After a little re-reading, I’ve noticed another part of Atlas Shrugged that seems to be timely. Here are some quotes about a small-scale factory socializing, among other things, health care.
Atlas Shrugged – Part II – Chapter X
The plan was that everybody in the factory would work according to his ability, but would be paid according to his need.
…it wasn’t too clear, but nobody asked any questions. None of us knew just how the plan would work, but every one of us thought that the next fellow knew it. And if anybody had doubts, he felt guilty and kept his mouth shut—because they made it sound like anyone who’d oppose the plan was a child killer at heart and less than a human being. They told us that this plan would achieve a noble ideal.
When it’s all one pot, you can’t let any man decide what his own needs are, can you?
Well, anyway, it was decided that nobody had the right to judge his own need or ability. We voted on it.
In the old days, we used to celebrate if somebody had a baby, we used to chip in and help him out with the hospital bills, if he happened to be hard-pressed for the moment. Now, if a baby was born, we didn’t speak to the parents for weeks. Babies, to us, had become what locusts were to farmers. In the old days, we used to help a man if he had a bad illness in the family. Now—well, I’ll tell you about just one case. It was the mother of a man who had been with us for fifteen years. She was a kindly old lady, cheerful and wise, she knew us all by our first names and we all liked her—we used to like her. One day, she slipped on the cellar stairs and fell and broke her hip. We knew what that meant at her age. The staff doctor said that she’d have to be sent to a hospital in town, for expensive treatments that would take a long time. The old lady died the night before she was to leave for town. They never established the cause of death. No, I don’t know whether she was murdered. Nobody said that. Nobody would talk about it at all. All I know is that I—and that’s what I can’t forget!—I, too, had caught myself wishing that she would die. This—may God forgive us!—was the brotherhood, the security, the abundance that the plan was supposed to achieve for us!

#1 by Vinny on September 8, 2009 - 4:05 am
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I recently read Atlas Shrugged for the first time and I was struck by the thought that at the time Rand wrote the book, the top marginal tax rate was 90%, labor unions were strong, and the United States was the world's biggest creditor as well as the world's greatest manufacturer.
Rand's philosophy of unfettered free markets and the evils of government regulation didn't gain political ascendancy until Reagan came to power in the 1980's with his tax cuts and union busting. Since then America has become the world's biggest debtor and its manufacturing base is gone.
The irony is that the conditions under which Rand's fantasy can become a reality were brought about in large part by her followers.
#2 by Rob on September 8, 2009 - 11:16 am
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Rand was no doubt influenced by her Soviet background and not just what she saw in the United States.
I wouldn't say that Rand's fantasy became a reality due to her followers. Are you referring to Greenspan? If so, by the time he became Chairman of the Fed, he was a much different man than the one who wrote 'Gold and Economic Freedom'. No true Randian could take he role of central planner (without the intention to destroy it).