"So Sorry To Interrupt..." But Where Are The Objectivist Reviews?

Posted by khalling 11 years, 9 months ago to Books
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from gulcher wdonway on Facebook:

"Doubtless people just failed to see this...

So sorry to interrupt, but, knowing the importance of reviews on Amazon, how can there be ONE review of the new TAS book by Ed Hudgins on the civil war underway in the Republican Party?

One?

Again, so sorry to interrupt the cartoons on Obama, the catty links on Hillary Clinton, the self-gratifying little "let's all applaud" comments on Obamacare. But Ayn Rand in articles like beacon fires atop mountains warning freedom's warriors to muster, demonstrated again and again that we could win--if we win at all--only by the depth and consistency of our philosophical premises.

"The Republican Party's Civil War" asks: What were the underpinnings of the party in political philosophy, what are they today, and what must they become if the party is to stand for the rights to live, liberty, and happiness? They are important questions for those who realize that in America, at every election, there are only two parties.

Is the success of "The Republican's Party's Civil War"--which puts in no uncertain terms the choices that America faces--and exposes the futility of the businessmen who pour money into the party and suppose they have done all the can--and refutes the all-too-justified perception that the Republican Party is the pal of Wall Street's crony capitalists--worth the time it takes to compose a few intelligent sentences for an Amazon review? If just the Objectivists who are my Facebook friends each took a few minutes to rate and review this book, so that a couple hundred reviews appeared on Amazon, it is almost certain that the Amazon editors would take notice and designate this book an "Editor's Choice" or one of several others categories. And suddenly thousands of readers would be buying this book and would read David Kelley's take on the philosophical battle for the Grand Old Party, see Ed Hudgins's take on how current issues depend on philosophy, and, yes, see Walter Donway's take on how the failure to distinguish laissez faire capitalism from the crony capitalism of the pull peddlers is alienating a whole generation from the Republican Party...

What doesn't this happen? What keeps us from coming together in an effort such as this that, for each us, would be so easy, but in effect would achieve so much?

As Ayn Rand warned almost 40 years ago, "Don't Let It Go!" Why should a rare book exposing the real battle over who shall govern America, and by what principles, vanish unnoticed when you and I could do so much--if only we cared.

You can make it happen by posting a rating and a few sentences on Amazon. And by sharing this post and urging your Facebook friends to act.

It is as simple as that. And yet, why is it so improbable? What is stopping us?"
SOURCE URL: http://www.amazon.com/The-Republican-Partys-Civil-War-ebook/dp/B00ICZ37TQ/ref=zg_bs_tab_pd_bsnr_3


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  • Posted by straightlinelogic 11 years, 9 months ago
    "This is required reading for anyone concerned about the future of the Republican Party."

    To do what you suggest, I would have to actually be concerned about the future of the Republican Party, which I am not. It is just as statist as the Democratic Party, but pays off a different set of campaign contributors. The Republicans have made their peace with the welfare state, high taxes, government control of the economy, central banking, a fiat currency, and the US as the world's policeman. The last Republican president started wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that have yielded the US nothing and have cost thousands of US lives and trillions of dollars. He promulgated the doctrine that the US is justified making war anywhere it thinks there are terrorists, and started the undefinable and never ending war on terrorism. He signed into law the Patriot Act, which was the foundation for our present national security state. He signed a prescription health benefit to add to the unfunded liabilities that are bankrupting our country and allowed discretionary spending to rise at a far faster rate than Clinton had, adding to our staggering debt. He pushed massive bailouts of the banks under the too big to fail doctrine. I think both parties are statist nightmares and I'm hoping when we have our inevitable crash, some sort of new political party, dedicated to liberty and limited government, will emerge from the rubble. I refuse to lend any kind of intellectual or moral support to the Republican party or anyone who has the stomach to examine it.
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    • Posted by dbhalling 11 years, 9 months ago
      Hi Straightline,

      I don't think the book disagrees with most of what you say, but the question is will there be a pro-freedom party in the US? We know it will not be the democrats, but the Republican core has really been the fiscal conservatives (not true freedom, but close) which has been co-opted by the religious right and the establishment Republicans. The book explores the issue of the libertarian party and whether that is the way to go for pro-freedom voters. I think it makes some interesting points. Points that Rand considered in her day.
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      • Posted by straightlinelogic 11 years, 9 months ago
        Fair enough, I'll take your word for it since I haven't read the book and probably won't. Rand championed the Republicans and dismissed libertarians as hippies on the right. I found her fondness for the Republicans somewhat mystifying, since they had been unable to mount an ideological counterattack against the New Deal, our involvement in Vietnam, and the Great Society. I think she was more swayed by their rhetoric than what they actually did and didn't do. I also found her cheerleading for her then friend Alan Greenspan to head the Federal Reserve mystifying, especially after having been such an ardent proponent of the gold standard. As for will there be a pro-freedom party in the US? I think we may end up trying freedom after everything else has failed. Freedom may arise from the ashes of the current Republican party, or it might not, it may be an entirely new party. I don't think fiscal conservatism is close to being true freedom, for too many times it has made Republicans "the tax collectors for the welfare state."
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        • Posted by dbhalling 11 years, 9 months ago
          Sad points and certainly not without basis. The question is; is there any party that can be moved to support true freedom? The book is an attempt to move in that direction. Your pessimism is certainly not without merit. But we try. We write books. We point out what freedom is and hope to move the ball in the right direction.

          Personally I think the US will sway between a environmental/socialist and theocratic dictatorship until the next crisis. I write so that people understand another alternative.
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  • Posted by Vinay 11 years, 9 months ago
    Libertarianism and the Libertarian Party as it "currently" is, are not the same thing. The Lew Rockwells and the anarcho-nonsensicals have been driven out of the party. Of the 2012 candidates, Gary Johnson was by far the only rational candidate, a 1000 times better than Santorum, Romney, and Gingrich combined. He has an unsurpassed veto record. He wants to end the Fed, whereas the GOP candidates do not seem to understand the issue. If many had voted for him; If he say, had got 5-6% of the vote, then in 2016 the GOP might have put him up. That is also a way of working "within the system". If Rand were alive today, she would endorse Gary J far more than religious conservatives like Reagan and Goldwater, and most certainly ahead of Romney etc., and even ahead of Cruz, Rubio, Rand Paul, and Ryan.
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  • Posted by Vinay 11 years, 9 months ago
    Did Rand even praise the GOP ever, let alone champion it? She occasionally praised Goldwater and Reagan specifically. She was scathing of Governor Romney (the father). Most objectivists are aligned with the ARI, hence the lack of reviews for anything that comes from TAS.
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    • Posted by dbhalling 11 years, 9 months ago
      She did discuss whether objectivists should work within the republican party or start a third party. She came down squarely, at the time, of working within the republican party.
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    • Posted by 11 years, 9 months ago
      She did not champion the Libertarian party either-yet American Objectivists still vote. I personally am interested in more political analysis from Objectivists. To stay within the realm of philosophy and ignore the body politic has made for some rather disconnected political endorsements by prominent Objectivists in my opinion.
      Producers on this site can check out quite a treat: Rand's personal copy of Goldwater's "The Conscience of a Conservative," with her handwritten notes (copious) in the margins. While there was much she disagreed with, there was also praise.
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