‘Across this country, it was a time in which we had lost our minds’

Kudos to [tag]Montana[/tag] Gov. [tag]Brian Schweitzer[/tag] (D) for these [tag]pardons[/tag], but it’s tragic that they were necessary.

Before a packed crowd in the state Capitol, Gov. Brian Schweitzer signed pardons on Wednesday to clear the names posthumously of 78 Montanans convicted of [tag]sedition[/tag] during World War One.

The 78 people — all but one were men — were arrested and convicted of violating a restrictive state Sedition Act for criticizing the U.S. role in World War One or for refusing to buy war bonds. Some of the people, many of whom were immigrants, expressed support for Germany in the war.

Critics, including Democrat Schweitzer, said those laws trampled the Bill of Rights to the U.S. Constitution.

“Across this country, it was a time in which we had lost our minds,” the governor said. “So today in Montana, we will attempt to make it right. In Montana, we will say to an entire generation of people, we are sorry. And we challenge the rest of the country to do the same.”

Montana took the “lead” in 1918, passing a Sedition Act and creating a Montana Council of Defense, which banned the use of the German language, even in churches, and barred a number of books about Germany. “Third-degree committees” were formed to identify those who did not buy war bonds. The efforts helped inspire the Federal Sedition Act of 1918.

As the NYT noted, there was one instance in which a traveling wine and brandy salesman was sentenced to 7 to 20 years in prison for calling wartime food regulations a “big joke.” For that matter, 12 children were put up for adoption when their family farm failed due to the imprisonment of their father.

Clemens P. Work, director of graduate studies at the University of Montana School of Journalism, spurred the state into action with a book chronicling the sedition era and highlighting the affected families. Work said he sees some parallels between 1918 and 2001.

Mr. Work, who was conducting research for the book when the Sept. 11 attacks occurred, said he had found the similarities between 2001 and 1918 to be eerie.

“The hair on the back of my neck stood up,” Mr. Work said. “The rhetoric was so similar, from the demonization of the enemy to saying ‘either you’re with us or against us’ to the hasty passage of laws.”

Obviously, no Americans face state-sanctioned punishment for criticizing the government, but I often wonder if, decades from now, people will look at the Bush era as “a time in which we had lost our minds.”

I can think of no more appropriate response, then or now, than reading/reciting e.e. cummings’ I Sing of Olaf

  • the Bush era as “a time in which we had lost our minds.”

    The Patriot Crusade for Freedom terrorist witch hunt is up there with the Salem witch hunt and the McCarthy anti-American witch hunt as looney tunes moments in American history.
    Fear and blind faith are a bad mix.

  • The Bush era is not over yet, so one may still see that type of thing happening, especially if we are taken over the edge of the cliff and into a war with Iran.

  • “Obviously, no Americans face state-sanctioned punishment for criticizing the government”

    Give it time, CBR. It starts with the War on Leaks, which is becoming the War on Reporters, and which will morph into a War on Dissent, which has already been deemed treasonous.

  • “Obviously, no Americans face state-sanctioned punishment for criticizing the government”

    I guess it depends on how you look at it. The Denver 3 might disagree with you. Granted, their punishment did not include prison, but weren’t they “punished” by being thrown out of a “public” general assembly?

    It’s a slippery slope and this admin is still sliding so I wouldn’t be surprised to see jail terms yet for critics of this government.

  • We’re getting there, and this time it’s over a
    phony “war on terror,” which will be an all
    time historical first. At least the trangressions
    against civil liberties and the Constitution
    during the Civil War, World War I, and World
    War II were hysterical reactions to true
    apocalyptic events. This time, the event
    is a fiction, devised for the very purpose
    of gaining permanent control of the government
    by intimidating its citizens.

    An all time low, in every way, this presidency.
    The mind reels in its futile attempt to grasp the
    significance of all the evil that Bush has
    done and continues to do.

  • When I look at all the heat that’s being foisted upon Mr. Colbert,due to nothing more than speaking out against the ineptitude of this current government and its porpogandizing minions who dare to label themselves as journalists, it may well be that we, as a nation, are already in the preliminary stages of a new series of “Sedition Acts.”

    Groups of people who dare to call this administration to account for its bombastic drivel; its overt criminality; its blatant disregard for the sanctity of humane-ness and common sense, are relegated to “straw-man” status. When individuals of measurable renown speak out, they are immediately ridiculed and humiliated through the media, rather than countered in their queries by those who have been asked to explain.

    The only difference between George W. Bush and George Rex III…is that this current example of a governing tyrant is on the same side of the Atlantic as the rest of us….

  • “Obviously, no Americans face state-sanctioned punishment for criticizing the government…”

    Actually that has already happened on a small scale to everyday Americans. People have been arrested for wearing anti-Bush tee shirts and escorted from public campaign events (even when they have an invitation!) by “authorities” who fear they haven’t drunk the Kool Aid. Let’s count too the rendition victims and the disappeared that the Decider has decided are terrorists who need to be stopped BEFORE they do something wrong.

  • Remember, we are doing SO BADLY in our war against terror that we can’t even critize the Bushites for doing badly in the war against terror because that would mean the terrorists would win our war against terror.

    Remember that, and spit it into the face of the next jerk who wants to make you shut up.

  • SEDITIONIST LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL

    Governor Brian Schweitzer
    c/o Sarah Elliott (selliott@mt.gov)
    State of Montana

    Dear Governor Schweitzer:

    By consensus the committed participants in the global network of the Seditionist League International, devoted to the exposure of the inherent depravity of government, have requested that I, as convenor of the League, write to you to express the League’s commendation of your decision to grant posthumous pardons to those prosecuted, convicted, fined and imprisoned under the Montana Sedition Act of 1918.

    Unfortunately, it will not be possible for me or other members of the League to join you at the pardon ceremony this afternoon. However, please express to members of the families of those persecuted under the Sedition Act our fraternal greetings and our satisfaction with this long-delayed and exceedingly rare act of justice.

    You will not, I am sure, be surprised to learn that you are the first government official to be recognized by the League in this manner. Thus, you will not, I hope, object that we include you within the scope of our fraternal greeting.

    Sincerely,

    Stefano P. Trebbi, Ph.D.
    Convenor, Seditionist League International
    1-706-294-9993

  • Just for the record, while the Pinstriped Pimps in Versailles-on-the-Potomac are screaming for Colbert’s head, an AOL poll yesterday (and AOL skews “conservative”) showed that 62% thought Colbert was funny, and 67% thought his actions were appropriate. Five jokes (and not the funniest) were voted on, and all were listed as a “hit”, with the percentages running from 78-87%. The top-scoring line was “I believe that government is best that governs least and by that standard, we are successful in Iraq.”

    So, surprisesurprise, the Republicans and the offended Ken and Barbie dolls of the White House Typists Corps are “out of touch” with Mainstream America.

    As to the point here about WW1 and dissent, it wasn’t just in Montana.

    In 1918, in the town of La Jara, Colorado, in the San Luis Valley in the southeastern corner, the barn of one Harry Wiest was burned down by his neighbors, for the crime of his last name being “Wiest.” This was particularly ironic since Mr. Wiest’s great-great-grandfather, Peter Wiest, had come to this country in 1849 with a Prussian price on his head for the crime of having been a member of the Congress of Frankfurt in the anti-Prussian Revolution of 1848, and Mr. Wiest’s grandfather was a decorated veteran of the Civil War. Mr. Wiest was not a newcomer to the valley, having first homesteaded his farm there in 1907, and having been considered a leader of the community in the following ten years.

    How do I know that? Harry Wiest was my grandfather.

    It constantly amazes me that Democrats go out of their way to claim Woodrow Wilson as a member of their pantheon for his international idealism. The truth about this narrow-minded Southern bigot is the exact opposite. As President, he was personally responsible for insuring that theFederal Government operated across the country in accordance with the Southern Apartheid laws that founded official segregation. As President, he was personally responsible for ordering his Attorney General – A. Mitchell Palmer – to go after all dissenters to his war (which we didn’t enter for the German crime of sinking our ships, but rather to insure that J.P. Morgan and the rest of the Wall Street plutocrats got their loans repaid by Britain and France) and prosecute them for treason.

    40 years ago, I had the privilege of meeting and becoming a friend of Ammon Hennacy, who was prosecuted under the Federal Sedition Act for opposing the draft as a leader of the Socialist Party, and sentenced to 20 years, of which he spent five in solitary confinment in Atlanta Prison before being released. He was later a co-founder with Dorothy Day of the Catholic Worker. He was fascinating to listen to as he talked of his old friend Gene Debs and the others. I think he was probably the closest thing to a for-real Saint I ever met, though neither Pope Ratsy or any of his predecessors would agree, since Ammon was as subversive of their authority as he had been of Woodrow Wilson’s.

    Wilson is a pig who should be formally thrown out of the pantheon, and the truth of his misrule should be publicized. Not only that, but his pigheadedness was personally responsible for none of his proposals being adopted after the war. None of the Europeans could stand being in the same room with him, and not for his proposals, but for the personal moreal stench that came from him.

  • That would be infinitely preferable to someday looking back on the Bush era and thinking about how good we had it back then….

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