Just joined
I've read Atlas Shrugged a couple years ago. Due the many protests going on and how Trump is trying to improve America I have been studying a lot more on politics and wanted to join here to read up on your opinions and discussions. If you have any top 10 books or articles or websites or blogs or anything else you would like to share with a newbie then I would gladly accept them with gratitude. Cheers.
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Anarchy is impossible to implement in civilized society. The notion of "markets" for force somehow leading to utopian protection of our rights is a floating abstraction impossible to implement anywhere. So is rationalistic manipulation of "definitions" without regard for the meaning of concepts. It is easy to implement anarchy for uncivilized society where coercion is a constant threat and reality.
This is not a matter of people not yet being "ready" for anarchism while wistfully dreaming of the day when an imagined utopian floating abstraction is somehow possible; the arbitrary use of force is not "ready" for rational human beings and never will be.
In addition to protection from criminals and crackpot anarchists imposing their variety of imagined utopias by force, rational people do require a government, properly conceived to protect the rights of the individual against arbitrary force in general and to establish objective law so that everyone knows in advance what is not permitted.
Those new to Ayn Rand can read her explanation of government in essays such as "Man's Rights" and "The Nature of Government".
The topic of this thread was initiated by someone new to Ayn Rand's ideas and seeking to find out more. It is not a place to spread confusion by those who do not understand Ayn Rand's philosophy themselves, pushing anarchism as an ideal somehow compatible with her philosophy and with civilization -- while recruiting for anti-Ayn Rand floating abstractions with repeated promotion for the resurrection of 40-50 year old anarchist utopian tracts about "markets" for force long ago discredited and rejected for good reason.
It seems to me that anarchy may be impossible to implement in an uncivilized society.
Anarchy simply means "no government". And as I stated earlier in this thread I do not believe that humanity is ready for "no government". But the idea is interesting. Most here, I believe, think that a very limited, small, non-intrusive government of some form to be the ideal (along the lines laid out in the U. S. Constitution). I found Rand's description of Galt's Gulch in Atlas Shrugged to be an ideal to strive for. Was there a government there? Certainly not formally. Does it qualify as a small society without a government? You tell me. Would you fear Hank Rearden or any of the others in the Gulch? What if the world were populated with such people? Would there then need to be a government? Completely rational objective beings may not require a government. In that world if a dispute arises between myself and another we will figure out who is right -- if it is me he will learn, if it is him I will learn. If the issue is difficult we may contract with a third party to help find resolution. From Galt's speech we learn that no one has the right to initiate the use of force. If I adhere to that principle then I will seek to remedy any inadvertent breech I may make and so will others that follow the same principle.
For some very interesting stories involving this topic you might like to read some of the works of L. Neal Smith. I also think you might find the "Market for Liberty" of interest. In both you will find more detailed descriptions of these ideas.
The moral basis of limited government protecting the rights of the individual is the moral necessity of using reason to pursue one's values, which in turn requires use of rational persuasion in dealing with others and the protection of the rights of the individual against those who use force to impose what they want. It is not based on hedonistic whim worship obliterating the distinction between force and reason. Anarchy is not a moral ideal and is impossible to implement in civilized society.
If we take the term anarchy literally, it is completely incompatible with the concepts of civilization or society. Never in the entirety of human history it ever existed as an intended condition. Set aside temporary situations consequent to major disasters.
So, can I ask you, in few sentences, for this audience, to describe a society living in anarchy the way you visualize it?
Thanks in advance.
For the nature of the "street protests" in particular, see Ayn Rand's philosophical analysis of riots such as Berkeley "protests" in the name of "free speech" (in the 1960s) in her anthology *Return of the Primitive: The Anti-Industrial Revolution", particularly in this context the article "The Cashing-In: The Student Rebellion". The root causes and the mentality behind them are same now.
For a discussion on this forum of sources on Ayn Rand see https://www.galtsgulchonline.com/post...
Without understanding the philosophy the politics cannot be understood or changed. Ayn Rand was politically neither a conservative nor a modern liberal. They are a false alternative.
Thanks. If I tap my name on the top of this page a drop down offers a saved option. That is where I would like to save.
DOB
I would suggest anything Rand, but "Anthem" the 90-page novel will help you ease into sharing the ideas with youth or those not rady to read in dept, to get them interested.
Also:
The Law by Frederic Bastiat
On Liberty by John Stuart Mill
UN Agenda 21: Environmental Piracy by Dr. Ileana Johnson Paugh who will show you what real slavery un the UN will be like
Websites
www.americanpolicy.org The Amrican Policy Center which connects the dots between local government, school indoctrination and the UN goal for one world government, end to property rights and end of capitalism, whenich they have spoken of openly.
Canada Feree Press website will also put things in perspective.
I larked anything Jean Paul Sartre as well, his idea of choices and responsibility, but stay away from his later Marxist phase.
More cognizant of the importance of individual freedom would be a virtue.
Knowing the limits of federal power would be a real plus.
In the meantime, we MUST take every "news" report with a YUGE grain of salt and, while working to inform people and trying to induce rationality among them, and helping explain that reason is our best tool and weapon, we can also hope Mr. Trump does try to improve things.
Thank you for your response.
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