Townhall...
Take
a Stand Against Rand
By Marvin Olasky
7/15/2011
For
nearly a decade Democrats have
sought a religious wedge issue that could separate big chunks of white
evangelical voters from their Republican home. Now they’ve found it,
and are
thrusting at the Social Darwinist/Ayn Rand underbelly of American
conservatism.
First,
a bit of recent history:
Democrats have not gained much white evangelical support on healthcare
and
environmentalism. In 2008 they successfully used guilt over segregation
to
elect the first African-American president, but that may not work again
as
concern over Obamanomics trumps the ghosts of generations past.
Second,
some late 19th-century
history: Following the 1859 publication of Charles Darwin’s On the
Origin of
Species, conservatives who became known as Social Darwinists began
equating the
economic struggle among humans with the struggle for survival among
animals.
They typically argued that “society is constantly excreting its
unhealthy,
imbecile, slow, vacillating, faithless members to leave room for the
deserving.
A maudlin impulse to prolong the lives of the unfit stands in the way
of this
beneficent purging of the social organism.”
(Yale
professor William Graham Sumner
said that “Nature” has placed the downtrodden into a “process of
decline and
dissolution by which she removes things which have survived their
usefulness.”
Johns Hopkins professor Simon Newcomb argued that human evolution
required the
death of today’s “worthless” humans. One problem: People created in
God’s image
are not “things” and are never “worthless.”)
Third,
the history of George W. Bush’s
1999-2000 “compassionate conservative” campaign: Dan Quayle, Lamar
Alexander,
and others complained that the double-C term was redundant, because
conservatism by definition is compassionate. But that isn’t true
historically
and it’s not true at the present, because one departed thinker who
still wields
great influence on the right is Ayn Rand—and religious liberals are now
rightly
chastising conservatives who idolize her.
Ayn
Rand (1905-1982) was a
pro-free-enterprise but anti-Christian popular philosopher and
novelist.
Millions of Americans have read her most popular work, Atlas Shrugged
(1957),
even though it clocks in at 1,000-plus pages. Others have seen the
movie,
belatedly made from the first part of that novel, which hit the
theaters this
April. Former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan is one of her devotees. Rush
Limbaugh
is among the many who call her “brilliant.”
I
read Atlas Shrugged recently and
respected its support for innovators who pour themselves into their
businesses
and its disdain for bureaucrats who think entrepreneurialism is easy
and
automatic. I also was amazed at the viciousness of Rand’s view of
Christianity,
leading up to its conclusion, where the book’s hero traces in the air
the Sign
of the Dollar, a replacement for the Sign of the Cross. I didn’t mark
every
purple passage because I was reading the novel on a treadmill, but
Rand’s
sneering words got my heart beating faster, and it wasn’t true love.
Half
a century ago two Christian
conservative icons decried Atlas Shrugged. Flannery O’Connor wrote to a
friend,
“I hope you picked it up off the floor of the subway and threw it in
the
nearest garbage pail.” Whittaker Chambers wrote in National Review,
“Out of a
lifetime of reading, I can recall no other book in which a tone of
overriding
arrogance was so implacably sustained. . . . It consistently mistakes
raw force
for strength, and the rawer the force, the more reverent the posture of
the
mind before it. . . . From almost any page of Atlas Shrugged, a voice
can be
heard, from painful necessity, commanding: ‘To a gas chamber—go!’”
And
this, sadly, is the book that a
budget expert I admire, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., recommends—apparently
without
caveat—and tells his staffers to read. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., is
also a Rand
fan. This does not mean that they subscribe to her atheism: They may
just be
looking for a novel that shows young readers how capitalism turns
individual
self-interest into service to others, and in the process helps the poor
far
more than socialistic schemes do.
But
Ryan and others, if they want
support from Christians, cannot merely react to the left’s criticism
with a
shrug: They should show what in Rand they agree with and what they
spurn. The
GOP’s big tent should include both libertarians and Christians, but not
anti-Christians.
Read
it at Townhall
|