Posts Tagged ‘Ayn Rand’

The Limits of Libertarianism

July 29th, 2011 by John Feehery

I like to call myself a Libertarian, but I am really not.

I don’t really want government to disappear.  While I read The Fountainhead in college, and I admit I have found it to be influential in my life, I think Ayn Rand was a little kooky and her objectivism philosophy is unworkable in the real world.

My brother, the Tea Partier is a Libertarian.  He wants government to shrink dramatically.  He wants police forces to be shrunk, he wants teacher’s pensions cut, he wants most regulatory bodies eliminated.  He finds government to be oppressive and he wants it to be gone.

He also believes that for the last forty-five years, America has been living a lie.   He hates the military industrial complex, he hates the Federal Reserve, he wants to go back to a Gold Standard.   He thinks we should never
have gone into Iraq and believes that the Soviet Union would have fallen without the Reagan buildup, and he believes that the banking system in this country is essentially corrupt.

He also finds Michele Bachmann to be appealing and he appreciates what Joe Walsh is doing in stopping the debt limit extension.

On the Nature of Freedom in a Multi-Cultural Society

June 28th, 2010 by John Feehery

Taking my dog out for a walk in my neighborhood, I passed by two grand old houses that were clearly in a state of disrepair.  I saw my friend Tony, who lives next to them, and asked what the back story was.  He told me about a lady who owned several houses on Capitol Hill, where I live, who moved away but keeps ownership of the houses.

“It’s kind of a fetish thing with her.  As soon as the DC government threatens to tear the houses down, she pays her back taxes and they back off,” Tony said.

The houses are eyesores.  Their floors are crumbling in.  Who knows what goes on inside of them?

Fetish or no, the owner’s actions are irresponsible, a threat to her neighbors’ property and a perfect reason for the government to move in and take action.

Government exists for a reason:  To take collective action on behalf of the people when the general welfare requires it.

The story of the abandoned houses got me thinking about the nature of freedom in a multi-cultural society as big and as complex as the United States.  The rise of the Tea Party movement has challenged the 20th century consensus for what is and what isn’t the appropriate role for government.

Stand and Deliver

April 1st, 2010 by John Feehery

As I read the New York times this morning, for some reason my thoughts turned to Ayn Rand.

Rand, famous objectivist philosopher and author of the influential books Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead, would have nodded her head in appreciation to the life described in this obituary:

“Jaime Escalante, the high school teacher whose ability to turn out high-achieving calculus students from a poor Hispanic neighborhood in East Los Angeles inspired the 1988 film “Stand and Deliver,” with Edward James Olmos in the starring role, died Tuesday at his son’s home in Rosedale, Calif. He was 79 and lived in Cochabamba, Bolivia.

Success, acclaim and the celebrity status that came with “Stand and Deliver” brought strife. Mr. Escalante butted heads with the school’s administration and fellow teachers, some jealous of his fame, others worried that he was creating his own fief. The teacher’s union demanded that his oversubscribed calculus classes be brought down in size.

In 1991, Mr. Escalante left Garfield to teach at Hiram Johnson High School in Sacramento. Without him, Garfield’s calculus program withered. In 2001 he retired and returned to Bolivia.”