Taunted by John Galt in Indiana

Ayn Rand is incredibly popular in India, but not so much with (presumably Indian) Indiana University student Indira Dammu:

On my daily walk to class, I am taunted by chalkings that declare obscure statements such as â??Who is John Galt?â? Undoubtedly the handiwork of some pretentious â??free-thinkingâ? student group, these chalkings echo a disturbing trend among college students to identify themselves as libertarians.

Apparently “the promotion of social and economic freedoms” is not very “charming” to her.
I wonder what is. Communist bread lines? Socialized dental plans? Inquiring minds want to know.
I say keep up the taunting, guys, until we can get to the bottom of this.
UPDATE (10/18/2007): Thanks to Ryan Kraus at the University of Indiana for alerting me to the fact that this happened in Indiana, not India. 😛

The Uncompromising Ayn Rand Is Still Relevant

This choice quote appeared in today’s Washington Times, drawn from Brian Doherty’s recent subscribers-only article on Ayn Rand and the right in the Wall Street Journal:

[Ayn] Rand was, despite her exile from the conservative movement, a fan of Barry Goldwater, the modern Right’s first serious presidential candidate. She told him, ‘I regard you as the only hope of the anti-collectivist side on today’s political scene, and I have defended your position at every opportunity.’ For his part, Goldwater said that ‘I have enjoyed very few books in my life as much as ‘Atlas Shrugged.’
Why does she matter to modern politics? It’s not like she is around for conservatives to seek her endorsement. But it is worthwhile for political activists to remember that Ayn Rand was utterly uncompromising on how government needed to respect the inalienable right of Americans to live their own lives, and of American business to grow, thrive, innovate and improve our lives without niggling interference.

Zogby Poll: 8% of USA Has Read Atlas Shrugged

This just out, instigated by Atlasphere member Logan Darrow Clements:

Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) October 17, 2007 — A Freestar Media/Zogby poll found that 8.1 percent of American adults have read the book Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. The poll of 1,239 adults was conducted by Zogby International between October 10 and October 14, 2007 at the request of Freestar Media, LLC. Among the poll’s 80 questions was “Have you ever read the book Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand?”. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.8 percentage points.
Atlas Shrugged chronicles an America where government has taken control of nearly all aspects of the economy. As society collapses the heroine follows a trail of clues surrounding the disappearance of innovators and the rise of a mysterious phrase “Who is John Galt?” Last week Ayn Rand fans celebrated the 50th anniversary of the first publishing of Atlas Shrugged.
Have you ever read the book Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand?
It’s influence is rising. A 1991 poll by the Library of Congress and Book of the Month Club found that Atlas Shrugged was the second most influential book after the Bible. 2008 Presidential candidate Ron Paul often quotes the author and even named his son “Rand”. Next year a movie version of Atlas Shrugged will be produced with Angelina Jolie in the lead role.
Could reading Atlas Shrugged promote financial success? The poll found that 14% of those earning $100,000 a year or more have read Atlas Shrugged while only 2% percent of those earning less than $35,000 a year have read it.
About the same percentage of men and women have read Atlas Shrugged, 48.2% men vs. 51.8% women. However, respondents living in the east (11%), west (10%), and south (9%) are about twice as likely as those living in the central/Great Lakes region (5%) to say they have read the book. Among the poll’s other findings: 38.7% of passport holders have read it, as have 10.8% of people who visit YouTube.com a few times a month.
Freestar Media, LLC was created by Logan Darrow Clements to produce media applying Ayn Rand’s philosophy of reason, individual rights and laissez-faire capitalism to current events. The company’s most popular project was The Lost Liberty Hotel, a rebellion against eminent domain abuse that involved applying the Supreme Court’s Kelo vs. City of New London ruling to one of the justices who voted in favor of it. Mr. Clements is currently producing two documentary films, one about socialized medicine, the other about eminent domain abuse.

Only 92% left go go….
We interviewed Clements a few years ago about his thoughts on entrepreneurship and his participation in the California 2003 recall election.

NYC's Grand Central Terminal As an Article of 'Atlas Shrugged' History

An interesting piece in Stamford’s The Advocate begins:

NEW YORK – Grand Central Terminal provides visitors with frequent train service, dining and shopping options, and to some, the meaning of life.
Some Metro-North Railroad employees say one of mankind’s greatest achievements lies in New York City’s deepest basement – a rotary power converter that once provided electricity to the entire railroad and to the historic train terminal.
Recently, nine Grand Central visitors got to see the converter close up to compare it with its literary equivalent – John Galt’s motor in novelist Ayn Rand’s 1957 magnum opus “Atlas Shrugged.”
To celebrate the book’s 50th anniversary, the visitors, who dubbed themselves “Friends of Atlas Shrugged,” a subgroup of the Ayn Rand Institute in Irvine, Calif., went to Grand Central for an exclusive tour in hopes of seeing some of the philosophical and technological inspirations for the novel.
“I have never been down in the bowels of a train station before,” said Jean Binswanger of New York, one of the terminal’s visitors, who included former Ayn Rand Institute board Chairman Peter Schwartz, a Danbury resident. “I think this is a fitting way to celebrate the anniversary.”

Keep reading for more.

WSJ: Rand and the Right

Brian Doherty has published what looks like it might be an interesting article in the Wall Street Journal, titled “Rand and the Right.” It begins:

Because of her opposition to New Deal government controls, novelist and philosopher Ayn Rand started off thinking of herself as a conservative. By the time her blockbuster novel, “Atlas Shrugged,” was published 50 years ago this week, she’d changed her mind. She decided she was a radical — a “radical for capitalism,” that is.
Conservatives, she’d come to believe, were insufficiently principled in their defense of a free society and once the novel was out, the official conservative movement turned its back on her.
While “Atlas Shrugged” was a ferocious defense of certain values shared by many conservatives, then and …

Unfortunately, you must be a WSJ subscriber to read the full article.

Big Atlas Shrugged Movie Update from Bidinotto

UPDATE (13 Oct) – We have now published a slightly modified version of Bidinotto’s post as a feature column at the Atlasphere: “Major Atlas Shrugged Movie Updates.”

Robert Bidinotto has just published a long and excellent post on the upcoming Atlas Shrugged movie, drawing upon his experiences and observations at the recent Atlas Shrugged 50th Anniversary Celebration in Washington, D.C.
After reviewing some key aspects of the movie’s likely format (it’s likely to be one movie rather than a series), new director (Vadim Perelman, who Bidinotto says is unlikely to “shrug”), and some tantalizing plot details (strikes, gulches, and lovers), Bidinotto concludes:

[L]et me say that my longstanding worries about this film project were very much allayed during the movie panel discussion and the subsequent conversation with Perelman. I want to emphasize this as strongly as I can: These people are all absolutely committed to doing a great film, faithful to Rand’s story, characters, and ideas.
Michael Burns, vice president of Lionsgate, read Atlas at age 17 and even attended Ayn Rand’s funeral in 1982. John Aglialoro, the businessman who bought the film rights, is a committed Objectivist and a trustee of The Atlas Society; he has fought for fifteen long years to make this project a reality.
Co-producers Howard and Karen Baldwin are devoted to this project and have worked on it with John for years. David Kelley’s credibility, credentials, and commitment regarding Atlas Shrugged need no further discussion.
Co-executive producer Geyer Kosinski, who is also Angelina Jolie’s representative, is a long-time enthusiastic Rand fan. Angelina herself loves the novel and the lead character, and has insisted that she wants to “get it right.” And I’ve just told you my impressions of Vadim Perelman.
Folks, I really think this film will be made — and in a way that Ayn Rand would have liked.

See Robert’s full post for much, much more information.
If you only read one thing this month about the Atlas Shrugged movie, read this.

Ayn Rand and Love in the Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor just published a full-length article on finding love around a shared interest in Ayn Rand’s writings. The Atlasphere figures prominently in the article, as you might expect, together with many quotes from members of our dating service.
Some excerpts:

Ayn Rand might seem an unlikely matchmaker. In a 1964 Playboy interview, she famously said that a man who places friends and family above “productive work” is immoral, an “emotional parasite.”
Yet as Atlas Shrugged turns 50 this week, Rand’s iconic intellect presides over The Atlasphere (www.theatlasphere.com) — a dating, networking, and news website that has connected her admirers since 2003.
…For Joshua Zader, The Atlasphere’s founder, the notion of Rand-inspired love makes perfect sense. “At a certain point in my 20s,” he says, “I realized I had met all my closest friends through Rand club meetings, conferences, or book signings.” He later met his wife that way, too.
…Rand saw the essence of femininity as a longing to look up to men — and went so far as to say that to be president would be “psychological torture” for a woman, and any woman who would covet the job must be too irrational to deserve it.
Yet in perusing The Atlasphere profiles, the confidence these women show — and seek — stands out. “We probably have more women than normal who say things like, ‘I need a man who won’t be intimidated,’ ” says Zader.
That gender equality certainly appeals to Annie Gilman, a graduate student at the California State Polytechnic University in Pomona. She sees relationships, in their simplest form, as “business transactions.” “You have to have something to offer to somebody in a free market,” she says.
Maybe Internet dating is courtship’s free market. Villalobos suspects that Rand would delight in its entrepreneurialism: “In effect, she has spawned a virtual Galt’s Gulch.”
Galt’s Gulch, the valley retreat of the chosen few in Atlas Shrugged, is an Objectivist’s utopia — full of industrious, virtuous people, working happily (and tax free). “She is very good at evoking the feeling that ‘This is an exciting world and if you agree with my vision, you’re a wonderful person and let’s do work together,’ ” says Zader.
Let’s do work together. It might be an epigraph for The Atlasphere, where productivity is integral to love. Rand and her characters “take love, romance, and sex seriously,” says Onkar Ghate, a senior fellow at The Ayn Rand Institute in Irvine, Calif. “Love is selfish and it is to be pursued selfishly.”

See the full article for more.
Christina McCarroll was a picture of professionalism during her research for the article — and I think it shows in the final product. I am grateful.

OC Register Profiles ARI President Yaron Brook

The article, titled “Atlas came to Irvine,” begins:

Yaron Brook grew up a socialist. What choice did he have?
His parents were “standard leftist intellectuals,” he said, driven from their homeland of South Africa by the injustices of apartheid, and drawn to Israel by dreams of Zionism and kibbutz-living. A kibbutz, you know — one of those communal farm/socialist-type utopias where everything is shared, collectivism rules, and other people help bring up your kids.
Brook’s dad was a doctor. The family spent time in England and Boston, and he fondly recalls arguing with his Western capitalist classmates over the blights of poverty and economic inequality that went hand-in-hand with the free market.
So honestly. How did Yaron Brook come to be one of the nation’s — nay, the world’s — leading spokesmen for “rational selfishness” and “laissez-faire capitalism”?
How did he come to conclude that making money is good — very good — and that life’s highest moral purpose is achieving personal happiness and individual fulfillment, not necessarily helping the neighbor in need?
How did Yaron Brook come to be president of the Ayn Rand Institute?

Keep reading to learn how he “fought the book” while first reading Atlas Shrugged, what he did professionally before agreeing to serve as president of ARI, and how many bananas he pulls down as the successful president of a burgeoning non-profit.
I’ve never met Yaron Brook, but I keep hearing good things about him. That he would merit an article like this in a major newspaper, says even more.
Kudos to Mr. Brook on his outstanding work.

'Capitalist Heroes' in Today's Wall Street Journal

Today is the 50th Anniversary of the publication of Ayn Rand’s novel Atlas Shrugged!
From today’s Wall Street Journal:
CAPITALIST HEROES
By David Kelley
October 10, 2007; Page A21
Fifty years ago today Ayn Rand published her magnum opus, “Atlas Shrugged.” It’s an enduringly popular novel — all 1,168 pages of it — with some 150,000 new copies still sold each year in bookstores alone. And it’s always had a special appeal for people in business. The reasons, at least on the surface, are obvious enough.
Businessmen are favorite villains in popular media, routinely featured as polluters, crooks and murderers in network TV dramas and first-run movies, not to mention novels. Oil company CEOs are hauled before congressional committees whenever fuel prices rise, to be harangued and publicly shamed for the sin of high profits. Genuine cases of wrongdoing like Enron set off witch hunts that drag in prominent achievers like Frank Quattrone and Martha Stewart.
By contrast, the heroes in “Atlas Shrugged” are businessmen — and women. Rand imbues them with heroic, larger-than-life stature in the Romantic mold, for their courage, integrity and ability to create wealth. They are not the exploiters but the exploited: victims of parasites and predators who want to wrap the producers in regulatory chains and expropriate their wealth.
Continue reading “'Capitalist Heroes' in Today's Wall Street Journal”