Read the excerpt from a memoir written by Allan Pinkerton about the Great Railroad Strike of 1877."For this reason the strike of '77 was a complete failure. Although in many instances riotous excesses were not committed, the attempt of which they were all guilty—to prevent the movement of trains—made their strike as truly a riotous proceeding as the pillage, arson, and murder of Pittsburgh could have made it. By this act the strikers placed themselves in an attitude of defiance to all law and to society, and as surely arrayed law, order, and society against them. Had they won, it would have been a triumph of anarchy; and anarchy is a something impossible to exist. No community can exist save under law and order; and no riotous strike is possible of success short of revolution; while revolution itself is a failure, unless it brings to a people a still purer law and a more secure order." Which of these people would most likely agree with Allan Pinkerton's opinion?
1.President Hayes
2.An anarchist
3.Railroad workers
4.The Knights of Labor