French Riots Caused by Welfare State

Shannon Love offers useful free-market insights into the root causes of the increasingly widespread riots in France:

Via Instapundit comes a discussion on whether the riots in France, and the general breakdown of law and order in some sections of other European countries, are primarily the result of Islamo-facism, runaway multiculturalism or the welfare-state. All three factors play into the problem but I think the primary driver is the welfare state.
One might ask, however, why should anyone riot when the welfare state provides all the basic material necessities of life? It’s not as if the residents of the suburbs of Paris are starving, exposed to the elements or deprived of medical care. By the standards of most of humanity, they live quite opulent lives. Why doesn’t the welfare state make them happy?
The short answer is that human beings are not cows. Cows are quite content if their material needs are met but people have hopes, dreams and aspirations. It is precisely these psychological benefits that the welfare state ultimately cannot provide. People are rioting not because they are deprived of material benefits but because they are wholly dependent on the whims of others for the benefits they do receive. They have no status and no control. It is these social, psychological and spiritual deprivations that they are ultimately striking out against.

Keep reading… (via Instapundit)

C-SpanII Book TV: Was Communism A Threat to Hollywood?

As pointed on this blog entry, the Liberty Film Festival featured a panel of authors who have written books about Hollywood debate the quesstion: Was Communism a threat to Hollywood? The event was recorded and will be broadcasted on C-SPAN II’s Book TV on Saturday, November 5 at 9:00 pm and Sunday, November 6 at 7:00 pm
See the announcement of the show on C-Span II Book TV.

Google Library Infringes Copyright?

Google is undertaking a large, long-term project to make the content of hard copy books (remember those?) available via the Internet.
Such a project would unquestionably benefit many in significant ways. Nick Taylor, in a Washington Post editorial, argues they are going about it without due consideration of intellectual property rights.
In response, Authors Guild, of which Taylor is current president, has filed suit against Google.
One side argues the potential benefit to society outweighs the author’s right to compensation for his or her work. The librarian of the University of Michigan, for example, states “We cannot lose sight of the tremendous benefits this project will bring to society.”
Others argue no copyright infringement is taking place.

First, Google does not intend to sell digital copies of the books themselves, selling instead targeted advertising links embedded on the results page. Second, only very small snippets of the books (less then three lines) will be displayed at any one time.

While agreeing about the likely benefit, Taylor argues that “Society has traditionally seen its greatest value in the rights of individuals, and particularly in the dignity of their work and just compensation for it.”

Two Upcoming TIA Teleconference Lectures

This Thursday, November 3, Atlasphere member Andrew Bernstein will present a live teleconference lecture on the subject “Ten Neglected Truths About Capitalism.” Dr. Bernstein will share new insights into the nature and history of Capitalism, which he learned from his research on his book The Capitalist Manifesto. The lecture will run 8:30-10:00 EST and will include a 30-minute Q&A.
Next Wednesday, November 9, M. Zachary Johnson, a composer and musicologist in the New York City area, will present a live teleconference lecture on the subjet “The Head and Heart of Music.” The lecture will run 8:30-10:00 EST and will include a 30-minute Q&A.
From the description:

This lecture will introduce the idea that the philosophic issue of the relationship between man’s mind and body is the crucial issue in the field of musicâ??that it is this abstraction which ties together and explains a vast range of seemingly disparate concretes in the field. This “head-heart” issue is a basic determinant of a person’s taste in musicâ??and sets the course of the history of music.

Both lectures are presented under the auspices of The Intellectual Activist.

Government: The Real Oil Profiteers

Oil companies will surely be getting a beating for their record profits this year. When you see it, just keep this in mind: “Gas Taxes Exceed Oil Companies’ Profits.” Here’s the take-home-message:

Since 1977, governments collected more than $1.34 trillion, after adjusting for inflation, in gasoline tax revenuesâ??more than twice the amount of domestic profits earned by major U.S. oil companies during the same period:

Via Instapundit.

Remembering Joan Kennedy Taylor

Objectivist History Project founder Duncan Scott sends us this unfortunate news:

Joan Kennedy TaylorJoan Kennedy Taylor, former publisher of one of the first Objectivist themed magazines, Persuasion, and an associate of Ayn Rand for over twenty years, died Saturday morning after a long battle with cancer.
Beginning in the early 1970’s Kennedy Taylor wrote and spoke on feminist issues from a Libertarian perspective. She also directed book programs for the Manhattan Institute and the Foundation for Economic Education; was an editor for The Libertarian Review and The Freeman; and for ten years was a commentator for the Cato Institute’s syndicated radio program, “Byline.” Earlier, she was the founder and editor of Persuasion from 1964 to 1968. She was the National Coordinator of the Association of Libertarian Feminists and a member of the board of directors of Feminists for Free Expression.
She was the author of several books, including Reclaiming the Mainstream: Individualist Feminism Rediscovered, published in 1992 by Prometheus Books. She was the editor of Free Trade: The Necessary Foundation for World Peace, and the co-author with Lee M. Shulman of When to See a Psychologist. Besides writing articles for publications that include The Wall Street Journal, Success, The Washington Times, and Reason, the Hoover Institution brought out her pamphlet, “Women’s Issues: Feminism, Classical Liberalism, and the Future,” in its Essays in Public Policy series and she has contributed to a number of books: Equal Opportunities: a Feminist Fallacy (London, 1992), Beyond the Status Quo: Policy Proposals for America, and Freedom, Feminism, and the State, as well as several textbooks.
Kennedy Taylor was interviewed for The Objectivist History Project on April 4th, 2004. Excerpts from the interview were shown at The Objectivist Center Summer Seminar in Vancouver in July 2004, with Miss Kennedy Taylor attending. She spoke of her close relationship with Ayn Rand, of her father, composer Deems Taylor, and his friendship with Rand in his later years. She described efforts by Objectivists to end the military draft which ultimately proved successful.
According to her son, Michael Cook, current plans — which may change — are to have calling hours at Frank Campbell Funeral Home on 81st St. and Madison Ave., New York City on Wednesday, 4 pm to 7 pm (call Campbell FH 212-288-3500 to confirm), to have calling hours in Lee, Massachusetts on Thursday, and to have her funeral on Friday in Stockbridge, followed by a burial in the Stockbridge Cemetery.

Joan Kennedy Taylor

Joan Kennedy Taylor, one-time associate of Ayn Rand, passed away October 29, 2005. (as reported here and here) Ms. Taylor is probably best known for her work: Reclaiming the Mainstream: Individualist Feminism Rediscovered. She also contributed an essay to Feminist Interpretations of Ayn Rand, edited by Chris Sciabarra and Mimi Gladstein.
Ms. Taylor was interviewed in 2004 for The Objectivist History Project. In the interview, she recalled her first meeting with Rand and the surprising role that many early students of Objectivism played in bringing about the end of the military draft.
On a personal note, I had the opportunity to speak with Ms. Taylor while we waited for flights after TOC’s 2004 Summer Seminar in Vancouver. We spoke more about her association with Rand—of whom she had warm memories. I wish I had known Ms. Taylor better; she will be greatly missed.

Between Jam and Jelly: Government Folly Part 3,326

In a stellar short essay, Uriah Kriegel illuminates a dangerous trend in legislative thinking — adherence to the principle: that which is not explicitly allowed is therefore forbidden.
Kriegel focuses on some absurd recent rulings of the European Commission, but his insights apply equally well to all countries’ regulatory bodies.
He rightly points out that such a principle is entirely antithetical to the American system of government, in principle if not always in practice.
His use of Justice Stephen Bryer’s recent book, Active Liberty, as an example is apropos, especially in light of recent debates over ‘judicial activism’.
Readers of Anthem and Atlas Shrugged will understand the principle already, but Kriegel makes his own case with no explicit reference to Rand’s philosophy.
And make it he does… in spades.
The essay is available on Tech Central Station’s web site.

Atlas Shrugged #3 at UCSB Bookstore

From the Santa Barbara Independent:
THE INDY LIST
Top 10 Sellers at the UCSB Bookstore
In addition to the thousands of textbooks that fly through their doorsâ??such as Chemistry 1Aâ??s super-hot Chemicals and their Principles, which sold 750 copies in just two days on the shelfâ??the UCSB Bookstore also sells books that college students can use and enjoy. Here are the top 10:
1. Globalization: A Very Short Introduction, by Manfred B. Steger
2. Everything Is Illuminated, by Jonathan Safran Foer
3. Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand
4. The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky
5. Cliffâ??s Notes for Othello
6. Harper-Collins Latin Concise Dictionary
7. Oxford American College Dictionary
8. Better Homes and Gardensâ?? New Cookbook
9. An Insiderâ??s Guide to Santa Barbara, by Karen Hastings
10. The Guide to Getting It On, by Paul Joannides and Daereick Gross

Atlas Shrugged Film Closer?

According to a recent article in BoxOffice Mojo:
“…Howard Baldwin, [who] tells me that he is closer to bringing Ayn Rand’s epic to the screen. ” writes editor and publisher Scott Holleran.
There’s some reason to hope the screenplay will be faithful to the spirit of the novel.

“Based on a reading of the Atlas Shrugged script, producer Baldwin promises that Miss Rand’s essential principlesâ??reason, selfishness, capitalismâ??are integrated in the plot and that, as in the novel, businesswoman Dagny Taggart struggles to operate a transcontinental railroad in a nation run by preachy socialists, while looters and moochers pick at the remains.”

That would be welcome news, indeed.