One nation under Galt: How Ayn Rand’s toxic
philosophy permanently transformed America
The "Atlas Shrugged" author
helped make the United
States one of the most uncaring nations in
the industrial world
BRUCE E. LEVINE,
ALTERNET
“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….To justify and
extol human greed and egotism is to my mind not only immoral, but evil.” — Gore
Vidal, 1961
Only rarely in U.S. history do writers transform
us to become a more caring or less caring nation. In the 1850s, Harriet Beecher
Stowe (1811-1896) was a strong force in making the United States a more humane nation,
one that would abolish slavery of African Americans. A century later, Ayn Rand
(1905-1982) helped make the United
States into one of the most uncaring nations
in the industrialized world, a neo-Dickensian society where healthcare is only
for those who can afford it, and where young people are coerced into huge
student-loan debt that cannot be discharged in bankruptcy.
In 1966, Ronald Reagan wrote in a personal
letter, “Am an admirer of Ayn Rand.” Today, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) credits Rand for inspiring him to go into politics, and Sen. Ron
Johnson (R-WI) calls Atlas Shrugged his “foundation book.” Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX)
says Ayn Rand had a major influence on him, and his son Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY)
is an even bigger fan. A short list of other Rand fans includes Supreme Court
Justice Clarence Thomas; Christopher Cox, chairman of the Security and Exchange
Commission in George W. Bush’s second administration; and former South Carolina governor Mark
Sanford.
But Rand’s impact on U.S. society
and culture goes even deeper.
The
Seduction of Nathan Blumenthal
Ayn Rand’s books such as The Virtue of
Selfishness and her philosophy that celebrates self-interest and disdains
altruism may well be, as Vidal assessed, “nearly perfect in its immorality.”
But is Vidal right about evil? Charles Manson, who himself did not kill anyone,
is the personification of evil for many of us because of his psychological
success at exploiting the vulnerabilities of young people and seducing them to
murder. What should we call Ayn Rand’s psychological ability to exploit the
vulnerabilities of millions of young people so as to influence them not to care
about anyone besides themselves?
While Greenspan (tagged “A.G.” by Rand) was
the most famous name that would emerge from Rand ’s
Collective, the second most well-known name to emerge from the Collective was
Nathaniel Branden, psychotherapist, author and “self-esteem” advocate. Before
he was Nathaniel Branden, he was Nathan Blumenthal, a 14-year-old who read Rand ’s The Fountainhead again and again. He later would
say, “I felt hypnotized.” He describes how Rand
gave him a sense that he could be powerful, that he could be a hero. He wrote
one letter to his idol Rand , then a second. To
his amazement, she telephoned him, and at age 20, Nathan received an invitation
to Ayn Rand’s home. Shortly after, Nathan Blumenthal announced to the world
that he was incorporating Rand in his new
name: Nathaniel Branden. And in 1955, with Rand
approaching her 50th birthday and Branden his 25th, and both in dissatisfying
marriages, Ayn bedded Nathaniel.
What followed sounds straight out of Hollywood , but Rand was straight out of Hollywood , having worked for Cecil B.
DeMille. Rand convened a meeting with Nathaniel, his wife Barbara (also a
Collective member), and Rand ’s own husband
Frank. To Branden’s astonishment, Rand
convinced both spouses that a time-structured affair—she and Branden were to
have one afternoon and one evening a week together—was “reasonable.” Within the
Collective, Rand is purported to have never
lost an argument. On his trysts at Rand’s New
York City apartment, Branden would sometimes shake
hands with Frank before he exited. Later, all discovered that Rand ’s
sweet but passive husband would leave for a bar, where he began his
self-destructive affair with alcohol.
By 1964, the 34-year-old Nathaniel Branden
had grown tired of the now 59-year-old Ayn Rand. Still sexually dissatisfied in
his marriage to Barbara and afraid to end his affair with Rand ,
Branden began sleeping with a married 24-year-old model, Patrecia Scott. Rand , now “the woman scorned,” called Branden to appear
before the Collective, whose nickname had by now lost its irony for both Barbara
and Branden. Rand ’s justice was swift. She
humiliated Branden and then put a curse on him: “If you have one ounce of
morality left in you, an ounce of psychological health—you’ll be impotent for
the next 20 years! And if you achieve potency sooner, you’ll know it’s a sign
of still worse moral degradation!”
After being banished by Rand, Nathaniel
Branden was worried that he might be assassinated by other members of the
Collective, so he moved from New York to Los Angeles , where Rand
fans were less fanatical. Branden established a lucrative psychotherapy
practice and authored approximately 20 books, 10 of them with either “Self” or
“Self-Esteem” in the title. Rand and Branden never reconciled, but he remained
an admirer of her philosophy of self-interest until his recent death in
December 2014.
Ayn Rand’s personal life was consistent
with her philosophy of not giving a shit about anybody but herself. Rand was an ardent two-pack-a-day smoker, and when
questioned about the dangers of smoking, she loved to light up with a defiant
flourish and then scold her young questioners on the “unscientific and
irrational nature of the statistical evidence.” After an x-ray showed that she
had lung cancer, Rand quit smoking and had
surgery for her cancer. Collective members explained to her that many people
still smoked because they respected her and her assessment of the evidence; and
that since she no longer smoked, she ought to tell them. They told her that she
needn’t mention her lung cancer, that she could simply say she had reconsidered
the evidence. Rand refused.
How Rand ’s
Philosophy Seduced Young Minds
When I was a kid, my reading included comic
books and Rand ’s The Fountainhead and Atlas
Shrugged. There wasn’t much difference between the comic books and Rand ’s novels in terms of the simplicity of the heroes.
What was different was that unlike Superman or Batman, Rand
made selfishness heroic, and she made caring about others weakness.
Rand said, “Capitalism and altruism are
incompatible….The choice is clear-cut: either a new morality of rational
self-interest, with its consequences of freedom, justice, progress and man’s
happiness on earth—or the primordial morality of altruism, with its consequences
of slavery, brute force, stagnant terror and sacrificial furnaces.” For many
young people, hearing that it is “moral” to care only about oneself can be
intoxicating, and some get addicted to this idea for life.
I have known several people, professionally
and socially, whose lives have been changed by those close to them who became
infatuated with Ayn Rand. A common theme is something like this: “My ex-husband
wasn’t a bad guy until he started reading Ayn Rand. Then he became a completely
selfish jerk who destroyed our family, and our children no longer even talk to
him.”
To wow her young admirers, Rand would often tell a story of how a smart-aleck book
salesman had once challenged her to explain her philosophy while standing on
one leg. She replied: “Metaphysics—objective reality. Epistemology—reason.
Ethics—self-interest. Politics—capitalism.” How did that philosophy capture
young minds?
Metaphysics—objective reality. Rand offered a narcotic for confused young people:
complete certainty and a relief from their anxiety. Rand
believed that an “objective reality” existed, and she knew exactly what that
objective reality was. It included skyscrapers, industries, railroads, and
ideas—at least her ideas. Rand ’s objective
reality did not include anxiety or sadness. Nor did it include much humor, at
least the kind where one pokes fun at oneself. Rand assured her Collective that
objective reality did not include Beethoven’s, Rembrandt’s, and Shakespeare’s
realities—they were too gloomy and too tragic, basically buzzkillers. Rand preferred Mickey Spillane and, towards the end of
her life, “Charlie’s Angels.”
Epistemology—reason. Rand ’s
kind of reason was a “cool-tool” to control the universe. Rand
demonized Plato, and her youthful Collective members were taught to despise
him. If Rand really believed that the Socratic
Method described by Plato of discovering accurate definitions and clear
thinking did not qualify as “reason,” why then did she regularly attempt it
with her Collective? Also oddly, while Rand
mocked dark moods and despair, her “reasoning” directed that Collective members
should admire Dostoyevsky, whose novels are filled with dark moods and despair.
A demagogue, in addition to hypnotic glibness, must also be intellectually
inconsistent, sometimes boldly so. This eliminates challenges to authority by
weeding out clear-thinking young people from the flock.
Ethics—self-interest. For Rand ,
all altruists were manipulators. What could be more seductive to kids who
discerned the motives of martyr parents, Christian missionaries and U.S. foreign
aiders? Her champions, Nathaniel Branden still among them, feel that Rand ’s view of “self-interest” has been horribly
misrepresented. For them, self-interest is her hero architect Howard Roark
turning down a commission because he couldn’t do it exactly his way. Some of
Rand’s novel heroes did have integrity, however, for Rand
there is no struggle to discover the distinction between true integrity and
childish vanity. Rand ’s integrity was her
vanity, and it consisted of getting as much money and control as possible,
copulating with whomever she wanted regardless of who would get hurt, and her
always being right. To equate one’s selfishness, vanity, and egotism with one’s
integrity liberates young people from the struggle to distinguish integrity
from selfishness, vanity, and egotism.
Politics—capitalism. While Rand often
disparaged Soviet totalitarian collectivism, she had little to say about
corporate totalitarian collectivism, as she conveniently neglected the reality
that giant U.S.
corporations, like the Soviet Union , do not
exactly celebrate individualism, freedom, or courage. Rand was clever and
hypocritical enough to know that you don’t get rich in the United States talking about compliance and
conformity within corporate America .
Rather, Rand gave lectures titled: “America ’s Persecuted Minority: Big
Business.” So, young careerist corporatists could embrace Rand ’s
self-styled “radical capitalism” and feel radical — radical without risk.
In recent years, we have entered a phase
where it is apparently okay for major political figures to publicly embrace Rand despite her contempt for Christianity. In contrast,
during Ayn Rand’s life, her philosophy that celebrated self-interest was a
private pleasure for the 1 percent but she was a public embarrassment for them.
They used her books to congratulate themselves on the morality of their
selfishness, but they publicly steered clear of Rand
because of her views on religion and God. Rand ,
for example, had stated on national television, “I am against God. I don’t
approve of religion. It is a sign of a psychological weakness. I regard it as
an evil.”
Actually, again inconsistent, Rand did have a God. It was herself. She said:
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.”
While Harriet Beecher Stowe shamed
Americans about the United
States ’ dehumanization of African Americans
and slavery, Ayn Rand removed Americans’ guilt for being selfish and uncaring
about anyone except themselves. Not only did Rand
make it “moral” for the wealthy not to pay their fair share of taxes, she
“liberated” millions of other Americans from caring about the suffering of
others, even the suffering of their own children.
The good news is that I’ve seen ex-Rand
fans grasp the damage that Rand ’s philosophy
has done to their lives and to then exorcize it from their psyche. Can the United States
as a nation do the same thing?
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