Atlas Spurned: Ayn Rand Wouldn't Approve of Paul Ryan [View all]
Jennifer Burns, author of Goddess of the Market: Ayn Rand and the American Right, reflects on Paul Ryan's tremulous relationship with Ayn Rand's ideas.
Mr. Ryans youthful, feverish embrace of Rand and his clumsy attempts to distance himself from her is more than the flip-flopping of an ambitious politician: it is a window into the ideological fissures at the heart of modern conservatism.
Rands atheism and social libertarianism have long placed her in an uneasy position in the pantheon of conservative heroes, but she has proved irresistible to those who came of age in the baby boom and after. They found her iconoclasm thrilling, and her admirers poured into Barry M. Goldwaters doomed 1964 presidential campaign, the Libertarian Party and the Cato Institute. After her death, in 1982, it became even easier for her admirers to ignore the parts of her message they didnt like and focus on her advocacy of unfettered capitalism and her celebration of the individual.
Mr. Ryan is particularly taken by Rands black-and-white worldview. The fight we are in here, he once told a group of her adherents, is a fight of individualism versus collectivism. If she were alive, he said, Rand would do a great job in showing us just how wrong what government is doing is.
Rands anti-government argument rested on another binary opposition, between producers who create wealth and moochers who feed off them. This theme has endeared Rand, and Mr. Ryan, to the Tea Party, whose members believe they are the only ones who deserve government aid.
Full oped:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/15/opinion/ayn-rand-wouldnt-approve-of-paul-ryan.html