kenbuzz
10-22-09, 03:09 PM
After years of procrastination, primarly due to the sheer size of the book, I have finally put all of my delaying tactics on hold and have begun to read Ayn Rand's opus, Atlas Shrugged.
I have a hardcopy at home, and an unabridged audiobook copy in my car. The audiobook spans fourty-five 75-minute CDs, so I ripped and re-burned everything into MP3 format... but it's still 8 full CDs worth of Ms. Rand. I've read at home when the opportunities present themselves, but it's mostly the 40-minute commute where I've been listening in on the world of Dagny Taggart, Francisco D'Anconia, and Hank Reardon. Four weeks of daily commute, plus 4 hours spent listening while I drove to/from Cincinnati on Sunday for the Bengals game, and I'm not quite to the half-way point. I'm on "CD" #21 of 45. Reardon's wife has just met Hank at the train station, and there's talk of new government rules regarding wage, price, and spending freezes. (No, I'm not keen on spoiling anything.)
I have become completely hooked.
This story, while not exactly chocked full of adventure, action, or sex, has "clicked" for me. I think of myself as a capitalist and a constitutionalist - and I'm thinking this should be required reading for anyone professing a knowledge of how a free marketplace can and should operate. There was a speech last week given my Fransicso at a party where he responds to a comment about money as the root of all evil. It was wonderful! I was driving home that evening when he started, and I was literally doing some fist-pumps to emphasize points as he made them. The folks in the other lane probably thought I was having a seizure. :lol:
At another, earlier, point of the story, I believe it was Dagny who said the following: "What is morality? Judgment to distinguish right and wrong, vision to see the truth, courage to act upon it, dedication to what is good, integrity to stand by that good at any price." -- I wrote it down and have it sitting on my desk at work.
I know that several folks have made comments about the book - with most of the comment seeming to be on how they "gave up" because it was too long, too boring, or other reasons. I could see how it might be too conservative or too capitalistic for certain Otters, which might explain the bail-out rate. But I'd be curious to hear from folks who have read the entire book - without spoilers of course - to see what your opinions are.
I have a hardcopy at home, and an unabridged audiobook copy in my car. The audiobook spans fourty-five 75-minute CDs, so I ripped and re-burned everything into MP3 format... but it's still 8 full CDs worth of Ms. Rand. I've read at home when the opportunities present themselves, but it's mostly the 40-minute commute where I've been listening in on the world of Dagny Taggart, Francisco D'Anconia, and Hank Reardon. Four weeks of daily commute, plus 4 hours spent listening while I drove to/from Cincinnati on Sunday for the Bengals game, and I'm not quite to the half-way point. I'm on "CD" #21 of 45. Reardon's wife has just met Hank at the train station, and there's talk of new government rules regarding wage, price, and spending freezes. (No, I'm not keen on spoiling anything.)
I have become completely hooked.
This story, while not exactly chocked full of adventure, action, or sex, has "clicked" for me. I think of myself as a capitalist and a constitutionalist - and I'm thinking this should be required reading for anyone professing a knowledge of how a free marketplace can and should operate. There was a speech last week given my Fransicso at a party where he responds to a comment about money as the root of all evil. It was wonderful! I was driving home that evening when he started, and I was literally doing some fist-pumps to emphasize points as he made them. The folks in the other lane probably thought I was having a seizure. :lol:
At another, earlier, point of the story, I believe it was Dagny who said the following: "What is morality? Judgment to distinguish right and wrong, vision to see the truth, courage to act upon it, dedication to what is good, integrity to stand by that good at any price." -- I wrote it down and have it sitting on my desk at work.
I know that several folks have made comments about the book - with most of the comment seeming to be on how they "gave up" because it was too long, too boring, or other reasons. I could see how it might be too conservative or too capitalistic for certain Otters, which might explain the bail-out rate. But I'd be curious to hear from folks who have read the entire book - without spoilers of course - to see what your opinions are.


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