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The Wall Street Journal, April 14,
2011
Remembering the Real Ayn Rand
By Donald L. Luskin
Tomorrow's release of the movie version of "Atlas
Shrugged" is focusing attention on Ayn Rand's 1957 opus and the free-market
ideas it espouses. Book sales for "Atlas" have always been brisk—and all the
more so in the past few years, as actual events have mirrored Rand's
nightmare vision of economic collapse amid massive government expansion.
Conservatives are now hailing Rand as a tea party Nostradamus, hence the
timing of the movie's premiere on tax day.
When Rand created the character of Wesley Mouch, it's as
though she was anticipating Barney Frank (D., Mass). Mouch is the economic
czar in "Atlas Shrugged" whose every move weakens the economy, which in turn
gives him the excuse to demand broader powers. Mr. Frank steered Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac to disaster with mandates for more lending to low-income
borrowers. After Fannie and Freddie collapsed under the weight of their
subprime mortgage books, Mr. Frank proclaimed last year: "The way to cure
that is to give us more authority." Mouch couldn't have said it better
himself.
But it's a misreading of "Atlas" to claim that it is
simply an antigovernment tract or an uncritical celebration of big business.
In fact, the real villain of "Atlas" is a big businessman, railroad CEO
James Taggart, whose crony capitalism does more to bring down the economy
than all of Mouch's regulations. With Taggart, Rand was anticipating figures
like Angelo Mozilo, the CEO of Countrywide Financial, the subprime lender
that proved to be a toxic mortgage factory. Like Taggart, Mr. Mozilo
engineered government subsidies for his company in the name of
noble-sounding virtues like home ownership for all.
Still, most of the heroes of "Atlas" are big businessmen
who are unfairly persecuted by government. The struggle of Rand's fictional
steel magnate Henry Rearden against confiscatory regulation is a perfect
anticipation of the antitrust travails of Microsoft CEO Bill Gates. In both
cases, the government's depredations were inspired by behind-the-scenes
maneuverings of business rivals. And now Microsoft is maneuvering against
Google with an antitrust complaint in the European Union.
The reality is that in Rand's novel, as in life,
self-described capitalists can be the worst enemies of capitalism. But that
doesn't fit in easily with the simple pro-business narrative about Rand now
being retailed.
Today, Rand is celebrated among conservatives: Rep. Paul
Ryan (R., Wis.) insists that all his staffers read "Atlas Shrugged." It
wasn't always this way. During Rand's lifetime—she died in 1982—she was
loathed by the mainstream conservative movement.
Rand was a devout atheist, which set her against the
movement's Christian bent. She got off on the wrong foot with the movement's
founder, William F. Buckley Jr., when she introduced herself to him in her
thick Russian accent, saying "You are too intelligent to believe in God!"
The subsequent review of "Atlas Shrugged" by Whittaker Chambers in Buckley's
"National Review" was nothing short of a smear, and it set the tone for her
relationship with the movement ever since—at least until now.
Rand rankled conservatives by living her life as an
exemplary feminist, even as she denied it by calling herself a "male
chauvinist." She was the breadwinner throughout her lifelong marriage. The
most sharply drawn hero in "Atlas" is the extraordinarily capable female
railroad executive Dagny Taggart, who is set in contrast with her boss, her
incompetent brother James. She's the woman who deserves the man's job but
doesn't have it; he's the man who has the job but doesn't deserve it.
Rand was strongly pro-choice, speaking out for abortion
rights even before Roe v. Wade. In late middle age, she became enamored of a
much younger man and made up her mind to have an affair with him, having
duly informed her husband and the younger man's wife in advance.
Conservatives don't do things like that—or at least they say they don't.
These weren't the only times Rand took positions that
didn't ingratiate her to the right. She was an early opponent of the Vietnam
war, once saying, "I am against the war in Vietnam and have been for years.
. . . In my view we should fight fascism and communism when they come to
this country." During the '60s she declared, "I am an enemy of racism," and
advised opponents of school busing, "If you object to sending your children
to school with black children, you'll lose for sure because right is on the
other side."
If anything, Rand's life ought to ingratiate her to the
left. An immigrant woman, she arrived alone and penniless in the United
States in 1925. Had she shown up today with the same tale, liberals would
give her a driver's license and register her to vote.
But Rand was always impossible to pin down politically.
She loathed Dwight Eisenhower, whom she believed lacked conviction. And in
1975 she wrote, "I urge you, as emphatically as I can, not to support the
candidacy of Ronald Reagan," primarily on the grounds that he didn't support
pure laissez-faire capitalism. But she endorsed Richard Nixon in 1968
because he supported abolition of the military draft. Rand was especially
proud of her protégé Alan Greenspan for serving with Milton Friedman on
Nixon's Gates Commission, the findings of which led to today's all-volunteer
army.
Rand was not a conservative or a liberal: She was an
individualist. "Atlas Shrugged" is, at its heart, a plea for the most
fundamental American ideal—the inalienable rights of the individual. On tax
day, with our tax dollars going to big government and subsidies for big
business, let's remember it's the celebration of individualism that has kept
"Atlas Shrugged" among the best-selling novels of all time.
Mr. Luskin is chief investment officer at Trend Macrolytics LLC
and the co-author with Andrew Greta of "I
Am John Galt," out in May by Wiley & Sons. |