by Matt-Chicago » Fri Aug 05, 2011 8:06 pm
It's amusing but ultimately sad reading the immature and discredited objectivist nonsense which has been denounced and renounced by all but the most ideologically idealistic and foolish. Most young subscribers to Ayn Rand's reprehensible nonsense get over it by the time they graduate college - as they should.
For those here who don't know about objectivism - it's basically a philosophy which glorifies individualism, selfishness, greed, and abhors altruism or basically trying to do or plan anything for the benefit of others or society as a whole.
Even Alan Greenspan had to renounce it after the financial collapse saying he had to change his entire world view. The completely unregulated derivatives market, which is today over $500 trillion was left to nothing but "the market" and it imploded and had to be bailed out, and the worst is probably yet to come.
We'd have had a housing slump due to bad mortgages, but nowhere near the $12 trillion hole shot into our economy because of the bundling, selling, insuring, swapping, etc - of these mortgages. The fact that so many mortgages defaulted is only one piece of many as to why the collapse happened and continues.
The fact that we allow multinational corporations to play all the peoples of the world against each other for who will work for the lowest wage, under the worst conditions, with the least rules and regulations to protect workers, consumers, and the environment - is not some natural law or written on some great tablets handed down from above. It's man made and completely within our ability to change it and I think we should.
When you think about the last 500 years of history - objectivist fantasy seems to fly out the window.
Did the market create the slave abolitionists? How about the eight hour word day? Sick pay? Weekends? Workplace safety? Consumer protections? Did the market get rid of Jim Crow legalized discrimination? Did the market clean up our air and water? Did the market provide for a secure retirement for seniors? Or did the powers who control market fight every single one of these every step of the way?
The US used to be a third world country without all of those things I listed above. How did it change? How did we get a middle class instead of just a small group of wealthy and powerful and masses of basically feudal slaves? We got those things not through the market, but through people willing to work for the benefit of society and others, through collective action, and *gasp* through government. Don't get me wrong, capitalism is great at creating wealth and spurring innovation and I don't want to see that go away but it is very lousy at providing any measure of security or stability. The issue is that you can still have a government and society which guarantees some standard of living for its citizens regardless of wealth, power, ability, or other personal circumstances and still leave plenty for the market. Guaranteeing that everyone has access to health care will not hurt entrepreneurism, nor will a guaranteed paltry retirement like social security, nor will assistance to poor families, nor will regulations to protect workers, consumers, and the environment. This is what generations of Americans have struggled for and what is currently being taken away and for what? So the people with all the wealth and power can get even more wealth and power. Because five vacation houses are better than four even if it means the elderly eating cat food and corpses rotting in the streets.
Being for rules of the road does not make you anti automobile. Being for seat belts does not mean you hate people driving.
Politeness is a discipline that compels respectful behavior. Morality is like a politeness of the soul, an etiquette of the inner life, a code of duties, a ceremonial of the essential.