Thoughts On Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged"
Posted: Sat Aug 05, 2023 10:32 pm
What would happen if all the entrepreneurs in society went on strike? That is the topic in one of Ayn Rand’s storied novels, “Atlas Shrugged.” John Galt, an iconoclast entrepreneur, calls the entrepreneurs to go on strike and withdraw from a society run by an oppressive dictatorship.
Full disclaimer: I haven’t read the novel yet, but as a solopreneur, the ideas resonate with me. The reality is that scenarios like that depicted in “Atlas Shrugged” have happened before, sort of. The results were not pretty:
In the Soviet Union, because capitalism and private property were more or less outlawed, the productivity machinery of the “superstate” eventually ground to a halt. But not after millions had suffered from famines, shortages, purges, torture, deaths, the Gulags, and a lot more
In Mao’s Communist China, where entrepreneurial initiative was discouraged and the Party and Chairman were considered supreme, again the entrepreneurs more or less were forced to go underground or leave the country altogether. Millions died of starvation and lack as the country’s productive machinery again ground to a halt
In Venezuela today, the Communist experiment seems to have hit a hard patch. Many Venezuelans are eager to leave, or have left, including many of that great country’s hardest working entrepreneurs
I should know something about this. I grew up under Mugabe’s Communist Zimbabwe, and I could never understand why the brightest and wealthiest property and business owners were leaving the country. Fast forward a decade, and there was a shortage of just about anything you could imagine: bread, medicines, gas, just about all the essentials of day to day life.
How I wish Ayn Rand were wrong (I still haven’t read the novels!), but it’s like one guy said, you can ignore the truth, wish it away, hope it were not so, but at the end of the day, there it is.
Full disclaimer: I haven’t read the novel yet, but as a solopreneur, the ideas resonate with me. The reality is that scenarios like that depicted in “Atlas Shrugged” have happened before, sort of. The results were not pretty:
In the Soviet Union, because capitalism and private property were more or less outlawed, the productivity machinery of the “superstate” eventually ground to a halt. But not after millions had suffered from famines, shortages, purges, torture, deaths, the Gulags, and a lot more
In Mao’s Communist China, where entrepreneurial initiative was discouraged and the Party and Chairman were considered supreme, again the entrepreneurs more or less were forced to go underground or leave the country altogether. Millions died of starvation and lack as the country’s productive machinery again ground to a halt
In Venezuela today, the Communist experiment seems to have hit a hard patch. Many Venezuelans are eager to leave, or have left, including many of that great country’s hardest working entrepreneurs
I should know something about this. I grew up under Mugabe’s Communist Zimbabwe, and I could never understand why the brightest and wealthiest property and business owners were leaving the country. Fast forward a decade, and there was a shortage of just about anything you could imagine: bread, medicines, gas, just about all the essentials of day to day life.
How I wish Ayn Rand were wrong (I still haven’t read the novels!), but it’s like one guy said, you can ignore the truth, wish it away, hope it were not so, but at the end of the day, there it is.