https://twitter.com/cushbomb/status/1357872430006472710?s=19

  • viva_la_juche [they/them, any]
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    edit-2
    4 years ago

    a few days ago, I went to an mom and pop discount/used bookstore, I haven't been in years but I thought maybe i'd happen across some decent theory to read.

    Nothing, absolutely nothing remotely left of obama/neolib dems and tons of conservative grifter books. and worst of all, probably, i'm not kidding, 28 copies of atlas shrugged and other ayn rand books on the shelf and another box of them near the counter.

    Idk if the store was owned by a libertarian or if one just donated a small truckload of ayn rand books but I was just like "jesus christ."

          • viva_la_juche [they/them, any]
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            edit-2
            4 years ago

            i refuse to waste my time on it with so many other books i want to read but as i understand it the whole thing is basically rand constructing situations where gender flipped mary sue characters can espouse her world view for twenty pages while the other characters patiently listen which sounds like bad fanfic level writing.

            • invalidusernamelol [he/him]
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              4 years ago

              From her character descriptioms, I just assume all the "good guys" are minecraft characters with their square, angular faces, and all the "bad guys" are just Roblox characters with their soft, rounded features.

                • invalidusernamelol [he/him]
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                  edit-2
                  4 years ago

                  Yep, the "looters" all have "expressionless grey eyes" and are either balding, "droopy faced" or both.

                  Also all the "hero's" are blonde haired and blue eyed. It's literally an aryan dom fetish novel.

                  Good guy:

                  The glare cut a moment’s wedge across his eyes, which had the color and quality of pale blue ice – then across the black web of the metal column and the ash-blond strands of his hair – then across the belt of his trenchcoat and the pockets where he held his hands. His body was tall and gaunt; he had always been too tall for those around him. His face was cut by prominent cheekbones and by a few sharp lines; they were not the lines of age, he had always had them; this had made him look old at twenty, and young now, at forty-five.

                  Bad guy:

                  He had a small, petulant mouth, and thin hair clinging to a bald forehead. His posture had a limp, decentralized sloppiness… a body with an elegance of line intended for the confident poise of an aristocrat, but transformed into the gawkiness of a lout. The flesh of his face was pale and soft. His eyes were pale and veiled…

            • Lerios [hy/hym]
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              4 years ago

              as a writer of bad fanfiction, even we don't pull shit like her.

          • Sushi_Desires
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            edit-2
            4 years ago

            I once told myself that I was going to read atlas shrugged in order to understand my enemies' though processes, but when I went to my parents' book shelf, fished out their ancient copy and saw that it was 1000 pages I was just like "fuck this."

            • invalidusernamelol [he/him]
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              4 years ago

              Still millions of times more entertaining than Atlas Shrugged. If you're going to read a nonsensical fantasy story, at least choose one with clever wordplay.

    • _else [she/her,they/them]
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      4 years ago

      lefties keep bookshelves, and sometimes read books we're given.

      other sorts of people... kind of don't do either thing.

      • mwsduelle [he/him]
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        4 years ago

        Is there anything stopping us from requesting millions of copies of those awful books to make the Ayn Rand Institute lose money?

      • TheCaconym [any]
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        4 years ago

        All of this to say propaganda is free for Americans:

        Sounds like a free source of toilet paper.

    • invalidusernamelol [he/him]
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      edit-2
      4 years ago

      Oh man, I thought at first that each chapter was being summed up in a short pithy jab, then I realized that each one of those was actually a hyperlink to a full article on the passage. Night mode making hyperlinks hard to see again.

      Edit: read through chapter 2, and it's pretty good. A bit lib with the Gates praise at one point and some defence of intellectual property law as "promoting innovation", but at least it takes a big old dump on Rand.

      Also, my god. Ayn. Who do you think the trains exist for? Who do you think the steel is poured for? Do you think these industrialists do it because it's fun? You stupid motherfucker.

      • LeninsRage [he/him]
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        edit-2
        4 years ago

        Depending on the chapter summary it can get very lib, ie "communism doesn't work because x" bad, very New Deal fetishism type liberalism

        I just remember it quite fondly because me binging it was a pretty significant marker in my political development ~2014-15, it was quite refreshing to revisit Atlas Shrugged with a much more critical eye when I had read it in earnest as a teenage libertarian in 2007. Literally the only way anyone can think it's a good novel - not even in an ideological sense, but a literary one - is to go into it with a preconceived bias in mind.

      • LeninsRage [he/him]
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        edit-2
        4 years ago

        Thing is Atlas Shrugged is such a piece of garbage I'm unsure even the most clever 11-minute takedown can do it justice

        EDIT: And yes, it's a very good "in a nutshell" takedown of the book. But it's still really important to comprehend and understand some of the deepest hatreds at the base of Rand's ideology, those being: that all who do the slightest degree of Wrongthink deserve death (the Midnight Train to Death); that all the ultimate villains are secretly motivated by death drive to bring down the "productive people" (embodied by James Taggart and his fate); and that all non-Ubermenschen don't deserve salvation no matter how loyal or hardworking they might be (embodied by Eddie Willers and his fate, and how Dagny's character arc is quite literally to view common people as objects rather than human beings); all with the specific excerpts from the text and excerpts from Ayn Rand's own (hilarious) life.

  • hopelesscomrade [they/them]
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    4 years ago

    There is a reason why you read Anthem in high school and not Fountainhead of Atlas Struggled, mainly because it's not a confusing pile of shit and simple post apoloclyptic story about a man who tries to reintroduce banned capitalistic technology for his own benefit and how he would rather destroys his own life that belong to a collective.