Posted on 05/14/2014 6:33:32 PM PDT by OddLane
She was also not a man. You forgot that.
~She was also not a man. You forgot that.~
What do you mean?
Pardon me...read it a long time ago.
Two characters, Dagny and Francisco, were blue bloods but most worked for their wealth. John Galt worked for a few years as an automotive engineer then as a railroad laborer.
Dagny and Francisco worked from childhood if I recall correctly
You are correct.
It’s a suggestion for your list of all the things Rand was notsuch as “a good Christian.”
LOL. Remember? Not so much.
You're wrong.
the only way one knows if a person is an atheist is if they are "vocal" about it.
And Rand was very vocal about her disdain for religion, and for being an atheist. I suppose that's why we knew about it many decades ago.
And Rand, at that time, was anything but "renowned" in any way.
Maybe we just define the word differently. Or, maybe you are very young and don't remember the 60's. Rand, and her Objectivist movement, were very well known at the time. Atlas Shrugged was published in '57, and was on the best seller list for 22 weeks. Her Playboy interview in '64 is still popular today. Nathaniel Branden and his group had a whole floor leased in the Empire State Building at this time. But she wasn't renowned? Sure.
I’ll take Reagan at his word, unless you have something that proves otherwise. Maybe he changed his mind after her comments about him being beholden to the religious right. Maybe not. Maybe he was a man who said what he meant and meant what he said. Hey, at least you learned something about Reagan and Rand that you weren’t aware of before. Glad I could help.
I won’t take you at your word, if you are going to try and twist about the blandest thank you note that we have ever seen from a candidate, into a ringing endorsement of Ayn Rand.
Reagan was no libertarian, and so far, you haven’t proven he was a true admirer of Ayn Rand.
Dear Mr. Vandersteel:
Thanks very much for the pamphlet. Am an admirer of Ayn Rand but hadnt seen this study.
Sincerely, Ronald Reagan
Now do you have more comments from Reagan on Ayn Rand, or is that sad little note from 1966, it?
I read Atlas Shrugged in 1960 at the age of 24 and became a student of the Nathaniel Branden Institute that fall. I’ve been an Objectivist ever since. I think I know what I’m talking about.
In any case, after watching Part I, I'm going to take a pass.
The few people I know who saw the sequel were underwhelmed, to say the least.
A lot of people thought the girl who played Dagney Taggart was miscast. They were learning from their mistakes and the second one did better.
I need to prove nothing. You should let it go.
Atlas Shrugged, to this day, remains a testament to Rand's anti-Christian philosophy.
You will take Reagan at his “WORD”?
Trying to twist a generic thank you note.Dear Mr. Vandersteel:
Thanks very much for the pamphlet. Am an admirer of Ayn Rand but hadnt seen this study.
Sincerely, Ronald Reagan
Into a permanent, and public statement, and a part of history that Reagan was an “admirer” of Ayn Rand, is a heck of a stretch, for a generic thank you note.
You are making that little note into a Reagan position statement on Ayn Rand.
What was a candidate supposed to say to a company president who admired Ayn Rand so much that he sent a pamphlet to the governor candidate?
Got any more of this definitive history?
You have it backwards. No one had heard of Ayn Rand or her philosophy in 1960. Sure, she had readers, but that was it. It took Paul Ryan to make her famous.
I feel sorry for her in that regard.
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