Joe McCarthy Had Nothing To Do With the House Unamerican Activities Committee
A while ago I came across an interesting video from RazörFist called Hollywood Was Always Red. (A warning: RazörFist uses very salty language.)
One of the things that really struck me from it was when RazörFist pointed out that Joe McCarthy did not run the House Unamerican Activities Committee and the first clue should have been in the name: the House Unamerican Activities Committee. How, he asks, would Senator Joe McCarthy run the House Unamerican Activities Committee?
If you look it up, what Joe McCarthy ran were called the "Army-McCarthy Hearings" which were held by the "Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Senate Government Operations Committee" (see here). They had nothing to do with Hollywood blacklists and, as the name would suggest, were investigating communist infiltration into the Army.
The House Unamerican Activities Committee, or more properly the House Committee on Un-American Activities, was formed in 1938—9 years before Joe McCarthy would become a senator—and was initially chaired by Martin Dies Jr, a Democrat from Texas. (Check out the Wikipedia page on it.)
When he pointed out that the first clue should have been the name and highlighted the "Senator" in Senator Joe McCarthy and the "House" in House Unamerican Activities Committee, I was stunned. It's so obvious, just from that, and yet somehow I had never considered that and just went along with the fake history I was told about how the House Unamerican Activities Committee was part of McCarthyism and McCarthy led to blacklisting in Hollywood and the like.
I don't get stunned watching YouTube videos often. In fact, I'm not sure I have other than with this one. But it's so strange to have realized that something that was commonplace among everyone I knew wasn't just wrong, but obviously wrong. Not just obviously wrong, but we had all the information to know that it was wrong and just never put it together. The "House Unamerican Activities Committee" was just a name, not a collection of meaningful words in a meaningful order. But it really should have been.
