February 7, 2013
Thirty years after her death, Ayn Rand’s philosophy of selfishness
and billionaire empowerment rules the world. It’s a remarkable
achievement for an ideology that was pushed to the fringes for most of
her life, and ridiculed on national television in a notorious interview
with Mike Wallace.
But, it’s happened. And today, the United
States and other independent governments around the world are crumbling
while Ayn Rand’s billionaires are taking over.
With each new
so-called Free Trade agreement – especially the very secretive Trans
Pacific Partnership, which has less to do with trade and more to do with
a new law of global governance for transnational corporations – Ayn
Rand’s reviled “state” (or what we would call our democracy, the United
States of America) is losing its power to billionaires and transnational
corporations.
Ayn Rand hated governments and democracy. She
considered them systems of mob rule. She grew up in Russia, and as a
child watched the Bolsheviks confiscate her father’s pharmacy during the
Russian Revolution. Likely suffering from PTSD from that incident, Ayn
Rand devoted her future writings to evil government, including the
"evil" of its functions like taxation, regulation, and providing social
services to the poor and sick.
She divided the world into makers and takers (or what she called “looters”).
On
one side are the billionaires and the industrialists. People like Dagny
Taggert, a railroad tycoon, and Hank Rearden, a steel magnate. Both
were fictional characters in her book Atlas Shrugged, but both have
real-world counterparts in the form of the Koch Brothers, the Waltons,
and Sheldon Adelson. According to Rand, they are the “Atlases” holding
up the world.
So, in Atlas Shrugged, when the billionaires, tired
of paying taxes and complying with government regulation, go on strike,
Ayn Rand writes that the American economy promptly collapsed.
On
the other side are the “looters,” or everyone else who isn’t as rich or
privileged, or who believed in a democratic government to provide basic
services, empower labor unions, and regulate the economy. They are the
leeches on society according to Rand (and according to Mitt Romney with
his 47% comments). And, as she told Mike Wallace in in 1959, they do not
even “deserve love.”
To our Founding Fathers, looking out for the
general welfare of the population was an explicit role of the
government, one of its most important and the reason this nation was
created when we separated from Britian.
But to Ayn Rand, a
government that taxed billionaires to help pay for healthcare and
education for impoverished children was not just unwise economically, it
was also immoral.
Nature abhors a vacuum – both in the wild and
in politics. So, when people, organized in the form of a government,
are removed from power, then money organized in the form of corporations
and billionaires moves into the vacuum to take power – which is exactly
what’s happening today, worldwide.
In the thirty years after her
death, the United States crept closer and closer to Ayn Rand’s utopia.
Reagan dramatically slashed taxes on the rich and went after labor
unions. Clinton deregulated financial markets for the rich, ended
welfare as we know it, and committed our nation to one globalist
corporate free trade agreement after another.
And, under Bush and
Obama, we’ve seen the rapid privatization of our commons, the further
erosion of social safety nets, and more losses of national sovereignty
with more so-called free trade agreements.
In Europe, we’re seeing
sovereign governments neutered by Conservative technocrats. According
to Ayn Rand, the rich can never be asked to sacrifice. So instead, it’s
working people across the Eurozone who have to pay for the bad
investments that the banksters made in the run-up to the global
financial collapse.
As we saw in Greece in 2011 with the deposing
of Prime Minister George Papandreou, and all across the state of
Michigan over the last few years with financial managers laws, when
democratic governments are unwilling to do the bidding of the rich,
they're immediately replaced by corporate lackeys who will.
The Taggerts and the Reardens are holding the reins of government today.
Which
explains why Corporate America paid an average tax rate of just 12% in
2011 – the lowest rate in 40 years. It explains why 400 billionaires in
America now own more wealth than 150 million other Americans combined.
And it explains why fewer impoverished Americans are getting less
federal assistance than at any time in the last half-century.
Ayn Rand envisioned a world without governments – a world where the super-rich are free to do as they wish.
We
tried that during the so-called Gilded Age of the late 19th Century –
before Ayn Rand was alive. If she'd watched the ruthlessness of the
Robber Barons like she did the Bolsheviks, she may have reached
different conclusions.
She may have realized that American
Presidents like Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, and Dwight
Eisenhower were right when they made sure that wealth was more evenly
distributed and the Billionaire Class was held in check.
Or she
may have come to understand that corporations and billionaires owe their
wealth to the state and not the other way around. Without favorable
patent and copyright laws, a court system, an educated workforce, and an
infrastructure to move goods about the country, then no one would be
able to get rich in America. We'd be like the Libertarian paradise
of Somalia.
As Harry Moser, the founder of the Reshoring Initiative,
argued in
The Economist, “Corporations are not created by the shareholders or the
management. Rather they are created by the state. They are granted
important privileges by the state (limited liability, eternal life,
etc). They are granted these privileges because the state expects them
to do something beneficial for the society that makes the grant. They
may well provide benefits to other societies, but their main purpose is
to provide benefits to the societies (not to the shareholders, not to
management, but to the societies) that create them.”
Sadly, this understanding of how democratic republics work - and why - has been lost in this generation.
And Ayn Rand’s disciples are making sure the next generation never finds it again.
Idaho
State Senator John Goedde, who chairs that state Senate’s Education
Committee, introduced a bill this week that would require all students
to read Ayn Rand’s book “Atlas Shrugged” before they can graduate.
Goedde explained that the book made his son a Republican and that it
“certainly gives one a sense of personal responsibility.”
Between
stupidity like this, and the re-birth of Ayn Rand through
corporate-funded think tanks and Hollywood movies, the Billionaire Class
wants to make sure the next generation buys into a toxic ideology
that’s quite literally destroying the world as we know it.
They
don’t want the 21st Century to be “America’s Century.” They want it to
be the “Billionaire’s Century.” And if they succeed, then the middle
class in America - and through most of the developed world - will go
extinct.
Sam Sacks is a former Democratic staffer on Capitol Hill. He's now the senior producer on The Big Picture with Thom Hartmann airing weeknights at 7pm EST on Free Speech TV and RT America.