A
few days ago, John Oliver from HBO's “Last
Week Tonight with John Oliver” presented a three-and-a-half-minute long segment entitled “Ayn
Rand – How is she still a thing?”
To
those unaware, I have considered myself a student of
Objectivism
and have been studying the philosophy for many years. So, when I
watched the segment and saw that it was full of the same kinds of
ridiculous attacks against Rand that have been around for decades, I
simply rolled my eyes and went about the rest of my day. However, I
also had the sense that it was only a matter of time before the video
would soon spread all over the Internet.
I
was right.
There
are people who claim that “Last Week Tonight” is a comedy show and that it is meant for a laugh and not to be taken seriously. However,
the problem is that people DO take these comedy shows seriously. I
have seen a lot of articles that said that Jon
Stewart, John Oliver's previous boss, was one of the most trusted
names in news (see here
and here).
And now similar
things are being said of John Oliver as well.
Source |
Whether
that means that people trust comedians a lot, or they just distrust
other news shows a lot is a different question. However, the fact of
the matter is that comedian pundits have become one of the most
seriously-treated modern-day arbiters of “knowledge.” I find it
quite disheartening.
Seeing
how John Oliver is a well-known and beloved comedian with his own TV
show on HBO and I am but a small-time blogger, it is very unlikely
that this (admittedly) lengthy post that details where John Oliver
went wrong with his criticisms of Ayn Rand will get nearly as much
publicity as his three-minute video.
But,
well, I have time on my hands today and this is a topic that I am
passionate about. So these are the things that John Oliver got wrong
about Ayn Rand and Objectivism.
1.
“Ayn Rand became famous for her philosophy of Objectivism, which is
a nice way of saying “being a selfish asshole.””
The
people who made this video are either intentionally or
unintentionally misrepresenting Ayn Rand from the get-go. Yes, the
word “selfishness” is very much associated with Ayn Rand. But
what did she mean by “selfishness?” Did she mean it the way the
makers of this video did by comparing it with Drake's song when he
said, “It's all about me, don't give a fuck about you,” or when
that woman said “I will fucking kill you?”
No,
certainly not. To find out what she meant by “selfishness,”
check this link here.
One of these things is not like the others Source |
2.
Ayn Rand's quote taken out of context – “Why is it good to want
others to be happy? You can make others happy when and if those
others mean something to you selfishly.”
This
was the part of the video that probably got a lot of people thinking
that Ayn Rand's selfishness was, indeed, about “It's all about
me, don't give a fuck about you.”
But
you have to take the interview
into context. The clip was taken from an interview that she gave to
Tom Snyder and you can find the entire 30-minute video here.
The philosophical topics being discussed prior to her talking about
the happiness of oneself and the happiness of others were about
sacrifice,
altruism,
and Immanuel
Kant.
Can you imagine modern-day talk shows talking about such heady subjects? It would be the fastest way to get canceled! Source |
Now
listen to the whole segment of what she said about the topic of
happiness in that lecture, instead of the five second clip that those
comedians cherry-picked. The segment is from 21:32 to 24:22. It is
hardly a case of “It's all about me, don't give a fuck about you.”
3.
“Stories of rapey heroes complaining about how nobody appreciates
their true genius.” (Part 1)
That
snide comment about “rapey heroes” was taken from “The
Fountainhead,” when the main character, Howard Roark,
supposedly “rapes” the female heroine, Dominique Francon. Thus
began the myth that Rand was somehow pro-rape.
I
don't have a link to what Rand said about the rape scene so I will
copy/paste from the book “Letters
of Ayn Rand.”
“But
the fact is that Roark did not actually rape Dominique; she had asked
for it, and he knew that she wanted it. A man who would force
himself on a woman against her wishes would be committing a dreadful
crime. What Dominique liked about Roark was the fact that he took
the responsibility for their romance and for his own actions. Most
men nowadays, like Peter Keating, expect to seduce a woman, or rather
they let her seduce them and thus shift the responsibility to her.
That is what a truly feminine woman would despise. The lesson in the
Roark-Dominique romance is one of spiritual strength and
self-confidence, not of physical violence.
“It was not an actual rape, but a symbolic action which Dominique all but invited. This was the action she wanted and Howard Roark knew it.”
“It was not an actual rape, but a symbolic action which Dominique all but invited. This was the action she wanted and Howard Roark knew it.”
Now
was it unfortunate that she used the word “rape?” It certainly
was. The word has some strong meaning behind it and it has gotten
much stronger since Ayn Rand used it.
Now
there is certainly an interesting factoid about Rand that Professor
Jennifer Burns mentioned
in her book “Ayn
Rand: Goddess of the Free Market.” When “The
Fountainhead” had been just published, one of the reasons for
the book's success was the torrid love scenes, which some could
consider as an early form of BDSM-literature.
During a book signing, when a member of the audience asked Rand whether the sex scenes were based on her own sexual experiences, she
supposedly uncharacteristically playfully said something along the
lines of it merely being her fantasy.
Now,
I am a Redditor. And while browsing Reddit
over the years, I have come across on numerous occasions when people
have made confessions of their BDSM and rape fantasies. The stories
were all the same – they were confused, they knew rape to be
immoral and illegal, they felt guilty, and they didn't know what to
do. Many commenters, however, did not reproach them. In fact, many
commenters said that such fantasies were not all that bizarre and
that there is a community that engages in “rape fantasies,” all
practiced with mutual consent – that the healthy thing to do is to
talk openly about it with compassionate people who will not label
them as freaks for being different.
People
can be very understanding. Until Ayn Rand's name is mentioned. Then
she just becomes “rapey.” Seeing how so many people tend to
project
their life experiences onto out-of-context quotes or misquotes of Ayn
Rand, she really is a Rorschach
test.
Did you know that this character can also be traced back to Ayn Rand's philosophy of Objectivism? Source |
4.
“Stories of rapey heroes complaining about how nobody appreciates
their true genius.” (Part 2)
Ayn
Rand's four major works of fiction were “The
Fountainhead,” “Atlas
Shrugged,” “We
the Living,” and “Anthem.”
I have read them all and not once have I ever come across any of her
heroes complaining that nobody appreciated their true genius. In
fact, not caring about the opinions of others is one of their central
characteristics.
Case
in point, this is a clip from the movie adaptation of “The Fountainhead,” which the original clip mocked, that shows Howard Roark having a
short conversation with the story's main villain, Ellsworth Toohey.
5.
The clip that compares Howard Roark's selfishness to the
“selfishness” of spoiled children in “Super Sweet Sixteen.”
The
following is what Ayn Rand said about pride.
Obviously,
those sixteen-year-old children most likely do not possess the pride
that Ayn Rand talked about.
So
comparing the selfishness, the pride, and the self-esteem that Ayn
Rand advocated to that of spoiled children is simply yet another
example of intellectual laziness.
Source |
6.
“Ayn Rand has always been popular with teenagers but she's
something you're supposed to grow out of like Ska music or handjobs.”
Firstly,
this one sentence contains
several logical
fallacies and it will take more time than it has already taken to
tackle each one of them.
Secondly, I prefer not to respond to insults.
7.
“Mark Cuban's favorite book is about a misunderstood visionary who
blows things up when he doesn't get his way.”
Please, allow me to set up a hypothetical scenario for you. Let's say you
are a photographer who wishes to make it big. And let's say that a
bona fide expert said that he likes your photos; that there is real
potential for getting them published in a fancy magazine or to open
your very own gallery in Gangnam.
However, there are conditions.
In
order to get more Koreans to like and want to buy your photos, you
have to take more pictures of white people eating kimchi while giving
a thumbs up. And preferably this will all take place on Dokdo while
they are stomping on a Japanese flag. He then assures you that those
pictures will be a big hit and that you will earn a generous sum of
money for them as well as a glowing review in all the major newspapers
in the country.
Would
you take such a picture for that kind of prestige or honor or money?
Or would you refuse and continue to take photographs the way you
like?
Source |
Ayn
Rand's point was not simply about throwing tantrums if you don't get
your way. Claiming that “The Fountainhead” was a story about an architect and his profession is analogous to claiming that “Animal Farm” was about farm animals.
Assuming that the judgments and decisions that you have made were reached via an intelligent and rational thought process, it was about staying true to your principles; about not giving an inch to those who are mediocre.
Assuming that the judgments and decisions that you have made were reached via an intelligent and rational thought process, it was about staying true to your principles; about not giving an inch to those who are mediocre.
8.
“Cuban even named his 287-foot yacht “Fountainhead,” because
sometimes, having a 287-foot yacht just isn't enough to warn people
you're a douchebag.”
Why
is owning that big of a yacht a sign of being a douchebag? Now,
personally, I have never heard of Mark Cuban before. I don't know
him or anything he has said or done. Maybe he IS a douchebag. I
don't know if he is or not.
But
why is owning a big yacht a sign of being a douchebag? Did he steal
it? I think it would be difficult to steal a boat that big and not
be questioned by the police, no? Or does being rich automatically make
someone a douchebag, no questions asked?
This
is what Ayn Rand referred to as Argument
from Intimidation.
9.
“However, Ayn Rand is an unlikely hero for conservatives.”
The
only thing that the video got absolutely right was that she has taken
strong positions that conservatives would never agree with, especially in regards
to abortion,
her atheism,
and her
opinions of President Ronald Reagan. Conservatives have indeed
cherry-picked bits of her ideas that they like while discarding the
rest.
The
following is what Ayn Rand said about conservatives:
That
probably explains why while she was alive, conservatives didn't side
with her at all. Many of them found her views toxic. Case in point, here is what
William
F. Buckley Jr., the founder of the National Review, had to say about Ayn Rand:
Modern-day
conservatives, who have seemingly conveniently forgotten that they used to abhor her, have attempted a type of revisionist history in their
selective embrace of Ayn Rand.
By
the way, the people who at least initially attempted to side with her
by cherry-picking some of her ideas but discarding those that they
did not like were the libertarians. For that reason, Ayn
Rand HATED libertarians. To her, libertarians were worse than
communists. To use an analogy, she probably would have likened
communists to barbarians at the gates, and libertarians to sleeper
cells within the besieged walls. She thought that by discarding some
of her key philosophical views, which she thought were paramount for
Objectivism to work, they were undermining the cause of liberty from
within.
It's
one of those reasons why I find it annoying when Rand-bashers
conflate
libertarianism with Objectivism and attack both as one and the
same thing.
10.
“I do not think they (Native Americans) have a right to live in
any country merely because they were born here (the United States)
and acted and lived like savages.”
This
is the big one – hew view about Native Americans. This was
something that the people behind “Last Week Tonight” got partly right.
She did say it. It was a response that she gave to a question that she received during a Q&A session at the United States Military Academy at Westpoint. This is the full transcript of what she said.
In
her book, “Return
of the Primitive: The Anti-Industrial Revolution,”
she spelled out that she rejected primitivism
and tribalism,
and argued that they are symptoms of an “anti-industrial”
mentality. As far as Rand was concerned, a proper civilization was
one that respected individual
property rights, because the right to property was one of the
requirements for man's survival in this world. Furthermore, she was adamant that a rights-respecting civilization is paramount in order to free Man from men.
However,
she argued that Native Americans did not practice private property
rights; that they practiced communal “rights” to property, which
they used to eke out a subsistence-based life. Therefore, as Native
Americans' practices were primitive and did not respect individual rights, the sort of thing that people need in order to live rational,
independent lives, she argued that they were savages.
Therefore,
she argued that Western colonialists who came to the New World armed with
the knowledge of rights, ipso facto, had the right to take the land
for their own use.
So,
when she used the word “savage,” contrary to what the video insinuated, she did not mean that they were
redskinned humanoids. She was using the word as the word actually
means
– a
member of a people regarded as primitive and uncivilized.
Regardless of what she meant, however, she was wrong.
Regardless of what she meant, however, she was wrong.
Source |
Yes,
it's true. I, a student of Objectivism, am publicly stating that
Ayn Rand was wrong about the subject of Native Americans.
For
one thing, history has shown that Native Americans DID have private property rights as can be seen here.
Furthermore,
the United States Constitution, which Ayn Rand was (mostly) a big fan of, can
trace its roots to, among
other things, the
Iroquois
Confederacy.
For
other views about Native Americans and private property rights, I found this page
on Reddit to be particularly helpful.
The
only thing that Ayn Rand knew about Native Americans was that when
they were still powerful enough, they killed scores of European
colonialists. However, she never mentioned how Europeans took part
in the ethnic cleansing of Native Americans.
Did that mean she was racist? No. Considering what she thought about racism and what she thought about Native Americans, it is unlikely that she cheered their being slaughtered, but it is also unlikely that she was particularly sorry to see them go the way of history. Either way, she was wrong about them being primitive savages.
Did that mean she was racist? No. Considering what she thought about racism and what she thought about Native Americans, it is unlikely that she cheered their being slaughtered, but it is also unlikely that she was particularly sorry to see them go the way of history. Either way, she was wrong about them being primitive savages.
Now
how did Rand, who was such an intelligent person, get this one so
dead wrong?
I
honestly don't know. She liked to claim that all of her judgments
were based on a rational thought process based on the knowledge that
was available. So... was she truly being rational all the time and
did she not let bias cloud her judgment at all? Perhaps not. I am of the
opinion that no
one is really unbiased. We can try to be as unbiased as we can (the key word here being “try”), but I think that our own limitations as human beings prevent us from
being completely unbiased.
Or
was it because history text books at that time weren't giving
accurate information about Native American history? I don't know.
I'm not an expert about how American history was taught from the
1920s to the 1970s. Perhaps someone else who does know can expound on
that topic.
If
the way that American history was taught at the time, especially about Native Americans, was, indeed, inaccurate, then I think we can chalk this one up
to her being the product of her times.
However,
if the way that the history of Native Americans being taught to the
general public in that era was not all that different from the way it
is taught today, which I find doubtful, then, at least as far as this
topic goes, Rand would have been guilty of being intellectually lazy,
too.
Conclusion
So,
she was wrong about Native Americans. Was she wrong about other
things, too? Certainly. I definitely disagree with the way she
portrayed the power-dynamics that occur between men and women. She
thought that women always had to be “under” men – that women
could not be happy if they tried to be “above” men. I disagree with that.
There
are things that Rand said that I, and probably other Objectivists,
too, disagree with.
So
why do I still like Rand so much? Well, firstly, I have concluded
that she tended to be right more often than she was wrong. Secondly,
there's a reason why her philosophy is called “Objectivism,” and
not “Randianism.”
This
is what Ayn Rand said about thinking.
Rand
did a lot of thinking in her day. She was right about a lot of
things, and she was wrong about some other things. As a student of
Objectivism, I think that I owe it to myself to do my own thinking
based on new information and knowledge that is presented to me; and
not to rely on everything that Ayn Rand said.
For those who disagree with Rand, there is nothing wrong with disagreeing with her. However, if you are going to disagree with Rand, perhaps it might be a good idea to actually familiarize yourself with her work, rather than rely on the biased commentary of others.
For those who disagree with Rand, there is nothing wrong with disagreeing with her. However, if you are going to disagree with Rand, perhaps it might be a good idea to actually familiarize yourself with her work, rather than rely on the biased commentary of others.
Source |
Basically, Ayn Rand had a strong, brutally honest philosophy. I admire her for that, I think straight, honest dialogue is what we sorely need in the world today. Unfortunately, the politically correct mob and the left generally have a field day with anyone past or present that present their ideas in such clear-cut ways. If you also give them little harsh one-liners (as Rand was prone to do), even if they were within the context of a larger conversation where their meaning was different to what could be originally perceived of them, they will be quickly quoted, jumped-on and ridiculed.
ReplyDeleteThat is true. I am fairly convinced that Ayn Rand is one of the most misrepresented and smeared people in the world.
DeleteI saw this video many years ago. Christopher Hitchens was one of those great intellects that I admire, and it is a pity that he died so soon. So when I first came across this video titled “Hitchens Destroys the Cult of Ayn Rand,” I got excited! One intellectual titan arguing against another? It sounded great!
ReplyDeleteBut then I watched the video and it was the first time that I became disappointed with Hitchens. After that, I cursed the person who uploaded the video for giving it such a sensationalist title, which had filled me with hope for a strenuous debate, only to find out that the uploader was probably someone who finds thinking painful. It wasn't just because I disagreed with what Hitchens said. It was also because this man, who had written and said some of the most erudite things in recent history, was so glib and lacked any sort of real intelligent argument.
I will quote the parts from the video that I thought were most important.
“I care very much about literature, as the place were, where real ethical dilemmas are met and dealt with. So to have novels transcendentally awful as “Atlas Shrugged” and “The Fountainhead” sort of undermines my project.”
“I have some respect for “The Virtue of Selfishness,” her collection of essays.”
“By the way, a state Federal Reserve Bank is not part of the libertarian program though Mr. Greenspan seems iffy about this self-evident proposition.”
“I don't think there is any need to have essays advocating selfishness among human beings. I don't know what your impression has been, but some things require no further reinforcement... So having books strenuously recommend that people be more self-centered, seems to me, as the Anglican Church used to say in its critique of Catholicism, a work of supererogation.”
Firstly, merely asserting that her books were bad is not really an argument. It was nothing more than a classic case of argumentum ad nauseam.
Secondly, he did not even bother to engage in any of the principles that were advocated by Rand or even attempted to explain what they are.
Thirdly, he didn't even bother to expound on the word “selfishness.” What did Ayn Rand mean by “selfishness?” What did he mean by “selfishness?” If he had even the smallest understanding of her work, he would have known that Objectivism defines the word rather differently. But he didn't utter a word. Not unlike the people at “Last Week Tonight.” So either Hitchens either did not know what he was talking about or he was willfully equivocating.
Fourthly, like so many other people in the world, he, too, conflated Objectivism with libertarianism, which just goes to show that perhaps Hitchens really didn't really know what he was criticizing.
Fifthly, the irony of the whole thing was that he claimed that people are already selfish and need not be told to be more selfish than they already are only a few seconds after he mentioned that he had some respect for “The Virtue of Selfishness.”
The reason why that is so ironic is that one of the essays in that book was an essay titled “Isn't Everyone Selfish?” which was written by Rand's then protege, Nathaniel Branden, in 1962. The essay was about the difference between the Objectivist understanding of the word “selfishness” (which Objectivism defines as a genuine concern with discovering what is to one’s self-interest, an acceptance of the responsibility of achieving it, a refusal ever to betray it by acting on the blind whim, mood, impulse or feeling of the moment, an uncompromising loyalty to one’s judgment, convictions and values) and the popular understanding of the word.
In other words, the response to Hitchens' criticism was already given when Hitchens was still a 13-year-old boy.
If you would like to read the essay, it can be found here: http://biblioteca.mygeocom.com/wp-content/uploads/filebase/R/Rand%20Ayn/Ayn%20Rand%20-%20The%20Virtue%20of%20Selfishness.pdf
It's on Page 53.
What John Oliver got right and wrong about Ayn Rand, as a philosophy and individual, is rather moot when it's clear that conservative-leaning politicians and corporate heads have gotten her wrong as well, as illustrated above. It is rather clear that conservative-leaning politicians and businessmen hold up their misinterpretation of Ayn Rand as their inspiration. I think the clip is told in such a way that it doesn't denigrate Ayn Rand quite so much as illustrates the mentality of the people who worship her, however wrongly, to the detriment of everyone else around them.
ReplyDelete