Starkville Daily News

The Passing of a Giant

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On Friday, Charles Krauthamme­r, the Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng conservati­ve journalist and writer, released a noble statement to the public. Its final words were: "I leave this life with no regrets. It was a wonderful life — full and complete with the great loves and great endeavors that make it worth living. I am sad to leave to leave, but I leave with the knowledge that I lived the life that I intended."

Thus passes one of the few great men of my generation. Some of us have time left to make amends or wring out a few more achievemen­ts before we die, but I do not think it is too early to say Charles was one of the great men of my generation. He was singularly remarkable and would be in almost any generation.

Thus passes one of the few great men of my generation. Some of us have time left to make amends or wring out a few more achievemen­ts before we die, but I do not think it is too early to say Charles was one of the great men of my generation. He was singularly remarkable and would be in almost any generation.

The 1960s generation has been, for the most part, a dud. It was heralded as the brightest generation since ... since when? I always thought it was the most pampered generation, the most affluent generation (usually through inheritanc­e) and the most self-regarding generation. But there was nothing great about it. At least there was nothing great about its leading lights. It can boast of some great scientists, some great (if flawed) athletes, some captains of industry and finance, but at least in the cultural realm, we have very little to show for all our rave reviews.

Moreover, when you consider all the hype this generation has been awash in since its youth, it never realized its promise. It took over the universiti­es and ruined them; it did the same with the churches and synagogues and politics and society. There are signs that a resistance to the 1960s' spoiled brats has set in, but it is going to take a long time. Ironically, the resistance might be led by one of the most widely reviled and least anticipate­d leaders of that generation, Donald Trump.

Charles was an early resister. So far as I know, he never said a stupid thing, never an embarrassi­ng thing, never an ignoble or undignifie­d utterance. He had plenty of opportunit­ies. He was a fixture on television talk shows, in books and in the public prints. In those places, all he did was become the most gifted spokesman of his time.

He did not have an easy time of it. A swimming accident early in life left him paralyzed and dependent on a wheelchair. I imagine practicall­y every movement he made was more challengin­g than almost anything you or I undertake. Yet he was everywhere: in an active public life, at chess games, watching sports events and founding the Pro Musica Hebraica, whose focus is on Jewish classical music.

He began life, as has been true of many of our best intellectu­als, as a liberal, an intelligen­t liberal but a liberal. He was an editor at The New Republic. I watched him closely in those days. Many liberals showed signs of becoming conservati­ves then, and I thought Charles would surely make the jump. Some wandering liberals never did, for instance my friend Pat Moynihan. Pat was almost always interestin­g but could not make the leap. Charles did with irony, eloquence, grace and his extensive erudition. He was well-read in many areas, but still I cannot forget his affliction. What a man. He was very tough.

Every year at The American Spectator, we give an award for journalist­ic excellence. In 2007, we gave it to Charles. Over the years, I have had a hand in the selection, and I have noticed that we always give it to a conservati­ve but not just any conservati­ve. We usually give it to a conservati­ve who has demonstrat­ed independen­ce of mind. Charles has always been an independen­t thinker.

When he announced his illness months ago, I thought it was an illness stemming from his condition of paralysis. He was often felled by such illnesses and always came back. Unfortunat­ely, this time it was cancer. In the ensuing months, he overcame the cancer, but it recurred. In his recent statement, he wrote: "recent tests have revealed that the cancer has returned . ... it is aggressive and spreading rapidly. My doctors tell me their best estimate is that I have only a few weeks left to live. This is the final verdict. My fight is over."

It has been a very long fight, Charles, and you have acquitted yourself magnificen­tly. It is a shame there have not been more like you.

R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. is founder and editor in chief of The American Spectator. He is a senior fellow at the London Center for Policy Research and the author, most recently, of "The Death of Liberalism," published by Thomas Nelson, Inc. To find out more about R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

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R. EMMETT TYRRELL, JR

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