QUOTE OF THE DAY

“If swindling pays, then it will not stop. The definition of the good society is one in which virtue pays.”

Abraham Maslow

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flash
flash
April 30, 2014 10:03 am

Added to my must read list.

http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/h/herman-mccarthy.html
Joseph McCarthy
Reexaming the Life and Legacy of America’s Most Hated Senator
By ARTHUR HERMAN

In retrospect, McCarthy’s disgrace and obloquy has come at a certain price to historical truth. He has become so taboo a figure, someone presented only in Rovere-style caricature rather than flesh and blood, that confusion and ignorance about what he did and the times in which he operated are widespread. Books like David Caute’s The Great Fear, which implicitly compared the anti-Communist crusade of the fifties to Stalin’s Great Terror, or Ellen Schrecker’s Many Are the Crimes: McCarthyism in America, can portray the entire period in the most terrifyingly nightmarish colors, and be believed. So part of dispelling the myths about Joe McCarthy has to include dispelling the myths about the 1950s and the so-called red scare.

We need to remember that during the entire period, from 1947 to 1958, no American citizens were interrogated without benefit of legal counsel, none was arrested or detained without due judicial process, and no one went to jail without trial. As George Kennan, no admirer of the investigations, stated, “Whoever could get his case before a court was generally assured of meeting there with a level of justice no smaller than at any time in recent American history.” All through the “worst” of the McCarthy period, the Communist Party itself was never outlawed, membership in the party was never declared a crime, and it continued to maintain public offices, publish books and the Daily Worker, and recruit new members (admittedly a tough sell by then).

In fact, most of what people ordinarily mean when they talk about the “red scare” — the House Un-American Activities Committee; anti-Communist probes into Hollywood, labor unions, and America’s schools and universities; the Rosenberg trial; blacklisting in the media and schoolteachers fired for disloyalty — had nothing to do with McCarthy and he had nothing to do with them (although when asked, he generally approved of them, as most other Americans did). McCarthy’s own committee in the Senate, the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which he chaired for less than two years, had a specific duty to investigate communism in the federal government and among government employees. It had done so before he became chairman, and it did so after he left, under Senator John McClellan and Bobby Kennedy. The men and women McCarthy targeted, rightly or wrongly, as Communists or Communist sympathizers all shared that single characteristic: they were federal employees and public servants, and therefore, McCarthy and his supporters argued, they ought be held accountable to a higher standard than other American citizens.

A. R. Wasem
A. R. Wasem
April 30, 2014 12:35 pm

The “left” has wildly mischaracterized and falsified the history of the ’50s I believe it’s Brent Bozell who’s written the book to read: “McCarthy and His Enemies”. BC-LR to all