Anonymous ID: 8e3f3b March 16, 2020, 8:10 a.m. No.8437199   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7202 >>7236 >>7310 >>7344

>>8436957

>> Ayn Rand = first red pill, changed the course of my life.

Will be forever grateful.

 

Sure was for me too, Anon

 

…think I was 17 ~ my Dad threw a copy of "Anthem" on my bed, and said, in low-key manner:

"Read it when you get a chance… it's only 90-some pages."

 

The way he did it, said it, and walked out of the room ~ well, it intrigued the hell out of me, and read it immediately! The book Expanded TF out of my Thinking ~ Opened a Whole New World!

 

{Thanks Pops ~ miss you moar than anything ~ & would give Anything if you could be here to Go through The Storm together}

 

Ayn Rand came of age during the ascendancy of collectivism across the globe — not only in communist Russia, from which she escaped in 1926, but also in fascist Italy, Nazi Germany, and to an alarming degree in her adopted homeland, America. Rand identified collectivism — the idea that individuals should be subjugated to the group and sacrificed for the common good — not only as a moral evil but as the essential cause of the political evils then engulfing the civilized world.

 

In the summer of 1937, Rand took a break from working on The Fountainhead to write the novelette called Anthem, a short, highly stylized tale of a future dystopia so saturated in collectivism that the word “I” has disappeared from the language.

 

First published in England in 1938, Anthem was rejected by collectivist-dominated American publishers in the 1930s — an American edition (slightly revised by Rand) did not appear until 1946.

 

Sauce + synopsis + excerpts = here:

https://aynrand.org/novels/anthem/