Eugene V. Debs - United States

Eugene V. Debs
and the Idea of Socialism
by Howard Zinn
The Progressive magazine, January
1999
We are always in need of radicals who
are also lovable, and so we would do well to remember Eugene Victor
Debs. Ninety years ago, at the time The Progressive was born,
Debs was nationally famous as leader of the Socialist Party, and
the poet James Whitcomb Riley wrote of him:
"As warm a heart as ever beat
Betwixt here and the Judgment Seat."
Debs was what every socialist or anarchist
or radical should be: fierce in his convictions, kind and compassionate
in his personal relations. Sam Moore, a fellow inmate of the Atlanta
penitentiary, where Debs was imprisoned for opposing the First
World War, remembered how he felt as Debs was about to be released
on Christmas Day, 1921: "As miserable as I was, I would defy
fate with all its cruelty as long as Debs held my hand, and I
was the most miserably happiest man on Earth when I knew he was
going home Christmas."
Debs had won the hearts of his fellow
prisoners in Atlanta. He had fought for them in a hundred ways
and refused any special privileges for himself. On the day of
his release, the warden ignored prison regulations and opened
every cell-block to allow more than 2,000 inmates to gather in
front of the main jail building to say good-bye to Eugene Debs.
As he started down the walkway from the prison, a roar went up
and he turned, tears streaming down his face, and stretched out
his arms to the other prisoners.
This was not his first prison experience.
In 1894, not yet a socialist but an organizer for the American
Railway Union, he had led a nationwide boycott of the railroads
in support of the striking workers at the Pullman Palace Car Company.
They tied up the railroad system, burned hundreds of railway cars,
and were met with the full force of the capitalist state: Attorney
General Richard Olney, a former railroad lawyer, got a court injunction
to prohibit blocking trains. President Cleveland called out the
army, which used bayonets and rifle fire on a crowd of 5,000 strike
sympathizers in Chicago. Seven hundred were arrested. Thirteen
were shot to death.
Debs was jailed for violating an injunction
prohibiting him from doing or saying anything to carry on the
strike. In court, he denied he was a socialist, but during his
six months in prison he read socialist literature, and the events
of the strike took on a deeper meaning. He wrote later: "I
was to be baptized in socialism in the roar of conflict.... In
the gleam of every bayonet and the flash of every rifle the class
struggle was revealed."
From then on, Debs devoted his life to
the cause of working people and the dream of a socialist society.
He stood on the platform with Mother Jones and Big Bill Haywood
in 1905 at the founding convention of the Industrial Workers of
the World. He was a magnificent speaker, his long body leaning
forward from the podium, his arm raised dramatically. Thousands
came to hear him talk all over the country.
With the outbreak of war in Europe in
1914 and the build-up of war fever against Germany, some socialists
succumbed to the talk of "preparedness," but Debs was
adamantly opposed. When President Wilson and Congress brought
the nation into the war in 1917, speech was no longer free. The
Espionage Act made it a crime to say anything that would discourage
enlistment in the armed forces.
Soon, close to 1,000 people were in prison
for protesting the war. The producer of a movie called The Spirit
of '76, about the American revolution, was sentenced to ten years
in prison for promoting anti-British feeling at a time when England
and the United States were allies. The case was officially labeled
The US. v. The Spirit of '76.
Debs made a speech in Canton, Ohio, in
support of the men and women in jail for opposing the war. He
told his listeners: "Wars throughout history have been waged
for conquest and plunder.... And that is war, in a nutshell. The
master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has
always fought the battles." He was found guilty and sentenced
to ten years in prison by a judge who denounced those "who
would strike the sword from the hand of this nation while she
is engaged in defending herself against a foreign and brutal power."
In court, Debs refused to call any witnesses,
declaring: "I have been accused of obstructing the war. I
admit it. I abhor war. I would oppose war if I stood alone."
Before sentencing, Debs spoke to judge and jury, uttering perhaps
his most famous words. I was in his hometown of Terre Haute, Indiana,
recently, among 200 people gathered to honor his memory, and we
began the evening by reciting those words-words that moved me
deeply when I first read them and move me deeply still: "While
there is a lower class, I am in it. While there is a criminal
element, I am of it. While there is a soul in prison, I am not
free."
The "liberal" Oliver Wendell
Holmes, speaking for a unanimous Supreme Court, upheld the verdict,
on the ground that Debs's speech was intended to obstruct military
recruiting. When the war was over, the "liberal" Woodrow
Wilson turned down his Attorney General's recommendation that
Debs be released, even though he was sixty-five and in poor health.
Debs was in prison for thirty-two months. Finally, in 1921, the
Republican Warren Harding ordered him freed on Christmas Day.
Today, when capitalism, "the free
market," and "private enterprise" are being hailed
as triumphant in the world, it is a good time to remember Debs
and to rekindle the idea of socialism.
To see the disintegration of the Soviet
Union as a sign of the failure of socialism is to mistake the
monstrous tyranny created by Stalin for the vision of an egalitarian
and democratic society that has inspired enormous numbers of people
all over the world. Indeed, the removal of the Soviet Union as
the false surrogate for the idea of socialism creates a great
opportunity. We can now reintroduce genuine socialism to a world
feeling the sickness of capitalism- its nationalist hatreds, its
perpetual warfare, riches for a small number of people in a small
number of countries, and hunger, homelessness, insecurity for
everyone else.
Here in the United States we should recall
that enthusiasm for socialism-production for use instead of profit,
economic and social equality, solidarity with our brothers and
sisters all over the world- was at its height before the Soviet
Union came into being.
In the era of Debs, the first seventeen
years of the twentieth century-until war created an opportunity
to crush the movement-millions of Americans declared their adherence
to the principles of socialism. Those were years of bitter labor
struggles, the great walkouts of women garment workers in New
York, the victorious multiethnic strike of textile workers in
Lawrence, Massachusetts, the unbelievable courage of coal miners
in Colorado, defying the power and wealth of the Rockefellers.
The I.W.W. was born-revolutionary, militant, demanding "one
big union" for everyone, skilled and unskilled, black and
white, men and women, native-born and foreign-born.
More than a million people read Appeal
to Reason and other socialist newspapers. In proportion to population,
it would be as if today more than three million Americans read
a socialist press. The party had 100,000 members, and 1,200 office-holders
in 340 municipalities. Socialism was especially strong in the
Southwest, among tenant farmers, railroad workers, coal miners,
lumberjacks. Oklahoma had 12,000 dues-paying members in 1914 and
more than 100 socialists in local offices. It was the home of
the fiery Kate Richards O'Hare. Jailed for opposing the war, she
once hurled a book through a skylight to bring fresh air into
the foul-smelling jail block, bringing cheers from her fellow
inmates.
The point of recalling all this is to
remind us of the powerful appeal of the socialist idea to people
alienated from the political system and aware of the growing stark
disparities in income and wealth-as so many Americans are today.
The word itself-"socialism"-may still carry the distortions
of recent experience in bad places usurping the name. But anyone
who goes around the country, or reads carefully the public opinion
surveys over the past decade, can see that huge numbers of Americans
agree on what should be the fundamental elements of a decent society:
guaranteed food, housing, medical care for everyone; bread and
butter as better guarantees of "national security" than
guns and bombs; democratic control of corporate power; equal rights
for all races, genders, and sexual orientations; a recognition
of the rights of immigrants as the unrecognized counterparts of
our parents and grandparents; the rejection of war and violence
as solutions for tyranny and injustice.
There are people fearful of the word,
all along the political spectrum. What is important, I think,
is not the word, but a determination to hold up before a troubled
public those ideas that are both bold and inviting-the more bold,
the more inviting. That's what remembering Debs and the socialist
idea can do for use.
Heroes
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