a transcription of their eloquent and moving self-defense prior to their imprisonment and deportation on trumped-up charges of wartime espionage. of E m m A g ol dm A n’s Mot h er ea rt h “An indispensable book . a judicious, lively, and enlightening work.” —Paul Avrich, author of Anarchist Voices “Peter Glassgold has done a great service to the activist spirit by returning to print Mother Earth’s often stirring, always illuminating essays.” —Alix Kates Shulman, author of Memoirs of an Ex-Prom Queen “It is wonderful to have this collection of pieces from the days when anarchism was an ism— and so heady a brew that the government had to resort to illegal repression to squelch it. What’s more, it is still a heady brew.” —Kirkpatrick Sale, author of The Dwellers in the Land “Glassgold opens with an excellent brief history of the publication.
    [Show full text]
  • LGBT Identity and Crime
    LGBT Identity and Crime LGBT Identity and Crime* JORDAN BLAIR WOODS** Abstract Recent studies report that LGBT adults and youth dispropor- tionately face hardships that are risk factors for criminal offending and victimization. Some of these factors include higher rates of poverty, over- representation in the youth homeless population, and overrepresentation in the foster care system. Despite these risk factors, there is a lack of study and available data on LGBT people who come into contact with the crim- inal justice system as offenders or as victims. Through an original intellectual history of the treatment of LGBT identity and crime, this Article provides insight into how this problem in LGBT criminal justice developed and examines directions to move beyond it. The history shows that until the mid-1970s, the criminalization of homosexuality left little room to think of LGBT people in the criminal justice system as anything other than deviant sexual offenders. The trend to decriminalize sodomy in the mid-1970s opened a narrow space for schol- ars, advocates, and policymakers to use antidiscrimination principles to redefine LGBT people in the criminal justice system as innocent and non- deviant hate crime victims, as opposed to deviant sexual offenders. Although this paradigm shift has contributed to some important gains for LGBT people, this Article argues that it cannot be celebrated as * Originally published in the California Law Review. ** Assistant Professor of Law, University of Arkansas School of Law, Fayetteville. I am thankful for the helpful suggestions from Samuel Bray, Devon Carbado, Maureen Carroll, Steve Clowney, Beth Colgan, Sharon Dolovich, Will Foster, Brian R.
    [Show full text]
  • Emma Goldman, Anarchism and Other Essays (Third Revised Edition, New York: Mother Earth Publishing Association, 1917)
    Emma Goldman, Anarchism and Other Essays (Third revised edition, New York: Mother Earth Publishing Association, 1917) THE PSYCHOLOGY OF POLITICAL VIOLENCE TO ANALYZE the psychology of political violence is not only extremely difficult, but also very dangerous. If such acts are treated with understanding, one is immediately accused of eulogizing them. If, on the other hand, human sympathy is expressed with the Attentäter, 1 one risks being considered a possible accomplice. Yet it is only intelligence and sympathy that can bring us closer to the source of human suffering, and teach us the ultimate way out of it. The primitive man, ignorant of natural forces, dreaded their approach, hiding from the perils they threatened. As man learned to understand Nature's phenomena, he realized that though these may destroy life and cause great loss, they also bring relief. To the earnest student it must be apparent that the accumulated forces in our social and economic life, culminating in a political act of violence, are similar to the terrors of the atmosphere, manifested in storm and lightning. To thoroughly appreciate the truth of this view, one must feel intensely the indignity of our social wrongs; one's very being must throb with the pain, the sorrow, the despair millions of people are daily made to endure. Indeed, unless we have become a part of humanity, we cannot even faintly understand the just indignation that accumulates in a human soul, the burning, surging passion that makes the storm inevitable. The ignorant mass looks upon the man who makes a violent protest against our social and economic iniquities as upon a wild beast, a cruel, heartless monster, whose joy it is to destroy life and bathe in blood; or at best, as upon an irresponsible lunatic.
    [Show full text]
  • “For a World Without Oppressors:” U.S. Anarchism from the Palmer
    “For a World Without Oppressors:” U.S. Anarchism from the Palmer Raids to the Sixties by Andrew Cornell A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Social and Cultural Analysis Program in American Studies New York University January, 2011 _______________________ Andrew Ross © Andrew Cornell All Rights Reserved, 2011 “I am undertaking something which may turn out to be a resume of the English speaking anarchist movement in America and I am appalled at the little I know about it after my twenty years of association with anarchists both here and abroad.” -W.S. Van Valkenburgh, Letter to Agnes Inglis, 1932 “The difficulty in finding perspective is related to the general American lack of a historical consciousness…Many young white activists still act as though they have nothing to learn from their sisters and brothers who struggled before them.” -George Lakey, Strategy for a Living Revolution, 1971 “From the start, anarchism was an open political philosophy, always transforming itself in theory and practice…Yet when people are introduced to anarchism today, that openness, combined with a cultural propensity to forget the past, can make it seem a recent invention—without an elastic tradition, filled with debates, lessons, and experiments to build on.” -Cindy Milstein, Anarchism and Its Aspirations, 2010 “Librarians have an ‘academic’ sense, and can’t bare to throw anything away! Even things they don’t approve of. They acquire a historic sense. At the time a hand-bill may be very ‘bad’! But the following day it becomes ‘historic.’” -Agnes Inglis, Letter to Highlander Folk School, 1944 “To keep on repeating the same attempts without an intelligent appraisal of all the numerous failures in the past is not to uphold the right to experiment, but to insist upon one’s right to escape the hard facts of social struggle into the world of wishful belief.
    [Show full text]
  • Etta Semple: Sister out of Christ/Kansas Freethinker and New Thought Healer
    Etta Semple: Sister Out of Christ/Kansas Freethinker and New Thought Healer Presented By Vickie Sandell Stangl Franklin County Historical Society 75th Anniversary History Symposium April 2012 Etta Semple was born in 1854 but was a woman far ahead of her time in asking questions about the existence of God and challenging accepted religious dogma. Most unusual was Etta's merging of Freethought principles with "New Thought" healing without religious overtones. Her life and story keenly reveals America's discomfort in acknowledging and respecting dissent or minority viewpoints during the late 19th and early 20th century. By the time of her tragic death in 1914 of pneumonia, Mrs. Semple had won over many detractors due to her selfless work in healing the sick at her Natural Cure Sanitarium. It was difficult for citizens of the early 20th century to accept that nobleness and goodness of character could exist without religion. Etta showed it was not only very possible, but also heroic under such negative opinions about freethinkers. While many prejudices still exists today against freethinkers (Atheists, Humanists, Agnostics) Etta's Freethought philosophy made her a constant target within the community of Ottawa, Kansas where she wrote, lived and advocated for freedom of conscience. Ottawa was founded by Baptists missionaries and by 1888 there were seventeen active Christian churches. However, behind these very visible symbols of religion, America was teeming with dissent; a growing movement of freethinkers were re-examining religious teachings and the role of religion in government. Although it's rarely noted by historians, high ranking individuals within the government and society were alarmed by the rise of religious leaders pushing to amend the US Constitution and declare America a Christian nation.
    [Show full text]
  • Global Anti-Anarchism: the Origins of Ideological Deportation and the Suppression of Expression
    Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies Volume 19 Issue 1 Article 7 Winter 2012 Global Anti-Anarchism: The Origins of ideological Deportation and the Suppression of Expression Julia Rose Kraut New York University Follow this and additional works at: https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/ijgls Part of the Immigration Law Commons, and the International Law Commons Recommended Citation Kraut, Julia Rose (2012) "Global Anti-Anarchism: The Origins of ideological Deportation and the Suppression of Expression," Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies: Vol. 19 : Iss. 1 , Article 7. Available at: https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/ijgls/vol19/iss1/7 This Symposium is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School Journals at Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies by an authorized editor of Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Global Anti-Anarchism: The Origins of Ideological Deportation and the Suppression of Expression JULIA ROSE KRAUT* ABSTRACT On September 6, 1901, a self-proclaimed anarchist named Leon Czolgosz fatally shot President William McKinley at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. This paper places the suppression of anarchists and the exclusion and deportation of foreigners in the aftermath of the "shot that shocked the world" within the context of international anti-anarchist efforts, and reveals that President McKinley's assassination successfully pulled the United States into an existing global conversation over how to combat anarchist violence. This paper argues that these anti-anarchistrestrictions and the suppression of expression led to the emergence of a "free speech consciousness" among anarchists,and others, and to the formation of the Free Speech League, predecessor of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction 
    introduction he early- and mid-nineteenth-century United States produced a T bewildering variety of individualists, in the sense of people who advocated the primacy of the human individual politically and of the particular thing metaphysically, and in the sense of seriously idiosyn- cratic persons who followed their own odd genius wherever it dragged them. It was, in many ways, a religious revival, but it soon sacrificed God on the altar of nonconformity. It produced undoubted geniuses of the caliber of Emerson, Fuller, Thoreau, Melville, Whit- man, and Hawthorne. It produced social reformers as pure and in- tense as any that the world has known—such as William Lloyd Garrison, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Captain John Brown. And it produced utopians who thought they could found a new social order—including Adin Ballou, John Humphrey Noyes, Amos Bron- son Alcott, and Josiah Warren. Like almost all of these astonishing and exasperating people, Josiah Warren hailed from New England. Like Garrison (and Ben Franklin, { 1 } 2 introduction Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, and Albert Parsons) he was a printer. Like John Brown he was a revolutionist, though Brown was violent and Warren, by his own declaration, peaceful. Like Emerson and Whit- man, he sang, or in his case lectured, about free individuality and connected it to an understanding of the universe. Like Thoreau he loved simplicity and skill, and displayed them prodigiously as quali- ties of character and thought throughout his life. And like Ballou— and the rest of these people at one time or another—he loathed the state and took steps to fashion a life without it.
    [Show full text]
  • The Long Red Scare: Anarchism, Antiradicalism, and Ideological Exclusion in the Progressive Era Adam Quinn University of Vermont
    University of Vermont ScholarWorks @ UVM Graduate College Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 2016 The Long Red Scare: Anarchism, Antiradicalism, and Ideological Exclusion in the Progressive Era Adam Quinn University of Vermont Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Quinn, Adam, "The Long Red Scare: Anarchism, Antiradicalism, and Ideological Exclusion in the Progressive Era" (2016). Graduate College Dissertations and Theses. 582. https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/582 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Dissertations and Theses at ScholarWorks @ UVM. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate College Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ UVM. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE LONG RED SCARE: ANARCHISM, ANTIRADICALISM, AND IDEOLOGICAL EXCLUSION IN THE PROGRESSIVE ERA A Thesis Presented by Adam Quinn to The Faculty of the Graduate College of The University of Vermont In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Specializing in History May, 2016 Defense Date: March 24, 2016 Thesis Examination Committee: Nicole Phelps, Ph.D. Advisor Dona Brown, Ph.D., Second Reader Alec Ewald, Ph.D., Chairperson Cynthia J. Forehand, Ph.D., Dean of the Graduate College ABSTRACT From 1919 to 1920 the United States carried out a massive campaign against radicals, arresting and deporting thousands of radical immigrants in a matter of months, raiding and shutting down anarchist printing shops, and preventing anarchists from sending both periodicals and personal communications through the mail. This period is widely known as the First Red Scare, and is framed as a reaction to recent anarchist terrorism, syndicalist unionizing, and the Bolshevik Revolution.
    [Show full text]
  • Anarchist Magic: the Gathering Deck
    Anarchist Magic: the Gathering Deck DESCRIPTION, INSTRUCTIONS This de`ck is designed for the Commander (Elder Dragon Highlander) format, and therefore contains 100 cards, including a single commander. Players who desire to use this deck in standard (i.e.: 60-card play) can alter the deck accordingly. Please note, altohugh these cards are not legal in tournament and sanctioned play, they are balanced and fair (i.e.: not "broken"). As such, this deck should be competitive and completely capable of winning against powerful EDH/Commander decks, and shouldn't piss off your friends too much. The cards in this deck are meant to reflect a broad and encompassing anarchist philosophy. The creatures are all contemporary and historical anarchists. The enchantments, instants, sorceries, and other spells reflect and represent a wide array of anarchist movements, ideas, and literary works (e.g.: Sabotage, Winstanley's True Leveling, Elements of Refusal, etc.). The artifacts are all items commonly used or referenced by anarchists. All of the cards in the deck have been given a fantasy flare, so, for example, Emma Goldman is now Red Emma of Kovno. Most of the "fantasizing" is drawn from references to people, places, or works of and by anarchists. Most of the flavor text on the cards is quoted from metal bands I like. A brief note on ideology: yes the deck is Red AND Green. I made it this way on purpose. I am a devout primitivist, but I still support labor struggles and initiatives. Only by respecting each other's differences and working together to accomplish goals- both short term (e.g.: labor organizing) and long term (e.g.: dismantling the fuck out of industrial civilization)- can we hope to build a successful movement.
    [Show full text]
  • War, Empire, and Anarchy in the Languages of American National Security
    War is the Health of the State: War, Empire, and Anarchy In the Languages of American National Security A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY Ryan M. Johnson IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Barbara Y. Welke and Kevin P. Murphy December 2014 © Ryan M. Johnson 2014 Acknowledgements Graduate students accrue a number of debts over the years, financial, intellectual, emotional, and everywhere else in between. This project would not have been possible without the financial assistance of a number of historical and academic institutions that provide the kinds of support required of such an endeavor. The American Historical Association’s Littleton-Griswold Research Grant has become a key contributor to successful dissertation projects throughout the years, my own included. I particularly benefitted from the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship offered by the University of Minnesota Graduate School, opening up the time in my schedule required to finish up the majority of the writing for my work. I would like to thank the American Society for Legal History, not only for the financial help allotted by the William H. Cromwell Fellowship, but for providing a warm and inviting intellectual atmosphere at their yearly conferences and their general enthusiasm for new research. Similarly, I would like to thank the UMN Law School for assisting in the research of graduate students with the Erickson Fellowship in Legal History, but perhaps more so, for encouraging new and exciting work by being both open-minded and intellectually engaging. Susanna Blumenthal and Carol Chomsky deserve particular recognition and gratitude.
    [Show full text]
  • The Voltairine De Cleyre Reader
    The Voltairine de Cleyre Reader Born into poverty and plagued by it her entire life, educated by nuns in a convent school, chronically ill, T h the survivor of a nearly successful assassination e V attempt, and dead at a tragically early age, Voltairine o l t de Cleyre doesn't seem a likely candidate to become a i r what Paul Avrich called "a greater literary talent than i n any other American anarchist." e d e C But de Cleyre was undeniably one of the most l e y important anarchist thinkers in the US or any other r e country. Greatly admired by her contemporaries for R e her brilliant writing and tireless schedule of public a d speaking, her ability to approach the most complex e r issues with a mixture of common sense, passion, and clarity makes her works as relevant today as they were a century ago. 2004 AK Press anti­copyright ISBN: 9781902593876 Palczewski, Catherine Helen (1995) Voltairine de Cleyre: Sexual Slavery and Sexual Pleasure in the Nineteenth Century. NWSA vol.7, Fall 95. Parker, S.E. Voltairine de Cleyre: Priestess of Pity and Vengeance, Freedom (London), April 29, 1950. Perlin, Terry M. Anarchism and Idealism: Voltairine de Cleyre, LaborHistory, xiv (Fall 1973), 506-20. Rexroth, Kenneth. Again at Waldheim (poem), Retort (Bearsville, NY), Winter 1942. Starrett, Walter [W.S. Van Valkenburgh]. Untitled manuscript on Voltairine de Cleyre, TABLE OF CONTENTS Ishill Collection, Harvard. Biographies Stein, Gordon (1995) Voltairine De Cleyre: The American Rationalist Volume 39, by Sharon Presley 1 Number 6. by Sara Baase 6 Voltairine de Cleyre, Freedom (London), August 1912.
    [Show full text]
  • Mckinley's Assassination from the Anarchist Standpoint
    McKinley’s Assassination from the Anarchist Standpoint Voltairine de Cleyre Six years have passed since William McKinley met his doom at Buffalo and the return stroke of justice took the life of his slayer, Leon Czolgosz. The wild rage that stormed through the brains of the people, following that revolver shot, turning them into temporary madmen, incapable of seeing, hearing, or thinking correctly, has spent itself. Figures are beginning to appear in their true relative proportions, and there is some likelihood that sane words will be sanely listened to. Instead of the wild and savage threats, “Brand the Anarchists with hot iron,” “Boil in oil,” “Hang to the first lamp-post,” “Scourge and shackle,” “Deport to a desert island,” which were the stock phrases during the first few weeks following the tragedy, and were but the froth of the upheaved primitive barbarity of civilized men, torn loose and raging like an unreasoning beast, we now hear an occasional serious inquiry: “But what have the Anarchists to say about it? Was Czolgosz really an Anarchist? Did he say he was? And what has Anarchism to do with assassination altogether?” To those who wish to know what the Anarchists have to say, these words are addressed. We have to say that not Anarchism, but the state of society which cre- ates men of power and greed and the victims of power and greed, is responsible for the death of both McKinley and Czolgosz. Anarchism has this much to do with assassination, that as it teaches the possibility of a society in which the needs of life may be fully
    [Show full text]