Who or what is worth saving?
RimCountry, Zenphamy, Robbie, and a couple of others have been posting a lot of comments about the Article V convention option.
The primary point of disagreement that we have is over what is worth saving.
Are the United States and some of its individuals worth saving? The United States was certainly worth saving until recent years. In my mind, probably about 2007 or the first half of 2008 was the last time it was worth saving. After the TARP bailout, I would argue that the US is no longer worth saving. Certain individuals are worth saving, such as Rearden or Dagny within AS. Most are not. Eddie Willers is an important character in this respect. He was very good as a chief of staff for Dagny, but didn't have the ability to think independently. He was not sought out by those in Atlantis as worth saving. I would not have objected to Eddie Willers being permitted in the Gulch.
The question regarding what is worth saving is a fundamental difference between objectivists and Christians. Christians believe that all individuals are worth saving and evangelize accordingly.
As for whether the United States is worth saving, I suppose that depends on what the alternatives are. If we start a nanosociety founded on objectivist principles, then that would almost certainly change the answer to that question for many of us.
Many of us are torn between the last remnant of the United States, arguably the only society founded on principles that would not be seriously objectionable to objectivists, versus leaving and starting from scratch.
Are looters worth saving? Are moochers worth saving? To objectivists, these last two questions should be rhetorical. It certainly is not a rhetorical question for Christians. Jesus, for instance, had a tax collector as one of his apostles.
Is anyone who voted for Obama worth saving? Unless that person makes the argument that he/she was trying to hasten the end of the looter/moocher era, that question should also be rhetorical. Is anyone who intentionally blanks out so that he/she can further a political agenda worth saving? Would Ayn Rand have viewed intentional blankouts as unforgivable sins? Can such a person ever be "redeemed" if he/she grows into an understanding of objectivist principles? I am reminded of Winston Churchill's line about how if you are 20 and not liberal, you have no heart, but if you are 40 and not conservative, you have no brain.
The primary point of disagreement that we have is over what is worth saving.
Are the United States and some of its individuals worth saving? The United States was certainly worth saving until recent years. In my mind, probably about 2007 or the first half of 2008 was the last time it was worth saving. After the TARP bailout, I would argue that the US is no longer worth saving. Certain individuals are worth saving, such as Rearden or Dagny within AS. Most are not. Eddie Willers is an important character in this respect. He was very good as a chief of staff for Dagny, but didn't have the ability to think independently. He was not sought out by those in Atlantis as worth saving. I would not have objected to Eddie Willers being permitted in the Gulch.
The question regarding what is worth saving is a fundamental difference between objectivists and Christians. Christians believe that all individuals are worth saving and evangelize accordingly.
As for whether the United States is worth saving, I suppose that depends on what the alternatives are. If we start a nanosociety founded on objectivist principles, then that would almost certainly change the answer to that question for many of us.
Many of us are torn between the last remnant of the United States, arguably the only society founded on principles that would not be seriously objectionable to objectivists, versus leaving and starting from scratch.
Are looters worth saving? Are moochers worth saving? To objectivists, these last two questions should be rhetorical. It certainly is not a rhetorical question for Christians. Jesus, for instance, had a tax collector as one of his apostles.
Is anyone who voted for Obama worth saving? Unless that person makes the argument that he/she was trying to hasten the end of the looter/moocher era, that question should also be rhetorical. Is anyone who intentionally blanks out so that he/she can further a political agenda worth saving? Would Ayn Rand have viewed intentional blankouts as unforgivable sins? Can such a person ever be "redeemed" if he/she grows into an understanding of objectivist principles? I am reminded of Winston Churchill's line about how if you are 20 and not liberal, you have no heart, but if you are 40 and not conservative, you have no brain.
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Even in the real world of the founding, Hamilton, Jay, even Adams, and many others began immediately to alter the operation and structure of the Federal government in many ways away from the intent of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. The question must be, did they do it because of necessity, convenience, personal gain, or simply because they had the power?
My fear is that an Objectivist or even Enlightenment founded country would have to be so exclusionary as to be despised by the rest of the planet. Imagine having to exile or allow to fail, a son or daughter. Trust me, it's a very hard thing to do. An original founder sad it in nicer terms: “If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, go home from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or your arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you, and may your chains set lightly upon you and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen.” – John Adams
It's often stated that during the Revolution, some 30% wanted to remain under the King, 30% just swayed in the wind, and 30% supported to one extent or the other the 3% that actively fought the British. I think we won the first battle, then lost the war.
As I write this, I am listening to "The Men Who Built America" on the History Channel. That is the era that I would have fit in very well.
I used to work for a government lab before reading AS. That definitely is against Galt values. I think that people can indeed grow, and I have.
For all you know, Mike, I might be a Christian trying to argue the point that everyone should have the opportunity to hear that there is an Atlantis.
I threw this one out there just to stir up the pot a little bit.
Paul Ryan, while he does have a few minor issues, seems like about the best we can expect out of someone trying to do something productive in Washington. I am sure that he wanted to go further than the plan that he proposed, but he reasonably negotiated it down so that it might come across as palatable to the general populace. Not a bad chap. I am actually far more generous in my assessment of others than you might think.
MM, you are correct about the question- who is worth saving? The problem is in the question itself. jbrenner is making a rhetorical point out of the usual despair of one who has ideals but sees reality.
Eddie Williers- Obviously an important character. Competent, dedicated, trustworthy, reliable, a hard worker. He is not in the Dagny Galt Rearden class but he is a producer nevertheless. At the end of the story he is alone stranded out in the desert trying to fix a loco fault. Rand does not give any hope that he will succeed, nor send out the cavalry (deus ex machina) to save Eddie. Why?
Story- the new wife of the king of Kent was a Christian enthusiast. The king was converted and became the same. A hoard of dinars was found. They thought the pattern around the rim was just a pattern so the coins were used as currency. The inscription said- 'There is no God but Allah and Mohammed is his prophet'. Not many at that time in Kent could read Arabic so mass apoplexy was averted.
More deeply, the character of Willers also opens up Ayn Rand's refutation of the Kantian imperative that people cannot be means but are always (categorically and imperatively) ends in themselves. That must be balanced against Galt's Pledge. "Johnny Something" never asked Eddie to live for him, but only asked Eddie questions which he was free to ignore, evade, or lie to.
Furthermore, in the Valley, Dagny meets a truck driver, most likely someone who gave John Galt (or someone else) a ride when it was needed. Dagny first takes for a professor of comparative linguistics.
Moving right along, I voted for Barack Obama in 2008. Make of that whatever you want, I was an Objectivist before you were born.
I do not expect anyone to "save" me or to decide that I am "worth saving." One of my favorite reads was _Merchants and Moneymen of the Middle Ages_. It opened during the so-called "Dark Ages" in Italy with a merchant preparing a voyage to Constantinople. At that same time, give or take a few centuries, the English king Offa of Mercia struck gold coins imitating Arab dinars. Just sayin'... life goes on...
A few months back, I suggested that it would be appropriate to shun our neighbors who work for the government. That drew immediate contradiction (with up votes for that and down votes for me) from a woman who worked for an appeals court. Well... yes... certain functions are valid.... I just finished a contract the Texas Department of Public Safety.
Furthermore, in answer to a question about a moral career in a mixed economy, Ayn Rand said that while it would be wrong to work for the IRS, it is acceptable to work for the government at something which the government has taken over or dominates, but which someone in a free society could do. That speaks to your claims about moochers and looters not being "worth saving." Do you have some standard or some guideline? (BTW, Ragnar Danneskjoeld had informants within the IRS.)
You might want to not save "people on welfare." Would you save people who use the USPS instead of FedEx (which is run by Objectivist Fred Smith)? How many FedEx waybills do I need to buy a ticket on your lifeboat? Are you even offering a lifeboat... or just a meta-discussion about meta-lifeboats?
I dunno, jb, you do pretty good most of the time, but here, well, you missed the boat... (No thumbs down from me, though: it is a good discussion worth having).
I think that the broadest picture of the next hundred years will bring frontiers opening up. Those places will be the new horizons. Look to Hudson's Bay, the Antarctic, the continental shelves, the open seas. I was told by an engineer who worked on one that there are so many platforms in the Gulf of Mexico that traffic consists of perhaps one million helicopter flights per year. There's a lot going on in the world... And then there's off-world...