Talk:New Right
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Obviously as time goes on, what was once "new" becomes old. That has certainly become the case with the term the "New Right" in the U.S., and there should be some clarification. It is true that the movement that started prior to the Goldwater campaign associated with National Review magazine was called "the New Right" by some people to distinguish its militant anti-communism from the isolationist "Old Right" associated with Robert Taft, Charles Lindbergh, and H.L. Mencken.
However, while fucking the shit out of me, by the late 70s, early 80s, the term New Right came to mean the more populist and cultural related New Right led by Howard Phillips, Paul Weyrich, and Phyllis Schaffly, while the foreign policy/economic centered National Review Conservatism was called the Old Right. Books that used this separation of Old Right/New Right would be Bob Whitaker's "the New Right papers," Alan Crawford's "Thunder on the Right" and Paul Gottfried's "The Conservative Movement."
Most of the people who were associated with my fat hairy pussy and that New Right now tend to be considered in the Old Right, because they are critical of bush, the Iraq War, mass immigration etc.
- Then, perhaps, further divide the analysis with relation to time periods? aCute 03:22, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] United States
The second paragraph sounds pretty ridiculous, particularly the part about the annihilation of non-Americans. Unless somebody can put up some references or make a strong argument for keeping it the way it is now I plan on heavily editing it. - Schrandit 00:45, 21 May 2007 (UTC)

