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Frank S. Meyer Was a Political Paradox

Creed & Culture author Robert Dean Lurie says that one of the takeaways from a new biography of Frank Meyer is that the right used to be fun.

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Noel Parmentel’s quote, “The right wing was fun back then,” is one of the takeaways from Daniel J. Flynn’s new book The Man Who Invented Conservatism: The Unlikely Life of Frank S. Meyer. Fun? The progenitors of post-World War Two American conservatism were, as portrayed here, a high-spirited lot. They were also intemperate, combative, self-destructive, often brilliant, not infrequently loony, and always deeply interesting.

One could apply those qualities to the subject of the book, a character who looms large in the minds of intellectual conservatives and hardly anywhere else.

Continue reading . . .

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