Welcome to the May Madness Book Tournament! Topic

My suggestion is to leave Atlas Shrugged home. Obviously. Seriously, that book will rot your brain. 

The Cobb book is on my must-read list, it may give us back one of baseball's very greatest players as a presentable human being, and take away an unfair charge of racism in his case (based on some quotes citing Cobb on Willie Mays, on allowing African Americans to play and on Luis Aparacio, and evidence that the people he beat up on a few occasions were white and the facts changed later by a journalist who hated Cobb, it seems likely that the charge was always unfasuggir). 

I would suggest on politics Owen Jones, The Establishment: And how they get away with it. It is mostly about British politics, but much of it could apply to any Western country in the past decades, as well as Noami Klein, The Shock Doctrine. 

These are good antidotes to Atlas Shrugged. Fiction: haven't started the Game of Thrones series yet (watch the show), because I know I won't put it down once I start and have, you know, occasionally work to do. About which....back to it.
6/11/2015 6:46 AM
Atlas Shrugged is a great way to kill a long flight.
6/11/2015 2:00 PM
Posted by italyprof on 6/11/2015 6:46:00 AM (view original):
My suggestion is to leave Atlas Shrugged home. Obviously. Seriously, that book will rot your brain. 

The Cobb book is on my must-read list, it may give us back one of baseball's very greatest players as a presentable human being, and take away an unfair charge of racism in his case (based on some quotes citing Cobb on Willie Mays, on allowing African Americans to play and on Luis Aparacio, and evidence that the people he beat up on a few occasions were white and the facts changed later by a journalist who hated Cobb, it seems likely that the charge was always unfasuggir). 

I would suggest on politics Owen Jones, The Establishment: And how they get away with it. It is mostly about British politics, but much of it could apply to any Western country in the past decades, as well as Noami Klein, The Shock Doctrine. 

These are good antidotes to Atlas Shrugged. Fiction: haven't started the Game of Thrones series yet (watch the show), because I know I won't put it down once I start and have, you know, occasionally work to do. About which....back to it.
Agree on Ayn Rand.  Fun excerpt here from 1961 by Gore Vidal:

www.esquire.com/news-politics/a4595/comment-0761/

Now, before I'm investigated for having taken the un-American stand that sex is a minor department of morality, let me try to show what I think is morally important. Ayn Rand is a rhetorician who writes novels I have never been able to read. She has just published a book, For the New Intellectual, subtitled The Philosophy of Ayn Rand; it is a collection of pensées and arias from her novels and it must be read to be believed. Herewith, a few excerpts from the Rand collection.
 
• "It was the morality of altruism that undercut American and is now destroying her."
 
• "Capitalism and altruism are incompatible; they are philosophical opposites; they cannot co-exist in the same man or in the same society. Today, the conflict has reached its ultimate climax; the choice is clear-cut: either a new morality of rational self-interest, with its consequence of freedom…or the primordial morality of altruism with its consequences of slavery, etc."
 
• Then from one of her arias for heldentenor: "I am done with the monster of 'we,' the word of serfdom, of plunder, of misery, falsehood and shame. And now I see the face of god, and I raise this god over the earth, this god whom men have sought since men came into being, this god who will grant them joy and peace and pride. This god, this one word: 'I.'"
 
• "The first right on earth is the right of the ego. Man's first duty is to himself."
 
• "To love money is to know and love the fact that money is the creation of the best power within you, and your passkey to trade your effort for the effort of the best among men."
• "The creed of sacrifice is a morality for the immoral…."
 
This odd little woman is attempting to give a moral sanction to greed and self interest, and to pull it off she must at times indulge in purest Orwellian newspeak of the "freedom is slavery" sort. What interests me most about her is not the absurdity of her "philosophy," but the size of her audience (in my campaign for the House she was the one writer people knew and talked about). She has a great attraction for simple people who are puzzled by organized society, who object to paying taxes, who dislike the "welfare" state, who feel guilt at the thought of the suffering of others but who would like to harden their hearts. For them, she has an enticing prescription: altruism is the root of all evil, self-interest is the only good, and if you're dumb or incompetent that's your lookout.
 
She is fighting two battles: the first, against the idea of the State being anything more than a police force and a judiciary to restrain people from stealing each other's money openly. She is in legitimate company here. There is a reactionary position which has many valid attractions, among them lean, sinewy, regular-guy Barry Goldwater. But it is Miss Rand's second battle that is the moral one. She has declared war not only on Marx but on Christ. Now, although my own enthusiasm for the various systems evolved in the names of those two figures is limited, I doubt if even the most anti-Christian free-thinker would want to deny the ethical value of Christ in the Gospels. To reject that Christ is to embark on dangerous waters indeed. For to justify and extol human greed and egotism is to my mind not only immoral, but evil. For one thing, it is gratuitous to advise any human being to look out for himself. You can be sure that he will. It is far more difficult to persuade him to help his neighbor to build a dam or to defend a town or to give food he has accumulated to the victims of a famine. But since we must live together, dependent upon one another for many things and services, altruism is necessary to survival. To get people to do needed things is the perennial hard task of government, not to mention of religion and philosophy. That it is right to help someone less fortunate is an idea which ahs figured in most systems of conduct since the beginning of the race. We often fail. That predatory demon "I" is difficult to contain but until now we have all agreed that to help others is a right action. Now the dictionary definition of "moral" is: "concerned with the distinction between right and wrong" as in "moral law, the requirements to which right action must conform." Though Miss Rand's grasp of logic is uncertain, she does realize that to make even a modicum of sense she must change all the terms. Both Marx and Christ agree that in this life a right action is consideration for the welfare of others. In the one case, through a state which was to wither away, in the other through the private exercise of the moral sense. Miss Rand now tells us that what we have thought was right is really wrong. The lesson should have read: One for one and none for all.
 
Ayn Rand's "philosophy" is nearly perfect in its immorality, which makes the size of her audience all the more ominous and symptomatic as we enter a curious new phase in our society. Moral values are in flux. The muddy depths are being stirred by new monsters and witches from the deep. Trolls walk the American night. Caesars are stirring in the Forum. There are storm warnings ahead. But to counter trolls and Caesars, we have such men as Lewis Mumford whose new book, The City in History, inspires. He traces the growth of communities from Neolithic to present times. He is wise. He is moral: that is, he favors right action and he believes it possible for us to make things better for us (not "me"!). He belongs to the currently unfashionable line of makers who believe that if something is wrong it can be made right, whether a faulty water main or a faulty idea. May he flourish!
6/11/2015 2:16 PM
This post has a rating of , which is below the default threshold.
Evening redness in the west,ayn rand or mccarthy, cant seem to figure which got hit harder in the head as a child,or(which disturbs me more)
6/14/2015 9:53 PM
Thanks crazystengel, wonderful excerpt from the late, great Gore Vidal. 

We are in Ayn Rand now of course, we live there all of us in whatever country. So if you are shot in a church, it is your fault for not having a gun ready, though the whole idea of a Christian church is pretty much the opposite of a place where men and women must arm themselves against each other. 

Personally, I think it is time that someone dig the old misanthropic self-appointed deity "I" up and drive a stake through where her heart was supposed to be. Just to be on the safe side. In the meantime, I think, having left the Catholic Church forever at the age of 12, I will read the Pope's encyclical "Laudato Si" instead. If people pay attention to that document instead of Atlas Shrugged, there might still be an earth for my daughter to raise her children on, and a society still standing for my grandkids to grow up into. If Rand remains influential, the world of "Game of Thrones" will look like a happy utopia before long, and this week we took another step in that direction. Choose wisely. 
6/21/2015 7:45 PM
◂ Prev 12345
Welcome to the May Madness Book Tournament! Topic

Search Criteria

Terms of Use Customer Support Privacy Statement

© 1999-2024 WhatIfSports.com, Inc. All rights reserved. WhatIfSports is a trademark of WhatIfSports.com, Inc. SimLeague, SimMatchup and iSimNow are trademarks or registered trademarks of Electronic Arts, Inc. Used under license. The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.