Remem­ber, remem­ber, the 5th of November,
Gun­powder, treason and plot.
I see no reason why gun­powder treason
Should ever be forgot.”

Read­ing Emma Gold­man quotes with Jack the other night. Real­ised she’d be locked up quicks­mart if she were around today, there’d be rendi­tion and we’d never hear of her again. [1]

I’m enough of a paci­fist that I argue against assas­sin­a­tion as well as against war, but I still have an odd sense of respect for some of the advoc­ates of viol­ent res­ist­ance through­out his­tory, espe­cially when it has seemed there was no other option, simply because they stood up for what they believed in [2].

It’s a very, very com­plic­ated one. And it always comes down to dis­cuss­ing what would have happened if Hitler were assas­sin­ated… a point made in the very inter­est­ing art­icle in the Good Week­end about World War I. 

Anyway, I’m just ram­bling now, so I’ll wait for the anonym­ous flamage to begin. 

[1] She was locked up then too, and then depor­ted, but it wasn’t illegal for people to know where she was or to pub­lish that. Now, it is, if someone is sub­ject to a con­trol order.
[2] And no, I am NOT talk­ing about ran­domly blow­ing up inno­cent bystand­ers as per cur­rent cell-based and State-based ter­ror­ist prac­tice. I’m talk­ing about Guy Fawkes and the Black Hand killing Alex­an­der III and vari­ous other folks. Of course, someone killed Kennedy too, and there’s the rub: who gets to decide who’s good and who’s bad? It’s way too uni­lat­eral and there­fore does­n’t fit within a col­lect­ive decision making pro­cess that I’d prefer. And having a col­lect­ive decision made about assas­sin­a­tion starts to sound like cap­ital pun­ish­ment, which I’m opposed to on the basis that I don’t think the State should have the right to decide who lives and dies. So… no to death by assas­sin­a­tion. Just to be REALLY clear.