Indeed, many of those who most vigorously opposed Communism in this country were reviled and demonized more than the Communists themselves. Irrespective of whether you believe certain Communist "hunters" committed excesses, should you excuse the actual traitors themselves (here I'm referring to Soviet Spies in the bowels of our government)? What would motivate people to defend the indefensible? Indeed, the greatest irony of the McCarthy chapter of American history is that it has been rewritten to protect those who protected America's enemies.
And please don't say that liberal sympathy for the bad guys was motivated solely by their instinct to protect innocent individuals from "McCarthyite" tactics. The Alger Hiss affair preceded McCarthyism's seminal event: McCarthy's "notorious" Wheeling, West Virginia, speech, in which he claimed that 57 Communists were in the State Department.
The Alger Hiss affair began when ex-Communist spy Whittaker Chambers accused his former friend, Alger Hiss, of being a Soviet spy. Read and lament how the liberal establishment circled the wagons in defense of this Communist and maliciously assassinated Chambers' character for exposing one of their darlings. Read how after Chambers produced his smoking gun, the Pumpkin Papers, liberals persisted in defending Hiss.
Read how even "On the day of Hiss's conviction (of perjury for lying about being a Soviet spy), Jan. 25, 1950, (President Truman's secretary of state) Dean Acheson announced at a press conference, "I do not intend to turn my back on Alger Hiss." Read Coulter's delicious revelation that both the Washington Post and the New York Times, as late as 1992, and again in 1994 in the Times' case, were still running stories defending Hiss.
To the everlasting shame of these two newspapers, in 1995, the results of the Venona Project (the decoding of Soviet cables during the Cold War) were made public, indisputably proving, among other things, that Hiss was a Soviet spy. There's so much more in Coulter's book. Read it.
Liberals have been quick to castigate others for their alleged excesses. In "Treason," Coulter has exposed them for their own excesses -- in naturally jumping to the defense of those who sought to harm our nation. If they had any legitimate defense for their behavior, perhaps they would quit bashing Coulter and present it. Don't hold your breath.