Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Celebrate Capitalism Awareness Week: Sept 27- Oct 4

I'd be remiss if I did not mention that today kicks off Capitalism Awareness Week. This week celebrates the great productive achievement and higher standard of living brought on my men of the mind operating under the only moral socio-economic system known to man: Capitalism. Capitalism is the only system in accordance with man's fundamental right to life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness. Capitalism sets man free to choose his own destiny. Capitalism doesn't just allow man to exist; it allows him to live! 

To learn how you can join the worldwide celebration, complete with a schedule of events (all of which will be streamed live), click the following link: http://www.capitalismweek.org/ 

Be sure to catch the first event, "Regulating Capitalism: Moral Necessity or Moral Treason?" tonight at 8:30pm ET.  

Enjoy!

Capitalism Awareness Week is sponsored by The Undercurrent.


Sunday, September 11, 2011

9/11: The Day Atlas Became Prometheus
























John Galt is Prometheus who changed his mind. After centuries of being torn by vultures in payment for having brought to men the fire of the gods, he broke his chains—and he withdrew his fire—until the day when men withdraw their vultures.” 
-Francisco d’Anconia, Atlas Shrugged


It was a few weeks ago from today that I came across “The Sphere” by Fritz Koenig in Battery Park. For me, it immediately evoked the image of the Greek Titan, Atlas. But this sculpture did not elicit positive feelings as I stood gazing at it. I noticed it was battered, tarnished, and decrepit. I was left wondering if the artist was trying to convey some sort of message? I felt it quite a poetic reference to the current state of the world and I thought, “this is what happens when Atlas shrugs: the world decays.”

A few days later, as I was strolling through Battery Park again while on my break from work, I noticed a plaque that made me realize the condition of “The Sphere” was not done so intentionally by the artist. It read:

For three decades, this sculpture stood in the plaza of the World Trade Center. Entitled "The Sphere", it was conceived by artist Fritz Koenig as a symbol of world peace. It was damaged during the tragic events of September 11, 2001, but endures as an icon of hope and the indestructible spirit of this country. The Sphere was placed here on March 11, 2002 as a temporary memorial to all who lost their lives in the terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center.

It was then that I began to realize the symbolic significance of what was left of the sculpture. September 11th, 2001 was the day the great movers of our world, the industrialists, the American worker, the keepers of our Republic, came under attack. Essentially, 9/11 was the day that Atlas became Prometheus. 

Just in the same way vultures were sent down to devour the liver of Prometheus, so too were the great airliners sent in as vultures to devour the heart, spirit, and mind of Atlas.

But Atlas did not shrug on 9/11. He had a job to do. And in all the fury of that day, life went on, and he continued to move the world. 

On this 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, take a moment to remember the fallen, the brave, and the resilient. We have them to thank for our normal lives (at least what we now consider normal). 

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Pres. Obama: 'Rights, What Are They Good For?'


"What kind of country would this be if this Chamber had voted down Social Security or Medicare just because it violated some rigid idea about what government could or could not do? How many Americans would have suffered as a result?" -President Barack Obama, September 8, 2011


Mr. President, you have sworn to uphold, defend, and protect the Constitution of the United States, a document recognizing the individual rights of human beings and thus "subordinating society to moral law."1


You have just recanted that oath. Individual rights are not some "rigid idea;" they are moral principles. A government that is not limited to the role of protecting individual rights becomes a violator of those rights. You have just stated that it is perfectly fine for governments to violate the rights of their citizens. You are both wrong and immoral. Ideas and rhetoric such as this only leads people towards the gas chambers. 


It's quite telling of you, Mr. President, to openly admit that welfare programs are a violation of rights, only to then declare support and approval for them. This fact makes you one thing and one thing only: a tyrant.


It's time to wake up, Mr. President. Americans ARE suffering! And their suffering is a direct result of invasive policies that have utterly trampled and obstructed their freedom to action, their unalienable rights. Their shared suffering is a direct result of a call for "shared sacrifice" through more welfare statism. When you spread the wealth around, you spread the suffering as well. How can you honestly believe you have the moral high ground?


May November 6, 2012 go down in history as the day America came to her senses.