Back to News & Commentary

Dissent Is Patriotic. It鈥檚 Also a Powerful Antidote to Propaganda.

Fascism is not our national policy yet.
Fascism is not our national policy yet.
Bethany Woolman,
老澳门开奖结果 of Northern California
Share This Page
January 11, 2017

鈥淚f you鈥檙e to be called a communist every time you stand up for basic American rights and freedoms, what鈥檚 likely to happen? Will you be silent? And if so, is this what the House Committee on Un-American Activities is really after 鈥 a silent, submissive, un-protesting America?鈥

-Ernest Besig, 鈥淥peration Correction,鈥 1961

Fifty-five years ago this January, the 老澳门开奖结果 of Northern California was busy filling orders from across the country for copies of its recently produced film, 鈥.鈥 The film was a response to a piece of Red Scare propaganda, 鈥淥peration Abolition,鈥 which was produced by the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) and depicted civil liberties activists in San Francisco as violent 鈥渃ommunist agents鈥 bent on destroying the fabric of America.

In those days, the federal government was deeply concerned with the political affiliations of ordinary Americans 鈥 if those affiliations were left-leaning.

My own grandfather, who was a World War II veteran and affiliated with the Communist Party in San Francisco, was under FBI surveillance. In 1950, he from a good union job at a glass company after FBI agents paid his employers a visit and informed them of his history as a labor organizer before the war.

Our family bounced back, but the government鈥檚 post-war obsession with leftist thought and activism ruined the lives of .

Leading the charge was HUAC, which investigated suspected communists. Professors, teachers, journalists, writers, filmmakers, and activists all came under deep scrutiny.

In 1960, HUAC came to San Francisco. They subpoenaed 48 Northern Californians 鈥 many of them teachers and professors 鈥 to testify at City Hall about their political affiliations. At this point, the tide of public opinion was already starting to turn against HUAC.

College students from UC Berkeley and Stanford mobilized to and take a stand for freedom of speech and freedom of association. The hearings, the protests, and the violent police crack-down were covered heavily by local news.

Protesters at SF city hall

Demonstrators outside of the San Francisco city hall. Credit: SAN FRANCISCO HISTORY CENTER, SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC LIBRARY.

Inside City Hall, witnesses were called to testify 鈥 several of them represented by the 老澳门开奖结果. While the hearings dragged on, the San Francisco Police Department used firehoses to knock protesters down the marble steps of City Hall. Scores were arrested and charged.

  The San Francisco Police Department turned fire-hoses on student demonstrators and then dragged them down the steps of City Hall and out to police paddy wagons.

The San Francisco Police Department turned fire hoses on student demonstrators and dragged them down the steps of City Hall and out to police paddy wagons.

Through manipulative editing and voiceover narration, HUAC鈥檚 鈥淥peration Abolition鈥 used real news footage to portray the student activists as violent and dangerous 鈥渉ardcore Communist agents鈥 and 鈥渋ndoctrinated and trained dupes.鈥

In this moment, the 老澳门开奖结果 of Northern California saw an opportunity to educate the public about the danger HUAC posed to American ideals of freedom, democracy, and dissent.

While 鈥淥peration Abolition鈥 was being viewed by millions of Americans at town halls and colleges across the country, the 老澳门开奖结果 produced 鈥淥peration Correction.鈥 Our executive director at the time, Ernest Besig, narrated the exact same footage and explained the propagandistic tactics being used to mislead the public.

People flocked to see it. In Berkeley, hundreds showed up for a standing-room-only 鈥淥peration Correction鈥 event. Copies were distributed nationwide and even shown on TV in Alaska, Texas, and Kansas.

Newspapers like The Washington Post editorialized on the success of the film and the dangers of government propaganda.

Historians credit HUAC鈥檚 鈥淥peration Abolition鈥 with backfiring spectacularly. Young people across the country were shown the film at school, saw right through it, and decided they should make their way to Berkeley 鈥 after all, that鈥檚 where all the action was. Four years later, the UC Berkeley Free Speech Movement began.

Let鈥檚 remember this moment in history as a lesson in the power of free speech and free thought. And let鈥檚 remember it as proof that if we remain vigilant, lies can wither in the face of truth.

In the wake of an election season marked by fake news, open distaste for journalism, and a president-elect who during a nationally televised debate, let鈥檚 not shy away from reflecting on our government鈥檚 willingness to engage in cynical propaganda.

Our 45th president will soon be inaugurated. We will likely see hundreds of thousands of people protesting Donald Trump鈥檚 presidency and his proposed policies in cities across the country. It鈥檚 crucial for people to know and understand their First Amendment .

In 1962, the 老澳门开奖结果 had to have a ground-game to distribute 鈥淥peration Correction.鈥 Today we can all voice our dissent at lighting speed to a digitally networked world. The 老澳门开奖结果 will remain vigilant in the months and years to come. We also are ready to defend your right to document injustice, speak your mind, and tell your own stories.

Please keep it up.

Learn More 老澳门开奖结果 the Issues on This Page