"As far as the individual is concerned, his ethical duty is to be the selfless, voiceless, rightless slave of any need, claim or demand asserted by others. The motto “dog eat dog”—which is not applicable to capitalism nor to dogs—is applicable to the social theory of ethics. The existential monuments to this theory are Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia."-Virtue of Selfishness
Just plain astounding. As I read the article I found myself sitting here with my mouth hanging open. Is this where we're going too, so we can all be equal, and share in the wealth?
I've been reading Atlas Shrugged for the first time. I had watched AS I & II and wanted to read the whole book before AS III is released. I just reached the point where Hank Reardon is forced to sign the "gift" certificates giving up his rights to his patents. You're right, just exchange Nespresso for Reardon Metal.
If you mean the slide toward mediocrity, it won't go on long. It only takes a few years. Once mediocrity becomes law, though, it appears to take a generation or two for people to lay down. The first generation works on out of pride, then habit. In spite of a growing number of slackers, the second generation works on out of deference to their elders and the feeling that something will change. It's the third generation that gets it; forced to watch those who do nothing handed same life as those who work; they eventually lay down and without outside aid, the economy collapses. I hear the same story in Cuba I heard in Russia: "They pretended to pay us, so we pretended to work".
I've always thought Rand a romantic. She hoped the achievers would quit and band together and achieve in their own world. In real world experiments it doesn't seem to happen that way. The achievers finally give up, lay down and live in the same misery as the takers.
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Jan
"As far as the individual is concerned, his ethical duty is to be the selfless, voiceless, rightless slave of any need, claim or demand asserted by others. The motto “dog eat dog”—which is not applicable to capitalism nor to dogs—is applicable to the social theory of ethics. The existential monuments to this theory are Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia."-Virtue of Selfishness
If you mean the slide toward mediocrity, it won't go on long. It only takes a few years. Once mediocrity becomes law, though, it appears to take a generation or two for people to lay down. The first generation works on out of pride, then habit. In spite of a growing number of slackers, the second generation works on out of deference to their elders and the feeling that something will change. It's the third generation that gets it; forced to watch those who do nothing handed same life as those who work; they eventually lay down and without outside aid, the economy collapses. I hear the same story in Cuba I heard in Russia: "They pretended to pay us, so we pretended to work".
I've always thought Rand a romantic. She hoped the achievers would quit and band together and achieve in their own world. In real world experiments it doesn't seem to happen that way. The achievers finally give up, lay down and live in the same misery as the takers.