A.Word.A.Day on ÒMcCarthyismÓ
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article go to BÕManÕs Revolt.
A friend recommended the free email service to
me several years ago. You sign up
for it and Monday through Friday you get a vocabulary-stretching word sent to you,
along with interesting background and context. The words are built around a particular
theme each week. ItÕs called A.Word.A.Day. The
New York Times has called it, ÒThe most
welcomed, most enduring piece of daily mass e-mail in cyberspace,Ó the web site
proudly proclaims.
Operating, as I like to do, under the general
assumption that it is better to know more than to know less, I followed my
friendÕs recommendation and signed up.
For a number of years, the only problem I had with the service was that
I seldom found the time to read it and it added to my inbox overload. Then came the theme for November 25-29,
ÒWords that arose from cartoons.Ó The word for November 26 was ÒMcCarthyism,Ó
and hereÕs what it said:
MEANING:
noun: The practice of making unfounded
accusations against someone.
ETYMOLOGY:
After
US senator Joseph McCarthy (1909-1957) known for making unsubstantiated claims
accusing people of being Communists, spies, and disloyal. Earliest documented
use: in 1950 in a cartoon by Herbert Block.
USAGE:
"This
is the greatest case of rampant McCarthyism to ever hit organized sports. ...
There was no hard evidence that three other first-timers on the ballot used
steroids, but that didn't keep the Baseball Writers Association of America
(BBWAA) voters from denying them entry to the Hall."
Bob
Keisser; Extreme Thinking Common for Hall Voters;
Daily News (Los Angeles, California); Jan 10, 2013.
Since this is a subject about which I feel that
I am somewhat better informed than the writer of those lines, I quickly weighed
in with a critical comment, which you can do by going to the Wordsmith.org web
site and typing your comment into a box.
On Sunday you get a mailing with selected readersÕ comments on the words
of the week. I had had a good
experience with this feature, having had my comment published upon my only
previous submission, the subject of which now escapes my recollection. HereÕs what I said this time:
There
are a couple of things that are problematic about your description of the word
"McCarthyism." First, you say that its first known usage was in a
Herblock cartoon. I think that further research is called for. Joanne Cavanaugh Simpson in Johns Hopkins Magazine says that McCarthy investigative target Owen
Lattimore is credited with coining the term. It
definitely originated with his political enemies of the day, a fact that calls
into question your statement that he "was known for making unsubstantiated
claims accusing people of being Communists, spies, and disloyal."
That was the charge leveled by his political enemies, who were and are
powerful in the media like Herblock and The
Washington Post, so it has stuck. For whether or not his charges were
accurate, see my articles "Truman Administration Adviser Counseled
Surrender of Korea to Reds," "James Forrestal and Joe McCarthy," and "M. Stanton Evans on Good Night and Good Luck."
On
November 28 I received an email confirmation from Wordsmith.org that said
simply, ÒThanks for sharing this,Ó and what I had typed into the box was
repeated below the note of appreciation.
My hopes were up. The very
best thing, to my mind, would be for them to print my entire letter so that my
discoveries would reach a much broader audience than they usually do. I could understand, though, why they
might not want to allow someone to use their forum to plug their own work. So, at the very least, I had hope that
the letter would be printed, less the concluding sentence. That sentence was added, as much as
anything, for the edification of the folks at A.Word.A.Day. No one reading those articles with an
open mind and any sense of fairness could possibly let that characterization of
Senator McCarthy stand without challenge, I thought.
During
the week I shared my A.Word.A.Day experience with
some like-minded contacts. One of
them steered me to a related article, which I shared with the Word.A.Day folks on Saturday with my comment as follows:
A
correspondent has sent me this essay in relation to the subject at hand, Joe McCarthy and the
Establishment Bolsheviks by Kerry Bolton. It reinforces your statement that
the term originated with Herblock, but it further calls into question your
assertion that McCarthy made unsubstantiated claims accusing people of being
Communists.
The Garg Rabbit Punch
I
waited for Sunday afternoon with great expectation, and, sure enough, there was
a critical comment on ÒMcCarthyism.Ó Here it is:
From: Robert
Voitier (mrv1948 gmail.com)
Subject: Bias on
your part (Re: McCarthyism)
In 2009 the
Texas State Board of Education revised their high school history class
curricula to suggest that the results of the Venona
Project show Senator Joseph McCarthy to have been justified in his zeal in
exposing those whom he believed to be Soviet spies or communist sympathizers.
Robert Voitier, Lafayette, Louisiana
Ah,
the Texas
State Board of Education! The same folks who never let
facts get in the way of ideology. The same folks who
are still trying to sabotage science textbooks by inserting creationism into
them. For a peek into their minds, watch this brief interview with Don McLeroy who served as the chairman of the Board (video). About Venona Project exonerating McCarthy, see this.
-Anu Garg
Now itÕs hard not to admire Anu
Garg, the immigrant from
India who rose from rural poverty to worldwide prominence through his love of
the English language, but what he has done here is simply shameful. I asked for a more scholarly and
objective approach to the question of the origin of the word ÒMcCarthyism,Ó and
he has gone hard in precisely the opposite direction. I have asked for a sense of fair play,
and he has responded with a kick to the groin, a low blow, a
cheap shot.
He knows full well that the Board of Education
folks hardly make the best case in defense of McCarthy and against the word
ÒMcCarthyism,Ó because he has what I have sent him in hand. He suggests that those folks are just
blinded by their ideology, and in support of his assertion he links to the
writings of the statist ideologues at the Texas Freedom Network. The founder of that organization, Cecile
Richards, is not just the daughter of the former Democratic
governor of Texas, Ann Richards, but has been the president of the Planned
Parenthood Federation of America since 2006. The TFN is in close
alliance with such organizations as the ADL, the Southern
Poverty Law Center, People for the American Way, and the Hate Crimes Research
Network in support of more laws that go contrary to the principle engraved in
stone over the entrance to the U.S. Supreme Court Building, ÒEqual Justice Under
Law.Ó
Almost everything the organization stands for
belies its name (shades of ÒPeopleÕs RepublicÓ or ÒAffordable Health CareÓ),
but nothing does it so much as its explicit position against local
control of neighborhood schools:
The Texas Freedom Network affirms the crucial reforms and
progress made by Texas public schools since the mid-1980s. Standards such as
small class sizes, teacher certification and strong accountability
measures have helped our stateÕs students succeed. Deregulation measures called
Òlocal controlÓ or Òhome ruleÓ would threaten that progress by erasing these
and other quality education standards.
We recently received another reminder of just
how much progress we have made with those centralized Òquality education
standards.Ó But let us not stray too far from the question at issue. In the article to which Garg links, the TFN shoots down the notion that the Venona intercepts
exonerated McCarthy by invoking Emory University historian Harvey Klehr. Klehr might be right in a narrow technical sense that those
revelations donÕt generally reveal that McCarthy was right about the lionÕs
share of people whom he accused of being Communists. They deal mainly with the bigger fish
who had already been identified as Communist spies by the famous defectors from
their ranks, Elizabeth Bentley and Whittaker Chambers. Among them were Alger Hiss, Harry Dexter
White, and Lauchlin Currie, the sort of people whom
the TFNÕs ideological soul mates defended to the hilt in their day, and some do
up to the present time. These were
men of very great influence and power.
The leading McCarthy target, Asia specialist Owen Lattimore, had not been fingered as a spy by either Bentley
or Chambers, and he does not turn up in the Venona
documents, but his primary avenue of influence on the government was through
the Red spy, Currie.
There is a much better authority on McCarthy than Klehr on McCarthy and his assault upon U.S. Communism. That is M. Stanton Evans. Most recently he has written, with
Herbert Romerstein, StalinÕs Secret Agents: The Subversion of RooseveltÕs
Government. I sum it up in my review, ÒWhat we learn from Evans
and Romerstein is that the Soviet war and post-war
gains at the WestÕs expense were hardly an accident. They had ample
assistance from a Roosevelt administration that was thoroughly laced with
StalinÕs agents. The agents were sufficiently numerous and highly placed
that almost any theft of secrets they might have accomplished was small
potatoes compared to their influence upon policy.Ó
Mr.
Garg would do well to read that book and that review,
but the Evans book that bears most directly upon the question at issue is his
earlier tour de force, Blacklisted by History:
The Untold Story of Senator Joe McCarthy and His Fight against AmericaÕs
Enemies.
That is the book to which we refer in the article
we called to GargÕs attention, "M. Stanton Evans on Good Night and Good Luck." In the George Clooney movie, the Army
code cloak Annie Lee Moss is depicted as the very epitome of government workers
unfairly maligned by McCarthy. With
meticulous documentation, Evans shows that the unfair slanderers in this case were
not McCarthy, but Edward R. Murrow and CBS News and later George Clooney.
On
page 456 Evans makes this observation about McCarthyÕs general manner in the
hearings he conducted:
Among
the more conspicuous features of the early subcommittee sessions were
McCarthyÕs frequent comments about the new Republican administration that had
just taken office and his relations with his Democratic colleagues. In both cases, the transcripts show, he
was generally speaking a model of politesse—something
nobody could possibly figure out by reading a whole library of books about
McCarthy now available to the public.
Concerning
McCarthyÕs fairness, or lack of same, we have this on the next page:
A
third conspicuous feature of the hearings was the leeway granted even hostile
witnesses, up to and including conduct plainly contumacious (a good one for A.Word.A.Day ed.). Again contra the usual horror stories,
witnesses before the panel were (a) permitted to have counsel present and
confer with counsel on an unlimited basis; (b) given time to obtain counsel,
and urged to do so if they didnÕt have such; (c) allowed to say almost anything
they wanted, including criticism of McCarthy, challenges to the jurisdiction of
the panel, and ideological filibusters of all types—though these always
tended in the same direction.
Unlike
Klehr, Evans is not an academic historian. As you watch Klehr
on YouTube, you can see how boxed
in he is from a professional standpoint.
You can well appreciate the pressures that he has been under merely on
account of his discoveries concerning American Communism. He is almost apologetic about it, and
even minimizes it, calling the Communist movement Òmarginal.Ó He has already
swum against the tide of his profession enough. He knows that saying too much good about
McCarthy would be taking a step too far.
But why is that so?
Why has McCarthy been so vilified, even to the point of the creation of
the slanderous word ÒMcCarthyism?Ó
One may begin to formulate an answer to that question for oneself by
reading my ÒJames Forrestal and Joe
McCarthy,"
or perhaps even better through studying BoltonÕs ÒJoe McCarthy and the
Establishment Bolsheviks,Ó also sent to Garg,
as we have noted. (We also noted in
a follow-up email to Garg that in none of the
articles that I recommended to him does the word ÒVenonaÓ
even appear, demonstrating that he had merely knocked down a straw man, and
knowingly so.)
We shall take a stab at a more explicit answer to the
ÒMcCarthyismÓ mystery in a future article.
In the meantime, we have canceled our subscription to A.Word.A.Day, explaining why.
David Martin
December 6, 2013
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