Senator Warren G. Harding.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
McCarthy.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
He collected information about the political views of government workers and used it against them.
McCarthy.
... the first "Red Scare was about job and political reform ... The second "Red Scare " was manly locked on communism and how it has i been indoctrinated into American society and political bodys...
During the Red Scare, particularly the first one in the early 1920s, the most notable figure arrested was anarchist and socialist leader Emma Goldman. She, along with many others, was targeted during the Palmer Raids, which aimed to suppress radical political movements. Thousands of immigrants, labor activists, and leftists were also arrested, but Goldman remains one of the most prominent examples of the crackdown on perceived subversion. The second Red Scare in the late 1940s and 1950s saw numerous individuals, including government officials and Hollywood figures, face accusations and arrests related to alleged communist affiliations.
A Red Scare is the promotion of fear of a potential rise of communism or radical leftism, used by anti-leftist proponents. In the United States, the First Red Scare was about worker (socialist) revolution and political radicalism.
Dr. Robert Oppenheimer
Paul Robeson became a symbol of the Red Scare due to his outspoken political beliefs and activism, particularly his support for civil rights and socialism, which were viewed with suspicion during this period. His strong ties to leftist movements and his criticism of American capitalism led to government scrutiny and blacklisting, exemplifying the era's fear of communism and dissent. As a prominent African American figure, his persecution also highlighted the intersection of racial and political repression in the United States during the 1950s. Robeson's experience illustrated the broader climate of paranoia and intolerance that characterized the Red Scare.