SABOTAGE
The interest in sabotage in the United States has developed lately on
account of the case of Frederick Sumner Boyd in the state of New Jersey as
an aftermath of the Paterson strike. Before his arrest and conviction for
advocating sabotage, little or nothing was known of this particular form
of labor tactic in the United States. Now there has developed a two-fold
necessity to advocate it: not only to explain what it means to the worker
in his fight for better conditions, but also to justify our fellow-worker
Boyd in everything that he said. So I am desirous primarily to explain
sabotage, to explain it in this two-fold significance, first as to its
utility and second as to its legality.
Its Necessity In The Class War