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When Good Historians Go Bad .... Ann Coulter
World Net Daily ^ | 6 August 2003 | Ann Coulter

Posted on 08/06/2003 5:22:03 PM PDT by Rummyfan

When good historians go bad

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Posted: August 6, 2003 6:25 p.m. Eastern

© 2003 Universal Press Syndicate

Arnold Beichman recently wrote a column attacking my latest book, "Treason" – which he at least admits he didn't read – claiming he has the "names of 'innocent lives' Mr. McCarthy ruined." I was excited to see it. I've been asking for just one innocent person ruined by Joe McCarthy for six weeks, but until now all I had gotten was wild speculation about my personal life.

But strangely, while Beichman claims to have the names of McCarthy's innocent victims, he declines to mention them. (It's been almost 50 years and these people still won't name names.) Instead he offers to send me "one of the most important testimonies about McCarthyism" by "one of our leading Sinologists" – if I provide my address. Since Beichman ain't getting my address, I've looked up the article on my own. It contains the names of precisely two people allegedly destroyed by McCarthy.

The author of this "illuminating article on Joe McCarthy" is one Richard Walker. He didn't allot much space for the discussion of McCarthy's victims, inasmuch as the article consisted primarily of Walker's reminiscences about himself. I quote:

"In 1953 I published my book 'The Multi-State System of Ancient China.' The reaction from the scholarly world was very good."

"One distinguished scholar – who shall remain nameless but who will appear in this narrative again in the context of events that happened a few years later – wrote to me, 'I wish to send my congratulations. I find it excellent and marvel at the mass of literature you went through to reach your conclusions ...'"

"Other reviewers praised the volume."

"Two of my graduate students, who subsequently received their doctorates from Yale, attended the meeting and told me what transpired. Following a few toasts and rounds of drinks, professor Derk Bodde (who was one of the first to apply for the post I was vacating at Yale) rose and announced, 'I propose a toast! We finally got Dick Walker!'"

Beichman wearily explained he refused to read my book because "life is too short." But life is not so short that it cannot be filled with days reading Dick Walker quoting people lauding Dick Walker. (How can I add my name to the list of people whose lives were ruined by Dick Walker?)

But the point is, anyone who advertises his own pathological need for establishmentarian approval is not likely to be found praising Joe McCarthy. Still – though Beichman finds it absolutely urgent that I read Walker's piece – the only specific charge against McCarthy in the entire groaning article is this: "McCarthyism destroyed the careers of a number of fine China specialists in the Foreign Service. What happened to Oliver Edmund Clubb and John Paton Davies was a discreditable chapter in the defense of State Department professionals who were rendering honest service to their country."

Davies and Clubb were among the WASP three-names who helped relinquish China to communist mass murderers – John Carter Vincent, John Stewart Service, John Paton Davies and Oliver Edmund Clubb.

Leaving aside the intriguing facts about Oliver Edmund Clubb, this was not a case instigated by McCarthy, but rather by one of Beichman's heroes, Whittaker Chambers. Indeed, Chambers says as much in his book "Witness" – a book Beichman has praised, saying "few autobiographies are as moving and as instructive about the meaning of communism." I've read the article by Richard Walker. Now Beichman ought to actually read "Witness."

As for John Paton Davies, as a Foreign Service officer, he issued flagrantly pro-communist propaganda in his reports from China, insisting that the United States abandon our ally Chiang Kai-shek and work with the communists. The future of China, Davies said, is not Chiang's, but theirs. Or, as the Washington Post put it in Davies' obituary, Davies' reports "advised a more nuanced approach to communism in China than was politically palatable." (In the sense that Benedict Arnold took a more "nuanced" approach toward the American Revolution than was politically palatable.)

In addition, a Senate committee recommended that Davies be tried for perjury for denying that he had recommended various communists and communist sympathizers to the CIA. He was investigated more than half a dozen times by the State Department. Eventually, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles – no fan of McCarthy's – asked Davies to resign.

Evidence that Davies' career was "destroyed" by McCarthy consists of rafts of platitudinous, worshipful mentions of his name, hagiographic obituaries, the "John Paton Davies Lecture Series" at Deerfield Academy – and even his return to the State Department in 1969 to work on disarmament issues.

Most important, there is an iron-clad taboo against blaming communist-sympathizing Foreign Service officers like Davies for the loss of China. You can say the neoconservatives single-handedly took the nation to war with Iraq, but you cannot say that a band of pro-Mao Foreign Service agents in China had any effect on Mao's triumph in China.

Democrats lose entire continents to totalitarian monsters, lose wars to bloody tyrants, lose countries to Islamic fascists, and then insist that everyone recite the liberal catechism: "No one lost China," "Vietnam was an unwinnable war," "Khomeini's rise to power was inevitable." (Conversely, Ronald Reagan didn't "win" the Cold War; it just ended.)

At the time, the State Department even issued an 800-page "White Paper" purporting to prove the communist takeover of China was inevitable. Despite these heroic efforts, a Gallup poll found that a majority of Americans did not buy the "inevitability" excuse. If Foreign Service officers like Davies can't be blamed for the loss of China, why is Joe McCarthy blamed for the loss of Davies' job? Maybe that was "inevitable," too.

It is not clear how one goes about delineating with absolute certainty where "inevitability" ends and "traitorous incompetence" begins. I will leave that to metaphysicians like Arnold Beichman. Still, what kind of argument is that?

The claim that nobody could have saved China is the most amazing Democratic dodge ever. Perhaps in the chaos of Weimar Republic, Hitler's rise to power was also inevitable. But it is unlikely that we would feel much warmth toward Nazi stooges feverishly working in the State Department to reach out to Hitler on the grounds that his rise was "inevitable." Would our anger be assuaged if we were informed their hard work didn't really help? They tried to help Hitler, but their assistance was superfluous. Let's move on.

Whether or not China could have been saved from communism, it is a fact that the WASP three-names like John Paton Davies weren't trying to save it.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: anncoulter; anncoulterlist; arnoldbeichman
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1 posted on 08/06/2003 5:22:04 PM PDT by Rummyfan
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To: Pokey78


Ann Coulter ping!
2 posted on 08/06/2003 5:23:40 PM PDT by Rummyfan
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To: Rummyfan
Well, she kicked Beichman's butt right between the goal posts.
3 posted on 08/06/2003 5:27:41 PM PDT by aruanan
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Ann, all guns blazing, all the time. I am in total love.
4 posted on 08/06/2003 5:33:31 PM PDT by At _War_With_Liberals ("they took 2 steps to the left, I took 3 steps to the right")
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To: Rummyfan
Oh boy, she sure gets under their skin, I love it!

Still waiting to buy a coffee table book of pictures of her, she's a fantastic photographic study. She has semmingly infinita variations.

Also, she can convey her ideas with that stare. Gives new meaning to the saying "It's written all over her face."

5 posted on 08/06/2003 5:34:10 PM PDT by norraad
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To: norraad
Oh boy, she sure gets under their skin, I love it!

She gets under mine, too, but it has nothing to do with politics. What a lady.

6 posted on 08/06/2003 5:52:31 PM PDT by Marauder ("Baby, I Got News for You" -- Johnny Otis)
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To: Rummyfan
MAN am I glad she's on our side.
If I were a liberal I'd hate her, she beats the crap out of them every week without breaking a sweat.
7 posted on 08/06/2003 5:58:02 PM PDT by The Brush
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To: The Brush
Joe McCarthy is also blamed by "Sinologist" John Fairbanks for ruining his career, but after McCarthy died in 1957 it was revealed by the Senate Internal Security Comittee that he tried to bring Communism to Japan(!).
8 posted on 08/06/2003 6:05:43 PM PDT by UbIwerks
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To: Rummyfan
GO chick GO chick GO chick....!
9 posted on 08/06/2003 6:05:45 PM PDT by ZviTheWise ("Everybody in this house needs to calm down and eat some fruit or something." -- Mel Gibson, "Signs")
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To: Rummyfan; Howlin; mombonn; Sabertooth; Miss Marple; *Ann Coulter list; BraveMan; 1riot1ranger; ...
Thanks!

Ann ping.

10 posted on 08/06/2003 6:26:59 PM PDT by Pokey78
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To: Rummyfan
The left hates Ann because she digs out the truths they have been diligently burying through revisionist history for 50 plus years. Liberals hate truth because they are always wrong.
11 posted on 08/06/2003 6:38:02 PM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all things that need to be done need to be done by the government.)
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To: Rummyfan
Ann Coulter is relentless (among other things...)
12 posted on 08/06/2003 6:54:19 PM PDT by Prince Caspian (Don't ask if it's risky... Ask if the reward is worth the risk)
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To: Rummyfan
What a Babe!!
13 posted on 08/06/2003 7:17:34 PM PDT by Wycowboy
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To: Mind-numbed Robot
The Bible says "the truth shall set you free." Liberals hate the truth because they wish to subjugate everyone else under their "enlightened" domination. Liberalism sooner or later leads to slavery.
14 posted on 08/06/2003 7:26:19 PM PDT by JG52blackman
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To: JG52blackman
Amen.
15 posted on 08/06/2003 8:12:34 PM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all things that need to be done need to be done by the government.)
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To: Rummyfan
INTREP
16 posted on 08/06/2003 9:15:20 PM PDT by LiteKeeper
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To: Rummyfan
just think of this....if patton would have had his way at the end of world war two, the cold war would have never occured.
the old mantra of "we must all get along" that you hear in the form of "bi-partisan" by "those people" ( it raises my blood pressure just to think about saying the name. lol)
is just thier way of saying"you gotta do it our way" or "you're being insensitive.)
frankly, McCarthy, imho, had it right from the word go.all the proof any one really needs is spouting nonstop through various forms of media and all through our school systems.
(obvious socialist tactics of submission and control)
Ann has the heart of our greatest war heros , and if "those people" are nervous because of her viewpoints...well that just shows how much they have to hide

give 'em hell Ann
you ROCK!
17 posted on 08/06/2003 10:04:03 PM PDT by xtorpedoman (do what you can,with what you have, where ever you are)
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To: Rummyfan
Awesome Ann Bump!
18 posted on 08/06/2003 10:26:16 PM PDT by Tamzee (I was a vegetarian until I started leaning toward the sunlight...... Rita Rudner)
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To: Tamsey
Ann bump!
19 posted on 08/07/2003 4:43:16 AM PDT by 7thson (I think it takes a big dog to weigh a 100 pounds.)
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To: Rummyfan; Ann Coulter
Well, that's gonna leave a mark. ;-)
20 posted on 08/07/2003 7:47:47 AM PDT by an amused spectator
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