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Atlas Shrugged: Why is this so bad?

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Posts

  • Kipling217Kipling217 Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Because they where smart. Not because they where working with their hands. It was a way of showing their intellectual superiority to other people. Its in all her writings: Mind work good, physical work bad.

    Even the workers you mention are only mentioned positivly because they have a glimmer of übermensch talent of the strikers. They are not complete fuckups, like the rest of the proles Their mental abilites is what she lauds, not their physical ones. In the end she lets them share the fate of the rest.

    Remember the Tagart line employee that refuses to strike and tries to keep things going(forget his name)? He has part of the talents that Dagny has, but lacks enough to become a true ubermensch. He did nothing wrong other then try to keep things together. He is shown in a positive light, right up until he is left to die in the desert.

    Kipling217 on
    The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
  • enc0reenc0re Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Organichu wrote: »
    i absolutely didn't take that from it at all- but rather, that a moral and competent approach (borne from the intellectualism she idolizes) to any honest work is admirable

    It was clearly this. Otherwise, why the hardon for the busdriver?

    enc0re on
  • DrezDrez Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    Because they where smart. Not because they where working with their hands. It was a way of showing their intellectual superiority to other people. Its in all her writings: Mind work good, physical work bad.

    Even the workers you mention are only mentioned positivly because they have a glimmer of übermensch talent of the strikers. They are not complete fuckups, like the rest of the proles Their mental abilites is what she lauds, not their physical ones. In the end she lets them share the fate of the rest.

    Remember the Tagart line employee that refuses to strike and tries to keep things going(forget his name)? He has part of the talents that Dagny has, but lacks enough to become a true ubermensch. He did nothing wrong other then try to keep things together. He is shown in a positive light, right up until he is left to die in the desert.

    This definitely isn't true if you bring The Fountainhead into your analysis. Roark often did a lot of the work himself, and I'm pretty sure Rand was suggesting this as one of his character strengths.

    Drez on
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  • OrganichuOrganichu poops peesRegistered User, Moderator mod
    edited August 2010
    he isn't left in the desert. he opts to remain in the desert.

    but more importantly, you seem to be moving the goalposts.

    Organichu on
  • mythagomythago Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    enc0re wrote: »
    Organichu wrote: »
    i absolutely didn't take that from it at all- but rather, that a moral and competent approach (borne from the intellectualism she idolizes) to any honest work is admirable

    It was clearly this. Otherwise, why the hardon for the busdriver?

    Because he's in a BUS. Big machine = sexy.

    mythago on
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  • Kipling217Kipling217 Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    I think its to show that Roark is superior to others. "He is a better architect because he knows how to mix cement and lay plumbing"

    Its to show while master craftsment can be expert in one field, Roark is an expert in many. Which means he is better then them and therefore more suited to be the architect of the buildings. Its not the physical labour, but the mastery of several fields of engineering.

    In fact you could argue that while normal people can barely master one field, a Randian superman can master several without difficulty. Its the ultimate proof of the superiority of mind workers.

    Edit: I am not changing the goalpost. Its my position that Rand believed that mental work(creative,etc,etc) was superior to physical work and that this is borne out by her writings. Where she describes a good man dying in the desert.

    Kipling217 on
    The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
  • OrganichuOrganichu poops peesRegistered User, Moderator mod
    edited August 2010
    no one's disputing that rand worshipped the mind and fetishized people with intelligence, or people who she felt were naturally adept. i don't think anyone here is an objectivist. what i'm disputing is the oft-repeated sentiment (and the one in that silly comic with the flowers and the apocalypse) that 'and what will these captains of industry do, once all the proles are gone?'

    rand's answer is "they will do prole work and will still be moral for it"

    i think there are enough obvious avenues of attack to criticize her ridiculous philosophy. no need to invent others that are simply not reflected by her views or work

    Organichu on
  • DrezDrez Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    I think its to show that Roark is superior to others. "He is a better architect because he knows how to mix cement and lay plumbing"

    Its to show while master craftsment can be expert in one field, Roark is an expert in many. Which means he is better then them and therefore more suited to be the architect of the buildings. Its not the physical labour, but the mastery of several fields of engineering.

    In fact you could argue that while normal people can barely master one field, a Randian superman can master several without difficulty. Its the ultimate proof of the superiority of mind workers.

    You said "mind work good, physical work bad" on the last page. It sounds like you're taking that statement back? Because what you're saying now contradicts that statement. As does Roark, as I pointed out.

    I don't think you are correct here.

    Drez on
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  • Kipling217Kipling217 Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Drez wrote: »
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    I think its to show that Roark is superior to others. "He is a better architect because he knows how to mix cement and lay plumbing"

    Its to show while master craftsment can be expert in one field, Roark is an expert in many. Which means he is better then them and therefore more suited to be the architect of the buildings. Its not the physical labour, but the mastery of several fields of engineering.

    In fact you could argue that while normal people can barely master one field, a Randian superman can master several without difficulty. Its the ultimate proof of the superiority of mind workers.

    You said "mind work good, physical work bad" on the last page. It sounds like you're taking that statement back? Because what you're saying now contradicts that statement. As does Roark, as I pointed out.

    I don't think you are correct here.

    Well you think that we should ignore Rand totally when discussing her writings so.....

    And No, the ability to master many fields of work is a display of mental skill. The fact that they have physical components are less important then showing that Roark masters all of them. Or are you saying that understanding a job requires no mental effort? Or that mastering several is requires more then just mastering one?

    Because then I think you are wrong.

    Rand always places mental skill higher then physical skill. its her value system. It doesn't mean physical work is pointless, it means its useless unless guided by sufficent intellect. Which creates a society with intellectual supermen on top, with proles at the bottom.

    Kipling217 on
    The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
  • Kipling217Kipling217 Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    I mean the flip side here is that Rand valued Physical and mental work equaly. Try finding proof of that in her works.

    Kipling217 on
    The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
  • DrezDrez Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    Drez wrote: »
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    I think its to show that Roark is superior to others. "He is a better architect because he knows how to mix cement and lay plumbing"

    Its to show while master craftsment can be expert in one field, Roark is an expert in many. Which means he is better then them and therefore more suited to be the architect of the buildings. Its not the physical labour, but the mastery of several fields of engineering.

    In fact you could argue that while normal people can barely master one field, a Randian superman can master several without difficulty. Its the ultimate proof of the superiority of mind workers.

    You said "mind work good, physical work bad" on the last page. It sounds like you're taking that statement back? Because what you're saying now contradicts that statement. As does Roark, as I pointed out.

    I don't think you are correct here.

    Well you think that we should ignore Rand totally when discussing her writings so.....

    But I do think you can take Rand's writings into account when discussing Objectivism.

    Also, I'm bored with the whole "death of the author" angle. It's cute that you want to dismiss me for that, but it doesn't make your statements any less contradictory. I'm trying to communicate with you in the framework that you guys want to discuss the topic in. And within that framework, you are wrong.

    Kipling217 wrote: »
    And No, the ability to master many fields of work is a display of mental skill. The fact that they have physical components are less important then showing that Roark masters all of them. Or are you saying that understanding a job requires no mental effort? Or that mastering several is requires more then just mastering one?

    Because then I think you are wrong.

    Rand always places mental skill higher then physical skill. its her value system. It doesn't mean physical work is pointless, it means its useless unless guided by sufficent intellect. Which creates a society with intellectual supermen on top, with proles at the bottom.

    Is this just a long-winded way of saying "sorry, I shouldn't have said 'mind work good; physical work bad'"? Because you are still contradicting that comment. Either physical work is bad or it isn't. Either Roark actually performing physical work was bad or it wasn't. We're not talking about the fact that he knows how to perform the manual labor, we're talking about the fact that he actually DOES the manual labor. Multiple times. In fact, a lot of his contractors complain about it, if memory serves.

    In fact, the first time Dominique Falcon sets eyes on him - and let's totally dispense with "death of the author" now and assume that Dominque Falcon is something of a doppelganger for Rand, since that fits in with your interpretative framework - Roark is working. With a jackhammer or something if memory serves. I believe one of the contractors points him out to Dominique. Dominique starts to go all a-quiver. She was previously ready to be mean to him or something and then she starts coming back every day just to watch him glisten and ripple in the sun, hoping maybe she can be the rock he forcibly jackhammers into.

    Doesn't sound to me like Ayn Rand - in your interpretative framework - looks down on manual labor or laborers. It's not his mind that Ms. Falcon wants at that point. And she certainly doesn't look down on him too poorly for his manual labor. She may have made a comment or two about it, but Roark shoots that down as well. And remember, Roark is the superman of that novel.

    Drez on
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  • DrezDrez Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    I mean the flip side here is that Rand valued Physical and mental work equaly. Try finding proof of that in her works.

    I don't have to find proof of that in anything. You're making a positive claim. I'm shooting it down. I don't have to pander to your false dichotomies.

    Drez on
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  • mythagomythago Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Organichu wrote: »
    no one's disputing that rand worshipped the mind and fetishized people with intelligence, or people who she felt were naturally adept. i don't think anyone here is an objectivist. what i'm disputing is the oft-repeated sentiment (and the one in that silly comic with the flowers and the apocalypse) that 'and what will these captains of industry do, once all the proles are gone?'

    rand's answer is "they will do prole work and will still be moral for it"

    i think there are enough obvious avenues of attack to criticize her ridiculous philosophy. no need to invent others that are simply not reflected by her views or work

    The Bob the Angry Flower comic isn't silly, in that if Rand really thought her ubermenschen would do everything, there wouldn't be a need for magical perpetual motion or food machines.

    I don't think you get much more Mary Sue than a character who is good at everything.

    mythago on
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  • JuliusJulius Captain of Serenity on my shipRegistered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Organichu wrote: »
    no one's disputing that rand worshipped the mind and fetishized people with intelligence, or people who she felt were naturally adept. i don't think anyone here is an objectivist. what i'm disputing is the oft-repeated sentiment (and the one in that silly comic with the flowers and the apocalypse) that 'and what will these captains of industry do, once all the proles are gone?'

    rand's answer is "they will do prole work and will still be moral for it"

    i think there are enough obvious avenues of attack to criticize her ridiculous philosophy. no need to invent others that are simply not reflected by her views or work

    I think people are more pointing out that that answer is silly. Killing motherfuckers because they thought their jobs were important, then admitting that they were important is ridiculous.

    Of course Rand neatly avoids a lot of problems by making almost the whole cast ubermenschen. Imagine Galt just saying "hey guys, I also know everything about farming and no other farmer in existence is as good as me so don't worry about the food".

    Flaws are for humans. Being a grandchild of both Harry Potter and Goku means the rules bend to my will.

    Julius on
  • OrganichuOrganichu poops peesRegistered User, Moderator mod
    edited August 2010
    mythago wrote: »
    Organichu wrote: »
    no one's disputing that rand worshipped the mind and fetishized people with intelligence, or people who she felt were naturally adept. i don't think anyone here is an objectivist. what i'm disputing is the oft-repeated sentiment (and the one in that silly comic with the flowers and the apocalypse) that 'and what will these captains of industry do, once all the proles are gone?'

    rand's answer is "they will do prole work and will still be moral for it"

    i think there are enough obvious avenues of attack to criticize her ridiculous philosophy. no need to invent others that are simply not reflected by her views or work

    The Bob the Angry Flower comic isn't silly, in that if Rand really thought her ubermenschen would do everything, there wouldn't be a need for magical perpetual motion or food machines.

    I don't think you get much more Mary Sue than a character who is good at everything.

    they were merely plot devices- just more opportunities for her to flex her muscles and go "look at what my ideal man can do"

    it doesn't really matter whether there exists a perpetual energy machine or a transfiguring wizard who creates food from farts

    Organichu on
  • OrganichuOrganichu poops peesRegistered User, Moderator mod
    edited August 2010
    Julius wrote: »
    Organichu wrote: »
    no one's disputing that rand worshipped the mind and fetishized people with intelligence, or people who she felt were naturally adept. i don't think anyone here is an objectivist. what i'm disputing is the oft-repeated sentiment (and the one in that silly comic with the flowers and the apocalypse) that 'and what will these captains of industry do, once all the proles are gone?'

    rand's answer is "they will do prole work and will still be moral for it"

    i think there are enough obvious avenues of attack to criticize her ridiculous philosophy. no need to invent others that are simply not reflected by her views or work

    I think people are more pointing out that that answer is silly. Killing motherfuckers because they thought their jobs were important, then admitting that they were important is ridiculous.

    Of course Rand neatly avoids a lot of problems by making almost the whole cast ubermenschen. Imagine Galt just saying "hey guys, I also know everything about farming and no other farmer in existence is as good as me so don't worry about the food".

    Flaws are for humans. Being a grandchild of both Harry Potter and Goku means the rules bend to my will.

    of course the answer is silly, but it's not the answer that other people are claiming it is

    Organichu on
  • Kipling217Kipling217 Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Organichu wrote: »
    Julius wrote: »
    Organichu wrote: »
    no one's disputing that rand worshipped the mind and fetishized people with intelligence, or people who she felt were naturally adept. i don't think anyone here is an objectivist. what i'm disputing is the oft-repeated sentiment (and the one in that silly comic with the flowers and the apocalypse) that 'and what will these captains of industry do, once all the proles are gone?'

    rand's answer is "they will do prole work and will still be moral for it"

    i think there are enough obvious avenues of attack to criticize her ridiculous philosophy. no need to invent others that are simply not reflected by her views or work

    I think people are more pointing out that that answer is silly. Killing motherfuckers because they thought their jobs were important, then admitting that they were important is ridiculous.

    Of course Rand neatly avoids a lot of problems by making almost the whole cast ubermenschen. Imagine Galt just saying "hey guys, I also know everything about farming and no other farmer in existence is as good as me so don't worry about the food".

    Flaws are for humans. Being a grandchild of both Harry Potter and Goku means the rules bend to my will.

    of course the answer is silly, but it's not the answer that other people are claiming it is

    If you spend a 1000 pages praising your heroes for their intellectual brilliance and then have them end up as fry cooks for the rest of their life. You do kind of undercut your own arguments. Even if they are happy, competent and moral in their new jobs.

    Kipling217 on
    The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
  • OrganichuOrganichu poops peesRegistered User, Moderator mod
    edited August 2010
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    Organichu wrote: »
    Julius wrote: »
    Organichu wrote: »
    no one's disputing that rand worshipped the mind and fetishized people with intelligence, or people who she felt were naturally adept. i don't think anyone here is an objectivist. what i'm disputing is the oft-repeated sentiment (and the one in that silly comic with the flowers and the apocalypse) that 'and what will these captains of industry do, once all the proles are gone?'

    rand's answer is "they will do prole work and will still be moral for it"

    i think there are enough obvious avenues of attack to criticize her ridiculous philosophy. no need to invent others that are simply not reflected by her views or work

    I think people are more pointing out that that answer is silly. Killing motherfuckers because they thought their jobs were important, then admitting that they were important is ridiculous.

    Of course Rand neatly avoids a lot of problems by making almost the whole cast ubermenschen. Imagine Galt just saying "hey guys, I also know everything about farming and no other farmer in existence is as good as me so don't worry about the food".

    Flaws are for humans. Being a grandchild of both Harry Potter and Goku means the rules bend to my will.

    of course the answer is silly, but it's not the answer that other people are claiming it is

    If you spend a 1000 pages praising your heroes for their intellectual brilliance and then have them end up as fry cooks for the rest of their life. You do kind of undercut your own arguments. Even if they are happy, competent and moral in their new jobs.

    only if you pretend they're dichotomous. rand does not.

    Organichu on
  • mythagomythago Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Organichu wrote: »
    they were merely plot devices- just more opportunities for her to flex her muscles and go "look at what my ideal man can do"

    it doesn't really matter whether there exists a perpetual energy machine or a transfiguring wizard who creates food from farts

    If the book is a polemic promoting a specific philosophy - which it is - then it does matter, because she is solving a problem with the philosophy by waving a magic wand.

    If the book is merely literature with no ulterior motive, then it's just lame-ass writing.

    Rand does not ask the question "given a society of magical ubermenschen and perpetual motion, what would be the result?" She's parading around cardboard characters and improbable plot-rigging in order to promote a specific worldview as right because, see, it works for John Galt!

    mythago on
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  • OrganichuOrganichu poops peesRegistered User, Moderator mod
    edited August 2010
    mythago wrote: »
    Organichu wrote: »
    they were merely plot devices- just more opportunities for her to flex her muscles and go "look at what my ideal man can do"

    it doesn't really matter whether there exists a perpetual energy machine or a transfiguring wizard who creates food from farts

    If the book is a polemic promoting a specific philosophy - which it is - then it does matter, because she is solving a problem with the philosophy by waving a magic wand.

    If the book is merely literature with no ulterior motive, then it's just lame-ass writing.

    Rand does not ask the question "given a society of magical ubermenschen and perpetual motion, what would be the result?" She's parading around cardboard characters and improbable plot-rigging in order to promote a specific worldview as right because, see, it works for John Galt!

    you're arguing on a separate wavelength.

    i agree that it's a stupid plot device, because it undermines the efficacy of what she argues- that talented men can prosper, no matter what, and that they have no need for cooperation or mutual reliance. all very good, you're right on that point.

    where it is not relevant is her view on the morality of certain types of work.

    people are claiming that she- and her characters- had no taste for menial work, and no willingness to do it. that if they struck off into the wild to start their utopia, they'd starve to death, and they'd turn up their noses at the work they'd so long ignored was done by 'regular' people.

    while i agree with the conclusion being reached (re: efficacy, and why in a real world with people not from the planet krypton, a man can't be a great philosopher and great pirate and great engineer and great cook and great brakeman and great lawnmower...) but i disagree that it's because of the characters being 'unwilling' to do that work. that is where i think these characterizations are false.

    the eventual conclusion is the same (that they'd be fucked, in their tiny, insular community with real men and women who can't do everything), but the mechanism by which we get there is not what is being claimed. they wouldn't starve or drown or die of the cold because of their effete reliance on the proletariat.

    Organichu on
  • Kipling217Kipling217 Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    They would eventually hit a problem. Small communities are much more vunerable unforseen disasters than large ones. Mostly because they lack people able and willing to do boring yet needed work. Maintance for example.

    This means it doesn't matter how great the people living there are, they can't do everything at once.

    Small communities are more interdependent then large ones too.

    Kipling217 on
    The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
  • OrganichuOrganichu poops peesRegistered User, Moderator mod
    edited August 2010
    i agree they'd hit a problem.

    specialization and collective action are important.

    but this tangent initially started along the lines of 'if the menial workers went on strike, the giants of industry would be out on their asses!', to which i responded that some of rand's strikers were menial workers.

    Organichu on
  • enc0reenc0re Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    She wasn't advocating that the Great Objectivists of this world actually go on strike, right? I thought it was more of a hypothetical, like Rawl's "Original Position."

    enc0re on
  • Kipling217Kipling217 Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Organichu wrote: »
    i agree they'd hit a problem.

    specialization and collective action are important.

    but this tangent initially started along the lines of 'if the menial workers went on strike, the giants of industry would be out on their asses!', to which i responded that some of rand's strikers were menial workers.

    The bolded part has been shown to be true on more then one occasion. Lots of companies have learned collective action power up close and personal(GM, Ford and Chrysler).

    Even Rand's übermensch could not be captains of industry without people to captain. Even if they could survive as menials, they wouldn't be captains of industry anymore.

    What Rand claims is that its also true the other way around. That without People like Galt or Rearden the menials would starve. Thats where reality starts to set in.

    Kipling217 on
    The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
  • RustRust __BANNED USERS regular
    edited August 2010
    enc0re wrote: »
    She wasn't advocating that the Great Objectivists of this world actually go on strike, right? I thought it was more of a hypothetical, like Rawl's "Original Position."

    nothing in the book really sounded like a rallying cry, no

    the hypothetical interpretation is probably on the mark

    Rust on
  • OrganichuOrganichu poops peesRegistered User, Moderator mod
    edited August 2010
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    Organichu wrote: »
    i agree they'd hit a problem.

    specialization and collective action are important.

    but this tangent initially started along the lines of 'if the menial workers went on strike, the giants of industry would be out on their asses!', to which i responded that some of rand's strikers were menial workers.

    The bolded part has been shown to be true on more then one occasion. Lots of companies have learned collective action power up close and personal(GM, Ford and Chrysler).

    Even Rand's übermensch could not be captains of industry without people to captain. Even if they could survive as menials, they wouldn't be captains of industry anymore.

    What Rand claims is that its also true the other way around. That without People like Galt or Rearden the menials would starve. Thats where reality starts to set in.

    i agree with you on this matter, and always have

    Organichu on
  • The EnderThe Ender Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    It was clearly this. Otherwise, why the hardon for the busdriver?

    Ahem.


    Rand wasn't wet over the bus driver. She was wet over the bus. She had a sexual fetish for mechanical & industrial objects (...This would be why it is important to understand the author if you want to understand their writing. The book didn't fucking write itself).


    Honestly, this isn't something that I think is fair to level at Rand as a criticism at any rate.

    The Ender on
    With Love and Courage
  • Edith UpwardsEdith Upwards Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Objectivists believe in a number of crazy things, chief among which being that there will come a time when the unwashed masses will turn to communism, and that the only way for society to persist as it does now would be for "The movers and shakers of society" to exterminate anywhere from half to ninety percent of the population.

    Now, let's ignore Rand's horrible writing, creepy rape fetish, racism, and that her assumptions ignore our world's basic laws. At the core of her "philosophy" is the idea that the rich will eventually rise up against the evil poor people who have been holding them back, and after killing them, create a utopia. This sounds familiar.

    Edith Upwards on
  • JuliusJulius Captain of Serenity on my shipRegistered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    They would eventually hit a problem. Small communities are much more vunerable unforseen disasters than large ones. Mostly because they lack people able and willing to do boring yet needed work. Maintance for example.

    This means it doesn't matter how great the people living there are, they can't do everything at once.

    Small communities are more interdependent then large ones too.

    Nah, there's someone at the Gulch who is awesome at maintenance and absolutely loves doing it. And disasters and accidents don't happen because everyone is perfect.

    Julius on
  • WotanAnubisWotanAnubis Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Julius wrote: »
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    They would eventually hit a problem. Small communities are much more vunerable unforseen disasters than large ones. Mostly because they lack people able and willing to do boring yet needed work. Maintance for example.

    This means it doesn't matter how great the people living there are, they can't do everything at once.

    Small communities are more interdependent then large ones too.

    Nah, there's someone at the Gulch who is awesome at maintenance and absolutely loves doing it. And disasters and accidents don't happen because everyone is perfect.
    Yeah, but things like earthquakes and tornados, unlike cancer apparently, aren't caused by a lack of perfection.

    WotanAnubis on
  • SchrodingerSchrodinger Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Earthquakes don't affect floating cities, and tornadoes can't penetrate the force fields. Cancer? That sounds like something that God gives moochers as punishment for their laziness.

    Schrodinger on
  • Dis'Dis' Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Earthquakes don't affect floating cities, and tornadoes can't penetrate the force fields. Cancer? That sounds like something that God gives moochers as punishment for their laziness.

    Cancer is when cells stop letting the body mooch off their hard work - clearly a community of like-minded cells should isolate themselves and do the best job each can do, even if the rest of the body collapses!

    Dis' on
  • Edith_Bagot-DixEdith_Bagot-Dix Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Earthquakes don't affect floating cities, and tornadoes can't penetrate the force fields. Cancer? That sounds like something that God gives moochers as punishment for their laziness.

    Ahem...

    bioshock_ryan.jpg

    There's no God to punish moochers in the Atlasverse. Galt would just modify his creation to cause cancer in moochers.

    Edith_Bagot-Dix on


    Also on Steam and PSN: twobadcats
  • DeebaserDeebaser on my way to work in a suit and a tie Ahhhh...come on fucking guyRegistered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Dis' wrote: »
    Earthquakes don't affect floating cities, and tornadoes can't penetrate the force fields. Cancer? That sounds like something that God gives moochers as punishment for their laziness.

    Cancer is when cells stop letting the body mooch off their hard work - clearly a community of like-minded cells should isolate themselves and do the best job each can do, even if the rest of the body collapses!


    This makes my <3 sing.
    :^::^:

    Deebaser on
  • electricitylikesmeelectricitylikesme Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Sig'd.

    electricitylikesme on
  • SynthesisSynthesis Honda Today! Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Earthquakes don't affect floating cities, and tornadoes can't penetrate the force fields. Cancer? That sounds like something that God gives moochers as punishment for their laziness.

    Ahem...

    [Andrew Ryan looking very unhappy]

    There's no God to punish moochers in the Atlasverse. Galt would just modify his creation to cause cancer in moochers.

    Damn, I never realized how angry Ryan looked in that statue.

    Synthesis on
  • Kipling217Kipling217 Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Dis' wrote: »
    Earthquakes don't affect floating cities, and tornadoes can't penetrate the force fields. Cancer? That sounds like something that God gives moochers as punishment for their laziness.

    Cancer is when cells stop letting the body mooch off their hard work - clearly a community of like-minded cells should isolate themselves and do the best job each can do, even if the rest of the body collapses
    !

    This post is truly a thing of beauty.

    Kipling217 on
    The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
  • WinkyWinky rRegistered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    Dis' wrote: »
    Earthquakes don't affect floating cities, and tornadoes can't penetrate the force fields. Cancer? That sounds like something that God gives moochers as punishment for their laziness.

    Cancer is when cells stop letting the body mooch off their hard work - clearly a community of like-minded cells should isolate themselves and do the best job each can do, even if the rest of the body collapses
    !

    This post is truly a thing of beauty.

    It is actually a wonderful analogy. Like actually a pretty good way to describe the realization of Randian philosophy in society.

    Winky on
  • KastanjKastanj __BANNED USERS regular
    edited August 2010
    Sig'd.

    Damn you!

    Kastanj on
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
  • NamrokNamrok Registered User regular
    edited August 2010
    Winky wrote: »
    Kipling217 wrote: »
    Dis' wrote: »
    Earthquakes don't affect floating cities, and tornadoes can't penetrate the force fields. Cancer? That sounds like something that God gives moochers as punishment for their laziness.

    Cancer is when cells stop letting the body mooch off their hard work - clearly a community of like-minded cells should isolate themselves and do the best job each can do, even if the rest of the body collapses
    !

    This post is truly a thing of beauty.

    It is actually a wonderful analogy. Like actually a pretty good way to describe the realization of Randian philosophy in society.

    Yeah, you know. If you didn't actually read it.

    Namrok on
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