ON JESUS AND AYN RAND
As most here know early on during the Covid Fiasco we pivoted from a Gold Only Site to focus more on what was going on here .
One of the first websites I came across was Much Ado about Corona which was run buy a young man named John Manley in Stratford Ontario.
I had a sense that this guy was something special . I contacted him and learned he was writing and would be self publishing a “Utopian Love Story ” about a Young man from a small Town in Northern Ontario and his journey through those horrible early days of Covid Lockdowns and Mandates. I offered to help him help fund the project and we have been in contact ever since. He is a sometimes reader at Goldtent. As you will soon see he is a Inspiration .
I wept when I learned his Wife last year had decided to stop her dialysis and let go, She died peacefully at home surrounded by loving friends and now John writes about how she is still in contact with him and their son Jonah ( now 16)
tangibly and on a regular basis. Jonah was born blind . The relationship John and Jonah have is also inspirational to say the least. Here is an example of what I mean. …received in an email he sent out to his followers . We focus so much on the dark and evil in the world . BUT through this Journey I am humbled to have met so many wonderful people through Goldtent .
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“Recently someone told me that Jesus said, “You should love others MORE than yourself.”
“What?” was my instant response. “When did Jesus ever say that?”
What the Book of Matthew actually quotes Jesus saying is: “Thou shalt love thy neighbour AS thyself.”
In other words: just as much as yourself.
But I think many people do interpret it as “more than yourself.”
Why? Because it makes us feel unworthy to do impressive things that would benefit our own lives. It caters to our fear of failure. It breeds low self-esteem. And it feeds laziness.
As Peter Keating says in Ayn Rand’s novel, The Fountainhead:
“Katie, why do they always teach us that it’s easy and evil to do what we want and that we need discipline to restrain ourselves? It’s the hardest thing in the world — to do what we want. And it takes the greatest kind of courage. I mean, what we really want…. Not as I want to sleep with some woman or get drunk or get my name in the papers. Those things — they’re not even desires — they’re things people do to escape from desires — because it’s such a big responsibility, really to want something.”
A couple of weeks ago, my son and I finished reading The Fountainhead. In fact, we read it twice. Or, rather, listened to it twice. We purchased the audiobooks in both English and Spanish (going back and forth every ten minutes). It’s a long book at 32 hours (64 with the Spanish translation) but I can honestly say that I was sorry when the final chapter arrived.
I’ve already read many of Ayn Rand’s non-fiction works, so I was expecting this novel to be an awkward didactic story. Instead, her ability to describe scenes, craft unique characters and write dialogue was so well executed that my only regret was having waited so long to read this epic tale.
A big focus in the book is living for one’s own self-interest rather than sacrificing one’s time and energy to a greater collective. While collectivism is usually looked upon as a sociopolitical issue, Ayn Rand’s story tackles it from the point of view of one’s soul.
The Fountainhead is about not finding one’s self-worth in sacrifice to others. Much like the saying, the best way to help the poor is not to become one of them; the story proposes that the best way to stop the world from falling into depravity and mediocrity is to pursue noble goals and great achievements.
As Howard Roark says in the opening chapter:
“But you see, I have, let’s say, sixty years to live. Most of that time will be spent working. I’ve chosen the work I want to do. If I find no joy in it, then I’m only condemning myself to sixty years of torture. And I can find the joy only if I do my work in the best way possible to me. But the best is a matter of standards — and I set my own standards.”
So if you’ve ever been distracted from personal pursuits by the siren calls of altruism, I’d highly recommend you purchase The Fountainhead and read it a few times. Here’s the link:
https://blazingpinecone.com/shop/the-fountainhead/
—John C.A. Manley
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Here is John’s epic Covid era Novel . It is captivating and incredibly well researched and written. A must for those of us who lived our own dramas during that dark period where we all were abruptly and rudeley shaken Awake into the realization of the Dark Evil Forces who would enslave us , control us and every aspect of our lives our lives.
After reading it if you are like me you will place it prominenly on the mantle as a reminder every day .
Cheers To John and Jonah (The kid understands Ayn Rand in Spanish ? ) SHEESH
https://www.amazon.ca/Much-Ado-About-Corona-Dystopian/dp/1778123104
Unfortunately, collectivism is on the rise in the “collective West”.
These Western nanny States, being socialist, generally destroy individual incentive.
As it is easier to sit back, become lazy, and let the nanny State look after all needs and wants, from birth to death.
Socialism will crash and burn, when we get the sovereign debt defaults, and they run out of other peoples money.
When the nanny State cannot be funded, individuals will be forced to get off their butts, and take some responsibility…
Thanks, Fully. There’s a lot to consider in your post, which I will work on.
Yup. Read Fountainhead first, in late 80s, early 90s.
Should have read it long before then.
Atlas Shrugged is a tour d’ force, but I always recommend Fountainhead first to get the theme across in a more personalized way.
Last year when Aaron Rodgers was castrigated for being unvaxxed he did an interview on a popular ESPN sports show from his home
He was castrigated by the leftard sports casters even more because prominently behind him on a bookshelf was Atlas Shrugged
he article denegrating him said it was a Far Right racist Book that had been discredited
sick fucks
Beautiful…
Thanks, Gary! I appreciate your sharing that. Funny enough, Nicole had read both Ayn Rand novels like 7 or 10 years ago. I’m just catching up. I remember she used to be a hardcore NDP supporter. She read those novels and it changed her who political outlook. It also changed her relationship with the parastic medical system.
Like one Leo358 said above, socialism will “crash and burn.” I’m just hoping we can do a controlled demolition.