harmony wrote:Wasn't Pres Benson a member of the John Birch Society?
According to the Prince & Wright biography of President McKay, he was not, but he did sympathize with their cause, advocate it, and attend many of their meetings.
harmony wrote:Wasn't Pres Benson a member of the John Birch Society?
Daniel Peterson wrote:guy sajer wrote:Some years ago some conspiratorial fruitcake wrote some book called "None Dare Call It A Conspiracy." William F. Buckley, presumably, referred to it snidely as "None Dare Call It b***s***."
Maybe an apocryphal story, but I like it.
It sounds like Buckley.
Back when he was very young, when Robert Welch had just started the John Birch Society and was pushing the idea that President Eisenhower was "a conscious, card-carrying member of the Communist conspiracy," Buckley responded "Eisenhower's not a Communist. He's a golfer."
He had no patience for such silliness.
And no, President Benson was not a member of the John Birch Society, though he was more sympathetic to it in the 1960s and 1970s than I could have wished. His son Reid was a member.
Daniel Peterson wrote:The very first time I saw Professor Midgley was at a BYU debate in which, as I remember, he demolished W. Cleon Skousen and Skousen's fruitcake notions about a vast international conspiracy of Illuminati and communists.
Daniel Peterson wrote:The very first time I saw Professor Midgley was at a BYU debate in which, as I remember, he demolished W. Cleon Skousen and Skousen's fruitcake notions about a vast international conspiracy of Illuminati and communists.
I have been asked by the Editor of the Daily Universe to make some comments on the John Birch Society. It is difficult to believe that anyone at the university--anyone who reads books and thinks--would take such a movement seriously.... The man who wrote The Politician did so to inform his followers that former President Eisenhower was a communist. Of course he provides no evidence but the usual collection of garbage. For absurdity, the charge against Ike would have to be placed next to the belief, as far as I know, held by no-one, that President McKay is secretly a Catholic. What Welch-Birch really wants is to return to a world without taxes, the U.N., labor unions, racial minorities demanding some kind of legal equality; Birchers want a world without fluoridation, the Soviet Union, large cities and emerging nations and all the rest that goes with our world.