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McCarthyism

McCarthyism, named after Senator Joseph McCarthy, was a period of intense anticommunism, also popularly known as the second Red Scare. It occurred in the United States from 1948 to about 1956, when the government of the United States was actively engaged in suppression of the Communist Party USA, its leadership, and others suspected of being communists. From the viewpoint of some conservatives and McCarthy-supporters at the time, the suppression of "radical organizations" was necessary. Senator McCarthy and his followers felt there was a dangerous subversive element that posed a danger to the security of the country, thereby justifying extreme, possibly illegal measures. For others it was seen as class warfare and a massive violation of civil and Constitutional rights. History has supported the latter view, and McCarthyism is often seen as a blight on the nation's traditions of civil rights and liberties.

McCarthy's anticommunist crusade faltered in 1954 as his hearings were televised, for the first time on the new American Broadcasting Company. ABC needed to fill their afternoon slots, which allowed the public and press to view first-hand McCarthy's badgering of individuals and controversial tactics. The press also started to run stories about how McCarthy ruined many people's lives with accusations that were in some cases not backed up by evidence. 

Since the time of the red scare led by Joseph McCarthy, the term McCarthyism has entered American speech as a general term for the phenomenon of mass pressure, harassment, or blacklisting used to pressure people to follow popular political beliefs. The act of making insufficiently supported accusations or engaging in unfair investigations against a person as an attempt to unfairly silence or discredit them is often referred to as McCarthyism. The Arthur Miller play The Crucible, written during the McCarthy era, used the Salem witch trials as a metaphor for the McCarthyism of the 1950s, suggesting that the process of McCarthyism-style persecution can occur at any time and place. The term "McCarthyism" has since come to mean a government witch hunt seeking to punish unapproved thoughts or political stances.

The term originated in a March 29, 1950 political cartoon by Washington Post editorial cartoonist Herbert Block. The cartoon depicted four leading Republicans trying to push an elephant (the traditional symbol of the Republican party) to stand on a teetering stack of ten tar buckets, the topmost of which was labelled "McCarthyism". The reluctant elephant was quoted in the caption as saying "You mean I'm supposed to stand on that?"

Last updated: 08-07-2005 20:09:56
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