ded_maxim: (преведение)
ded_maxim ([personal profile] ded_maxim) wrote2009-09-15 02:38 pm

крестовый поход детей против социализма

В последнем выпуске New Republic, прелестный наброс про Айн Рэнд и ее последователей сегодня:
Around the age of five, Alissa Rosenbaum's mother instructed her to put away some of her toys for a year. She offered up her favorite possessions, thinking of the joy that she would feel when she got them back after a long wait. When the year had passed, she asked her mother for the toys, only to be told she had given them away to an orphanage. Heller remarks that "this may have been Rand's first encounter with injustice masquerading as what she would later acidly call ‘altruism.’ " (The anti-government activist Grover Norquist has told a similar story from childhood, in which his father would steal bites of his ice cream cone, labelling each bite "sales tax" or "income tax." The psychological link between a certain form of childhood deprivation and extreme libertarianism awaits serious study.)
Они что там, сговорились все?

[identity profile] kotovski.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 06:54 pm (UTC)(link)
трудное детство, деревянные игрушки, гыгы

[identity profile] kotovski.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 06:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Действительно, прелестно!

Pat Toomey, the former president of the Club for Growth and a Republican candidate for the Senate in Pennsylvania, has recently expressed an allegorical version of this idea, in the form of an altered version of the tale of the Little Red Hen. In Toomey's rendering, the hen tries to persuade the other animals to help her plant some wheat seeds, and then reap the wheat, and then bake it into bread. The animals refuse each time. But when the bread is done, they demand a share. The government seizes the bread from the hen and distributes it to the "not productive" fellow animals. After that, the hen stops baking bread.