• @thantik
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    1369 months ago

    Personally I love reading novels of worlds that have no basis in reality. I also love authors that repeat themselves over and over because I have memory issues and can’t remember the last sentence I’ve read.

    Oh, and I also love reading novels of worlds that have no basis in reality.

    • @[email protected]
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      329 months ago

      I don’t know. She sucks you in with the atrocious writing and two dimensional characters who are all just stand-ins for an opinionated author, but she really seals the deal with the fetishization of rape culture and how it inexorably ties in with hyper-capitalist American culture. It’s really the whole package.

      • @[email protected]
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        89 months ago

        I can’t defend any of that, and I’m ashamed to say, that crap worked on me for a bit as a man barely a boy, in the 90s. What helped me was looking at other movements like scientology and Charles Manson.

        Just trying to say, don’t throw someone in the trash just because they read trash.

        • @[email protected]
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          259 months ago

          There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs."

        • @afraid_of_zombies
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          39 months ago

          Fountainhead worked on me a bit. I still think integrity and innovation are important, but I bet I would have gotten that way even if I hadn’t read it.

          I don’t make weapons, I don’t work for Twatter or Faceboot, I do make an effort to keep refining and upgrading designs instead of endlessly recycling the old, I do pull out dead useless code. I don’t win every battle and I don’t even fight every battle. And very generally speaking I do think if you do work you are proud of you will be happier.

          At the same time you should not assume you are the smartest person and if everyone is doing X you need to at least consider that they are on to something.

          See? You don’t need a 400 page novel. A paragraph works.

          • Flying SquidOPM
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            29 months ago

            Yes, but your paragraph has less rape, which Rand would consider a minus.

      • @[email protected]
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        159 months ago

        “This book is a testament to how even the most stupid among us can write a fully fledged book with words, chapters, and everything.” ~@tea

      • Queen HawlSera
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        69 months ago

        I struggle to see how anyone could have written the Turner Diaries and not have either been trolling or gotten some serious “Are we the baddies?” Energy in the process…

    • blivet
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      9 months ago

      Yeah, honestly, I don’t mind reading novels that argue points I disagree with, but the repetitiveness is unbelievable. One of the reasons John Galt’s 60 page speech is so tedious is that all of the points he makes in it had already been made two or three times before by other characters.

        • Flying SquidOPM
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          129 months ago

          Yes. And I really hope whoever shelled out cash to see the Atlas Shrugged 3 movie had to sit through every agonizing second of it on screen.

  • @[email protected]
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    799 months ago

    Since everyone else is talking about Ayn, let me tell you about Dorothy Parker.

    You know that movie, “A Star Is Born?” She wrote the original version. She was a famous writer, known for her devastating insults. She was also an early Anti-Fascist and supporter of Martin Luther King, JR.

    Totally underappreciated and far more deserving of fame than Ms. Rand.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy_Parker

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algonquin_Round_Table

    https://bookshop.org/search?keywords=dorothy+parker

    • Flying SquidOPM
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      389 months ago

      And one of the greatest wits of American history. She deserves to be up there with Twain.

      If nothing else, she should be remembered for all time for coming up with the phrase “what fresh hell is this?”

      • @[email protected]
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        269 months ago

        Dorothy Parker was once asked to use the word horticulture in a sentence. “You can lead a horticulture,” she replied, “but you can’t make her think.”

        • Flying SquidOPM
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          199 months ago

          “Tell him I was too fucking busy-- or vice versa.”

      • @1luv8008135
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        109 months ago

        If nothing else, she should be remembered for all time for coming up with the phrase “what fresh hell is this?”

        Well there you go, I know nothing else about her and she’s already my new favourite person.

      • Flying SquidOPM
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        59 months ago

        “Heterosexuality isn’t normal, it’s just common.”

        Another great Parker quote.

      • @LordOfTheChia
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        29 months ago

        Now the 3rd song in the musical from the IT Crowd’s “Work Outing” episode makes sense.

  • @[email protected]
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    439 months ago

    I’m the person who basically never throws a book away (I did once, but I bought a replacement after the old version literally broke apart in several places). But I would light a chimney with “Atlas shrugged”, if only to prevent it from falling in gullible hands.

    • @[email protected]
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      19 months ago

      Our high school literature teacher gave the class each a copy of Atlas Shrugged and the Fountainhead as a graduation gift. This was before I knew anything about these books, but once I figured it out it explained a lot about her. Nice for the most part, overdramatic and cheap at times, mostly just went to work or the casino, and smoked like a chimney.

      Never read those books though I might still have them somewhere, I’m bad at throwing out gifts.

      • @Mowcherie
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        19 months ago

        It does not spark joy. Don’t let it take up your precious real estate. Out it goes.

  • Queen HawlSera
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    419 months ago

    I still cannot believe a novel this terrible inspired a successful movement that was thoroughly endorsed by presidents.

    If I had a time machine I would go back in time and publish it, but make sure that it only had a limited release. Never got super big just big enough so that some people had heard of it, and then I would sue Ayn Rand when she published her version. Win easily and announce that I wrote it as a parody, mocking people who think that being overly self reliant and rejecting community is a good way to live, for they are like house cats… overly dependent on others yet thoroughly convinced of their own independence. “As Ms. Rand demonstrated by stealing my book and claiming it as her own.”

    Then I’d put a time capsule with the fucking source code to Bioshock 1, 2, and Infinite somewhere to preserve those games in the timeline.

    The damage that book has done to this world…

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      Win easily and announce that I wrote it as a parody, mocking people

      Then watch it backfire horribly. Conservatives (including those who call themselves libertarian) are blind to satire. You might remember that the_donald was satirical at the start. So was the game Monopoly.

      • Queen HawlSera
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        99 months ago

        Yeah but Ayn Rand’s reputation would be ruined and she would never have started “Objectivisim”

        “The question isn’t if I am allowed to do these things, but rather who is going to stop me?” - Ayn Rand, not even pretending she isn’t the villain.

        • @postmateDumbass
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          29 months ago

          That question probably hit different in 1955 than it did in 2005

            • @postmateDumbass
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              29 months ago

              My point is not based in comic books

              In 1955 the society told everyone don’t do shit to change anything. It was a time of restraint and repression.

              In 2005 society was in a revolutionary mode and told everyone to question and disrupt everything.

              So to tell people to challenge what was allowed in 1955 actulally was a good and vital thing to change society. In 2005 challenging what was allowed was mostly done for personal gain, exploiting the system.

    • @hark
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      149 months ago

      Really elaborate plan that will probably end up failing because the book, and its author, only got big because it gave greedy bastards an excuse to be so unashamedly greedy. If not this trash then another work of trash.

      • Queen HawlSera
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        9 months ago

        Ayn Rand did more than write a book, she actually started a movement and even had a fling with L. Ron Hubbard to learn how to properly cult…

        She never believed in scientology and thought L. Ron was a great man for running such a successful con.

        She also hated religion in general, for she saw it as a form of collective bargaining and hated it for encouraging people to not be selflish.

        Rand was a monster

        • Flying SquidOPM
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          59 months ago

          She literally said altruism was evil. I mean what the ever-living fuck?

          • Queen HawlSera
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            29 months ago

            Not only that, but satanism, and I don’t mean edgy atheists pretending to worship the devil in order to troll right leaning judges, but actual honest-to-Dog satanists, actually cite Ayn Rand is a major source of inspiration, and someone to look up to in terms of how to be a good person.

            No I know that the satanists who Worship in the way that I’m speaking, Anton LaVey and his alike do not literally worship satan. But they are still very evil people who do terrible things.

            I mean their book literally says that it is foolish for one to give up the world, only to gain their own soul. Lot of very strong, “Are we the baddies?” Energy

            • Flying SquidOPM
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              09 months ago

              Yeah, LaVeyan Satanism is Ayn Rand with some woo woo window dressing.

    • @rodneylives
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      59 months ago

      There has always been a market for telling people what they want to hear.

      • Queen HawlSera
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        49 months ago

        If you’re talking about the Bible. Religious texts typically require historians and theologians to figure out the meaning of… lots of hard to understand passages requiring a context not easily understood in the modern age.

        It’s not like Ayn Rand which was an incomprehensible mess from its inception.

    • @postmateDumbass
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      29 months ago

      It will probably tie back to mind control efforts fighting communism.

  • Sir_Osis_of_Liver
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    399 months ago

    Back when I was in junior high in the early 1980s, I found a copy of Atlas Shrugged on my father’s bookshelf, and started reading it. I can’t remember how far I got into it, but I do remember thinking it was just awful in just about every way: story, writing, pacing, everything.

    I asked Dad about it, “Oh, that. It’s terrible, isn’t it?” A friend had given it to him. Neither one of us finished reading it and after that it ended up at a book reseller.
    On the plus side, he’d gone through his books and gave me James Clavell’s Shogun to read, which was an awesome novel.

    • @PsychedSy
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      69 months ago

      I tried reading it twice and didn’t finish either time.

      • Sir_Osis_of_Liver
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        39 months ago

        The only other book I struggled with was Pirsig’s Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. The travel-log sections were entertaining, and the relationship with his son was interesting, but the discussions on the nature of quality were completely lost on me.

        I did get through Zen on the second attempt because I thought it was worth it. I saw no value in Atlas Shrugged at all.

        • @somethingsnappy
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          39 months ago

          Zen and the Art was a big deal for me. A journey to the state I wanted to leave. It made me love what I was giving up.

            • @somethingsnappy
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              19 months ago

              Montana. Great place to grow up. I left to see the world and for work. Now I can’t go back (until I retire maybe) for job and personal reasons.

    • @somethingsnappy
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      59 months ago

      Was your father an English teacher? That’s how I ended up reading those books around that age. Add some Hesse and the Gulag Archipelago and we may be related.

      • Sir_Osis_of_Liver
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        9 months ago

        Dad had an interesting career. Started as an office clerk for a railway with only high school education. Then he got into using an IBM 650 (IIRC) for doing freight rate calculations. How he managed that transition, I have no idea. He didn’t care for being cooped up all day flipping switches, dealing with punch cards and tapes.

        He switched to marketing and got on there very well and retired after 37 years as a regional director.

        He always has a book on the go, even now at 83. He has an eclectic pile of them that he kept, from Zane Grey to an early history of the Civil War written around 1870.

        • @somethingsnappy
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          29 months ago

          So interesting. I just read everything on the shelves. It was mostly confusing. Animal Farm is not like Charlotte’s Web.

    • Kit Sorens
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      59 months ago

      The audiobook isn’t so bad. It’s certainly 64hrs of audio… And took me 3 months.

      • @[email protected]
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        39 months ago

        That’s how I ingested it. I did it on work related cross country drives at 1.3x speed. It was… underwhelming and made me ask “What the hell is this?” and “She can’t seriously see the world like this, right?” many, many times.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        I like to fall asleep listening to audiobooks, except they have to be kinda dull otherwise I get actually invested. You may have just picked my next one!

        • Flying SquidOPM
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          49 months ago

          Do you want nightmares about the Reagan Administration? Because this is how you get them.

          • @[email protected]
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            29 months ago

            the characters are well-written imho.

            I hate to break it to you, but the characters in Atlas Shrugged are famously one-dimensional. They’re terrible caricatures who are 100% good or bad. They never develop or learn anything new about themselves.

            It’s obvious who’s good and bad from page 1, which makes the massive length even more ridiculous. It could have been a pamphlet that said “money good, helping people bad”.

            The best possible book review is just a recycled quote from Billy Madison:

            “what you’ve just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.”

    • @[email protected]
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      29 months ago

      Shogun is a good one. My favourite book for a long time, and it currently sits on my bedside table for a second read. I’m just amazed that you mentioned it.

      • Sir_Osis_of_Liver
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        I remember not picking up another book for some time after finishing Shogun. I wanted to hang onto it as long as I could. It’s epic.

  • style99
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    399 months ago

    Reading Atlas Shrugged is more like a hazing ritual conservatives inflict on each other.

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      I look back and my parents let me read this in high school without comment…like wtf mom and dad.

      • @Zron
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        -19 months ago

        It’s an intelligence test. Either smart enough to smell the bullshit, or you need to be tutored on critical thinking.

    • @nBodyProblem
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      19 months ago

      I dunno, when I was in high school there were a number of Ayn Rand essay contests with prize money.

      I won’t say they’re good books but I did make good money from reading them.

    • @niktemadur
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      19 months ago

      You mean the ones that can read anything longer than a National Enquirer piece. There must be dozens of them!

  • @[email protected]
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    329 months ago

    I remember reading The Foundtainhead and, when I finished I realized what a lousy, shitty philosopher Ayn Rand was.

    And that all my architect friends had terrible egos.

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      Is that where Ted’s ego came from in HIMYM? I thought it was just Ted, but maybe all architects are horrible?

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        That’s my experience, I framed houses for a few years after college and the architects thought they were gifts from God. Engineers were mostly cool, though. Most of them would understand “Your design is dumb and here’s why. We’re gonna have to change it” and they’d usually learn from it.

        My best day on a job site was watching the architect wearing zero safety gear walk right into a temporary support for a wall. It was fantastic.

    • Flying SquidOPM
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      39 months ago

      That explains a lot about Frank Gehry. That and a complete lack of aesthetic sensibilities.

    • @afraid_of_zombies
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      09 months ago

      And that all my architect friends had terrible egos.

      Not as bad as engineers but in my experience yes. Which is fine, it would be nice to have a few unique buildings to look at.

      • Sir_Osis_of_Liver
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        69 months ago

        Very early on in my career in consulting engineering, I had an architect tee-off on me for changing the ceiling heights of the office space she’d designed.

        I’m electrical, all I was concerned with was circuiting her lights, that was it. I had documentation showing that I’d worked off of exactly the same ceiling heights she had sent me. Heights that she’d apparently changed somewhere along the line without informing the client, who was an international conglomerate, and notoriously picky to work for.

        That could have blown over, had she not berated me over email while CCing the client, my management and just about anyone else involved with the project. I made sure to “reply all” showing where the change had happened. She was replaced on the project the following week.

        After that I stuck to industrial projects, where the buildings were non-descript concrete and steel boxes with no architectural involvement.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          Generally firing an architect midway through a project means the project is dead, particularly since they control the permitting and if they are the arch of record they have their stamp on it. Wonder how that went.

        • @afraid_of_zombies
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          19 months ago

          In my experience the story doesn’t end with them being fired it ends with them yelling at me for not anticipating what they wanted, getting backcharges because why not, and years of fights inside and outside of work.

          But hey why shouldn’t we all just do our work professionally and go home?

  • @erasebegin
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    309 months ago

    100% 👍👍👍 the BBC did a great docu-series on Raynd. If you’re wondering what it is that you can’t quite put your finger on about her work, it’s that she’s utterly miserable. A person whose geat intellect can’t even make them joyful is a person whose intellect has turned against them.

    • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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      169 months ago

      In addition to her just being a miserable person, her actual composition is just awful. The following quote is a sentence:

      “Productiveness is your acceptance of morality, your recognition of the fact that you choose to live–that productive work is the process by which man’s consciousness controls his existence, a constant process of acquiring knowledge and shaping matter to fit one’s purpose, of translating an idea into physical form, of remaking the earth in the image of one’s values–that all work is creative work if done by a thinking mind, and no work is creative if done by a blank who repeats in uncritical stupor a routine he has learned from others–that your work is yours to choose, and the choice is as wide as your mind, that nothing more is possible to you and nothing less is human–that to cheat your way into a job bigger than your mind can handle is to become a fear-corroded ape on borrowed motions and borrowed time, and to settle down into a job that requires less than your mind’s full capacity is to cut your motor and sentence yourself to another kind of motion: decay–that your work is the process of achieving your values, and to lose your ambition for values is to lose your ambition to live–that your body is a machine, but your mind is its driver, and you must drive as far as your mind will take you, with achievement as the goal of your road–that the man who has no purpose is a machine that coasts downhill at the mercy of any boulder to crash in the first chance ditch, that the man who stifles his mind is a stalled machine slowly going to rust, that the man who lets a leader prescribe his course is a wreck being towed to the scrap heap, and the man who makes another man his goal is a hitchhiker no driver should ever pick up–that your work is the purpose of your life, and you must speed past any killer who assumes the right to stop you, that any value you might find outside your work, any other loyalty or love, can be only traveller you choose to share your journey and must be traveller going on their own power in the same direction.”

  • @[email protected]
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    279 months ago

    I have to be in the minority of sane people who enjoyed this book.

    To be fair, I had no context and read the first 10 pages assuming it was satire. The rest of the experience was bizarre. In the first chapter the main character ignores the advice of the train employees and orders the train to run despite the signal being red. It’s touted as taking responsibility when none else would. Utterly insane to me that someone who had been out of the area for decades, making management level decisions, would decide they know better than the worker on the ground who does the job daily. The contempt and arrogance leading to destruction - a great critique of management structure and survivor bias. How is it not satire?

    Through the looking glass with a self important free capitalist narcissist, with almost no experience of the world and commerce outside their bubble, self hating tirade against perceived inability. Fascinating stuff

    • @[email protected]
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      39 months ago

      I read ‘The Fountainhead.’ It was enjoyable the same way a book about talking bears who fly magical ponies would be fun, a fantasy not connected to actual human life.

  • @[email protected]
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    249 months ago

    Started reading Atlas a couple of months ago and put it aside after a third or so. I am used to reading “conventionally boring” stuff but this was such a slog. Super sterile, the characters are stereotypical, the message Rand wants to bring across seems awfully clear very early on. It may be the historical context that makes it more interesting, I didn’t see it, though. Just couldn’t do it.

    Reading your comments on this thread is a relief, maybe there is nothing wrong with me after all.

    • @Thisisforfun
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      169 months ago

      Just wait till you get to the last third, where the ideas that weren’t subtly telegraphed in the first two thirds will be even less subtly shouted in a hundred page long speach.

      • @postmateDumbass
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        59 months ago

        I got to that part, and it was at that point i shruged.

      • @[email protected]
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        49 months ago

        Yeah I got that impression from the other comments. I might go back to just that part for the hell of it. Seems to be kind of a meme.

        • @batmaniam
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          29 months ago

          I’m the guy from above who said I liked the “quantity over quality” she had because it let me get lost. Even I skipped “the speech” lmfao. It just repeats the shitty, not subtle, ideas that have been repeated 100x by that point, and even within itself it repeats the same damn thing over and over and over.

          I can see it being a nifty writing technique to basically have an academic paper micro-version of the whole work diogenically within your philosophy tilted book, but the problem is if that was the intent, it’s a paper that no one would publish because it sucks.

    • @batmaniam
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      99 months ago

      I was lucky enough to read it young before I knew it was “a thing”.

      I loved the stream punky Sci fi stuff (yes I loved bioschock when it came out).

      I enjoyed the rugged individualism stuff, but like, in the same way I enjoy James Bond committing extra judicial killings, Indiana Jones, cheesy ghost movies , or Hell in a Cell.

      I was really confused when I found out it’s got a cult. I just enjoyed my nifty train story.

      The writing is dry, voluminous but not really good. I personally enjoyed getting lost in that much volume, but that’s not going to be everyone. The philosophy stuff isn’t bad or wrong within it’s own universe, it’s just not really applicable to real life. Basing a world view on it is like reading/watching the silo series and thinking that’s how you should live in present day, rules about going outside and all. The conclusion isn’t totally wrong, but the premise its valid under is so narrow it’s useless, and that’s how it got it’s cult.

      • @[email protected]
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        Yeah I don’t know, I remember something about extra super steel in the beginning, where it was kind of like “assertive entrepreneur makes eggheads do the impossible”. That is just not how anything in engineering works at all. Was kind of a turn-off for me also.

        But I am glad that this stuff made it into a cool train story for you. I like your sentiment.

        • @batmaniam
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          29 months ago

          Haha thanks. There were parts I enjoyed and I don’t get a chance to talk about them much without people thinking I’m crazy, or worse, in the cult.

          Re: The super engineer. I also was lucky there that I read it before my technical education, now it would probably bug me. Still, the escapism of being the superman “I CAN do it all!” can be fun, but it is just that: escapist fantasy. Problems arise when people forget that.

      • @thisorthatorwhatever
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        29 months ago

        Read it when young as well, though I was luckily enough to read a quick bio of her. Escaped Communism, worked in Hollywood.

        Felt that this was more a rant about trying to be passionate when stuck in a system, be it the horrible Communist system, or an uncaring bureaucratic one.

        • @batmaniam
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          19 months ago

          Right, like that’s definitely a read of it. That’s kind of what I was getting it in that the philosophy makes sense in the world she created, it just doesn’t have all that much in common with the real world.

          That take makes sense, but it’s definitely not what the author intended. She very much wanted it to be applied to modern times. Whether or not you can separate the authors intent from the book itself involves some “death of the author” type conversations that, despite knowing some $5 lit terms, I’m not super versed in. Even then, I think the energy is better spent on more interesting examples, like how “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” kind of changed significance over time.

          I’m close with a family that lived through the collapse of the USSR. Based on what I’ve heard alone, Rand’s reaction is really understandable in my opinion. It doesn’t make it correct, but I do get the reaction.

    • @chakan2
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      29 months ago

      No no…at least get to the rapey bit…then you can solidify your hatred of that wretched wind bag in granite…its just before the speech that takes like 100 pages.

  • @[email protected]
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    229 months ago

    There’s at least a grain of truth in that book. Try starting a business or producing something.

    Look at domestic attempts to mine lithium or building semiconductor plants. Try building anything here.

    “When you see that in order to produce, you need to obtain permission from men who produce nothing; when you see that money is flowing to those who deal not in goods, but in favors; when you see that men get rich more easily by graft than by work, and your laws no longer protect you against them, but protect them against you. . . you may know that your society is doomed.”

    • @chiliedogg
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      759 months ago

      I work in municipal development. You want to open a new business, build a house, or develop land in my city, you need my signature to do it.

      I’m one of those officious pricks. I’m “the man” holding people down.

      Because if I don’t then all these rich fucks pave over everything, flood their neighbor’s land, block traffic, poison their customers, and sell houses that’ll collapse 10 minutes after The warranty expires.

      So yeah, people have to get our permission to do things that affect the community.

      • @[email protected]
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        39 months ago

        Where I live approval on average takes a year or more. Permits alone can cost like 50k for a house. All of those things you’ve mentioned would result in court cases and awards …

        Honestly even residential houses that are to code are sort of trash aren’t they? Like laminated wood chips and saw dust more and more every year.

        How many other approvals are required above you to build? How long and at what cost ? Mostly curious. Here its pretty bad IMO. Here being Canada.

        • @jj4211
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          39 months ago

          All of those things you’ve mentioned would result in court cases and awards …

          For one, not necessarily, and two, small comfort if it happens after the fact when it could be avoided with some reasonable oversight. For example, screwing up erosion is something likely to be overlooked by parties involved and is at high risk of not being noticed naturally until after damage is difficult or impossible to undo. Besides, I think folks like it when matters like that are settled before they might incur liability.

          Another example, I had some HVAC work done. The county inspectors highlighted a fire hazard after they were done, that I never would have realized unless the house caught fire.

          Now where I live, permits aren’t overly expensive and are fairly expedient as are inspections. I can understand frustrations if there’s no effort at reasonable efficiencies, but then again some projects require community fair chance to become aware and provide feedback, and those sorts of projects can really drag out the time since it’s mostly waiting to give a chance for it to be noticed.

          • @[email protected]
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            09 months ago

            Like you say avoiding liability is in everyone’s interest. In a utopian libertarian society maybe an inspector someone you’d want to pay electively like an engineer.

            Someone who could coordinate consultations with surrounding properties and engage others who are experts with say surface water etc.

            The other option might be your insurance company would require inspection for you to receive coverage… In the event of say an HVAC electrical fire. Then the cost is certifying the build is covered by a private company instead of being a state operated service which is free from the pressures of competition. Also then delays in permitting could also incur liability :)

            In reality if permitting is quick, affordable and isn’t weilded like a political weapon Im mostly fine with it. The federal government is using it to pretty much shut down oil and gas development in Canada. Municipal permitting is partly why we have a massive housing crisis.

            • @chiliedogg
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              29 months ago

              Houses are largely built by shell companies that exist to build the neighborhood then dissolve. When the house fails in 5 years there’s nobody to sue for damages.

              So instead we require developers to permit and build shit right before we allow the houses to be occupied. The streets have to be built right, the increased impervious cover has to be accounted for to prevent flooding of the next property over, and inspections have to be performed.

              Then, we make them pay a maintenance bond and the City takes over maintenance of the road, using the bond to pay for repairs in the first 10 years. If they build them right, the bonds don’t get used, and we give the money back.

              But to get the money back they have to keep the company alive, so there’s someone to sue.

              And the permit to build a house is about $3,500 here. I ran the numbers for our budget cycle, and we actually lose money on single family houses. We make it up some with commercial buildings, but overall our department loses money, and people building houses are being subsidized by the existing tax payers while bitching about the fees.

      • @HessiaNerd
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        29 months ago

        I am an engineer. I love making things. I work in a heavily regulated industry (Med device), and it is a huge pain in the ass. I have to fill out obscene amounts of paperwork for everything I do. I live in the woods with a well and a septic system. I am hoping to disconnect from the electric grid in a few years.

        I bought into rugged individualism when I was younger, but I have come to realize it is a farce. I am really glad there is the structure and oversight for these things that can harm people. Complex systems require diverse areas of expertise and multiple layers of oversight and protection.

        The sentiment that it is some great burden to “obtain permission from men who do nothing” is a blatant strawman for what the processes actually are.

        • @chiliedogg
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          119 months ago

          There’s a huge difference between a politician and a municipal employee. Our planners and engineers don’t take lobbying money, and our engineering criteria and building codes are based on physical reality, not policy.

          In our city and many others, Council cannot force us to allow a particular development. They can sign all the agreements they want to waive use restrictions and fees, but the engineer and building official are still the final authority on whether or not something can be built, and their reviews do not consider politics.

    • @[email protected]
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      449 months ago

      Yes the world would be a better place if people looking to profit in the world didn’t have to ensure that their products were safe, regulated, and taxed appropriately. Business owners should just be able to make their own rules.

      Nah man I’d say that shit it stupid too. It’s difficult to build a lithium mine in the United States for pretty good reasons, especially surrounding regulation and safety.

      • @[email protected]
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        39 months ago

        Australia has some of the tightest safety regulations and strongest unions on the planet. We are opening lithium mines left right and centre.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        It’s cheaper to mine lithium in other countries because the labor is cheaper, the labor is cheaper because we live in a country with a more advanced economy, that same economy became more advanced under more stringent regulations. Who gives a shit if they don’t mine lithium here when we designed the machines that mine lithium all over the world. There’s a reason people are beating down the doors to come here.

      • @[email protected]
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        -99 months ago

        Like most things it’s balance … No one wants the ecological damage of the 60s again. I’d say the vast majority of the things people are buying are imported from less regulated markets… Lead in the kids toys am I right? If things are produced here at least you can take those companies to court when they do harm.

        Good reasons being ? I’ve seen projects cancelled due to a few arrow heads and tool parts being found … Massive overruns due to turtle eggs. Private companies just don’t build here if they can avoid it. Building and producing things is never perfectly safe and will always cause some ecological damage. The things we consume are actually built overseas in the most destructive and unregulated way possible mostly … Are they not?

    • @[email protected]
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      279 months ago

      That’s how you trick the gullible, start with a bit of truth they can understand and then jump off the deep end into lunacy.

      • R0cket_M00se
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        29 months ago

        The same can be said about basically anything, that’s why you have a brain to evaluate what parts are grounded in the truth and what is a conclusion drawn from truth that serves the specific needs of whoever is spinning the narrative.

      • @[email protected]
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        -29 months ago

        You can agree with some principles of a work and reject others. What parts of her philosophy do you find to be lunacy?

        • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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          What parts of her philosophy do you find to be lunacy?

          “A man’s sexual choice is the result and the sum of his fundamental convictions… He will always be attracted to the woman who reflects his deepest vision of himself, the woman whose surrender permits him to experience a sense of self-esteem. The man who is proudly certain of his own value, will want the highest type of woman he can find, the woman he admires, the strongest, the hardest to conquer–because only the possession of a heroine will give him the sense of an achievement.”

          Almost forgot:

          “In this world, either you’re virtuous or you enjoy yourself. Not both, lady, not both.”

        • @Wakmrow
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          99 months ago

          The premise that some people are just better than everyone else is not intelligent. Valuing a person’s worth as a human by measuring their productivity is genocidal.

          • @[email protected]
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            79 months ago

            Valuing a person’s worth as a human by measuring their productivity is genocidal.

            Of course you don’t value people based on their productivity! That’s downright anti-American “from each according to his ability” commie talk! You value people based on their net worth! One Dollar, One Vote, that’s what I always say.

            /s,

          • @[email protected]
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            -59 months ago

            Some people are just better in terms of being productive. I don’t see how that’s debatable. The question is just if you let those people keep they’re outsized earnings or you forcibly redistribute them.

            • @Wakmrow
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              19 months ago

              I’m going to respond so hopefully you grow.

              Productivity is difficult to measure or define. Intelligence is similar. Regardless, neither of these things define value in a human life. Some people love to cook, some are great at reading comic books. One might be really good at watching TV. In the end, your preference for what is seen as valuable comes to your preference. There’s nothing objective about it. More concretely, in many engineering jobs great engineers are promoted into management positions for which they are ill suited. They make more money, are they not definitionally more productive? Yet the company and team is worse off.

              As for your question, Rand is not subtle about her thoughts.

        • @chakan2
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          39 months ago

          Her stances on Race, Rape, Economics, Gender, and her Writing style…all lunacy.

          • @[email protected]
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            09 months ago

            I like her stance on economics and free markets … Also the prime mover concept is somewhat accurate

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      I mean, why SHOULDN’T I be able to expose people and the environment to harmful conditions in order to maximize profit?

      I’m allowed to do that in other countries, and I can also pay those slaves in beans so that I can make even more money.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        Some environmental impact is unavoidable. I think people are maybe a bit more aware and if I knew a company was being unnecessarily wreckless I’d personally not give them a dime. Also this is what lawsuits are for. These companies should be sued into nonexistence.

        Why are domestic companies forced to compete on an uneven playing field like that? Why are companies able to just go abroad and import at very favourable rates. That’s profoundly unfair … But have you thought about what would happen to the cost of goods if there was an equal playing field? All the worst things are still done they just happen elsewhere.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          lemmy doesn’t semd updates reliably. or at least my client.

          Anyway, what you’re saying is that capitalism and open markets is the enemy. I agree.

    • @chakan2
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      9 months ago

      That’s not a grain of truth…it’s an environmental protection.

      That’s almost the most ironic Ayn Rand post you could make.

    • Flying SquidOPM
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      109 months ago

      Sure. Try it. Try making a railroad without eminent domain.

      • @[email protected]
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        49 months ago

        Eniment domain doesn’t appear to be the problem here lmao

        It’s more like

        Try making a railroad when the industry has been captured by regulations written by the big players whose purpose is to erect barriers to entry for any new railroad companies that might want to start up, and reduce costs by reducing safety. Also, you need angel investors to give you billions and anyone with the means to do that is already in bed with the big boys so they’re not going to give you shit.

        • Flying SquidOPM
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          39 months ago

          Except it wasn’t a new railroad company in the book.

          • @[email protected]
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            -39 months ago

            It is abundantly clear that we’re not talking about the details of the book anymore. We are talking about that one passage and how it relates to our current society.

      • @[email protected]
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        -39 months ago

        The protagonist being in a privileged position due to government seisuze of private property is certainly an excellent point. I just feel the state exercising power in the other direction, against productive ventures instead of property owners, may be a little too in vogue these days.

    • @[email protected]
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      I’ve read all of Rand and I thoroughly enjoyed it. But not for the right reasons.

      Coming from a background myself of community art > touring performance artist > clown/circus school > comedy and improv… I found things like “I’ma write a book where a character delivers a speech on capitalism longer than the communist manifesto” to be quite funny.

      The way people spoke to each other, the ridiculous melodrama from the perspective of a soy bean stuck on a train, a community made from pure gold inside a hologram inside a volcano, how people can only have sex if they bite each other, the amazing lazzi (sketch) of the rich man accidentally giving a homeless man $100 bill instead of $1 and the homeless man not caring because it was an accident, the guy putting out a steel furnace in meltdown while naked with his bare hands…

      I thought it was very funny. I chortled all the way through. a perfect 7/10.

    • @[email protected]
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      99 months ago

      It seems to me this passage speaks against the bankers, intellectual property owners, monopolists, land owners and the like. All gate keepers of resources.

      Perhaps Atlas is actually someone else than Rand thought.

      • @[email protected]
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        -29 months ago

        It speaks against a system where political favour dictates your success as a producer over your ability to compete. If you feel land owners and intellectual property owners are gate keepers in a society where your can have your own ideas and buy your own property I don’t know what to say.

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          I know.

          The permits, policies, regulation and political apparatuses which Rand so despises are legal fictions which allow a small group of people control, who gets to use what resources and how.

          Currencies, fractional reserve banking, patents and land ownership are similar legal fiction, which allow a small group to control who gets to use what resources and how.

          If I want to sell razor blades to a Gillette razor, I will get sued for patent infringement. Is their gatekeepping somehow more morally valid than the politician’s who gives a tax break to Gillette’s competitor since their production line is in his city?

          I was trying to humorously point out, that the quoted part of Rand’s text could be read almost as a socialist opinion, where the value created arises from the worker and not the owners.

          • @[email protected]
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            -99 months ago

            I guess the difference being the people in control of permits and policies produce nothing of value. If a capitalist fails to produce he no longer holds the property or patents. Someone else gets them to try to compete.

            The reason capitalism is moral is that the people who get the scarce resources need to be effective in providing for everyone else by creating or they lose them. Under a central planning system this is not the case. Scarce resources are held by connected people … The state bails them out if they really fuck up.

            Nothing is stopping you from creating an improved Gillette razor and competing without blatenly copying their patent… Property is expensive but available (problem created by government with interest rate manipulation and making land one of the only viable hard assets) you can hire people for your factory. They’ll cost 10x what they do overseas though… So you’d probably just go there.

            Man you won’t find me defending fractional reserve banking or fiat currency. Those are also things created by politicians and bankers. They’re just means of stealing value. You also can’t have socialism without fiat currency. The myth that you can rob the 1% to pay for the needs of everyone… Well do the math … Liquidate the 10 richest people and it funds the state for maybe a month or something.

            Ah I didn’t get the joke I guess lol. I’m not really much of a fan of socialism. If companies can’t build without permits and tax breaks then you dont really have a level playing field anymore and you no longer have functional creative destruction. Old inefficient well connected incombants strangle the new razor corp in the crib and you’re stuck paying 35 dollars for blades :)

  • @[email protected]
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    189 months ago

    Eh, it wasn’t bad as a revenge fantasy. You might like it if you enjoy thinking about how all the people who don’t appreciate you would be screwed if you just left. The political philosophy being proposed won’t be too offensive if you already lean libertarian.

    My main objection to the book (other than the infamous speech, which I admit I couldn’t read all the way through) is that it’s a sort of morality play with with exaggerated good and bad and no shades of gray, but it keeps denying this and insisting that the real world really is that black and white. The reader ought to take it with more than a little pinch of salt.

    Oh, and that Ayn Rand’s self-insert has a BDSM fetish I really would have preferred not to know about. (Why do authors keep inserting their kinks into books? I’m looking at you, Robert Jordan. And especially at you, Piers Anthony.)

    • @Yosituna
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      89 months ago

      Ugh, Piers Anthony. I remember absolutely LOVING Piers Anthony’s books as a kid; I went back a while back to reread them as an adult (and read the ones I hadn’t read before) and good god, but I could not do it. Even beyond the terrible puns (not as fun when you’re not like ten years old) and the really regressive ideas of gender roles, after the third book with a young teen girl seducing a virtuous middle-aged man because he was the only one who truly loved her, I was just staring at my old books in horror.

      (A few years back someone linked me to his Hi Piers newsletter, which moved to the Internet a while back. I got as far as seeing him talking about the sexual attractiveness of girls at menarche - their first period, which can be as young as 9 - and I had to stop because of the full-body shudders.)

      • Flying SquidOPM
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        29 months ago

        He used to advertise that ‘Hi Piers’ newsletter on TV commercials. How weird was that?

        • @Yosituna
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          29 months ago

          What the heck, really? I just remember him always mentioning it in his author’s notes at the end of his books (and for a while there I think there was also a 1-800-HI-PIERS phone number or something?). I remember as a kid wanting to subscribe to the newsletter, but I’m glad in retrospect I didn’t, yikes.

          • Flying SquidOPM
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            Really. It was bizarre to me as a non-fan that an author would go to that length. And yes, the 800-number was featured. I tried to find it on YouTube, but it appears to have gone down the memory hole. I think he only advertised on cable, but it still couldn’t have been cheap. Did that really translate into money for him?

            EDIT: Also, it was just him sitting in a chair, talking. No fantasy scenes or even artwork.

      • Drgon
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        29 months ago

        I hate how much I like the idea of the Incarnations series. Dead like me is one of my favorite TV shows (reaper was OK too)

        But I cannot go back to all of the rape

    • @SCB
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      My main objection i similar to our but broader in scope. None of the main characters feel like real people. They are Platonic Ideals of Ayn Rand’s fantasy lifestyle, full stop

      That always annoys the shit out of me when not one well. It can be done well, but it takes a significantly better author.

      I think author-kinks are a bit misrepresented (especially with Jordan, who I read more as commentary on power dynamics) but the point is not invalid at all.

      • @[email protected]
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        49 months ago

        None of the main characters feel like real people.

        Apparently she did that on purpose. From Wikipedia:

        She wanted her fiction to present the world “as it could be and should be”, rather than as it was. This approach led her to create highly stylized situations and characters.

        • @[email protected]
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          I consider that to be a wishful revisionism on her part. The truth is shes just a bad writer.

          The charactors in her first book “Anthem” are exactly as wooden and fake as the charactors in “Atlas shrugged.” She never developed any finesse or depth because real people aren’t as shallow as the imaginary people she dreamt about.

          • Flying SquidOPM
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            29 months ago

            The Fountainhead too. Howard Roark was just a cardboard cutout with a bunch of notes pinned to it.

    • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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      Why do authors keep inserting their kinks into books?

      Oh… I suggest you don’t read my books when they come out. They’re romance novels entirely focused on my kinks.

      • Flying SquidOPM
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        29 months ago

        Chuck Tingle? You’re on Lemmy?

    • @afraid_of_zombies
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      39 months ago

      You might like it if you enjoy thinking about how all the people who don’t appreciate you would be screwed if you just left.

      I see you have read my dream journal.

      You really can’t win. If you people are dependent on you it means more work if/when you take time off. If people don’t need you, they don’t need you and this world is just that colder.

  • @[email protected]
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    159 months ago

    The amount of people with both the patience to read it and the inability to tell that it is describing a fantasy land with magic and wizards is worrying.

  • CoachDom
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    139 months ago

    So what’s up with this novel? Can’t find anything obvious about it - only that it’s mighty popular among conservatives (which is usually a red flag)

    • Flying SquidOPM
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      There are plenty of articles going into great detail- here is one- but essentially it is a showcase for Rand’s moronic and hateful Objectivist philosophy and it has such ludicrous ideas in it as suggesting railroads would do great if it wasn’t for the pesky government getting in their way and after society collapses, the brilliant industrialists will all live in paradise just as soon as we find a way to create electricity by violating the laws of physics.

      For those who are already familiar, this cartoon summarizes the problem with Atlas Shrugged quite succinctly.

      • @[email protected]
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        139 months ago

        I wanted to read this book so I could see what the fuss was all about. I’ve never made it 80% of the way through any other book and then intentionally stopped reading it. Everything about the way it is written is so bad. The characters are all made of cardboard. The situations that arise make no sense. Pretty much everything about the book makes no sense and is just to drive the story towards whatever idiotic conclusion Rand wanted.

        When John Galt finally appeared and I realized he was just three incoherent speeches in a trench coat and not an actual attempt at writing a character, I basically abandoned finishing the book in disgust.

        • Flying SquidOPM
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          29 months ago

          Did you get to the part where Galt had a magical machine that generated power from static electricity that would power his entire society? See? All we need for an objectivist paradise is to forget about all that “science” nonsense and make it happen through willpower!

          • @[email protected]
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            29 months ago

            Nah I didn’t make it that far. I couldn’t take too much of that character. It doesn’t surprise me that it gets even more ridiculous though.

      • Queen HawlSera
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        69 months ago

        Competition is a great idea to these bozos until they realize that it’s possible for them to lose.

      • @afraid_of_zombies
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        29 months ago

        Even if they had robots they would still need to be tooled ;)

        This would have been a welcome addition to the book.

    • @afraid_of_zombies
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      129 months ago

      It’s just one of those novels that many bookish 17-19 years have read. I think it is worth reading in the sense that I think reading the Bible is worth reading. It is popular enough that you sorta have to have some familiarity with it. Popular because it is popular at this point.

      Basic setting is (I am going to steel man it) the world is falling apart from communism and the US is pretty much the last functional country. However instead of slowly drifting down like everyone expects suddenly the US is declining much faster. The reason is all the Jeff Bezoses are going on strike secretly.

      The plot follows an heiress to a train company as she tries to hold things together and has an affair with one of her clients.

      Eventually everything falls apart and the Jeff Bezoses launch a plan to rebuild but with a new rule that they are running everything.

      The end.