Howard Roark and 'My Architect'

In a review of the movie My Architect for the Grand Rapids Press, reviewer John Douglas reports shades of Howard Roark in the movie’s lead character:

Nathaniel [Kahn] also went to see the structures his father designed. As the film progressed, Kahn began to remind me of Howard Roark, the uncompromising architect in Ayn Rand’s “The Fountainhead.” Thus he became a very interesting character in my eyes, because I loved [Roark] when I read the book.

See the full review for additional details. (And please send us your own comments, if you’ve seen the movie.)

David Strom and Ayn Rand

David Strom, president of the Taxpayers League of Minnesota, counts Ayn Rand as a significant influence on his thinking. From a profile of Strom at the Star Tribune:

In recent weeks, Strom, president of the ardently conservative Taxpayers League of Minnesota, triggered an angry backlash over his provocative assertions that the strike-idled Twin Cities bus system does nothing to relieve congestion and that taxpayers would be better off buying used cars for low-income folks who are dependent on transit.
The voice of a dominant advocacy group in Minnesota, Strom has been mounting similarly scalding attacks on government spending and liberal thinking since 1997, shortly after the League was founded by a group of wealthy entrepreneurs.

See the full article for the scoop on how and why he made a “right turn on the ideological highway.”

Prescription Drugs and Atlas Shrugged

In today’s LATimes.com, James P. Pinkerton has a commentary titled “Reining In Prescription Prices Is a Seductive Idea. But It Might Kill You.” [registration required]
From his comments:

Why not have price controls on pharmaceuticals? That’s a tempting idea for the federal government, which is desperate to restrain its spending and the size of its deficit. But a closer look ? and a look back at history ? shows that price controls are the falsest of false economies. […]
The Kennedy-Pelosi effort has gained momentum. Sen. John Kerry, the apparent Democratic presidential nominee, has added his oomph, promising that he will do everything to make sure “the American people have affordable medicine available to them.”
That all sounds innocent, doesn’t it? What’s wrong with negotiation? And surely there’s nothing wrong with affordable medicine.
The problem is that it won’t be a real negotiation. The federal government is so big and so powerful, as former head of the Medicare program Gail Wilensky said, that “government doesn’t negotiate prices; it sets them.” And so medicines will be affordable ? for as long as they are available. But as in some present-day addendum to Ayn Rand’s classic novel “Atlas Shrugged,” price controls could cause capitalists and their capital to go on strike; they could pursue more profitable ventures elsewhere in the free market, leaving the rest of us alone with our illness.

See the full article for further analysis.

T.J. Rodgers and Dartmouth College

Cypress Semiconductor CEO T.J. Rodgers has a reputation for standing up for rational principles, and has been known to require his managers to read Atlas Shrugged.
In the mid-90s, Rodgers “rebuked a nun who had criticized Cypress for its lack of women or minority board members, saying it would be immoral for him to pick directors based on criteria other than merit.”
More recently, an article for the San Francisco Chronicle reports that he’s decided to run for office. In particular, he’s running for the board of trustees for his alma mater, Dartmouth College, in a bid to reform its politically correct and educationally destructive policies:

Rodgers, class of 1970, said he’s concerned that his alma mater, long a bastion of traditional education, is wasting scarce money “in the diversity area.” He wants the college to stop adding ethnic studies classes and refocus its resources on the fundamentals, such as civics, science and history.
“I could live with (the spending) if it was for academics,” said Rodgers, who is running on a platform of fiscal prudence and a return to basics.
He was urged to undertake this diversion from running Cypress’ $863 million business by another Bay Area iconoclast — former legislator and Superior Court Judge Quentin Kopp.
“He is a man of convictions, unafraid to express those convictions, and a believer in Dartmouth,” said Kopp, class of ’49 and an active member of the college’s 62,000-member alumni association.
Clara Lovett, president of the American Association for Higher Education in Washington, D.C., said Rodgers and Kopp are not the only prominent alumni trying to counter “what they see as too much political correctness on campuses.”
“You can argue about their opinions or disagree with them, but they are people whose education has served them well,” Lovett said. “They can think, they care, and they can make an argument.”

See the full article for more details.

Online Self-Esteem Course with Nathaniel Branden

Psychologist author (and long-time Rand associate) Nathaniel Branden has announced a new self-directed online course based on his book The Six Pillars of Self-Esteem. From the announcement:

The online course includes audio and/or video of Dr. Branden in every chapter,
so you can hear and see the man behind the words.
The course package also includes three life changing calls with Dr. Branden:
Call One: Basic Principles of Self-Esteem
Call Two: Internal Sources of Self-Esteem
Call Three: External Influences on Our Self-Esteem

More information is available on the ConsciousOne web site.

Ayn Rand & The Atlasphere in Chicago Tribune

Linda Rodriguez of the Columbia News Service has an article in today’s Chicago Tribune discussing the Atlasphere’s dating service [registration required] and its, er, founder:

As a 30-year-old doctoral candidate in psychology at the University of New Mexico, Joshua Zader saw philosophy as a common ground for love interests. Thus he launched his Internet dating site on Nov. 1, 2003.
Tastefully accented in green with a dark blue background, the Web site features pictures of happy couples who, like site visitors themselves, are presumably all aficionados of the work of Ayn Rand, creator of the philosophy known as objectivism and author of “The Fountainhead” and “Atlas Shrugged.”

Actually, they’re stock photography models. One day we may replace them with member photos.

Zader started the site to bring together people sharing their common interest.
“When you have a very strong artistic response to something like a novel, there’s a very strong chance that your soul mate also had the same reaction,” said Zader, who met his wife at an Ayn Rand conference. “You can be sure that they have similar life views.” […]
Samantha Johnston, a 41-year-old Portland, Ore., resident who plans to go to law school after completing a degree in philosophy, has been a user of Zader’s Atlasphere dating service since it was launched.
Though she hasn’t met her love-match yet, she is confident that it could happen, especially since the odds are in her favor: There are 382 male members on the site and 97 female members.
“You tend to find `The Fountainhead’ or `Atlas Shrugged’ when you’re in high school or college, and the ideas resonate so deeply with you that it tends to carry you through the rest of your life,” she said.
“You’re hoping to find someone who reflects that back at you.” […]
The backbone of online dating’s niche sites is acceptance, understanding and common interests, something that many people are finding more and more difficult to find on larger, more general sites.
“I tried Match.com and Yahoo personals, and I got a lot of hits that way,” Johnston said. “But they were from people whose philosophical differences were almost diametrically opposed to mine, so I unsubscribed within a few months.” Match.com, for one, has nearly a million subscribers.
Johnston was ecstatic to find Atlasphere. “There’s just a lot that you don’t have to explain about yourself,” she said. “You’re starting out on a much higher level of compatibility that you just don’t get at other sites. At other sites, you have to do a lot more mining.”

See the full article for more discussion of the advantages of niche dating.

A Passion Against Man

Onkar Ghate has written a criticism of The Passion of the Christ for the ARI MediaLink. From the article:

When charges of anti-Semitism, denied by the producers, surrounded the film before its opening, there was outrage from many circles. But when the principals behind the film tell us openly that its message is that not only Jews but all men are implicated in the death of Jesus, the voices of moral outrage fall silent. (In what follows I leave aside the question of how successfully the film conveys its intended message.)
So, let us ask some questions no one is asking. Why is it immoral to ascribe guilt to all Jews, but not immoral to ascribe guilt to all mankind? How can anyone know, without first considering our specific choices and actions, that you or I are guilty? How can you or I be responsible for the death of a man killed some two thousand years ago? To make any sense of the accusation, one must recognize that one is here dealing with, albeit in a more sophisticated form, the same collectivist mentality as the racist’s. For the anti-Semite, to be Jewish is to be evil. For the devout Christian, to be human is to be evil.

Read the full review for further details.

Joanne P. McCallie

Joanne P. McCallieMichigan sports fans are already familiar with MSU head women’s basketball coach Joanne P. McCallie:

Last season, McCallie guided a depleted MSU squad to a 17-12 overall record and its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1997, as the Spartans earned a No. 8 seed in the East Regional. Despite numerous injuries that left MSU with a core of just six players getting nearly all of the minutes, she led Michigan State to its best Big Ten finish since 1997, as MSU tied for fourth in the league with a 10-6 record.
The Spartans improved by four wins over the previous season?s Big Ten win total – more than any other team in the conference. McCallie, whose three-year record at MSU stands at 46-43, earned her 200th career win Dec. 5, 2002, at Oakland and currently has a career record of 213-116 in 11 seasons as a head coach.
McCallie guided one of the nation?s top shooting teams last season. The Spartans ranked third nationally in three-point field goal percentage (.397), fifth in free throw percentage (.783) and 30th in field goal percentage (.448), becoming one of just four teams to rank nationally in all three shooting categories.
The Spartans also demonstrated a tough side, leading the Big Ten and ranking 11th nationally in rebound margin (+7.7), while ranking second in the league for the second straight year in scoring defense (60.7).

Now they know she’s also a huge fan of Dagny Taggart.
UPDATE: More information about Joanne McCallie and her successes during the past year.

New Issue of 'Navigator'

The latest issue of The Objectivist Center‘s monthly journal, Navigator, is out.
In his cover article “Fortress Americanism,” Roger Donway examines the dangerous influence of foreign ideas on the founding philosophy of America. Noting two contrasting philosophies of liberty, Donway writes:

Since the dawn of the Enlightenment, liberty in America has rested on the political philosophy of John Locke to a degree unequaled in any other country, even Great Britain. By contrast, liberty in continental Europe has rested on a political philosophy rooted in medieval Christendom, secularized by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and radicalized by romanticism and socialism.

And in the article “Art and Ideas,” TOC Executive Director David Kelley tackles the age-old question of why humans started creating art:

Why did humans begin doing this sort of thing? Unlike tools for hunting, cooking, building, scraping animal skins, and the like, these artifacts have no clear survival value. Why did people whose daily life was a struggle for subsistence and whose life expectancy was probably less than twenty years spend time and energy making two-dimensional images in dark places? Why did they spend time and energy making instruments to produce rhythmic, tonal sounds? Why did they invent stories of things that never happened? What was the purpose of such activities? What needs did they satisfy? Why has art been such a pervasive feature of human life?

See the full issue of Navigator for these and other articles.

New Russian Printing of Rand's Novels

From a posting to Russell Whitaker’s Survival Arts blog, the next printing of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead is scheduled for next week.
Sponsors are being sought. Glenn Cripe (a partner in the printing) writes:

We are also looking for sponsors. For $500, you get your name in all future editions of the books, a few free copies for your own use, a tax deduction, our undying gratitude, plus the chance to participate in changing the course of history! Inquiries should be sent to randinrussia@yahoo.com.

In case you can read Russian, the cover for volume 1 of Atlas Shrugged is given below:

atlas_shrugged_v1_cover_ru.jpg