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RECRUDESCENCE OF BARBARISM.

JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(5):293-294. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450570051007.
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ABSTRACT

In the old barbaric days, while physical prowess was the chief quality that determined the survival of the fittest, it is in evidence that moral cowardice, as shown in treachery, assassination, and the torture of the defenseless, was the rule rather than the exception. At the present time the revelations of moral turpitude in France, coupled with the clear evidences of savage disposition, make it plain that but a brand is needed to light the fires of another Commune and to initiate a fierce civil and religious war. The Dreyfus case is but a humiliating picture of moral cowardice from the beginning to the present stage. In our own country, to the thoughtful, who must by no means be confused with the pessimistic, the signs of this form of degeneracy are all too evident. The signs are most obvious in our crowded cities where the environment departs farthest from nature

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