The more people are accused, the more terrible it is for the United States. Americans are afraid of the Soviets - it takes life. Some people have lost their careers for accusations. For example, in 1950, 151 actors, writers, directors, producers, musicians, journalists, and other people involved in entertainment were accused of redness without evidence. This list is known as the Hollywood blacklist. The list will end its career and may be permanently removed from the TV or radio. Therefore, some of the most famous artists in the United States can not find a job.
Senator Joseph McCarthy expanded the red panic after the war with his notorious Hollywood blacklist for celebrities and script writers including Truman Capote and Arthur Miller, denied their employment and hurt their reputation . Government-sponsored efforts to eliminate "outsiders" by creating a culture of terror in addition to a career that harms wealthy famous people today is furious, especially during political chaos, thrilling It was. One of the aims of fascism is to maintain complete control, partly by motivating or forcing integration, and by eliminating personal expression. Eugenia Paulicelli, a fashion scholar, writes, "Fashion with dual functions, taking into account institutions and processes, institutional and personal behavior." Separating from traditional costumes under Soviet communism, the people become more likely to become citizens and social goals. And punish them
Beginning in 1950, Senator Joseph McCarthy launched a campaign called McCarthy to identify and eliminate suspicious communists in the United States. McCarthy accused the masses of becoming federal government, individuals of Hollywood, and communist supporters, spreading the red panic and fearing the overthrow of the communist. Although he received some support during the mission, the Army McCarthy Hearing and the Watkins Committee ultimately weakened McCarthy's political influence. In December 1954, the problematic McCarthy was criticized by the US Senator.
As his new book shows, the media has always been a fort for defending democracy. Calpe wrote about the brave report of the "Red Terror" drama to Senator Edward R. Marrow's senator Joseph McCarthy in the early 1950s. And it led to McCarthy 's death. He reminded us that the reports of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in the early 1970's led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon.