I was responding to a poster who referred to US history. Try to herd those cats and focus.Quote from Lucrum:
Aside from it's own dark cloud of slavery, Canada has an impressive and remarkable history as well.
I was responding to a poster who referred to US history. Try to herd those cats and focus.Quote from Lucrum:
Aside from it's own dark cloud of slavery, Canada has an impressive and remarkable history as well.
Quote from Thunderdog:
Rand was one-dimensional and naive. Her take on economics, as expressed in her novels, was fairly laughable.
That's fine. But she doesn't end it there. She takes it to a cardboard cutout extreme and, in the process, loses her way:Quote from Dr. Zhivodka:
The one poignant thought I was left with after reading all of Rand's works was "take care of yourself(and your loved ones)" and therefore not be a burden on society.
The most noble thing one can do for one's society is live and prosper and in doing so not be a burden on thy neighbor.
Quote from Thunderdog:
That's fine. But she doesn't end it there.
http://elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&postid=2495002&highlight=ambition#post2495002
Quote from OPTIONAL777:
Randites like Rand because she told narcissists that is it "good to be a narcissist."
Kind of like Gordon Gekko saying "greed is good."
Rand was not very evolved, which is why her primitive shallow thinking is not taught much in philosophy classes on major universities...
Her appeal the self absorbed "me" generation says it all...
Quote from Thunderdog:
Perhaps I am mistaken, but there may be more differences than similarities in your comparison. And if you are indeed correct, then what was Rand railing about, since the two of her books that I read are set in the US? No, I think Rand crossed the line quite comfortably into one-dimensional fanaticism. And, sure enough, it drew a crowd. Not so much unlike some modern-day one-dimensional fanatics drawing a crowd today, wouldn't you say?