- The Ayn Rand Institute (ARI), also known as the Center for Advancement of Objectivism, is devoted to the "writings and work of novelist-philosopher Ayn Rand." Specifically, it advocates for "rational self-interest and laissez-faire capitalism." Rand wrote that "the protection of individual rights is the only proper purpose of a government." ARI accepted $150,000 to $350,000 from the government as part of the PPP.
I'm in such a weird, shitty mood that I'm halfway tempted to write an apologia for Ayn Fucking Rand. I think she was a middle-class Russian kid whose family lost fuckin' everything to the Bolsheviks. Her dad managed to open a pharmacy only to have it stolen. Her family were wiped out in Leningrad before she could get them to the USA. "The State" was not a comforting presence in her life. The people who interpreted Rand definitely had a milder experience with "The State" than she did. Libertarians see the villains of Atlas Shrugged as FDR and LBJ; her worldview was informed by Stalin and Hitler. And I mean... she went from Stalin's Russia to Cecil B. DeMille's Hollywood. This would teach you a few things: (1) Trust no one (2) I me mine (3) Run Sammy Run. Now. Give that person a cult.
Okay well I hadn't considered that and now I am pleased. By the time I found out libertarianism was based in even shakier philosophical grounds than scientology I had long since evaluated it as an ornate ex-post-facto justification for selfishness-as-philosophy so I've never so much as read a page of her stuff. Action Philosophers is hilarious though.Making Ayn Rand out to be the product of her times is also the best "fuck you" to her ideology though so it can't be wholly apologia.
set his goal and moved toward it, his way as straight as one of his rails. He never sought any loans, bonds, subsidies, land grants or legislative favors from the government. He obtained money from the men who owned it, going from door to door—from the mahogany doors of bankers to the clapboard doors of lonely farmhouses. He never talked about the public good. He merely told people that they would make big profits on his railroad, he told them why he expected the profits and he gave his reasons. He had good reasons. [...] It was said that Nat Taggart had staked his life on his railroad many times; but once, he staked more than his life. Desperate for funds, with the construction of his line suspended, he threw down three flights of stairs a distinguished gentleman who offered him a loan from the government. Then he pledged his wife as security for a loan from a millionaire who hated him and admired her beauty. He repaid the loan on time and did not have to surrender his pledge. The deal had been made with his wife's consent. She was a great beauty from the noblest family of a southern state, and she had been disinherited by her family because she eloped with Nat Taggart when he was only a ragged young adventurer. ~ Atlas Shrugged, near the end of chapter 3.He [Nathaniel Taggart] was a man who had never accepted the creed that others had the right to stop him. He