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| [Reprinted from The
Gargoyle, November, 1960] |
"Get the hell out of my way" is the delightfully pungent
demand which John Galt, the hero of Ann Rand's newest novel, Atlas
Shrugged throws at the looters in control of the American
government. As a result of their bureaucratic controls, the producers
and inventors, of which John Galt is one, are finding it increasingly
difficult to produce with the result that the nation's productive system
is grinding to a halt, with the T gradual breakdown of Taggart
Transcontinental Railroad symbolic of the economy's disintegration. To
beat the looters at their game, John Galt convinces the leading
industrialists to leave their businesses and disappear into a Shangri-La
he has established hidden in the mountains of Colorado. When the nation
is in a shambles, they are to return to direct the resurrection of the
nation based on a free economy and a government limited to protection of
life and property and the sanctity of contract.
The book is a brilliant, fighting defense of the dignity of the
individual and of private enterprise. Miss Rand, who has written other
powerful novels attacking socialistic concepts, emphasizes in this book
that above all a man must be a man and not a spineless, cringing
security seeker. That we need this to be dinned into our minds today is
a terrible indictment of the low state to which we have fallen and her
description of real men is a thrilling experience.
That is not to say that she is without faults. As a matter of fact, she
attacks many of our cherished concepts and thus, no doubt, will be
damned as often as she is praised. For example, she condemns the concept
of the brotherhood of man because she believes it is the justification
of socialism. Of course, socialists and do-gooders have perverted this
concept but Miss Rand in attempting to correct their error goes too far.
Recognition of the fact that men are all brothers really means man
realizes that he is not just one of the lower animals, but rather has
within himself something which makes it necessary for him to help a
fellow human being in distress. With the exception of the paternal
instinct, the lower animals are utterly indifferent to their fellow
animals. If a dog is drowning, another dog will not rescue him. If a man
sees another man drowning, he will make an attempt to save him, or at
least feel he should. But this concept when carried too far can be
corruptive instead of benevolent as when politicians and bureaucrats use
it as an excuse to give themselves jobs administering relief throughout
the world. That Miss Rand really believes men should help one another in
the sense that Jesus of Nazareth did is evident as she has her hero
saved by his friends, which they would not do if they acted the way she
has them talk.
Unfortunately, Miss Rand suffers from the same misconception of the
rulership of the world that Plato, the socialists and the libertarians
have. All of them believe that the mass of people must be led by some
ruling intelligentsia. Plato has his philosopher-kings; the socialists
have their bureaucrats; the libertarians have their educable elite,
while Miss Rand has her big industrialists. Now, men can live only under
two types of economy -- a directed one or a spontaneous one. A directed
economy is like an array in which all orders are given from above and
must be implicitly obeyed. Such is a socialistic economy. The other one,
the voluntary or market economy is one in which the customer is king,
and by buying, or not buying votes for or against the production of
goods and services. Both the libertarians and Miss Rand recognize and
strongly advocate a free economy and private property, but they still do
not adequately appreciate that the customer is the directing party and
no geniuses are needed to lead them. Every man is a leader in his own
sphere no matter how high or low.
As a matter of fact, the real hero of this novel is one of the mass. He
is Eddie Willers who stays to the end trying to keep the railroad
running thru thick and thin when those, who consider themselves his
leaders start their interminable wars and mess things up.
If only enough people will read her book maybe the next time the
politicians and bureaucrats start interfering they too will say, "Get
the hell out of my. way."
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