Thursday, January 27, 2005

Ayn Rand would turn 100 this year

Andrew Stuttaford in the New York Sun:
Even the smaller details of Rand's life come with the sort of epic implausibility found in - oh, an Ayn Rand novel. On her first day of looking for work in Hollywood, who gives her a lift in his car? Cecil B. DeMille. Of course he does. Frank Lloyd Wright designs a house for her. Years later, when she's famous, the sage of selfishness, ensconced in her Murray Hill eyrie, a young fellow by the name of Alan Greenspan becomes a member of the slightly creepy set that sits at the great woman's feet. Apparently he went on to achieve some prominence in later life.

...When, after nearly 50 years, her beloved long-lost youngest sister, Nora, made it over from the USSR, they promptly fell out - over politics, naturally. Poor Nora was on her way within six weeks, back to the doubtless more easygoing embrace of Leonid Brezhnev.
It still seems odd to me that she compromised her otherwise uncompromisable principles to favor the draft during the Vietnam War. Even her hatred of the state and slavery were overwhelmed by her hatred of communism and the Soviet Union.

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