From: Gerald A. Levy (Gerald_A_Levy@MSN.COM)
Date: Sat May 01 2004 - 06:25:25 EDT
"The day will come when our silence will be more powerful than the voices you are throttling today." -- the last words of August Spies On May Day, 1886, there was a parade of 80,000 workers in Chicago for the 8-hour-day. Two days later, a clash at the McCormick Reaper Works ended with police beatings and the killing of 2 unarmed workers. A protest meeting was called for the following evening at Haymarket Square. At the rally, a bomb exploded which killed one police officer. The police immediately opened fire on the workers -- killing 1 and wounding many others. The events of 1886 led to the infamous "Haymarket Affair" in which 8 radical leaders -- primarily anarchists and socialists -- were falsely charged, tried, and convicted. Four of the defendants [George Engel, Adolph Fischer, Albert Parsons, August Spies] were condemned to death and went to the gallows -- and into history -- on November 11, 1887. The day beforehand, another defendant, LOUIS LINGG, allegedly committed "suicide" in prison under mysterious circumstances. The remaining 3 were pardoned ... 16 years later. No evidence ever connected any of these men to the bomb that exploded in Haymarket Square. The events are described -- from a variety of perspectives -- in the following pages. http://www.graveyards.com/foresthome/hmarket.html http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/about/mayday.html http://www.kentlaw.edu/ilhs/haymarket.htm August Spies -- the author of the above quote and one of the 4 who were executed -- became radicalized and politically active after Federal troops were used against workers in the Railroad Strike of 1877. Although often described as an anarchist, he was a socialist -- indeed, that same year (1877) he joined the Socialist Labor Party. He went on to become a delegate to the Socialist Convention in Chicago in 1881, a delegate to the International Workingmen's Party of America Convention in Pittsburgh in 1883, worked with the 4,000 striking miners in the Hocking Valley Strike of 1884-5, and for several years was the editor of the German-language newspaper for workers, Arbeiter-Zeitung. Since the passage of the Patriot Act, and ongoing discussion about whether the Patriot II Act will be passed, the events of 1886 seem to be highly relevant for today. Even before that time, an eerie similarity existed between the circumstances concerning the trial of the Haymarket 8 and the arrest, trial, and conviction of Mumia Abu-Jamal. Abu-Jamal, a journalist, political activist and former member of the Black Panther Party, has been condemned to death and is awaiting -- and fighting -- execution on death row in Pennsylvania. For more information about his case, see http://www.freemumia.org http://www.mumia.org http://refuseandresist.org/mumia/idx.php The Haymarket trial was one event in which there was an *international* movement of solidarity by anarchists and socialists, including Marxists. Some of the writings of the latter, including an article by Eleanor Marx and Edward Aveling, can be found at: http://www.marxists.org/subject/mayday The speeches of the Haymarket defendants can be read at: http://www.marxists.org/subject/mayday/articles/speeches.html The most eloquent -- and lengthy -- speech was made by August Spies (described above). His defense was simple: "My defense is your accusation." His speech turned the words used in his indictment into an indictment of his accusers and the system they represented. In a sense, Spies offered a *critique* of the state's case against him. The critique not only attempted to show the irrationality and falsity of the charges against him but to use the opportunity to condemn the very system that was trying him and to offer a political alternative. Perhaps in this sense, Spies' critique had a similarity to *Marx's critique of political economy*: i.e. it was not merely a defense and a criticism, rather it was an attempt to *surpass* the body of thought being subjected to critique and to offer an *alternative*. Of course, Spies' aim (which, after all, was just a speech) was more limited than Marx's aim in writing _Capital_. Yet, both had *revolutionary* aims that can not be forgotten when assessing their speeches and writings. How could it be that Marx -- a revolutionary -- could limit himself to *only* exposing what was *wrong* with political economy? The answer, of course, is that he didn't limit his aim in that way. This insight, imo, is de-emphasized or forgotten by those who think that Marx was either a classical economist or someone whose aim was merely to critique (narrowly understood) political economy. In this sense, Marx had far more in common with August Spies and Mumia Abu-Jamal than with Adam Smith and David Ricardo. Do others agree? The Haymarket Eight are, of course, long dead. Long live the Haymarket Eight! Mumia Abu-Jamal STILL lives! LONG LIVE and FREE Mumia Abu-Jamal! Happy May Day everyone! In solidarity, Jerry
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