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Hellraisers Journal – Wednesday June 21, 1922
Ricardo Flores Magón Denied Clemency, Remains at Leavenworth
Editorial from the Oklahoma Leader of June 15, 1922:
TO OUR EVERLASTING SHAME
———-The breadth and depth of the ever-widening and deepening gulf which separates this government from the lofty ideals which glorified the minds of the lovers of human liberty who founded it, was never so clearly illustrated than by the recent refusal of the so-called department of justice to extended clemency to Ricardo Flores Magon.
Magon, Mexican patriot, poet and idealist, fled from Mexico when the tyrant and usurper Porfirio Diaz, always popular in this country, sought to take his life because he raised his voice and pen in behalf of his oppressed countrymen. Across the Rio Grande, safe, as he thought, from the power of his persecutor, and in a country which in times past had offered asylum to those who were exiled by liberty hating tyrants, Magon sought to arouse his countrymen to rebel and repudiate the government which was traducing the spirit of liberty and trampling the Mexican constitution in the mire.
Because of his activity in this respect, and at the instance of the secret service agents of Diaz, Magon was arrested and indicted in federal courts for inciting revolution against a friendly nation, and was convicted and given a long sentence twenty years in Leavenworth. Meantime the little flame he had fearlessly kindled burst into a refining conflagration Diaz, the bloody tyrant and usurper, abdicated his throne and escaped to a foreign land, never daring to return to the country he had impoverished and betrayed.
But notwithstanding the goal for which Magon yielded his liberty was won, the usurper removed and his regime destroyed, a servant of the people placed in office, order restored and constitutional government instituted Ricardo Flores Magon is still a poor and miserable prisoner in a stone cell in a penitentiary, the property of the United States, a nation conceived in justice and born in the name of Liberty. More than that, Magon is going blind and unless he is shortly released will never see the result of his humble labor, so fearlessly performed, to achieve his country’s redemption.
The Mexican ambassador, the legislatures of the states of Yucatan and Coahuila de Zeragoza and the Mexican Federation of Labor have memorialized the alleged department of justice at Washington for clemency for Magon, and for his fellow prisoner, Libraro Rivera, all to no avail. The capitalist government at Washington is taking sweet revenge upon the man, who was most responsible for the exile of Diaz, the dear friend of the capitalists of this country.
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[Photograph and emphasis added.]
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SOURCES
Quote Freedom Ricardo Flores Magon, ed, Speech re Prisoners of Texas, May 31, 1914
https://isreview.org/issue/101/intervention-and-prisoners-texas
Oklahoma Leader
(Oklahoma City, Oklahoma)
(Editors: Oscar Ameringer and Dan Hogan)
-June 15, 1922
https://www.newspapers.com/image/657264451/
IMAGE
Ricardo Flores Magon #14596 at Leavenworth Pen, Nov 3, 1919
http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/bright/magon/images/ricardomug2.jpg
https://projects.ncsu.edu/project/acontracorriente/fall_05/Wood.pdf
(page 14/29, see for date of arrival at Leavenworth and sources for same)
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/117689452
(sadly, file not available online)
See also:
American Political Prisoners
Prosecutions Under the Espionage and Sedition Acts
-by Stephen Martin Kohn
Greenwood Publishing Group, 1994
(search: magon)
https://books.google.com/books?id=-_xHbn9dtaAC
Ricardo Flores Magón
el apóstol de la revolución social mexicana
-by Diego Abad de Santillán
Grupo cultural “Ricardo Flores Magón,”, 1925
https://books.google.com/books?id=BAKElGQu-wYC
Magón To Harry Weinberger, May 9, 1921
https://www.marxists.org/subject/anarchism/ricardo-flores-magon/1921/magon-to-harry-weinberger.html
Tag: Ricardo Flores Magón
https://weneverforget.org/tag/ricardo-flores-magon/
Oscar Ameringer (August 4, 1870 – November 5, 1943)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Ameringer
Dan Hogan (1871–1935)
https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/dan-hogan-6885/
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The Ballad of Ricardo Flores Magon