Hellraisers Journal: From the Social Democratic Herald: Eugene Debs Recalls Labor’s Battles in the “War for Freedom”

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SDH p2, Jan 11, 1902———————-

Hellraisers Journal – Sunday January 12, 1902
Eugene Victor Debs Recalls Bloody Scenes of Battle in Class War

From the Social Democratic Herald of January 11, 1902:

The War for Freedom.

By Eugene V. Debs.

EVD crpd Nw Orln Tx Dem p3, Jan 26, 1900

The country we inhabit is generally supposed to have been in a state of peace since the close of the Civil War, excepting the brief period required to push the Spaniards off the western continent. And yet during this reign of so-called peace more than a score of bloody battles have been fought on American soil, in every one of which the working class were beaten to the earth, notwithstanding they outnumber their conquerors and despoilers at least ten to one, and notwithstanding in each case they asked but a modest concession that represented but a tithe of what they were justly entitled to.

To recall the bloody scenes in the Tennessee mountains, the horrors of Idaho, the tragedies of Virden, Pana, Buffalo, Chicago, Homestead, Lattimer, Leadville, and many others, is quite enough to chill the heart of a man who has such an organ, and yet above the cloud and smoke of battle there shines forever the bow of promise, and however fierce the struggle and gloomy the outlook, it is never obscured to the brave, self-reliant soul who knows that victory at last must crown the cause of labor.

Thousands have fallen before the fire of the enemy and thousands more are doubtless doomed to share the same fate, but

“Freedom’s battle once begun,
Bequeathed from bleeding sire to son,
Though baffled oft, Is ever won.”

The struggle in this and other lands by the children of toil is a struggle between classes which in some form or other has been waged since primitive man first captured and enslaved his weaker fellow-being. Through the long, dark night of history the man who toiled has been in fetters, and though today they are invisible, yet they bind him as securely in wage slavery as if they were forged of steel.

How the millions toil and produce! How they suffer and are despised! Is the earth forever to be a dungeon to them? Are their offspring always to be food for misery? These are questions that confront the workingmen of our day and a few of them at least understand the nature of the struggle, are conscious of their class interests, and are striving with all their energy to close up the ranks and conquer their freedom by the solidarity of labor.

In this war for freedom the organized men in the Western states have borne a conspicuous and honorable part. They have, in fact, maintained better conditions on the whole than generally prevail, and this they have done under fire that would have reduced less courageous and determined men. But, notwithstanding their organized resistance, they must perceive that in common with all others who work for wages they are losing ground before the march of capitalism.

It requires no specially sensitive nature to feel the tightening of the coils, nor prophetic vision to see the doom of labor if the government is suffered to continue in control of the capitalist class. In every crisis the shotted guns of the government are aimed at the working class. They point in but one direction. In no other way could the capitalists maintain their class supremacy. Court injunctions paralyze but one class. In fact, the government of the ruling class today has but one vital function, and that is to keep the exploited class in subjection.

Labor unions, most of them with antiquated methods, are inadequate to cope with the situation in any crisis, and when the smoke of battle clears away their members lie stark and dead on the field, or languish in prison, or are forced to leave wife and child and tramp among strangers in quest of a job. Every battle that has been fought teaches the one lesson, that the workers must unite upon class-conscious ground, that they must vote as one against every capitalist candidate even though he be their best personal friend; that they must nominate their own candidates upon a platform that recognizes clearly and declares unequivocally in favor of their interests and stand by them until they make their own class the governing class and abolish the wage system and the countless crimes that follow in its train.

Let the labor unions staunchly contend with all their power for such concessions as are possible under the present system, but at the same time let the members who compose them open their eyes to the fact that an industrial revolution is in progress and that to secure inestimable blessings they must make their class, the only class essential to modern society, the governing class, which means the abolition of class rule and wage slavery and the inauguration of the reign of freedom.

EUGENE V. DEBS.
Terre Haute, Ind.

—————

[Photograph and emphasis added.]

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SOURCE

Social Democratic Herald
(Milwaukee, Wisconsin)
-Jan 11, 1902, p2
https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/social-democratic-herald-us/020111-socdemherald-v04n28w180.pdf

IMAGE
EVD Nw Orln Tx Dem p3, Jan 26, 1900
https://www.newspapers.com/image/201767187/

See also:

Debs Internet Archive
https://www.marxists.org/archive/debs/
“The War for Freedom” by EVD
-written Dec 11, 1901, at Terre Haute IN
https://www.marxists.org/archive/debs/works/1901/19011211-debs-thewarforfreedom.pdf

Coal Creek TN Mine War of 1891-1892
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_Creek_War

Coeur d’Alene ID Mine War of 1899
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1899_Coeur_d%27Alene_labor_confrontation

Virden IL Massacre of 1898
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Virden

Pana IL Massacre of 1899
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pana_riot

Buffalo NY Switchmen’s Strike of 1892
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffalo_switchmen%27s_strike

Pullman Strike of 1894
-began in Chicago, spread across U. S.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pullman_Strike

Homestead PA Strike of 1892
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homestead_strike

Lattimer PA Massacre of 1897
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattimer_massacre

Leadville CO Miners Strike of 1896-1897
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leadville_miners%27_strike

POEM Fragment from:
The Giaour by Lord Byron, 1813
-lines 123-125
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Giaour
http://www.google.it.ao/books?id=bEoJAAAAQAAJ

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Lattimer Massacre – Van Wagner