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Free Speech

A Free Speech Lesson From Karl Marx

Censorship tends to blow up in the faces of the censors.

Damon Root | 7.17.2025 7:00 AM

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A drawing of Karl Marx against a red and black background | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Midjourney
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Midjourney)

There's a basic principle of free speech that the censors always seem to forget. Namely, the act of suppressing speech only tends to add more fuel to the speaker's fire.

Don't believe me? Just ask Karl Marx.

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In 1842, Marx was an up-and-coming radical journalist and chief editor at a Prussian publication called the Rheinische Zeitung. His readers thrilled to his biting pen and caustic attacks on the Prussian monarchy. But when Russian Emperor Nicholas I happened to read one of Marx's articles, which also savaged Prussia's then-key ally, Russia, the boot of censorship came stomping down. Russia lodged an official complaint about Marx's writings with the Prussian regime and the Rheinische Zeitung was repressed by state censors in 1843.

"I am tired of this hypocrisy and stupidity, of the boorishness of officials, I am tired of having to bow and scrape and invent safe and harmless phrases," Marx told a correspondent. "In Germany there is nothing I can do." So Marx departed for Paris and the rest, as they say, is history.

"Two years later," the political philosopher Isiah Berlin wrote in his illuminating 1939 biography, Karl Marx: His Life and Environment, Marx "was known to the police of many lands as an uncompromising revolutionary communist, an opponent of reformist liberalism, the notorious leader of a subversive movement with international ramifications." Indeed, Berlin argued, "the years 1843-5 are the most decisive of his life." It was during that tumultuous period in which Marx truly became the notorious figure that we recognize today.

All of which suggests an interesting counterfactual: What if the Prussian authorities had left Marx in peace to crank out his rancorous articles? Might he have remained content to scribble away and never become the communist firebrand of historical infamy? What if?

But the censors did not leave Marx alone. They hounded him out of Germany. And their efforts backfired spectacularly. Not only did the censors fail to throttle Marx's work; they actually turbo-charged his radicalization and greatly furthered the spread of his ideas.

The historical record is replete with similar stories about ultimately doomed efforts to silence political speech. For example, when I was researching my book about Frederick Douglass and the Constitution some years ago, I was struck by how many celebrated antislavery activists first became radicalized against slavery when they witnessed proslavery mobs trying to stamp out abolitionist speech.

Take the case of the great Salmon P. Chase. In the summer of 1836, Chase was a successful young lawyer living in Cincinnati, Ohio. On July 12, a proslavery mob forced its way into the offices of a local abolitionist newspaper called the Philanthropist and destroyed the printing press. Two weeks later, the mob went hunting for the paper's editor, the abolitionist James G. Birney.

"I heard with disgust and horror the mob violence directed against the Anti-Slavery Press and Anti-Slavery men of Cincinnati in 1836," Chase later wrote. "I was opposed at this time to the views of the abolitionists, but I now recognized the slave power as the great enemy of freedom of speech [and] freedom of the press and freedom of the person. I took an open part against the mob."

So began Chase's extraordinary antislavery career, which included arguing against the Fugitive Slave Act before the U.S. Supreme Court, helping found the antislavery Free Soil Party (whose catchy motto, "Free Soil, Free Speech, Free Labor, and Free Men," he coined), and eventually replacing the hated Roger Taney, author of the disgraceful Dred Scott decision, as chief justice of the United States.

It all started with Chase's outrage at the sight of proslavery thugs on the rampage against abolitionist speech. "From this time on," Chase recalled of the violent summer of 1836, "I became a decided opponent of Slavery and the Slave Power."

I suppose that's the one good thing that might be said about censorship: It has a pronounced tendency to blow up in the faces of the censors.

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NEXT: Tracking a Unicorn in Adam Smith's Edinburgh

Damon Root is a senior editor at Reason and the author of A Glorious Liberty: Frederick Douglass and the Fight for an Antislavery Constitution (Potomac Books).

Free SpeechCivil LibertiesHistoryPolitical FreedomFirst Amendment
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  1. mad.casual   11 hours ago

    First, The Libertarian Case For Bernie Sanders and now
    the libertarian case for Karl Marx?

    FFS, Reason.

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   10 hours ago

      What if the Prussian authorities had left Marx in peace to crank out his rancorous articles? Might he have remained content to scribble away and never become the communist firebrand of historical infamy? What if?

      Notoriously, Marx died penniless and alone, largely forgotten, you dumb fuck. He could've done that in Germany or Paris or anywhere else.

      If anything Marx serves as a lesson that half-wit, political crackpot journalists should just be shot or otherwise conspicuously killed by their peers, readers, and/or activists rather than allowed to complete their idiocy for future mouthbreathing morons to reinterpret and idolize.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Chumby   10 hours ago

        Notoriously, Marx died penniless and alone, largely forgotten, you dumb fuck.

        As have many who were coerced into living under a marxist regime.

        Log in to Reply
      2. Stupid Government Tricks   10 hours ago

        Marx would have remained forgotten if not for Lenin's revolution.

        Log in to Reply
        1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   5 hours ago

          Which is exactly why you get rid of Marxists when you find them.

          No Marxist has a right to exist.

          Log in to Reply
        2. Uncle Jay   5 hours ago

          Marx got a lot of publicity during an uprising in Paris in the late 1800's.
          He couldn't have gotten more publicity if he had paid for it.
          It was after this uprising that Marx' political gibberish became popular with the envy and stupid crowd and still is to this very day.

          Log in to Reply
      3. JohnZ   8 hours ago

        Marx abandoned his family, lived with another woman and was an all around slime ball. It's too bad his writings weren't tossed into the trash , where they belong.
        If it wasn't for those Bolsheviks who took up Marx's garbage verbosity along with the help of ****** bankers, the Marxist revolution would have never succeeded.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Michael Ejercito   6 hours ago

          What bankers?

          Log in to Reply
          1. mad.casual   6 hours ago

            I believe in the old Reason markup it would be written as: [[[[bankers]]]]

            LOL @ new markup automatically linking to [Amazon].

            Log in to Reply
          2. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   5 hours ago

            Not Kramer. It was established in court testimony that he could never be a banker.

            Log in to Reply
            1. Think It Through   2 hours ago

              He always wanted to be, though.

              Log in to Reply
        2. Uncle Jay   5 hours ago

          Marx relied more on successful capitalists like Engles than bankers. When he didn't get what he wanted, he would go into an infantile tantrum believing he was entitled to other peoples' money.
          Sort of like the leftists today worldwide.

          Log in to Reply
    2. Uncle Jay   5 hours ago

      There's a difference between Karl Marx and Comrade Bernie Sanders?

      Log in to Reply
      1. shawn_dude   4 hours ago

        If facts matter, yes. If facts don't matter and we're only going on the feels, no.

        Log in to Reply
  2. Chumby   10 hours ago

    Was Salmon P. Chase gay? If so, does sarc know?

    Log in to Reply
  3. Vernon Depner   10 hours ago

    That Robert Kennedy is our HHS Secretary four years after COVID Fascism is a contemporary example of this.

    Log in to Reply
    1. shawn_dude   4 hours ago

      No, it is not. The point of the article isn't that the result of censorship is that people abandon reality and embrace conspiracy theories.

      Log in to Reply
  4. Longtobefree   10 hours ago

    Now do an article on the 243.000 people who were censored and never heard from again - - - - - -

    Log in to Reply
    1. Stupid Government Tricks   9 hours ago

      That was my reaction. We only hear about the ones who escaped censorship, the Streisands. Censorship succeeded very well with the vast majority of people. Of course, it succeeded so well that we can't count them, but only fools believe there were few.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Chumby   9 hours ago

        Should Damin root out the nameless censored?

        Log in to Reply
  5. Quo Usque Tandem   9 hours ago

    "I am tired of this hypocrisy and stupidity, of the boorishness of officials, I am tired of having to bow and scrape and invent safe and harmless phrases," Marx told a correspondent. "

    What say you, Preet Bharara?

    Log in to Reply
    1. Uncle Jay   5 hours ago

      "I am tired of this hypocrisy and stupidity, of the boorishness of officials, I am tired of having to bow and scrape and invent safe and harmless phrases," Marx told a correspondent. "

      Are you sure that isn't millions of people who lived under communist rules said?

      Log in to Reply
  6. But SkyNet is a Private Company   9 hours ago

    It’s a good thing Marxists never censor anyone who disagrees with them

    Log in to Reply
  7. 7e3df5b   8 hours ago

    I think a similar example in modern times is that of Shane Gillis. He was cancelled by SNL and now he is arguably bigger than any of the current cast members and even the show itself.

    Log in to Reply
    1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   5 hours ago

      Yeah, fuck Lorne Michaels, that leftist hack. It’s going to be good to see the back of him. SNL is a sad, desiccated, democrat propagandist shell of what it used to be.

      Log in to Reply
  8. JohnZ   8 hours ago

    The amount of censorship and propaganda that was used to bludgeon Americans into forced lockdowns, forced vaccination(deadly), and the massive censorship of anyone who dared contradict what our over lords in D.C., particularly that of Darth Fauci would have made Joe Stalin envious.
    Luckily the overlords couldn't censor everyone and eventually the truth was revealed.
    And now Trumpy wants to censor anyone who dares bring up the subject of Epstein. Wonder why?
    There are those who want to censor and control all the news coming out of the middle east . It isn't working too well.
    The free flow of information must be allowed or liberty and freedom will be censored.

    Log in to Reply
  9. Social Justice is neither   8 hours ago

    Why does it not surprise me that Maex is Damon's go to example? And an ahistorical reading to boot, gotta love the dishonesty of Marxist progressive Leftists like Root.

    Log in to Reply
  10. TJJ2000   8 hours ago

    I certainly hope the censorship done by the party-of-slavery (i.e. Democrats) does blow-up in their faces.

    So far their new tactic to avoid it is to Self-Project.
    Pointing fingers at everyone else while they do exactly it.

    Log in to Reply
  11. Minadin   7 hours ago

    I'm not taking any lessons from a guy whose terrible theories led to hundreds of millions of deaths and the untold suffering of so many more people in the past 120 years.

    Log in to Reply
    1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   5 hours ago

      Every Marxist regime that exists/has existed is proof of why you exterminate the Marxists.

      Log in to Reply
  12. Uncle Jay   5 hours ago

    "Censorship tends to blow up in the faces of the censors."

    Oh, I don't know about that.
    Censorship seems to work pretty well in Cuba, North Korea, the PRC, American college campuses, and other totalitarian states.

    Log in to Reply
  13. Untermensch   4 hours ago

    My great(x3)-grandfather, a well-known author and journalist in the Bavarian kingdom, was a political liberal (in the European sense). He was also a close friend of Marx, but fell out with him over his realization that Marx’s ideology was anti-liberal. This wasn’t immediately apparent in the early days of Marx’s career when communists and liberals often made common cause against entrenched political systems.

    But the censorship of the day cut against anyone who wasn’t pro-monarchy and he had to flee post-1848 Bavaria after his writings got him in trouble with the monarchy, even though his father was a high court official. He first fled to the Saarland (he is listed as a political refugee in newspapers of the period) and then to France, before settling in Switzerland. It was while he was there that he broke with Marx.

    If we set aside that this article is about Marx, it could describe any number of people who those commenting here might see as more congenial.

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