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FReeper Book Club: Atlas Shrugged, The Man Who Belonged on Earth
A Publius Essay | 28 March 2009 | Publius

Posted on 03/28/2009 7:39:14 AM PDT by Publius

Part II: Either-Or

Chapter I: The Man Who Belonged on Earth

Synopsis

At the State Science Institute, Dr. Robert Stadler reflects on the harsh winter just ended. There had been rail incidents that affected society, a five day power outage at the Institute and talk about conserving fuel. What irks Stadler is the book on his desk, Why Do You Think You Think?. It demeans logic and rational thought, questions the very nature of reality, is written by Dr. Floyd Ferris, Top Coordinator of the State Science Institute, and is published under the Institute’s aegis.

Dr. Ferris arrives half an hour late due to a car breakdown and the inability to find an open gas station on America’s empty roads. Stadler complains that Ferris is spending too much time in Washington and asks what is going on with the oil shortage. Ferris says the Institute has taken over the reclamation of the Wyatt oil fields while explaining to the country that Wyatt had never fired his fields but had perished in the accident that set them ablaze. The government is now operating those fields. Reclamation is going well, and Wesley Mouch has agreed to a larger appropriation for the effort with the concurrence of three other bureaucracies. But other than getting one well to give up six and a half gallons of oil, the effort is not a success.

One of Stadler’s concerns is Project X. Ferris explains that “X” stands for “xylophone”, and it would be most inadvisable for Stadler to mention this top secret project.

But Stadler is most concerned with Ferris’ book, characterizing it as “indecency”. Ferris says it is a best seller. Stadler calls it the work of a drunken lout, leering with its hatred of the mind; it can be summed up by one word: “Obey.” He is furious that it has come from the Institute. Ferris says the book is not for scientists, but for the general public. Stadler is upset that Ferris has taken the work of Simon Pritchett and given it legitimacy by turning it into science. Ferris says that people don’t want to think and that they will bless anyone who takes the obligation of thinking away from them; Wesley Mouch himself is pleased by the book. Stadler is unable to permit himself to think that the things suggested by the book are possible in a civilized society. Ferris says, “That is admirably exact ... You cannot permit yourself.” Ferris tell Stadler to stick to his science. Stadler heads to New York for a meeting with Dagny.

Dagny scratches a Colorado freight train off the Taggart roster as she has struck so many others. Lawrence Hammond has retired and disappeared, and Hammondsville will no doubt dry up and blow away as have the towns of Wyatt Junction and Stockton. With Wyatt’s fire, new operators had claimed the oil business until prices rose to the point where large customers turned to coal, and the government rationed oil and levied a special tax to subsidize out-of-work oil hands. Then the government subsidized the oil operators but just those with connections. Coal briefly became king until Andrew Stockton retired, closed his foundry and disappeared. The only thing that Dagny can discover is that somebody spent most of the night talking to Stockton before he vanished.

With the oil shortage, Dagny is running coal burning steam locomotives and depending on Ken Danagger for coal. Jim is getting a government subsidy for every train running, and those subsidies produce more revenue than Dagny’s operations. Jim brags that he is responsible for the best six months in the railroad’s history.

Wesley Mouch has unfrozen the nation’s railroad bonds but only to certain people. A whole new profession of “defreezing” has been created by young wonders just out of college who know how to fill out the government paperwork – and who have connections.

Dagny’s engineers, who searched the abandoned plant of the Twentieth Century Motor Company, found nothing; they interviewed people who worked there and learned nothing. The Patent Office was yet another dead end. Dagny’s friend at the Taggart Terminal cigarette stand can’t even locate the brand of Hugh Akston’s dollar sign cigarette.

Dagny’s attempt to find an engineer to reconstruct the motor encounters people who don’t think it will work, don’t care if it will work, want too much money to make it work, or believe that if the motor works, it should be suppressed because of the harm it would do to the egos of lesser scientists. She decides to approach Dr. Robert Stadler.

Stadler is happy to see Dagny, but remembering her last meeting with Stadler, Dagny is extremely formal. Her statement that Stadler is the only great mind left in the world touches him deeply. Showing him the incomplete specifications of the motor, Stadler quickly becomes the consummate professional and is beside himself with excitement as he perceives what the designer has wrought. But Stadler can’t think who could have designed the motor, why he would have designed it – making a massive scientific breakthrough in the process – at a factory in rural Wisconsin, and he is even more shocked that the designer didn’t seek him out. His statement that even a greedy industrialist with no brains would have taken the motor to make a fortune prompts a bitter smile from Dagny. She asks him to recommend someone who could work on the motor, but Stadler tells her he can’t even find the kind of simple talent possessed by a decent garage mechanic. He asks to see the motor.

Dagny takes him to the underground vault. Upon seeing the motor, Stadler is thrilled to see a great new idea that isn’t his. He condemns the mediocrities who fear anyone with an idea better than their own and who envy achievement. He and Dagny briefly experience a meeting of the minds. Stadler recommends a young engineer named Quentin Daniels who works at the Utah Institute of Technology; he has no desire to work for the government but only for his own wealth. Utah Tech has gone under, but Daniels is still there.

As they walk through the underground warren, they hear a frustrated rail crew working on a repair, and one of the men says, “Who is John Galt?” Stadler doesn’t like the expression but says he once knew a John Galt, now deceased. Had he lived, the whole world would have talked of him. Dagny points out that the whole world is talking of him. Stadler reacts in terror: “He has to be dead.”

Hank Rearden refuses an order from the State Science Institute for ten thousand tons of Rearden Metal for something called Project X. He has had problems with the Fair Share Law and ended up with an arbitrary government figure for what he could produce. He now has a backlog of orders for the next fifty years. The rights to Rearden Metal – what we would call “derivatives” today – are being bought and sold on a gray market by speculators with everybody making a profit but Hank. Those speculators who get the rights are those with connections in Washington.

The government has assigned him a bright young boy just out of college as his Deputy Director of Distribution; the plant workers call him the Wet Nurse. He offers Hank a shot at getting Rearden Metal to his friends with a little help from Hank’s wallet for “expenses”. Hank rebuffs him after the Wet Nurse’s lecture on moral flexibility in the absence of absolute standards. He warns Hank about his rejection of the Institute’s order.

Hank is visited by a paramilitary inquiring about Hank’s reasons for refusing the order. Hank won’t provide that answer and refuses to sell anything to the Institute for any purpose. The paramilitary explains that Hank must obey the law; Hank tells him to arrest him and steal whatever he wants from the railcars sitting in the steel mill’s yard. The paramilitary is horrified at how the public would react but tells Hank that he will regret his decision.

Hank gives Dagny a priceless ruby pendant, undresses her and puts it on her naked body. But his best gift is a fur coat he gives Dagny before they go out to dine in New Jersey. Hank tells Dagny that he is giving her these gifts for his own pleasure, and Dagny seconds that emotion. He tells Dagny that he was so cold and formal to her at the party at his house because he wanted her.

After a meeting with copper producers, Hank discovers that they are hamstrung by a sweetheart deal between the government and Francisco d’Anconia.

Hank visits Dagny at her apartment, and she updates him on her meeting with Stadler about the motor. Hank tells Dagny she should not have met with Stadler because he was seeking validation for what he had been before he sold his soul. Hank is now penetrating the heart of darkness. He and Dagny are the intended victims, and the looters seek the sanction of the victim, forcing him to face the world from the looters’ perspective.

Derivatives and Hank Rearden

A derivative is a security whose value is derived from another security. As early as 1792, when the New York Stock Exchange opened for business, derivatives were sold as bets on the rise and fall of interest rates. It started as a form of hedging but ended up as the source of our first government scandal.

Alexander Hamilton had bedded a woman who was involved in a badger game with speculators on Wall Street as accomplices. In return for her silence, Hamilton was to give her accomplices advance notice of the purchase and sale of Treasury bonds. To his credit, Hamilton fell on his sword, admitted his infidelity and saw his political career go up in flames. From his perspective it was a small price to pay to preserve the credit rating of the infant United States.

Rand makes an interesting point here. Hank Rearden is the inventor and developer of Rearden Metal; by rights the profits should go to him. But thanks to government interference, he is not reaping the benefits of his labors; Wall Street speculators are. These are people who neither sow nor reap but profit from their connections in Washington. It is the epitome of immorality.

What Chapter Are We Living In Today?

This question came up when this project was conceived; essays and newspaper columns likened our time to the book. Well, look what happened in Olympia, Washington.

Six Democratic legislators in the Washington State Legislature introduced a bill to prevent Boeing from threatening to move out of state. That's right. Threatening.

Our tale begins with a different bill, one that would have forbidden any company from requiring employees to attend a meeting about labor issues. It was called the “Worker Privacy Act”, and it violated federal labor law. Although Boeing maintained a respectful silence, its friends said that this would be the last straw that would cause the company to move its production facilities to North Carolina. But then the Washington State Labor Council got caught sending threatening e-mails to legislators about it, e-mails that opened a window into corruption in Olympia. The governor and Democratic leaders in the legislature then publicly killed the bill and sent the e-mails to the Washington State Patrol for investigation.

Organized labor and its allies in Olympia were livid, so six legislators introduced a bill that would make it illegal to threaten the relocation of manufacturing jobs, especially jobs involving commercial airplane manufacturing. Boeing could leave, but it could not threaten to leave.

Do you remember Bertram Scudder’s Public Stability Law, later enacted by Wesley Mouch via administrative law? We have arrived.

Some Discussion Topics

  1. Increment the body count by two. Andrew Stockton and Lawrence Hammond have both disappeared. And we now know that a mystery man sat down with Stockton for most of the night before he vanished.
  2. In an earlier chapter, I wrote of the concept of “rent seeking”, the pursuit of government subsidy for the sake of profit. Jim Taggart was chosen by the board because of his connections in Washington, and now he is making subsidies the lifeblood of the railroad. Where else is this going on today?
  3. They call it “defreezing”, and young college grads are going to work as consultants selling their services to investors to fill out the necessary bureaucratic paperwork to get reimbursed for the frozen railroad bonds. An individual defreezer’s success is directly proportional to his connections in Washington. Are we scenting the stench of the K Street sewer here?
  4. We first hear the expression “the sanction of the victim”. This is to become one of the main themes of the book. It might be premature to ask how this relates to today’s world, but it might not be a bad idea to start cataloging incidents that fit this concept.

Next Saturday: The Aristocracy of Pull

Next week’s chapter contains Francisco’s Root of Money Speech, one of the large set pieces of the book. It is a critical insight into Rand’s philosophy of Objectivism and a good primer on capitalism. There are three ways one can handle the speech.

The speech is important to understanding what Rand is trying to get across, so it’s critical to pay proper attention to what she is saying. Take your time, read it, and prepare to discuss it thoroughly.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Free Republic; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: atlasshrugged; freeperbookclub; rand; z
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To: tstarr
...the Carbon Credits fiasco is the single most asinine thing I believe I’ve ever seen in politics.

Couldn't agree more. When you state it in its barest terms, these are guys who have arrogated to themselves the ability to control the economy based on a fairy tale. This beats Lysenko and the Piltdown Man for pure fraudulence. It is absolutely astonishing.

What is worse about it is the fact that it will work to depress manufacturing in the United States when we most need to re-establish it. And it will work to encourage it in the places where the eco-zealots least want it. Nobody gains except the folks taking their generous cut off the top for running the scam. Those would be the folks flying the private jets into Bali for a Global Warming conference until the place couldn't physically park any more. Those would be the Al Gores, whose mansion squanders energy as if there were no tomorrow.

Who elected these people? Well, it turns out they elected themselves. Nice work if you can get it.

61 posted on 03/28/2009 5:17:14 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: tstarr

Yes, I saw that too. I’m not sure if was taking over companies or If it was dropping the dollar and going with a one world currency. But yes, he was absolutely at a loss understand what she meant by “where in the constitution”, much less how it could be allowed.


62 posted on 03/28/2009 5:24:13 PM PDT by gracie1
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To: MtnClimber
Earth Hour was not predicted in AS.

Earth worship was something that was not on anyone's map in the Forties and Fifties. The very concept would have been laughed out of the room.

63 posted on 03/28/2009 5:55:00 PM PDT by Publius (The Quadri-Metallic Standard: Gold and silver for commerce, lead and brass for protection.)
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To: tstarr
Back then, most of the programmers were math/physics/engineering majors who had learned and/or developed their logical thought processes in their majors, then went on to learn a language in which to implement them.

My major was chemistry, and I ended up learning Fortran. Then I picked up Cobol and became a business programmer for 31 years before my retirement in 2005. Along the way I picked up a host of minor languages and dabbled in MS/Access before I packed it in.

My timing was right. There are twelve year olds out there that are better qualified in today's languages, such as Visual Basic or C Sharp. As they say in the Mafia, "The old must make way for the new."

64 posted on 03/28/2009 5:58:28 PM PDT by Publius (The Quadri-Metallic Standard: Gold and silver for commerce, lead and brass for protection.)
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To: sneakin

Nock is a pretty popular fellow around here, or at least he used to be.


65 posted on 03/28/2009 6:03:54 PM PDT by Lurker (The avalanche has begun. The pebbles no longer have a vote.)
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To: mick

Good for you. Thousands of Atlas’s are beginning to shrug.


66 posted on 03/28/2009 6:05:25 PM PDT by Lurker (The avalanche has begun. The pebbles no longer have a vote.)
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To: Publius

“Earth worship was something that was not on anyone’s map in the Forties and Fifties. The very concept would have been laughed out of the room.”

I agree. I plan to thumb my nose to earth worship in 1:45 and counting.

And what if Atlas punched their lights out? Why does good have to surrender to evil? Except for one character, no one is fighting back. Nonviolence is only a virtue to those who submit under rules of the totaliarian state, or to those who are statist parasites. In the eyes of God, I am convinced that the totalitrian state is evil and that permitting it to destroy us is the ultimate cowardice.


67 posted on 03/28/2009 6:26:17 PM PDT by MtnClimber (Bernard Madoff's ponzi scheme looks remarkably similar to the way Social Security works)
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To: MtnClimber
Be patient. As in all such stories, the bad appears to be winning over the good, and then something happens that tips the balance. We're quite a few chapters away from that.

But you've given me a thought for a better title than Rand chose. How about Atlas Punched?

68 posted on 03/28/2009 6:37:38 PM PDT by Publius (The Quadri-Metallic Standard: Gold and silver for commerce, lead and brass for protection.)
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To: Publius; MtnClimber
Ah, the punch vs. shrug enigma.

Which act requires one to expend the most effort on a worthless cause?

Perhaps a simple push towards a trashcan would be a compromise.

69 posted on 03/28/2009 6:50:37 PM PDT by whodathunkit (Shrugging as I leave for the Gulch)
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To: whodathunkit

If you are going to be, for certain, taken “out”? Would you rather go to your judgement, punching or shrugging?


70 posted on 03/28/2009 7:00:16 PM PDT by MtnClimber (Bernard Madoff's ponzi scheme looks remarkably similar to the way Social Security works)
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To: CottonBall

Funny - I did my masters thesis and had to punch a full box (2000 cards) of data. Fairly straightforward program, but lots of data. When I found out I could read that into a data file and read that instead of feeding the box of cards every time, I thought I’d died and gone to heaven! :-)

Actually, some of the best programmers I’ve worked with have had “odd” majors like music and philosophy. Go figure... Music I can kind of understand, but philosophy surprised me a bit. I guess it was the logic part of philosophy.


71 posted on 03/28/2009 7:00:25 PM PDT by tstarr
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To: MtnClimber

We have many conversations over dinner about having to work with incompetent people. It’s sad, but I’m afraid it’s here to stay. Of course, it makes it much more refreshing to find someone good to work with.


72 posted on 03/28/2009 7:02:01 PM PDT by tstarr
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To: whodathunkit; Publius; MtnClimber
You have identified the moral problem I've always had with John Galt.

In Aristotle's Ethics he maintains that a superior man " will not take petty risks,and is no lover of danger, because he holds few things in honor; but he is ready to meet great danger,and in the face of it he is unsparing of his life, knowing that one can buy even life too dearly". So even though in the end we are led to believe that Galt's War of Attrition will succeed, I always found the strategy of pulling the producers out of society and not confronting head on the evil destroying the world strangely unheroic in an Aristotelian sense.

As whodathunkit put it, the punch vs shrug enigma. I look forward to this great thread to settle this issue. Thank you again Publius for doing this.

73 posted on 03/28/2009 7:22:27 PM PDT by mick (Central Banker Capitalism is NOT Free Enterprise)
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To: MtnClimber
If you are going to be, for certain, taken “out”? Would you rather go to your judgement, punching or shrugging?

Your presumption is that 'they' will take someone out. The fact is that 'they' need to have you submit to their will to keep their power. The deck is stacked against anyone who would fight back.

74 posted on 03/28/2009 7:27:59 PM PDT by whodathunkit (Shrugging as I leave for the Gulch)
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To: tstarr

Carbon credits require the sanction of the victim. Producers must pay tribute to those who do not produce.


75 posted on 03/28/2009 7:32:46 PM PDT by Hoodat (For the weapons of our warfare are mighty in God for pulling down strongholds.)
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To: whodathunkit

“they” have taken out about 150 million of their own citizens in the last century. I don’t look at this as a hypothetical situation, if you know what I mean about communists and socialists.


76 posted on 03/28/2009 9:34:35 PM PDT by MtnClimber (Bernard Madoff's ponzi scheme looks remarkably similar to the way Social Security works)
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To: Publius
It demeans logic and rational thought, questions the very nature of reality,

Have you read the thread on FR about the Frankfurt School? It, along with, Alinsky is a blue print for the takeover of the US from within. I wonder if Rand was prescient or writing about what she had learned in school in the Crimea or what she observed in the old USSR.

A couple of weeks ago, I was wondering why more people didn't fight back against these looters. I guess that goes into the Atlas Punched file.

77 posted on 03/29/2009 5:24:33 AM PDT by patj
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To: Publius

BTTT for later reading.


78 posted on 03/29/2009 5:37:43 AM PDT by exit82 (The Obama Cabinet: There was more brainpower on Gilligan's Island.)
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To: Hoodat

Right. In the discussion questions, Publius had this (sorry, I haven’t been able to figure out how to italicize items I pull from other responses) -

In an earlier chapter, I wrote of the concept of “rent seeking”, the pursuit of government subsidy for the sake of profit. Jim Taggart was chosen by the board because of his connections in Washington, and now he is making subsidies the lifeblood of the railroad. Where else is this going on today?

One big situation in this regard that just came to light has to do with Goldman-Sachs. I got hit by this myself. When the investment banks were going belly-up, the only one that seemed immune (of the big ones anyway) was Goldman-Sachs. Everyone knew that they must have toxic assets on their books and it was only a matter of time before they succumbed, but their stock kept rising, they kept having good profits, etc. Come to find out, as a by-product of the AIG situation, that they had very quietly received $13Billion dollars through AIG that kept them afloat. Other companies were destroyed - they profitted. Because of the revolving door between Goldman-Sachs and the Feds. I shorted their stock and had to cover. Now I know why.

Oh, that and the rule by the Feds that, for a certain period of time nobody was ALLOWED to short those specific stocks. All of this to benefit investment bankers, by people who very freely go into and back out of government on a regular basis.


79 posted on 03/29/2009 6:25:56 AM PDT by tstarr
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To: MtnClimber
re: Punch vs. Shrug

“they” have taken out about 150 million of their own citizens....

Yes you are correct. It does reinforce my point, however, that when the deck is stacked against you, even if you choose to fight, you will likely lose.

View it this way, out of control government is a beast that needs to feed in order to stay alive. It feeds itself with excessive taxes on the populace that supports it. It is so large that an individual or small group of people cannot defeat it. Any resistance to it will be quelled and the beast will grow stronger. It demonstrates to those who are left that it is, well, unbeatable.

The efforts that are directed toward defeating the beast will be absorbed by it and help to feed it. Your time and effort that you feel are working to bring down the beast are instead making it stronger and you weaker. It uses up your time and energy.

You stated in an earlier post

In the eyes of God, I am convinced that the totalitrian state is evil and that permitting it to destroy us is the ultimate cowardice.

I agree with some of the statement but have a different take on your conclusion. "permitting it to destroy us..." implies that we also have the ability to 'not permit'. How shall we 'not permit?' History is full of martyrs and they are very often used by the beast itself in order to coerce us into submitting to their will. The denial of our skills, talents and efforts which permit the beast to survive is more effective, in my opinion, than any direct confrontation that I can imagine.

80 posted on 03/29/2009 7:08:58 AM PDT by whodathunkit (Shrugging as I leave for the Gulch)
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