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"Good Night, and Good Luck"
-- Joe McCarthy Rides Again
By Bernard Weiner
Co-Editor, The Crisis Papers
October 18, 2005
Whenever I have a dream, I ask myself: "Why this dream now? What is
happening in my life at this moment that would engender these particular
images?" The same question has to be asked about "Good Night, and Good
Luck," George Clooney's powerful docudrama about the McCarthy era of the
1950s: "Why make this film now? Is there something happening in our
society, our media, our politics that would make audiences resonate with a
low-budget film, shot in black and white, about that era in America?"
It seems clear that director Clooney and co-writer Grant Heslov see a
direct contemporary parallel with the anti-communist political
witch-hunting of the 1950s, the unwillingness of most of the media to take
on the bullyboy of that era. In our own time, an arrogant bullying
Administration is ruining the country, running roughshod over the
Constitution, and questioning the patriotism of any who oppose them, much
as Senator Joe McCarthy did with anyone who raised questions about his
methods of hunting down suspected Communists. Except these days, of
course, one substitutes "terrorists" for "communists."
Think I'm exaggerating? How about the White House orchestrating a smear of
Ambassador Joseph Wilson because he publicly questioned Bush's twisted
evidence for going to war in Iraq -- and then, as a special revenge-bonus,
key Administration officials outed Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, as a
covert CIA officer? (Indictments in this case, and the coverup that
followed, are expected within the next week or two.)
How about then-Attorney General John Ashcroft telling Congress that those
who ask pointed questions about the legalities of the Administration's
"war on terrorism" give aid and comfort to "the enemy"? (Here's Ashcroft's
exact quote: "To those who scare peace-loving people with phantoms of lost
liberty, my message is this: Your tactics only aid terrorists -- for they
erode our national unity and diminish our resolve. They give ammunition to
America's enemies...")
How about then-Press Secretary Ari Fleischer warning reporters to "watch
what you say" about the Administration's anti-terrorism policies, and the
comments of Administration hatchetmen in the press, such as Ann Coulter,
calling anti-Bush liberals "traitors" who deserve to be shot?
How about White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan questioning the
patriotism of veteran correspondent Helen Thomas just a few days ago
because she "expressed her concerns" about the Bush Administration's
handling of the Iraq War? Here's the official transcript of the key
exchange, including ABC's Terry Moran nailing McClellan. Thomas has asked
several questions about Bush's policies in Iraq:
McCLELLAN: Well, Helen, the President recognizes that
we are engaged in a global war on terrorism. And when you're engaged in
a war, it's not always pleasant, and it's certainly a last resort. But
when you engage in a war, you take the fight to the enemy, you go on the
offense. And that's exactly what we are doing. We are fighting them
there so that we don't have to fight them here. September 11th taught us
--
THOMAS: It has nothing to do with -- Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11.
McCLELLAN: Well, you have a very different view of the war on terrorism,
and I'm sure you're opposed to the broader war on terrorism. The
President recognizes this requires a comprehensive strategy, and that
this is a broad war, that it is not a law enforcement matter. Terry.
TERRY MORAN: On what basis do you say Helen is opposed to the broader
war on terrorism?
McCLELLAN: Well, she certainly expressed her concerns about Afghanistan
and
Iraq and going into those two countries. I think I can go back and pull
up her comments over the course of the past couple of years.
MORAN: And speak for her, which is odd.
McCLELLAN: No, I said she may be, because certainly if you look at her
comments over the course of the past couple of years, she's expressed
her concerns --
THOMAS: I'm opposed to preemptive war, unprovoked preemptive war.
MR. McCLELLAN: -- she's expressed her concerns.
THE ROTTEN ODOR FROM THE TOP
Well, you get the idea. Criticize the Administration, have your ideas
distorted, your reputation smeared, your patriotism questioned -- with the
consequences, of course, that your job, and perhaps even your life, could
be placed in jeopardy. (Many of Plame's contacts, for example, ones that
she had built up over a decade as a covert CIA agent working in the field
of weapons of mass destruction, were compromised and may well have been
eliminated in their home countries.)
What emanates from the top works its stink down to the grassroots. There
are instances of folks being refused passage on airplanes because a group
with which they're associated is critical of the Bush Administration, or
they're wearing anti-Bush buttons or T-shirts. And there are all those
citizens who are bounced from Bush rallies, supposedly open to the public,
because they don't look right or are known to be Democrats. Or, a student
is kicked out of school for wearing an anti-Bush logo on his T. Or, one of
my favorites, Bush telling a citizen on a rope line who asked him a
pointed question, "Why should I care what you think?"
We pay Bush's salary but the only people he wants to hear from are large
GOP donors and the criminally-liable lackies and toadies down there in the
Bush Bunker with him -- or, as we learned last week, from
carefully-prepped military officers in Iraq (not ordinary soldiers)
feeding back to him the war talking-points they'd rehearsed with a
Pentagon public-relations specialist. Oh, by the way, one of those
supposed "combat troops" praising Bush's policy, the one sitting in the
front row at the far left, turns out to be a Pentagon public-relations
flack.
Despite the Bush Administration buying off name journalists to spout its
propaganda message (the hiring of talk-show host Armstrong Williams
finally is being investigated as a possible crime); despite manufacturing
its own propaganda "news reports" and then sending them to TV stations
around the country to be used as real journalism; despite the staged photo
ops in New Orleans and Iraq, on sets immediately dismantled after the
shoot; despite the GOP's control of the House and the Senate and most of
the corporate media -- despite all that, Bush's ratings continue to
plummet, to the lowest point of his tenure in office, down in the 30s,
even sliding fast among Republicans. Finally, the veils have come off the
public vision, and they are beginning to see Bush&Co. for what it is.
BEWARE OF CORNERED, WOUNDED BEASTS
On the one hand, that's good news for those of us dedicated to a
restoration of Constitutional rule, and to bringing the troops home alive
from Iraq ASAP. On the other hand, I must confess I'm really nervous. The
Bush Bunker crew right now are desperate, on the ropes, and have painted
themselves into a felonious corner of their own devising. Beware wounded
beasts; when they feel trapped, they are liable to strike out in a
desperate attempt at survival.
As the Plamegate indictments approach; as Bush's popularity ratings
continue to fall precipitously; as the situation in Iraq continues to
deteriorate, referendum or no referendum; as the true nature of Bush's
unfeeling ideology toward ordinary people became even more clear in the
wake of the Katrina disaster; as the corruption and corporate thievery
proceeds apace; as the DeLay and Frist and Abramoff scandals continue to
ooze pus all over the GOP leadership -- as all these negatives continue to
build pressure in the White House, one can anticipate a wide variety of
major distractions and violent initiatives, both foreign and domestic.
What might some of those be? In one effort to get the Plamegate
indictments off the front page, we can anticipate that Saddam Hussein's
show-trial in Iraq will dominate the front pages and TV-news broadcasts to
tell us yet again what a monster dictator this guy was, thus leaving
precious little space or airtime available for the White House's ethical
and criminal problems. (Let's just stipulate: Saddam was one of the worst
dictators ever, nobody mourns his loss from power -- and now let's get
back to the real news.)
In addition, I would not be surprised if the U.S. or Mideast ally Israel
took out Iran's nuclear power plants and research facilities. A massive
bombing, with all the ramifications of such action in the Muslim world,
would do wonders to divert attention. Likewise, ratcheting up the military
pressure on Syria, after the U.S. recently started up hostilities along,
and perhaps even beyond, the border with Iraq. Or, the Bush Administration
may choose once again to look the other way when a major terrorist
incident is about to happen inside the U.S.
THE IMPEACHMENT SCENARIO
Karl Rove's M.O. always has been: When in trouble, attack. Don't let the
opposition even get close to defining the agenda and parameters of
discussion. As Rove himself is about to be attacked, I would think he
might have even more motivation to pull out all the survival stops and
arrange for something drastic to become Topic#1, rather than permitting
the American public to focus on the high crimes and misdemeanors of the
Bush Administration before the judicial dock.
And rest assured, the Plamegate indictments will have ramifications way
beyond those charged. Once the perp-walks take place, once those trials
begin -- and probably long before as key elements of the case are leaked
-- the dirty secrets inside the White House will be revealed; Republican
Senators and House members, anxious to be re-elected, might well
back-pedal away so fast from BushCheneyRoveLibby that in the rush you'll
barely be able to read the impeachment bill they'll agree to support.
In addition, GOP power-brokers and economic leaders, anxious to keep the
markets stable and their profits predictable, might bow to the inevitable
and their own self-interests and jettison their support for the Bush
Administration, putting their money behind other, less-tainted politicos.
What would follow impeachment trials -- assuming Bush and Cheney don't do
a Nixon and resign first? One would hope that the political lessons would
have been learned by those next in line -- be it Hastert or Stevens or
Rice or Rumsfeld. Whoever would take over from Bush would be reading the
2006 pre-election polls and, realizing that the Republicans are going to
be swept out of power bigtime (to even try to manipulate the election
returns in that kind of landslide atmosphere would be counterproductive),
might well abandon the imperial adventuring and corporate looting and
advocacy of torture as state policy and shredding of Constitutional
protections, etc. etc. In other words, there would be some movement toward
the middle.
McCARTHYISM IN THE BUSH ERA
Which brings us back to "Good Night, and Good Luck." Something similar
happened to Sen. Joseph McCarthy in the '50s: He was riding as high as any
political demagogue could rise, for years virtually controlling the
government and America's socio-political agenda in his anti-communist
frenzy -- ruining the reputations of honorable men and women with impunity
-- and then, suddenly, he went too far, was shamed and humiliated and was
isolated by his fellow senators and his powers removed. He died of
alcoholism-related diseases a few years later.
For those unfamiliar with McCarthy and the political/social mayhem he
caused 50 years ago -- along with the vigilante movement he spawned
("McCarthyism") -- here's a brief primer. Waving what he claimed were
lists of names of alleged Communists inside the State Department and
elsewhere in the government, and denouncing citizens left and right for
alleged "communist sympathies," and with few in academia, the media and
government willing to take him on and risk being called a "pinko" or
worse, McCarthy became the locus of malevolent power in America,
dispensing a kind of toxic poison all around the country that created fear
and kept people from fully exercising their rights as citizens. Keep your
mouth shut and your head down -- that was the operating principle in the
McCarthy period.
McCarthy's downfall was that he didn't know where to stop, or when;
indeed, he believed he was unstoppable. But after hounding show-biz
personalities and academics and media reporters and lower-level government
employees, McCarthy began attacking the U.S. Army leadership, including
war-hero General George Marshall, at which point former four-star general
Dwight David Eisenhower, now President Eisenhower, had had enough. The
battle was joined, and CBS star newsman Edward R. Murrow attacked McCarthy
frontally and wounded him enough so that others, including Boston attorney
Joseph Welch and McCarthy's fellow Senators, could finish him off.
But you don't get a lot of this important layering-history in "Good Night,
and Good Luck," which prefers to focus almost exclusively and insularly on
the battle between Murrow/CBS and McCarthy. But McCarthy's arrogant
recklessness went far beyond the mass media. One of my former university
teaching colleagues, for example, had been denounced by a touring McCarthy
as a "communist sympathizer" from the stage of the university where he
taught; my colleague (who, of course, was no pinko sympathizer, just one
of the few academics in the loyalty-oath McCarthy era still courageous
enough to ask questions) lost that job and, even though he located another
teaching position years later, he was emotionally scarred, easily
frightened and very afraid to speak his mind in public. Others suffered
similar harrassments even though their only crime was having names similar
to the real suspects. It was a true witch-hunt, with people naming names
willy nilly -- or being forced to publicly denounce their parents -- just
to clear their own.
THE POLITICS BEHIND WITCH-HUNTING
The unspoken assumption in "Good Night, and Good Luck" is that there may
have been a few Communists inside and outside the government that were
worth paying serious attention to, but if there were, laws and procedures
were in place for uncovering and dealing with them; the glory of our
country's system is that one can pay attention to the civil liberties
afforded suspects even when going after them legally. The unspoken
assumption in our own time is that there may be al-Qaida sleeper cells
inside the U.S., but, even if that were true, you don't need to use a
sledgehammer to kill some gnats, wrecking the entire Constitutional house
in the process.
McCarthy was encouraged by Republicans in the 1950s to rampage around
looking for supposed Communists -- and bullying everyone in his path --
because it would reap the party political advantage in the post-World War
II Cold War hysteria. Republicans today encourage, or at least acquiesce
to, the Bush Administration's incompetent rampaging in search of
"terrorist" suspects, shredding bad ly the protections of the
Constitution, because it serves their electoral advantage in a society
frightened by the prospect of future terrorist attacks.
"Good Night, and Good Luck" -- which, in a brilliant stroke, stars Joseph
McCarthy as himself (from newscasts of the time) -- is not a consistently
great movie. It barely captures the social sweep and damage done by
McCarthyism outside the CBS newsroom, and in its desire to glorify the
courageous work of CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow (played brilliantly by
David Straithairn) and his colleague Fred Friendly (Clooney), it overlooks
that fact that others more courageous took on McCarthy long before they
did. But, despite its flaws, it's a riveting and socially important film,
one we need to ruminate upon for its messages for our own time and
situation -- lest we continue to repeat bad history.
Copyright 2005, by Bernard Weiner |