Oct 05
History

The Paradoxical Patriot

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The Paradoxical Patriot

The political odyssey of Frank S. Meyer

Rediscovering a Conservative Architect

President Harry Truman famously said, “The only thing new in the world is the history you don’t know.” In Daniel J. Flynn’s latest tome, The Man Who Invented Conservatism: The Unlikely Life of Frank S. Meyer fits that bill. Flynn, a senior editor at The American Spectator, examines the ideological evolution of one of conservatism’s most paradoxical and overlooked architects, Frank S. Meyer.

Archival Discoveries

Flynn draws from archival materials that include letters, documents, and personal artifacts to uncover new perspectives on Meyer’s intellectual journey and lifelong relationships. This long-lost treasure trove of history was rediscovered three years ago, anchoring Flynn for three days as he sifted through the chronological gold mine hidden within a former soda warehouse in Altoona, Pennsylvania.

From Marxist to Conservative

With exhaustive research and vivid storytelling, Flynn chronicles Meyer’s improbable political legacy from Marxist demagogue to conservative academic. Among the pantheon of conservative American thinkers that stretches from John Adams to Thomas Sowell, it is Meyer who emerges as the godfather of the American conservative movement.

Shaping the Conservative Movement

Flynn paints a rich, nuanced portrait of Meyer, revealing the intellectual rivalries, friendships, and ideological battles that shaped the contemporary post-World War II conservative crusade with Meyer at its philosophical core.

The Birth of Fusionism

Meyer was an intellectual and political acrobat, and central to his legacy was his development of “fusionism,” which reconciled libertarianism and traditionalism. It was fusionism that influenced the Goldwater coalition that bequeathed Ronald Reagan his philosophical scaffold, offering an avenue for free-market evangelists and moral crusaders to harmonize.

Contradictions that Defined Him

Meyer’s contradictions and convictions defined the ideological contours of modern American conservatism. Complex lives sculpt and influence political legacies as Meyer’s fusionist thought continues to echo, fracture, and evolve in today’s ongoing political discourse.

Liberty and Tradition as Counterweights

Meyer was an atheist who sympathized with Catholic thought, a libertarian who valued tradition, and a radical who ultimately embraced restraint. These contradictions are not smoothed over; they are presented as essential to understanding Meyer’s intellectual depth.

His paradoxes reveal a disheveled, deeply human ideologue. He saw liberty and tradition not as enemies, but as necessary counterweights. Meyer argued liberty was the highest political good, but only when exercised within a framework of virtue, understanding that political movements are built not on purity, but on persuasion.

A Cultural Force

Meyer was more than a theorist, editor, and mentor, but a cultural force in the first degree. Academic pursuits at Princeton and Oxford led to his role as a founding editor of National Review, where he wrote the longstanding and weighty column Principles and Heresies.

His personal life is woven throughout the narrative, reinforcing how belief systems are lived as much as they are theorized. The Cold War backdrop adds another layer to his intellectual fabric, underscoring how anti-communism served as both a catalyst and crucible for Meyer’s eventual conversion.

Scholarship with Narrative Flair

Flynn’s prose blends scholarly rigor with narrative flair that transcends the conventional biography by breathing life into Meyer, long relegated to the margins of historical irrelevance. Flynn reconstructs Meyer’s journey as both theatrically charged and ideologically complex, crafting a storyline that makes convoluted ideological shifts feel personal and accessible while reading like a novel.

A Layered Metamorphosis

The sheer scope of Flynn’s research – 129 pages of acknowledgements, bibliography, and index attests to the depth of the author’s excavation and underscores Meyer’s evolution not as a clean ideological pivot, but as a layered metamorphosis. Meyer emerges as a paradoxical academic perched at the anxious intersection of Cold War conservatism.

Charity and Clarity

Flynn’s treatment of Meyer evokes the Thomistic balance of charity and clarity. He probes Meyer’s contradictions not to dismiss them, but to illuminate the restless intellect of a man who believed, like Thomas Aquinas, that truth is not merely known, it is lived.

Lasting Relevance

The result is a well-researched and revealing portrait of a scholar whose ideas remain relevant.

In an era where ideological nuance is treated like betrayal, Meyer’s life reminds us that contradiction is not a weakness, but the price of finding truth.

Meyer’s conviction that ideas shape history is not an abstraction but a vocation, with Flynn guiding readers through a life marked by philosophical and moral rigor.

A Must-Read Biography

For those who possess a reading list that is drawn to narrative history and biographies, Meyer’s story needs to be at the top of the list.


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