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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMother Jones: Pete Seeger's FBI File Reveals How the Folk Legend First Became a Target of the Feds
Mother Jones - Pete Seegers FBI File Reveals How the Folk Legend First Became a Target of the Feds
It all started with a letter.
David Corn
December 18, 2015
From the 1940s through the early 1970s, the US government spied on singer-songwriter Pete Seeger because of his political views and associations. According to documents in Seegers extensive FBI filewhich runs to nearly 1,800 pages (with 90 pages withheld) and was obtained by Mother Jones under the Freedom of Information Actthe bureaus initial interest in Seeger was triggered in 1943 after Seeger, as an Army private, wrote a letter protesting a proposal to deport all Japanese American citizens and residents when World War II ended.
Seeger, a champion of folk music and progressive causesand the writer, performer, or promoter of now-classic songs, including as If I Had a Hammer, Where Have All the Flowers Gone?, Turn! Turn! Turn!, Kisses Sweeter Than Wine, Goodnight, Irene, and This Land Is Your Landwas a member of the Communist Party for several years in the 1940s, as he subsequently acknowledged. (He later said he should have left earlier.) His FBI file shows that Seeger, who died in early 2014, was for decades hounded by the FBI, which kept trying to tie him to the Communist Party, and the first investigation in the file illustrates the absurd excesses of the paranoid security establishment of that era.
In July 1942, Seeger was drafted into the Army. (I was almost glad when I heard from my draft board, he later wrote in a diary.) He was assigned to be trained as an aviation mechanic at Keesler Field in Mississippi. While in the Army, he kept up with the news, and in the fall of 1942, Seeger, who was then 23 years old, wrote a letter of protest to the California chapter of the American Legion. It was to the point:
How did the American Legion respond? It forwarded Seegers note to the FBI in San Francisco. And somehow this matter was brought to the attention of the Military Intelligence Service of the War Department. Within weeks, military intelligence was investigating Seegerand soon updating the FBI on its effort. The official reason for investigation, as numerous military reports forwarded to the FBI noted, was that Subject wrote letter protesting and criticizing the California American Legions resolution advocating deportation of all Japanese, citizens or not, after the war, and barring all Japanese descendants from citizenship.
Seeger had become a target merely because he had objected to mass deportations. The secret investigation coincided with the completion of Seegers training as an aviation mechanic. He expected to be deployed to active duty. But while he was under investigation, those orders never came. He watched the rest of his training class be sent to airfields, but he stayed put. At first, he wasnt sure why. He was frustrated.
/snip
It all started with a letter.
David Corn
December 18, 2015
From the 1940s through the early 1970s, the US government spied on singer-songwriter Pete Seeger because of his political views and associations. According to documents in Seegers extensive FBI filewhich runs to nearly 1,800 pages (with 90 pages withheld) and was obtained by Mother Jones under the Freedom of Information Actthe bureaus initial interest in Seeger was triggered in 1943 after Seeger, as an Army private, wrote a letter protesting a proposal to deport all Japanese American citizens and residents when World War II ended.
Seeger, a champion of folk music and progressive causesand the writer, performer, or promoter of now-classic songs, including as If I Had a Hammer, Where Have All the Flowers Gone?, Turn! Turn! Turn!, Kisses Sweeter Than Wine, Goodnight, Irene, and This Land Is Your Landwas a member of the Communist Party for several years in the 1940s, as he subsequently acknowledged. (He later said he should have left earlier.) His FBI file shows that Seeger, who died in early 2014, was for decades hounded by the FBI, which kept trying to tie him to the Communist Party, and the first investigation in the file illustrates the absurd excesses of the paranoid security establishment of that era.
In July 1942, Seeger was drafted into the Army. (I was almost glad when I heard from my draft board, he later wrote in a diary.) He was assigned to be trained as an aviation mechanic at Keesler Field in Mississippi. While in the Army, he kept up with the news, and in the fall of 1942, Seeger, who was then 23 years old, wrote a letter of protest to the California chapter of the American Legion. It was to the point:
How did the American Legion respond? It forwarded Seegers note to the FBI in San Francisco. And somehow this matter was brought to the attention of the Military Intelligence Service of the War Department. Within weeks, military intelligence was investigating Seegerand soon updating the FBI on its effort. The official reason for investigation, as numerous military reports forwarded to the FBI noted, was that Subject wrote letter protesting and criticizing the California American Legions resolution advocating deportation of all Japanese, citizens or not, after the war, and barring all Japanese descendants from citizenship.
Seeger had become a target merely because he had objected to mass deportations. The secret investigation coincided with the completion of Seegers training as an aviation mechanic. He expected to be deployed to active duty. But while he was under investigation, those orders never came. He watched the rest of his training class be sent to airfields, but he stayed put. At first, he wasnt sure why. He was frustrated.
/snip
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Mother Jones: Pete Seeger's FBI File Reveals How the Folk Legend First Became a Target of the Feds (Original Post)
Dennis Donovan
Yesterday
OP
vapor2
(1,633 posts)1. Never knew this as a fan of his music
ALSO watch The US vs John Lennon. I wonder if history will repeat itself??
Iggo
(48,533 posts)2. Seriously. Pete Seeger.
Jeez.
Martin Eden
(13,563 posts)3. Thanks for sharing this article on Pete Seeger
Interest in his life has been renewed since the Bob Dylan movie came out.
snot
(10,812 posts)4. Authoritarians fear art.
It's too educational.
What is more educational is most aesthetic
and what is most aesthetic is most educational.
Nam June Paik, Radical Software, Issue # 1
Thanks for the history!
Kid Berwyn
(18,351 posts)5. Kash Patel will do worse.
Imagine J Edgar Hoover with AI working for Al Capone.