Know Your Enemy: Frank Meyer, Inventor of Conservatism
Know Your Enemy: Frank Meyer, Inventor of Conservatism

Know Your Enemy is a podcast about the American right co-hosted by Matthew Sitman and Sam Adler-Bell. Read more about it here. You can subscribe to, rate, and review the show on Apple Podcasts and Stitcher, and receive bonus content by supporting the podcast on Patreon.
Devoted Know Your Enemy listeners will recall that, in November 2021, we released a fairly dense, theory-driven episode on Frank Meyer, the communist from New Jersey whose exploits on behalf of the Party in the United Kingdom got him kicked out of the country and back to the United States, where he eventually turned right and became a key figure in the postwar U.S. conservative movement, both as an editor at National Review and an architect of institutions like the American Conservative Union, Young Americans for Freedom, and the Conservative Party of New York. Of course, we had more to say about Meyer, and we’re devoting another episode to him, this time focused on the details of his incredible life, thanks to the publication of an extraordinary new biography of Meyer, Daniel J. Flynn’s The Man Who Invented Conservatism: The Unlikely Life of Frank S. Meyer. Flynn discovered a trove of never-before-seen papers of Meyer’s that range from personal documents (tax returns, Christmas cards from Joan Didion, his dance card from college) to his correspondence with nearly every conservative writer and intellectual of note in the 1950s and ’60s. Armed with these files, Flynn offers a vivid portrait of a brilliant, eccentric political life and mind.
Listen again: “Know Your Enemy: Frank Meyer, Father of Fusionism” (November 10, 2021)
Further reading:
Daniel J. Flynn, The Man Who Invented Conservatism: The Unlikely Life of Frank S. Meyer (2025)
Frank S. Meyer, In Defense of Freedom: A Conservative Credo (Regnery, 1962)
F.A. Hayek, “Why I am Not a Conservative,” from The Constitution of Liberty: The Definitive Edition (2011)
George H. Nash, The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America Since 1945 (Basic Books, 1976)
Garry Wills, Confessions of a Conservative (Doubleday, 1979)
“Against the Dead Consensus,” First Things, March 21, 2019
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