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Post 100

Tuesday, June 7, 2005 - 4:11pmSanction this postReply
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Well, I read it, so here's my take.

I would have preferred that they just publish the journals with no commentary interspersed, rather than turning the book into James Valliant, Defense Attorney for Ayn Rand.  I really don't feel that Ayn Rand needs defending!  My God, he devotes a couple of pages to the foibles of other thinkers of the past, informing us that "Karl Marx rarely bathed" and "Jean-Paul Sartre ... consumed a quart of alcohol, 200 milligrams of amphetamines, and several grams of barbiturates a day."  The point he comes around to making is that "...Ayn Rand was a sober, non-promiscuous, peaceful, rights-respecting, honest, hard-working and generous individual."  Well, OK, she was way more pleasant than many other famous people who were less pleasant than she was....

Early in the book Valliant points out some inconsistencies in the biographical accounts of Nathaniel Branden and Barbara Branden.  Such things as "was Rand somewhat uncomfortable with physical reality, or not?" "Was Rand incapable of relaxing and enjoying life, or not?"  I think these are valid criticisms, but I am not too sure how important they are.  After all, a biography written by someone who knows the subject is going to contain some conjectures and speculations.

As for the meat of the book, the journal entries regarding Nathaniel Branden:  I was angered to see how much of Rand's time and energy had been wasted by Nathaniel Branden.  Here she was, trying to counsel him on his psychological problems, trying to figure out their relationship, asking herself "What is he hiding?  This just doesn't add up."  Because Branden feared losing his whole relationship with Rand, he hid some pretty important details of his private life from her.  It was like trying to fit together a jigsaw puzzle with a couple of pieces missing.

Don't expect to see a different side of Ayn Rand's personality in these journal entries.  She certainly was consistent!  An average person might have lamented the end of a relationship with "I feel I'm being rejected; what's wrong with me?"  Ayn Rand remains Ayn Rand:  "Romantic rejection is painful because it contradicts and violates "visibility," one's view of the objectivity of one's own value, it projects the wrong "feedback."  Mrs. Logic - and that's a big part of what I love about her.

The thing that's most striking is really how exactly Rand's note "To Whom It May Concern" matches these journal entries.  It laid out precisely what her problem was with Nathaniel.  The fact of the affair is not mentioned because it's non-essential.

So, would I recommend the book?  Well, if you've read my take on it, you really don't need to slog through the book!  :-)  All in all, I'd say it wasn't as interesting as I would have hoped; I must admit I skimmed some parts of the journal entries!  I think it was an exploitative attempt to milk the cash cow of the Estate, but they have every right to do that, and maybe ARI felt that there was some "value added" in Valliant's commentaries. But I'm glad the material has been published anyway, to let Ayn Rand speak for herself.


Post 101

Tuesday, June 7, 2005 - 4:49pmSanction this postReply
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Laure,

I just started this book. I was happily agreeing with your post, especially the part about letting Rand speak for herself. Hmmm... Angry about time wasted on Nathaniel? Interesting... Something to think about as I read the book... Then I came to this:
The thing that's most striking is really how exactly Rand's note "To Whom It May Concern" matches these journal entries.  It laid out precisely what her problem was with Nathaniel.  The fact of the affair is not mentioned because it's non-essential.
Screeeeeeech... Whazzat? Non-essential?

What is all the yelling about then?

Non-essential for whom?

For all those people who were asking, "What on earth happened?" for years after the whole NBI structure fell apart? For the people at ARI who, as bastions of truth and integrity Objectivism-style, formally denied that it even existed until forced to admit that it did? For the two who were repudiated and denounced, or for Ayn Rand herself?

I could go on and on and on.

But how about this? Ayn Rand did not mention it for the very same reason she never mentioned the affair while it was happening. She was protecting her public image by projecting one that was widely different than her private life.

Period. No condemnation. No evasion. No fabrication. Simple observation.

I have no problem with identifying whoever the bad guy is. Facts are facts. But I see no value at all in ignoring some key issue - like why the whole shebang went tumbling down - and then calling it "non-essential."

(I still sanctioned your post, though, as I thought most of it was insightful - and you did actually wade through that book - as I am now doing...)

Michael


Post 102

Tuesday, June 7, 2005 - 5:57pmSanction this postReply
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Michael,

I can see how you could think the affair was essential in the Rand/Branden break, but if you read Rand's journal notes, you will see that the essential thing to her was not the fact that he didn't want to continue their affair, it was the fact that he had been deceptive.  She spent four years trying to figure Branden out, all the while he was carrying on a relationship with someone else without telling her.  It was all about the deception.


Post 103

Wednesday, June 8, 2005 - 4:12amSanction this postReply
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Lance,

Sorry I wasn't clear. I didn't mean to imply here that they were co-conspirators, only that they were presenting the same view of Ayn Rand. 

This passage was only intended to point to the double standard that exists on this thread with regard to the use of "Ayn Rand's words" and "letting them speak for themselves."

Tom


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Post 104

Wednesday, June 8, 2005 - 5:43amSanction this postReply
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It is such a shame that book is being taking seriously at all.  Why must people who want to see the unpublished work of a genius have to wade through such ugly, ugly gossip is beyond me.  Barbara is a wonderful woman and certainly does not deserve to be crucified like that.  Barbara and Nathaniel gave so much to objectivism and gave it a human touch.   It would never had caught on without their input and bouncing ideas with Rand.  Their contributions to the movement cannot be brushed off because of a failed romantic relationship.  To make people wade through this dirty laundry/divorce trial in order to have a glimpse of Ayn Rand's mind at work is evil.


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Post 105

Wednesday, June 8, 2005 - 6:32amSanction this postReply
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Tom,

Would you mind explaining what the double standard is? For the life of me, I see none.

I am calling Valliant and Ayn Rand's heir to task on a grossly inappropriate misuse of Ayn Rand's unpublished material - regardless of the side of the fence. What they did would be a travesty to any great author.

Ayn Rand has never needed any commentator to clarify her meaning. She would never have let that happen in life under any circumstance. Not admitting that, now isn't that evasion?

I remember saying that Valliant had every right to present his case in separate essays - even quoting Ayn Rand - and even in the same book. Is that not good enough?

Putting his own words in the middle of hers that are being published for the first time - there's one hell of a double standard for you.

Did you notice that he included his commentary in the middle of Ayn Rand's own sentences? Not even at the end of paragraphs? And that he formatted them in bold to make sure that everyone understood just how important they were in relation to Ayn Rand's own words?

Do these comments here seem to shout out at you? Well so do his, in the middle of Ayn Rands unpublished work being published for the first time.

Michael


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Post 106

Wednesday, June 8, 2005 - 6:54amSanction this postReply
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Laure,

I have to wait to get there in the book before I can make my own judgment as to whether Ayn Rand considered the end of the affair as important or not. (Valliant's one-sided interspersions certainly will not help. I have to try to ignore them to maintain my own objectivity.)

I have no doubt that, as you say, the lying was very important. Any person at all will feel deeply betrayed on discovering that their lover, confident and spokesman has been lying to them for four years - and bouncing all over the place to keep the lie up.

Just as speculation at this point, don't you think that four years of being pushed off is time enough to start getting the idea that things are not like what they used to be? So wouldn't a change in focus be a natural outcome?

There is a possible implication that if the affair was not essential at that point, it never was. But apparently it was, judging from her actions in trying to maintain it and resume it after some time off.

I remember someone mentioning that there are no journal entries for the start of the affair.

I do wonder what makes those who praise Ayn Rand's perception to the extent they do accept so easily that she - to them - was such an incompetent judge of character for 18 years?

Michael


Post 107

Wednesday, June 8, 2005 - 8:31amSanction this postReply
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Well stated, Michael - a distinct contradiction there.....

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Post 108

Wednesday, June 8, 2005 - 9:09amSanction this postReply
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katdaddy: "have to wade through such ugly, ugly gossip is beyond me."

Yes, but I thought you read Barbara Branden's book?


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Post 109

Wednesday, June 8, 2005 - 9:53amSanction this postReply
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Michael,

I meant "what is the point of your questions?"

I'm still not sure that I get the point of these three questions. Is there supposed to be a morally correct answer? A rationally correct answer? You are clearly angry that Ayn Rand's Journals were used in this way but I don't think you make your case in what you write

So maybe I can make them clear to myself and answer them

This is the issue I want to discuss: Does Valliant make his case?

So here's my take on some of your comments and questions from that perspective.

1. Questions about the use of Rand's Journals to make the case 
Answer: If a case is  going to be made by anyone it can't be Ayn Rand because she never made a case. She never did what Valliant does. She never read, let alone critiqued the Brandens' books. And she never presented her Journals with commentary to explain them  against any of their charges.

Now, of course, you could argue that that is your point. If she didn't do it, what gives anyone the right to do what she didn't do? Have I understood your objection? 

I think there is a problem with this argument. She didn't make a case because she thought she had already made as much of a case as she needed to. And then she dropped it. Finished. No more comments by her about the Brandens. Case closed.  She's banished the Brandens from her life, from her thoughts (at least as far as that is possible to someone with her memories), and from Objectivism. She kept what they had done under her mentorship in the "canon" and assumed that they would be honorable enough to speak only for themselves in the future, and not continue to make any claims about Objectivism or her. And, perhaps, she trusted that everyone else would simply take her at her otherwise trustworthy word. 

But they didn't. Each of the Brandens wrote about her in terms that she never had a chance to defend  against, and each of them has re-inserted themselves into Objectivism, a practice to which she has had no opportunity to object on any grounds.  And people in general, on the basis of those books began to impune her trustworthiness, her motives and even her sanity. And it is wider than the Brandens. IT is in every issue  that has been raised over the years since -- from homosexuality to "truth and toleration" to musical taste to the Reismann's to dogmatism to cultishness. So, my argument is this: a case for Rand needs to be made -- her case, as much as that is possible given that we can't actually put her or the Brandens on the stand. And given that the person being defended is Ayn Rand, I am willing to introduce any and all of her writings. And, given that she cannot be her own lawyer (a practice that is usually frowned upon even if the defendant is alive) I am willing to allow, even welcome, someone to be her "mouthpiece."

2. Why I haven't dealt with some of the claims and why I am no longer willing to sit on this Jury.

In a word, I believe the Jury pool is tainted. And the first piece of evidence is what I suppose most of the readers of the last sentence are now thinking. Now, I don't claim to be a mind reader, but I've had enough experience on this site to know that I'm probably pretty close when I say that you are thinking that I am the one tainting it with my defense of Ayn Rand and ARI's "propaganda." 

But of course, that is the very point at issue in this case. You claim, for instance, that ARI is not interested in the truth, they are interested in "proving a point."  What point is that, if it isn't the truth? Isn't the truth the point at issue?

And, as I've seen on this and other forums, if someone tries to defend against one of the Brandens' assertions, or give another view, or argue a contrary point they are called "dogged literalists," "Randroids", "true believers."  They are accused of "whitewashing", "protecting Rand's public image"  But these are all the very point at issue.

At issue is whether I or anyone can wholeheartedly and whole-mindedly accept Peikoff's position in "Fact and Value"  without automatically having it assumed that I am a "cultist."  Indeed at issue is why anyone who claims to be a fan of Ayn Rand would dismiss without argument  -- on no other grounds than that it comes from ARI -- anything they put out.

As for double standard, I quote the lovely Kat. "It is such a shame that this book is taken seriously at all."  If  I or Valliant or Peikoff say that -- as it was said and is being said repeatedly -- about the Brandens' books, we are accused of "wanting to hide the truth of the affair," "cultism", "evasion", "whitewashing Rand's goddess image" etc. But my bet is that Kat will be sanctioned many times over, and only I will call her on it.

If we say that the Brandens' books are "ugly and evil" and consist, insofar as they "humanize" Rand, largely of gossip and faulty interpretation from disgruntled associates who have an ax to grind, that's "ARI propaganda", but my bet is that Kat and others, saying the same thing about Valliant's book, will be sanctioned many times over, and only I will call her on it.

Being forced by Ayn Rand's words to admit that the affair took place when he was unwilling to accept the word of the Brandens' (after all Rand had condemned them as liers) is "evasion" on Peikoff's part.  But refusing to accept that the Brandens might not be quite as wonderful as some of the people on this thread want to believe, when Rand's own words (forget Valliant's commentary) condemn them, that's NOT?

Give me a break.

Now for the issue of  'lies'.  I had originally thought that I would answer David's post #29, but decided against an immediate response, thinking that the first thing that needed to be done was to get past the invective and double standard.  I haven't managed to do that, but in the interest of completeness before I disengage, let's look at the first of them: "the lie that the disagreement over how Rand picked the name "Rand" was ominously indicative of a larger malevolence on Barbara Branden's part?"  Well, this is part of what's at issue, isn't it? If, indeed that is Valliant's claim, it isn't enough to simply say it's a lie, one must prove it. And one must prove it by, to some extent at least, showing that it wasn't indicative of a larger malevolence. But, that is what the entire book is about, isn't it? 

The point made by Shiff is next.
Quoting Shiff: "Is Mr. Valliant suggesting that the Brandens decided after their break with Rand (or perhaps before) that they would keep their stories straight on how Rand repressed feelings of anti-semitism as a means of discrediting her or as part of their plan to financially exploit her? Absurd.

So if their stories don't match exactly they're proven liers; and if their stories are the same, they must be co-ordinating their lies."

Again, these are some of the points at issue, aren't they?

Some points. I'm not clear what is being called "absurd" in the first paragraph -- the entire idea, the part of co-ordination, the part of discrediting, or the part of financial exploitation.
Again the point at issue, so requiring more than "absurd" as validation.

To the issue of the Brandens acceptance as gospel here, I doubt very much that the idea that Rand repressed feelings of [about?] anti-semitism is being called absurd. This, unlike Valliant's claim, is accepted at face value.

Further, I don't see in this review any example of  "if their stories don't match exactly they're proven liers." There may be one in Valliant's book, but I don't see it referenced here, and, in any case, it a point at issue requiring more than "shame."

And so on. I don't see a single "lie" whose truth or lack thereof is not a point at issue requiring more than the invocation of received wisdom. "Does Valliant think O'Connor was an alien from outer space?" is not an argument against Valliant's discussion of this issue.

So, I know I won't have satisfied everyone. And I'm pretty sure the sanctions will not be numerous. But if sanctions were what I'm about, I wouldn't be here.

And, on this thread, I have no more to say.

Tom

PS to Alec, you really have a way of conflating and expanding what people say and giving it whatever twist you like.  It is a rare gift.  I offered a way for us to communicate, and you replied with more invective. So be it.


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Post 110

Wednesday, June 8, 2005 - 10:24amSanction this postReply
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Ultimately, as someone noted, we will NEVER know the truth about what really happened. Something happened, and who you choose to believe is your own business. I've never read Nathaniel Branden's book or Mr. Vailiant's book. I've read and own Barbara Brandedn's book. Certainly reading her book gave me a lot to think about. I know my copy of Atlas Shrugged has a dedication to Nathaniel Branden in it.

In the end I decided that what I thought about Rand personally had little to do with what I thought of her ideas. I never knew her, except from her writing, and I celebrate her for her amazing acheivements. I've also not met Barbara Branden, though I've had the pleasure of concerving with her on the SOLO forum. What I think of her is drawn from that experience. She seems to be a wonderful person, and I'm glad to be able to interact with her.

In the end, none of this matters. Had Ayn Rand simply noted in "To Whom it May Concern" that she was breaking with the Branden's and that they were no longer voices for Objectivism or her personally, rather than leveling charges and accusations, we would not be talking about this now. It simply takes away from the value of spreading her ideas. Every hater of Rand laughs in delight at these arguments and divisions. They are the only ones who benefit from it.

Ethan

(Edited by Ethan Dawe on 6/08, 11:00am)


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Post 111

Wednesday, June 8, 2005 - 11:15amSanction this postReply
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Tom,

I'm sorry you're signing off since you did not really answer my questions (are they so unanswerable?) and asked me one.
She never did what Valliant does. She never read, let alone critiqued the Brandens' books. And she never presented her Journals with commentary to explain them  against any of their charges.

Now, of course, you could argue that that is your point. If she didn't do it, what gives anyone the right to do what she didn't do? Have I understood your objection? 
I would never ask the question you attribute to me and you didn't understand my objection at all yet. I have tried to be as clear as I can. I will try again.

My objection is that NOBODY has the right to present their own words and opinions in the middle of a compilation of the unpublished work of ANY GREAT AUTHOR. Under any circumstances. Not just Rand. A great author's work belongs to that author alone.

The place for commentary is outside the work, quoting it. I have no objection to informative footnotes to provide dates or explain vague references and so forth. I have no objection to including essays to advance the essay writer's conclusions within a compilation. I am strongly against putting the compiler's opinions in the middle of a great author's words. Any great author.

Is that clear?

Thumbing through the book, I thought of picking out a few of Valliant's bold-formatted opinions (and there are quite a few amid more proper information) to illustrate, but I think I will finish the book first and write my own review. I just came across this little gem by accident: Valliant even decided to publish material Rand crossed out (p. 291) to prove how she could change her mind.

He published what she threw away. What on earth was he thinking about? 

About "truth"? Well anyway, the "truth" I was talking about, to define it better, has nothing to do with this trial, the Brandens, ARI or anything else involved in this mess. It has everything to do with letting Ayn Rand's words tell her own story in her own manner. Not against or for anything. That kind of truth.

What Ayn Rand had to say. Not ARI, not Valliant, not Brandens, not Tom, not Michael.

Ayn Rand.

But you obviously believe that Ayn Rand's words are not enough to accomplish YOUR purpose and VALLIANT'S purpose (and presumably ARI'S purpose) - which is to "defend" her against what you judge to be an attack. Apparently you feel that presenting a written defense with quotes is not enough to serve YOUR purpose. You need to cut up the unpublished material of a genius and intersperse it with one-sided commentary to give it weight.

You also obviously do not hold much store in respecting Ayn Rand's own work AS SHE WROTE IT, since you do not address this as holding any kind of value one way or the other, but always harp back to your own interests.

Well I do hold responsible scholarship as a value. I do hold Rand's work as she wrote it as a value. You may not, Valliant may not, ARI may not, but I do.

On the Brandens, I will address one point that you make and others do - which is also one of the premises of Valliant's book. It is that the Brandens' books are solely - or at least primarily - responsible for the reputation Rand had of being autocratic and intolerant, etc. You even go further and attribute most all the conflicts and infighting between the people in the Objectivist movement after these books were published to this influence.

One thing I intend to do - and I have started, is to find out the following:

(1) Whether any people were publishing public opinions that Ayn Rand was autocratic and intolerant, etc., before 1986, when TPOAR came out (or even 1968, the split, for that matter), and

(2) Check out whether or not there was any conflict and infighting in Objectivist organizations between 1968 and 1986 (and before also).

What I come up with will definitely influence how I judge the actual impact (in reality - not partisan bias) that Brandens' books had on Rand's "autocratic" reputation (in quotation marks to signify the standard bunch of other adjectives) and on instituting conflict and infighting within the Objectivist movement after 1986.

Whatever I do find, however the cards may fall, will not affect my contempt for the blatant mutilation of a great author's work.

Michael

(Edited by Michael Stuart Kelly on 6/08, 11:26am)


Post 112

Thursday, June 9, 2005 - 5:32amSanction this postReply
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Michael,

One short  reply. You assert that no one has the right...but fail to make a case for that assertion. And I see a distinction without a real difference between what you object to and what you say is OK.

Of course you will find "complaints" prior to 1986.  Barbara reports them. That's not the problem.

Tom


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Post 113

Thursday, June 9, 2005 - 11:43amSanction this postReply
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Tom,

This is getting amusing. I ask some serious questions about what was done in public with Ayn Rand’s work and instead of answering, you dance around the questions and ask what my point is and try to drag the issue back to the Branden versus Rand metaphorical "trial."

Do my questions make you uncomfortable? They should. They cut deeply into basic premises.

As to your insinuation, no, I will not use Barbara as my only source for the history of the Objectivist movement – not even as a primary source in this case due to the accusations leveled at her. There is plenty of stuff to consult – Internet, books and published articles, movies, other stuff, including and most especially ARI’s own material.

I am confused by the following:
You assert that no one has the right...but fail to make a case for that assertion. And I see a distinction without a real difference between what you object to and what you say is OK.
Are you referring to the right no one has to mutilate a great author’s unpublished work when it is published for the first time? I certainly did make a case for that. (If that is not what you are referring to, please explain so I may address it.) I will even recap the case against taking a great author’s unpublished material and chopping it up because this is crucial to me.

Point No. 1 in the case against mutilating Ayn Rand’s unpublished work:
I hold that the integrity of a great author’s work must be respected by presenting it as the author wrote it. This seems so obvious to me that the need to make a case for it seems ludicrous. Except that it is not. Monkeyshines have been perpetrated on Ayn Rand’s own work.

I observe that there are those in the world for whom respecting the integrity of a great author’s work is of no value whatsoever. From their acts, Valliant is one for publishing a mutilation of Ayn Rand’s unpublished journal, Ayn Rand’s heir is another for authorizing it and you are another for defending it – or at least dancing around the issue when questioned on it.

Mutilation of a great author’s unpublished work is wrong. There is not merely the disrespect issue. There is another. Letting an author like Rand (or any author for that matter) speak for herself as she spoke is important evidence for arriving at the truth on the different aspects of her life.

If you want to use Rand’s own words as evidence in this "trial," for instance, then do so. I do not object to that. But pure unadulterated evidence is always the standard for any "trial." In the real judicial system, when evidence has been tampered with, it is thrown out of court. Valliant tampered mightily with her work.

Each of the Brandens used their own words in their own respective works. Since they lived intimately for 18 years with Ayn Rand, their works are just as much autobiography as biography. Most people do not see this aspect in this controversy.

But if you do not think that pure unadulterated evidence is the proper standard for arriving at the truth (of anything), then our discussion has stepped way beyond the rational. We start getting subjective.

I can make a further case of the suitability of presenting a great author’s words as the author wrote them if you like. However, since you (and Valliant and apparently ARI) hold the amazing position that mutilating a great author’s work (Rand’s in this case) is the proper method for arriving at the truth, I think the burden of proof is on you to say why you think so. Or admit that a really horrible mistake was made and try to correct it. Once again, that is only if you want to be rational.

If you want to be irrational, fine. We need no further discussion.

Point No. 2 in the case against mutilating Ayn Rand’s unpublished work:
In life Ayn Rand doggedly resisted her own work being published with running commentary by others, even favorable commentary. She did so (1) in written and published statements, and she did so (2) in legal and personal acts to stop those who would insist on it. The stories abound. She did this her whole life long. She even went to the extent of claiming that Objectivism is defined only by what she wrote and approved of.

For her heir and others to act as if she would have made an exception in this one instance is nothing short of spitting on her memory.

From a personal perspective, if I ever attain any degree of fame and bequeath my written work to an heir, I would want all unpublished material to be presented as I wrote it. (I would not mind some footnotes to give dates, references and so forth). If I miraculously came back to life, I would be very angry at my heir if my work was presented chopped up with running commentary in bold in the middle of my sentences, even if he/she was trying to defend some aspect of my life or I made a gross mistake or whatever.

My work is MINE. I wrote it. Not anybody else. It is MY life and my writing is one of the most precious parts of it. Does that attitude really need defending?

Also, do you really think Ayn Rand felt differently when she was alive? That the Branden issue would be more important to her than the integrity of her own work – and keeping other people’s mitts off her work? If you are uncertain, then look at what she said and did about it. I remember her stating that others have a right to their own work, not hers.

Now here we come to the rub. Dead people cannot defend themselves from those who think they know what is best for them, can they?

Well those who are alive and love their works certainly can. I am one of them.

I hold absolute contempt for the approach Valliant published on professional grounds – not on Branden support ones. HE MUTILATED AYN RAND’S UNPUBLISHED WORK.

That is much more than a "distinction without a real difference," as you stated above. Mutilating Ayn Rand’s work is serious. I will not ignore it and shrug it off.

If it is truth you really seek, may I suggest the unbiased, scholarly and documented approach of Chris Sciabarra and his magnificent contributions? Or the loving and painstaking care by Harry Binswanger in making a written compilation of her workshop tapes for ITOE? Do I need to go on?

Valliant and ARI (and you by defending it), in publishing a chopped up mutilation of Ayn Rand’s journal entries, including bold-face running commentary, is making three very loud and distinct statements: (1) Ayn Rand was incompetent to speak for herself because the issue was too personal, (2) Her work needs the services of a commentator to make it clear, (3) HER UNPUBLISHED WORK DOES NOT DESERVE TO BE PUBLISHED AS SHE WROTE IT.

Do you people really think you are defending Ayn Rand by demeaning her in that manner?

Michael


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Post 114

Thursday, June 9, 2005 - 9:05amSanction this postReply
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Michael, you keep complaining about how Valliant added his editor notes as if you never read an edited book. Since you know their his notes because he tells readers what BOLD, [], and etc. mean, your question doesn't make any sense.

You tell us you hate hypocrisy, what the book covers, but you avoid what the books says for: (in posting order)
"I admit my bias"
"I have not yet read it...here are a few preliminary comments."
"Valliant is a trial lawyer"
"should be getting mainstream coverage"
"I haven't actually read the book yet"
"a work flawed by an incorrect approach, a blatant ad hominem agenda and plain bad writing"
"I have not read the book yet, but I did get halfway through the article"
"If this book flops"
"He is guilty of the most sloppy scholarship"

Then:
"my copy of The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics finally arrived in the mail."

You seem to be trying to confuse the how with the what.



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Post 115

Thursday, June 9, 2005 - 12:46pmSanction this postReply
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Glenn, you just wrote:
Since you know their his notes because he tells readers what BOLD, [], and etc. mean, your question doesn't make any sense.
Funny, the use of bold is universally considered as making text stand out from the rest of the text to emphasize it, making it more important, not just differentiating it. At least that is the case everywhere else in the printed English language.

So let me see if I understand. Are you postulating that Valliant was not aware of such usage and that he merely made a non-traditional use of formatting as a stylistic whim? If so, go for it. Personally, that sounds completely ridiculous to me. Valliant is not uneducated. He knew he was emphasizing his own words over Ayn Rand's words.

To address your insinuation, yes I am biased on this issue. I will not only state it clearly here, but if you look at my profile, you will see that The Passiona on Ayn Rand by Barbara Branden had a profound personal impact on me years ago.

Valliant is biased. So am I . So what? Where is the problem? We still have to get our facts and procedures straight.

I have two biases, to tell the truth. I am biased in favor of Barbara. I AM BIASED IN FAVOR OF AYN RAND.

Respecting Ayn Rand's written legacy is VASTLY MORE IMPORTANT than the Rand-Brandens matter. Do you disagree with this?

After starting to read Valliant's book, my suspicions, which were based on reading what others had written and Valliant's previous article - only half-read by me - are not only true. They are worse than I had imagined.

Ayn Rand's work was mutilated for partisan reasons. I do not approve of her work being mutilated at all.

Michael



Post 116

Thursday, June 9, 2005 - 2:33pmSanction this postReply
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LOL

Uncomfortable? You've got to be kidding.

The fact is, I don't owe you a thing -- not an answer, not a question, not a single moment more of my time or my thought to deal with the tempest in a teapot that appears to be your substitute for dealing with the content of even Ayn Rand's own words. Your crocodile tears over Rand's "sacred text" seem strained at best. And totally beside the point of the real question at issue: Does Valliant make his case?

Outraged? Yes.

The truth is, I don't care whether you think he made his case.

The scotch has disappeared.  And so have I.

Tom


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Post 117

Thursday, June 9, 2005 - 3:10pmSanction this postReply
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    I finally finished the rest of Valliant's book. How sad that the lives of complicated, highly intelligent heroic and would-be heroic people are reduced to a prosecutorial legal brief. The gloat is that "this is the end of the Brandens."
    The evil Brandens, who did the most to make an Objectivist movement, now inhabited in part by the gloaters. There was a whole slew of wrongs in the Nathaniel Branden Institute days, mostly on the personal level, but I never met any Objectivist or student of Objectivism who wasn't seemingly trying to do the right thing and be a better person. Too many got caught in the machinery--no one more so than the Brandens--of trying to live the conflicted lives oriented in reality on the one hand and the world of Atlas Shrugged on the other. There was only one ultimate judge or arbiter about the latter, Miss Rand herself.
    So Miss Rand thought Mr. Branden was conflicted with being a would-be "Objectivist hero" and an authentic Objectivist hero. She didn't understand that any Objectivist hero wasn't really one at all, although the attempt to be one had to be heroic. An Objectivist hero is primarily oriented towards Atlas Shrugged and the Objectivist philosophy. A hero is reality oriented.
    There are two Objectivisms. One is the philosophy of Ayn Rand, with Miss Rand today as an icon. The other is reality oriented, to wit: reality and reason with the rest under development. Even the Objectivist ethics aren't enough as they are. Rational self-interest is fine but human beings cannot be reduced to that. Laissez-faire capitalism is fine, but we don't yet know what an ideal government should be until we know more about the ethics. What we do know enough of is that it is desirable for the culture to sanction rational self-interest and the politics to move towards more freedom as a matter of principle and practicality.

--Brant

(Edited by Brant Gaede on 6/09, 3:22pm)

(Edited by Brant Gaede on 6/09, 8:10pm)


Post 118

Thursday, June 9, 2005 - 3:25pmSanction this postReply
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Rational self-interest is fine but human beings cannot be reduced to that.

Mr. Gaede, may I ask what you think they should then be reduced to?


Post 119

Thursday, June 9, 2005 - 4:03pmSanction this postReply
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Tom,

I'm getting to whether Valliant made his case or not. Believe me, I will deal with it in due time. To tell the truth, there are two premises so far where I do not think he did, but I want to finish the book first.

I am just establishing whether or not the evidence has been tampered with, like any good attorney would. I see that it has. I mention this fact and express my strongest disapproval according to professional standards. As a trial lawyer, much less biographer, he should have known better. What he did was very poor form and would have gotten his case thrown out of any court in the USA in a real trial.

No, you don't owe me any answer. But you do make some pretty wild assertions in your posts addressed to me and ask questions. I presume that who does that is prepared to answer some himself.

Sorry I was mistaken. You apparently want agreement, not discussion of facts.

So you don't have to answer whether you think that Rand's unpublished work should be mutilated or not. That is important to me, not necessarily to you.

Michael

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