Lakshmi Rana and Atlas Shrugged

Lakshmi RanaShe may not be a fan yet, but Indian fashion model Lakshmi Rana reports that she’s currently reading Atlas Shrugged:

New Delhi, October 16: ??During the fashion season I usually work on Sundays, but on days that I am home I wake up around 9a.m,?? says model Lakshmi Rana. After breakfast she goes through newspapers. Being an avid reader Rana takes time out to read books on Sundays. ??Currently I am reading Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand,?? she says. Richard Bach is also a favourite. ??I enjoyed reading Hari Kunzru?s The Impressionist recently,?? adds Rana. In the afternoon she hits the gym. ??I go to Ozone (in Defence Colony) where I usually work out for about two hours. Sometimes I take the sauna and steam bath and do a pedicure,?? she says. After that Rana hangs out with friends. ??When they come home I enjoy cooking for them. I usually make fish curry or fish fry.?? On Sundays she sleeps late as she usually catches up on movies on her DVD player. The last film that Rana watched was Michael Mann?s Collateral.

If you need a dating service, Miss Rana, we’ll be right here for you.

'Night of January 16th' in San Dimas

Ayn Rand’s play “The Night of January 16th” will be showing in San Dimas, California (near San Bernardino) for the next few weekends. It looks like a very enjoyable production, too:

Most people today try to dodge jury duty. But in 1935, people were more than willing to do the job.
That was especially evident when “Night of January 16” hit Broadway the same year. The drama/comedy/murder mystery allowed audience members, even women, to submit their names on paper to possibly be selected to sit on the jury during the performance. The jury decided whether the defendant, Karen Andre, did or did not murder her incredibly wealthy but very mean boss/lover. So, the show has two possible endings.
The same is true for the Alliance for Performing Arts and The Place Theatre production of the play, which debuts Friday night in the fellowship hall of San Dimas Community Church.
“The real nice thing about this is we get it over in one night,” director Melinda Brasch said, jokingly referring to how long court cases take these days.
The theater company has transformed the fellowship hall into a 1930s courtroom. Guests are encouraged to wear 1930s apparel (they’ll get $2 off their ticket prices if they do). Witnesses will be seated among audience members. The jury will be sequestered during intermission and fed snacks.
“Night of January 16,” written by Ayn Rand, takes the audience on a journey through the fateful night in question. It is built in such a way that the evidence of the defendant’s guilt or innocence is evenly balanced and the decision will have to be based on the juror’s own feelings toward the case, Brasch said.
The actors in this performance have to be very careful to do their jobs convincingly. If one of the them has to cry, it better look real, or else the jury could decide that person was faking it. Each night could bring about a different verdict.
“If someone happens to screw up, it changes what the jury thinks,” said Randy Merritt, 46, of La Verne, who plays defense attorney Stevens. Keep reading…
When: 8 Fridays and Saturdays; 3 p.m Sundays through Oct. 31
Where: The Place Theatre, San Dimas Community Church fellowship hall, 216 San Dimas Ave., San Dimas
Tickets: $15 general, $12 seniors/students
Information: (909) 596-8811

Additional information about this performance and the group sponsoring it are available on the San Bernadino Sun web site.

'Apprentice' Bill Rancic and The Fountainhead

Sounds like Bill Rancic (winner of last season’s The Apprentice, starring Donald Trump) knows where to turn for inspiration. From the Chicago Tribune‘s description of Rancic’s home:

The master bedroom, on the third floor, is large but not outrageously so, with a fireplace, a vaulted ceiling and a balcony that looks out over the back yard shared with the main house. The walls are a dark, mossy taupe with white trim, and heavy black velvet curtains block out the light.
On his nightstand is a copy of Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead. Clearly, architecture and the perils of selling out are on the mind.

No indication, yet, whether he is actually a fan of the novel. But he seems like someone who should be.

Columbus Day: A Weapon Against Terrorism

Front Page Mag has reproduced Thomas Bowden’s op-ed on Columbus day under the title “Columbus Day: Another Weapon Against Terrorism.” From the article:

We cannot win a war in which Islamic totalitarians loudly proclaim that their way of life is superior–while liberals trot out the cliches of multiculturalism, claiming that there is no objective standard by which to judge a society good or evil, and conservatives downplay the religious motives driving Islamic terrorism, clinging to the notion that religion promotes peace despite blood-soaked centuries of evidence to the contrary.
This moral uncertainty is dividing Americans into two equally ineffectual camps. Liberals, mortified by world opposition, want to demilitarize the conflict in favor of a criminal-justice approach, granting every Muslim killer his day in court. Conservatives, although seemingly willing to address the conflict militarily, wring their hands if a stray bullet chips gold leaf off the dome of a mosque.
Americans can escape this quagmire of moral vacillation only by becoming fully, rationally convinced that our values are objectively worthwhile–that they are worth pursuing, worth upholding, and worth defending, by force if necessary. One way to attain such moral certainty is to understand, with full clarity, why we celebrate Columbus Day.

See the full article for further elaboration.

Harry Potter and Philosophy

Harry Potter and Philosophy - Click to OrderA new volume of essays titled Harry Potter and Philosophy (Open Court, 2004) has just been published. The book contains contributions by Atlasphere members Shawn Klein (who was also co-editor of the volume) and Diana Hsieh. Atlasphere interviewee Mimi Reisel Gladstein also has an essay.
The book is not specifically targeted towards Rand admirers, of course. Shawn writes:

There isn’t too much Ayn Rand. But Diana’s essay and my essay make passing references, and in the quotes from philosophers section there is a quote from Ayn Rand. (I made sure of that!)

From the back cover:

You don?t need a diploma in arithmancy, the friendship of a hippogriff, or even a Hogwarts Library card to discover amazing and arcane secrets in the labyrinthine world of Harry Potter.
In the book you now hold in your hands (or for more advanced students, the book you have levitated into a suitable position while you feed snacks to your owl), seventeen philosophical scholars unlock some of Hogwarts? secret panels, displaying fresh insights enlightening both for sorcerers and for the more discerning Muggles.
Among the occult lore here revealed, behold the best recipe for true courage, proof that self-deception does not yield happiness, how ethics can be applied to the branch of technology known as magic, why the Mirror of Erised isn?t adequate for real life, whether prophecy rules out free choice, and what dementors and boggarts can teach us about joy, fear, and the soul.
All the pages of this book are acid-free and have been individually bewitched with an anti-befuddlement incantation. Don?t forget to keep your wand primed and read between the lines. Failure to observe these precautions may invite the malign influence of Vol?sorry, He Who Must Not Be Named.
“Harry Potter and Philosophy is the most enjoyable HP spin-off I?ve read?and I?ve read most of them. Some chapters are so full of good reflections, clear thinking, and reliable scholarship, I couldn?t resist reading entire passages aloud. Our family plans to read these thought-provoking essays at the dinner table, sparking intelligent conversation with our teen- and college-aged children?Harry Potter fans all.”
   ?Connie Neal
   Author of The Gospel According to Harry Potter
“With insight, humor, and a style and structure true to the world and characters of Hogwarts, David Baggett and Shawn Klein have compiled a wonderful, stimulating book of philosophical insights. From the Slytherins and ambition-as-virtue to feminism and the women of Hogwarts, readers will enjoy stretching beyond the normal boundaries of Muggles? classrooms.”
   ?Roderic Owen
   Professor of Philosophy, Mary Baldwin College

The book is available in bookstores, and is also available online from Amazon.com.

Free Markets in Space

The Houston Chronicle has published a terrific op-ed by Ayn Rand Institute staff writer Robert Garmong titled “Myth of government-only exploration lost in space.” From the article:

On Monday, SpaceShipOne, the first privately funded manned spacecraft, captured the $10 million X Prize by making its second trip to outer space in less than a week. In doing so, it did more than shatter the boundary of outer space: It destroyed forever the myth that space exploration can only be done by the government.
Earlier this year, a Bush administration panel on space exploration recommended that NASA increase the role of private contractors in the push to permanently settle the moon and eventually explore Mars. But it appears that neither the administration nor anyone else has yet considered the true free-market solution for America’s moribund space program: complete privatization.
There is a contradiction at the heart of the space program: Space exploration, as the grandest of man’s technological advancements, requires the kind of bold innovation possible only to minds left free to pursue the best of their thinking and judgment. Yet by placing the space program under governmental funding, we necessarily place it at the mercy of governmental whim. The results are written all over the past 20 years of NASA’s history: The space program is a political animal, marked by shifting, inconsistent and ill-defined goals.

Read the full article for additional information.

Lessons from the Iraq War: Reconciling Liberty and Security

The Objectivist Center and The Cato Institute are co-sponsoring a one day symposium focused on the Iraq War. With opening comments from Cato’s Executive Vice President David Boaz and The Objectivist Center’s Executive Director David Kelley, the day continues with panel discussions on “Reflections on the Iraq War,” “Has the Invasion and Occupation of Iraq Advanced America’s Interests in the Middle East?,” and “The Principles Guiding Military Intervention”. The conference also features Ted Galen Carpenter, Nick Gillespie, Ronald Bailey, Brink Lindsey, Charles Pena, Ed Hudgins, and many others.
The “Lessons from the Iraq War: Reconciling Liberty and Security” symposium is free of charge and will be held October 22, 2004, 8:30-5:00pm at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C. For more information and registration information, visit The Objectivist Center or the Cato Institute.

Ayn Rand at Saddam's Palace

Atlasphere member Robert Begley has ensured that any soldier perusing Saddam Hussein’s former palace in search of Ayn Rand’s writings won’t come up empty handed.
These are — of course — books that should bring hope to any budding democracy.
Also added were books by Edward Cline, Cox and Forkum, Andrew Bernstein and the Arabic translation of the U.S. Constitution.
UPDATE: Joe Kane reports that ALL of the relevant books are currently checked out of the palace library.

What Makes a True Hero?

Writing for LewRockwell.com, Charley Reese has some interesting comments on what makes a hero (and what doesn’t), especially during times of war.

The novelist Ayn Rand made an interesting point once. She said the words we use and our moral approval are a kind of currency we use to reward virtue. If we fail to withhold our moral approval from people who don’t deserve it, then in effect we make it counterfeit and thus cheat those people who do deserve it.
In other words, if you’ll smile and shake hands with any lout, bum or criminal, what good is your handshake and smile? If you’re going to call heroes people who just happen to be soldiers, police officers and firefighters, what are you going to call those individuals who do something really outstanding?
Rand said something else interesting once. She said the way to kill greatness was not to attack it, but to simply reward mediocrity. We certainly do that in our society. If you put a chimpanzee on live television 20 minutes a day, five days a week, within a fortnight it would be national celebrity. A young woman who in smarter days would have been called what she is ? a spoiled slut ? achieves worldwide fame just by videotaping herself copulating with some guy.
No nation can do great things once its people lose the ability to define greatness and to distinguish between the truly outstanding and the mediocre. That is just as important as knowing the difference between right and wrong.
I do not intend to imply that people who do the unpleasant jobs, like policing and soldiering, don’t deserve respect. They certainly do. But we should reserve the word “hero” for those who perform extraordinary and outstanding deeds.

See the full article for further elaboration.

The X-Prize: Private Enterprise in Space

Glenn Reynolds offers appropriate congratulations to the X-Prize winners for their so-far successful privatization of space exploration:

NASA got us to the moon in an amazingly short time. But its subsequent history demonstrates that command-style economics is a little like steroids in athletics: You get a burst of rapid growth when the drugs first take hold, but after a while you realize that your national testicles are shrinking. […]
I heard someone on one of the cable channels (it might even have been MSNBC!) predicting that more people will travel into space in the next decade than in all of human history to date. That’s probably right — and if it is, it will be because the forces of capitalism have done what they always do, making things cheaper, better, and more widely available.

Reynolds’s full article will be enjoyable reading for any advocate of limited government in space.