Mexican Billionaire Carlos Slim Slams Bill Gates & Warren Buffet's "Santa Clause" Routine

From today’s New York Post:

March 14, 2007 — Carlos Slim, the Mexican tycoon just a hair from being the world’s richest man, scoffed yesterday at Bill Gates and Warren Buffett for “playing Santa Claus” to cure poverty’s ills.
Slim climbed on his meanie soapbox just days after his $49 billion fortune was ranked by Forbes as the third-richest behind that No. 1 Gates and No. 2 Buffett – only a few billion shy from eclipsing them both.
“Poverty isn’t solved with donations,” he said at the unveiling of his own health care initiative. Slim continued that building good businesses do more for society than “going around like Santa Claus.”
Slim wants to build huge hospitals in northern Mexico where the U.S. can ship tens of thousands of Medicare patients for health care that can be delivered at much cheaper costs.
Slim was unimpressed at how Buffett and Gates vowed late last year to combine their entire fortunes into the world’s largest foundation to do good works.
“Our concept is more to accomplish and solve things, rather than giving,” Slim said.
Slim, 67, has expanded his empire of telecom and energy assets faster than any of the other top billionaires of the world, growing at 64 percent last year.

Interesting. And very Randian-sounding. Could he be a celebrity Ayn Rand fan?
UPDATE: Then again, maybe not. Reader Ashley March at the Cato Institute writes:

According to our Director of the Center for Global Liberty and Proserity, Ian Vasquez, far from understanding Objectivism, “Slim is the biggest hypocrite and worst mercantilist in Latin America. Heâ??s one of the reasons mexico has not grown faster; among other things, heâ??s ruthlessly maintained a telecom monopoly in mexico, making it a huge bottleneck in the economy and one of the most expensive places to make calls.”

"Voice of America" Program on Ayn Rand

Voice of America (broadcast in 45 languages) now offers a newly-produced program about Ayn Rand that seems reasonably objective. (I’ve not listened to the program itself.)
UPDATE: One of our members points out that “While I’m happy to hear that VOA did a generally positive piece on Ayn, it does contain a number of errors, such as she wrote a book on love (a confusion about the Romantic Manifesto) or that the Collective helped edit Atlas Shrugged.”  Thanks for the heads-up.

NPR Interview with 300's Frank Miller

Based upon the trailer, the new movie 300 appears to glorify virtues like strength, courage, and determination. No wonder, then, that so many liberal reviewers are dismissing it.
The following excerpt, from a recent interview with Frank Miller (upon whose graphic novel the movie is based) on National Public Radio, seemed pretty telling. (I can’t find a way to link to it directly, but the transcript appeared in the comments, at Mar 9 12:58 pm, from a post by Dean Barnett about the movie.)
From the interview:

NPR: [â?¦] Frank, whatâ??s the state of the union?
FM: Well, I donâ??t really find myself worrying about the state of the union as I do the state of the home-front. It seems to me quite obvious that our country and the entire Western World is up against an existential foe that knows exactly what it wants â?¦ and weâ??re behaving like a collapsing empire. Mighty cultures are almost never conquered, they crumble from within. And frankly, I think that a lot of Americans are acting like spoiled brats because of everything that isnâ??t working out perfectly every time.
NPR: Um, and when you say we donâ??t know what we want, whatâ??s the cause of that do you think?
FM: Well, I think part of that is how weâ??re educated. Weâ??re constantly told all cultures are equal, and every belief system is as good as the next. And generally that America was to be known for its flaws rather than its virtues. When you think about what Americans accomplished, building these amazing cities, and all the good its done in the world, itâ??s kind of disheartening to hear so much hatred of America, not just from abroad, but internally.
NPR: A lot of people would say what America has done abroad has led to the doubts and even the hatred of its own citizens.
FM: Well, okay, then letâ??s finally talk about the enemy. For some reason, nobody seems to be talking about who weâ??re up against, and the sixth century barbarism that they actually represent. These people saw peopleâ??s heads off. They enslave women, they genitally mutilate their daughters, they do not behave by any cultural norms that are sensible to us. Iâ??m speaking into a microphone that never could have been a product of their culture, and Iâ??m living in a city where three thousand of my neighbors were killed by thieves of airplanes they never could have built.
NPR: As you look at people around you, though, why do you think theyâ??re so, as you would put it, self-absorbed, even whiny?
FM: Well, Iâ??d say itâ??s for the same reason the Athenians and Romans were. Weâ??ve got it a little good right now. Where I would fault President Bush the most, was that in the wake of 9/11, he motivated our military, but he didnâ??t call the nation into a state of war. He didnâ??t explain that this would take a communal effort against a common foe. So weâ??ve been kind of fighting a war on the side, and sitting off like a bunch of Romans complaining about it. Also, I think that George Bush has an uncanny knack of being someone people hate. I thought Clinton inspired more hatred than any President I had ever seen, but Iâ??ve never seen anything like Bush-hatred. Itâ??s completely mad.
NPR: And as you talk to people in the streets, the people you meet at work, socially, how do you explain this to them?
FM: Mainly in historical terms, mainly saying that the country that fought Okinawa and Iwo Jima is now spilling precious blood, but so little by comparison, itâ??s almost ridiculous. And the stakes are as high as they were then. Mostly I hear people say, â??Why did we attack Iraq?â?? for instance. Well, weâ??re taking on an idea. Nobody questions why after Pearl Harbor we attacked Nazi Germany. It was because we were taking on a form of global fascism, weâ??re doing the same thing now.
NPR: Well, they did declare war on us, butâ?¦
FM: Well, so did Iraq.

Intriguing.
I read Steven Pressfield’s Gates of Fire last year and enjoyed it a lot. The Spartans are truly inspiring, and the movie 300 seems to be the latest example of their particular brand of inspiration.
At least, the trailer makes it appear that way.
UPDATE: Diana Hsieh writes that 300 was ultimately disappointing. And she’s got some good arguments about why.
UPDATE 2: On the other hand, the movie receives a glowing review from Aaron at Rebirth of Reason:

Most significantly, 300 presents heroes without doubt or apology. There are no anti-heroes to be found, none just going through the motions, no muddled or conflicted ‘heroes’ succumbing to this or that weakness or folly. The rhetoric of Leonidas and others inspire, touting reason, freedom, and deriding the mysticism not only of the East but of the Greek’s own gods and Oracle. Their confidence is unshaken, resolve unrelenting, and words matched by actions to the last stand. Not just imagery, not just presentation, but heroism and sense of life make this film awesome.

Mark Skousen on Atlas Shrugged in the Christian Science Monitor

Mark Skousen has penned a new (and ultimately disappointing) article called “Atlas Shrugged – 50 Years Later” for the Christian Science Monitor.
Seems he digs the novel’s capitalist politics but can’t quite stomach its ethic of enlightened self-interest. Still choosing between sadism and masochism, as Miss Rand would say.

Hudgins, Bidinotto on Air America Radio

The Atlas Society sent the following notice:

Edward Hudgins, executive director of The Atlas Society, and Robert Bidinotto, editor of the group’s magazine, The New Individualist, will each appear on “The Thom Hartmann Show” on Air America.
Hudgins will be interviewed on Thursday, March 1 at 12:07pm Eastern time ; Robert will be interviewed on Friday, March 2 at 1:34pm.
Hartmann’s the guy who replaced the Al Franken last week. Here are the affiliates that carry the show. The show also will be carried on Sirius/XM satellite radio; you can go here to listen live. There’s a call-in line for listeners, too: (866)303-2270.
Hope you can listen in!

Robert Bidinotto blogs about these appearances at Bidinotto Blog.

Movie Recommendation: The Lives of Others

From 1960s Rand associate Bob Hessen:
I warmly recommend THE LIVES OF OTHERS, dealing with East Germany before its collapse in 1989. The secret police (the “Stasi”) spy on the lives of everyone suspected of being disloyal to the regime or the ideal of socialism. Ulrich Muhe, who won a Lola, the German equivalent of an Oscar for his brilliant performance, detects a trace of independence and non-conformity in a leading playwright and his actress girlfriend, so he begins round-the-clock surveillance of their apartment, spying on every conversation and intimate moment. But his adversarial attitude softens when he discovers that his boss, who approved the surveillance, has sexual designs on the actress. The story is exceptionally suspenseful and superbly acting. This movie earned eleven awards in Germany last year — and I shall be rooting for it to win an Academy Award as Best Foreign Film this year.
It opened last week in Menlo Park and presumably is playing nation- wide, but there is no telling how long it will play, so see it soon if it appeals to you.

Czech President Vaclav Klaus Slams Global Warming

Matt Drudge points out a very articulate (and high profile) new swipe at global warming from Czech President Vaclav Klaus, from an interview in a Czech publication:

Q: IPCC has released its report and you say that the global warming is a myth. How did you get this idea, Mr President?
A: It’s not my idea. Global warming is a myth and every serious person and scientist says so. It is not fair to refer to the U.N. panel. IPCC is not a scientific institution: it’s a political body, a sort of non-government organization of green flavor. It’s neither a forum of neutral scientists nor a balanced group of scientists. These people are politicized scientists who arrive there with a one-sided opinion and a one-sided assignment. Also, it’s an undignified slapstick that people don’t wait for the full report in May 2007 but instead respond, in such a serious way, to the summary for policymakers where all the “but’s” are scratched, removed, and replaced by oversimplified theses.
This is clearly such an incredible failure of so many people, from journalists to politicians. If the European Commission is instantly going to buy such a trick, we have another very good reason to think that the countries themselves, not the Commission, should be deciding about similar issues.

President Klaus goes on at some length, and it’s quite good, so keep reading
PS: For anyone new to the subject of why global warming is a farce, you can hardly do better than Michael Crichton’s excellent novel State of Fear. You might even call it “the Atlas Shrugged of global warming dissent” — and it comes complete with footnotes and an annotated bibliography for further reading.

Radicals for Capitalism on C-SPAN2

Brain Doherty, senior editor at Reason Magazine, will be discussing his new book Radicals for Capitalism: A Freewheeling History of the Modern American Libertarian Movement on C-SPAN2’s “After Words”. Readers of Ayn Rand will recognize the title, taken from Rand’s description of her political viewpoint.
From the C-SPAN Booknotes email announcement:

Insightful author interviews
Saturday 9 PM, Sunday 6 PM and 9 PM ET
Brian Doherty is a senior editor at Reason magazine and the author of This Is Burning Man: The Rise of a New American Underground. He discusses his latest book, Radicals for Capitalism: A History of the Modern American Libertarian Movement, with Doug Bandow, former senior fellow at the Cato Institute and current vice president of policy at Citizen Outreach, a limited-government public policy organization. Mr. Bandow’s latest book is Foreign Follies: America’s New Global Empire.

The Life and Ideas of Milton Friedman

Worth Watching:
Power of Choice: The Life and Ideas of Milton Friedman
Monday, January 29, 2007; check local listings for broadcast time.
“A documentary on the life and ideas of Nobel-winning economist Milton Friedman (1912-2006), with comments from former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan; economists Gary Becker and Paul Samuelson, and former Estonian prime minister Mart Laar.”