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We will not walk in fear
Point of Order
October 26, 2006
Point of Order is a 1964 documentary on the Army-McCarthy hearings. Read the rest of this entry »
HUAC
October 8, 2006
Joseph McCarthy wasn’t the only legislator abusing power. In the House it was the House Un-American Activities Committee and the infamous 1947 investigation into Communist propaganda in the film industry. You can see Walt Disney’s testimony here.
The House Committee on Un-American Activities is often confused with McCarthy’s investigations over in the Senate. Of course being in the Senate, McCarthy had nothing to do with the House committee. The House committee was chaired by John Parnell Thomas during those 1947 hearings, Thomas having served as chair until he was accused, tried and convicted of fraud. He resigned from Congress on January 2, 1950, disgraced. Freedom hating asshats always get their’s it seems.
Pardoned by Truman in 1952 he even made an attempt to reenter federal politics in 1954 but was defeated for the Republican nomination during the primary. Congress would have no more of his asshattery.
McCarthy’s fall, too, was fast and furious.
Cronkite reflects
October 3, 2006
On the 50th anniversary, March 9, 2004, of Murrow’s “See It Now” where he attacked Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s underhanded tactics while investigating Communist infiltration, Walter Cronkite looks back on NPR.
Another draft
September 30, 2006
An undated draft of Murrow’s response to McCarthy’s April 6, 1954 accusations Read the rest of this entry »
Joe’s rebuttal accepted
September 29, 2006
Murrow’s acceptance of McCarthy’s suggestion for an April 6, 1954 chance to respond to Murrow’s March 9 piece on the junior Senator from Wisconsin’s investigation into Communists in the government. Read the rest of this entry »
See It Now draft
September 28, 2006
A draft of the on-air speech from See It Now’s response to McCarthy’s April 6, 1954 accusations against Murrow. The draft is dated April 5. Read the rest of this entry »
Censure of McCarthy
September 24, 2006
The Censure of Senator Joseph McCarthy:
83rd Congress, 2nd Session, Senate Resolution 301 (2 December 1954).
Resolved, That the Senator from Wisconsin, Mr. McCarthy, failed to cooperate with the Subcommittee on Privileges and Elections of the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration in clearing up matters referred to that subcommittee which concerned his conduct as a Senator and affected the honor of the Senate and, instead, repeatedly abused the subcommittee and its members who were trying to carry out assigned duties, thereby obstructing the constitutional processes of the Senate, and that this conduct of the Senator from Wisconsin, Mr. McCarthy, is contrary to senatorial traditions and is hereby condemned.
Sec 2. The Senator from Wisconsin, Mr. McCarthy, in writing to the chairman of the Select Committee to Study Censure Charges (Mr. Watkins) after the Select Committee had issued its report and before the report was presented to the Senate charging three members of the Select Committee with “deliberate deception” and “fraud” for failure to disqualify themselves; in stating to the press on November 4, 1954, that the special Senate session that was to begin November 8, 1954, was a “lynch-party”; in repeatedly describing this special Senate session as a “lynch bee” in a nationwide television and radio show on November 7, 1954; in stating to the public press on November 13, 1954, that the chairman of the Select Committee (Mr. Watkins) was guilty of “the most unusual, most cowardly things I’ve ever heard of” and stating further: “I expected he would be afraid to answer the questions, but didn’t think he’d be stupid enough to make a public statement”; and in characterizing the said committee as the “unwitting handmaiden,” “involuntary agent” and “attorneys-in-fact” of the Communist Party and in charging that the said committee in writing its report “imitated Communist methods — that it distorted, misrepresented, and omitted in its effort to manufacture a plausible rationalization” in support of its recommendations to the Senate, which characterizations and charges were contained in a statement released to the press and inserted in the Congressional Record of November 10, 1954, acted contrary to senatorial ethics and tended to bring the Senate into dishonor and disrepute, to obstruct the constitutional processes of the Senate, and to impair its dignity; and such conduct is hereby condemned
April 6, 1954
September 23, 2006
A transcript of April 6, 1954 edition of See It Now, McCarthy’s rebuttal to Murrow: Read the rest of this entry »
The Army-McCarthy Hearings
September 22, 2006
A Report on McCarthy
September 8, 2006
Here is the script from the March 9, 1954 “See It Now,” A Report on Joseph McCarthy.
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