Ayn Rand Fan: Congressman Ron Paul

An excellent article at LewRockwell.com reminds us that United States Representative Ron Paul of Texas was strongly influenced by the writings of Ayn Rand, as well as other free market luminaries such as Bastiat, Von Mises, and Hayek.
The article consists chiefly of an open-ended interview with Congressman Paul. Here is an excerpt from the editor’s commentary, at the end of the article:

What strikes you first when meeting Ron Paul is his quiet, courteous and gentle manner. It is a peaceful quality. As I talked with him, I began to realize it is a quality of “no force.” There is nothing forceful at all about him. His views are expressed with the strength of the well thought out, cogent argument. Yet, there is not the forcefulness of “you have to think my way” that one often is subjected to in a discussion. You are free to think your way and he is simply saying what he thinks. Don?t mistake that genteel manner for being wishy-washy. He is very clear, direct and resolute when it comes to his principles. Those are non-negotiable. That is where his tough, surety of purpose is foremost.

See the full article for more information about this admirable politician.

The Case for Kerry: Selected Readings

A letter from Atlasphere member Eric Nolte:
The very persuasive cases made on the Atlasphere for Bush and Badnarik were accompanied by a surprising header, announcing that no one could be found to make a case for Kerry. Now, let’s not stretch the point and say that anyone should actually stand up and cheer for the man, but Dubya is so awful that we should not dismiss voting for Kerry without some serious meditation.
I know of at least two staunch advocates of freedom who are not supporting Bush or Badnarik.
Surely I am not the only member of the Atlasphere who heard Leonard Peikoff tell an audience that Kerry is very much better than Bush?
Peikoff’s case was excerpted from a lecture series on “The DIM Hypothesis.” As I remember it, the thrust of the matter is that Bush stands for theocracy, supported by a frightening, ideologically systematic, and massive base. By contrast, Kerry stands for socialism, but has nothing like a massive ideological base, because there is no credible, ideologically systematic support for socialism left anywhere in the world, not least because the left condemns all efforts to think systematically. (Of course, there is no credible, systematic support for religion either, but the Christian Right is happily deluded to hold its ideology.) In a contest between these two awful groups, the point is that theocracy is much more overtly irrational than democratic socialism.
The compelling point here is on the terrible danger posed by the Christian Right. This group is so big and influential today that another term for Bush might encourage them to become vastly more assertive and oppressive than they are now. There are something like 60 million born-again Christians, not counting fellow travellers, who believe that the Bible is the literal, revealed word of God, and they are out to impose their views on everybody else. This group is overwhelmingly Republican. They hear Bush as speaking for them, and Bush affirms this impression when he said in his first campaign that his favorite philosopher is Jesus Christ. Not even Hillary Clinton, says Dr. Peikoff, poses as great a threat to the ideals of the American project as the Christian Right, and Kerry has no such agenda supported by any such mass base.
Peikoff concludes by saying that those who know history and grasp the importance of philosophy know that an ideology, a systematic philosophy, accompanied by a truly mass base, can make serious inroads into dominating a culture.
How long can intellectual freedom last in the face of massive opposition from the Christian Right, endorsed by a second term for Bush?
In the end, Kerry is enormously bad, says Dr. P, but Bush is “apocalyptically bad.”
Dr. Peikoff’s statement isn’t in print to my knowledge, but you can listen to his 19 minute statement over at his website, listed below. It is a compelling statement.
Now here is another case for Kerry, this one from Lew Rockwell:
Consider that despite the seemingly more libertarian campaign rhetoric of Republicans, and despite the obviously socialist policies advocated by Democrats, the actual result of their policies (as opposed to the ideological planks of mainstream party platforms) is that Democrats may practice more “responsible” government than their colleagues across the aisle. Democrats ardently believe in the grace and sanctity of the Nanny State, and so they are motivated to try to make it work. By contrast, Republicans are even more heedless of the danger of a growing statist power than Democrats! This is the height of irony, but there may be some truth here. I commend you to read this very interesting piece, “The Myth of the Kerry Calamity,” on the Lew Rockwell website.
Dr. Peikoff also recommends an analysis of these matters by John Lewis.
At Lewis’s website, I found a link to a raft of interesting articles of his. I believe the one Peikoff referred to is called, “Opposing Platonic Conservatism: A Matter of Values.”

The Meaning of the Right to Vote

Ayn Rand Institute staff writer Alex Epstein has published an op-ed reminding us that on election day it is freedom, not voting, which makes America great:

Every Election Day politicians, intellectuals, and activists propagate a seemingly patriotic but utterly un-American idea: the notion that our most important right–and the source of America’s greatness–is the right to vote. According to former President Bill Clinton, the right to vote is “the most fundamental right of citizenship”; it is “the heart and soul of our democracy,” says Senator John McCain.
Such statements are regarded as uncontroversial–but consider their implications. If voting is truly our most fundamental right, then all other rights–including free speech, property, even life–are contingent on and revocable by the whims of the voting public (or their elected officials).

See the full article for additional analysis.

Harry Binswanger Endorses George W. Bush

Noted Ayn Rand Institute lecturer and Objectivist Graduate Center professor Harry Binswanger has publicly endorsed voting for George W. Bush in this year’s election. From his article “Vote for President Bush” at Capitalism Magazine:

At this late date, after the three debates, the nature of this campaign is set, and the meaning of this election has come into focus for me. The meaning is: independence vs. dependence. The Bush policies favor America retaining its sovereignty–cooperating with allies as and when they are willing–and America on the offensive. The Kerry program favors America surrendering that independence to curry favor with the bribed French and the America-hating despots at the U.N.
At a time when we are at war, after we have experienced an attack worse than Pearl Harbor, the main issue in this election has to be the war. And, appropriately, Bush has made it the main issue–both at the Republican convention and since.
The Bush doctrine, for all its timid, bumbling, and altruism-laced implementation, intends America to act, to use its military might offensively, even when half the world protests against it. Kerry’s “instincts” are to negotiate, conciliate, and retreat.

Read the full article at CapMag.

Jack Wheeler Profile at WorldNetDaily

WorldNetDaily has an interesting profile of “Indiana Jones of the Right” Jack Wheeler, who has been a fan of Ayn Rand’s works since the 1960s. The article begins:

Dr. Jack Wheeler, whose death-defying adventures span the globe and whose achievements have inspired wide-ranging acclaim, is one geopolitical expert who doesn’t mince words.
Wheeler’s latest barbs are reserved for the Central Intelligence Agency, which despite common perception, he says, is populated by anything but right-wing operatives.
“Most folks think the CIA is a right-wing outfit,” Wheeler writes on his unique intelligence website, To the Point. “It is not. The CIA has been dominated by incompetent left-wing hyper-liberals for years. The worst mistake of George Bush’s presidency was not replacing Clinton holdover George Tenet as CIA director. This is a guy responsible for the single greatest intelligence failure in U.S. history (being unaware of 9-11), who sweet-talked his way into Bush’s confidence and was able to keep his job because he named the CIA Headquarters after [Bush’s] father.”
Available to subscribers of To the Point, Wheeler’s piece goes on to discuss Tenet’s demise and reminds readers he predicted who the ex-CIA chief’s replacement would be, former Rep. Porter Goss. Wheeler describes how the CIA bureaucracy waged a war against Goss’ confirmation, which took months to be approved.
“The key to understanding this war,” writes Wheeler, “is that the CIA doesn’t simply live in a pre-September 11 world where terrorism is only a ‘nuisance’ ? it is that the CIA lives in a left-wing world, the same left-wing world as the State Department. Both worship at the Shrine of Accommodation, Appeasement and Compromise.”

See WorldNetDaily’s full profile of Wheeler for additional information.

Star and Buc Wild Cite Ayn Rand

[UPDATE (1/18/05): It turns out that the first-person excerpt below was not written by Star, but by a poser. See the updated entry on this topic for more information.]
We’re not sure whether to file this under “media citings” or a new category called “media we could do without”… A duo named “Star and Bucwild” have been getting serious morning radio airtime on hip hop stations in New York City (Hot 97) and Philadelphia (Power 99). One of them is a big fan of Ayn Rand’s work.
As one Atlasphere member wrote to us, “Star sounds like Urkel’s creepy, brain damaged uncle. It was very odd to hear him cite Rand. … This will be a good test of whether just getting Rand’s name out is worthwhile despite the context, the speaker, and the severely muddled message.”
Indeed. Here’s a sample:

When we went to LA. we started a Cable Access show called Universal Player Haters. Buck was just a kid. He was 13, 14 years old. He was big into Dance Hall. I was like make some money, be famous. He?s not really a hater. I?m a hater. A player hater is someone who hasn?t achieved the things that a person has. A hater has achieved. We used to be player haters. But we?ve elevated. A haters ideology isn?t just what have you done to me but what the fuck have you done for me? A hater isn?t some one who is miserable with themselves or frustrated. I read a book by an author named Ayn Rand. She wrote the Fountain Head and Atlas Shrugged. She was an atheist. She said things like embracing your ego and being confident. Being objective. Is Nelly really all that or is he being pounded into our head until we know his music? Like my thing with Tigger, it?s not personal. It?s business. It?s questioning his whole aura. The bellhop yasaboss negro. Just happy all the time. Every body?s his fucking cousin. What the fuck are you so happy about?

Okay … NEXT!

Ayn Rand and Privacy in Washington Times

Bob Barr, a former Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Georgia, writes an excellent article about privacy concerns for the Washington Times, and cites Ayn Rand’s novel The Fountainhead as part of his discussion:

The American conception of personal privacy as a right has its origins in the long-held tenet of English jurisprudence that “a man’s house is his castle.” In modern times, the importance of privacy to our very way of life is eloquently captured by philosopher Ayn Rand in her 1943 novel “The Fountainhead,” in which she posits that “privacy” is the very bedrock of modern civilization. While not a purely American concept, the value of privacy has taken root in our society more than any other. Indeed, it is enshrined in the Fourth Amendment to our Constitution ? the government cannot invade our persons, homes or papers to gather evidence against us without a good reason for doing so; private lives are, well, private.
In the olden days, this actually meant something. People were outraged when someone’s laundry, be it clean or dirty, was aired publicly without a good reason. Instinctively, Americans distrusted anything that scrutinized their daily activities. Gossip, though practiced quietly, was a bad word.

He contrasts this with today’s infatuation with reality television, and notes that if we lose our appreciation for privacy, we’ll likely lose our rights to it as well. The full article is worth reading.

Follow-up Comments from Don Parrish

Don Parrish sent the following comments after we posted his article on “The Case for Badnarik“:

Thanks for a very nice editing job on my article. I was pleased with the result. If I had known that John Hospers was writing the case for Bush, I would have mentioned that my first Libertarian vote for President was in 1972 for Dr. Hospers, a man I admire very much. I met him in 1972 at the first Libertarian convention in Denver.
The last time I spoke to him was a few years ago at a TOC summer seminar. I told him that my favorite speech of his to a Libertarian group was entitled “To Keep Time With” in Dallas in 1974. He smiled at me and informed me it was his favorite speech too!! A kind of magic moment!!
Today I read his excellent, impassioned cry of the heart for Bush. It was vintage Hospers. I would love to team up with him on an attack-a-thon on Kerry! It was very appropriate for you to inform the Atlasphere that you could not get a case for Kerry!
If we were having a public discussion, I would point out that Libertarians who agree with Dr. Hospers should follow his advice if they live in a battleground state, but should follow my advice otherwise. He is emphasizing the short term and I, the long term.
Short term thinking can apply in the battleground states, but it is a waste in the majority of states. Libertarians who live, for example, in California, New York, Texas or Illinois should follow my suggestion and vote for Badnarik because there is nothing that will change the outcome in those states. Voting for Badnarik will have the practical effect of signaling President Bush in his second term to move in a more Libertarian direction.

Camp Indecon 2005

Camp Indecon has just announced plans for its 2005 summer camp. From the announcement:

Camp Indecon will return to Woodland Park, Colorado for the week of July 16 through July 23, 2005. Set high in the Rocky Mountains surrounded by Pike National Forest, the Templed Hills Retreat Center has proven to be an ideal location for lodging, dining, class time, and recreation.
As in 2004, we have reserved the same two lodges, one for children ages 9 through 12 and the other for ages 13 through 17. For more information, please visit our website.

One parent from last year’s camp provides the following endorsement:

After camp this year, Dan Lind wrote, ?My 12 year old daughter just returned from her second year at Indecon, and my endorsement is based on her experience.?
?Over the years I’ve talked with my daughter, Susan, about the empirical basis of knowledge, about logic, about the Law of Identity (‘Sweetie, we might not know everything about something but we DO know that we CAN know and understand things about it’)…At Indecon they actually talk about this stuff.?
Mr. Lind continues, ?Indecon is much more than just instruction. It has the activities and fun and social events one would expect from a summer camp. The principles of independence, confidence and thinking for yourself run through all the activities, and create an integrated, cohesive experience.?
?Susan’s mother died in late 2002. By the time she went to Indecon the first time in the summer of 2003, she had acquired her sea legs, had begun to master the art of navigating her life without the existence of her mom. Indecon tied in nicely as an ‘away from home’ adjunct to the support network she has in our community, and I noticed a deepened sparkle and confidence in her that year.?
?Susan has made friends at Indecon from all over the country, one from Canada who has been at Indecon both years she was there. It has the activities and fun and social events one would expect from a summer camp. I’m hoping these will be a circle of special friends that she’ll retain into her adult life.?
?The value Indecon offers is a great deal more than the cost. I recommend it.?

For additional background information about Camp Indecon, see our interview with Camp Indecon founder Hannelore Bugby.
If you are interested in sending your child to Camp Indecon, contributing to the camp’s scholarship fund, or becoming a counselor, visit the Camp Indecon web site for further details and contact information.

Writer Wanted: The Case for Kerry

Do you advocate voting for John Kerry in this election? Would you like to write up your perspective for the Atlasphere? If so, read on…
High-profile advocates of Ayn Rand’s ideas have come down on different sides of the 2004 presidential race.
We’d like to publish a series of commentaries on the election, titled “The Case for Kerry,” “The Case for Bush,” and “The Case for Badnarik.” We’ve been unable to find someone to advocate the Kerry position, however.
If you’re interested in writing a pro-Kerry piece, please contact us ASAP and include a quick outline of the kinds of facts you’d plan to marshal to make your case.
If we don’t find a Kerry advocate by Saturday, we may not proceed with the project; so if you’re interested at all, please let us know.