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“Arthur Miller had just turned 14 when His family's savings were
wiped out by the stock market crash of October, 1929. Almost literally
overnight, the lives of many of his friends changed from reasonable comfort
to poverty. Over the next 12 years--the time of the Great Depression, as
it is called--Arthur Miller came to know and work with people who had joined
the Communist Party. These people weren't spies, they simply were desperate,
and they saw Communism as a way out of a desperate situation. And although
Communism worried a few people in the 1930s, most were too busy with their
own problems to give it much thought. Besides, Soviet Russia was not yet
an enemy of the United States. In fact, Russian and American soldiers later
fought side by side against the Germans at the end of World War II. It
wasn't until after the war, when--as so often happens--the victor's turned
against each other, that Communism began to be considered a very serious
threat. By the late 1940s when the Congressional hearings first began,
there were quite a few people who had flirted with Communism at some time
or other, although most had renounced it long before. But even if you had
no Communism in your own past, you could easily be in the same position
as Arthur Miller--you knew someone who did. That was more than enough to
get you in trouble with Senator McCarthy and similar investigators.” |