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You have benefited from Ayn Rand's struggle, and their story.
As for Rand herself, the story is that she was on the telephone with Isabel Paterson. The world had been shocked into awareness by The Fountainhead. But the movie was then five years in the past, the book ten. Everyone was waiting for Rand's next book. Fortune magazine hinted at it in 1952. They knew that she was working on a novel "about business" in the tone of The Fountainhead. Paterson said that Rand had to write another novel because her fans expect it. (Maybe she said "demand". It is in one of the biographies.) Anyway, Rand saw through it, as no one ever did. "They do? What if I stopped writing? What if all of the authors stopped writing?" And there it was.
No one had ever asked that question before.
Why did Dagny not quit? Why did Dagny smoke cigarettes?
Just a thought.
It's easy to imagine how that scene might have played out differently, had she decided it wasn't worth risking John Galt's life for her to indulge in some fantasy of "educating" a den of thieves:
John says, "You've decided, then?"
And she says, "Yes."
But she goes up to Midas and asks him for an appointment, at nine a.m. the next day, so she can claim the settlement account and negotiate a business loan. Then she asks Francisco for a letter of intent for that narrow-gauge line she had earlier proposed. She also asks Francisco for his word of honor that he will see to Hank Rearden's defection at the earliest opportunity. And maybe she offers Ragnar a commission to pull Eddie out.
But where then would have been the story? The story was really about Dagny Taggart and Henry Rearden separately concluding that the motives, morals, and loyalties of James Taggart and all the rest of that crew were completely foreign to them--foreign, as far as that goes, to anything properly human. And under no circumstances could a Dagny Taggart or a Henry Rearden negotiate with them.
but she probably could have ... ahem ... had James removed
in some creative manner ... and taken over TT. -- j
.
his way in the government, where he would thrive
among people of common loyalties? . there might
have been a position there ....... -- j
.
.
and she started it, with the night of january sixteenth! -- j
.
.
Then again: Dagny--and Henry Rearden, too--had to hit bottom, and realize they were hanging onto something, the meaning of which had ceased to exist. For Henry Rearden, that realization came to him on his long drive across New Jersey and back to Pennsylvania, after the abortive meeting with James Taggart, Floyd Ferris, Tinky Holloway, Wesley Mouch, and (as I think) Chick Morrison. The last tumbler of the steel safe fell when James Taggart, in that most Freudian of slips, said, "Oh, you'll do something!"
Dagny had a worse problem. She wanted to preserve the railroad as close to intact as possible--so that when the looters lost the battle, she'd have the railroad still in existence. The railroad also had tradition behind it. Rearden Steel was only as old as Henry Rearden's adult career, and not even as old as that. Taggart Transcontinental went all the way back to the American War Between the States. "From ocean to ocean forever." One does not give up a thing like that lightly.
That's what almost cracked Francisco d'Anconia. He had four hundred years of tradition, going clear back to the Spanish Empire and the Viceroyalty of Peru, to throw away.
Of course, John Galt's arrest brought Dagny around. Not so much the arrest itself, as her realization that the people who rode Taggart trains wouldn't lift a finger to help him. Francisco knew she would see that; hence his recruitment of her as a spy, with a cutout number to dial when the time came.
Eddie Willers, sadly, never realized it. He didn't want to surrender such achievement, either to the looters' government or to the inexorable inertia and potential energy of the great tumbling boulder, or snowslide, the American economy had by then become. "Don't let it go!" he cries.
Rand was a champion of justice above all. There was justice in what had to happen to Dagny, and how she had to suffer. To paraphrase Ray Collins as James W. Gettys in Citizen Kane, she needed more than one lesson. And she got more than one lesson. Happily for her and for John, she got the last lesson in time.
And there is justice in what we assume happens to Eddie. Never once able to consider independence, or to apply to himself to surviving a total social collapse, he falls victim to it. At least half the reviews and commentaries on AS I have ever read, assume Eddie dies on that track, lying prone in front of that crippled locomotive, and probably breathing his last even before the batteries give out on that loco's headlight.
Why did Dagny not quit until John Galt had to demonstrate the futility of waiting for the looters to come around, by placing himself into the looters' hands? Know that, and you'll also know why Eddie did not stick with Dagny when she offered to pull him out with her.
I might possibly imagine someone rescuing him, however: Sheriff Joseph Arpaio, the real-life Sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona, acting on tips from that wagon train when it rolls into Phoenix. If any modern-day LEO would have "shrugged," Joe Arpaio would have been the one.
Except Rand didn't invent anyone like Sheriff Joe. She literally never could have imagined such a person.
To me that's the whole point. She was so a preternaturally driven to produce and to ignore political BS. The point is even the most dogged producer will eventually shrug because it's difficult to make someone innovate at gunpoint.
The lesson is when a train wreck is going to happen no matter what is done to stop it...get off the tracks.
One might well apply that to present day circumstances.
Part Two of the Bush & Obama Great Recession is .....coming down the track.
And if she had quit and started her own line would she had any more chance at all with the odds or would the outcome have been the same? Hmmm.
Very valid questions Rich. Seems to me questions many of us struggle with.
I worked in printing for 11 years before I finally decided to open my own company. I thought about it for a number of years because the company I was working for was not headed in a direction that I wanted to go. It still took me at least 5 years to make a move. Why? Many factors but likely the biggest was I was used to it. It was more comfortable to stay than leave. It is funny, from the day I left to start my own I did not miss the company at all. My life was so much easier even though it was all on my shoulders.
It's as simple as that. I'm surprised that a "Gulcher" even asked the question.
Had John not intervened, she and Reardan would probably have died fighting and that would have been a terrible tragedy.
As for benefiting from James' deals...those deals cost her far more than she ever received in return. No...I would have to say that she did not benefit, once the results were tallied.
that would have prevented it. Anyway,"she was
armed with the knowledge that Jim was not smart
enough to harm the railroad too much and she
would always be there to correct whatever damage he caused." At least, that's what she
thought.
No need to look for any criticism....