Sawyer reading “The Fountainhead” on Lost
I’ve noticed that people sometimes search my old site for the screenshots I took of Sawyer reading The Fountainhead last season. I posted it to The Forum, but the site I was hosting the images under no longer exists. Here they are again if you want to see them.
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Cline on Clinton
I just read an outstanding article written by Edward Cline titled “Hillary Clinton’s Uncle Ellsworth. In his post, he shows the similarities in the relationship between Saul David Alinsky and Hillary clinton and the relationship between Ellsworth Toohey and Catherine Halsey in The Fountainhead. This post of his really is a must read.
Compare that with Hillary’s quest for the meaning of her life in her letters to Peavoy. One letter to him she signs “Me,” parenthetically adding “the world’s saddest word.” That one brief signature can stand to represent the self-deprecatory remarks in all her other letters discussed by the Times. I do not think Hillary suffered from a crisis of self-respect, as Catherine Halsey did; I do not think she ever had a self to respect. She would have agreed with everything Toohey told Catherine, without Toohey having to exert much effort to convince her or having to resort to vicious put-downs.
It takes a village, or a Toohey, or an Alinsky, to fill such a void. This is a candidate for the Presidency of the United States. Hillary has progressed from doubting the effectiveness of massive government programs to help the poor to seeing them as the only answer, in the name of “social justice.” Like Alinsky, like Toohey, she wishes to crush the individualist independence of Americans and replace it with dependence on the state – and she would be the state – chiefly because she has grown to fear and hate independence in anyone.
I love the first comment on this post, in which “Mike” responded “See, this is why I read this blog.” If you don’t have Rule of Reason on your blog reader, you must add it. Here is the current link to their RSS feed.
Tags: [clinton, fountainhead, rule of reason]