This line of argument doesn't make sense to me.
A lot of people thought that the US Government was infiltrated with spies, and they were right. It's long been common knowledge that there was a Soviet spy on the Manhattan project, for instance, which is probably why the USSR got the bomb so quickly.
Yes.
However, McCarthy essentially used the (correct) suspicion that there were Soviet spies in the US Government as a pretense to further his own political agenda.
I suppose so. I wish the real world consisted of businessmen who would serve in government for 4 years and then go back to business (like jury duty). But instead most if not all politicians are (mostly lawyers, and that's another problem) people whose whole goal is to attain and keep power.
This should be considered reprehensible by all people. History is that it was considered reprehensible by people who did not consider Soviet espionage a problem. However, it should, by all reason, be considered even more reprehensible by people who considered Soviet espionage a problem, because McCarthy's own political ambitions diverted attention away from the people who really were spies. De Facto, McCarthy acted as a Soviet agent, and he was more effective in that job than in any other.
That's interesting and I'd say,
defacto: true. But it could still be true, as I posit that it could be, for the MAIN reason that it follows logically from the premise. 1. Assume there is a communist infiltration, 2. Chicken Little warns of it. 3. Chicken little gets a high profile, 4. Chicken little is correct about his warning. 5. The infiltration is powerful enough to kill Chicken Little. So while it is true that McCarthy did damage to "anti-communism", there were also many communists who were rooted out, nevertheless. But I wonder how much damage to anti-communism was really due to McCarthy being bad at what he did. Could a charming person have done it and not been censured? How could we ever know for sure? I translate what you have said to this: after McCarthy, what politician in their right mind, who wanted to stay a politician (or stay alive?), would make much anti-communist noise after seeing what happened to McCarthy? So, for whatever reason McCarthy got clobbered, it had a lasting effect that was helpful toward communists. I'm not sure you are right that it was specifically a McCarthy flaw - I posit that anyone at that time would have been rooted out for delivering the message to the public about the 80-something names.
I have learned from experience that what I am saying cannot be conveyed, except to people who have figured it out for themselves. The overt appearance of intention and ideological rectitude blinds many people to the possibility that what their "friends" do may actually be counterproductive. I've seen this happen often, notably with the feminism of the late 1980s and the early 1990s.
I don't see your point as being so ephemeral as to be difficult to grasp - I just do not completely agree. Feminists destroyed feminism because most women do not relate to extreme feminism. Tree-huggers might destroy ecological purposes, too, I suppose. But I do not buy the line: McCarthy was right but his methods sucked. It seems to be the lock-step mantra from the left. Some espouse it because their favorite hallowed poly-sci prof said it enough for it to burn a groove in the neural network. Sorry, but that's what you sound like when you say "what I am saying cannot be conveyed...". I do not know much about McCarthy as a personality - he maybe DID suck, big time. But what I have read about what he DID, sounds to me like he was set up,
vis a vis how the Truman Administration changed the rules on him.
McCarthy's claims that the US government was infested with Soviet spies served, for him, the same purpose as a carnival barker's top hat or the pretense of the Catholic Church to protect rapists of children.
Before, I erroneously said it was McCarthy's job. I read some and see that he adopted this role on his own, apparently. So he may have done it because of strong convictions or (being a politician) mostly for the attraction as you suggest. But I'm not cool, unless I say "McCarthy sucks" after I say he may have been right.
I have already seen how, on this forum, asking a few questions that may imply some defense of McCarthy, quickly casts you in a domain of some sort of undesired association. If anything, that is quite revealing about a powerful mind-game being played out to this day. ...and very few have the balls to open up discussion about those subjects that are politically incorrect. Jeez, what was I thinking... to suggest McCarthy was right? How insane. Wait - no, now I get it ... its OK to say McCarthy was right if I follow up with a comment about how he sucked. Seems like Orwellian 'newspeak' to me.