Community Columnist:
BY LIN QUENZER
Recently I read in the news about a student at George Mason University who was arrested for trespassing and disturbing the peace because he was protesting the presence of military recruiters on his campus. Tariq Khan, a 27-year-old American citizen, a veteran of four years in the Air Force, found that freedom of speech did not, apparently, extend to him as a Muslim American, nor to his views on war. Though Tariq’s professors and fellow students are fighting to restore his ability to express his opinions, they face an uphill battle.
This is not a new phenomenon in the United States; it is a page right out of the old Cold War play book that was penned in large part by Wisconsin Sen. Joseph McCarthy and his compatriot, Nebraska Sen. Kenneth Wherry, to silence political opposition.
Certainly some of the catch phrases have changed. Communists are now replaced with terrorists, Muslims have replaced “Godless Russians” and the Middle East has replaced Southeast Asia, but one drum continues to bang Wherry’s tired old message: Namely, that homosexuals are a threat to America and are the cause of all bad things that happen to our country.
Today we listen, agog at all these old, hateful messages dressed up in new clothes about “these people,” evildoers bent on America’s utter destruction and, in our fright, forget the painful lessons of McCarthy’s Red, and Wherry’s Lavender, Scares. In the dark days following 9/11, the American public was informed by Jerry Falwell that homosexuals had brought about this catastrophe and that we must “purge” ourselves of this evil. Sadly, many people swallowed this lie as easily as they swallowed it in 1950 when Wherry proclaimed from the Senate floor, “Can (you) think of a person who could be more dangerous to the United States of America than a pervert?” (“The Lavender Scare,” David K. Johnson, University of Chicago Press)
more:
http://www.journalstar.com/articles/2005/10/15/letters/doc4350410351acc407467343.txt