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    Posted by awebb 8 years, 11 months ago
    With Objectivism you're allowed to care for whomever you want but you aren't forced to.

    Same with charity. You're free to donate to whatever cause you find valuable but you shouldn't be extorted to do so (ex. Being taxed to pay for other people's health insurance).
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    • Posted by $ Suzanne43 8 years, 10 months ago
      Right you are! The politicians should not be in the enforcement business of handing out money...mainly to appear like Santa Claus to get votes. Instead, charity should come from churches and individuals. If I didn't have to give so much of my tax money to the moochers, I would have more to give to the charities that I support.
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    • Posted by DrZarkov99 8 years, 10 months ago
      Splendid response! I provide assistance to those I choose to. I don't deduct charitable contributions from my income when I file taxes (inherent extortion) because I feel charity should have meaning.
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      • Posted by hattrup 8 years, 10 months ago
        Another idea to consider is to actually deduct the contribution, and contribute more equal to the tax savings - thereby redirecting the states' cut to the charities of your choice. Your net contribution would be the same, and you would redirect what would otherwise be government spent funds.
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  • Posted by ameyer1970 8 years, 10 months ago
    Barbara Branden was once asked basically the same question. "Who will help the poor and disabled in an Objectivist society". Barbara's response: "if you want to help them, no one will stop you."
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    • Posted by $ Snezzy 8 years, 10 months ago
      I heard Rand speak exactly the same words. All of Rand's friends heard that same question all the time, of course, and had a standard answer ready.

      Meanwhile, I once suggested to a politically liberal friend that churches should handle charity, and she said it is immoral to require that someone have to hear a prayer when he is given a bowl of soup.
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      • Posted by $ Suzanne43 8 years, 10 months ago
        Why am I not surprised. Your liberal friend expects us to listen to all kinds of liberal trash but condemns a short grace before a meal. What is she afraid of!
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      • Posted by bsmith51 8 years, 10 months ago
        If I remember right, it was while in high school in the 1960s that I heard that a Catholic Cardinal(?) said the church was getting out of the charity business, and that such was the role of the government. Maybe someone else here remembers. My thought at the time was, this is the beginning of the end of the USA.
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  • Posted by Temlakos 8 years, 10 months ago
    It allows for private charity, since charity is a function of an individual, or a voluntary association, not a government.

    But perhaps you ask: can one behave consistently with Objectivism by caring for another who cannot support himself? Well, hasn't it occurred to anyone that a mutual trade might obtain here? And that trade need not be intimate. It can just be a matter of "I like having this person around."
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  • Posted by $ MikeMarotta 8 years, 11 months ago
    (1) You are perfectly free to do so, if you desire.

    (2) What do you mean by "support" themselves? Stephen Hawking only follows in the tradition of Karl "Proteus" Steinmetz, a hunchback dwarf.

    (3) We know now that with attention and care, even Downies can hold jobs. People invested themselves in discovering that. Their motives were their own. Common culture calls it "altruism" but that is too shallow an answer.

    (4) What rational motivation could induce a person to care for orchids or a cat? Why feed and walk a dog... twice a day... for 20 years...? The answer is quite simple in Objectivist psychology: self-reflection.

    Not every self-reflection is a selfish one, however. Mother Theresa was validated by the suffering of others. Her nunnery was given (and is still given) millions of dollars. They do nothing with it. She did nothing to alleviate the suffering of those who came to her. That is quite a bit different than the service you get when you pay for your last days in an American hospice. The people there take care of those who cannot take care of themselves - and they make good money doing it. It is obviously rewarding to them on several levels.

    It is not what you do, but why you do it.
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    • Posted by $ Radio_Randy 8 years, 10 months ago
      You mention that "Downies" can hold a job and I fully agree. However, the Liberal Left would rather hold them down as the "Victims".

      Don't even get me started on Special Olympics.
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  • Posted by cranedragon 8 years, 10 months ago
    Of course! Furthermore, it allows those who receive charity, to know that their care was not extorted from unwilling taxpayers, but was freely given by people who genuinely want to help them [or more generally, people in their situation].
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  • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 8 years, 10 months ago
    I have one in the family. Cerebral Palsy with cleft palate. She will never speak like the rest of us. As far learning that's a disconnect that's also pemanent to perhaps age four age five if we are lucky = minus speech. But she is the delight of my life and 99% of the time except when noticeable frustration arrives very happy. She likes stuffed Teddy Bears and she responds to music moving to the beat and tempo. She knows how to ask for food or water and when other natural occurances occur. She is not my natural child but she is MY daughter. When you join a pre-existing family it's all or nothing. which is why I quit cruising the sail boat....but did not quit sailing.
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  • Posted by fivedollargold 8 years, 10 months ago
    Having managed group homes for people with severe autism and profound mental retardation, $5Au can say that none of these folks will ever acquire enough skills to live independently. For many, basic self-care skills are an immense challenge. At some point, parents get old and can't care for them. Without societal help, they die. A strict Objectivist who holds to a purely Darwinian perspective might find this unfortunate but acceptable. Your thoughts?
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    • Posted by mspalding 8 years, 10 months ago
      An Objectivist who is concerned about this situation might step in to help. They might set up a charity, solicit donations, and manage the group home. But if it isn't important to you, then it isn't your duty. If this isn't important to anyone in an entire society, then in that society, they will die. But of course in that society, no one would be upset about those deaths.
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  • Posted by $ SarahMontalbano 8 years, 10 months ago
    My uncle was severely handicapped, both physically and mentally. My grandparents cared for him, although he was difficult to care for and in the end, had to be sent to a center for handicapped adults. The key to my grandparents "selflessness" was that they valued my uncle.
    Objectivism is unique in that you are allowed to donate to whatever cause you find valuable, and to help whatever person you choose to. It isn't regarded as a duty to care for the handicapped, poor, or ill. It is a choice like any other, and Objectivism recognizes your right to make that choice.
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  • Posted by SBilko 8 years, 10 months ago
    The problem is not whether or not to care for someone. The problem is whether one has a duty to do so. Objectivism logically shows why no such duty exists. That means that programs that use the forced confiscation of wealth for such activities are immoral and should be illegal in an ethical society. However, no one has the right to stop anyone from using their legally acquired wealth for any moral purpose, and that includes giving it away.
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  • Posted by LibertyBelle 8 years, 10 months ago
    It allows for it, yes. It just doesn't mandate it.
    Except in certain defined situations. (I'm not Ayn
    Rand, and don't want to presume to speak for her,
    but this is how I understand it). If parents bring a
    child into the world, and the innocent child is mentally retarded or disabled so that he never
    can grow up to full mature competence, they
    have the obligation to care for him as long as
    they live, and to make provision for his care af-
    ter their deaths, should he survive them. Also
    if there is some sort of contract or prior obliga-
    tion, such as a disabled veteran's getting care
    as compensation for his service.
    ---It is certainly allowable in the case of a loved
    one, or friend, provided no one else's rights are
    violated thereby (minor children must come be-
    fore a friend, naturally). After all, personal
    value counts for something.
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    • Posted by EAJewett 8 years, 10 months ago
      Hear, hear, for the disabled veteran! I didn't serve and my recent family and friends thankfully came home safely. The bargain of enlistment should guarantee that catastrophic care. It is certainly "sold" that way. Those backing away from it usually didn't spend any time in the military.
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      • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 8 years, 10 months ago
        Those sorts of promises are commonly reneged to one extent or the other. Experience? 24 years mostly infantry the rest a tad bit harder. I don't trust the government nor even less their employers.
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  • Posted by $ Abaco 8 years, 10 months ago
    Great question.

    I have a disabled son. I don't see anything in Objectivism that would indicate we shouldn't care for those with disabilities.

    Just this morning, driving in to work, I was struck by something. As my pickup rolled up to some railroad tracks I saw a homeless person with a blanket over their head, wondering around by the tracks. It's very cold out this morning. I looked back at them and thought...What in the hell is wrong with my country? Why do we allow this? All this damn rhetoric about helping the needy...all this damned B.S. altruism is shoved down our throats, starting in early elementary school. Yet, honestly, we crap on those who really have needs. My own son doesn't go to our school district. They, flat-out, refused to take him (a public school that we all pay for). When we started to fight them, they had CPS take three of the children of a woman I was working with to fight the district. They were willing to destroy a family, rather than just obey the altruistic laws that they had set up to HELP DISABLED CHILDREN! That was a major turning point in my life - a major wakeup call.

    As an Objectivist, I have really come to realize just how precious the mind of man is, and how we should guard it from birth. We don't, as a society. In fact, we're doing the opposite. Look at what's happening to the neurological health of our children. There is no way America can afford to care for the coming wave of people with mental disabilities. The railroad tracks are going to get crowded...
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  • Posted by EAJewett 8 years, 10 months ago
    Many here have laid out the "choice" vs. "duty" in charitable care. I've just started David Kelley's book Unrugged Individualism, which presents it as benevolence vs. altruism. Beyond those who are not authors of their own problems, I believe there are some who may just need a reminder, as much as the food I delivered. A look and a handshake with no pity or condescension might make the difference.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 10 months ago
    My father was once Mobil's first environmental engineer. He took care of me quite well when I was a kid. Now he has a very bad case of Alzheimer's disease, and I am taking care of him. I am not living my life for his sake, nor did he live for mine, but as family does, we take care of each other because it is in our own long-term self interest.
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  • Posted by DJM 8 years, 10 months ago
    We have the right to spend our money as we wish. But at the center of our philosophy must be the understanding that some forms of help may be toxic, IE, they build dependency where the alternative is the goal. Some people are beyond providing for themselves. And there we may have to donate to dependency, but only where we will do no harm.
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  • Posted by $ jlc 8 years, 10 months ago
    I have read the comments and think that the real corner case here is whether or not a person who cannot support themselves (ie in a coma) and who has no friends and relatives who can support them should be cared for by taxes if voluntary donations do not suffice.

    Employable Down's Syndrome cases and loving families miss the point of the question.

    Jan
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  • Posted by Herb7734 8 years, 10 months ago
    As many Objectivists will tell you, if you want to help them no one will obstruct your desire to do so. Further, if you are particularly interested in a specific charitable cause, you will also be free to organize an institution for helping that cause. And by the way, there's nothing wrong for you to get paid for your efforts.
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  • Posted by term2 8 years, 10 months ago
    I would help someone who was trying but just couldnt make it. I wont help the bums who just expect others to take care of them. I resent being forced to help people the government deems to be 'entitled' to help.
    There are so many "entitled" people with their hands out these days, I dont give to anyone anymore. Its too hard to figure out if they are wanting help to get back on their feet, or just wanting a free ride.
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  • Posted by Zenphamy 8 years, 10 months ago
    If you want to, go ahead and care for as many as you would like and are able to. I've got a couple of ex-wives that would probably love to meet you.
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  • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 8 years, 11 months ago
    Of course not. Why should it? After individual comes family. I don't believe we cull our young in quite that callous a fashion. That's more the fashion of unfulfilled subjectivist ideal-ology. The line of Plato as followed by Herr Hitler and his perfect Aryan or others who espouse nurturing mothers but end up with stern and always male leadership. Hillary an exception
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  • Posted by LibertyBelle 8 years, 10 months ago
    I typed a response but didn't see it come on the
    screen after I sent it. I signed out of the yahoo
    network and signed back in , and came back to
    the Gulch to start over but I'm not getting referred
    to the sign-in place.
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  • Posted by $ sjatkins 8 years, 10 months ago
    What? It allows you to care for anyone you care to in any way you wish. That is the point. Actual caring versus introducing coercion of others and daring to call that "caring". Everyone can practice as much charity and other types of caring that they wish to.
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  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 10 months ago
    The answer depends on your reason for caring. From an Obj.ists point of view:
    1. If you care for someone because you truly value him, then you are not sacrificing yourself and you are acting morally.
    2. If you value him but provide "support" to the point of sacrificing yourself (e.g. it gets well beyond your original intent to help but you can't turn back), then you may end up sacrificing.
    2. If you care out of a sense of duty, then you are sacrificing.

    "Allow" is not the appropriate word; but I assume you meant "does Obj. say that it is proper to".
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