Radio Interrupted 9/18/15
Today’s program was outrageous. The host suggests some sort of collective right of association. He argues for collective values. His attitudes are not objectivist and lead to the idea of national ID cards, the TSA, the NSA, search and frisk. This show does not represent objectivism and is a poor reflection on the gulch.
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One may purchase and otherwise obtain all of the writings and analysis of AR's thoughts and developed philosophy that one wishes, but that does not an Objectivist make. What ever you imagine an Island in the North Cook Islands, or the lands acquired by the idiots of Oregon, or the mentally deficient that would not only intentionally and knowingly drink poisoned KoolAid but also feed it to the children, you're so far off base as to be in a separate ball game in a separate league.
This is a site for people interested in Ayn Rand, her thoughts, her writings, and her philosophy of Objectivism--not for random, non-sequitur or other ludicrous inputs, or the accumulation of points based on just the addition of a post of stream of consciousness comment.
Maybe such contributors should contribute 'one gold dollar' per each non-Objectivist post or comment.
I'll never forget going to the bathroom there. The bathroom had an attendant. I didn't know what on earth he was doing there until my friend said that I was supposed to tip him. I silently wondered why. I had to tip him for the privilege of having him watch me wipe my hindquarters with toilet paper so thin you could see through it and more abrasive than wiping with printer paper. THAT is a restriction on the freedom to travel. People in this forum may say that I am giving up liberty to get security if I say that I would be willing to tolerate pre-9/11 (or perhaps pre-1980) standard immigration security measures. Perhaps. That is a fair amount of security to gain with almost no loss of liberty. It sounds like a good value-for-value trade for me.
Today's security obviously is overdone and ridiculous. Just for the reaction, when asked to remove my shoes, I submit but only under the condition that the TSA agent must smell those shoes. ;)
I get lost in historical weeds sometimes. Lose track that the discussuin is philosophical rather than geopolitical.
http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/nat...
When a country does not grant rights to citizens, let alone non-citizens, that nation is an outlaw.
Yes, we have.
Thank you for your respect, it is returned in kind.
The situations are NOT parallel. Government in the Gulch, such as it was and what there was of it, was either a true direct democracy or a near anarchy. Likely dependent on what issue you were picking.
So in the case of immigration to the Gulch, immigrants were explicitly selected. Dagny was already selected, but chose not to accept membership at the time. She didn't necessarily realize she had been selected, but she knew people who had been once she trespassed.
Anyway, in her case as well as any foot trespassers, either every member of the Gulch could be directly asked on what to do about her or else a few people would decide for everyone with no consultation.
Everyone asked - direct democracy
Nobody asked - near anarchy since no titles/positions to make these decisions were ever explicitly stated.
Which? I don't think that can be determined from the minimal text on this in the book. Your opinion on that may differ.
In any case it is not relevant.
Dagny as trespasser is dubious. She was already on the list to be invited, she just found them before being asked. Found them through her own abilities I might add. She was an interloper, but not an unwelcome one.
Now the outside world, our government is an mishmash of part republic and part democracy. We also have a population of 320m and climbing.
We don't have someone or even a group of people making invitation lists for specific people to emigrate. We don't even have coherent policies about it.
How are these parallel?
Direct democracy hasn't been seen in the real world representing more than a few hundred or thousand people since the earliest days of Greek city-states as far as I am aware.
Correct.
However, claims were made, quite strongly and without the courtesy of a request for clarification, that my conclusions were drawn from collectivism.
In response, I have provided relevant quotes from Ayn Rand and relevant events in Atlas Shrugged.
And, yes, the situations are parallel.
The minimal government in the gulch is not what we are concerned with. It would be a much better situation for all of us if that is what we had, but with 320 million people and climbing, not what we have or are likely to be able to get to.
Unfortunately, the more people under the aegis of any given government, the larger and more bloated that government becomes. As the founders warned, once the people realize they can vote themselves things from the public treasury, they will do so.
Every new right or entitlement some politico comes up with and gets passed, increases the bloat and cost. And the bigger it grows, the more it feeds the corruption.
If we want to discuss and debate a Gulch government, lets have a thread about it. Dragging it into a discussion about immigration does no good, the situations are not parallel.
Yes it was. Private property with a minarchist government: a system of courts whose job it was to execute the will of the individuals in the Gulch that contracts between individuals be honored. If someone decided to flout those minarchist courts they would be violating the rights of each of the members of the Gulch who delegated their authority to those courts.
Freedom of Association is an implied Constitutional right, yes.
But it was explicit in the Gulch as demonstrated by my previous points.
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