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How to Not Be a Fascist – Nathan Beacom

In the 1920s, the liberal consensus was shattering across Europe. In the wake of the Great War, Bolshevism was on its murderous march across the East and rightist ideologies like Italy’s Fascismo and Germany’s National Socialism were duking it out with communists. A young philosopher in his 20s had already experienced the whole gamut of extremism: Aurel Kolnai was a Hungarian Jew, and by early adulthood he had lived through the Bolshevik revolution and the violent dictatorship of Béla Kun. And he was ultimately forced to flee Hungary to escape right-wing violence against Jews.

Kolnai arrived in Vienna in 1920, a time of intellectual ferment. Already tutored by the depredations of political radicalism, he was immediately disgusted by the emerging Nazism in Germany and Austria. His essays against the Nazi regime were some of the very earliest published, and he carried on a sustained critique for roughly the next 15 years, including after his escape to North America. In the 1920s and ’30s, as a convert to Catholicism, he published under the name Van Helsing, after the scholarly Catholic vampire hunter from Dracula.

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