nobody likes a snitch.
Apr. 23rd, 2007 12:43 pmHuh, there's a thought I'd never had before.
I'm reading a biography of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the civilian administrator of the Manhattan Project. I've finally plowed through towards the end of the book, when Oppenheimer is stripped of his security clearance. (There's a lot of reasons for this, and the book goes into them.) Of course, it's the late forties and early fifties, so if you're at all familiar with the political climate of the time, it's full of HUAC and McCarthy and some of the ugliest moments in US history. (Not to mention that J. Edgar Hoover, the FBI director, was a paranoid jerk who didn't care much about the rule of law, but I do digress.)
Anyway, I'd always thought that the HUAC/McCarthy thing was bad because it forced people to confess to things that weren't true, and blew innocent associations into world-shattering communist plots, both of which aren't healthy for a mostly-functioning democracy. But there was one piece of the puzzle I'd failed to understand until I got hit with a sledgehammer over it.
From the time we are young, one of the values instilled in us is that you don't rat out a buddy. I mean, there's a reason "tattle-tale" was a grave insult on the grade school playground, after all. As we grow older, we find ways to justify the times when we have to, but it always comes at some cost, and is usually an agonizing decision.
HUAC/McCarthy forced people to name names. And they often forced people to do it in the most humiliating way possible, and then, just to rub the salt in the wound, punished them almost as strictly as if they'd refused to talk.
I'd never thought of it in quite that way before, but it makes sense. And it makes that whole period just that more ugly and disgusting.
I'm reading a biography of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the civilian administrator of the Manhattan Project. I've finally plowed through towards the end of the book, when Oppenheimer is stripped of his security clearance. (There's a lot of reasons for this, and the book goes into them.) Of course, it's the late forties and early fifties, so if you're at all familiar with the political climate of the time, it's full of HUAC and McCarthy and some of the ugliest moments in US history. (Not to mention that J. Edgar Hoover, the FBI director, was a paranoid jerk who didn't care much about the rule of law, but I do digress.)
Anyway, I'd always thought that the HUAC/McCarthy thing was bad because it forced people to confess to things that weren't true, and blew innocent associations into world-shattering communist plots, both of which aren't healthy for a mostly-functioning democracy. But there was one piece of the puzzle I'd failed to understand until I got hit with a sledgehammer over it.
From the time we are young, one of the values instilled in us is that you don't rat out a buddy. I mean, there's a reason "tattle-tale" was a grave insult on the grade school playground, after all. As we grow older, we find ways to justify the times when we have to, but it always comes at some cost, and is usually an agonizing decision.
HUAC/McCarthy forced people to name names. And they often forced people to do it in the most humiliating way possible, and then, just to rub the salt in the wound, punished them almost as strictly as if they'd refused to talk.
I'd never thought of it in quite that way before, but it makes sense. And it makes that whole period just that more ugly and disgusting.
no subject
Date: 2007-04-23 09:37 pm (UTC)Turning in your friends is bad. Whats worse however is that such an environment also turns into "do what I want or I'll rat you out". (For generic "you".) Which can happen whether or not "you" are guilty of whatever the witchhunt of the day is about.
Ugly and disgusting aren't nearly strong enough to describe it.
no subject
Date: 2007-04-24 07:39 am (UTC)O got the shaft from both ends. He accepted the blame for making the bomb, criticized the government for using the bomb, was extorted by HUAC, and then blacklisted for rolling over.
Is it forgivable? Yes. But only because he was the first to accept the magnitude of what he had been responsible for creating. And O is a posterboy for how gravely wrong the HUAC became, and in consequence, caused our country to become.
To me, 'Good night and good luck.' is much more than a farewell, it is a benediction, a reminder that no matter how ugly things get, the best and brightest of us will be those that continue to forge a path toward the future.