McCarthyism?

eltonjohnElton John has given an interview that the BBC is reporting on in which he speaks of the reluctance of celebrities to speak out against the Iraq War to the situation of McCarthyism in the 1950s. According to the story:

Elton John has said stars are scared to speak out against war in Iraq because of “bullying tactics” used by the US government to hinder free speech.

“There’s an atmosphere of fear in America right now that is deadly. Everyone is too career-conscious,” he told New York magazine, Interview.

Sir Elton said performers could be “frightened by the current administration’s bullying tactics”.

The singer likened the current “fear factor” to McCarthyism in the 1950s.

“As of this spring, there have been virtually no anti-war concerts – or anti-war songs that catch on, for that matter,” he said.

“[T]he Dixie Chicks got shot down in flames last year for criticising the president. They were treated like they were being un-American, when in fact they have every right to say whatever they want about him because he’s freely elected, and therefore accountable.”

Assuming that the BBC is being accurate in its reporting of what John said, what the heck’s going on here?

I don’t know how much Elton John knows about U. S. history, but the McCarthy Era (1950-1953) was a period in which the U.S. Congress was conducting hearing (led by Sen. Joe McCarthy) into alleged Communist infiltration into the U.S. government and military. McCarthy went too far and destroyed his own reputation (hence his name is now a by-word for government-led bullying). He was censured by the Senate and retired in disgrace. Ironically, McCarthy was right that there were Soviet infiltrators (Duh! You don’t think the KGB had anybody working for them in the U.S.?), and recently declassified intelligence indicates that McCarthy actually underestimated the number of Soviet agents there were. We now know that there were at least 349 such agents, only half of whom were ever identified.

Several years before the McCarthy Era, in 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committee investigated the Communist subversion in Hollywood and ended up citing the Hollywood Ten for contempt of Congress for refusal to cooperate with the investigation. So there was a case in which the government could be perceived as “bullying” entertainment inductry figures.

However, as far as I am aware, nothing remotely like that is happening now. The celebrities who have spoken out against the administration’s prosecution of the War on Terror, including the Iraq War, have been entirely unmolested by the government as far as I can tell, and Elton John’s reference to government “bullying tactics” is remarkably short on specifics as to what those tactics are–at least as it is reported by the BBC.

The fact that “as of this spring, there have been virtually no anti-war concerts – or anti-war songs that catch on” is due to three factors: (1) major hostilities are already over in the Iraq War and the clean-up phase, as difficult as it has been, has not turned into the kind of morass that Vietnam did, (2) unlike the Vietnam war, the Iraq War was prosecuted as part of self-defense campaign to ensure national security in the wake of a devastating sneak attack that galvanized the American public, and thus (3) the American public supported and largely continues to support the war–at least to the extent of not being interested in organized protests or buying anti-war songs.

The problem Elton John has is not with the government, it is with the public.

Those celebrities who have encountered problems with their careers have done so not because the government hauled them up before a congressional committee and cited them for contempt of Congress but because the public decided it didn’t want to buy their records or watch their shows.

I happen to be one of the people who stopped listening to the Dixie Chicks after their comments last year. For those who may not be aware, while on tour in England the Chicks’ lead singer made comments about the Chicks, as Texans, being ashamed of President Bush. My initial impulse was to be dismayed at their remarks but not to stop listening to them. I figured the Chicks would quickly be brought to their senses and apologize and there would be few long-lasting repercussions.

They had to apologize. The comments that they made displayed no grasp whatsoever of who their core audience is (i.e., country-music fans). Managers and record company officials would quickly sober the group up to the potential career implications of directly mocking the sensibilities of one’s core audience, and an apology would be forthcoming.

However, instead of apologizing, the Chicks issued a series of smouldering, defiant non-apologies that made a pretense of being apologetic. I mean, they couldn’t even muster up the wherewithal to give an acceptable phony showbiz apology to their fans. Every time they opened their mouths to “apologize,” they only made it worse. While this string of non-apologies was happening the Chicks did the absolutely bizarre thing of responding to the controversy by appearing on the cover of Entertainment Weekly stark nekkid with politically-charged words written all over their bodies (e.g., Traitors, Hero, Boycott, Brave, Dixie Sluts, Free Speech, Saddam’s Angels, Peace).

It was at that point that I decided–all on my own, without anybody from the government telling me what to think–“Okay, these people are too bizarre for me. Whatever skills they may have as singers, I’m not going to be able to listen to them sing for the foreseeable future without having to think about all this unpleasantness, and as I don’t want to do that, the simple solution is to stop listening to their music and stop buying their CDs. Perhaps increasing age, maturity, or business-savvy will prompt the Chicks to rethink their position and at some point in the future issue at least a passingly sincere apology and I can rethink my decision, but for now, that’s it.”

So the Dixie Chicks weren’t shot down in flames. They shot themselves down by mocking the sensibilities of their core audience at a nationally sensitive moment and then–like defiant children–repeatedly refusing to apologize to their fans and then doing the over-the-top bizarro stunt with the Entertainment Weekly cover.

There’s no government bullying here. People decided all on their own that the Dixie Chicks’ behavior was sufficiently unacceptable that they didn’t want to support them anymore.

Elton John, your problem isn’t with the American government but the American public. I wonder why it is that you don’t say so?

Author: Jimmy Akin

Jimmy was born in Texas, grew up nominally Protestant, but at age 20 experienced a profound conversion to Christ. Planning on becoming a Protestant seminary professor, he started an intensive study of the Bible. But the more he immersed himself in Scripture the more he found to support the Catholic faith, and in 1992 he entered the Catholic Church. His conversion story, "A Triumph and a Tragedy," is published in Surprised by Truth. Besides being an author, Jimmy is the Senior Apologist at Catholic Answers, a contributing editor to Catholic Answers Magazine, and a weekly guest on "Catholic Answers Live."

8 thoughts on “McCarthyism?”

  1. “The problem Elton John has is not with the government, it is with the public.”
    Good one Jimmy.
    I too was turned off by the Dixie Chicks behaviour…which is really too bad because they are really good and they are the ONLY country music group that I like. I normally don’t dig the country music.
    And it’s not just the Dixie Chicks that give me problems nowadays. I have to try extra hard when watching the Lord of the Rings to not remember that the guy who plays Aragorn is an ignorant left wing anti-Bush wacko.
    I don’t know where this martyr’s complex comes from. Michael Moore, the world’s foremost anti-American, has been able to make tens of millions of dollars for movies that in an earlier age could have been grounds for treason charges.

  2. Jimmy,
    At the article mentioned, the name of the Committee was the “House Committee on Un-American Activities.” I guess “HCUA” didn’t sound as good as “HUAC” so it’s generally reported as the latter.

  3. The Dixie Chicks excercised their freedom of speech. The government did not stop them.
    What they and other “freedom of speech” activists fail to recognize is that the rest of America excercised their freedome of speech also – to condemn the Chicks.
    Freedom of speech goes both ways.

  4. Elton John, your problem isn’t with the American government but the American public. I wonder why it is that you don’t say so?

    Because that would be bad marketing!
    Hallo Jimmy, Emily Snyder here – having been directed by Mom re: the “Gobble Us In”…oops, “Gather Us In” post that Suzanne sent her. And so it goes, and so it goes….
    But seriously, I think this ultimately comes down to a question of responsibility. Just as Adam and Eve sought a means to blame anyone but themselves for their actions, so do we ever seek out a scapegoat.
    I’ve been chatting with some of my students who are upset about the war/Bush/defense of marriage…welcome to MA (sigh)…. Each of them tends to blame the President for all their ills; after all, he can hardly fight back and seems a likely target. He is that marvellous face of the nebulous “they.”
    Curious dichotomy, non? One must blame a “them,” form fabulous mythologies about “religious right conspiracies” so that, in one’s own mind, one can play the part of wounded, individualistic underdog…all the while grateful that one is backed by every other “wounded, individualistic underdog” in the so-called “liberal intelligencia.”
    How can that be fully blamed? We are called to become the individual whom God created, we are each called to be saints within the Body of Christ. But whereas we are called to be a toe, a hand, a heart in His Body, the liberal mindset says, “Let us all be amputated pinkies together.”
    Anywho, poor Elton John would hardly like to wake up and realize that he might have to consider whether his music is particularly good, rather than simply laying the blame at the U.S. Government’s feet.

  5. Yeah, I know. So sad. Rondstadt has such a killer voice, too. Her performance as Maybelle in “The Pirates of Penzance” is excellent, and she has an out-of-this-world version of Hank Williams’ “Hey, Good Lookin'” that she did with the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.
    Don’t know if I would have walked out on her recent performance (maybe), but won’t stop listening to her stuff–unless she issues a string of smouldering non-apologies and poses naked on a magazine cover with political slogans written on her body (or takes actions equivalent to these).

  6. Celebrities can say what they want. They just don’t like it that others can respond to them. If the Dixie Chicks, or Elton John, didn’t want opinions in response to their political statements, they should have just shut up and sang. We all have free speech.

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