If you are not a fan of Ayn Rand, why are you in the Gulch?
Posted by Mamaemma 10 years, 6 months ago to Philosophy
And if someone is a fan of Ayn Rand, does that mean that that person understands and agrees with her philosophy?
While we're very happy to have you in the Gulch and appreciate your wanting to fully engage, some things in the Gulch (e.g. voting, links in comments) are a privilege, not a right. To get you up to speed as quickly as possible, we've provided two options for earning these privileges.
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In actuality, the US Constitution does say that the US gov't can take from its citizens - it's called taxation which is authorized in Article 1, Section 8 and subsequently in the 16th Amendment.
How do you see Cronyism being "allowed" in the constitution? I only see it being allowed by those "interpreting" the constitution. What gives?
Jan
I actually am from Madison. I was born in Madison General hospital, the same place my wife and two kids were born. She lived in DC working at Arnold and Porter. We moved back within a few years of each other and met at a bar (technically it was a "young professionals" event) downtown. :)
We are independent-minded, none of the stuff you say. My wife knows Hillary Clinton only through a colleague. I think if she got involved in the sausage making, she'd get disgusted. I am in no way close enough to any politicians to know which stories about shenanigans are true.
Our neighbors have chickens. I heard you can't have roosters b/c of the noise. One of our kids is nicknamed the rooster b/c he makes a lot of noise first thing in the morning.
Regarding the part about emails, I was just saying in other forums I would have more room to share ideas.
Regarding this stuff about me being tricky, I don't get it. Policy is strictly an avocation for me. I go through periods of not reading the papers, depending on what's going on. You've come up with this narrative that I'm in the world of selling policies, and it's just not true.
Yes. Not hard to find, for sure.
"But if you are not a troll, but your communication style makes people you find interesting repeatedly think that this is your goal, then you might wish to take that under advisement."
If we're taking the impression of other people's goals under advisement, let me speculate on why people might think I'm malicious: "But wait, Rand is about dividing people into group identities and asking all members of the group to agree on everything. You either accept the list of pre-agreed-upon conclusions as a whole, or you're being tricky. You cannot think for yourself in this group, but you must pretend to."
We do not need to take these guesses under advisement. We should just stick to the actually topics.
I had to pass civics in high school, and support the few states that are trying to bring this course back.
I think it is time for me to get another copy now. Thanks for the reminder.
Jan
Why am I here??
Because I enjoy the company and interesting discussions.
Even with the ones I disagree with the most...
I've often called Atlas Shrugged the greatest book ever written even though it contains one-dimensional main characters and a number of other literary flaws. AR made those characters one-dimensional for a reason, though. They stood as archetypes. The greatness wasn't in any single aspect of the characters or the writing, it was in the message that was so well delivered - the introduction of Objectivism to the general populace.
I submit that, without the underlying message of Objectivism, AS isn't a compelling book. I'm going to take a LOT of dren for this, I expect, but purely as a novel the plot and characters aren't top-notch. (Stop, don't shoot, PLEASE!) Based on that I'd say that it's likely that a fan of AR is a fan of her message, the philosophy, and less a fan of the more superficial aspects of her novels.
To quote Dennis Miller, "That's just me. I could be wrong."
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