by Gen La Greca and Marsha Enright
It’s been a year since Stephen Moore’s article, “Atlas Shrugged: from Fiction to Fact in 52 Years,”seemed to ignite an explosion of interest in Ayn Rand. Sales of this prescient novel tripled; two Rand biographies have been selling like hotcakes; and references to her in the media have skyrocketed.
Yet, some free-market defenders continue to repudiate her and her ideas, as they have for decades. It used to be conservatives such as William F. Buckley of National Review trashing Atlas Shrugged; now the critics include libertarians, such as Heather Wilhelm of the Illinois Public Policy Institute, who penned “Is Ayn Rand Bad for the Market?”.
But in their rush to distance themselves from Rand, they succumb to a deadly philosophic trap. It results from their anxious desire to apologize for the individualistic, self-interested motives that actually drive free markets. This anxiety prompts them to defend capitalism on the opposite premise: that capitalism is good only because it is “other-directed”—i.e., that it grants certain groups, such as the poor, opportunities to acquire wealth and power.
Over the decades, this has led such apologists to launch unpersuasive and futile crusades, such as “compassionate conservatism” and “bleeding-heart libertarianism,” which are not defenses of capitalism, but embodiments of its opposite. For example, conservatives and some libertarians plunged headlong into the moral and logical pitfalls of collectivism when, led by “compassionate conservative” Republican president George W. Bush, they created Medicare Part D, then the biggest-ever addition to welfare entitlements.
Likewise, Wilhelm summed up what too many on the right think, when she writes that free markets are best “sold” on the premise that, above all else, they help society’s neediest. She adds that “Rand’s insistence on the folly of altruism, however, tends to overshadow and even invalidate this message.”
You bet it does—and with good reason. That’s because no one can defend capitalism and free markets logically and consistently without a moral validation of enlightened self-interest as the highest good.
After all, the left didn’t rise to power because they had facts and rational arguments on their side. The empirical case for the superiority of capitalism in bringing a better life to the poor is overwhelming, whether we compare Chile to Cuba, Hong Kong to communist China, or the fully communist China of the past to itself today. So, one has to ask: Why haven’t these arguments won over all those who claim to want to help the poor?
The answer is that the left’s ascendance to power wasn’t driven by economic fact but by a moral vision thinly covered with economic claims. This vision was accepted by millions only because of the moral philosophy of self-sacrifice that dominates our culture.
That morality claims that the highest good for each individual is to live for the sake of others—for society or the collective. Ultimately, it implies that each of us is a moral slave to someone else. Whether it’s Marx’s “From each according to his ability, to each according to his need,” or Hitler’s admonition to live for the German Volk, or Pol Pot’s belief that “since he [the individual] is of no use anymore, there is no gain if he lives and no loss if he dies,” the morality of self-sacrifice kills liberty because it subordinates the individual’s life to the group.
This is the morality that brought us the carnage of the 20th century.
The arguments of “compassionate” libertarians and “bleeding-heart” conservatives do nothing to challenge this ethic. They merely try to slip capitalism in under the tent of collectivist moral philosophy, telling everybody, in effect: “Don’t worry; even though sinful, individualistic self-interest drives capitalism, it is good because it can be harnessed to serve groups, such as the poor.”
In other words, these would-be defenders of capitalism merely “me-too” the collectivist moral claim that our primary ethical responsibility should be the welfare of other people. In this view, they march lockstep with those on the left who revile individualism and capitalism as being anti-poor, anti-caring.
Their view couldn’t be further from the truth. Free-market capitalism arises from a social vision that cares about the smallest minority of all: the individual. That vision recognizes the moral superiority of the right of the individual to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness—the very vision identified by Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence and fought for by the Founding Fathers.
What is this right, if not the right of each person to pursue his or her own highest self-interest? Remember, the slogan of the American Revolution was “Don’t tread on me.”
Yet, that “selfish” American Revolution established a social system that created the most productive nation the world has ever seen, with the highest level and broadest distribution of wealth. It was a system based on individual rights, limited government, and equal justice under the law, in which everyone could keep and enjoy the fruits of his or her own efforts.
This system was fair because it gave each person the equal opportunity—and the pride-enhancing challenge—to make the most of his or her life, poor and rich alike. In fact, only a capitalist society can truly serve the interests of the poor and the disadvantaged, as well as the rich and the capable, because it is at root based on justice for the individual. And justice for the individual is justice for all.
This is what makes capitalism morally superior to collectivism.
Ironically, given the prevailing presumptions about self-interest, capitalist societies such as the U.S. are also the most charitable. Our individualistic system created a nation of magnanimity due to our unimpeded productivity, overflowing abundance, and benevolent sympathy for other individuals struggling for their own lives, liberty, and happiness.
It’s amazing that in all their talk of Rand’s “harsh message” and “confrontational language,” many free-market defenders haven’t asked themselves why her writings have inspired millions to become advocates of capitalism. They don’t understand that she completes the 18th century vision of the American Revolution by presenting a morality that fully justifies capitalism and individual freedom.
Rand’s morality of rational, enlightened self-interest defends the individual’s right to his own life, the power of his own liberty, and the glory of his pursuit of his own happiness. She said: “My philosophy, in essence, is the concept of man as a heroic being, with his own happiness as the moral purpose of his life, with productive work as his noblest achievement, and reason as his only absolute.” Her message—that “man’s proper estate is an upright posture, an intransigent mind and a step that travels unlimited roads”—is a message of the glory of the individual, unshackled and free.
We urgently need Rand’s vision of the moral nobility and greatness of a social system based on enlightened self-interest if we, the 21st century advocates of freedom, are to finally free the world from the death grip of collectivism. And that is a vision we must defend with “our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.”
Marsha Familaro Enright is president of the Reason, Individualism, Freedom Institute at the Foundation for the College of the United States.
Gen LaGreca is the author of Noble Vision, an award-winning novel about the struggle for liberty in health care today. Visit her website at http://www.wingedvictorypress.com/.
10 comments:
"...references to her in the media have skyrocketed."
Umm, which media? Aha, I see, the only one that the objectivists/libzs’ like to attack, the most popular Fox News is the only one that made references to Ayn Rand. There have never been any references to Rand from CNN, CBS, NBC and others. But I know that you attack Fox, because of religious talk hosts as O’Reilly, Becks, Hannity, et al.
Great, you enthusiastically quote media (aka Fox News), but at the same time attacking talk hosts of that specific media.
Dinther made a very good point on the other thread. Libz should stop attacking anyone who is not 100% pure libz, because that's the main reason they have turned away from joining or listening to the Libz.
Hayden, the article doesn't mention your favourite source of Christian propaganda. Instead it links directly to two articles in the Wall St Journal, and refers indirectly to many, many other articles on both sides of the Atlantic including the Wall St Journal, the (UK) Telegraph, the (London) Times, the Atlantic, the NY Times and the Washington Post.
So go piss up a stick. :-)
Errr... Anybody else notice a bit of a contradiction in this article:
"They merely try to slip capitalism in under the tent of collectivist moral philosophy, telling everybody, in effect: “Don’t worry; even though sinful, individualistic self-interest drives capitalism, it is good because it can be harnessed to serve groups, such as the poor.”"
Followed by:
"Yet, that “selfish” American Revolution established a social system that created the most productive nation the world has ever seen, with the highest level and broadest distribution of wealth."
----
It seems to me, in *part*, the authors of this article fall for the folly they are discussing.
And re the discussion of Fox on this thread.... I'm a new convert. Absolutely love Glenn Beck. He's a nutter of the most wonderful and entertaining kind.
Good article.
[Welcome back Peter.]
Question was, "Can the free market be saved without Rand?"
Answer is, "No. Unfortunately it can't be."
The reason is exactly as stated in the article. It is always invalid to attempt defense of an ideal by employing its antithesis for the purpose.
LGM
You know, I really don't care how we get a more libertarian society. It matters not the slightest to me whether agitators for one are motivated by a desire to help their fellow man, or some psuedoreligious belief in "objective truth". I would have at least thought that followers of the latter should view practitioners of the former as "useful idiots". But by definition, objectivists don't care about changing things, they just care about being right.
I guess the simple answer, Blair, is this: that if the gains aren't intellectually defensible, then they won't last. And mystic claptrap is not defensible.
Worse, if your only defense of freedom is on the basis of mysticism and primitive superstition, then you hand the weapons of reason and science to the enemies of freedom, even though they have no right to them.
There could be no worse way to shoot freedom in the foot, and to undermine any momentary advances you do make.
On top of that, if there's no conception that any gains you make in the direct of freedom even need to be defended -- no understanding that the primary revolution to be had is one 'inside people's heads' -- then the gains you do make will soon be overturned or misdirected, and freedom itself will then be disparaged.
And that last situation, as you should be aware, is the unfortunate legacy of the Douglas 'Revolution.' For all the hope at the time, the minor rolling back of govt he effected never created a revolution in people's minds (and the 'revolution's' flagbearers never knew they needed to), which is why the architect of that revolution now sits in parliament like Nero's pariah, and his current party gets smaller with every election.
In the end, as the Values Party proved, Ayn Rand was right in observing that “a political battle is merely a skirmish fought with muskets; whereas a philosophical battle is a nuclear war."
If you're going to win victories for freedom, then that's the ground on which you have to fight your battles. And you have to know you need to.
The other side sure as hell do.
Willie wrote: "Errr... Anybody else notice a bit of a contradiction in this article..."
I don't see the contradiction; please expound on that.
I read it as, "Capitalism does ultimately help the poor, but that's not the proper moral grounds for supporting it."
@ Willie
No contradiction that I can see. Capitalism allows individualistic self interest to reign, and it provides the greatest level of general wealth....
Both are collaries of each other (cause and effect, actually), and both are equally valid in defending capitalism.
The point of the article, I think, is that you undercut yourself by promoting the latter, but apologising for (or trying to evade) the former.
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