DH Ep:57 The McCarthy Hearings: America's Reign of Fear

January 12
1h 24m

Episode Description

In the spring of 1954, Wyoming Senator Lester Hunt walked into his Senate office with a rifle hidden beneath his overcoat. Weeks of blackmail by allies of Joseph McCarthy had broken him. The gunshot that followed should have warned America about the darkness that had descended upon the nation. It didn't.

This episode of The Disturbing History Podcast takes you inside one of the most troubling chapters in American history. 

Senator Joseph McCarthy's four-year reign of terror destroyed thousands of lives, drove good people to suicide, and held an entire nation hostage to paranoia. From his infamous 1950 Wheeling speech where he claimed to hold a list of 205 Communists in the State Department to his spectacular downfall during the Army-McCarthy hearings, we cover the complete story of how one man weaponized fear and nearly brought American democracy to its knees. You'll hear about the Hollywood blacklist that ended careers and drove artists into exile. 

The Lavender Scare that persecuted gay and lesbian Americans alongside suspected Communists. The brave few who stood against McCarthy, including Senator Margaret Chase Smith and broadcast legend Edward R. Murrow. And the dramatic moment when Army counsel Joseph Welch asked the question that finally ended McCarthy's power: "Have you no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of decency?"

This is the story of McCarthyism, the Red Scare, and the House Un-American Activities Committee. It's the story of the Hollywood Ten, Roy Cohn, and the Cold War paranoia that gripped 1950s America.

Most importantly, it's a warning about what happens when fear overwhelms reason and accusation becomes proof of guilt.The tactics McCarthy pioneered didn't die with him. They echo through American politics to this day.
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