Exclusive Interview
Dr. Yaron Brook on Ayn Rand, Capitalism and the War on Terror
The Daily Bell is pleased to present this interview with Dr. Yaron Brook.
Introduction: Dr. Yaron Brook is executive director of the Ayn Rand Center for Individual Rights. He is a columnist at Forbes.com, and his articles have been featured in major publications such as the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and Investor’s Business Daily. Dr. Brook is often interviewed on radio and is a frequent guest on a variety of national TV programs. He is co-author of Neoconservatism: An Obituary for an Idea and a contributor to Winning the Unwinnable War: America’s Self-Crippled Response to Islamic Totalitarianism. Dr. Brook, a former finance professor, is an internationally sought after speaker on such topics as the causes of the financial crisis, the morality of capitalism, and U.S. foreign policy.
Dr. Brook was born and raised in Israel. He served as a first sergeant in Israeli military intelligence and earned a BSc in civil engineering from Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, Israel. In 1987 he moved to the United States, where he received his MBA and Ph.D. in finance from the University of Texas at Austin; he became an American citizen in 2003. For seven years he was an award-winning finance professor at Santa Clara University, and in 1998 he cofounded a financial advisory firm, BH Equity Research, of which he is presently managing director and chairman.
Daily Bell: Acquaint us with your background, and how you became interested in Ayn Rand.
Dr. Yaron Brook: I read Atlas Shrugged when I was 16. I was born and raised in Israel and was living there at the time, and I would say at the time when I read Atlas Shrugged I was a committed socialist, altruist and collectivist – the opposite of Ayn Rand. When a friend handed me the book and I read it, I really fought the book, but by the end Ayn Rand had won. She had convinced me that she was right and the ideas that I had held before were wrong.
It's quite different than a lot of people who read Atlas Shrugged. Their experience of it is, yes, this on some level is what I believe; she's putting it into words. In my mind it wasn't. It was a real revolution, an intellectual revolution. So once I read Atlas Shrugged, I tried to read everything else I could get my hands on. It wasn't easy to do in Israel in those days. There was no Internet, no clubs or organizations where I could get my hands on books. Eventually I got my hands on more material and became more and more committed to her ideas.
Daily Bell: Tell us about the Ayn Rand Institute (ARI), a non-profit organization in Irvine, and your role there. Tell us more about your journey from socialism to Rand-ism. What were some of the landmarks?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Well, really there was only one landmark, and that was Atlas Shrugged. After that I read everything else she had written. About three years later, I got some people in Israel interested in her ideas, and we would get together on a regular basis to discuss them. After getting my undergraduate degree in Israel, I moved to the United States, where again I met more people who were interested in Ayn Rand's ideas. I ended up attending some conferences that the Ayn Rand Institute was involved in at that time and attended classes and seminars with the Institute in philosophy.
I also started a company that put on objectivist conferences all over the United States and other countries as well. We had one in Belgium, one in London, Italy, a cruise on the Greek Islands and did a lot of fun stuff. So I got to know everybody who was involved at the Institute and taking courses from them, and many of them were speakers at my conferences. When the previous Executive Director of the Institute retired, they came to me and offered me the job. That was in 2000, and I have been President and Executive Director of the Institute since then.
Daily Bell: You worked not only in the Israeli army but also for Israeli intelligence. Did you work directly for the Mossad? Are you entirely free to speak your mind now?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Yes, I am (laughing). Well, I am not sure what they would say but yes, I think I am. During my compulsory military service, I was a 1st Sergeant in the Israeli Army Intelligence – from 1980-82, not a very long time. Initially I was in the tank corps for nine months and then spent the rest of my three years of service in military intelligence; I never worked for the Israeli intelligence agency.
Daily Bell: You are an associate of Leonard Peikoff, who seems to be a kind of lightening rod for controversy as well as a champion of Ayn Rand. Can you tell us something about him and why that is so?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Sure. Leonard is the foremost expert today on Ayn Rand's philosophy, Objectivism. He's one of the smartest people I know. I don't think anybody understands Objectivism as well as he does, and knows how to apply it as well as he does. He was Rand's longtime student, and he wrote a landmark book on Objectivism. Across many decades, he's been loyal to his ideas; he's a man of principle and believes in Ayn Rand's philosophy and has stayed consistent to it. He has often made statements or disapproves of things that people are doing or saying, and he expresses his assessment in a very blunt, straightforward way. That turns some people off. He takes judging people very seriously. He takes the nature of justice and the nature of morality very seriously. Unlike many people today Leonard is willing to be just; he actually makes a case for why he believes certain people are the way they are, and certain views of the way they are. It's his uncompromising style and his uncompromising views that make him a lightening rod.
Daily Bell: On foreign policy, the ARI advocates American national self-interest, including ending the regimes that sponsor terrorism. Is that a true summary of ARI's perspective?
Dr. Yaron Brook: That's a brief sound-bite version of it, and of course, it's important to flesh out the details. I would encourage your readers to have a look at two ARI books that discuss our views on foreign policy at length: Winning the Unwinnable War: America's Self-Crippled Response to Islamic Totalitarianism, and The Foreign Policy of Self-Interest. But let me sketch the bare outlines.
We believe that the only purpose of government is to protect individual rights. So in the context of foreign policy, the only purpose of government is to protect the lives and property of American citizens. When those lives or property are endangered, threatened or actually attacked, it is the job of the American government to do whatever is in its power to stop those attacks, to get rid of the threats, to allow Americans to live in peace without that threat laying over them. That's the guiding idea.
In the case of terrorism, I'd make two key points: "terrorism" is one particularly heinous tactic, but still just a tactic, employed by the Islamist movement; and that the fundamental problem is that ideological movement – which is inspired, funded and actively spearheaded by state-sponsors, prominent among them Iran and Saudi Arabia. Islamist terrorist organizations rely on (and often act as proxies for) regimes that share their goals and that provide them with infrastructure, training, logistical support, safe haven, weapons – and, crucially, intellectual inspiration. Consequently, following 9/11, we needed to stamp out not just the particular Islamist faction behind the attack, but the culpable state-sponsors. We believe that those regimes should be punished for their actions.
Daily Bell: Can it be said that you saw the Bush Administration's policies as weak ones, and that you advocate a stronger response to aspects of Islam that you consider terrorist?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Absolutely. I think George Bush's policies made America look like a complete weakling. I think he engaged in the wrong wars and when he engaged in war he did so in a self-sacrificial, wimpy way, that undercut our military goals. On this, I'd refer you to Winning the Unwinnable War, which analyzes in detail the policies of the Bush administration post-9/11. The Iraq war needlessly cost thousands of American lives, billions of dollars, and worked to undermine our security in many ways.
If somebody attacks us, they should suffer the consequences, which I believe should be pretty horrendous. I don't believe that Iraq was a significant threat to the States in the context of 9/11. I think there were other countries that were – chiefly Iran – and they got a free pass. All of which has left us worse off.
I really believe – and I know many, particularly in the libertarian movement disagree with me – but I believe that the war was motivated by Bush's messianic agenda to bring democracy to the Middle East, and lift the region's people out of their misery and destitution. But that's not a legitimate goal for war.
I don't believe you go to war to build sewers, open schools, and bring democracy – as our military was ordered to do in Iraq. I believe that it's proper to go to war in self-defense, and when you go to war, that entails destroying the enemy. History shows that whenever you go to war for any other reason, you lose. World War II was the last war America won; since then our approach to war has been incoherent, our purposes unclear – think of Vietnam – and the results, tragic.
Daily Bell: Is it true that the motivation for Islamic terrorism comes from Muhammad's teachings, not poverty or a reaction to Western policies?
Dr. Yaron Brook: At root it's ideas, not poverty, that drives the Islamist cause. There are plenty of poor people around the world who don't strap bombs to themselves and go blow up innocent people in malls or restaurants or in places of business like high rise buildings. Empirical evidence tells us that many Islamic terrorists are middle class and tend to be well educated. Osama bin Laden was a multi-millionaire. Some of the 9/11 hijackers had engineering degrees. I completely reject the notion that Islamist terrorism is motivated by poverty.
Is it motivated by a reaction to American policies? Again, no. American policy in the Middle East has been a farce for most of the 20th century; I'd argue we were unable to properly define and effectively pursue our self-interest. But the fact is, the animus of Islamists predates substantive US involvement with the area – Britain and France were much more significant powers in the region when the Islamist movement began its ascent. Their animus against us has everything to do with their ideas.
Consider what the Islamist ideologues themselves say and write. Look at the theoreticians, the people who bin Laden and people like him read and studied and based their organizations and their activism and their terrorism upon. Those intellectual leaders have a deep-rooted hatred of the West that has nothing to do with the West's activities in the Middle East. It has everything to do with the fact that we are secular, that we are successful, that we are capitalists.
Take, for example, Sayyid Qutb, an intellectual father of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, and a leading intellectual of the jihadist movement more broadly. Around 1949 or so, he lived in the US briefly, and observed American culture. Now, bear in mind, although he lived in a tame, small town in Colorado, he came away fearing that our influence would further drive Egyptians away from Allah. He considered even Christians, even religious Americans, as fundamentally secular because he went to church dances and saw men and women dancing together. That was horrific to him. His enmity to the West was fundamentally rooted in the fact that America is secular, non-Islamic, and respects the individual's political sovereignty. That, at root, is why he thought the West should be fought and destroyed.
Part of the Islamist outlook is that the Muslim world is impoverished and lacking in political power (compared to its long-ago empire days) because it has drifted away from piety. The existence of a stupendously powerful, wealthy and, crucially, secular nation – the U.S. – is an implied rebuke to their ideal. And they feel it is an obstacle to their political goal of establishing religious rule.
Based on what Islamists think Islam says, they believe it is their moral responsibility, their duty to their religion, to bring about a world dominated by wholesale submission to Allah's laws. A necessary means to that end is to destroy secularism and in particular to destroy the most powerful secularists in the world, which is today the United States.
If you think about the values that the West, primarily the United States, has to offer to the Middle East in terms of technology, education, wealth, capitalism, individual rights, the principals by which the West functions, then they should embrace our presence, they should welcome it.
Daily Bell: Have you urged that the US use overwhelming, retaliatory force to "end states who sponsor terrorism"? What would that consist of?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Yes, I believe that the regimes that support terrorism should be destroyed. That means the leadership and the infrastructure that makes that leadership possible should be replaced as long as the regime continues to support terrorism. That means using overwhelming force. That means supporting internal revolutionary countries, whatever the means necessary. Americans should not live in threat because Iranian or Saudi or Afghan or Iraqi regimes are plotting to kill Americans.
Daily Bell: Leonard Peikoff wrote an article entitled, "End States Who Sponsor Terrorism," which was published as a full-page ad in the New York Times. Can you summarize it? Is that ARI's current position?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Yes, and I think we have summarized it in the previous question; but that's not a substitute for reading the article. I think the role of the United States government is to protect the lives and property of Americans and if there are regimes out there that are threatening the lives and property of Americans, those regimes need to be dealt with, and dealt with in the harshest military means if that is the best way of getting eliminating the threat to the lives and property of Americans. If there are better ways of getting rid of them like through encouraging an internal revolution in Iran, then that's better. It's cheaper and it's easier and it doesn't imperil the lives of Americans.
Daily Bell: You make a distinction between Israel and Zionism. Can you explain? You have said that the West isn't at war with terrorism but the ideology of Islamic totalitarianism. Can you elaborate?
Dr. Yaron Brook: First, my view of Israel is that it is a moral country, it is a good country, and it is a country that deserves our moral support and our political support. And the reason for that is it is a Western country and it respects, to the extent that any Western country does, the individual rights of its citizens. In Israel you have such a thing as property rights, you have freedom of speech, you have freedom of mobility – you can leave and return to the country freely – as we have in all Western countries – France, Britain, United States, Germany and Italy and so on – all legitimate, moral countries that deserve moral and political support. I think Israel is morally on par with those countries. The Arabs who live in Israel, whether they are Muslim or Christian, have more rights in Israel than they do in any Arab country out there.
Israel is under constant threat of annihilation. It is the victim in its war with the Palestinians and with its Arab neighbors. They have tried to annihilate it from the day it was established and for no just reason. I am a big supporter of Israel and I think any rational person should be. I think anybody who values freedom should be a supporter of Israel. I think those who are attacking Israel – militarily attacking Israel – whether it's the Palestinians or another neighbor, are the enemies of freedom and have shown themselves to be the enemies of freedom by the way they rule their own people. I think it is horrific that some Americans, some libertarians, find themselves attacking Israel and supporting its enemies. I think it's an example of the fact that key people in the libertarian movement are not advocates of individual freedom and individual rights.
Daily Bell: Do you believe Islamic totalitarians want to spread a global Islamic government across the world using physical force?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Yes. Read Ayatollah Khomeini. Read what he wrote while he was supreme leader of Iran – and in the decades before he rose to power. Read what the current supreme leader of Iran, Khamenei, writes and read his speeches. Read Sayyid Qutb, a founder of the Muslim Brotherhood. Read what the radical political party in Egypt, the Salafi Al-Nour, the party that won over 20 percent of the vote in Egypt, has written. Read what they want to do with Egypt and what their ambitions are beyond Egypt. Read the political manifesto of Hamas or Hezbollah or Islamic Jihad.
All of them have an immediate enemy. In the case of Hamas it's Israel. In the case of Hezbollah, it's Israel and the Lebanese government. In the case of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafi, it's the Egyptian government. But all of them, once they have conquered their immediate close enemy all of them want to bring about the establishment of the Caliphate, which is a world empire, a Caliphate, a dictator and governed by Sharia law, which is Islamic law and they are ambitious. They want to dominate the world. They say it, not me.
Now, we look at that and say, 'That's absurd. That's ridiculous. Nobody wants world domination. We live in the 21st century.' But we forget that just a few decades ago the Communists wanted world domination and thought they'd have it, Hitler wanted world domination and thought he'd have it and Japan wanted world domination and thought they would have it. So in the last hundred years we've witnessed ideological movements seeking world domination and willing to use force in order to attain it. The Islamists have just picked it up from there. I think anybody who doesn't understand that hasn't read them and doesn't listen to what they have to say.
Daily Bell: You also believe that the US was attacked first and therefore the US government and the president have a moral obligation to defend American citizens.
Dr. Yaron Brook: Yes. I think that 9/11 was an unprovoked attack against America. Of course, it wasn't the first unprovoked attack against America. I think, for example, you can go back to 1979, November 4th, when the US embassy in Tehran was taken over and American diplomatic personnel were held hostage for 444 days for no legitimate reason. That is an act of war. Taking over somebody's embassy is an act of war. The United States did nothing; it did not retaliate when that happened.
In 1983 the US embassy in Beirut was bombed. The links to both Hezbollah and ultimately to Iran were very clear and very obvious. Subsequently the Marine barracks in Beirut were attacked and 244 marines were killed. Remember why those marines were there. They were there as part of a ceasefire mission, to protect the Muslims from being slaughtered by Christians. Now, should they have been there? I would say no. I don't believe our foreign policy that sends marines all over the world to be on peaceful missions is correct but it doesn't matter. It was unprovoked. The Marines were not there to kill Muslims; quite the contrary, they were there to save Muslims. They were there partially to prevent the Israelis from finishing off the remnant of the Palestinian terrorists that were still in Beirut, and yet they were brutally slaughtered by the Iranians and the Hezbollah – we could go on and on with how terrorists and Iranian intelligence and PLO have killed Americans all over the world and America has done nothing in retaliation.
And then in 1993 a car bomb explodes underneath the Twin Towers to try to bring them down. Links to existing terrorist groups in the Middle East are quite clear, the people are captured and the plot fails. The people are captured, the links to terrorist organizations in the Middle East are clear. Again the United States again does absolutely nothing, and it's a paper tiger. Throughout the '90s there are small and large terrorist attacks including the bombing of our embassies in Tanzania, Nairobi and Kenya. Hundreds of people are killed and thousands injured, both Americans and Africans. So that is an act of war. There have been numerous attacks on America leading up to 9/11 and the Americans did nothing to provoke them.
Then, of course, they flew airplanes into buildings that killed 3,000 Americans. They could have easily killed 40,000 Americans if the towers had fallen quicker or struck at a different time of day. It was to kill many Americans and it was completely unprovoked, and America needed to do something, finally, after 30 years of terrorist acts against it and I don't think it did much. I think we are heading towards an era when 9/11 type attacks are only going to intensify and increase and where the state sponsorship of terrorism will only increase, and where the terrorists in the Middle East will only be more emboldened to kill more Westerners and more Americans.
Daily Bell: Do you think the 9/11 investigations should be re-opened?
Dr. Yaron Brook: No. The investigations identified the basic facts of the attacks. What we still need to carry out is a public inquiry into the ideas and intellectual myopia that shaped US foreign policy for the preceding decades. Our government failed to connect the dots: It was, in my view, a failure of US policy that our government didn't properly grasp the nature of the increasingly audacious jihadist movement and its state sponsors. I mentioned earlier the string of pre-9/11 attacks – and America's feeble responses – that emboldened the Islamist aggressors to ratchet up their ambitions and bring their holy war to US soil.
Daily Bell: Let's ask some financial questions. Why did you move to the US to study business and finance? You started an investment consulting business called BH Equity Research, located in San Jose, California. Tell us about that.
Dr. Yaron Brook: I moved to the United States in 1987 and got my MBA at the University of Texas in Austin. I then got a PhD in Finance at the University of Texas. I then was a science professor for seven years at Santa Clara University in California and then started BH Equity Research with a partner, who is still a professor at Santa Clara University. For ten years we consulted for a hedge fund or advised what are called market mutual strategies for this hedge fund. Between 1999 and 2006 we also managed a portfolio of private equity investments for high net worth individuals. Then in 2006 we raised our own private equity fund to invest in bank stocks and small community bank stocks. We have raised more money since then and today both manage money in the context of private equity but more of a hedge fund. We specialize really in investments in community banks. Both as long buy investments and short selling investments.
Daily Bell: Do you believe the US and the world are headed for a depression?
Dr. Yaron Brook: What we know is the economic policies of the US and Europe are disastrous and the long-term consequences are all bad. The economic policies of today are unsustainable. The fact that the Federal Reserve is keeping interest rates at zero right now is clearly distortive and creates mal-investment, bubbles and inflation.
Unless there's a fundamental change in course, I believe we're heading toward some form of economic catastrophe. But how that catastrophe manifests itself and the timeline, it's hard to say. I know for sure, though, that bad economic policies have bad consequences.
Daily Bell: What do you think of central banking? Should central banks be done away with?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Yes. I believe in private banking. I believe that currencies should be based probably on a gold standard, but certainly a market-determined standard.
Daily Bell: Is there some sort of power elite that controls central banks and intends to impose a New World Order?
Dr. Yaron Brook: No. That's a foolish idea. Libertarians do themselves a disservice when they get caught up in conspiracy theories. I think the world is pretty straightforward. The world is dominated by really, really bad ideas, by a lot of ignorance, a bad moral code and really bad ideas about politics, which drive people to do things that are not in their (or our) long-term self interest. I think central banks are an example of poor economic understanding and of a moral code that requires that government control as much of our lives as possible. I think this is fundamentally an ideological battle, a battle of ideas, a philosophical battle.
The destructive ideas dominating our culture are out in the open. They emanate from the universities. Their advocates are out in the open, blaring at us from lecture halls, pulpits, political rallies, editorial pages, TV and radio. What's devastating our world is the impact of intellectuals – professors, writers, economists, think-tankers – who advocate for Keynesianism, subjectivism, socialism, existentialism, post modernism, all these ideologies that are anti-capitalist, anti-individual rights, anti-freedom.
Daily Bell: So let's talk about Atlas Shrugged a bit. The movie was out this past year and people are drawing parallels based on what is currently happening in society and the book. Can you give us your take?
Dr. Yaron Brook: With the unfolding of the financial crisis, Atlas Shrugged has received increased visibility in the news in the last four years. 2009 was its peak year in terms of book sales. In its best year ever previous to 2009, Atlas Shrugged sold just over 200,000 copies. In 2009 it sold about half a million copies, which is unheard of, by the way – half a million copies for a 52 year old book (in 2009) is unheard of in the publishing business. Last year, 2011, it sold 445,000 copies and Atlas Shrugged was everywhere.
Yes, I think people see the parallels in the book and what's happening with everything around us. They're looking for answers. What's unique about Atlas Shrugged is not only that it gives us answers, but it gives us solutions. It presents the philosophical explanation for what is going on today in terms of cause and effect, but it also gives us the solutions to these problems and a philosophy that completely turns upside down the statist regimes and the statist ideologies of today and presents us, for the first time in history, with a consistent philosophy that is pro-individual rights, pro-individualism. And I think that's what makes us unique and that's what is so attractive about it and why it selling so much.
Daily Bell: Would you call it a political novel or philosophical one?
Dr. Yaron Brook: First and foremost, Atlas Shrugged is a brilliant novel that draws people in because of its mysterious plot and the larger than life characters. Politics is definitely part of the story, but it's one derivative consequence of the deeper philosophical theme. The novel conveys the destructive results that follow when certain moral ideas shape a society, an economy, the mind of an individual. What emerges from the story is how philosophy drives politics, how the code of selflessness in morality necessitates state intervention, necessitates the destruction of capitalism.
But Rand also dramatizes and articulates a positive vision, a new moral ideal for mankind. A lesson of the novel is that only rational, long-term self-interest can serve as a solid foundation on which to build a capitalist society.
Rand was distinctive in advocating that capitalism as a political system needs a proper moral-philosophical foundation. Politics, in Rand's view, doesn't stand on its own; it is a consequence of philosophic ideas, ideas in ethics, a view of human nature.
She disagreed with libertarians. She believes to ground liberty you need a philosophy. You need a particular view of morality, and in this case, a morality of rational self-interest. You need a particular view of epistemology, of how we know reality: We have to be advocates for reason. She argued that to build a laissez faire capitalist society, we need to base it on the principles of self-interest and the principles of reason and that if we try to circumvent that, which she believed the libertarian movement so often does, we end up losing the battle. We cannot succeed unless we reject the existing moral code, which is pro self-sacrifice, a selfless moral code, unless we reject that in favor of self-interest. Selflessness is consistent with statism. Only self-interest is consistent with capitalism,and that's part of the message of Atlas Shrugged.
Daily Bell: How is ARI doing these days? Membership is growing, lots of interest?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Yes, our membership is growing dramatically and our income is growing dramatically; we have grown fivefold in terms of revenue over the last 10 years. Revenue means contributions because we are not for profit. Interest in our products is growing and visibility is growing. By every parameter – interest in these ideas, books sales and everything – is growing. And I believe we're starting to have an impact on the philosophical, intellectual, political debate that is happening out there.
Daily Bell: Any closing thoughts? Any other books or resources you would like to mention?
Dr. Yaron Brook: Yes. I would like to point out I will have a book coming out in September this year called The Free Market Revolution: How Ayn Rand's Ideas Can End Big Government. I am really excited about that book. And of course, I encourage everybody to read Ayn Rand, and not just Atlas Shrugged but to really understand her philosophical ideas. I think if you read Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal, The Virtue of Selfishness, you will really understand how Ayn Rand ties economic politics to fundamental basic philosophical ideas.
Daily Bell: Thanks for speaking with us.
Dr. Yaron Brook: Thank you for your interest.
[Note: The hyperlinked definitions were created by The Daily Bell. Dr. Brook’s use of those terms does not imply any agreement with those definitions.]


We thank Dr. Yaron Brook for participating in this interview. We agreed to let him speak for himself and the Institute and he was willing to do so, so we won't comment further except to thank him for his forthrightness in speaking up and for presenting the above views. Such opinions are certainly not shared by all within our audience but certainly readers can benefit by understanding a variety of positions within the Randian community, and Dr. Brook is surely an able spokesperson for the Institute's views.
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Posted by AnarchoLibertine on 02/19/12 12:50 PM
I saw an old interview w/Ayn Rand (1979, Phil Donahue) where, at times, she came of extremely and militantly pro-Israel and anti-Islam... so, maybe neoconism runs deep in the Randian philosophy... ?
I think this is the interview (part 1 of 5):
Click to view link
Posted by AnarchoLibertine on 02/19/12 11:52 AM
Are all Randians neocons nowadays?
Posted by R on 02/16/12 11:07 AM
Your response appears highly presumptuous and factually incorrect, and you draw examples that are not "on point".
I am simply pointing out that in this current environment filled with the most vicious elements imaginable you must exercise some degree of "control" (yes I said the word "control") in order to preserve your "systems" and way of life.
History does not support your off point generalizations.
Likewise, neither does nature. All organisms have perimeter barriers (cellular wall, epidermis, etc.) and internal "control" and "feedback" systems (Antibodiesk, etc.) for the organism to survive. The same is true for a company, organization or a country. In this hostile environment, "like minded 'good' people" must exercise the same "system controls" to a greater or lesser degree. One day, perhaps the entire world will be that unified "system", but aberrant, destructive elements always seem to arise.
Perhaps those who have cancer can ask their "good productive cells" to reach out across the isle and engage in negotiation with the cancerous cells in an attempt to change the cancerous cells "nature". Perhaps a cellular candle light vigil around the cancerous cells will convince them to mend their ways. Or perhaps the good healthy cells can simply maintain an open free access for cancerous cells to all bodily "systems". The result will be "corruption" and failure of all of your life sustaining systems and your demise.
OK... ... come back with another off point 'clever' derisive response.
My points will stand regardless of your diatribe or attitude.
Posted by Wrusssr on 02/15/12 12:37 AM
Nope. Stopped reading and scanned the rest of his comments after his first attempt at 9/11--a field tested BS alarm. He'd make a good spokesman for the wizards, though. Has all the right credentials, frame of mind, spin-ability, etc., etc.
Posted by NAPpy on 02/14/12 06:56 PM
Thanks!
Posted by 45clive on 02/14/12 01:19 PM
You certainly gave Dr. Brook enough rope to hang himself which he promptly did. That he is a part of the Israeli lobby, or at the very least an appologist, is obvious. He pretends to honor liberty while encouraging bullying and submission to authoritarianism. Your afterthoughts were as muted as any I have read. I expect Ms. Rand is tossing restlessly in her grave at being so gravely co-opted. I will not be sending any donations to the Ayn Rand Institute anytime soon.
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Posted by Hoss on 02/14/12 10:45 AM
NAPpy,
Look up and read the article, "Objectivist Ethics". I like Molyneux too, but disagree with the foundation of his 'philosophy'. Substitute "universally preferable" for "life-enhancing", and he says mostly the same things Rand did. Rand identified the concept of the good with life, as exemplified by pain and pleasure. Molyneux lays it on preferences, which are subjective.
The definitions you gave are descriptions, not definitions. If you read Rand, you will be struck by the precision with which she zeroes in on fundamental underlying concepts. I suggest you refer to the Ayn Rand Lexicon for more precise definitions. It's on-line.
Rand struggled with the necessity for government, and being unable to come up with a solution to what I call 'the gang problem', came down on the minarchist side. She knew that government would grow unless held in check by the people, then she identified the intellectual poison that would get the people to let government grow unchecked. Too bad she was right on that part.
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Posted by Henry Pierson on 02/14/12 01:28 AM
"The basic political principle of the Objectivist ethics is: no man may initiate the use of physical force against others. No man-or group or society or government-has the right to assume the role of a criminal and initiate the use of physical compulsion against any man. Men have the right to use physical force only in retaliation and only against those who initiate its use. The ethical principle involved is simple and clear-cut: it is the difference between murder and self-defense. A holdup man seeks to gain a value, wealth, by killing his victim; the victim does not grow richer by killing a holdup man. The principle is: no man may obtain any values from others by resorting to physical force."
Posted by NAPpy on 02/13/12 10:03 PM
I'm one of those people who did not come to anarcho-capitalism from the Rand route, but rather from the economics route--Hayek, Mises, Rothbard, Hoppe. I've had several objectivists brag about Rand's philosophy, but I've never really seen an objectivist lay it out.
Doing a quick read through wikipedia, my guess is that Rand's epistemology is foundationalism--you can know when you reason from an axiom.
Based on another internet search, it looks like Rand's ethics can be summarized as follows:
""Since reason is man's basic means of survival, that which is proper to the life of a rational being is the good; that which negates, opposes or destroys it is the evil."
Personally, I've adopted foundationalism as my epistemology, so I have no problem with Rand there. Borrowing from a review by Molyneux, I find Rand's logic faulty in her ethics. I prefer argumentation ethics by Hoppe and the concept of Universally Preferable Behavior by Molyneux. Baxically:
a. Ethics: A scientific theory which attempts to minimize aggression against person or property by discovering and categorizing as valid those normative truth claims (propositions) which are logically justifiable, and by discovering and categorizing as invalid those which are not. Ethics delineates which normative truth claims can be enforced by proportional violence.
b. Etiquette: Those normative truth claims that are enforceable through non-violent means only.
c. Aesthetics: Those normative truth claims that are unenforceable.
If these formulations are correct, then it seems like Rand is at best a step in the right direction. If ethics are about logically justifying normative truth claims, then I find fault with her conclusions about the necessity of government. How do you justify monopolizing the initiation of force without being self-contradictory?
Anyways, if there are any Rand experts on this site, I'd be interested in your take on my attempted summary.
DB, thanks again for a fascinating interview.
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Posted by Henry Pierson on 02/13/12 07:28 PM
Thank you Daily Bell for a great interview and allowing us to reach our own conclusions as to Dr. Brooks words. When I read this interview I thought there are a number of people who will be all over this like flies on road kill in the hot Florida sun. So, the mindless minions of the Daily Bell, some which I recognize from the defunct FMNN took strenuous exception to Dr. Brook rightfully playing down conspiracy theory.
Daily Bell: Do you think the 9/11 investigation should be re-opened? How dare Dr. Brooks imply there was no 9/11 conspiracy when a great many of your readers believe the WTC didn't collapse due to the airplanes crashing into them but were actually demolished by 'conspirators'. Still, after all these years, I am waiting to hear who 'they' actually are. Amazing, out of the many people who must have been involved none have, through some circumstance in their lives, decided to come forward. Imagine how much such a story would be worth. Why it would be the book deal of the century and we would all know who 'they' actually are. Just like we know who 'they' (the conspirators) in all the other conspiracies actually are, right? No, that wouldn't be any fun now, would it? Yet, we do know conspiracies exist, it is clear who conspired to form the Federal Reserve. But we know who 'they' were.
Daily Bell: Is there some sort of 'power elite' that controls central banks and intends to impose a New World Order? When Dr. Brook answered no he qualified the answer by saying it is not a conspiracy theory. One cannot disagree that the 'power elite' are clearly not acting in their own best interest. I doubt anyone believes what they are doing is sustainable. When we reach the end game they too will be affected by the economic collapse.
What Dr. Brook did not say and what Ayn Rand believed is Libertarianism has no philosophy and that it renounces the need for an intellectual basis for what it believes. The true Libertarian position must is that no defense is necessary.
Posted by WD on 02/13/12 04:58 PM
Looks like the banksters have planted an operative into the heart of liberterianism. Full spectrum domination comes to mind. Of course their income has increased! It always does once you are on the bankster approved list.
Has anyone noticed the banksters are promoting Islam everywhere but Iran. Only Iran is bypassing the petrodollar. Only God can help them now.
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Posted by Hoss on 02/13/12 03:55 PM
1. The idea of any 'leaders' of an objectivist movement or body of objectivist thought is a contradiction in terms (more accurately, a sick joke). Anyone who 'follows' or 'joins up' has failed the test already.
2. Leonard Peikoff and ARI forfeited the moral right to speak for anybody other than themselves long, long ago (by coming up with insane conclusions based on irrelevant factors (endorsing Kerry!?)). If Ayn Rand were alive today and heard this compendium of painting with a broad brush, excusing the killing of innocents, and ignoring plain facts, then Yaron would be in the camp of Lew Rockwell, nursing his bruised ego and lashing out at her memory for years after suffering a devastating intellectual dismemberment. (Leonard's work was OK as long as Ayn was alive and guiding his work. Afterward, he fell apart. Another victim of the oxymoron; a sycophant is now going to tell me what to think? No.)
Everyone has their faults. Ayn had hers. I have mine. But the lessons of her epistemology are valuable, and I won't toss them away for ANYONE. I at least learned that much. The whole point of the exercise is to learn to think for yourself, and it doesn't appear that Yaron made that leap yet. This interview is an excellent example of why it pays not to be a 'joiner'.
Thanks to The Bell for bringing this interview. Too bad we got such a terrible example of Ayn Rand's influence pretending to speak on her behalf. Hopefully the millions of people who woke up and took charge of their own lives after reading her work will represent her memory better.
For the record:
I do not condone pre-emptive war.
I do not believe Islamists decided to do suicide attacks against us in a vacuum.
I am an engineer, I work in metallurgy, particularly steel, and I can not believe the preposterous official story of 9/11.
I believe coincidences and the incompetence excuse only go so far in explaining things.
And last, I need to go shower off after I distance myself from Peikoff's insane assertion that our pre-emptive wars should include consideration of a nuclear attack "regardless of the countless innocents caught in the line of fire". That gem is in the NYT ad mentioned.
No one could have gone farther than this in discrediting the incredible gift Ayn Rand left behind.
To hell with Yaron and Leonard. Don't presume to speak for me, dammit!
Posted by praxisseizure on 02/13/12 03:37 PM
Thanks DB for this article. As a long time reader and first time poster this interview was especially enlightening.
Everyone draws from Rand something different and this is yet another variant correlation of her perfect world to this real one. I for one think Rand's characters are, while useful, rather two dimensional. "Larger than life" gives them undue implied praise. The ideas are where it's at.
While I disagree on many facets of Brooks' world views his framing the grand argument as a war of ideas I think is exactly correct. I tend to side closer to DB's explanation of the evidence connected but dismissing others reconstructions of what "is" borders on extreme folly.
I think the religion locus is particularly pertinent in his responses. He seems an antagonist of the anti-religious religion insofar as implying academic dogma as its own religion. There I totally agree, but then, that train of thought also has dogmatic pitfalls.
Anyhow, again, very good interview. Of all articles I read DB for, the interviews are my favorite for their human spark looking into others' peepholes.
Posted by alexsemen on 02/13/12 12:24 PM
But what about the "free market"style robbery by the Turkish style Islam total war against Europe ( I mean Central and East Europe )
Now under Ayn Rand Istitutte those Jews( and Madelein Albright/Khazar roots) made possible again the installation of Islam in East Europe ( Bosnia and Albania Kosovo ).The worst forme of Islam, the so called "Proletcultism Islam"
The same bloody "free- market "ANI has impossed the bloody "multiculturalisme", or the genocide of Europe cultural and economical identity !
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Posted by gabe on 02/13/12 11:19 AM
While I was thrilled to read the interview and thank DB for presenting it... I kept waitng for DB to tactly throw a couple facts in this guys face... and it never happened? You guys just let him ignore Kissinger/rockefeller/bush/US support for Saudi Arabia maniacs... just let him erroneuosly talk about the 1st wtc bombing where the FBI cooked the bomb and told him to f***ING blow up the building???!!
Just let him talk about the muslim brotherhood as if the elite haven't put them in power?
has he read any volataire... he sounds like a character in Camus... "the world is straightforward... and we have to believe the governments interpretation of history because it is in our best national interest... the government would not lie/ Gulf of Tonkin was a legit story, Operation northwoods is a conspiracy theory... trust the governent war is peace"
Posted by EdwardUlyssesCate on 02/13/12 11:15 AM
Every so-called leader and organization should understand that:
'WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US.'
Click to view link
A few choice words of a non-sociopath can speak volumes, and yet volumes of a sociopath's words can say nothing. Just a thought. Much appreciate the publishing of other viewpoints. Thanks, DB.
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Posted by gabe on 02/13/12 11:12 AM
"Dubya wanted to spread democracy"... how much more naive can this guy be?
Interesting that these guys never talk about the US funding/militarizing and gunning up the police states of Saudi Arabia and Eygpt. Hey Yaron... where do you think Osama learned to be a "terrorist"?
I bet you think Sadam got his chemical weapons from the tooth fairy too?
I loved Ayn Rand's critique of communism/socialism and it affected me strongly, but how could you really have been affected by Ayn Rand economic thought and then gotten your PHD from UT Austin... one of the most marxist economics dept in the country... coincidentally that is where the Saudi founder of OPEC went as he was taught how to be a good minion for the Rockefellers.
Yaron, you are a creepy guy... guess what is written in the old testament... right after the 10 commandments part, the people are worshipping a golden calf... and many are polytheist... so god and Moses say we need to murder all the people who aren't monotheist... so they slaughter 3000 men women and children... .couldn't muslims point to such things and say we have a murderous intolerant religion at the heart of our system(i'm atheist as was Rand)... but yoran your nuke happy hate mongering is disgusting and more fitting for a communist(which you seem to be at heart).
You ignore facts regarding the 1st WTC attack... this makes you anti-reason... who cooked that bomb dumbass?
h
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Posted by Abu Aardvark on 02/13/12 05:27 AM
DB: "You make a distinction between Israel and Zionism. Can you explain? You have said that the West isn't at war with terrorism but the ideology of Islamic totalitarianism. Can you elaborate?"
------------------
Tony Cartalucci over at "Land Destroyer" CAN:
"The British Daily Mail published a stunning admission by "US officials" that Israel is indeed funding, training, arming, and working directly with US State Department listed terrorist organization, the People's Mujahedin of Iran, also known as Mujahedeen e-Khalq (MEK).
(... )
Of course, this is an overt lie, exposed by 3-4 years of documented collaboration between the United States and MEK, including an extensive conspiracy formulated within US policy think-tank Brookings Institution's 2009 "Which Path to Persia?" report, proposing to fully arm, train, and back MEK as it waged a campaign of armed terror against the Iranian people.
(... )
And while Israel's current regime is most definitely assisting MEK logistically, financially, tactically, and rhetorically, working in tandem to achieve Western hegemony across the Middle East, MEK's existence and sustenance is derived as much so, if not almost entirely from Wall Street and London, with Isreal serving merely as a regional conduit and beachhead with its regime a complicit cog of globalist ambitions. "US officials" deceitfully attempting to pawn off full responsibility onto Israel signals a new level of dangerous deception and subterfuge few are prepared to understand - but again, clues of this can be found within US policy papers frankly admitting the advantages of using Israel as a convenient scapegoat for what is a Wall Street/London agenda propagated through their contrived "international institutions" of "global governance."
Indeed, Israel has long been portrayed as the "puppet master" of a vast "Zionist" conspiracy, however it is quite clear they have been made overtly "evil" to take the blame for what is essentially a global-elite agenda based out of Wall Street and London, two cities Israel's current regime would not exist without the support of. For the people residing under the current Israeli regime, it would be beneficial for them to realize that they are being thrown under the bus by both their alleged allies and their own government and will be made the full scapegoats of increasing hostilities targeting both Syria and Iran to insulate and preserve the mechanics of an emerging global government they have helped carve out.
The intention is to create a religious-centric strategy of tension to obfuscate both the true aims and perpetrators of this global agenda in hopes of getting Jews, Muslims, Christians and others to divide along predictable lines against each other globally rather than recognizing and targeting the elite that lord over them domestically and internationally."
Click to view link
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Posted by the_IRF on 02/13/12 03:04 AM
I hope the below links {"Financial Tyranny"} is of some good use to everyone who might have read this most interesting interview. Thank you Dr. Brook and Mr. Wile. I am glad to hear about the five fold increase in revenues accruing to The Ayn Rand Institute.
"FINANCIAL TYRANNY: The Final Sections"
Click to view link
It is a long read, but worth it. Many tell me they can't stop until they get to the end and are dumbfounded to hear that there really is 200M tonnes of gold in the world and not the officially reported 120,000 tonnes AND that the Pentagon, Russia and China and 138 other nations are getting ready to put the corrupt 'banksters', et. al. in jail and take away the money they have been stealing these last 10-20 years.
I suspect Dr. Brook will be most interested to follow up with commentary on what may well be in the offing, if the reported world changing events detailed in the blog post above unfold and do prove to be true. I for one would very much like to hear what cautionary considerations might evolve from the thinkers at ARI. Were this to all unfold, it will be a game changer and many of those of the 'bankster' set {the White Shoe Boys, as Gerald Cellente likes to call them} will be off to jail, hopefully.
Robert .'.
Posted by Justin on 02/13/12 03:02 AM
A commited socialist at 16!? What a moron. Smart guys at 16 are surfing, skateboarding & smoking bongs behind the dunnies at the local park.
Now that's freedom!
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