Libertarian History/Philosophy
The Founding Mothers of Libertarianism
Freedom's Furies tells how three women offered their own unique defenses of individual liberty and how their disagreements anticipated the differences among libertarians and classical liberals today.

Freedom's Furies: How Isabel Paterson, Rose Wilder Lane, and Ayn Rand Found Liberty in an Age of Darkness, by Timothy Sandefur, Cato Institute, 500 pages, $19.95
With Freedom's Furies, Timothy Sandefur shows how Isabel Paterson, Rose Wilder Lane, and Ayn Rand defended individualism and free markets while America was in the grips of Depression and war. Although these three furies have long been identified as the founders of modern American libertarianism, Sandefur treads new ground by exploring their relationships with each other and by tracing the evolution of their thought. All three women offered their own unique defenses of individual liberty, and their disagreements anticipated the differences among libertarians and classical liberals today.
Sandefur, the vice president for legal affairs at the Goldwater Institute, begins with the trio's literary influences, particularly the novelist Sinclair Lewis. All three, he writes, appreciated how Lewis' books "expressed the way modern mass culture penalized originality and integrity, and rewarded obedience and cravenness." Each joined Lewis in rejecting conformity, but they resisted his dismissal of all bourgeois virtue—and Rand also rejected his pessimism.
The New Deal and World War II had a tremendous influence on the three thinkers. Sandefur describes the historical context well, with particular attention to the authoritarian side of President Franklin Roosevelt's administration. Indeed, professors looking for a book to assign classes studying American history from 1920 to 1950 should seriously consider Freedom's Furies. It masterfully details the causes of the Great Depression, the federal government's overreach during the New Deal, and the wartime attacks on political, economic, and civil liberties. Not only was individual freedom under assault, Sandefur notes, but it was "almost impossible to find any published material that made a strong, intellectual case for free markets." The furies realized they would have to produce their own.
And so Paterson's The God of the Machine (a philosophical treatise), Lane's The Discovery of Freedom (a pop history crossed with a manifesto), and Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead (a didactic novel) were published in 1943. All three writers believed that the morality of self-sacrifice should be rejected. Rand and Paterson both argued for a form of ethical egoism, and they would long debate who influenced whom. But the two differed greatly in their style: Rand was deeply influenced by 19th-century Romanticism while Paterson was committed to naturalism. For her part, Lane argued that human energy produced human flourishing and that "every human being, by his nature, is free." Humanity simply needed to discover this truth; hence her book's title.
All three authors independently developed some of the most important insights of classical liberal academics. Paterson's criticism of the New Deal, for instance, included the argument that central planning was impossible because bureaucrats "would have to know 'absolutely all the factors of present and past out of which the future must proceed, and to anticipate inerrantly all the possible new discoveries which may be made.'" These arguments capture some of the insights of Ludwig von Mises and F.A. Hayek, who were not well-known in the U.S. at the time. Likewise, The God of the Machine anticipated Karl Popper's critique of "the arrested society," which he wrote two years later. Paterson recognized that all utopias "are final…they are static societies"; as such, she suggested, they could not adapt, because "creative processes do not function to order." In short, "To live, people must think, and to think, they must be free."
Lane anticipated Hayek's critique of government planning in a short 1936 book titled Give Me Liberty. She argued, in Sandefur's words, that "to truly organize an economy…government bureaucrats would, in principle, need infinite knowledge." Lane also hit on some important insights later associated with the economics of public choice. The idea that bureaucrats could better manage the economy than individuals was, she wrote, the "dominant fallacy" of the 1930s. Instead, Lane insisted that "there was no reason to think government officials would be exempt from the shortsightedness, corruption, or ignorance that plagued the decisions of private citizens."
Sandefur also details the trio's views on religion and how those related to their defense of liberty. While all three believed that natural rights existed independently of government, they arrived at this conclusion in different ways. Lane and Paterson both argued that the existence of a deity was necessary. Rand, an atheist, disagreed; she believed that human beings could reason our way to a justification of natural rights.
Lane irritated the other two women with her insistence that Christian ethics could be reconciled with a robust defense of individual liberty. Her argument that people have a moral sense that leads us, by nature, to care for our neighbor annoyed Rand and Paterson, who felt that man should look after his own happiness and had no moral obligation to others. Paterson took umbrage at the vagueness of Lane's "all men are brothers" thesis and retorted, "Stalin is no brother of mine." This helped end Lane and Paterson's friendship. Lane's religious views and Rand's atheism likewise made any deep friendship between the two women difficult, and they met in person just once. As Paterson grew older, her notorious temper and her practice of hurting those close to her drove a wedge in her relationship with Rand.
Although this is an exceptional book, it is not flawless. The most striking shortcoming is the lack of attention to the ways the furies applied their individualism to minorities. Sandefur does note that "on matters of race relations, freedom of speech, and sexual autonomy, they were decades ahead of their time in embracing views later classified as 'liberal.'" That is absolutely correct, which is why it is frustrating that the book doesn't delve into that point in more detail.
Sandefur mentions, for instance, that Lane was hired by the Pittsburgh Courier (one of the largest black newspapers in the country) in 1942, but he doesn't detail any of the arguments she made in her essays there. Fellow historian David T. Beito and I have compiled more than 80 of Lane's columns in a collection that will be published in 2024. For more than two years at the Courier, Lane applied the ideals of individual liberty and her unique conception of human energy to black Americans and their struggle. As Rachel Ferguson and I show in our book Black Liberation Through the Marketplace, there is a deep tradition of classical liberals and libertarians fighting for minority rights in America.
Still, this book's flaws are small compared to its contributions. Freedom's Furies offers hope to a new generation of classical liberals and libertarians living through the threat of authoritarianism abroad and illiberalism at home. Compared with the domestic overreach of the 1930s and '40s and the rise of fascism and communism abroad, our own troubles don't seem quite as bad.
In the midst of that darkness, Sandefur writes, Paterson, Lane, and Rand argued "that the spirit of self-reliance was the keystone of American mores—the essential element that allowed for political liberalism, economic growth, the flourishing of geniuses such as Edison and the Wright brothers, and the peaceful pursuit of happiness by millions of unknown citizens." Individual liberty and self-reliance are still the keystones, and the furies' successors will surely continue to promote liberty in the face of the darkness today.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
At what point did journalists stop demanding government provide answers on how COVID specifically came into public distribution?
My understanding is that the Spanish flu of one hundred years ago can be traced to a specific farm in Kansas.
I am making a good salary from home $6580-$7065/week , which is amazing under a year ago I was jobless in a horrible economy. I thank God every day I was blessed with these instructions and now it’s my duty to pay it forward and share it with Everyone,
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK. 🙂
Here is I started.……......>> http://WWW.SALARYBEZ.COM
Doubtful. Most likely the Spanish Flu recrossed into humans in the trenches on the Western Front. It was possibly a mutation of flu viruses that had last appeared in humans in the 1890's - one reason why the death toll was significantly higher in under-30's. Those first flu cases were ignored by hospitals treating the injured because the war-injured overwhelmed everything.
The very first American soldiers in Europe were training and observing modern/trench warfare near the largest hospitals there in mid-1917. They then, in late 1917 and early 1918, returned to incorporate what they had learned into the training/strategy programs at Fort Leavenworth (infantry, officers) and Fort Riley (cavalry, artillery). From there it spread worldwide outside just a battlefield pandemic.
JMO but it's based on info that tends to get ignored.
The farm was near a US military base and it was the Americans that contracted it brought it to Europe, where it spread to many nations. There were reports of soldiers crossing the Atlantic to Europe that became ill.
Anyhow, we have this information from over 100 years ago. We (they) have spent trillions on covid. From where did it come?
I got no dog in your fight to emphasize covid origin - presumably WuFlu or Wuhan Flu. Neither do you unless you are initiating some crusade to rename Spanish Flu to Kansas Flu. Origins are very useful. Labels really aren't.
It would be nice to know how covid came about so as to not allow it to happen again. But you knew that. It would also be nice to know whether there were bad actors involved in covid so as to pursue penalties. No amnesty.
I italicized Spanish to denote the vernacular. It didn’t originate in Spain. They were neutral during the Great War where their press was not subject to wartime censorship. While the outbreak was affecting much of continental Europe similarly, the belligerent nations were not really reporting it so it looked like mostly just Spain had the problem.
In over 5,000 years of recorded human history, there is little if any credible evidence to support the notion of “a political coincidence.” In only two years in office President Trump produced a record economy, achieved record economic equality for women and minorities, controlled our borders peacefully, reduced our military actions abroad and avoided the temptation to to initiate new wars overseas, improved our economic treaties, and in short actually DID all the things over 60% of voters have continually said they want done for the past 70 years. And yet, “mysteriously” every Federal Agency, MSM outlet, academic institutions, and political operative from the left as well as many from the right unleashed the greatest single coordinated torrent of hatred in American history. In the summer of 2019, an unnaturally large number of prominent Democrats were recorded saying remarkably similar sentiments which can be paraphrased as: “I wish something like an epidemic would hit to hurt the economy so that the economy will falter and Trump won’t be re-elected.”
SHEZAM!!!!
Just a few weeks later, a mysterious new virus was observed near the Chinese lab performing gain of function “research” and funded for over 20 years, many of those years illegally, by Fauci (who lied to Congress to obtain the funding) and which also received millions each year from over a dozen Democrat mega-donors. “Remarkably similar” to the strain of virus the lab was known to be working on, this virus was ultimately proved to contain patented genes which could not (statistically) have evolved naturally.
Unless you are gullible enough believe in multiple “miracles” occurring simultaneously at precisely the right time to restore a political status quo, we know exactly where Covid came from and why.
In over 5,000 years of recorded human history, there is little if any credible evidence to support the notion of “a political coincidence.”
Only if you believe that conspiracies drive events. In that belief system, of course there is no such thing as a coincidence. If there is no credible evidence of a specific conspiracy, then that just proves how crafty they were.
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35,100 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,100 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link——————————>>> http://Www.JobsRevenue.Com
I also feel skeptical about people releasing a deadly virus to unseat Trump. But I have no doubt that many people orchestrated the pandemic response as a mechanism to take him down.
I totally agree with both of your reasons for continuing to look for origins of covid.
But the second reason verges, at best, on the silly and quixotic. Which also means that any attempt to look for the bad people and exact, what, reparations?, will quickly devolve into nothing but conspiratorial partisan dick-waving. That you acknowledge can only be eternal. So it has nothing to do with covid. And everything to do with your love of conspiratorial partisan dick-waving. Covid as an excuse to advance your political goals. Oooh - maybe an international Nuremberg Trial for covid. Or since you certainly don't like that idea - WTF are you actually looking for? A land war in Asia against China?
It looks like we agree on the first item.
You changed my mind on the second issue with your sound logic, cogent articulations and intelligent retorts. Let’s look at it. Covid didn’t cost anyone any money. No businesses were negatively impacted. Nobody lost their job as a result. No money was spent or wasted due to covid and certainly there were no injuries much less loss of life. In the extremely unlikely chance that covid was due to gross negligence or the even less likely occurrence of intention, those folks involved should get a free pass. Thanks for making things clear.
We ALL have a dog in the fight regarding COVID origin because it was very likely a lab leak, just like the 1977 flu. If we don’t get a handle on the true origins of COVID, and if it DID leak from a lab, and if that leak was the direct result of US government actors, then there’s not only nothing to prevent it from happening again, but it would give an essential green light to insure that it does.
if that leak was the direct result of US government actors, then there’s not only nothing to prevent it from happening again, but it would give an essential green light to insure that it does.
Oh ok. So what you're saying is that YOU should be required to pay reparations to the rest of the world x China. No amnesty!!
No amnesty. None.
And yes, if it turned out that the lab leak WAS caused by Anthony Fauci, then I would have no qualms in handing Fauci over to Chinese officials to stand trial there.
Yet many of the same people who cannot tolerate having uncertainty about the origin of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, adamantly claim they KNOW the truth!, and demand punishment for those responsible are the same people to say that it wasn’t that ready, the whole pandemic was overblown, etc.
It’s all partisan sports bullshit.
There should be a complete investigation where all the cards are on the table. Given that we don’t know, as you pointed out, it would be presumptive to preemptively exonerate any entity beforehand.
It will be great when we all finally know the whole story, if that occurs. What will be even better is when Reason covers it two years after the fact. Am looking forward to that.
Just an anecdote that proves nothing. My grandfather joined the army during WW1. He never left the states. Got the flu and spent his enlistment in an army hospital. Got a small pension that helped get the family through the depression.
A Spanish Bat in a wet market run by Gol-Dern Peppinas from The Real McCoys?
😉
I get paid over 190$ per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I’d be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I’ve been doing..
HERE====)> http://WWW.NETPAYFAST.COM
But what about sandwiches?
Sandwiches are the most libertarian of foods. Except cuban sandwiches.
Made for eating on the go or at the gamboling table.
🙂
What about from food trucks?
How close are they to brick-and-mortar food purveyors?
Sandwiches from food trucks FTW!
🙂
The Earl would like a word with you.
Word is, Ayn Rand had a really good recipe for Beef Stroganoff.
Yes, IIRC, Laissez-Faire Books actually had a cookbook of favorite recipes from Classical Liberal/Libertarian/Objectivismt celebrities and authors, and it included Ayn Rand's recipe.
It definitely wouldn't be called Hamburger Helper. It is not a chef's reason for being to help others, let alone hamburger, though if the chef's profitable recipe helps the hamburger, that is a bonus.
😉
Yes, I remember that cookbook well. I never did get around to trying the recipes. Not even the Chicken Brothbard
I wouldn't try that. It might be a bioweapons culture intended for use by either The Weather Underground or The Order, depending on Murray's desired alliance.
🙂
Seriously, IIRC, I thought Rothbard's recipe was Cherry Cloufouti, which he couldn't make but loved to eat. There were some interesting ones mentioned in the review, but I never bought the book. It could be out there on Powell's or Thrift books.
Who doesn’t like an Egg N Bacon sammich?
I for one refuse to indulge in pork spending.
it could also be that Kosher bacon they talked about in the Woodstock movie, though I wouldn't trust it's hygiene after being passed around among half a million Hippies.
🙂
Who can afford the egg?
And I see what you did there.
An Egg McMuffin with the emphasis on MUFFin.
😉
there is a deep tradition of classical liberals and libertarians fighting for minority rights in America
There is a deep tradition of liberals (before they were called classical) fighting to expand ideas of liberty to those who had none of that.
I don't see that at all with either 'libertarians' or self-proclaimed 'classical'. The core notion of the term 'classical' (as in an essentially conservative opposition to a perceived trend in 'liberalism') originates with Herbert Spencer (1884) with the adjective attached by Mises in the late 1920's.
It’s pretty clear by Rousseau and/or the French Revolution that there is a massive, probably irreconcilable deviation in what one could call “liberalism”. But yeah, a lot of people sort of toss Locke and the like in with Rousseau and the like, and it definitely shits up the discussion of what “classical liberalism” is a few centuries down the road.
So Then they nabbed “libertarianism” mid 20th century, from 19th century anarcho-socialists in Europe to try and rebrand. Great idea.
And don’t even get me started on “neo-liberalism”. A term that literally means anything to everybody trying to bitch about what they don’t like right now.
And there’s no point trying to iron out this time shit, because commies, and post structuralist word benders will just invert the meanings, anyway.
Gosh, ANOTHER republican book extolling the wondrousness of German-Austrian theorizing and of the same Christian altruism Adolf Hitler was so find of reciting--plus cramming fake conclusions into Ayn Rand's mouth. It's as some comments Rand actually made weren't embarrassing enough. Yet collectivists cannot resist scouring Nazi Yourup for what Patrick Henry, Lysander Spooner, HL Mencken, William Graham Sumner, Tom Jefferson and Mark Twain defended long before Hitler's first Communion.
See, kids, this is what you get if you ask ChatGTP for some Neo-Marxist gibberish.
Needs more Comstock Act.
"before Hitler’s first Communion."
Don't be like that, Hank. Hitler was actually just like you. You two could've been the best of pals.
According to John Willard Toland, witnesses indicate that Hitler's confirmation sponsor had to "drag the words out of him ... almost as though the whole confirmation was repugnant to him". - John Toland; Hitler; Wordsworth Editions; 1997 Edn; p. 18
Otto Strasser stated critically of the dictator, "Hitler is an atheist." for his unsettling sympathy to "Rosenberg's paganism" - Weikart, Richard (22 November 2016). Hitler's Religion: The Twisted Beliefs that Drove the Third Reich.
Rissmann notes that, according to several witnesses who lived with Hitler in a men's home in Vienna, he never again attended Mass or received the sacraments after leaving home at 18 years old.[12] - Rissmann, Michael (2001). Hitlers Gott: Vorsehungsglaube und Sendungsbewußtsein des deutschen Diktators. Zürich, München: Pendo, pp. 94–96
Krieger claims that Hitler had abandoned the Catholic Church - The Oxford Companion to Comparative Politics Pg 529
Bullock wrote that Hitler had been raised Catholic, but, though impressed by its organizational powers, repudiated Christianity on what he considered to be rational and moral grounds. "In Hitler's eyes, Christianity was a religion fit only for slaves; he detested its ethics in particular. Its teaching, he declared, was a rebellion against the natural law of selection by struggle and the survival of the fittest." - Alan Bullock; Hitler, a Study in Tyranny; Harper Perennial Edition, 1991; p. 219.
Ian Kershaw wrote an influential biography of Hitler which used new sources to expound on Hitler's religious views. He concluded that Hitler was spiritual, but nevertheless critical of Christian churches:
"However much Hitler on some occasions claimed to want a respite in the conflict [with the churches], his own inflammatory comments gave his underlings all the license they needed to turn up the heat on the "Church Struggle", confident that they were working towards the Fuhrer...Hitler's impatience with the churches prompted frequent outbursts of hostility. In early 1937, he was declaring that "Christianity was ripe for destruction" (Untergang), and that the churches must therefore yield to the "primacy of the state", railing against "the most horrible institution imaginable" - Ian Kershaw; Hitler 1936–1945 Nemesis; WW Norton & Company; 2000; pp. 39–40
British historian Richard J. Evans, who writes primarily on Nazi Germany and World War II, noted Hitler claiming that Nazism is founded on science: "Science, he declared, would easily destroy the last remaining vestiges of superstition' Germany could not tolerate the intervention of foreign influences such as the Pope and 'Priests', he said, were 'black bugs', 'abortions in black cassocks'." - Richard J. Evans; The Third Reich at War; Penguin Press; New York 2009, p. 547
British historian Richard Overy, biographer of Hitler, sees Hitler as having been a skeptic of religion: "Both Stalin and Hitler wanted a neutered religion, subservient to the state, while the slow programme of scientific revelation destroyed the foundation of religious myth."
Overy writes of Hitler as skeptical of all religious belief, but politically prudent enough not to "trumpet his scientific views publicly", partly in order to maintain the distinction between his own movement and the godlessness of Soviet Communism. In 2004, he wrote:
He was not a practising Christian but had somehow succeeded in masking his own religious skepticism from millions of German voters. Though Hitler has often been portrayed as a neo-pagan, or the centrepiece of a political religion in which he played the Godhead, his views had much more in common with the revolutionary iconoclasm of the Bolshevik enemy. His few private remarks on Christianity betray a profound contempt and indifference ... Hitler believed that all religions were now "decadent"; in Europe it was the "collapse of Christianity that we are now experiencing". The reason for the crisis was science. Hitler, like Stalin, took a very modern view of the incompatibility of religious and scientific explanation. - Overy, Richard (2004) The Dictators: Hitler's Germany, Stalin's Russia. Allen Lane/Penguin. pp. 280-287
Derek Hastings writes that "there is little doubt that Hitler was a staunch opponent of Christianity throughout the duration of the Third Reich". - Hastings, Derek (2010). Catholicism and the Roots of Nazism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 181.
Hitler was in fact excommunicated, along with all other Nazi leaders, in 1931. - Scholder, Klaus, The Churches and the Third Reich. 2 vols. Fortress Press, 1988 pp. 150–162
Goebbels wrote on 29 April 1941 that though Hitler was "a fierce opponent" of the Vatican and Christianity, "he forbids me to leave the church. For tactical reasons." - Fred Taylor Translation; The Goebbels Diaries 1939–41; Hamish Hamilton Ltd; London; 1982
According to Speer, Hitler's private secretary, Martin Bormann, relished recording any harsh pronouncements by Hitler against the church.[66] Speer considered Bormann to be the driving force behind the regime's campaign against the churches. Speer thought that Hitler approved of Bormann's aims, but was more pragmatic and wanted to "postpone this problem to a more favourable time":
"Once I have settled my other problem," [Hitler] occasionally declared, "I'll have my reckoning with the church. I'll have it reeling on the ropes." But Bormann did not want this reckoning postponed ... he would take out a document from his pocket and begin reading passages from a defiant sermon or pastoral letter. Frequently Hitler would become so worked up ... and vowed to punish the offending clergyman eventually ... That he could not immediately retaliate raised him to a white heat ... - Albert Speer; Inside the Third Reich: Memoirs; Translation by Richard and Clara Winston; Macmillan; New York; 1970; p. 123
Speer wrote that Hitler would say: "You see, it's been our misfortune to have the wrong religion. Why didn't we have the religion of the Japanese, who regard sacrifice for the fatherland as the highest good? The Mohameddan religion too would have been much more compatible to us than Christianity. Why did it have to be Christianity with its meekness and flabbiness?" - Albert Speer; Inside the Third Reich: Memoirs; Translation by Richard and Clara Winston; Macmillan; New York; 1970; p. 123
When the Panzer tracks meet the road, however, Hitler could have done everything to the Catholic Church and Protestant Church that he did to Jews and every other group he targeted. He didn't.
And Pope Pious XII could have said the word and millions of Catholics in Europe and worldwide would have dropped their weapons, both in executing the Holocaust and in prosecuting the War. He didn't.
Heed ten times more what people actually do than what they say, and a hundred times more than what others say about them.
Uh, Hank. Von Mises was Atheist, not Christian, and Rand also cited Von Mises.
Also, Von Mises and Rand were both Jewish. (I hope I haven’t summoned Herr Misek.)
Herr Misek was last seen on Emma Camp's British abortion prayer story, accusing Monarchists and royalty of being liars who need to be prosecuted with the rest of us.
I think I zinged him pretty good, though, so he may be lacking his wounds. Must wait and see...
🙂
Licking his wounds, I mean. Nazis are a bloodthirsty lot.
Rose Wilder Lane may have been influenced a bit by her mother as well. She was the only surviving child of Laura Ingalls Wilder, whom you might recognize from the "Little House" books. As such, she was only one generation removed from a pioneer who moved around the West in her early days.
So, a racist colonial oppressor? No wonder she ended up alt-right, er, libertarian.
LOL
The progressive movement is way ahead of you:
https://www.npr.org/2018/06/25/623318964/laura-ingalls-wilders-name-removed-from-childrens-literature-award
Holy fuck.
Your tax dollars at work.
Was going to comment on the Little House connection. Rose Wilder Lane was heavily involved in editing and publishing the series. Laura Ingalls Wilder likely never would have written them without her daughter's influence.
In a way, I think Lane had the most positive impact on the liberty movement out of those three. Rand's books are more famous and garner a bigger cult following than anything Rose directly authored, but she undoubtedly influenced far more young minds with ideals of independence and freedom via the Little House books.
I read something somewhere that evidence suggests that Rose Wilder Lane actually ghostwrote the Little House Series for Laura Ingalls Wilder.
One things for sure: The Libertarian influence shines through, because at the end of every TV episode of Little House on the Prairie, it shows Laura GAMBOLLING down the prairie hill with her doggie Bandit...without asking Ossifer Friendly "Ossifer, am I free to GAMBOL?"
Little House On The Prairie--End
https://youtu.be/lXWHNkTN1n0
😉
(Longtimers on the Comments will get the reference, though I don't know who actually began it.)
Plus, Charles always paid "cash on the barrel head", even if it meant taking a second job in Mankato or hauling freight in his wagon for people. And CPS was nowhere to be found, checking on the living conditions for those kids in that tiny cabin with no electricity or running water.
From a couple episodes I seen, there were children far worse off than the Engalls. The Engalls Kids had it great for their circumstance.
The Minnesota Historical Society has published Laura's original manuscript in her handwriting, with annotations. Laura was not new to writing for publication; her work as a reporter had been the main support of her family for decades before she decided to write a book based on her childhood memories. Too much of the series came from this manuscript to describe Lane's contribution as a "ghost writer", but she clearly went further than just editing. I consider it a collaboration.
Lane was a successful editor, and tried to edit and sell her mother's work (written for adults) to publishers. It just wasn't the kind of book they wanted at that time (early in the Great Depression). Lane then had the idea of a children's book formed from the "family tales" that she had pulled out of the main manuscript - stories told around the fireplace in Wisconsin, at the Ingall's and relative's houses. It had to be rewritten in simpler language for young children, rearranged, and the continuity filled in. Lane probably did most or all of the rewriting. That was published as "Little House in the Big Woods," and the publisher soon wanted more.
The rest of the series required less re-work. Laura did part of the expansion and rewriting of her work as children's books, and Lane was at least a very active editor, not only suggesting changes but doing some of the rewrite. But the end result was still more Laura's words than not.
There were some major changes from the original (and from historical accuracy). The real life order of the first three books was "Farmer Boy" (#2, Almanzo Wilder's childhood in New York state), "Little House on the Prairie" (#3, a homestead in Kansas, which turned out to be on the Osage reservation), and then "Little House in the Big Woods" (#1, when the Ingalls temporarily moved back to Wisconsin near their relatives). Since "Big Woods" happened to be published first, Lane changed the order and made Laura a few years older in "Prairie"; she also thought that readers wouldn't believe Laura could remember so much from when she was 3.
Omitted entirely was an episode in Iowa where the Ingalls couldn't pay the rent and left town at midnight, and various other short-term homes. Everything was revised to use the language of a child of Laura's age in the story; if one grew up with the series as I did, the language advanced from book to book to match my understanding.
Dire events were toned down. E.g., the long winter of 1880-81 cut De Smet, SD off from the railroad that supplied food and coal and left the entire population in danger of freezing and starving to death; as published it won't scare the children, although adults may understand the deadly peril.
I don't find it too hard to believe that minorities in early part of the 1900's would be libertarian. The government programs to help Americans usually excluded these groups. People are not going to look see government programs as a benefit if they are excluded from those programs.
Conversely as programs became open to a more diverse cross section of the American population, the programs came under more criticism, especially from those who had the programs to themselves earlier.
An actually interesting article at Reason. Thanks.
Agreed.
https://twitter.com/ggreenwald/status/1624083166238588929?t=DgS81aCq0The6Kp9ZkGKuQ&s=19
This is why I genuinely regard Sam Harris' admission as one of the most important statements in years.
When he said anything and everything is justified to help Dems win - lying, censorship, disinformation - he was conveying what most in media and left-liberal politics believe.
[Link]
The sad thing is that Harris had made a career and garnered a huge following by stating he'd pursue truth and reason at all costs, and then he just chucked it all away like that.
I wondered if he'd had a stroke or hit his head when I first read about that.
DJ
@dsjj251
·
Feb 10
Replying to
@ggreenwald
Whats your point here, that Dems have decided to play by republican rules ?
In what reality does this motherfucker live? I bet it’s the same one where Trump actually did start WW3 and declared himself godking of America.
Leftists have no right to continue breathing.
I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h. How? I’m working online! My work didn’t exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn’t be happier.
Here’s what I do………………..>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
Shoprite is going to need to hire a bunch of robots to replace all of the workers who have left.
I met Rand at one of her final public appearances the winter of 1976/1977 (not sure of the precise date, I’m sure it’s recorded) entitled “Global Balkanization. By then she was a bitter old woman who had been betrayed by her ex lover, but still whip smart.
Reading this article reminded me that there is IMHO really no dichotomy between whether people arrive at the conclusion that Liberty is the only sane philosophy through religion or pure deductive reason - after all, wouldn’t an omniscient creator design the universe in a way that truth was self-revealing to anyone? The notion that only those inducted into this or that particular religion could find truth seems arrogantly self-aggrandizing, as does the notion that those seeking spirituality would necessarily be blinded to reason.
Liberty is a (the only?) philosophy founded on win-win. Win-win objectives are psychologically healthy. Win-lose and lose-lose strategies are called “games,” and are all unhealthy / psychologically toxic. So too, politically and economically there is really only two choices in fundamental outlook - Liberty, and “everything else” (an infinite array of types, variations, and degrees of totalitarianism).
Well put.
Ackshuyally, her last public appearance was in New Orleans, LA in 1981:
Ayn Rand's Final Public Lecture: "The Sanction of The Victims"
https://youtu.be/1M8AusmUSJU
I'm not sure how smart Rand was. She seemed to think wealthy industrialists would rather keep 100% of 100 million dollars (by running off to Galt's Gulch) instead of 60% of one billion dollars (by staying in Chicago and paying their taxes).
When she wrote her books, the top tax rate was up to 90% - and that was only the federal income tax. Make a billion dollars in Chicago (which no one ever did!) without warping your business plans to keep most of your income in tax shelters, and I doubt you'd have ten million left.
JFK dropped the top rate to 70%, and tax revenue increased.
Sandefur, the vice president for legal affairs at the Goldwater Institute
Are we cheering on conservative populism now?
Barry Goldwater was popular, but not Populist in the Donald Trump/NatCon/Alt-Right/Alt-Lite sense used today. His eponymous Institute seems to reflect his sentiments as well.
Reason would have considered him a populist. And a threat to democracy.
Today, yes. In the early days of Reason , Goldwater was cool.
All three, he writes, appreciated how Lewis' books "expressed the way modern mass culture penalized originality and integrity, and rewarded obedience and cravenness."
*clears throat*
Is this book longer or shorter than the John Galt monologue?
https://twitter.com/BernieSpofforth/status/1624405843956449282?t=HPdOYX-EgTBVLVvH4ivLwg&s=19
BRAZIL - Lula states all citizens must be vaccinated to receive State benefits.
“children have to be vaccinated. Suppose they don’t have a vaccination certificate. In that case, the mother will lose the benefit”
Did the people really choose this?
Yes.
Any day now we’ll start seeing Reason posts telling us we must let the poor suffering Brazilian refugees into the U.S. After all, it’s not their fault!
https://twitter.com/CitizenFreePres/status/1624394231237447680?t=rqYP1eLvak_ALEzJtKZkCA&s=19
The earth ripped apart in Hatay, Turkey.
100 ft deep and 650 ft wide...
Locals say they heard the sound of a loud explosion before the earthquake.
[Video]
Surficial crack. An earthquake of that magnitude and power will be much deeper than 100 feet and cause large cracks like the described on the surface.
Wrong. The answer is, "Fracking is evil." Work backwards from there.
Ayn Rand is a hack writer who took her social security checks and cashed them dispite her “libertarian credentials.” Her readers and followers are adolescent children who whine about having to live in civilization, while they fantasize about a Gultch somewhere. They have beady, squinty eyes and they smell like cheese farts topped with mullets. Rules as they are by the ridiculous and drug addled matriarch. Their breath smells, they say ridiculous, retarded things that piss me off. I FUCKING HATE AYN RAND AND ALL THE PEOPLE WHO LIKED ATLAS SHRUGGED! DIE! DIE IN A FIRE YOU CRAZY OBJECTIVIST LIBERTARIAN ASSHOLES WHO LIKE AYN RAND BOOKS!!!!
You know who else had a knack for spewing forth hateful rants like that?
Ellsworth Toohey?
The Ultimate Warrior?
AlterNet and CounterPunch, where Earnesto probably got his copypasta dreck?
Awww, are you triggered you wee lamb?
Is there some "He who smelt it, dealt it" going on here?
🙂
"Ayn Rand ... took her social security checks and cashed them "
The person who claimed this got basic facts about Rand wrong, like that she was impoverished at her death. She left the equivalent of nearly 40K 2023 dollars to her maid, does that sound like someone impoverished to you? They also claimed that Evva Joan Pryor was a social worker, but she never worked as such. Ask yourself why you fall for such things.
Rand was wealthier and a more well-known author at her death than Marx was at his. They need other authors to be tortured, unrecognized geniuses and/or failures in their own time. Otherwise, Marx was just a white, male hobo of no historical note whose destructive ideologies continue to be adopted by sociopaths and have inspired more mass killing than any other writer on Earth.
If someone robs you every two weeks for decades, of course you're going to try to claw some of it back.
"Stop pretending this is normal."
https://twitter.com/catturd2/status/1624236170157719552
No wonder Shrike and Jeff like the man so much. He's just like them
“Someone accidentally pusheded him” - Nope
“That’s his grandson” - Nope
“It’s a fake video” - Nope
“Post the original” - okay.
What say you now Libs? Because it looks to me like he’s a creepy child sniffer who can’t help himself.
https://twitter.com/FiveTimesAugust/status/1624140572205191187
"Get him out of office right now and investigate. These people are sick and everybody protecting this guy, turning the other way, or making excuses is an enabler. Joe Biden is a child creeper, clear as day, and nobody is stopping him."
[video]
https://twitter.com/FiveTimesAugust/status/1623802675677503489
"The one that got away."
[video]
https://twitter.com/BotchMcGee/status/1624236586924736512
"He's just trying to engage a shy kid like parents and grandparents do all the time."
OK, so we're definitively done masking and social distancing now and forever, right?
MoeMacLean
@moe_lean
·
Feb 10
Replying to
@jdelong50
and
@catturd2
I like how this is the level of weirdo that shouldn't be in charge but the guy talking about grabbing women by their pussy isn't seen as a weirdo.
This guy seriously tried to deflect by complaining about the billionaire who talked about grabbing grown women with Billy fucking Bush.
The Founding Mothers of Reason's Libertarianism:
Angela Davis
Simone de Beauvoir
Valentina Tereshkova
Miuccia Prada
Jiang Qing
Dalia Grybauskaitė
As a young adult, a group of eight friends and I rented a large house. One morning I was awaken by several roommates who were in a panic. One of the roommates, Jessica had been found in her room unresponsive. Her color was blue and she was cold to the touch. There looked to be marks around her neck and her pajamas had been torn. We immediately called police. While waiting, we began speculating on what might have happened. Was this some natural causes tragedy? Maybe this was an accident such as an unintentional drug overdose? Could she had done something on purpose? Perhaps this was foul play - it looked like there may have been foul play but we just didn’t know. We all had a theory. When the detectives arrived, we met them outside. Before even asking a single question and prior to going inside, the detectives gave all of us immunity. They then began looking into what had occurred. True story.
My last month's online earning was $17930 just by doing an easy job obout 3 months ago and in my first month i have made $12k+ easily without any special online experience. Easiest home based online job to earn extra dollars every month just by doing work for maximum 2 to 3 hrs a day. I have joined this job aEverybody on this earth can get this job today and start making cash online by just follow details on this website........
See this article for more information————————>>>OPEN>> OPEN>> http://WWW.DAILYPRO7.COM