1895: back then it was called chivalry, today it is called feminism: the assumption that a woman has a right to kill if she claims afterwards, even without a shred of evidence that she was “abused” (a term that includes, according to professional domestic violence operatives, virtually anything and slight that upsets a woman, including a boyfriend (or non-boyfriend she regards as a boyfriend) who does not return phone messages regularly enough).
In
2013, we have, in Canada, the spectre of law professor Elizabeth Sheehy calling
for the legalizing of pre-meditated homicide (provided that the killer provide
to the government a standard allegation of “abuse” of some type, or even a statement
she felt “afraid” for some reason or other – no need to prove or justify or
support with evidence of any kind).
It
becomes clear then that the “boring” old stuff that goes by the name of
“history” is increasingly pertinent value for those seeking to understand and
resist the authoritarian irrational cult called gender ideology.
Here
is an account from the mid-1890s showing how, despite the typical chivalric
inclinations of the average man (chivalry being a particularly strong ethos in
the South of the US South), a group of men organized themselves for the purpose
of formally demanding respect for the rights of males, despite the ages-old
tradition of female privilege that pervaded their nation.
FULL
TEXT (Article 1 of 2): Macon, Go., Aug. 8. – The voters of Twiggs County have
passed resolutions calling on the Governor not to interfere with the hanging of
Mrs. Dibble Nobles, who has been convicted of the murder of her husband."
~ THE
USUAL THING. ~
Several
weeks ago, when sentence was pronounced the women took up the idea that Mrs.
Nobles had been driven to her crime by the exactions of her husband, and they
started a petition to the Governor to commute her sentence. They wrote to
sister societies in other States, and already letters are coming in from New
York, Massachusetts, Illinois, and other States protesting against the death
sentence for a woman. So strong has the move become that the male citizens of
the county held a meeting and issued the following call for the protection of
men by the execution of the female murderess:
~
CURIOUS PROTEST. ~
"Whereas
public sentiment is such in this country and vicinity that if executive clemency
is granted under, each circumstances it would be difficult in future to prevent
lynch law for murderers,
"Therefore,
we earnestly protest against the extension in any form of executive clemency
for this murderess, polluted with the lifeblood of her husband, and do hereby declare
our perfect confidence in our chief magistrate and the belief that he will not
swerve from the performance of his sworn duty by a desire to cater to a weak
sentimentalism or transient public feeling, inspired, as be is, by a desire for
equal justice and the sacred execution of our laws."
~
THREE FORMER EXECUTIONS. ~
There
have been three women executed previously in Georgia a husband poisoner, about
100 years ago; a girl accomplice in a murder, about twenty years ago, and a
negro woman who was active in the notorious Eastman riot.
[“For The Protection of Men – Georgians Protest Against
Clemency for a Woman Man-killer. – She Must Die The Death - Curious Resolution
by Citizens of a Georgia County Looking to the Better Protection of Men From
the Vengeance of Women Who Are Murderously Inclined.” The Evening Times
(Washington, D.C.), Aug. 8, 1895, p. 2]
***
FULL TEXT (Article 2 of 2): What shall be done with the
women who murder with the knife or pistol pr poison?
In a Georgia case where a woman murdered her husband, the
governor is overwhelmed with petitions for her pardon, but it will be noted
that the people of the county where she lived have held a mass meeting to
protest against executive clemency.
In New York a strong effort will be made to save Marie
Herbert, the slayer of her seducer, from the death penalty.
Speaking of these cases in The New York Press says:
Generic man is more chivalrous than he is credited for
being. In recent years only one woman has been put to death for murder in the
state of New York. Three or four others have been sentenced to capital
punishment, since 1887, but their lives have been saved, mainly through popular
protests. “Protect the woman!” is the first sentiment heard when she becomes
involved in the meshes of law. indeed, the greater the crime, the more severe
the threatened punishment, the louder is raised the demand that she go
scathless or inadequately punished. In short, man practically has two codes –
one for rigorous punishment of male offenders, one of redress and rectification
for women who do wrong, save it be one in.
Our contemporary, The Memphis Commercial-Appeal, discusses
the question on the same line with the following illustrations:
Some of the most depraved criminals, some of the most
conscienceless homicides, have been females. The Druse woman, who was hanged in
New York a few years ago for killing her husband – chopping him to pieces with
an ax and secreting his remains – deserved her fate. The Georgia woman, Mr.
Nobles, who is now under sentence for hiring a negro to kill her aged husband,
went about her work with the coolness and premeditation of a fiend, and should
not be allowed to escape the severest punishment. These are instances fresh in
the mind, but the criminal calendar is foul with such cases of female
wickedness. In the Forum for August Major Griffiths, her majesty’s inspector of
prisons, mentions as cold-blooded and callous murderesses as Catherine Hays,
who caused her husband’s death and wished to cut off his head with a penknife
and boil it; Mrs. Mrs. Manning, who dug the grave for her victim three weeks
ahead, in front of her kitchen fire, where she roasted and ate a goose the
afternoon of the crime; Kate Webster, who dismembered the corpse of her
mistress and boiled it piecemeal; Mrs. Browning, who flogged her two
apprentices to death after starving them shamefully; Sarah Malcolm, the
charwoman, who committed a triple murder, incited thereto by the sight of her
mistress’s wealth in coin and silver plate. Mothers have murdered their
children fror the insurance money, while the typical poisoner, Anna Zwanziger,
followed poisoning for a livelihood. Any number of examples might easily be
placed in evidence where women are heartless as the “Mr. Williams” whose crimes
are written up by de Quncey. But the foregoing will suffice to substantiate the
position taken, that while but few woman are “born” criminals, as contended by
the Italian savants, Lombroso and Ferraro, some of them have been so lost to
humanity and committed crimes for which execution on the gallows or in the
electric chair could not be tortured into “outraging humanity.”
The Memphis paper holds that it is going a little too far to
exempt a woman from the penalty for a fiendish murder simply because she is a
woman. In the clear, cold light of justice and reason this conclusion seems to
be the right ones. If women wish to escape the death penalty, they should not
commit murder.
[“When Women Commit Murder.” The Atlanta Constitution (Ga.),
Aug. 9, 1895, p. 6]
[528-4/30/21]
***
This was during the time the feminists today tell us it was illegal for a man to slap his woman around in the streets. The blind chivalry on display back then in this article is frightening. Very eye opening thanks again for all that you do.
ReplyDeleteYes. You made a typo "illegal" meaning "legal," yet I understood your intent. Feminists lie about that. They claim it was legal to beat women. Yet in sidebar "Domestic Violence" you will find quite a range of punishments for that crime. Gender feminists used to lie and write fake history deliberately distorting the past to serve their ideological agenda. Now most of them are so uneducated in real history (and in analysis of statistics) that they just repeat their mentoresses' lies thinking they are true. Or worse, having so interest in determining what is true and what is not. is pretty much a cult.
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