Objectivism and the National Parks
Posted by empedocles 10 years, 8 months ago to Philosophy
Having learned about Atlas Shrugged through the movies and subsequently through a reading of the book, I'm struggling to reconcile the National Parks along with her pro-business views. For example, what are your thoughts on Hetch Hetchy? I struggle with it as a backpacker and a businessman.
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I don't know how it works in state-to-federal government transactions. I don't know if anybody knows.
Just keep in mind, [A] no government gets money to buy things from anywhere except taxes and fees. [B] Do they decide that they get what they say they need? Remember 20th Century Motor Co!
Governments are omnivorous monsters, devouring anything in their paths, and most of what they leave behind is deep footprints and poop.
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/f3...
I read the article you posted, and was curious about which subject, of the many in the article, you were interested in discussing. The question "what do you think?" remains too broad. Your revised questions are better.
Should it have been dammed? I have no idea - there's no way to wrap my mind around every single element of that decision. In general, if done correctly, I am in favor of hydroelectricity.
National Parks? My very first philosophy teacher - a escapee from Soviet Russia - said that the very first thing that should be done in discussion is to define the terms, so we know what we are talking about. So....
National Parks. Who originally owned the land? How was it acquired? How are its various facilities maintained? Who has access? Who makes the rules, who can influence those rules, and how? in shorter words, what is a National Park?
When I know what you'd like to talk about, I'll see about breaking the time free to talk about how that relates to Objectivism. There's lots to talk about here.
WHAT?! "eminent domain is necessary"??!" defend that statement, if you can. I don't think it can be done without twisting yourself into a collectivist pretzel.
The Hetch Hetchy question requires the reader to inform themselves about it and come up with an opinion.
Some simple questions to think about. Should it have been dammed? Should we have National Parks? Then, how do you reconcile your answers with your thoughts on objectivism?
I've got no issue with the fed gov carving up a chunk of land for a military base - it's a necessary function. Ditto for something like Washington DC office space. However, I think you're getting into frivolity when you're declaring tens of thousands of acres off limits because "it looks pretty".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_lan...
Excerpt: "As of March 2012, out of the 2.27 billion acres in the country, about 28% of the total was owned by the Federal government..."
I don't think the founders would approve.
We could talk about even these questions for days [and probably will] but how about starting with a smaller, more specific question?
point for asking for our "thoughts" rather than our "feelings" or "beliefs". [If you don't know, that's the little number to the left of your name. You get them for saying something interesting, bringing up an interesting topic, and sometimes for a brilliant turn of phrase. It's not a "like", it's a "may I have some more, please?".