Full Description
The wave of anti-communist suspicion, accusation, and persecution that swept the United States in the late 1940s and early 1950s, associated with Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin. McCarthy claimed — without evidence — that the US government and army were riddled with communist agents. The period saw the blacklisting of suspected communists from Hollywood and academia, loyalty investigations of federal employees, and the destruction of careers through innuendo. McCarthy was finally discredited during the Army-McCarthy hearings of 1954.
Critical Perspective
McCarthyism has been so thoroughly discredited that it is easy to forget it enjoyed genuine popular support. The fear of Soviet espionage was not entirely irrational — the Rosenbergs had passed nuclear secrets to the Soviets, and Soviet intelligence had penetrated the US government. McCarthy exploited a real anxiety for political purposes, but the mechanisms he used — guilt by association, demands for loyalty oaths, the destruction of careers without due process — were symptoms of a democratic culture that had partially suspended its own principles in the face of perceived existential threat.

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