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Rand, Ryan and the Rest of Us
Townhall.com ^ | August 20, 2012 | Laura Hollis

Posted on 08/20/2012 2:57:17 PM PDT by Kaslin

Public awareness of Rep. Paul Ryan’s familiarity with (and apparent fondness for) the works of Ayn Rand has now seeped into the academy. The Chronicle of Higher Education features an essay today by Professor Alan Wolfe, Director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life at Boston College. This is an edited version of my response to Professor Wolfe in the article’s comments section.

There are any number of intellectual errors in both Professor Wolfe’s piece and in the comments that follow, and they can be summed up thusly: we read the writings of all sorts of people whose personal lives were a shambles, whose writing styles were (shall we say) distinctive, and whose philosophies were extreme, but who nevertheless managed to identify powerful truths.

I cannot speak for Paul Ryan. But since I fully expect the national conversation about this topic to contain the same deceit and reach the same fever pitch that Medicare and Mitt Romney’s dog have, I can speak for myself, and perhaps shed some light on the subject for anyone who has not read Rand.

First, as one who has also read all of Ayn Rand's novels, my conclusion is that she was, at best, a mediocre writer - speaking stylistically. Her grasp of conversation - even the names she chose for her characters - seemed to be clunky, gutteral ("Dagny"?), and contrived ("Wesley Mouch"). That said, the same folks who disdain Rand herald “Wall Street" as a pantheon of overarching truth about business, despite the eye-rolling lack of subtlety in the name of its notorious antagonist ("Gordon Gekko"). Obviousness is obviousness, notwithstanding the political perspective of the writer.

Second, I am well aware of Rand’s personal life, which was not salutory. Indeed, Rand's unusual take on male-female sexuality consistently played out in her novels in discomfiting ways. Despite - or perhaps because of (in her view) - their "strong" personalities, her female protagonists all seem to have a rape, bondage, and/or submission fetish, and are incapable of forming deep emotional attachments to men, confusing domination with love, infidelity with independence, and submission with respect. Even her strident professions of atheism seemed overwrought and unnecessary - and the number of persons of religious faith who find her economic, political and cultural observations enlightening only shores up this point.

Rand's beef with belief in God (and she focused primarily on Christianity) was that it demanded self-sacrifice - something she viewed as the penultimate sin and betrayal of humanity. But she never gave the beliefs of Christians (she was a Jew) or other faiths the same intense study that she gave other human philosophies and behaviors, nor did she explore facets of self-sacrifice that were actually born of love. Instead, she clung to shallow, two-dimensional stereotypes to prove her point. (Some would say here that all of her characters are two-dimensional stereotypes, and I am inclined to agree.) Just because you can point to one person whose cramped belief in God belies a shriveled, sociopathic view of the world does not mean that belief in God demands a shriveled, sociopathic view of the world. Furthermore, just as an athlete training for the Olympics (to find a timely analogy) pushes through pain, sacrifice and what seems very much like suffering to reach triumph, so too does *healthy* self-sacrifice in the Christian tradition peel away stunted layers of self-absorption and push individuals to a fuller understanding of themselves, greater accomplishments as individuals, and greater love for themselves AND others.

But - and it is an important "but" - neither Rand's stilted delivery, nor her deep-seated sexual pathologies, nor even her mischaracterization of Christianity takes away from some essential truths that she identifies and catalogs in her novels, with some powerful success. One must remember that she fled the Soviet Union, having seen firsthand and suffered through the privations and depravities thrust upon the population by the ideologues who controlled it - slavish adherents of collectivism. She knew that at its core, this was a completely renunciation of any value of the individual, except as a part of the state. (This, too, betrays her ignorance of Christianity, since it proclaims each and every individual as precious and invaluable, made in the image and likeness of God.)

Rand celebrated selfish individualism as a reaction against collectivism in all its forms and the widespread misery and destruction of life it caused, not only in the Soviet Union, but in Communist China, Cuba, North Vietnam, North Korea, and Cambodia - all of which she lived to see, and all of which only served to reinforce her perspective. Given the starvation, political persecution, imprisonment, and death that Communism has brought everywhere it was implemented, one can hardly blame her.

Rand resonates with people now because she sounded the clarion call against all collectivist philosophies which would subordinate the individual to the state, and which - of necessity - denounce individual achievement and accomplishment as "greedy," or "selfish" as justification for doing so. The United States is the most prosperous country in the history of the world, and Americans are the most generous when viewed by any standard of philanthropy: the donation of money or time, or the creation of foundations and other charitable organizations. And yet, with each passing day we hear the steady drumbeat of denunciations of all business as "greedy," "exploitative," "corrupt." Regrettably, the fountainhead ( yes ) of this viewpoint is the president of the United States whose views about business are well- known to anyone who has bothered to read his works or (more importantly) the works of those who inspired him. This reached its recent apotheosis in the president's statement in Roanoke, Virginia last month: "If you've got a business, you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen."

For those of us who know how businesses are *really* built, and who entrepreneurs *really" are – and Rep. Paul Ryan is among them -- this is not only the consummate insult, but a statement of staggering ignorance. We now live in a Bizarro-world society where certain social scientists and politicians would have us believe that huge swaths of the population cannot be held responsible for their own poor choices, but those of us who do not make those choices are at fault and will be forced to pay for them, not as charity, but by claim of right. Taxation is no longer cast as the contributions which are made to support civil society, but as reparations for blame. And yet, ironically, those among us who devote their lives and everything they own to building successful businesses that provide employment for millions of people, as well as goods and services that have created the highest standard of living in the history of the planet are not responsible for the fruits of their own work, but faceless strangers who never donated a dime or lift a finger to build those businesses are given the credit.

Rand is celebrated not because she was a great writer, but because she understood human nature and its relationship to political power. She understood that humans who celebrate government as God eventually act as if they have God's power. Her reaction was to reject the idea of God altogether. But many of us who believe in God have no difficulty separating her decision from our own. We simply acknowledge that no human is God and no human institution will deliver utopia. We study history and realize that a government which downplays or demonizes individual achievement, and excuses and subsidizes human failings under the guise of calling for higher and higher taxes will eventually be filled with a population which achieves little and expects much - all to be paid for on the backs of the shrinking numbers of people who still seek to accomplish something. Furthermore, it will be a system where power is held not at the level of individuals, families, communities - where it is most responsive, most diffused and least dangerous - but in the hands of a few whose primary contributions to society are their powers to take from some and distribute to others. At best, it is a system designed for financial collapse. At worst, it is a pathway to societal collapse.

Either way, we do not want it. And those of us who find value in Ayn Rand’s works understand that for all her faults, Rand foresaw it.

Finally, it is worth mentioning that Professor Wolfe tosses off a gratuitous insult at the end of his essay. As he is the director of a center devoted to the study of religion and American public life, one would think he would be slightly less condescending. I am not sure what he means by "creationism," but if by that he is referring to the 70 - 80% of Americans who believe in God (and who, by extension, believe that God created everything in some form or another), I am very curious what the focus of his Center is. Because he makes it sound as if the study of those who believe in God is like studying an inferior form of life.

Perhaps he has more in common with Ms. Rand than he admits.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: atheists; aynrand; collectivism; paulryan

1 posted on 08/20/2012 2:57:25 PM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

When I was in High School my dad made me read Rand and other things; thanks dad.


2 posted on 08/20/2012 3:10:38 PM PDT by Mike Darancette (Democrats: Ticket of Dope and Chains.)
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To: ADemocratNoMore; Aggie Mama; alarm rider; alexander_busek; AlligatorEyes; AmericanGirlRising; ...

Interesting take on Rand and Christianity.


3 posted on 08/20/2012 3:25:34 PM PDT by Publius (Leadershiup starts with getting off the couch.)
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To: Kaslin

I asked my kids to read Ayn Rand, 1984, and Animal Farm. I read her books and also internalized. Kurt Vonnegut’s Harrison Bergeron character.


4 posted on 08/20/2012 3:26:29 PM PDT by calico_thompson
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To: Mike Darancette

You had a very wise father.


5 posted on 08/20/2012 3:27:35 PM PDT by savagesusie (Right Reason According to Nature = Just Law)
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To: Kaslin
We now live in a Bizarro-world society where certain social scientists and politicians would have us believe that huge swaths of the population cannot be held responsible for their own poor choices, but those of us who do not make those choices are at fault and will be forced to pay for them, not as charity, but by claim of right.

Very true. This is what our President and his party have to offer and in an unscripted moment, let it out in the open. Collectivism and all the suffering and tyranny that goes with it.

6 posted on 08/20/2012 3:27:35 PM PDT by vlad335
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To: Kaslin
My brother's college had a Randian newspaper/magazine (published on newsprint the size of the college paper, but not every day). It was a life-saver for somebody going to public school to actually find people who were smart and articulate and interested in ideas.

By now I can see that they were too convinced of their own smartness and too certain about their own opinions, but I can still understand the appeal that Rand has to young people. It's something you have to go through to come out the other side, and going through it may actually make you a better person, however much you come to disagree with or detest Rand in the end.

The appeal isn't so much what Rand actually said. It's that she appeared to take thinking and ideas, principles and convictions seriously in a world that so often tries to avoid them. That certainty and self-confidence is also certainly a draw at first, though as you come to understand how complicated the world actually is, it's gets to be a turn-off pretty quickly.

7 posted on 08/20/2012 3:35:17 PM PDT by x
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To: Kaslin

I bet Ryan has read Keynes too, and Marx, so having read Rand, puts him two up on Obama, at least. All this nonsense about Ryan reading Rand is to obfuscate Obama’s intellectual shallowness as a Marxist sycophant.


8 posted on 08/20/2012 3:37:44 PM PDT by pallis
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To: Kaslin
The money quote for me:
She understood that humans who celebrate government as God eventually act as if they have God's power. Her reaction was to reject the idea of God altogether. But many of us who believe in God have no difficulty separating her decision from our own. We simply acknowledge that no human is God and no human institution will deliver utopia. We study history and realize that a government which downplays or demonizes individual achievement, and excuses and subsidizes human failings under the guise of calling for higher and higher taxes will eventually be filled with a population which achieves little and expects much - all to be paid for on the backs of the shrinking numbers of people who still seek to accomplish something. Furthermore, it will be a system where power is held not at the level of individuals, families, communities - where it is most responsive, most diffused and least dangerous - but in the hands of a few whose primary contributions to society are their powers to take from some and distribute to others. At best, it is a system designed for financial collapse. At worst, it is a pathway to societal collapse.

9 posted on 08/20/2012 3:59:59 PM PDT by mc5cents
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To: Kaslin
You cannot grasp Rand's philosophy by reading her fiction, alone. She wrote many, many non-fiction books, collections of essays, and newsletters. She was a much better non-fiction writer, IMO, than a novelist.

People who judge her philosophy after reading "Atlas Shrugged" or the "Fountainhead" will be making a decision based on insufficient data.

The author is correct, though, that her tumultuous and conflicted personal life should have no bearing on the analysis of her Objectivist philosophy. She wouldn't be the first person in history who allowed the flesh to overpower the mind.

10 posted on 08/20/2012 4:12:32 PM PDT by BfloGuy (Without economic freedom, no other form of freedom can have material meaning.)
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To: Publius

Indeed


11 posted on 08/20/2012 4:58:48 PM PDT by jonno (Having an opinion is not the same as having the answer...)
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To: Kaslin

My obligatory nod to John Piper - on Rand:
http://www.desiringgod.org/resource-library/articles/the-ethics-of-ayn-rand


12 posted on 08/20/2012 5:07:49 PM PDT by jonno (Having an opinion is not the same as having the answer...)
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To: Kaslin

Rand’s novels have a medicinal quality and often serve as a cure for those, especially among the young, falling into the illness of collectivism and statism. Of course, like most medicines, too large a dose is toxic.

Actually, either Randianism tempered with a healthy dose of the Latin church’s social doctrine, or the Latin church’s social doctrine tempered with a bit of Randianism ends up pretty much in the mainstream of American Conservatism.


13 posted on 08/20/2012 6:25:39 PM PDT by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know. . .)
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To: BfloGuy
. . . her tumultuous and conflicted personal life . . .

Her personal life is known to us only because her predatory associates, the Brandens, after Rand caught on to their duplicity, were furious. They waited for her to die and then tore her to shreds in their 'biographies'. After that, all bets were off for Heller and Burns to finish the job. Ayn Rand's crime against society was that she was an anti-communist writing against the red tide of the 20th century. The pillaging of her character that has saturated the internet is a tragedy.

14 posted on 08/21/2012 12:51:52 AM PDT by Misterioso
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To: Misterioso
Ayn Rand's crime against society was that she was an anti-communist writing against the red tide of the 20th century.

Exactly. The hatred of the good for being good, one might say.

15 posted on 08/21/2012 2:33:11 PM PDT by BfloGuy (Without economic freedom, no other form of freedom can have material meaning.)
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