How Many Bricklayers Did Galt Invite to the Gulch?
Galt went around inviting famous artists, noted business leaders to the Guch, but once there, who built their houses? Who paved their streets, dug their sewer lines?
This isn't a class warfare argument; the building of a house, for example, not only takes a skilled architect, but also skilled craftsmen and industrious laborers.
If the criterion for admission is a belief in "trading value for value", surely Galt should and would have invited "ordinary" workers to the Gulch as well as luminaries like Wyatt and Danagger?
Such people exist lower down on the ladder; people who believe in trading value for value, but lack the creative ability to invent a new motor or miraculous metal. People who didn't inherit an already successful railroad or copper mines, but would be able to get a day's worth of coal or copper dug in a day's worth of hours for a day's worth of pay. Maybe they lack the ambition to go through the headache of running a company when they get more satisfaction from digging coal out of the ground. Maybe they lack the self discipline necessary to see their visions to reality, but are still able and still believe in trading value for value.
What Utopians always underestimate in their rhetoric (no disparagement of Ms Rand intended) is the example America set before them. People's abilities and worth are not necessarily evidenced by their position in life. All the creative brilliance in the world will not get a brick wall built. A brick wall built without knowledge and skill won't stand, but the most creative and brilliantly designed wall will never exist without someone to lay it up brick by brick. Someone whose creative skill may be shrouded by prejudice toward his position in life.
There may not be a place in the Gulch for someone like me. But that would be Galt's loss.
This isn't a class warfare argument; the building of a house, for example, not only takes a skilled architect, but also skilled craftsmen and industrious laborers.
If the criterion for admission is a belief in "trading value for value", surely Galt should and would have invited "ordinary" workers to the Gulch as well as luminaries like Wyatt and Danagger?
Such people exist lower down on the ladder; people who believe in trading value for value, but lack the creative ability to invent a new motor or miraculous metal. People who didn't inherit an already successful railroad or copper mines, but would be able to get a day's worth of coal or copper dug in a day's worth of hours for a day's worth of pay. Maybe they lack the ambition to go through the headache of running a company when they get more satisfaction from digging coal out of the ground. Maybe they lack the self discipline necessary to see their visions to reality, but are still able and still believe in trading value for value.
What Utopians always underestimate in their rhetoric (no disparagement of Ms Rand intended) is the example America set before them. People's abilities and worth are not necessarily evidenced by their position in life. All the creative brilliance in the world will not get a brick wall built. A brick wall built without knowledge and skill won't stand, but the most creative and brilliantly designed wall will never exist without someone to lay it up brick by brick. Someone whose creative skill may be shrouded by prejudice toward his position in life.
There may not be a place in the Gulch for someone like me. But that would be Galt's loss.
Previous comments...
Just as mentioned, Kellogg, the Brakeman, etal. Each had their virtue and knew their value. I believe it was either Francisco or Galt that mentioned that while Eddie might not have have the abilities that they each had, he had his own virute and worked to the extent of his talents. I think that is all that is expected from each of us.
So, I am sure there were Objective Bricklayers, and Electricians, Railroad Engineers and Scientists along with the Midas Milligans and others..
Now, quit your nit-picking, and carry on!
I am excoriating him for not listening to the answers he doesn't agree with, and not referring to the expert on "what Rand means" - Rand.
AND I never got the idea that anyone was "invited" to the Gulch. All had to be shown, many had to be persuaded, often over some time. Examine a number of the scenes between Hank and Francisco or Dagny and Francisco, in which Francisco reveals the suffering - Rand says "torture" of the life he has CHOSEN to live in Prometheus' cause. The strike is not a picnic to which you invite your friends, it is ... a choice - different for everyone, and hard for almost all.
(And I imagine Galt could have handled the loss of you in his Gulch).
There was no effort in the book to provide an exhaustive list of all the residents of the Gulch. Plans were made to build new railroads and factories, etc. There could have been a couple thousand in the Gulch. And while millions perished on the outside, millions of others would have survived. Dagny wanted to take Eddie to the Gulch.
Midas had a vision, Galt/Ragnor/Francisco brought it to life.
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