How Many Bricklayers Did Galt Invite to the Gulch?
Galt went around inviting famous artists, noted business leaders to the Guch, but once there, who built their houses? Who paved their streets, dug their sewer lines?
This isn't a class warfare argument; the building of a house, for example, not only takes a skilled architect, but also skilled craftsmen and industrious laborers.
If the criterion for admission is a belief in "trading value for value", surely Galt should and would have invited "ordinary" workers to the Gulch as well as luminaries like Wyatt and Danagger?
Such people exist lower down on the ladder; people who believe in trading value for value, but lack the creative ability to invent a new motor or miraculous metal. People who didn't inherit an already successful railroad or copper mines, but would be able to get a day's worth of coal or copper dug in a day's worth of hours for a day's worth of pay. Maybe they lack the ambition to go through the headache of running a company when they get more satisfaction from digging coal out of the ground. Maybe they lack the self discipline necessary to see their visions to reality, but are still able and still believe in trading value for value.
What Utopians always underestimate in their rhetoric (no disparagement of Ms Rand intended) is the example America set before them. People's abilities and worth are not necessarily evidenced by their position in life. All the creative brilliance in the world will not get a brick wall built. A brick wall built without knowledge and skill won't stand, but the most creative and brilliantly designed wall will never exist without someone to lay it up brick by brick. Someone whose creative skill may be shrouded by prejudice toward his position in life.
There may not be a place in the Gulch for someone like me. But that would be Galt's loss.
This isn't a class warfare argument; the building of a house, for example, not only takes a skilled architect, but also skilled craftsmen and industrious laborers.
If the criterion for admission is a belief in "trading value for value", surely Galt should and would have invited "ordinary" workers to the Gulch as well as luminaries like Wyatt and Danagger?
Such people exist lower down on the ladder; people who believe in trading value for value, but lack the creative ability to invent a new motor or miraculous metal. People who didn't inherit an already successful railroad or copper mines, but would be able to get a day's worth of coal or copper dug in a day's worth of hours for a day's worth of pay. Maybe they lack the ambition to go through the headache of running a company when they get more satisfaction from digging coal out of the ground. Maybe they lack the self discipline necessary to see their visions to reality, but are still able and still believe in trading value for value.
What Utopians always underestimate in their rhetoric (no disparagement of Ms Rand intended) is the example America set before them. People's abilities and worth are not necessarily evidenced by their position in life. All the creative brilliance in the world will not get a brick wall built. A brick wall built without knowledge and skill won't stand, but the most creative and brilliantly designed wall will never exist without someone to lay it up brick by brick. Someone whose creative skill may be shrouded by prejudice toward his position in life.
There may not be a place in the Gulch for someone like me. But that would be Galt's loss.
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When one understands the general principle that Galt's Gulch represents, it does not matter much who Galt "explicitly" invites to the Gulch in the text. A proper understanding of the principle Galt’s Gulch represents reveals the qualifying characteristic for residency is not one’s class or social status but rather one's commitment to exchange value for value and a refusal to require other men to live for one's own sake.
Properly understood it becomes self-evident that a brick layer of the proper mindset would be as welcome in Galt's Gulch as an industrialist of the same mindset.
To focus on who Galt invites explicitly in the text is to completely miss or ignore all that is implicit in the principles Rand establishes throughout the rest of the book. Indeed, based upon those principles Galt’s Gulch would almost certainly have had sign out front stating: “Skilled Laborers Welcome”
I specifically remember the descriptions of Francisco's cabin being rather simple and modest in appearance save for his grand family crest hanging over the door. There were some high tech advantages over the outside world such as the holographic ray shield and Galt's new engines, but the gulch is overall is described in the book as fairly primitive living. The only important difference between the gulch with the outside world is that those on the inside are free to think and do as they please. No dictatorial government interference, no burdensome regulations, and no one to tell you how much profit you MAY make or how much money you MUST pay your employees. "McDonalds" cough cough.
One rule of being in the gulch early on was that you couldn't really pursue your expertise and had to stick with other jobs that could not be used to benefit the outside world. In the gulch, Hammond ran the grocery store, Narraganesett/Muligan = farming, Rand portrayed herself as the fishmonger, etc. I don't think anyone including Midas Mulligan lived in high tech “super mansions”.
The vast majority of people in the US just shrugged on their own. They had enough of the increasing socialism and being trapped in a dead end job. They all just got up and walked away into the empty darkness. Not everyone could be saved and not all wealthy industrialists were invited to the gulch either. Just as today, there were many billionaires like Oren Boyle or James Taggart. Scumbag wealthy people that are more than happy to use their money and power to influence politicians and keep competitors down while the money flows back into their own pockets. “cough” GE “cough”
I work in telecommunications - and had the opportunity to work with a union employee. Long story short - her comment was: Think about is like this - we do data entry. We don't get paid to think.
I actually see value in unions in today's environment ... unless the end result is this mind set.
It made me sad ....
Reminds me of an old Koan about the man that spent his entire life struggling up the 'ladder' only to reach the top and see that he'd climbed the wrong ladder.
He also dug, fitted, and laid granite.
He also worked girders in construction.
Francisco D'anconia, Hank Reardon, Ken Dannager, Ellis Wyatt, and Dagney Taggart worked their careers from the ground up.
Self-made men tend to have a wealth of knowledge, such as brick laying, which they would be happy to trade value for value.
Real world example: I have worked in IT for 25 years, yet I make scratch sourdough bread which my family fights over.
Were there a real gulch, and were I to be there, I would gladly bake the best bread I knew how in order to trade value for value.
On the contrary. IMO, her works were directed as much to reinforcing and encouraging the "non-elite" to believe in and respect the value of their labors and to make the most of them to create value as it was to appeal to the intellectual elite and entrepreneur class.
I saw nothing to suggest that a bricklayer or plumber—any craftsman who took pride in his work and who wanted to do the very best he could in performing it—was to be admired and had every right to demand and receive fair compensation for the value of what he or she produced.
What has she said that makes you feel differently?
One of the most touching scenes I ever read in any book was the scene between Mike and Roark when he tells Roark that he (Mike) once had a son... who died. As I recall, on hearing that, Roark touched Mike's shoulder.
I'm sure it affected me because my dad was an electrician and someone whose work could always be trusted. The Gulch would have been filled with Mike's. There work would have been all the more necessary because of the Galts.
Chin up!
I walk among you. As a machinist I see people every day who have one foot out the door when the quitting bell rings, while others do not turn off their machines until said time.
What is an honest wage, what is a full day's worth of work and what is the value of a skill??
What are you worth? Who decides?
Every slave knows that a free man owns himself.
Who owns you?
I believe not only did he, but those he invited also brought some of his own people in. Also, remember Midas had bought this valley a good time before as a private retreat. We can't necessarily assume everything was built from scratch. Also too, none of those invited would shirk from a little "honest labor".
Finally, Galt in his address exhorted those who sympathized with his cause to set up similar communities - rich, poor, industrialist or worker. What was necessary was alignment of ideals, not restriction of class.
So yes, there would be a place for you in "Galt's gulch". My question is, would you take it?
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