Wednesday, February 13, 2008

"You knew Joe McCarthy? What was he like...?"

(This post does not concern current events and thus probably should have appeared on the weekend. But I want to tell the story while my memory is fresh.)

Some of you may recall the Student on the Sofa, so gallantly aided by generous readers last Christmas. I did not tell you that she has been seriously ill for quite a while. On New Year's Eve, I took her to the emergency room. Two days ago, she went to the hospital for surgery.

As a dangerous operation stretched into its sixth hour, We Who Waited Outside became -- as you might imagine -- more than a little anxious. In other words, I was crawling the walls like Peter Parker.

During those hours, a number of fascinating characters wafted in and out of a small waiting room that would have provided an ideal setting for a one-act play. Among them was a young man frantic over the fate of his girlfriend. The girl's mother -- a Jehovah's Witness -- had forbidden a blood transfusion, despite the danger to her daughter. I had no idea what to tell the poor fellow.

My next chat was with a remarkable silver-haired gentleman named Art Peterson -- aviator, educator, and old-school Republican political operative, back in the days when politics was a sport for gentlemen. (He was gentlemanly enough to permit this post.) Although a conservative, his closest friend was the late James Michener -- a classic liberal who, like Peterson, had once made an unsuccessful congressional bid.

In his novel Recessional, Michener ingloriously kills off a character based on his friend. Peterson had come closer to attaining office, and Michener wanted vengeance.

Not all of Peterson's friends were liberals. He used to go out for drinks with Joe McCarthy -- although no mere mortal could match "Tailgunner Joe's" intake.

I had to ask about the infamous McCarthy. What was the man really like? Was his anti-Communist zeal genuine, as Ann Coulter and other latter-day apologists maintain? Or was he a tool of unseen manipulators, as some others have insisted?

(To read the rest, click "Permalink" below)


"Joe was once a boxer," Peterson explained. Back in those days, a fighter would try to beat the hell out of an opponent in the ring, and then he might have a beer with the same guy an hour later. It was nothing personal.

McCarthyism was largely theater. The crusader wore greasepaint. Imagine a Hamlet ending with real rapiers inserted into real ribcages.

Peterson pictured McCarthy as a hollow creature -- he certainly had a hollow leg -- unsure of his politics and desperately in need of a gimmick. At first, "his" issue was low-cost housing: McCarthy intended to establish himself as a liberal Republican, back in the days when such things existed. But a well-heeled backer in Wisconsin, Walter Harnishfeger, convinced McCarthy to support the Nazis responsible for the Malmedy massacre. (The previous sentence might be more accurate if you substitute "paid" for "convinced.")

Then, said Peterson, "this fellow at Georgetown" assured McCarthy that he could achieve fame by exposing alleged "communists" in Truman's administration. The Georgetown mentor was, I believe, Father Edmund Walsh, although Peterson did not recall the name.

"I kept telling Joe that Communism was far too important a matter for him to use for political gain," said Peterson. But McCarthy had a seat to keep. The circus came to town, and the spectators cheered the elephants. Never mind the ruined lives.

My thoughts wandered to Harvey Matusow, a fake "witness" against alleged commies in the labor movement. Matusow, a flamboyant thespian, considered his testimony a species of performance art. He realized only belatedly that innocents had gone to jail as a result of his hamming.

How many of history's actors have been...actors? How can adults lose sight of the difference between reality and professional wrestling? Is Ann Coulter, like her hero McCarthy, faking it?

In the future, perhaps one of her current drinking buddies will reveal the truth.

Toward the end of our chat, Peterson recalled a story told to him by William Shirer, the author of Inside the Third Reich. (Like Michener, Shirer was impeccably liberal.)

"Shirer told me that Jack Kennedy always kept his word." And how, asked Peterson, could Shirer make that claim with such confidence...?

Shirer revealed that JFK, as a Senator, had gone on a few dates with the college roommate of Shirer's daughter. "He told that girl that if he ever got elected President, she'd be the first girl he slept with. And he did!"

PS: My ladyfriend's operation was a success. Despite a rough night after surgery, she is now recovering. Art Peterson's loved one is also doing well. So is the young lady from the JW family. Despite the interesting company, I would prefer not to see the inside of a hospital waiting room again.

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

Interesting point of note, reading wiki, Unkle Joe McCarthy was Bobby Kennedy jrs sister Kathleens Godfather?
Flo

Jim said...

This is Cannonfire at its best.

Truth, insight, relevance . . . and human.

Who else in the blogosphere would understand that the fates of the three patients matters to the readers?

Peter of Lone Tree said...

From the GlobeandMail:
"I am JFK's love child, B.C. man says".
Also, there's a discussion thread on the above article over at Rigorous Intuition.

gary said...

Is America a Conservative nation? In some ways, no doubt. Hell, in some ways I'm conservative. The other side has done a good job at making "liberal" a dirty word. But on the other hand a number of polls have shown that a majority of Americans are suprisingly "liberal" on the issues, more so than the mainstream Democratic party. There was a lengthy poll on this recently, wish I could find the link. More federal aid to education? Even 58% of self-styled conservatives were in favor. Stricter environmental regulation.Basically "liberal" on abortion. Very liberal on health care. The American people are definately to the "left" of the Democratic Party on the Iraq war.

Personally I call myself a liberal democrat. Small "l", small "d." I never liked "progressive." We could call ourselves "moderates." Compared to the people on the other side we are. I don't think we need to move to the center though, we need to move the center to us. That's what Reagan did.

Anonymous said...

joe, please tell your lovely lady to fare well; had no idea this was the ailing 'friend'!

what pressure you must be under; what can we do to help?

AitchD said...

Americans have no modern tradition of being political, not with only two viable political parties trading places; so it seems pointless to argue whether Americans are 'liberal' or 'conservative' in a political sense. That said, I agree with Gary, but I would also say that modernity (as opposed to superstition, anti-intellectualism, and ethnic indoctrination) is more or less equivalent to what we now call liberalism. Personally I don't care for the term 'modernity', but it's helpful in understanding what could make an "impeccably liberal" American author such as James Michener write such awful, degrading, and untruthful things about someone like Allison Krause, who was shot to death at Kent State on 5/4/70. I figure the celebrated geezer couldn't bear to see the fruits of his Greatest Generation performing their acts on his hard-fought-for-and-won stage without the benefits of a barber or a marriage certificate.

To the Student on the Sofa: Get Well Soon! and Happy Valentine's Day Tomorrow!

Anonymous said...

The best post you've done in months. Let your human side show more often Joe. It becomes you.

Anonymous said...

These are the stories no one else can tell. Thank you for generously sharing them with us here.

I almost jumped ahead just to see how your friend's surgery came through, but the story was too good to miss.
Tell her I wish her a strong recovery! I am happy she had your humanity shine over her in her hours of need.
kc

Anonymous said...

interesting story Joe-- I am curious what it is inside the repugs that wants to tarnish the name of the Malmedy massacres so badly--- it's not just back in the 50s, as Olbermann shows it's on Faux even today ...so why is Faux rooting for the Nazis?

also what Gary said, and the notion of "liberal Republicans" made me wonder Joeseph, what do you (and y'all) think of Paul Ray and the Political Compass? i wish there was a way to work along these lines... www.politicalcompass.org

Anonymous said...

What scalarparty says about Malmedy is true -- and worth thinking about. It's as if the people who get this story backwards are deliberately trying to rehabilitate the Nazis by proving that Americans are just as bad.

Either that or what started out as a slam against the Roosevelt administration has retroactively turned into an attempt to justify Gitmo and Abu Ghraib by claiming that the Greatest Generation did it too.

Either way, this sort of embrace of bad behavior leads nowhere good.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Joseph Cannon said...

That Paul Ray shit ain't for me. I've skimmed very briefly, but it seems to me to be standard-issue SIBPATS progshit. Heard it before; don't wanna hear it again.

This is a liberal Democrat (big D) blog, owned and operated by a guy who HATES progs, and who ain't here to negotiate or to "dialog" with you. You don't have anything to say to me that I haven't heard before, so zip it.

You have plenty of other places to go on the net.

Joseph Cannon said...

Re: the first comment: RFK worked for HUAC originally.

That's one reason I hate progs. Modern progs would never forgive RFK for that. They'd probably twist the history -- "Robert Kennedy started the witch hunts!" -- just as they now try to convince the world that "Hillary started the Iraq war!"

Fucking progs. I wish they all had one neck so I could wring it.

AitchD said...

He didn't work for HUAC. It's young people like us who (righteously if not correctly) confuse HUAC, where Nixon gamboled, frothed, slobbered, and hissed, with McCarthy's Senate hearings. (James Gregory was the perfect Senator Iselin - he looked Nixonian and parodied McCarthy.)

Joseph Cannon said...

aitch, you're right. HUAC was the House. Hence the H. This is not the first time I've been corrected on that dumb mistake. I hope not to make it again.

An old friend of mine worked on "Barney Miller" and got to know James Gregory. My friend always spoke of him as a consummate pro -- on the set early, practicing every little move and inflection incessantly.

That guy could be funny as hell.