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Monday, February 20, 2012 - 2:20pmSanction this postReply
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Ahh, it's good to see the good guys win. In art, these days, the good guys often lose, and, are almost never businessmen, and especially not wealthy businessmen. Moral, wealthy, businessmen who win. Hmm...a relatively untouched idea. I wonder if there's a market for it. Perhaps the public is tired of the evil businessman archetype and want a change.

Anyways, I may pick this book up sometime. Its themes and characters were fairly uncommon for the time (1955) and, perhaps, are even more uncommon today. This fact alone interests me. Also, it would be nice to have a reprieve from the television shows which usually depict a morally suspect businessman.



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Monday, February 20, 2012 - 3:20pmSanction this postReply
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"Perhaps the public is tired of the evil businessman archetype and want a change."

Considering "the public's" reaction to Enron, Bernie Madoff, and everything else around it, perhaps not...




(Edited by Joe Maurone on 2/20, 3:26pm)


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Monday, February 20, 2012 - 3:26pmSanction this postReply
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“God bless you, Mr. Rearden!” said an old woman with a ragged shawl over her head. “Can’t you save us, Mr. Rearden? They’re eating us alive, and it’s no use fooling anybody about how it’s the rich that they’re after—do you know what’s happening to us?”

“Listen, Mr. Rearden,” said a man who looked like a factory worker, “it’s the rich who’re selling us down the river. Tell those wealthy bastards, who’re so anxious to give everything away, that when they give away their palaces, they’re giving away the skin off our backs.”

“I know it,” said Rearden.

The guilt is ours, he thought. If we who were the movers, the providers, the benefactors of mankind, were willing to let the brand of evil be stamped upon us and silently to bear punishment for our virtues—what sort of “good” did we expect to triumph in the world? He looked at the people around him. They had cheered him today; they had cheered him by the side of the track of the John Galt Line. But tomorrow they would clamor for a new directive from Wesley Mouch and a free housing project from Orren Boyle, while Boyle’s girders collapsed upon their heads. They would do it, because they would be told to forget, as a sin, that which had made them cheer Hank Rearden.

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Sunday, March 11, 2012 - 2:48pmSanction this postReply
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Hello, Ed. Thanks for this, one of my favorite novels and films. Read it ages ago, as did I Executive Suite, You mentioned some others which I bought on line--with the aid of http://www.fetchbook.info/--and I am reading Lincoln Lord just now. (TMachan@gmail.com)
(Edited by Machan on 3/11, 2:51pm)


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