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We've
Been Through This Movie Before: The 82nd Anniversary of the
Palmer Raids
by S. Leon
Felkins
This holiday season, the citizens of the US have reason to
reflect on the political directions being employed to "fight
terrorism" under the direction of Attorney
General John Ashcroft. Well it turns out, "we have been through
this movie before", as another Attorney General, Mr. Alexander
Mitchell Palmer, exposed the nation to a quite similar experience
some 82 years ago. The story of this episode, commonly referred to
as "The Red Scare", is worthy of review as there are many striking
parallels to the situation today, from terrorist attacks, nationwide
sweeps of suspects, to radical departures from the Constitution.
December 21, 2001, marked the 82nd Anniversary of
the departure of Emma
Goldman on her extended "Cruise Ship" vacations sponsored by the
U.S. Government and specifically authorized by Mr. Alexander
Mitchell Palmer, Attorney General. Ms
Goldman was accompanied by 248 other winners of this free cruise to
Russia, a number big enough for a party, but far short of the nearly 3,000 that
Palmer thought would enjoy the trip. Nevertheless, within the
next few weeks, thousands of "suspects" were taken into custody with
little or no due process and a few hundred more were deported.
While much of this shameful activity by our government can be
explained and somewhat justified by the hysteria of the citizens,
who supported such violent, unconstitutional, methods probably in
even greater percentages than the overwhelming percentages that
support President Bush and Attorney General Ashcroft now, then as
now, there were some actual "terrorist" acts.
Terrorist Acts
Interestingly, the terrorist acts of 1919 were directed
toward politicians and the financial leaders and symbols of that
time just as the attacks of 2001 were. While the terrorists in
1919 had not discovered anthrax, they were able to make use of mail
bombs as the excerpt from "The Red Scare In
Nevada, 1919-1920" details:
More
dramatic events plagued American society. In April 1919 a bomb was
discovered in Mayor Hanson's mail. The next day a bomb addressed
to Senator Thomas A. Hardwick blew off the hands of a domestic
servant in Atlanta. A mail clerk in New York discovered sixteen
parcels containing "infernal machines" addressed to Attorney
General A. Mitchell Palmer, Postmaster General Albert S. Burleson,
Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Secretary of Labor
William B. Wilson, J.P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, and other
government officials and industrialists. All together thirty-six
packages turned up. A few weeks later several bombs exploded, one
in front of Attorney General Palmer's Washington home, blowing a
man, presumably the bomber, to pieces. Although the bombings were
largely the work of criminal fanatics, actions like the veteran's
raid on the New York Call socialist newspaper office, the
Cleveland May Day Riot, and the Centralia Washington Massacre,
were planned by overzealous patriots, paranoid dissidents, or
overreacting citizens. One of the most
horrendous terrorist acts occurred later on September 16,
1920, the bombing
of the House of Morgan on Wall Street, where 33 people were
killed and 400 were injured.
The
interplay between public opinion, congressional action, and the
courts in dealing with this unrest and possibly exacerbating it was
evident then as it is now.
Legislative Abuse and Judicial Betrayal
Just
as Ashcroft was able to get repressive legislation through an
intimidated and cowardly Congress right after the September, 2001,
attacks and in response to public hysteria, the Executive branch of
the government right after World War I was also able to get very
repressive legislation passed, most of which was later repealed by
cooler heads and/or overturned by the courts. Freedom of speech in
particular was severely repressed, much more then than
today.
Similar to the public hysteria towards Middle Easterners
witnessed recently, there was great hysteria then towards certain
"aliens". In a land in which everyone except the Native Americans
could only trace back citizenship by birth, at best, a few
generations, this logic seems especially fragile. The aforementioned
Ms Goldman was in fact born in what is now Lithuania but was then
Russia, who
became a US citizen through marriage, later felt the bite of
this logic.
In
support of the Justice Department's schemes to deport
"undesirables", Congress attempted, through a series of laws, to
define away the rights of recent immigrants, particularly if those
immigrants were naive enough to think they had freedom of speech as
promised by the Bill of Rights. The three major acts are summarized
here:
The
Espionage
Act (1917) and the Sedition
Act (1918) outlawed efforts to obstruct military recruiting,
write or publish disloyal information, express contempt for the
government’s actions or in any way disrupt or speak publicly
against the war. Under the 1918 Alien
Act, the government could deport immigrants solely on
political whim, if such people dared to question the rise of big
business, encouraged the use of strikes, or spoke out against the
war. From "In
the Land of Liberty, Freedom Is Conditional" [an excellent and
highly recommended reference] Of course, we all know
that when Congress gets out of line and passes unconstitutional
legislation, the U.S. Supreme Court will protect us and squash such
legislation in short order. Don't count on it, friend – history and
current events tell us that, in fact, the Supreme will go along with
about anything if there is strong public support no matter how
unethical and/or unconstitutional it may be. The best example of
this spinelessness of the courts in this particular period of US
history is given by the Schenck v. United
States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919) case. Schenck was affirmed to be
guilty of "conspiracy to violate the Espionage Act" because he
passed out pamphlets that were in opposition of the war. The complete opinion is
online at Findlaw.
Actions by the Justice Department
The Justice Department was quick to make use of these abusive
laws and court decisions. Another quote from "In
the Land of Liberty, Freedom Is Conditional" :
The
Socialist Party, which at the time had close to 100,000 members,
also fell victim to these new laws. In May 1917 the party’s office
in Indianapolis was raided. By September the federal government
had rounded up most of the leaders and brought them to trial in
February 1918. Socialist Party leader Eugene V. Debs was also
arrested and after his trial was sentenced to ten years in jail.
The following year, the Supreme Court ruled that the speech Debs
gave supporting socialism and opposing military recruitment was
not protected by the First Amendment. . . . In 1919 President
Wilson authorized Attorney General Palmer to arrest and deport
thousands of foreign-born radicals. On one notorious night that
December, 249 resident aliens, including anarchists Emma Goldman
and Alexander Berkman, were arrested and ultimately deported to
the Soviet Union. Just as the public and
the victims know little about who are detained and for what reason
now, so it was in 1919-1920. In an essay written by A.G. Palmer, the
policy toward the arrests is expressed in tones we are so familiar
with today; "How the Department of Justice discovered upwards of
60,000 of these organized agitators of the Trotzky doctrine in the
United States is the confidential information upon
which the Government is now sweeping the nation clean of such alien
filth...." (emphasis added. Quoted from The Case
Against the "Reds")
One
man, Herbert Warner, gets six months in jail for uttering, "There is
what I consider one of the brainiest men in the world," while
pointing to a picture of Lenin. (See "The Most
Brainiest Man" for details)
And
just like today, we have the hysteria about our flag by the public
(but not a hoot about the Constitution!). One story told in the
article, "Freedom of
Opinion?", goes like this:
Chicago, May 6 – Disrespect for the American flag and a
show of resentment toward the thousands who participated in a
victory loan pageant here tonight may cost George Goddard his
life. He was shot down by a sailor of the United States Navy when
he did not stand and remove his hat while the band was playing the
"Star-Spangled Banner." Eventually the public,
the Congress and the Courts began to get a little embarrassed by
these abuses and the trashing of the Bill of Rights. Everyone, that
is, but Mr. Palmer. This wind-down of hysteria and abuse is
described in the essay, The Red Scare:
The
Red Scare finally came to an end after a series of actions by high
government officials, especially in the Justice Department itself,
which showed dissent from Palmer's philosophy. Assistant Secretary
of Labor Louis F. Post began to reject most of the cases brought
before him concerning the immigrants. Even the Secretary of Labor
himself, William B. Wilson turned against Palmer. Out of 6,000
warrants issued during the raids, less than 1,000 deportations
resulted. Even with all this opposition to his actions, Palmer
still aspired to the office of the Presidency. He was never
nominated. By 1920, the Red Scare was dying down, and by 1921 it
was virtually dead. Palmer's outstanding
achievements in documenting, locating and harassing tens of
thousands of "suspects", in a time long before computers and
electronic databases were invented, were made possible by the talent
and efforts of his number one assistant, J. Edgar Hoover, of which
more discussion will follow. An online essay, "America
responds to Terrorism: The Palmer 'Red Raids' summarizes
these accomplishments:
Even
though deportation matters were not normally the concern of the
Department of Justice, Attorney General Palmer soon created an
alliance with officials in the Bureau of Immigration to find and
deport alien "reds." J. Edgar Hoover, Palmer's chief investigating
officer, ordered Justice Department agents to go undercover and
join suspected radical organizations.
By
December 1919, Palmer, Hoover, and their allies in the Bureau of
Immigration had decided to arrest alien members of the Communist
Party and other foreign radicals. Hoover issued the instructions
to Department of Justice agents which called for the arrests to
take place during a series of raids planned for the evening of
January 2, 1920.
The Palmer "Red Raids" took place on schedule in more than
30 cities, located mainly in eastern states. Between six and ten
thousand people were arrested. In many cases, arrest warrants had
not been issued until after individuals found themselves in
custody. Moreover, Department of Justice agents rarely carried
search warrants during the raids. Nevertheless, the raiders seized
political literature, membership cards and lists, organization
records, and other papers. Very little evidence of revolutionary
or criminal activity actually turned up. Days after the raids,
thousands of aliens were still being held without formal charge,
without bail, without the assistance of a lawyer and in many
cases, without family or friends knowing where they
were.
Does
that sound familiar? Has Ashcroft been studying Palmer's notes? If
so then he needs to also take note that Palmer did not make it to
the Oval office and while he got a lot of support from the public
for awhile, he is not now very highly regarded. In fact, just the
opposite.
At
this point, it seems worthwhile to take a side trip to learn more
about this talented assistant of Mr. Palmer, J. Edgar Hoover.
J.
Edgar Hoover and the Birth of the FBI
The "General Intelligence Division (GID)", which later
became the FBI, was established in August of 1919 by Attorney
General Palmer. The purpose of the GID was to gather information on
"radicals". Mr. J. Edgar Hoover was put in charge.
These facts are worthy of some elaboration and analysis.
First, the FBI was formed out of the government's perceived need for
the control of political dissent. Its birth was inspired by
political control, not criminal prosecution. Second, the person in
charge, Mr. Hoover, was particularly adept at gathering political
information on the "suspects". In view of this, it should be no
surprise that the FBI has always had more of hankering for political
intrigue and investigations than criminal pursuits.
From
the very beginning, the actions of the FBI were extremely harsh and
cruel. The ship that I jokingly referred to above that Emma Goldman
and 248 other anarchists were shipped to Russia on was crowded,
filthy and cold. David B. Kopel and Joseph Olson in the 1996
article, "PREVENTING
A REIGN OF TERROR: CIVIL LIBERTIES IMPLICATIONS OF TERRORISM
LEGISLATION", relates the following on the actions of Palmer and
Hoover:
In
August 1919, Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer established the
predecessor of the FBI, the "General Intelligence Division," of
the Department of Justice. The Division was headed by J. Edgar
Hoover, and charged with gathering information on radicals. Over
the next year, six thousand people were seized in the "Palmer
Raids," many of them innocent of any crime, and unconnected to
radical politics. Many suspects were held in filthy jails and
beaten into false confessions. Even people who came to visit these
victims in jail were arrested, on the theory of guilt by
association. Congress
enthusiastically funded these efforts to control and eliminate
"radicals" just as it has today to support the fight on terrorism.
The following description of activities from "INTELLECT
SURVEILLED then sounds strikingly familiar to recent events:
In
June, responding to Garvan's [initial head of GID]
sensationalistic claim that a new wave of bombings and terrorist
acts would begin on July 4th, Congress authorized an additional
half million dollars for the "Radical Division" above and beyond
its initial appropriation of 1.5 million dollars. In December of
that same year Congress authorized yet another million dollars for
"running down reds" and prosecuting them.
Garvan brought in J. Edgar Hoover, then 24, to head the
GID. While at the Library of Congress, Hoover had compiled a name
index of 150,000 radicals, their organizations and publications.
At the GID he expanded the index to 450,000 names, thereby
increasing the prestige of his new Division. Next he added short
bios of identified radicals, which by February 1920 numbered
70,000. He appended press clippings and reports of their speeches
and publications for ready reference.
This is an incredible technical achievement. There's no
mention of the size of staff Hoover may have had but today, I doubt
that even with massive computers and a staff of thousands, this
could be accomplished in such a short time. Truly an inspired civil
servant. Some ideas on how this was accomplished are further
described:
One
of Palmer's early innovations was to create a corps of citizen
informers, an idea first proposed by Chicago advertising executive
Albert Briggs. By the time the United States entered World War I,
more than fifty such groups – typically comprised of "leading
citizens" – were watching and reporting on their fellow citizens
all across the country. In his annual report for 1917, Palmer
remarked that:
the American Protective League has proven to be
invaluable and constitutes a most important auxiliary and
reserve force for the Bureau of Investigation. Its membership,
which is carefully guarded, included leading men in various
localities who have volunteered their services for the purpose
of being on the lookout for and reporting to this department
information of value to the Government, and for the further
purpose of endeavoring to secure information regarding any
matters about which it may be requested to make inquiry.
What had begun as the "Slacker Raids" targeting military
draft evaders and conscientious objectors soon became a systematic
campaign to manipulate public fear of "Reds." In the early stages
of what came to be known as the "Palmer Raids," entire libraries
were seized, "almost by the bale" the Attorney General boasted. Of
these confiscated materials, 625 newspapers and periodicals were
filed and indexed. Two hundred and fifty-one were classified as
"ultra-radical." Three hundred and twenty-five in 25 foreign
languages were translated by a corps of 40 multi-lingual
translators. Special project studies were made of the Negro press
and IWW publications. (from:
"INTELLECT SURVEILLED: THORSTEIN VEBLEN AND THE ORGANS OF STATE
SECURITY")
Well, well, there is nothing new under the sun; the FBI has
relied upon citizens to snitch on each other from the very
beginning. The only difference I can see of the way it was done then
compared to today is that snitches then were volunteers and today
they are well paid. That's progress I suppose.
Hoover's incredible talents became more evident with time.
Even the current trend to interference between lawyers and their
clients (such things as wire tapping conversations and seizure of
legal fees, etc.) was anticipated by Hoover. But first you need the
names of the lawyers. On the second anniversary of the Russian
Revolution, November 7, 1919, over 10,000 suspected communists and
anarchists were arrested in twenty-three different cities. Many of
those arrested, of course, hired lawyers. Hoover then added the
names of all these hundreds of lawyers to his ever growing card
indexed database.
To
get the public on his side, Mr. Hoover decided he needed to arrest
someone that was high profile and would likely stir the passions of
the public for "quick justice". He selected:
Emma
Goldman, as he had been particularly upset by her views on birth
control, free love and religion. Goldman had also been imprisoned
for two years for opposing America's involvement in the First
World War. This was a subject that Hoover felt very strongly
about, even though it was never willing to discuss how he had
managed to avoid being drafted.
Hoover knew it would be a difficult task having Goldman
deported. She had been living in the United States for thirty-four
years and both her father and husband were both citizens of the
United States. In court Hoover argued that Goldman's speeches had
inspired Leon Czolgosz to assassinate President William McKinley.
Hoover won his case and Goldman, along with 248 other people, were
deported to Russia. (From
"John Edgar Hoover")
Other related incidents
Even well known politicians and celebrities were not safe
from possible harassment and imprisonment by the hyper investigative
agencies testing their strength on the public right after World War
I. A couple of examples is given by the article, The Red Scare In
Nevada, 1919-1920:
In
mid-1918 federal courts sentenced three-time presidential
candidate Eugene V. Debs and U.S. Senatorial candidate Victor L.
Berger to ten and twenty years imprisonment respectively. Although
Debs and Berger had never posed a serious threat to the country's
ability to wage war, they had violated American society's notions
of patriotism, nationalism and 100% Americanism. Not until 1921,
after conservatives so thoroughly cowed the spirit of radicalism
in America, were they freed from governmental harassment: Debs by
a Presidential pardon from Republican Warren G. Harding and Berger
by Supreme Court edict.
Conclusion
The hysteria of the public – a hysteria fed by the media and
the politicians – provided the basis and the environment that
allowed extensive abuse by the policing agencies of our government
right after World War I. The interaction between the oppressed
individuals, the congress and the Justice Department tended to feed
upon itself and exacerbated the situation. The acts of terrorism of
1920 may have never occurred had there been a more sane approach to
the initial fears created by the war.
I
again quote from the article, The Red Scare In
Nevada, 1919-1920:
According to [Constantine M. Panunzio, in a study of these
cases] the majority of those deported were hard working Russian
and Ukrainian immigrants with families who had lived in the United
States from six to ten years. Only a small minority of those
exiled could be called "dangerous radicals."
Gradually, opposition to these practices emerged.
Twenty-two New York clergymen denounced the "deportation
delirium," while one U.S. district attorney resigned in protest.
Acting Labor Secretary Louis F. Post held up these proceedings,
and released most of the six thousand prisoners against Attorney
General Palmer's wishes. Palmer retaliated by calling Post a
"Bolshevik." Mounting opposition and legal obstacles caused the
movement to quickly subside, but only after 556 had been
deported.
One
should note that neither the public nor the courts were responsible
for correcting this drift into totalitarianism No, responsible
citizens in positions of leadership raised enough hell to get the
country back on track – at least for awhile.
The similarities that exist today – the "raids" of Attorney
General Ashcroft, the detainment of thousands of "aliens", the
quickly passed "terrorist" acts that severely infringe our civil
liberties, the unquestioning support by the public – to that which
happened in 1919-1920 are remarkable. However, the people of that
time were fortunate in that the hysteria quickly passed and the
enforcement of the bad legislation subsided.
Today, we may not be so lucky. Due to the massive financial
interest involved and the enormous growth in government power, what
we lose today we may have a tough time ever getting back.
December 25,
2001
Mr. Felkins [send him mail] is a retired
former military officer, college professor, and computer systems
engineer. He is now an activist in the fight for the reform of the
forfeiture laws now plaguing the US and the world. He is presently
serving as the Executive Director of F.E.A.R., the
forfeiture reform group. In addition, he maintains a web page on
Political Philosophy, "A Rational Life" and
another on the history of politics, "The Political
Almanac."
©
2001 LewRockwell.com
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