In
The Atlantic Ross Douthat mildly defends G.K. Chesterton against Gopnik's charges published by the
New Yorker. Earlier posts about Gopnik's article are
here and
here.
But the whole point of the "in the context of his times" argument is precisely that by the standards of the '20s and '30s, it was morally impressive for a political writer to reject both fascism and communism, to praise Zionism, and to speak out forcefully against Nazi anti-Semitism - and not in its eliminationist phase, but in its very earliest stages.
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