Politics According To Krauthammer

Posted by Herb7734 5 years, 7 months ago to Politics
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I just finished Charles Krauthammer's last book, "Things That Matter." It is so brillian that I literally found over 100 topics to discuss in this forum. But I won't. At the very start of the book he makes the point that no matter how much effort he puts into writing about science,medicine, art, poetry,architecture, chess, space, sports, numbers, in the end they must "bow to the sovereignty of politics."In trying to move the spectre of politics off the table he got into the Voyager probes and whose voice narrated but Kurt Waldheim, a former NAZI. It prompted me to ask the Gulch one simple but extremely profound question: What one thing would you send on Voyager 1 and/or 2? Krauthammer finally winds up saying what biologist and philosopher Lewis Thomas proposed as evidence of human achievement ;the Complete works of Bach.(Personally, I would have chosen Beethoven). So, am asking this forum, if you were allowed to send only one item on Voyager 1 or 2, what would it be? Remember you are representing all of earth from fauna to flora, from philosophy to nonsense, from math to quantum. Just one thing. Music? Science? words? go for it.


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  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
    The last gasp of the original american spirit before the socialists take over completely and destroy it. The would be a picture of Donald Trump.

    Once Trump leaves office, it will be occupied by true collectivists, and we will get medicaid for everyone, guaranteed income, a flood of uncontrolled immigration, and the loss of america's economic dominance and world power.

    Despite Ayn Rand and her hope that AS would turn the tide, it hasnt at all.
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    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
      Ayn Rand did not "hope" Atlas Shrugged would turn the tide, she strongly advocated the necessity of those who understand it spreading the right ideas. But she had expected that when Atlas Shrugged was published its ideas would be more widely acknowledged. By the end of her life she was not optimistic but recognized that people have free will and are able to choose.

      A photo of Trump would be meaningless.
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        As I remember, Ayn Rand was on an interview show and she did talk about how she wrote AS in hopes people would wake up and slow down and reverse the march to collectivism.

        The photo of Trump was just an indication of when America woke up for the last time before the socialists took over and destroyed the country
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        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
          She said she wrote Atlas Shrugged to portray in fiction her vision of the ideal man. In 1964 she said "although the political aspects of Atlas Shrugged are not its central theme nor its main purpose, my attitude toward these aspects—during the years of writing the novel—was contained in a brief rule I had set for myself: "The purpose of this book is to prevent itself from becoming prophetic."

          Trump has no relation to that. Not only would a picture of Trump convey no meaning at all (and a picture is all there could be because there are no ideas to go with it), his election did not mean that America "woke up". Neither Trump nor the idolatry of the 'man on the white horse' show an awakening of reason and individualism, let alone the proper principles. Most of Trump's populist support, even in opposition to Hilary, is trying to have its cake and eat it too. The rejection of Clinton by a minority of the people, but enough to hold the electoral vote spread across the country between the dominant coasts, was much weaker than the rejection of George McGovern over 40 years ago both in numbers and in sense of life.
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          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
            Your quote supports my point about why she wrote AS.

            My point about the trump election was that it was the last stand for what’s left of American constitutional values. A weak stand I would agree. But just wait and see what follows him- a real horror show worse than obama
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            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
              It is not why she wrote Atlas Shrugged. She said "although the political aspects of Atlas Shrugged are not its central theme nor its main purpose..."

              Trying to prevent the plot from coming true is what she told herself while she was writing it, to avoid lapsing into disabling pessimism as she saw the events she was projecting in fiction already coming to be. That was her purpose in tolerating the negativism.

              Trump is not a last stand for what is left of American values; Trumpism is an emotional backlash following the 'man on the white horse' without understanding what American values have meant. Neither individualism nor the political implementation in the Constitution were ever about making "better deals" and emotional sales pitches to promote them. Don't project your values onto populism and conservative slogans.
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              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                I agree that trump isn’t an intellectually consistent individualist. If he were, he would want to repeal Obamacare, not repeal and replace it (only one example) .

                I think people today range from an intellectually consistent individualist to emotionally derived socialists like Bernie Sanders- with a lot of people bring in the gray area in between.

                The reason I characterize the trump support as a last stand of at least partial support for individualism is that they are standing up to the emotional appeals of collectivism, but without the benefit of a solid intellectual background. Hence, they will fail and be swept up in the coming Venezuelan - type funeral pyre when the USA wealth rubs out

                Trumps policies will make our current situation last longer, but willl not affect the eventual outcome.

                I don’t really know ARs motivations, but I say she did predict what’s going to happen
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                • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                  I give him credit for doing the right thing -- even if its for the wrong reasons.So long as he keeps it up, I'm all for him. He does things that others apparently don't have the balls to do, like moving the American Embassy to Jerusalem. They are the right things. In rhetoric, he is the good, the bad, and the ugly, but so long as he continues to reverse Obama, leave the man alone.
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                  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                    I would also say that Trump is under a LOT of pressure from liberals who want to destroy him at every turn. I think he says things to tweek them and to show people that PC is not such a good thing. Therefore, I do watch what he DOES more than what he says, although he does say what I am thinking more times than not. The libs hate his honesty and willingness to say what he thinks.
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                    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                      More openess and transparency than any previous president.
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                      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                        Trump is one of the few people I would love to have lunch with where we didn’t have to worry about leaks. I would like to ask him if he realized how badly he would be treated as president and whether he would have run if he had to do it again.
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          Some who have met him say he is very personable in person. He would probably give an honest answer. But I don't t think you have to ask to know that he realizes how badly he has been treated. I wonder if he realizes how offensive to many a lot of his own public behavior has been -- "big hand", "lyin' Ted", etc. (But that's not the only reason he is treated badly in politics.)
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                          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                            His nicknames should be taken in the context of politics. And his nicknames are really insightful for the most part. Politics runs on short sound bites more than actual facts today

                            When it comes to serious negotiations I think trump is very serious and respectful so long as he gets respect in return
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                    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                      Honesty is not a hallmark of Trump. It's not so much that he lies, but that he doesn't know the difference -- in his mentality of bombastic sales pitches.

                      The establishment frantically wants to destroy him because he openly rejects them -- with visible disrespect -- rather than pander to them. They are accustomed to the pandering from their victims and enemies. Open challenging of the establishment, both intellectually and in refusing to grant a moral sanction, is what we do need, but Trump is unable to articulate rational explanation on any level; it's all highly public name-calling and loutish taunting -- even against his own appointees who work for him. That doesn't explain anything to anyone who does not already realize they are angry, and doesn't take his own followers beyond that. His enemies don't know what he thinks either, but are capitalizing on his own loutish slogans and lack of ideas.

                      That is not who we are or should be. His lack of intellectual leadership on any level is a self-defeating false alternative. It's the frustrated, emotional 'follow the man on the white horse' mentality that Ayn Rand warned of and feared when she was advocating for the necessity of an intellectual response challenging the establishment intellectuals at all levels.
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                      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                        I would say you dont like Trump. You seem to find fault with him pretty much 100% of the time. He is a LOT better than the liberals floating around our country, and I think he deserves credit for that.

                        I think a lot of his "attitude" is designed to defend and defuse nastiness thrown at him by the left. He should disrespect them, they are the real intellectualized trash. So he calls them names which, by the way, pretty accurately describe them- Lyin Ted, Crooked Hillary, Low Energy Bush, etc. He even exposed McCain for using his self sacrificing POW status to get sympathy that he milked for his entire career. After all, we would rather soldiers that DONT get caught than ones who stay in prison after being permitted freedom by his captors.

                        To his credit, however he did it, he trounced on the crooked Hillary and Bill Clinton foundation that was putting our government up for sale to foreign countries for the price of a contribution. He showed the liberals for what they really are, and he went farther than anyone else to stick a dagger in the heart of political correctness.

                        He isnt the intellectual that you woudl want, but no intellectual would EVER be elected currently until the liberal establishment is weakened.
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          The goal is not to elect an intellectual. A leader in politics must at least be able to articulate his own views (which requires having them). A swaggering sales pitch sticking people with burning nick names is not rational. Even when it manages to nail something recognizable, Trump is unable to defend it or its significance when challenged. He quickly lost his 'prisoner of war' attack on McCain and retreated, further entrenching a false premise.

                          Even when he does something right, he ties it to loutish, indefensible rhetoric, making it harder for more reasonable people to defend it as he drags all of it down into his playground bully mentality. His enemies are recording and archiving all of it for use in campaign ads against him. With that kind of material they don't need to defend their own positions or discuss anyone else's, including the ones he does not have himself and never understood.
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                          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                            I would say that giving people accurate but non politically correct nicknames is indeed a masterful political move. It cuts through the political bs of dishonest people. He hasn’t been wrong yet at zeroing in on the basic characteristics of people he has given nicknames to

                            Mc Cain milked his tortured pow story for 30 years of sympathy. War heroes save other soldiers, win battles and don’t get captured. Instead of being freed and live to fight again, he chooses torture and sympathy

                            The hatred of trump has little to with what he says it does. The hate the fact he is anti the crooked establishment and they fear his ability to get public support. The libs come after him no matter what he does. The facts are he is actually doing a better job than a lot of other presidents
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                            • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                              Unfortunately, most people aren't as perceptive as you.
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                              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                                There are a lot of people on this forum who get right down to the bottom of things. I think half the voters just “knew” trump spoke the truth to them, but were afraid to speak out openly. Look what happens when one wears a MAGA hat in public today. But in the solitude of the voting booth, truth wins out
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                            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                              A lot more is required than name-calling against enemies. For every person who likes it out of his emotions other potential allies are driven away and it accomplishes less than nothing in addressing the causes of the problems.
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                              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                                Politically it was a smart move. He did win the election, which was his goal. In order to carry out the job of president, one has to get elected first

                                I would postulate that the so called potential allies he might have had to help with his agenda but who were turned off. By his personality werent committed to his agenda anyway. ( like mc Cain for example)
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                                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                                  We are talking about what is required to reverse the course of the nation to individualism, not what it takes for a politician who does not understand that to temporarily get in power with an ends justifies the means mentality further eliminating civilized behavior in a new level of descent regarded as normal for politics.
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                                  • term2 replied 5 years, 7 months ago
                  • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                    Trump is not always doing the right thing. When he does happen to do the right thing we will take it, but someone who temporarily does something right for the wrong reasons does not deserve "credit" for it, is not a solution, and is not a reason to be equated with him in what he stands for in the Trump idolatry.
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                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                  Ayn Rand said what her motives were. You don't have to guess. Trump is not a consistent intellectual anything. Not liking the results of collectivism is not individualism.
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                  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                    A true individualist would not want to be and would never BE elected now. We won’t live forever and need to take the least offensive alternative for the duration of our lives. What happens after I am gone isn’t of a lot of interest to me.
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                    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                      That is not a defense of Donald Trump.
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                      • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                        Really? You must lack imagination. While that was not my intention, a bright future is almost totally dependent on Trump as of now.The problem is who or what are we going to get after Trump. Looks like he is going to continue to do what is needed no matter what the weasels on the left do.
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          That better people did not surface to run in an election with two such sorry choices, and that an ideal candidate could not be elected now, is not a defense of the lesser evil of the two sorry choices.
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                      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                        Its a rational choice, however, given the available alternatives. He is a hell of a lot better than Hildebeast, even though he is not an objectivist or close to it. An Objectivist would never be elected now, so thats not a choice unfortunately.
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          A lot of people voted for him as the only alternative. The lesser of two evils does not make the lesser evil good. Voting against Clinton did not make Trump "the last stand for what’s left of American constitutional values" and is not a reason to broadcast his head shot photo to the universe like the promotions of Lenin and many more.
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                          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                            You have to admit that on a scale, Trump is a hell of a lot better than the liberals of today. If you rate him relative to a john galt, wouldnt he be higher than Hildebeast for example? We all have to live in the here and now, so a choice of lesser evils doesnt make it "good", but its just that-lesser of two evils. Means not as much of your money will be stolen, and the government might regulate your life a bit less.

                            We still have the destruction of the medical system with Obamacare, which I blame on Obama, and now the establishment who wants to "replace" it. I say REPEAL it period, but that does to show how much effect I have.
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                            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                              The Hilary scale does not make Trump "the last stand for what’s left of American constitutional values" and is not a reason to broadcast his photo to the universe.
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                              • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                                Why not? To an alien, one face is pretty much as good as another. The only significance would be to us, which is a bit silly.
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                                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                                  The whole exercise is silly. Trump's face does not represent anything that matters, either to those of us know the difference between what he is and the values you attribute to him, or to those who nothing about him at all.
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                              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                                What I am getting at is that is unlikely to be another elected president in the the future to defend American constitutional values anywhere near as much as Donald trump. In the future they will be liberal hacks. Look at how close Bernie Sanders got through popularity with the young voters

                                I just don’t see much of a future for the usa
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                                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                                  That doesn't make Trump admirable. He's a last gasp of something pro-America, but not American individualism or Constitutional limits on government.

                                  Gore came very close to winning power after Clinton (and would have if the Senate had removed Clinton), and so did Kerry. The trend into Obama was only a matter of time, and that set new precedents paving the way for the mentality of Sanders and Warren. Trump on the white horse was a desperate anti-intellectual backlash against it, without being for the right principles, in a zig-zag downward trend.
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                                  • term2 replied 5 years, 7 months ago
                                  • Herb7734 replied 5 years, 7 months ago
                    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                      It may be of interest to us via our children and grandchildren. It would be good to know that they were going to live in a bright future.
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                      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                        I would have to say that this is THEIR problem really. We have so little power to affect things more than may 4 years into the future. We gave them 4 years of a slowdown in the march of socialism, but thats about all we can do. 2020 will bring in democratic socialism and the completion of the destruction of medical care in the USA
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                  • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                    I care less about what he says than what he does.He's doing the right thing 80% of the time, which is better than any previous recent President.And what he does counts much more than what he says.
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                    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                      Whatever you personally care about, Trump is not right "80% of the time", it does matter what the President of United States publicly says, and his "deal making" and stirring things up do not make him an individualist.
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                      • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                        You are becoming too contentious. I will no longer reply to your posts. You have become what we used to call, a Randoid. Good luck. By the way, I'm not the one who lowers your points.
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                        • Posted by GaltsGulch 5 years, 7 months ago
                          Hi Herb,

                          TIP: Attack the argument, not the man. When reviewing your comments before submitting, look for the words, "you", or "your", and just make sure you're taking the best route to make your point. In fact, try saying what you want to say without using those words. If you can't, you're probably pointing at the wrong target. :)

                          And, don't forget, as the post owner, you can hide whomever you like at anytime by employing, "Hide", or "Ignore."
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                          • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                            Yes, but there are many ways to personally attack without using "you", and checking for the word, which often is appropriate to use, doesn't help when the attacks are deliberate. A thread initiator who does that should not be encouraged to use the "hide" function as a tool to suppress his target. We saw (a few ago) how another thread initiator used it that way in his own emotional outbursts coupled with taunting and mocking over how he was using it. (He seems to have since left the forum.)
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                          • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                            Thanks for the tip. I never hide, but I do ignore, which is what I choose to do with ewv. This is a person who takes joy in being a contrarian. However, an intelligent one, which is what suckered me in. I am a a profound believer in no censorship, subsequently, I will neither delete nor hide any posts. I even went to Federal court in order to defend myself and my son's ability to publish biographical graphic novels of notable entertainers and public figures without the need for authorization by them.
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                            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                              We have all had more than enough of these speculative, personal attacks, including the ones against Ayn Rand. I do not "take joy in being a contrarian". Claiming that is a way to evade the content of what is written here, but it isn't true and the personal deflection through psychologizing is not honest discussion of the content that is posted here, which is written for a reason, not to be "contrarian". Using the word "you" is not the only way to do it when the attacks are deliberately personal.
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          Explaining why Trump and adulation of him is contrary to what is needed in this country. Your "Randroid" name-calling adds nothing to the discussion as you try to dismiss explanations contrary to repetitive Trump-cheering and dismissal of the importance of ideas as "contentious".
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        • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
          What will happen post Trump? Sliding down the icy slope toward socialism? How to rule ourselves. Is strict domination by government the only way man's baser images can be kept in check? I was fortunate to live in an era which was the closest humans came to realizing freedom then any other time in history. It lasted so short that it couldn't even be considered the blink of an eye. In cosmic time it passed so quickly it virtually didn't exist. Yet it did. And how can you explain freedom to people who never experienced it or only saw it as too much responsibility?
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          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
            WE are still somewhat free in the USA, which is to be appreciated. The government does a lot of controlling and takes a lot of our money, and has direct control over transportation, finance, health care, food production, communication, etc. As long as we are quiet and live under their radar, we can go about our daily lives pretty much unmolested.
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      • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
        Ayn Rand had nothing to do with the spread of objectivism except to create it and inspire by writing an inspirational book. It was Branden who popularized it, lectured and proselitized it and designed and put out the printed matter. When she broke up with him over silliness, the movement fell apart, and Humpty-Dumptied. Silliness? Yes! She was married and she used him as a sex partner, and he idolized her and went along with it. He then fell in love with a woman other than his wife, and when Rand heard of it she broke off any relation she had with him. She had no claim to restrict him from meeting and falling for someone else. He was virtually her sex slave because he worshiped her so much. He'd never admit it, but as Grandpa Sherman would say, "You'd have to be blind in one eye and can't see out of the other" to not recognize it.
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        • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
          You are right. Ayn Rand was very intelligent, and a great writer and forward thinker. She was great when she was being interviewed- sharp as a tack.

          But except for AS, she didnt communicate with people where THEY lived. Branden, on the other hand did communicate that way. One could talk with Nathaniel, but not so much with Ayn Rand. She was more aloof. I agree that the movement stopped when Branden was excommunicated.
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          • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
            The very fact you use such terms as "excommunicated" explains a lot.
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            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
              It reveals, but not explains, a lot about those who initiated the use of such terms in sneering at Ayn Rand for throwing Branden out for what he was.
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            • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
              I really wasn’t close to the situation at all. It did have that flavor to it. Fast and complete
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              • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                A lot of actions are fast and complete; that doesn't make them "excommunications". Personal associations are not institutions, let alone religious or with rights of membership for the faithful, and not associating with someone is not a decree.

                Almost no one was close to the Branden situation, and could not have been, but a minority of detractors of Ayn Rand with their own personal resentments and spurred on by the Brandens, circulated that kind of rhetoric, bitterly playing on false connotations, to spread it among people who did not know.
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                • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                  My use if the word excommunicated had more to do with the swiftness and completeness iif the split on the part if ayn rand. One day things were ok, and the next came the complete dissociation with branden
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                  • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                    If you read Valliant's book you will see that it didn't happen suddenly. There was a long period of problems becoming worse. It seemed sudden because no one on the outside knew about it or expected it and Branden had not been making the progress that Ayn Rand had expected and wanted.
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                    • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                      Indeed it was hidden. Makes more sense that there were more reasons than a woman scorned, although that could too could explain it At this point both parties are no longer alive and we have all moved in many years ago
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                      • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                        Branden pushed the "woman scorned" line because he knew he could make it sound plausible to those who missed the rest. He never addressed the reasons Ayn Rand herself gave.
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                        • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                          The woman scorned had a ring of truth that fit her very stern approach to anyone who didn’t see and perfectly practice objectivism But she taught me to think for myself, and u ignored the way she protected objectivism (which I understood and was ok with). I figured branden did something and she didn’t like it, but it wasn’t my business
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                          • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                            She described at length what he had done over a period of at least four years. It included irresponsibility in his work with her, dishonesty, and financial misappropriations.
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          • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
            The movement did not stop. It is an intellectual movement, not groupies. Branden was not "excommunicated" with the "sex slave" smear; he was thrown out for his dishonesty and irresponsibility.

            People could and did talk to Ayn Rand. They lined up out into the hallways every year after Ford Hall. She was very gracious and wanted people to understand. Branden had been known for his pompous attitude.
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            • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
              Ayn Rand was very gracious when interviewed on TV, I would have to say. Quite easy to understand.

              I suppose maybe I was put off during her lectures at Ford Hall where she appeared distant and demanding. One got the feeling that emotions were to be discounted and ignored with her, while Branden was more understanding where people actually lived day to day.

              He was never pompous in my presence, however.

              It is an intellectual movement. I wish it could relate more to people than only to the intellectuals. I understand the need for intellectual understanding, but not everyone can catch on to the heavy duty philosophical principles.

              Branden was indeed excommunicated It was as if he never existed, and I never really heard good reasons from Ayn Rand like you are saying. It did seem more like a woman scorned....
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              • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                Intellectual understanding occurs at all levels of abstraction, not just 'heavy duty' philosophy.

                Branden was dropped because of what he made of himself; and ignored from then on as no longer important to follow, let alone feud with. All the public battling came from the Branden side. The false 'woman scorned' line was perpetuated by Branden. It's too easy to accept as plausible by those who don't know what Ayn Rand was. Read James Valliant's The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics: The Case Against the Brandens (2005).
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            • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
              If he was dishonest and irresponsible so was his paramour.The entire situation was sleazy. Neither of them was willing to put it all up front. When the truth came out it was a total surprise to most of us, many of whom refused to believe it at first.
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              • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                Branden was thrown out long after the affair for reasons that had nothing to do with it, let alone your smears about a "sex slave" and your obsession over a personal affair, all of which you mixed with an outrageous assertion that Branden and not Ayn Rand was responsible for the spread of her ideas.

                Ayn Rand was not "dishonest and irresponsible". One does not have to approve of their earlier strange and personally harmful personal choice in the affair to understand that.
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        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
          This personal mudslinging invective is all nonsense. Ayn Rand lectured, appeared on TV and radio interviews, and wrote non-fiction books and articles until the end of her life. Those who attended Branden's collapsed 'institute' were attracted to it through Ayn Rand. They were seeking more information from what they had read in her work -- for its conceptual content, not just "inspiration". Among the most valuable articles and lecture appearances by Ayn Rand and others were after Branden left. To say that Ayn Rand "had nothing to do with the spread of Objectivism" beyond an "inspirational book" is a vicious injustice.

          Branden was thrown out in the late 1960s because of his dishonesty and irresponsibility, not as a rejected "sex slave". If anyone cares he can read the documented account in James Valliant's The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics: The Case Against the Brandens.

          Branden's subsequent life, including a foray into New Age mysticism, demonstrates what he became, and it surely was not Objectivism. He was publicly known because of his prior association with Ayn Rand, which he exploited for the rest of his life in repeated attacks on her to bring attention to himself.
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          • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
            Getting a movement going is more than being an icon. It takes work, and recruitment and myriads of publication distribution and personal appearances.
            Let's boil away the relationships. Rand had a weekly sexual encounter with Branden whom she met as a youngster fresh out of high school.Like most of us, he adored her, as the brilliant writer who moved our minds and yes, our emotions. If she asked him to hang upside down from a flag pole he might have done it.I met him through my psychologist who was part of a small enclave of shrinks who were all "Randoids." Let's face it, she was no beauty. A somewhat dowdy lady with a brain that could melt ice at 50 feet.While I've read several bios of AR, I know what I witnessed and I can tell you that these were not deities but just people, with exceptional intellects.Look more closely at the Rand Branden affair. They kept their relationship a secret except to the inner circle. In that sense, weren't they lying to her followers? She was only perturbed about that when it looked as if he was lying to her. He on the other hand was filled with trepidation about her finding that a 3rd female was involved with him. His wife, a close friend, counted for zero as did her own husband. But none of this had changed the truth of a single thing she wrote.There's more but..... No more from me.
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            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
              This has nothing to do with their ill-fated affair, they did not lie about it -- personal privacy from the public is not lying, and her husband did not "count for zero" . The affair was over long before Branden was thrown out for persistent dishonesty and irresponsibility across the full range of his behavior. Your posts have been one big personal smear. None of it justifies spreading malicious gossip incongruously mixed with the outrageously false assertion that Ayn Rand "had nothing to do with the spread of Objectivism" beyond an "inspirational book" and mere "icon". Ayn Rand invested an enormous effort in speaking and publishing both before and after Branden. An intellectual movement is the spread of and application of ideas; organizations of different kinds are one aspect of how a movement works; physical "recruitment" is a much smaller part.
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              • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                You are defending the indefensible. Take away the name Ayn Rand and you would not be so willing to pronounce her virtue. It certainly is not my intention to besmirch either Branden or Rand. I think Rand made a big deal out of a very small situation. Could you tell me how he was dishonest or irresponsible? I'm a fairly perceptive person, and I didn't find any of that to be true.If you think that all that happened after they stopped their "time together" (Her words) you are mistaken, it was going on when Branden finally confessed his love for another woman. You sound exactly like the people of the time who refused to believe in the affair until they could no longer cover it up. And, if you think that Branden's wife and Rand's husband weren't terribly hurt by the affair which they were completely aware of, you are sadly mistaken. They were people not carved out of wood, and both of them were hurting. The insane degree to which Rand kept the relationship was one of total disregard for the spouses, but the moment she was placed in the same position that she placed them in, she blew a gasket. As much as I and everyone of that group loved her, she cared not for a bit about them at all. That's OK with me, but let's at least be honest.
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                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                  This is not about the earlier affair or defending it, that straw man obsession and your attempt to tie to everything else, including the ridiculous claim that Branden and not Ayn Rand was responsible for the spreading of Ayn Rand's ideas, is your own "defending the indefensible". Branden's later irresponsible and dishonest behavior extended to all of his work, professional relations, and relations with Ayn Rand and others. It was not a "very small situation" and was not over "sex slave".
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          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
            I think you are being a bit unfair to Branden. He helped bring Objectivism down to a more personal level and easier to actually apply in ones life for most people. Ayn Rand's epistemological and philosophical approaches, while strictly correct, were a bit hard to translate to everyday life for most of us (definitely you excepted)

            Branden went on to do more work in psychology than in philosophy, and he did expose some quite dramatic psychological difficulties that Ayn Rand had. She was a bit hard to deal with, which I saw for myself, if you werent absolutely perfect in your application of Objectivism. She tolerated absolutely no deviations.

            I lived through that period, and in fact had Branden come speak at Stanford while I was a student there after the famous breakup. I never heard him denigrating Objectivism or Ayn Rand personally. I think they each had their place.
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            • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
              Our group called itself "The Ayn Rand Society" and she let us know that we were not to use her name under any circumstances. There was no discussion or help from above only a terse edict. Which illustrates the kind of attitude that turns off people, even those who want to help. Branden would have handled it more diplomatically.She was not exactly what you'd call a "people person."
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              • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                Her telling you not to use her name to represent yourselves as associated with her or representing her ideas was not a "terse edict". You could do whatever you wanted to but not in her name. She did not want to be associated with the various groups who were claiming to or implying to speak for her. She was interested in her ideas being understood, not in being a personality followed by groupies.
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                • Posted by Dobrien 5 years, 7 months ago
                  Definition of terse. terser; tersest. 1 : using few words : devoid of superfluity. a terse summary ; also : short, brusque
                  Definition of edict : an official order or proclamation issued by a person in authority.

                  Used in a sentence, EWV often gives an edict and in his comment claims you were a groupie.
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                  • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                    Telling someone he can do what he wants but not use your name to do it is not an "edict" by a "person in authority". I do not give "edicts" either. There were in fact a lot of groups using Ayn Rand's name in a personality following and she did not want anything like that. No one said Herb was himself a groupie. Dobrien's personal attack does not belong here.
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              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                Very smart she was, and I lived her books and her philosophical work. She probably had a somewhat hard life so I give her a pass to a degree. I do remember a lecture at ford hall in Boston where I think some girl I think took a picture and rand went off the rails on her. It seemed a bit over the top. Made me sit quietly and certainly not ask questions...
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                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                  "Went off the rails" because you "think took a picture"? During the lecture, a personal intrusion? What really happened and what preceded it?

                  She did ask that people not take photos, saying that she was "too old for that".

                  Yes, she had had a hard life but was very determined. She also tended to appear 'formal' to some people. There is no doubt that some found her intimidating.
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                  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                    I was there, but it happened quickly. She had the ushers run over to the girl and either remove her from the hall or take her camera- I couldn’t really tell you for sure

                    I can tell you it was a bit disturbing to see. Ayn rand could have just calmly reiterated her desire not to be photographed. Her reaction was excessive relative to whatever damage was done by a simple photograph, at least IMHO
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                    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                      Did she ask the ushers or was it understood that they would do it? I think the policy was routinely announced in advance by Ford Hall that recordings and photographs were not permitted.

                      It is disturbing to the audience (or used to be) any time a speaker becomes upset or there is a disruption in a serious public lecture with some kind of enforcement invoked.

                      That happened during one of Leonard Peikoff's lectures there in the 1990s. Some clown in the audience stood up and interrupted, angrily yelling his opposition incoherently. Everything ground to a halt while Leonard Peikoff expressed his justified displeasure, the clown refused to sit down and be quiet let alone wait for the question period, and the ushers eventually dragged him out. Some in the audience quietly complained that the 'protestor' had a right to speak, too, as if Leonard Peikoff had been in the wrong for not allowing the outburst interrupting his prepared lecture.
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                      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                        The time I saw the disturbance with the picture, I remember rand rather roughly directing the ushers

                        I never saw anyone be unruly and demanding. I certainly would have stuck up for the speaker, who I had paid to hear

                        I can understand rands prohibition against recording if she was selling the recordings. I have to admit that she covered so much ground that I would have wanted to record it so I could listen to it sgain
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          At the time, the recordings were not being sold, but she was using her Ford Hall lectures as articles in her own publication. That is how many of them turned up in her anthologies, both during her lifetime and after -- so you did get them.

                          I don't remember an instance of her roughly directing the ushers, but I only attended her later appearances in the 1970s when I was just starting out. I can imagine her Russian accent coupled with being angry at a transgression sounding "rough"!
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                          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                            Yeah. I went to them in the mid to late 60s while I was at MIT in Cambridge. They were well attended actually
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                            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                              They were well attended to the very end, with long lines of people waiting hours to get in, and then long lines waiting to see her in the reception after the lecture, and enthusiastic discussions in and out of the lines. It had become an annual event drawing people from all over the country (and sometimes beyond). You were lucky to have those experiences in the early years of enthusiasm. Was there much interest at MIT then? Harry Binswanger graduated from MIT around the time you were starting.
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                              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                                I remember his name now that you mention it. My roommate, bob poole, and I went on to take over reason magazine from ll friedlander . There was considerable interest in ayn rand’s books. I remember u kind of withdrew from the world for three days to finish reading atlas shrugged. Talk about binge reading- couldn’t put it down
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                                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                                  I was reading it on the bus on the way to a part time job, missed the stop, and had to walk back a couple of miles. Plus stealing a few minutes here and there while in the bathroom.
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                                  • term2 replied 5 years, 7 months ago
            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
              Branden's earlier articles and lectures, along with Ayn Rand's, were helpful to readers of her fiction and who had questions and sought more non-fiction explanation. But according to those who attended their NBI, Branden developed a reputation for being the worst in pompous talking down to people; He was later thrown out for much worse after Ayn Rand had tried to help him.

              He didn't "expose dramatic psychological difficulties" after the break, he ruthlessly smeared her in a sustained personal attack while exploiting his former association. He spent the rest of his life doing that whether or not he included it at a lecture appearance at Stanford (and other such appearances) in the period shortly after the break. It took a few years, essentially until after she died, before he turned his obsession into a career.

              Ayn Rand was very intent on people understanding when she spoke with them. She could sometimes be personally "difficult", as Leonard Peikoff called it, but she was focused on ideas, not personal hostility. The "deviance" she did not tolerate was people acting as if they understood and agreed, serving to keep an association going, only for her to find out later they did not.

              Branden had a place before he self-destructed; not after. Those interested can still read and benefit from what he produced with Ayn Rand's agreement and encouragement, but that's it. His writing took a dramatic plunge after the break and he lost most of his following for good reason in both his work and his obsessive drive to undermine Ayn Rand both personally and in misrepresenting what she thought.
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              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                Ayn Rand demonstrated very hostile behavior if for any reason you did not immediately understand, or some aspect of what you said was not 100% right. I went to a few of her lectures and witnessed that firsthand. It made one afraid of opening ones mouth for fear of a dressing down from her. Sometimes people just dont understand right away and are not perfect. After all, her philosophy was indeed a bit new and not part of the mainstream most people grew up with.
                I didnt personally see any pompousness in Branden, although I wasnt around him a lot. He hardly talked about Rand, but was pretty involved in his psychology practice and writings.

                I almost went to work for him actually, but I am an engineer and didnt want to leave engineering.

                As you can tell from my ramblings, I am pretty interested in why objectivism has not caught on like I thought it would, and what would reverse that. I suspect it has to do with the fact most people have more allegiance to their feelings from an early age, and never realize that their feelings are the result of their thinking. I dont want this culture to crash and burn, but the way its going I dont see anything but that happening.
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                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                  Sometimes she responded with anger to questioners in public forums because she was angry over a false idea for which she saw the too clearly. Occasionally she misunderstood the purpose of the questioner. Sometimes she was impatient with people she knew and didn't see how they could not understand some aspect of something that was so clear to her. Occasionally fear of a 'dressing down' was visible in the form of the person breaking out in a sweat -- or invisible in the form of people not engaging at all. I suspect it is why some recordings have not been released in their 'raw' form. but it was not across the board personal hostile behavior; she was generally sincerely motivated to help people understand and was very generous and benevolent with her time. Branden's smears did not "expose dramatic psychological difficulties"; they were personal attacks that went well beyond any objective description.

                  If you don't understand the importance of the right philosophic ideas, how to spread them, and how radically different they are from western intellectual tradition, and instead focus on emotions as a strategy, you won't see why they haven't caught on much more rapidly.
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                  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                    I can accept that ayn rand is entitled to whatever feeling she had. I am sure it was difficult for her to deal with people who were not up to speed with her. I can understand that. What I saw happen never deterred me from the ideas she proffered.

                    I didn’t really see the personal reactions of either rand or branden. Actually I wasn’t terribly interested in that. I would have preferred then to continue to work together, but it wasn’t up to mrr
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                    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                      After Branden's self-destruction there was no option for them to work together. He was not the person he once was.
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                      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                        I would suggest he was the same person all along, but perhaps different sides became more prominent based in outside influences.
                        Wasn’t he married to Barbara branden while he was involved with ayn rand, and then eventually dumped Barbara for another wife later?
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          That he divorced his wife does not mean he had "two sides". Whatever tendencies he may have originally had that he suppressed, he became a different person. He betrayed his own professed values.
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                          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                            He certainly incurred the wrath of ayn rand. It wasn’t easy to really know what went on between them without being a fly in the wall. In the end we are left with the work they both did and to apply it to our own lives
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                            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                              Yes he incurred the wrath of Ayn Rand, but unlike the Brandens she didn't dwell on it. He was out of her life and she proceeded to ignore it

                              You can find out more of what went on from the use of her diary in Valliant's The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics: The Case Against the Brandens, finally written, independently, in 2005 after years of diatribes from the Branden's.

                              But you are right that far more important is the content and application of the ideas. It only comes up now when one of a handful still harboring bitter resentment starts gratuitously pushing the personal attacks.
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                      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                        I understand that at least from her side, the association was over forever
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          From any side it was over and had to be. "Preferring" that they continue to work together doesn't make any sense. It was not possible for Branden to work with Ayn Rand or any other rational person on behalf of Ayn Rand's philosophy, and it was not possible for Ayn Rand to work with what he became.
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                          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                            Obviously their relationship was over. By using the word prefer, I meant that i would have liked it if things worked out. But it wasn’t my day at all
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                            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                              Yes, it would have been better if Branden hadn't come apart. Ayn Rand would have preferred it, too. She had tried to help him.
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                              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                                Humans are very complicated, rational in some area and irrational in others. Very hard to tell, in that outside influences seem to bring out unexpected behavior
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                                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                                  There was no sign that Branden's problems were from outside influences. He seemed to have let himself go down, perhaps gradually, a path he no longer believed in and it blew up.
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                            • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                              I have decided to go the pacifist route. Lets you and him fight.
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                              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                                Funny. I never had a dog in that fight. I went on to just learn whatever I could from both of them
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                                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                                  Most people didn't know what to think. They were surprised and perplexed, made worse by directions from Ayn Rand's associates insisting that people repudiate Branden because "Ayn Rand wrote Atlas Shrugged" and anyone recommending, to those interested in psychology, that they read his Psychology of Self Esteem -- which had been published in The Objectivst and still endorsed by Ayn Rand -- was "sanctioning Branden". It was less than convincing as explanation.

                                  Ayn Rand's explanation that had been on the record since 1968 was more than enough to not grant a general moral approval of Branden, but it took years to see the subsequent course of the Branden's careers and nature of their writing. His first book, The Psychology of Self Esteem was essentially the same as how it had appeared serialized in The Objectivist so I continued to follow him, still wondering what had happened to him, then in his subsequent books noticing a big decline in the quality of his writing so I lost interest.

                                  But the later growing, constant attacks from the Brandens, especially after Ayn Rand died, including misrepresentations and obvious hatred and personal vindictiveness toward her, along with the change of direction and progressive decline in their work (including his New Age mysticism!) told me a lot more: I saw that I didn't need more details of the break to know who was worth following and who was not -- as a waste of time and repugnantly obnoxious at best. By the time Valliant's book was published I had long known what I needed to, but the book explained a lot.
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                                  • term2 replied 5 years, 7 months ago
            • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
              Thanks T2 you merely confirmed my own observations.
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              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                Interestingly enough, when i visited Jefferson museum in Charlottesville, I came away with an appreciation of how difficult it must have been to get people to agree to things like the constitution and declaration of independence. Just like today, there were people for it, and others against it. There was the establishment then too who didnt want to give up the goodies they got from the English. But the English were so greedy and controlling that it fed the fires of independence and eventually led to their defeat (fortunately).

                But there are some glaring holes in the constitution that led to the excesses of today that are bringing the country down. Also, one can see in the years after its passage that the government of the USA was not so high and mightly when it came to stealing lands from the Indians who lived here, Marching them off to reservations, running the mormons out of town after town, and then the most monstrous of all things- the destruction of the south because it wanted OUT of the union.

                I say, the constitution was nice, but not often did the founding fathers actually go along with it. They did what they needed to do to take over the whole land from sea to shining sea.

                Plus now, there is really no sanctity of private property, and this country is more fascist than capitalist. You can own things, but you dont control them.
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                • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                  It pays to set the standards high, because we know that the highest ideals will not be achieved on a regular basis.
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                  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                    Absolutely set the standards for a constitution high. My overall takeaway from the Jefferson museum was that there was intense compromise to arrive at a document at all. Same as what happens today in politics
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              • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                You did not observe what you wrote in your personal attacks. There is no excuse for it.
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                • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                  I am trying very hard to be polite, but you don't know what you are talking about. You sound like a brainwashed automaton.
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                  • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                    You did not observe Branden, with no work by Ayn Rand after writing an only "inspirational" novel, being responsible for the spread of Ayn Rand's ideas and you did not observe a "sex slave". You seem to harbor a lot of personal resentment towards Ayn Rand and are willing to make all kinds of outrageous statements on behalf of it. This is not the place for it.
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    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
      What saved humanity in the past was the new frontier that was the Americas. It was the fresh start that was needed. And it has begun to devolve to where Europe was after Columbus. Hopefully, space will become the new frontier and possibly save humanity again. One can only hope.
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    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
      Fortunately (for me) I will likely be gone by then and so, I leave the land of the ? and the home of the ? to you and hope you all survive.
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        I am 73, so I will be lucky to see much more than The liberals trying to impeach trump. At least it will make my remaining time more pleasant before the real ship hits the fan.

        Obama did us a great disservice by ruining healthcare. Not only did he raise the insurance rates, he made the deductibles so high people cant affort to use it after they pay the high rates.

        To boot, he made medicare the ONLY insurance us old folks can get, and made it so complicated and unprofitable that the really good hospitals like Mayo wont even take new patients.

        I did find a program at mayo that costs $500 a month- like a concierge service- that lets medicare people get some access
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        • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
          What it boils down to is Talks wrong but does right versus talks right but does wrong. Which do you want?
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          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
            talks wrong but does right. I think trump gets off on tweeking the liberals with his outlandish tweets. Then while they are ranting and raving, he just does what needs to be done.

            Sticks and stones will break my bones, but words will never hurt me- my mamma used to say.
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          • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
            That is a false alternative, one part of which is impossible. Correct action requires correct thought. A lot of what Trump does, or would do if he could, is not right.
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  • Posted by mminnick 5 years, 7 months ago
    I always like Dr. Krauthammer but his book Thinks that Matter was so spot on and so well conceived and executed I thought then and still think now it is one of the most compelling texts I have ever read.
    His mind and writing talent are being missed not and will be missed by all who knew him either directly or indirectly through his wor.
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  • Posted by $ Olduglycarl 5 years, 7 months ago
    I agree, Beethoven would be the better choice...it's musical math for the soul.

    I've thought of many things, books, movies, even a DVD of an orchestra playing Beethoven. But, perhaps a painting by Dan O'brien. A painting that shows the best of our architecture, our transportation, our pets, our dreams and our humanity.
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  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Trump definitely slowed the steady March to collectivism, which is all we can expect at this point. Look at the vitriol against trump. Not than a principled president would ever be elected today, but if he were imagine the hatred from the liberals that would be unleashed. He would probably be assassinated
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  • Posted by chad 5 years, 7 months ago
    If there is a place where the populace is libertine and individualistic instead of collective they might find humans frightening in their degree of self destruction and acceptance of evil. I would hope there might be some motivation to rescue me from here.
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    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
      Freedom only works if the individual is taught from the beginning to have a philosophic base that shows one is responsible for one's life, and coercion is not allowed in any form.
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    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
      Individualistic is the opposite of "libertine", "self destructive" and "acceptance of evil". Individualism requires rationality in self reliance.
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  • Posted by lrshultis 5 years, 7 months ago
    I would not have sent anything other than the Voyagers to gain knowledge of the solar system and a little beyond it. It is a little irrational to think that, if the probe was ever found by some intelligent beings, that thousands or millions of years or if at all in the future, the stuff sent would be of any importance at all. Until it is possible to travel faster than light, there is zero possibility of the probes being discovered.
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    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
      There are several ways being proposed to travel faster than light, but they are all ideas without implementation. But so was the quantum world before Einstein. It was there all the time, running the universe but we didn't realize it until Albert did a thought experiment and knew just enough math to back it up.
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      • Posted by lrshultis 5 years, 7 months ago
        Here is the problem with those proposed faster than light methods. They are the result of believing that whatever can be conceptualized as math must be physically possible. If something is possible physically, then math will be able to describe it but the math comes after the physical or a math discovered conceptually may be used to describe that physically real existing thing. Other than that, math is purely something of a mind of a brain and it is not possible to reify math to being some actual existing physical thing. Only very small subset of math will ever describe something physical. The rest has absolutely nothing to do with the real world but just interesting conceptualization.
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  • Posted by rtpetrick 5 years, 7 months ago
    I also read Dr. Krauthammer's last book. I found that I needed to have a dictionary near at hand because he used vocabulary, on almost every page, that I'd never seen before. I made notes in the margins. The man, not unlike William F. Buckley, had a magnificent vocabulary.
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    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
      Buckley used vocabulary to obscure and impress his own narcissism, not communicate. That was not magnificent.
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      • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
        Buckley was a snob. But he was also very smart. One can disregard the upturned nose if the words are the truth.
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        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
          The words were not the truth. He was vicious.
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          • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
            Buckley's personal, sneering, viciousness towards Ayn Rand can still be seen in youtube videos documenting his appearances. Buckley was an ardent religionist who tried tie capitalism to religion; he hated and viciously misrepresented Ayn Rand, who ignored his pseudo-intellectual personal feuding and juvenile mocking and taunting for what it was.
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          • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
            Religious conservative Buckleyites lashing out with 'downvoting' and nothing to say is not rational discussion. Buckley and his followers like Whittaker Champers hated, misrepresented and sneered at Ayn Rand with no intelligible response to her as long as they lived. An Ayn Rand forum is not the place to try to revive it, with or without cowardly hiding.
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  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
    I never liked Krauthammer, and used to turn off FOX when he ws on.
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    • Posted by rtpetrick 5 years, 7 months ago
      Hmmmm. Really ? Why? What reasons do you have for disliking Charles Krauthammer?
      NO fight...just curious.
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        It was more of an emotional reaction. I didnt see him that much on TV, so I didnt really analyze my reaction. He did seem somewhat argumentative with the FOX anchors, and that might have been part of it. I do remember a couple of times I thought he was way off base on his comments, but to be honest I dont remember what he said.

        I was surprised near his end when I saw he was paralyzed. That was hidden a lot, just like it was with FDR. I wouldnt have changed my opinion of him had I seen him paralyzed, in fact probably would have thought more highly of him for overcoming what most of us dont have to battle.
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  • Posted by $ blarman 5 years, 7 months ago
    I think that one of the reasons they went with music was because it is a basic form of communication with a lower common denominator than the written (or spoken word). Music is harmonic and mathematical at a fundamental level, so for that reason I, too, would include music.

    "Toccata and Fugue" vs "Ode to Joy"? Tough call. I'd probably sent both, along with Mozart's "Requiem", Tchaikovski's ballet "The Nutcracker", Vivaldi's "Four Seasons" (now there's a lengthy one for you), and Wagner's "Ring". And probably John Williams' theme from "Jurassic Park". Just because I love the bass line. ;)
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    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
      My impression it was music which was used as communication. The "Seasons" reminded me of Glazenouv's "The Seasons." I love joyful music, exciting, arousing. Maybe John Williams only?
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      • Posted by $ blarman 5 years, 7 months ago
        In my mind, Williams is the greatest composer of our age. His scores are synonymous with a great movie and credits "Jaws", "Close Encounters", "Star Wars (theme)", "Harry Potter (theme)", "Jurassic Park (theme)" and several others.
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  • Posted by mshupe 5 years, 7 months ago
    Yes, the premise of the question assumes a capacity to learn from what we choose.
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    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
      It need not assume anything. It is a very expensive gamble. The odds are against, but what the hell, it is a great trick if it succeeds. Nothing except a hunk of electronics if we don't.
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  • Posted by VetteGuy 5 years, 7 months ago
    Nothing. My opinion is that whoever finds Voyager (if anyone) will find out far more about us from the spacecraft itself than from the indecipherable (to them) recordings and pictographs attached to it.
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    • Posted by exceller 5 years, 7 months ago
      Agree.

      We should not think whoever finds the Voyager is endowed by the same qualities/traits as we humans. That species, whatever it'll be is unlikely to be human and as such will honor totally different standards as we do in technology, arts, science, etc.

      We should not anthropomorphize space.
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  • Posted by mshupe 5 years, 7 months ago
    Beethoven's Ode to Joy. As an element of the Ninth Symphony, which took 20 years to complete, it is the crescendo for a combination of a brilliant mind, the low time preference needed to fully express that brilliance, the complexity of the human mind without the need for the complexity of language. Of course it needs air to transmit it audibly, but could be appreciated by an advanced mind visually as the notes would be a mathematical formula.
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    • Posted by $ gharkness 5 years, 7 months ago
      And ears. Who knows what sort of functionality any other life form would have to even know it was music or to hear it? Not that we shouldn't TRY; I actually think it's a good idea, but they may or may not ever have a clue what we were trying to say.

      We'll never know. More's the pity.
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      • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
        Who knows what evolution has in store for a deaf, or blind creature. What alternate senses would be used instead. As to encounters of the 3rd kind, --not too likely. Think of a Roulette wheelwhose diameter is the size of a galaxy. What appears as a cluster is actually unimaginably distant from one athor. Sort of like shooting a pistol at two targets, a mile apart and expecting to hit both targets.
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    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
      It could be an oxygen or methane breathing critter. Who knows what resides in a few hundred thousand planets that support life, but a great choice. Ricard Strauss' "Death and Transfiguration" and/or "Thus Spake Tzarathustra"also by Ricard Strauss, (not the waltz king.)
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  • Posted by EgoPriest 5 years, 6 months ago
    The complete works of Ayn Rand beginning with Atlas Shrugged and Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, "the rest follow from these."

    I would not, as a rational egoist, have the least interest in "representing all of earth," but only man at his finest.

    If I can't have both the books sent, I guess I'd have to choose Atlas Shrugged and hope they have someone ingenious enough to deduce the Epistemology of John Galt (the DNA of his Speech, as it were).
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    • Posted by 5 years, 6 months ago
      I have all 4 of her novels, her play and all of the Objectivist Newsletters and Objectivist booklets, as well as all the polemics, and the books written by the Brandens as well as two biographies.I was far more enthusiastic when I was a good deal younger.
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      • Posted by EgoPriest 5 years, 6 months ago
        A very close friend of mine wrote another book you might like: "The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics: The Case Against the Brandens."

        This very real friend of mine engraved my copy of his book: "Jae -- For a true brother -- a second self . . . Yours -- Always -- Jim Valliant, 5-31-2017"

        It was he who finally woke me up. I also have a transcript of a video (VHS) interview he conducted with Dr. Leonard Peikoff in 1995. I will love it if ARI ever releases it (e.g., on Youtube).
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  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I got lost in it. I felt like I was there as part of the story. The sign of a great writer or moviemaker
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    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
      My only complaint was the length: that it had one at all because I wanted it to keep going.
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        A good sequel would be great. Where does a culture destroyed by collectivism go from there. How does it rebuilt. THAT is where we are now. That is where venezuela is now.

        We are living atlas shrugged right now. Even without a Galt, the motor of the world is being stopped a little st a time. I don’t make medical equipment anymore because iof FDA regulations, and I am only one example
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        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
          There can't be a sequel because it was complete in serving its purpose to show the role of man's mind in human existence. Others could write entirely different novels with different kinds of themes with plots about rebuilding. But to equal Atlas Shrugged it would have to be very philosophical, not just a political plot about rebuilding without regard for what makes it possible.
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          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
            True. AS is a book showing a decline of a culture. I guess I have a thirst for the “so what happens now” part showing a rise in a culture
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            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
              Ayn Rand described what must 'happen now', but implementing it requires putting it into non-fiction. As part of that, it would help if talented authors were to help motivate it with good, idealistic stories depicting it in action.
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              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                Yeah. Funny thing is that AS is so close to reality in this country that I find it hard to think of it as fiction. Apart from timing issues, things are moving lockstep with what she portrayed with the possible exception of John Galt. I don’t see at present anyone intellectually consistent enough and doing what he did in the USA Today.

                There are plenty of the other characters in the book present in our society right now.

                The next big recession will probably spawn directive 10-289.
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  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I think of it this way. It is what it is, whether we know the real facts were. But we have our futures to more productively think about

    Bantering back and forth in rational discussions can only help to find out what is really true, and to learn from what happened. The book you recommended isn’t on kindle unfortunately to make it easy for me to read. In the absence of reading that, I can say that there obviously were two sides to their split up which unfortunately for both if them wasn’t something they could resolve. What I do have to accept is that they did stop working together and that was that. One would have thought that two people could get to the bottom of disagreement and either settle them or just calmly agree to split up without hating each other. But apparently that didn’t happen, as it happens a lot in real life.

    One thing I respect about trump is he can call you rocket man at one time but change his tone and negotiate without animus later. At least trump wears his thoughts and feelings in his sleeve for all to see. No hidden agendas
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    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
      Rocket man certainly deserved to be called that and more. Trump's openness in that respect is one of his best features, in contrast to stock sanctimonious, posturing politicians, but I wonder what he said to him the next time they met to get him to talk (without animus?) and smile on TV. We will see what, if anything, significant comes of it. Meanwhile, Trump went on to praise the murderous dictatorship, as if that didn't matter especially to the victims, leaving us to wonder what if anything he really does believe from minute to minute that he appears so open about.
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        Interesting study on the role of emotions. Trump says he emotional tone of a relationship is set in the first minute or so of meeting a person. In the case if trump, he has met so many people that he quickly identifies the essence of their character almost instantly, and that’s what house into his instant emotional reaction. The emotion is an instant evaluation enabling him to act immediately without verbalizing why he feels that way. Emotions are a good thing to be cherished but only as an instant evaluation of a situation based on your values and thoughts. Bad values and conclusions yield inappropriate emotions

        He had seen people like Kim and immediately ignored the nonsense and saw kin for what he is. Basically Kim saw this too, felt at ease, enabling them to talk. Same with Putin and China. Trump tells u where he is at, accepts where the other party is at, and then looks for common ground. It’s actually cool to watch

        If anything will result in peace and cooperation, this us it. Would there have been peace and cooperation with hitler- I doubt it. But trumo would have recognized that far earlier than England did
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        I think trumps experience in ruthless New York business prepares him well to deal with foreign leaders. He got to be a billionaire by looking forward for deals to enrich himself. Now I see him doing that for the USA. He will trade respect for respect and he had ticket mab’s number all along. Blustering claims of sending bombshell to the USA were just trash talk. Kim was never going to bomb the USA and trump knew it. So he responded with boasting about how we had bigger bombs. When they met, he gave to Kim personal respect required to move forward. Trump accepted that Kim wanted to survive as leader to n Korea, but stood fast on the requirements for entry into world acceptance. We will see what happens. Kim isn’t going to get freebies like he got from bush and Clinton and Obama though
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    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
      Ayn Rand tried for four years to help him with his self-acknowledged problems. When she found out how much worse he had become with all the dishonesty and irresponsibility in his work for her philosophy, contrary to her prior hopes and expectations, she wrote him off as destructive to her values and that was it. She wrote her article publicly stating the status, the explanation, and her error in judgment, and then dropped it. She didn't spend the rest of her life hating him like the Brandens carried on. She had the future to think of, too, and Branden couldn't be part of it.

      Many copies of the Valliant book for under $10 at https://www.bookfinder.com/search/?au... but I don't know of any ebooks or pdfs.
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        Interesting. By the time of that split, I think I had absorbed the essence of ibjectivism that I could use. I didn’t get into the really deep epistemological work. I did publishing work for reason magazine for a couple of years after college, but bob Poole and Tiber Mach’s really took over the editorial work and made reason magazine a national force

        I knew branden and rand split and to be honest I kind of figured rand expected branden had very high standards that he didn’t meet and that was that
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        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
          By the time of the break he was a long way from meeting high standards!

          I got "into" the epistemology by the second year of taking her seriously because it was helpful in understanding math and science. It still is and I have come a long way since then in applying it. I also found that it shed a lot of light on other kinds of knowledge, including the rest of her philosophy.

          I have some very old issues of Reason from when I ordered back copies. I met Lanny Friedlander but was unimpressed with his emphasis on unphilosophical politics alone, and if I remember correctly, anarchism.
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          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
            I would say you are a very interesting person. You got much more into the details if ibjectivism than u did. You are probably a lot smarter than I am too. I am an engineer who uses creativity to expand on the discoveries of others and apply them in new and different ways. I am a problem solver

            I would hope congress people and Supreme Court justices would by guided by high level objectivist principles
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            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
              I have always been intellectually "interested". Not smarter, just always looking for deeper understanding. It paid off in particular in the kind of work I have done in mathematical analysis in engineering (but not for any patentable inventions). And it paid off in understanding how the viro preservationists use government to take private property in order to stop them. I'm still at it in understanding the nature of concepts in mathematics and physics as they historically developed. Ayn Rand's epistemology is crucial for that.
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              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                I do enjoy discussions with you on that it’s stimulating and reminds me of discussions late at night when I was in college

                Did you have favorite characters in atlas shrugged?
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                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                  I hope it's better than college dorm room bull sessions! But you are right that the idealistic, creative expression from younger people is missing. We used to have both informal and organized enthusiastic discussions all the time -- and they were a lot better than the typical time-wasting bull sessions that so many students drifted into (mostly as an alternative to working).

                  Not many on this forum show an interest in Ayn Rand's ideas. It used to be that interest in an Ayn Rand novel led to all kinds of enthusiastic questions and discussion -- not repetitious conservative politics and axes to grind.

                  As for the characters: Dagny, and Hank Rearden are at the top for me. There were many others that are admirable but don't have the personal connection for me. And John Galt was more abstract, being introduced in personal action only near the end where there wasn't much space left for the more personal character development showing what he was like in the way we saw with the others.
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  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I think I took away a good dose of the value of learning and then applying it to my life apart from what others were doing. So the split was there, but didn’t really mean much to me. I went through a lot of changes during and after college, shedding off Catholicism and struggling with the effects of an emotionally manipulative mother

    I learned a lot from rand and then learned a lot from branden about dealing with emotions He used to have weekly group therapy workshops in LA where I lived. He never talked about breakup with rand at all, just concentrated on integrating objectivist thinking with pre existing emotional problems. I have to say it helped me a lot to be more comfortable and integrated. I took away what I was ready to learn I guess and then moved on to exploit my creativity in business in the 70’s and beyond. I am happy and grateful I was exposed to the work both of them did
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    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
      And you were able to make use of it in living your own successful life without turning it into a substitute for that. Real living is what it's for.
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        Objectivism was never a cult for me. I took from it a quiet confidence that comes from accepting reality and dealing with it There’s always emotional baggage from early childhood experiences, but I was pretty independent with a good sense of self and the idea fostered by MIT that things in the world were understandable by me if I put my mind to it. Went on to become successful inventor and entrepreneur
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  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I have to mention a few things:
    1). Reversing the course of a nation of 300 million people is a massive task involving its citizens for the most part to change their whole philosophy if life
    2). Such a reversal will take many many years, maybe if the order of several generations
    3) The lives of most people alive today in the USA would be over before that happened
    4) For people alive today who already embraced individualism to live in country that embraced individualism , it would need to be a new “gulch” that was self sufficient and very well defended indeed.
    5) The main reason America made the successful split from England was geography and self sufficiency. Those elements are harder to come by today unless the gulch had a very low level of creature comforts
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    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
      The main reason for America's revolution against the British empire was the Enlightenment emphasis on reason and individualism. It was possible to implement because of the geographical distance and ability to be self-sufficient -- and because the American colonies did not have their own entrenched statist centralized government. England had much more freedom than it had previously, making the industrial revolution possible, but it couldn't shake its entrenched statism to become an America.
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        I agree. Also the colonists were a more homogenous group of individualists- enough to stick together and split from the king. I am not sure many of them philosophically understood what they were doing, but they just felt the spark of freedom and acted on it. I think they were children kind of stumbling in the dark looking for the light. It’s amazing they got as far as they did
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        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
          The leaders, like Jefferson and many others, were well steeped in the Enlightenment. I'm not sure how many others were or to what degree, but they certainly had the right individualist sense of life for it. They got as far as they did because of all that.
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          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
            There was a good deal of intellectual inconsistency too. Jefferson had hundreds of slaves to help with his plantation that weren’t freed until his death, which I find at distinct odds with his writings. He was part of the plantation establishment at the time. Monticello was quite large

            By the time the country was formed, many compromises were made, and in subsequent years many “rights” were trampled in the desire to expand the country. It was kind of far from an strict intellectually consistent country
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            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
              There were many slave holders, especially in the south, who were inconsistent, but Jefferson wasn't one of them. He literally thought from observation that the blacks were not capable of more, though he wanted to treat them well and didn't like the slave system. He eventually saw that his inferences had been incorrect.
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              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                BUT. The blacks were good enough to run his plantation. I would dispute his honorable intentions to a substantial degree. He needed workers and they were cheap and he didn’t have to worry about losing them. The slaves were smart enough to run the plantation pretty efficiently for being inferior beings

                He did what he had to do to survive. Just as the country did what it had to do to survive. When it came down to it, sticking to principles wasn’t paramount
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                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                  They didn't run the whole plantation. They were able to do what they were told to and act within that. It was all they knew because it was all they learned. If some of them showed more ability it wasn't recognized as real. Jefferson doubted they had the capacity to make choices for their own personal lives in the way free individuals did, from top to bottom, at the time. Almost everyone thought the blacks were truly inferior by biology, not competent individuals who happened to be enslaved and artificially prevented from becoming more.

                  Much of that attitude, to a lesser degree, carried forward until at least the 1950s, especially in the south. "Darkies" were porters carrying luggage at the train station because that was all they could do, etc. They even "talked funny". They were not seen as normal people, and it wasn't recognized that they appeared that way because they had been kept down, not by inherent limits on potential. Attributing economic motives as making principles irrelevant, as if everyone otherwise recognized blacks as equals, is a Marxist argument.
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                  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                    I think the same attitude is still prevalent in corporations today with regard to employees. Just follow the orders and don’t think
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                    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                      I have never enjoyed working for or with large corporations, but it is because of their 'politics' and atmosphere. The corporate attitude of following bureaucratic policy and submitting to mindless authority is not an attitude of workers being an inferior species; they know very well that the people they demand conformity from are capable of normal human thinking -- and sometimes better than the boss in charge, which tends to get in the way of authority for conformity.
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                      • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                        TO EWV ATTENTION PLEASE
                        Since I am against censorship, I have, to date, refused to block your posts on my topic. Your posts have roamed far afield from the original subject and are no longer relevant. If you wish to continue this seemingly endless string, please set up your own discussion and refrain from posting anything more to this discussion.
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          Most of the entire thread has been off topic from the original topic; this particular subthread left the topic days ago with your own attack on Ayn Rand and subsequent very personal attacks, which a moderator called you out on almost 4 days ago. They included your own "let's you and him fight", which term2 and I have not been doing, egging on the posts. My posts have been direct responses, not "roaming".
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                      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                        I think is a mix of bosses being protectionist and the desire in corporations for there to be stability and predictability So as to meet quarterly projections. If employees deviate from bureaucratic directives, it introduces potentially unwanted variations in outcomes

                        That said, I always thought it best to find people who can do what I do on an equal or better basis. That gives me the time to learn new things

                        Corporate mud level bosses are quite protectionist and fearful of underlings. Too bad really
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                        • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                          ATTENTION TERM 2 While I eschew censorship, this endless string between you and ewv is getting far off the topic. If you and ewv wish to continue this seemingly endless thread, I suggest one of you post your own topic of discussion.
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                          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                            I assume you are some sort of moderator on this forum and therefore feel the need to exert some control over what people do on it. I am not really sure what the problem is, but if you are in control, then what you say goes.
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                            • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
                              I'm not a moderator, I am the person who posted the topic which gives me a certain leeway as to how it's treated.I think that you and ewv are turning it into something other than its original intention. If you wish to continue your debate, I only suggested that you post your own subject for discussion rather than monopolyzing mine..I wouldn't care so much if you stayed on topic. One of the things I find of value is what the Gulchers think about something I post. I have found a good deal of learning. But if my topic is cars it doesn't help to veer off on to sailing ships.
                              See?
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    • Posted by 5 years, 7 months ago
      In the case of France or Russia the people were living in misery. The same cannot be said for the USA. Even our poorest have it better than most middle class in other countries.
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      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
        We take a lot for granted in the USA. Except for theft of about half of what we make and regulation of most things we do, we have basic liberties that a lot of people in other countries don’t have
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        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
          In Europe, including Russia, their misery didn't help them to learn what was right. In Russia, in particular, the people lived in terror and despised the government, but knew nothing about freedom and were afraid of it. They couldn't conceive of living through their own choices, without some government authority telling them what to do. Even in the satellites late in the Soviet Union, engineers and and industrial managers were perplexed over how their counterparts in the US whom they were in contact with could know what to build and try to sell, from machinery to software.

          Once the understanding of living in freedom with the American sense of life with its self-confidence and self-reliance is lost it's very difficult to get it back.
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          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
            True. I would also say that Russian culture is based on sticking with a strong leader who will take over other countries and enjoy the spoils of war
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            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
              Russians weren't enjoying spoils of war; they were miserable. The statist "sticking with a strong leader" is much deeper than that; the statism is the cause of the wars.
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              • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                Actually I was. Thinking more of what happened. After ww2 with the acquisition of the other surrounding countries. And wealth contained tgerein
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                • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                  Could you filter that for grammar and spelling?
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                  • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                    Sorry. Autocorrect seems to make more errors than accurate corrections. Statist countries continue to exist by extracting wealth from the countries and citizens they conquer. Which is what Russia did after ww2
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                    • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                      Stalin seized, dismantled, and moved east German industry into Russia with Roosevelt's approval in accordance with plans dating to well before Yalta. The Soviets survived by looting, but did not prosper from it because its system made prosperity impossible. The Russian people were devastated, not enjoying the constant deprivation.
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                      • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                        Agreed. Collectivism benefits the collectivists at the top. Obama is rich, so are the Clintons, Pelosi, even Maxine waters and the elite Washington overpaid politicians
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                        • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                          And yet I would not say they are enjoying it. They do not seem happy. Would anyone who understands want to be like them? Not just their assets, but the way they think and feel and relate to a world they do not understand. Would you give up your understanding and sense of self for that?
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                          • Posted by term2 5 years, 7 months ago
                            I can sit on a mountaintop and be at peace with no internet, social media, and cell phones. I have been that way for a long time. I have to credit at least part of that to atlas shrugged, although I would be hard pressed to explain why.

                            I get along with animals. I think because of this inner peace. I can’t imagine being some politician worrying what people think of me all the time
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                            • Posted by ewv 5 years, 7 months ago
                              -- or sitting on the rocks looking out at the ocean. It's not caused by Atlas Shrugged, but part of it is not needing socializing.

                              The animals depend on which type: You mean the ones that are value seekers in accordance with their own nature, not the ones who become politicians.
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  • Posted by 5 years, 6 months ago
    I knew a psychologist whose wife was also a psychologist who was a good friend of Branden's.As a result I got to know him quite well and I was quite amused at the break-up between Rand and Branden. For two of the most rational people I ever knew, the break-up was caused for the silliest, make that dumbest of reasons. Of course, being a guy married to the same woman from my youth to my dotage, (64 years) I question the sincerity of their emotions.
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