Giving Tuesday ?%!&
I have been solicited by both universities I attended, the university I am a professor at, and by the American Chemical Society for donations today.
What is going on with this proliferation of altruism?!*&! (in lieu of four-letter expletives)
What is going on with this proliferation of altruism?!*&! (in lieu of four-letter expletives)
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But if you want to bring down the entire room by being all serious, there's nothing wrong with generosity even if you can't afford it if, in your own hierarchy of values, your own comfort is less important than the benefit to another. Objectivism doesn't disapprove of generosity or even charity. There is a difference between charity and alms, generosity and self-sacrifice.
Forgive me for not remembering the characters' names or for muddling the details, but recall the young woman in Atlas Shrugged who worked at a job helping the less fortunate. She did it because she loved the work and it had meaning for her. Rand wrote her as a sympathetic character, one of life's everyday heroes. The young woman's father berated her for enjoying her work and claimed that she was being immoral unless she felt an obligation to help those beneath her, insisting that she must become a sacrificial piece of meat, or otherwise her work was meaningless. She was being unforgivably selfish if she enjoyed it. If I remember correctly that poor woman was destroyed by guilt and wasted away.
This doesn't apply to Gulchers, but I get so aggravated when people out in the world accuse Objectivism of being cruel and selfish (the modern usage) and Darwinian. That's a sentiment expressed by someone who hasn't read or hasn't understood Rand's novels. She has many characters performing mundane tasks to the very best of their ability, and she is specifically pointing out how valuable they are and how they are heroic in their way. You don't have to be Dagny Taggart or Hank Rearden to be held in esteem.
giving? . either that, or ransom. -- j
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of the capitalism which makes the world better for all of us,
even the "unlucky." . Smart Man, Sir & Thanks! -- j
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handgun I ever fired. . it's a long-barrel version from a
german officer. . well-made weapon. -- j
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It's in great shape and I shoot it from time to time. It stovepipes a round once in a while but I always attributed that to the ammo. That gun is a work of art, beautiful to look at and incredibly comfortable to hold.
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it is a guilt trip like so many which we see these days. -- j
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My father gave away his Lugar - from WWII.
Jan
I never knew anyone thought of donations as a form of worship. I know that charity and tithing are expected, but I never thought of it as a form of worship.
I believe that the act of giving is personal and private and shouldn't be co-opted as a marketing tool for businesses or political agendas.
I do like the idea of giving as something whimsical - I never realized that I sometimes give on a whimsy. It's what I did yesterday when I dropped a Silver Eagle in a tip jar - when no one was looking. The staff and owner at this diner are very special. It was only later that I realized - how the heck are they going to divide that up? Oh well.
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