The second Red Scare
The term "Red Scare" refers to periods of heightened anti-communist sentiment, fear, and persecution in the United States. This term is often associated with the First Red Scare following World War I and the Second Red Scare during the Cold War era in the 1950s. It typically involves government actions to suppress perceived communist threats and dissent.
mccarthyism
mccarthyism
The Red Scare.
This fear does not seem to have a specific term as described, but may stem from a fear of one's one voice, or phonophobia.
The ancient Hawaiians were communal, but they didn't have an ecomomy that could be described as "communist" or any other modern term.
red scare
8th grade Social Studies. Being red in the 1950 is another term for being a communist, since red is the color of the Russian flag. The Russians were communists.
McCarthyism mean making unfair accusations of disloyalty without evidence. The term is named after Senator Joseph McCarthy who in the 1950s accused thousands of Americans of being communists or communist sympathizers.
Short-term memory was described by psychologist William James in the late 19th century, but the concept was further developed by psychologist George A. Miller in the 1950s. Miller's research helped to popularize the idea of short-term memory and its limitations.
The Red Scare was the fear of Communism and its possible spread. There were two periods of Red Scare, after World War I and World War II.