Peru , stating "Get out: Terrorists of the government" Since the 1930s, the political elite of Peru used fear mongering tactics to influence the public by targeting foreign
communist movements according to historian Antonio Zapata of the
Pontifical Catholic University of Peru, beginning with
Joseph Stalin and later with
Fidel Castro.
Terruqueos began to appear during the 1980s and would occur throughout the
internal conflict in Peru. The basis of the
terruqueo began during the presidency of
Fernando Belaúnde when Legislative Decree 46 broadly defined terrorism as "any form of glorification or defense of the political discourse of subversive organizations". Into the 1990s,
authoritarian president
Alberto Fujimori utilized
terruqueos with the help of the
National Intelligence Service to discredit those who opposed him, including dissenters from his own government, with political scientist Daniel Encinas saying that this would evolve into conservative politicians using the attack to target those opposed to Fujimori's neoliberal economic policies and that the right-wing used the
terruqueo as a "strategy of manipulating the legacy of political violence". Ultimately, a
culture of fear was created by Fujimori according to Jo-Marie Burt, with individuals fearing that they would be described as a terrorist. The
terruqueo would then become so prominent that political discussions in Peru often devolved into the attacks, especially during elections. Experts of the United Nations condemned its usage during the protests.
United States 20th century Red-baiting was employed in opposition to
anarchists in the United States as early as the late 1870s when businessmen, religious leaders, politicians and editorial writers tried to rally poor and middle-class workers to oppose dissident railroad workers and again during the
Haymarket affair in the mid-1880s. Red-baiting was well established in the United States during the decade before
World War I. In the post-war period of 1919–1921, the
United States government employed it as a central tactic in dealing with labor radicals, anarchists, communists, socialists, and foreign agents. These actions in reaction to the
First Red Scare and the concurrent
Red Terror served as part of the organizing principle shaping
counter-revolutionary policies and serving to institutionalize
anti-communism as a force in American politics. The period between the first and second Red Scares was relatively calm owing to the success of government anti-communism, the suppressive effects of
New Deal policies on radical
organized labor and the
patriotism associated with total mobilization and
war effort during
World War II. Red-baiting re-emerged in the late 1940s and early 1950s during the period known as the
Second Red Scare due to mounting
Cold War tensions and the spread of communism abroad. Senator
Joseph McCarthy's controversial red-baiting of suspected communists and communist sympathizers in the
United States Department of State and the creation of a
Hollywood blacklist led to the term
McCarthyism being coined to signify any type of reckless
political persecution or
witch-hunt. The history of anti-communist red-baiting in general and McCarthyism in particular continues to be hotly debated and political divisions this controversy created continue to make themselves felt.
Conservative critics contend that revelations such as the
Venona project decryptions and the
FBI Silvermaster File at least mute if not outright refute the charge that red-baiting in general was unjustified. Historian
Nicholas von Hoffman wrote in
The Washington Post that evidence revealed in the Venona project forced him to admit that McCarthy was "still closer to the truth than those who ridiculed him" but has continued to believe that McCarthy did not identify the correct people. A similar view was expressed by Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who led the
Moynihan Commission on Government Secrecy declassifying the Venona decryptions.
Liberal scholars contend that even if someone could prove that the United States government was infiltrated by Soviet spies, McCarthy was censured by the Senate because he was in fact reckless and politically opportunistic, and his red-baiting ruined the lives of countless innocent people. In 1950, United States president
Harry S. Truman had called McCarthy "the greatest asset the
Kremlin has." Historian
Ellen Schrecker wrote that "McCarthyism did more damage to the constitution than the American Communist Party ever did".
21st century Although red-baiting in the United States does not have quite the same effect it previously did due to the fall of most
Marxist–Leninist governments in the 1990s, some pundits posit that events in 21st-century American politics indicates a resurgence of red-baiting consistent with the 1950s. The United States government's measures in 2008 to address the
subprime mortgage crisis such as the
Troubled Asset Relief Program were not only criticized as
corporate welfare but red-baited as a "gateway to socialism". Political activist and author
Tim Wise says that the emergence of such red-baiting may have been motivated by, and given additional force by,
racism towards President
Barack Obama and fear that the
progressive policies of his administration would erode
white privilege in the United States. Some commentators posit that red-baiting was used by
John McCain,
Republican presidential nominee in the
2008 United States presidential election, when he commented that Obama's improvised comments on
wealth redistribution to
Joe the Plumber was a promotion of
socialism. Journalist
David Remnick, who wrote the biography
The Bridge: The Life and Rise of Barack Obama, countered that it should be obvious that after one year in office Obama is a
center-left president and the majority of his policies are in line with the center-left Democratic tradition. In July 2011,
The Fiscal Times columnist Bruce Barlett wrote that an honest examination of the
Obama presidency must conclude that he has in fact been a moderately
conservative Democrat, and that it may take twenty years before Obama's basic conservatism is widely accepted. Author and columnist
Chris Hedges posits that the Obama administration's policies have been mostly
right-wing. In April 2009, Representative
Spencer Bachus made the claim that seventeen of his Congressional colleagues were
socialists but could only name Senator
Bernie Sanders, who has been openly
describing himself as a
democratic socialist for years. Sanders countered that American conservatives blur the differences between
democratic socialism and
authoritarian socialism, and between
democracy and
totalitarianism. For Sanders, the United States would benefit from a serious debate about comparing the
quality of life for the
middle class in the United States and in
Nordic countries with a long
social-democratic tradition. In May 2009, a number of conservative members of the
Republican National Committee were pressing the committee and by extension chairman
Michael Steele to officially adopt the position that the
Democratic Party is
socialist. Over a dozen members of the conservative wing of the committee submitted a new resolution, to be eventually voted on by the entire committee, that would call on the Democratic Party to rename itself the
Democrat Socialist Party; had this resolution been adopted, the committee's official view would have been that Democrats are
socialists. On 20 May 2009, supporters of the resolution agreed to accept language urging Democrats to "stop pushing our country towards socialism and government control", ending a fight within the ranks of the Republican Party that reflected the divide between those who want a more
centrist message and those seeking a more aggressive, conservative voice such as the one expressed by the
Tea Party movement. Frank Llewellyn, the national director of
Democratic Socialists of America, commented that Republicans never really define what they mean by
socialism, and are simply engaging in the
politics of fear. In July 2009, talk show host
Glenn Beck began to devote what would become many episodes on his TV and radio shows, focusing on
Van Jones, a special advisor in President Obama's
White House Council on Environmental Quality. Beck was especially critical of Jones' previous involvement in radical protest movements and referred to him as a "communist-anarchist radical". In September 2009, Jones resigned his position in the Obama administration after a number of his past statements became fodder for conservative critics and Republican officials.
Time credited Beck with leading conservatives' attack on Jones, who characterized it as a "vicious smear campaign" and an effort to use "lies and distortions to distract and divide". On March 5, 2020, an article was published by the
New York Times about
Bernie Sanders and his endeavors during his time as the mayor of Burlington, Vermont. The article mainly focused on his efforts to establish a
sister-city relationship with the city of
Yaroslavl of
the Soviet Union in 1987–88. The Times opened with a direct quotation from a letter Sanders sent to Yaroslavl, showcasing Sanders' desire to bring the United States and Soviet Union closer to peaceful relations. The Times continued with "Unbeknownst to him," the Soviets intended "to exploit Mr. Sanders's anti-war agenda for their own propaganda purposes." The Times presented 89 new files consisting of "letters, telegrams, and internal Soviet government documents" to back their claims. The controversy arose from the Times' presentation and interpretation of these files, potentially intending to paint Sanders with communist political leanings.
Jack F. Matlock Jr., The United States ambassador for the Soviet Union from 1987 to 1991, personally wrote the editor a letter upon reading the article, claiming it to be a "distortion of history." Matlock claimed the sister-city relationship Sanders developed was actively encouraged by the United States government, further insinuating the article to be an instance of Red-Baiting. == Insult usage ==