OBAMA HAS NEVER READ ATLAS SHRUGGED, BUT HAS READ RULES FOR RADICALS

  • Quotes from Ayn Rand
  • We are fast approaching the stage of the ultimate inversion: the stage where the government is free to do anything it pleases, while the citizens may act only by permission; which is the stage of the darkest periods of human history, the stage of rule by brute force

    There is nothing to take a man's freedom away from him, save other men. To be free, a man must be free of his brothers.

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  • (CNN) -- "Where is John Galt?" reads a sign in the back of a vehicle heading down Interstate 85 in Atlanta, Georgia.
    Ayn Rand, shown here on a 1999 stamp, is finding new readers thanks to the economic crisis.

    Ayn Rand, shown here on a 1999 stamp, is finding new readers thanks to the economic crisis.

    The quotation is wrong. As any reader of Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" can attest, the correct line is "Who is John Galt?" but the point is well taken.

    In the midst of the credit crisis and the federal government's massive bailout plan, the works of Rand, a proponent of a libertarian, free-market philosophy she called Objectivism, are getting new attention.

    "If only 'Atlas' were required reading for every member of Congress and political appointee in the Obama administration. I'm confident that we'd get out of the current financial mess a lot faster," Wall Street Journal columnist Stephen Moore wrote in early January.

    It's obviously getting attention from the general public. Rand book sales are "going through the roof," said Yaron Brook, the president of the Ayn Rand Institute. According to Brook, "Atlas Shrugged," her most famous novel, has sold more copies in the first four months of 2009 than it did for all of 2008 -- and in 2008, it sold 200,000 copies. It's been in Amazon.com's top 50 for more than a month.

    THE FOLLOWING WORDS MAY DESCRIBE THE NECESSARY ACTION TO STOP THE SOCIALIST AGENDA IN OUR MIDST.

    "Atlas Shrugged" concerns a group of corporate chieftains and individualists who go on strike in protest of government intervention in business. Among those trying to figure out what's happening are Taggart and steel tycoon Hank Rearden. Eventually they meet John Galt, an engineer who had been elevated to legendary status by "stopping the motor of the world" in encouraging other individualists to drop out, and who delivers the novel's showstopping 50-page speech -- an expansive summary of Rand's philosophy

    AS state above, it may be necessary to shut down the "motor of the world", this will put the parasitic taxeaters on notice to who is payin the bills.  Also, see February 28, 2009 entry on Ayn Rand.  This is very revealing to whom advocated her principles.

     

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