Photo: Ayn Rand, with the caption 'I knew some Objectivists once. Then they turned 17.'

Ayn Rand (nee Alissa "Alice" Zinovievna Rosenbaum) would've turned 100 yesterday. To quote Chistopher "Incoming Signals" Bahn, we should all bake cakes and then not share them with anybody.

Rand did get a few things right, in my opinion: communism bad, capitalism good, reward the talented who produce good output. But her philosophy, Objectivism, also casts petty selfishness, meanness and "screw you" as virtues and altruism and charity as vice. Its version of morality is overly simple and already comes built-in with any five-year old.



Her followers at the Ayn Rand Institute are no picnic either. Consider the essay What Young People Really Need: Not Volunteerism but Happiness and Heroes:

There is nothing wrong with an individual doing charity work, if it is not a sacrifice for him. But charity is not a moral ideal, nor does human life depend on it. Achievement is the moral ideal because man's life does depend on it.

If you live by this code of achievement, and struggle for your own values and attain happiness, then, as a by-product, your life will serve as an inspiration to others, showing them how much is possible, giving them courage to struggle for their own achievements. Michael Jordan, for example, has been termed a "know-nothing capitalist" by those who, like the President [Bill Clinton at the time the article was written -- Joey], hold that goodness consists of taking poor children to the zoo on a summer day. But a question needs to be raised to the advocates of volunteerism. What do you think young people find more inspiring: the sight of Jimmy Carter building churches in the jungles of Guatemala, or the vision of Michael Jordan soaring through the air, winning championships and earning millions, then flashing his joyous, brilliant, life-giving smile? The truth is that Michael Jordan's extraordinary success has inspired far more young people, poor, middle-class or rich, black, white or Asian, to strive for their own dreams than an army of social workers could ever think possible. As Ayn Rand puts it in Atlas Shrugged, "The sight of an achievement is the greatest gift that a human being could offer to others."

What. An. Ass. The parable A Boy's Life or Death is even worse, suffering from both bad philospohy and ham-fisted writing.



Ayn Rand is the topic of discussion on MetaFilter and on the cover of this month's issue of Reason magazine. If you'd like to find out more about her from a devotee and a detractor, consider this essay by acolyte Leonard Peikoff and this smackdown by Catherine Daligga.

(Amusing note: according to Daligga's essay, Rand's funeral wreath was a six-foot floral dollar sign. She was gangsta rap before gangsta rap!). Bling bling, Annie!



Proof that there's a dating service for every subculture: there's an Ayn Rand dating and networking site!

Who wants to bet that all those dates are "Dutch"?