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456 lines
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Plaintext
7 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
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This unfinished and unrevised article was among Col.
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Ingersoll's papers and is here reproduced without change. -- It is
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a reply to the Dean of St. Paul's Contribution to the North
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American Review for Dec., 1891, entitled: "Is Corporal Punishment
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Degrading?"
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________
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IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING?
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1891
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The Dean of St. Paul protests against the kindness of parents,
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guardians and teachers toward children, wards and pupils. He
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believes in the gospel of ferule and whips, and has perfect faith
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in the efficacy of flogging in homes and schools. He longs for the
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return of the good old days when fathers were severe, and children
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affectionate and obedient.
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In America, for many years, even wife-beating has been
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somewhat unpopular, and the flogging of children has been
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considered cruel and unmanly. Wives with bruised and swollen faces,
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and children with lacerated backs, have excited pity for themselves
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rather than admiration for savage husbands and brutal fathers. It
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is also true that the church has far less power here than in
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England, and it may be that those who wander from the orthodox fold
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grow mindful and respect the rights even of the weakest.
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But whatever the cause may be, the fact is that we, citizens
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of the Republic, feel that certain domestic brutalities are the
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children of monarchies and despotisms, that they were produced by
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superstition, ignorance, and savagery; and that they are not in
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accord with the free and superb spirit that founded and preserves
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the Great Republic.
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Of late years, confidence in the power of kindness has greatly
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increased, and there is a wide-spread suspicion that cruelty and
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violence are not the instrumentalities of civilization.
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Physicians no longer regard corporal punishment as a sure cure
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even for insanity -- and it is generally admitted that the lash
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irritates rather than soothes the victim of melancholia.
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Civilized men now insist that criminals cannot always be
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reformed even by the most ingenious instruments of torture. It is
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known that some convicts repay the smallest acts of kindness with
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the sincerest gratitude. Some of the best people go so far as to
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING?
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say that kindness is the sunshine in which the virtues grow. We
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know that for many ages governments tried to make men virtuous with
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dungeon and fagot and scaffold; that they tried to cure even
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disease of the mind with brandings and maimings and lashes on the
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naked flesh of men and women -- and that kings endeavored to sow
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the seeds of patriotism -- to plant and nurture them in the hearts
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of their subjects -- with whip and chain.
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In England, only a few years ago, there were hundreds of brave
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soldiers and daring sailors whose breasts were covered with
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honorable scars -- witnesses of wounds received at Trafalgar and
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Balaklava -- while on the backs of these same soldiers and sailors
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were the marks of English whips. These shameless cruelties were
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committed in the name of discipline, and were upheld by officers,
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statesmen and clergymen. The same is true of nearly all civilized
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nations. These crimes have been excused for the reason that our
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ancestors were, at that time, in fact, barbarians -- that they had
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no idea of justice, no comprehension of liberty, no conception of
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the rights of men, women and children.
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At that time the church was, in most countries, equal to, or
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superior to, the state, and was a firm believer in the civilizing
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influences of cruelty and torture.
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According to the creeds of that day, God intended to torture
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the wicked forever, and the church, according to its power, did all
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that it could in the same direction. Learning their rights and
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duties from priests, fathers not only beat their children, but
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their wives. In those days most homes were penitentiaries, in which
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wives and children were the convicts and of which husbands and
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fathers were the wardens and turnkeys. The king imitated his
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supposed God, and imprisoned, flogged, branded, beheaded and burned
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his enemies, and the husbands and fathers imitated the king, and
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guardians and teachers imitated them.
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Yet in spite of all the beatings and burnings, the whippings
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and hangings, the world was not reformed. Crimes increased, the
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cheeks of wives were furrowed with tears, the faces of children
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white with fear -- fear of their own fathers; pity was almost
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driven from the heart of man and found refuge, for the most part,
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in the breasts of women, children, and dogs.
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In those days, misfortunes were punished as crimes. Honest
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debtors were locked in loathsome dungeons, and trivial offenses
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were punished with death. Worse than all that, thousands of men and
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women were destroyed, not because they were vicious, but because
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they were virtuous, honest and noble. Extremes beget obstructions.
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The victims at last became too numerous, and the result did not
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seem to justify the means. The good, the few, protested against the
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savagery of kings and fathers.
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Nothing seems clearer to me than that the world has been
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gradually growing better for many years. Men have a clearer
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conception of rights and obligations -- a higher philosophy -- a
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far nobler ideal. Even kings admit that they should have some
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regard for the well-being of their subjects. Nations and
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individuals are slowly outgrowing the savagery of revenge, the
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING?
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desire to kill, and it is generally admitted that criminals should
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neither be imprisoned nor tortured for the gratification of the
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public, At last we are beginning to know that revenge is a mistake
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-- that cruelty not only hardens the victim, but makes a criminal
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of him who inflicts it, and that mercy guided by intelligence is
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the highest form of justice.
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The tendency of the world is toward kindness. The religious
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creeds are being changed or questioned, because they shock the
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heart of the present. All civilized churches, all humane
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Christians, have given up the dogma of eternal pain. This infamous
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doctrine has for many centuries polluted the imagination and
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hardened the heart. This coiled viper no longer inhabits the breast
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of a civilized man.
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In all civilized countries slavery has been abolished, the
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honest debtor released, and all are allowed the liberty of speech.
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Long ago flogging was abolished in our army and navy and all
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cruel and unusual punishments prohibited by law. In many parts of
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the Republic the whip has been banished from the public schools,
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the flogger of children is held in abhorrence, and the wife-beater
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is regarded as a cowardly criminal. The gospel of kindness is not
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only preached, but practiced. Such has been the result of this
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advance of civilization -- of this growth of kindness -- of this
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bursting into blossom of the flower called pity, in the heart --
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that we treat our horses (thanks to Henry Bergh) better than our
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ancestors did their slaves, their servants or their tenants. The
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gentlemen of to-day show more affection for their dogs than most of
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the kings of England exhibited toward their wives. The great tide
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is toward mercy; the savage creeds are being changed; heartless
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laws have been repealed; shackles have been broken; torture
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abolished, and the keepers of prisons are no longer allowed to
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bruise and scar the flesh of convicts. The insane are treated with
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kindness -- asylums are in the midst of beautiful grounds, the
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rooms are filled with flowers, and the wandering mind is called
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back by the golden voice of music.
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In the midst of these tendencies -- of these accomplishments
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-- in the general harmony between the minds of men, acting
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together, to the end that the world may be governed by kindness
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through education and the blessed agencies of reformation and
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prevention, the Dean of St. Paul raises his voice in favor of the
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methods and brutalities of the past.
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The reverend gentleman takes the ground that the effect of
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flogging on the flogged is not degrading; that the effect of
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corporal punishment is ennobling; that it tends to make boys manly
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by ennobling and teaching them to bear bodily pain with fortitude.
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To be flogged develops character, self-reliance, courage, contempt
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of pain and the highest heroism. The Dean therefore takes the
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ground that parents should flog their children, guardians their
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wards, and teachers their pupils.
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If the Dean is wrong he goes too far, and if he is right he
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does not go far enough. He does not advocate the flogging of
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children who obey their parents, or of pupils who violate no rule.
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It follows then that such children are in great danger of growing
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING?
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up unmanly, without the courage and fortitude to bear bodily pain.
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If flogging is really a blessing it should not be withheld from the
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good and lavished on the unworthy. The Dean should have the courage
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of his convictions. The teacher should not make a pretext of the
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misconduct of the pupil to do him a great service. He should not be
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guilty of calling a benefit a punishment He should not deceive the
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children under his care and develop their better natures under
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false pretenses. But what is to become of the boys and girls who
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"behave themselves," who attend to their studies, and comply with
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the rules? They lose the benefits conferred on those who defy their
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parents and teachers, reach maturity without character, and so
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remain withered and worthless.
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The Dean not only defends his position by an appeal to the
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Bible, the history of nations, but to his personal experience. In
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order to show the good effects of brutality and the bad
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consequences of kindness, he gives two instances that came under
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his observation. The first is that of an intelligent father who
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treated his sons with great kindness and yet these sons neglected
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their affectionate father in his old age. The second instance is
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that of a mother who beat her daughter. The wretched child, it
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seems, was sent out to gather sticks from the hedges, and when she
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brought home a large stick, the mother suspected that she had
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obtained it wrongfully and thereupon proceeded to beat the child.
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And yet the Dean tells us that this abused daughter treated the
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hyena mother with the greatest kindness, and loved her as no other
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daughter ever loved a mother. In order to make this case strong and
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convincing the Dean states that this mother was a most excellent
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Christian.
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From these two instances the Dean infers, and by these two
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instances proves, that kindness breeds bad sons, and that flogging
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makes affectionate daughters. The Dean says to the Christian
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mother: "If you wish to be loved by your daughter, you must beat
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her." And to the Christian father he says: "If you want to be
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neglected in your old age by your sons, you will treat them with
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kindness." The Dean does not follow his logic to the end. Let me
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give him two instances that support his theory.
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A good man married a handsome woman. He was old, rich, kind
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and indulgent. He allowed his wife to have her own way. He never
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uttered a cross or cruel word. He never thought of beating her. And
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yet, as the Dean would say, in consequence of his kindness, she
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poisoned him, got his money and married another man.
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In this city, not long ago, a man, a foreigner, beat his wife
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according to his habit. On this particular occasion the punishment
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was excessive. He beat her until she became unconscious; she was
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taken to a hospital and the physician said that she could not live.
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The husband was brought to the hospital and preparations were made
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to take her dying statement. After being told that she was dying,
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she was asked if her husband had beaten her. Her face was so
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bruised and swollen that the lids of her eyes had to be lifted in
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order that she might see the wretch who had killed her. She
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beckoned him to her side -- threw her arms about his neck -- drew
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his face to hers -- kissed him, and said: "He is not the man. He
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did not do it" -- then -- died.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING?
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According to the philosophy of the Dean, these instances show
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that kindness causes crime, and that wife-beating cultivates in the
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highest degree the affectionate nature of woman.
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The Dean, if consistent, is a believer in slavery, because the
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lash judiciously applied brings out the finer feelings of the
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heart. Slaves have been known to die for their masters, while under
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similar circumstances hired men have sought safety in flight.
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We all know of many instances where the abused, the maligned,
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and the tortured have returned good for evil -- and many instances
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where the loved, the honored, and the trusted have turned against
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their benefactors, and yet we know that cruelty and torture are not
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superior to love and kindness. Yet, the Dean tries to show that
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severity is the real mother of affection, and that kindness breeds
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monsters. If kindness and affection on the part of parents
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demoralize children, will not kindness and affection on the part of
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children demoralize the parents?
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When the children are young and weak, the parents who are
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strong beat the children in order that they may be affectionate.
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Now, when the children get strong and the parents are old and weak,
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ought not the children to beat them, so that they too may become
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kind and loving?
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If you want an affectionate son, beat him. If you desire a
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loving wife, beat her.
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This is really the advice of the Dean of St. Paul. To me it is
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one of the most pathetic facts in nature that wives and children
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love husbands and fathers who are utterly unworthy. It is enough to
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sadden a life to think of the affection that has been lavished upon
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the brutal, of the countless pearls that Love has thrown to swine.
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The Dean, quoting from Hooker, insists that "the voice of man
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is as the sentence of God himself," -- in other words, that the
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general voice, practice and opinion of the human race are true.
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And yet, cannibalism, slavery, polygamy, the worship of snakes
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and stones, the sacrifice of babes, have during vast periods of
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time been practiced and upheld by an overwhelming majority of
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mankind. Whether the "general voice" can be depended on depends
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much on the time, the epoch, during which the "general voice" was
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uttered. There was a time when the "general voice" was in accord
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with the appetite of man; when all nations were cannibals and lived
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on each other, and yet it can hardly be said that this voice and
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appetite were in exact accord with divine goodness. It is hardly
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safe to depend on the "general voice" of savages, no matter how
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numerous they may have been. Like most people who defend the cruel
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and absurd, the Dean appeals to the Bible as the supreme authority
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in the moral world, -- and yet if the English Parliament should re-
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enact the Mosaic Code every member voting in the affirmative would
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be subjected to personal violence, and an effort to enforce that
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code would produce a revolution that could end only in the
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destruction of the government.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING?
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The morality of the Old Testament is not always of the purest;
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when Jehovah tried to induce Pharaoh to let the Hebrews go, he
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never took the ground that slavery was wrong. He did not seek to
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convince by argument, to soften by pity, or to persuade by
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kindness. He depended on miracles and plagues. He killed helpless
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babes and the innocent beasts of the fields. No wonder the Dean
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appeals to the Bible to justify the beating of children. So, too,
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we are told that "all sensible persons, Christian and otherwise,
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will admit that there are in every child born into the world
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tendencies to evil that need rooting out."
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The Dean undoubtedly believes in the creed of the established
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church, and yet he does not hesitate to say that a God of infinite
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goodness and intelligence never created a child -- never allowed
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one to be born into the world without planting in its little heart
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"tendencies to evil that need rooting out."
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So, Solomon is quoted to the effect "that he that spareth his
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rod hateth his son." To me it has always been a matter of amazement
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why civilized people, living in the century of Darwin and Humboldt,
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should quote as authority the words of Solomon, a murderer, an
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ingrate, an idolater, and a polygamist -- a man so steeped and
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sodden in ignorance that he really believed he could be happy with
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seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines. The Dean seems to
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regret that flogging is no longer practiced in the British navy,
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and quotes with great cheerfulness a passage from Deuteronomy to
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prove that forty lashes on the naked back will meet with the
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approval of God. He insists that St. Paul endured corporal
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punishment without the feeling of degradation not only, but that he
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remembered his sufferings with a sense of satisfaction. Does the
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Dean think that the satisfaction of St. Paul justified the wretches
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who beat and stoned him? Leaving the Hebrews, the Dean calls the
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Greeks as witnesses to establish the beneficence of flogging. They
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resorted to corporal punishment in their schools, says the Dean and
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then naively remarks "that Plutarch was opposed to this."
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The Dean admits that in Rome it was found necessary to limit
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by law the punishment that a father might inflict upon his
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children, and yet he seems to regret that the legislature
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interfered. The Dean observes that "Quintillian severely censured
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corporal punishment "and then accounts for the weakness and folly
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of the censure, by saying that "Quintillian wrote in the days when
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the glories of Rome were departed." And then adds these curiously
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savage words: "It is worthy of remark that no children treated
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their parents with greater tenderness and reverence than did those
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of Rome in the days when the father possessed the unlimited power
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of punishment."
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Not quite satisfied with the strength of his case although
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sustained by Moses and Solomon, St. Paul and several schoolmasters,
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he proceeds to show that God is thoroughly on his side, not only in
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theory, but in practice; "whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and
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scourgeth every son whom he receiveth."
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The Dean asks this question: "Which custom, kindness or
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severity, does experience show to be the less dangerous?" And he
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answers from a new heart: "I fear that I must unhesitatingly give
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the palm to severity. * *
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|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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6
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IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING?
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"I have found that there have been more reverence and
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affection, more willingness to make sacrifices for parents, more
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pleasure in contributing to their pleasure or happiness in that
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life where the tendency has been to a severe method of treatment."
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Is it possible that any good man exists who is willing to gain
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the affection of his children in that way? How could such a man
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beat and bruise the flesh of his babes, knowing that they would
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give him in return obedience and love; that they would fill the
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evening of his days -- the leafless winter of his life -- with
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perfect peace?
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Think of being fed and clothed by children you had whipped --
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whose flesh you had scarred! Think of feeling in the hour of death
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upon your withered lips, your withered cheeks, the kisses and the
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tears of one whom you had beaten -- upon whose flesh were still the
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marks of your lash!
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The whip degrades; a severe father teaches his children to
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dissemble; their love is pretence, and their obedience a species of
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self-defence. Fear is the father of lies.
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**** ****
|
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||
|
||
|
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|
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|
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|
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|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
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scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
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Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
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nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
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religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
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the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
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The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
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The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
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**** ****
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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7
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