What Would Ayn Rand Think About Americanism Today?
As we mark the 240th anniversary of this country’s birth, we can ask, “What would Ayn Rand think about Americanism today?”
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.
We are here, and we are now, and I for one am an Individual with the rights of my existence and nature. All religions are anti-life in that they all seem to promise something beyond the glimmer of our life and our existence as we're able to know it. None are better or worse than any other. They are all morally wrong considered against the life of men. Only reason can defeat the evil or protect us from it.
I just wish the American public would wake up to the fire in their own house that the liberals are labling just another friendly barbecue. (unfortunately its our own house that is going up in flames, the burning up of all the American ideals and dreams)
A culture of entrepreneurship is not just about a lack of regulation. it is not even the legal framework of private property, though that is important. Hernando de Soto Polar made the point well in The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumph in the West and Fails Everywhere Else. Dale Halling has been saying the same things here. But necessary is not sufficient.
It is a problem that we advocates of capitalism have not solved. If laissez faire is just about the laws, why did capitalism blossom here in the first place? Telegraph, telephone, television, Internet... they did not come from the Cayman Islands or even from Hong Kong. Those places may be more "business friendly" but they lack something that we have. Even if we gave it a label, it might still remain ineffable.
I grant that you do know about Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, and of course Elon Musk, Bill Gates, and a few others. I grant also that Google executive Eric Schmidt is no fan of your freedom: he is explicit about that.
On the other hand, T. J. Rodgers does not get the celebrity notice, though he does make his opinions known. He is not alone in that. Ed Snider was a serious promoter of Ayn Rand's ideas. Moreover, his story about Atlas Shrugged begins with Peter O'Malley.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbPV6...
In The Invention of Enterprise, the editors and authors make the point that every society gets the entrepreneurs that it allows and encourages. In Rome, conquest brought glory. Successful businessmen bought farms, lived like landed optimates, and turned their enterprises over to freedmen and slaves. True laissez faire may be an unknown ideal, but you cannot condemn people for make the best lives they knew how. You might has well condemn them for not having cell phones.
(See my review here: http://libertarianpapers.org/article/...
The great age of railroading was interlaced with government initiatives. James J. Hill stands out. It is literally true that he sought no government favors. But the whole truth is that he benefited as a free rider on the grants and privileges given to others. Gould, Harriman, Fisk, Stanford,... Rockefeller, Ford, Carnegie, ... you can make heroes or villains out of any or all.
The story is then not them, but you. You are not alone in enjoying the bitter dregs of economic weltschmerz. It is a story that plays well here.
Try imdb.com for a good biography.
No doubt that AR would deplore the "internal policies" that we now live under, but we mustn't forget the contributions to that condition obtained through continual intervention and wars and the continual barrage of the propaganda of external/internal fear and 'the good' of spreading democracy. We only fail ourselves if we refuse to recognize that all of the US policies, "internal and external" have the same ultimate goals of collectivism/statism and slavery to central planners
The individual rights of man, defended fiercely by each and every man is the sole means to liberty, life, and happiness--that should be the true Americanism.
attack the fascists and collectivists in charge. -- j
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