An Australians view of Ayn Rand

Republican vice-presidential candidate Paul Ryan might claim inspiration from Ayn Rand, but that doesn't mean he shares her ideology, writes Chris Berg.

Paul Ryan told an audience in 2005 that "the reason I got into public service" was the novelist Ayn Rand.

That makes no sense at all.

Mitt Romney's vice-presidential candidate may be fond of Rand but Rand would not have been fond of him. She hated the idea of "public service".

No, her ideal pursuits were industry and science and art. By Rand's death in 1982, she had elaborated this view over two best-selling novels (Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead) and numerous essays and treatises.

Rand admired people who produced things; people who created value. The people opposed to producers are "looters" and "moochers". They take that value and redistribute it to rent-seeking businesses and the welfare state. They are at home with the government and the tax system; they live in a world of subsidies and congressional hearings ... and bailouts.

Paul Ryan supported the bank and automotive bailouts, among the most obscene examples of looting in American history. He now says he regrets those votes, and claims to oppose "corporate welfare" passionately.

His remorse would have done little for Rand. There was nothing she disliked more than inconsistency in the name of politics.

Bailouts and inconsistency are not the only differences between the novelist and the candidate. Ryan claimed his budget plan was based on his Catholic faith. Rand despised religion. Ryan is a fan of Ronald Reagan. Rand thought the Gipper was "trying to take us back to the Middle Ages".

The war on drugs, civil liberties, abortion, take your pick: Rand and Ryan part more often than they converge. She described the modern conservative movement as the "God-family-country swamp".

So it's hard to understand the hyperventilating that has greeted the announcement that Ryan will join Romney on the presidential ticket. In the New Yorker, Jane Meyer suggested that by picking such a dedicated Ayn Rand fan, Romney had "added at least the imprint of an extra woman".


Ryan is a common type. He apparently insists interns read Atlas Shrugged when they join his staff. Politicians like to think they are in the business of ideas, but that's nonsense. Politics is the business of power. Ideas are an optional extra, more useful for appealing to already committed supporters than formulating policy.


Ayn Rand's books are abused in this way more than most. Her novels may not be great literary works, but are rich and readable (something you could not say about Friedrich Hayek's dense prose, for instance). More than any other iconic free market writer, she creates a world with its own specific - that is, strict - moral code. And moral codes developed through fiction are seductive in a way that economic treatises are not.

We are so used to popular culture praising public service that the story of a heroic industrialist is highly subversive. If progressive thinkers want to hunt down the source of Rand's peculiar appeal, it will be found there - radicalism is always appealing. Right now there are few more truly radical notions than private success as noble, or of capitalism as admirable.

Rand has a reputation. But she did not believe virtue was a reflection of wealth. She was careful to draw portraits not only of industrialists but of workers and artisans. One small passage in Atlas Shrugged is more suggestive of Rand's world view than any of her later claims about altruism and Aristotle: she describes a train engineer as having "the ease of an expert, so confident that it seemed casual, but [his] was the ease of a tremendous concentration, the concentration on one's task that has the ruthlessness of an absolute".

Simply put, her novels are about human excellence, small and large. The plot of The Fountainhead pivots on an architect refusing to compromise his unique artistic vision. You can imagine the appeal. And, of course, opposed to such achievement are the predatory looters with powers to tax and regulate it all away.

Does it all seem a bit cartoonish? Surely no more cartoonish than those stories about evil industrialists and heartless capitalists defeated by noble truth seekers and crusaders for the underclass. Rand was working in a popular fiction genre full of heavy-handed socialist tracts like Robert Tressell's The Ragged-Trousered Philanthropists or the novels of Upton Sinclair.

The difference is that most of those socialist works have been forgotten and Rand's writing endures. The themes of Tressell and Sinclair have collapsed into cliché. Rand's remain subversive.

Rand's books have not penetrated Australia as they did the United States. She is not part of our national consciousness. Yes, she has her fans. Malcolm Fraser was one. But as John Singleton wrote, "Malcolm Fraser admires Ayn Rand. Ayn Rand admires Malcolm Fraser. All this shows is that neither knows what the other is talking about."

Rand was part of a distinctly American tradition. The libertarian writer Charles Murray rightly notes Rand's idea of freedom is particularly Jeffersonian. In her lifetime, she was supported by the anti-Roosevelt, anti-New Deal movement that died out with Robert Taft's loss to Dwight D Eisenhower for the Republican presidential nomination in 1952. That movement was reprised, in a very different form, by the presidential run a decade later by Barry Goldwater - one of the few politicians Rand liked.

Australia has none of that rich history. Our free market tradition owes more to nineteenth century British liberalism than the American Old Right. Rand is an import. When Singleton helped form the libertarian Workers Party in Australia in the 1970s, he admitted he'd given up on Atlas Shrugged 80 pages in.

There's a reason one of the great histories of the American libertarian movement was titled It Usually Begins With Ayn Rand. But it rarely ends there.

Chris Berg is a research fellow with the Institute of Public Affairs. His new book is In Defence of Freedom of Speech: from Ancient Greece to Andrew Bolt. He tweets @chrisberg. View his full profile here.

 

2 comments

Pete,

Whilst I am no political pundit such as your good self I have to say I was a fan of Ayn Rand in my younger years but found as time rolled by she like most did not have all the answers. Youth it would seem is not an incurable disease, time and experience are the healers.

No one does have all the answers as time has a habit of changing the validity of much thinking as would be expected.

I now find her thinking very dated when one looks at the requirements of the current world and even this will change over time. Fifty years hence what appears to work today will also be rather dated and ineffectual. As to what it will be I have no idea.

As an aside I do find Chris Berg rather tedious and a person of narrow viewpoint.

Nothing is forever.

Take it easy.

SD

Politics is the art of the possible . Whereas Ayn Rand was a philosopher . Philosophers do not provide political answers but an overarching philosophy for politicians to be guided by. 

An instance would be Marx for Socialists...

So Philosophers can never be out of date their ideas are always there. there are fashions in Philosophy and the overall fashion in the world has been to large centralised governments for the Whole of the twentieth century and continues today . 

This is the antithesis to Ayn Rand so she has never been in fashion .

the nearest to her Philosophy which is often misrepresented is Jeffersonian Democracy the original foundings of the US. 

SD I also enjoyed reading Ayn Rand, they were good reading at the time, a little fantasy can be exciting at the time, but life has a habit of intruding.

Your last few words were a downer....Nothing is forever.....

Seth,

Everything has an end, good and bad.

Life is all about the journey, a one act play with no rehearsal.

Take your bow at the end, hope you didn't fluff your lines overmuch and maybe a smattering of applause as the lights dim and the curtain comes down.

From what I can glean to do the right thing without reward or reason is what this living business is all about.

Take it easy.

SD

Yep, have to say I agree with your perspectives here Shaggy. Spoken by a fellow thespian?  Couldn't agree more, for many -  so eager to reach the destination - they miss the journey altogether!!

Micha a thespian , who wud of guessed

thespian
?θ?sp??n/
formalhumorous

1.
an actor or actress.
"an ageing thespian"

Cross between a thickhead and lesbian 

2 comments



To make a comment, please register or login

Preview your comment