(paid link)
A sign of the times, as reported
by the Ayn Rand Center for Individual Rights:
(via the Corner.)
Sales of Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" have almost tripled over the first
seven weeks of this year compared with sales for the same period in
2008. This continues a strong trend after bookstore sales reached an
all-time annual high in 2008 of about 200,000 copies sold.
If you're skeptical about figure-fudging from something named
the "Ayn Rand Center for Individual Rights", the Economistverifies,
even providing a chart based on Amazon sales data, annotated with
news events (via Viking Pundit):
Plus which, just the other day, a bum on the street asked me "Who is
John Galt?"
Arnold Kling points out this post from
Office of Management and Budget Director (and blogger) Peter Orszag,
who defends the Obama proposals to cut back the deduction
for charitable donations in the upper brackets. Arnold comments precisely
and pungently:
If you want to predict the Obama Administration's behavior, ask yourself
what policies can strengthen government and weaken the private sector.
That methodology will tell you that private charities are going to come
under assault. Charitable organizations offer services that compete with
government. That cannot be permitted in a "progressive" state, in which
all forms of civil society must be suppressed. Our country has a
remarkably very strong tradition of civil society, and I expect that we
can put up a good fight on the charitable deduction issue. But the fact
that the Obama folks are even willing to try this is a sign of just how
potent they are feeling and how impotent they think the opposition is
right now.
Also relevant to that point is Jen Rubin's reaction
to an Eleanor Clift comment that Obama is "saving capitalism":
[Obama] is not out to "save" capitalism, but to disable it and replace it
with a statist arrangement wherein the government owns banks and car
companies, directs employers on how to pay and treat their employees,
limits industrial output, and runs the healthcare system.
A huge fraction of the American economy is currently under
political control; never mind the Barackrobatic rhetoric,
Obama's goal is to increase that fraction. So if you're going
over to Amazon to buy Atlas Shrugged, maybe you should
toss a copy of
The
Road to Serfdom in your shopping cart at the same time.
The workers said they became suspicious when the caller then told them
to urinate on each other.
[Update: Hooray! Also
blogged by one of my favorite people, Dave Barry. Just knowing that the Barry fingers typed "Thanks to Paul Sand" gives me goosebumps. Or maybe that's
due to the snow shoveling.]
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