
Do you realize in your recent article you describe the opening chapters of ATLAS SHRUGGED in which a super depression happens as the logical result of American Socialism?
In 2011 we are living ATLAS SHRUGGED, and waiting metaphorically speaking for John Galt to make his famous speech on the Media that will at long last remove the blinders from our eyes.
The truth will set America free once again - but first it's gonna hurt.
ATLAS SHRUGGED the movie will finally premier this year on April 15th...but I predict most of us will only see it by way of DVD since it pulls no punches concerning AMSOC - American Socialism.
In 2011 we are living ATLAS SHRUGGED, and waiting metaphorically speaking for John Galt to make his famous speech on the Media that will at long last remove the blinders from our eyes.
The truth will set America free once again - but first it's gonna hurt.
ATLAS SHRUGGED the movie will finally premier this year on April 15th...but I predict most of us will only see it by way of DVD since it pulls no punches concerning AMSOC - American Socialism.
FROM WIKIPEDIA:
Atlas Shrugged: Part I is an upcoming 2011 film adaptation of Ayn Rand’s 1957 novel Atlas Shrugged, intended as the first in a film trilogy encompassing the entire 1,368-page book. After various treatments and proposals floundered in development hell for nearly 40 years,[1] investor John Aglialoro initiated production in June 2010. The film was directed by Paul Johansson and stars Taylor Schilling as Dagny Taggart and Grant Bowler as Hank Rearden.
Atlas Shrugged explores a dystopian United States where leading innovators, ranging from industrialists to artists, refuse to be exploited by society. The protagonist, Dagny Taggart, sees society collapse around her as the government increasingly asserts control over all industry (including Taggart Transcontinental, the once mighty transcontinental railroad for which she serves as the operating executive), while society's most productive citizens, led by the mysterious John Galt, progressively disappear. Galt describes the strike as "stopping the motor of the world" by withdrawing the "minds" that drive society's growth and productivity. In their efforts, these "men of the mind" hope to demonstrate that a world in which the individual is not free to create is doomed, that civilization cannot exist where men are slave to society and government, and that the destruction of the profit motive leads to the collapse of society.
Atlas Shrugged: Part I is an upcoming 2011 film adaptation of Ayn Rand’s 1957 novel Atlas Shrugged, intended as the first in a film trilogy encompassing the entire 1,368-page book. After various treatments and proposals floundered in development hell for nearly 40 years,[1] investor John Aglialoro initiated production in June 2010. The film was directed by Paul Johansson and stars Taylor Schilling as Dagny Taggart and Grant Bowler as Hank Rearden.
Atlas Shrugged explores a dystopian United States where leading innovators, ranging from industrialists to artists, refuse to be exploited by society. The protagonist, Dagny Taggart, sees society collapse around her as the government increasingly asserts control over all industry (including Taggart Transcontinental, the once mighty transcontinental railroad for which she serves as the operating executive), while society's most productive citizens, led by the mysterious John Galt, progressively disappear. Galt describes the strike as "stopping the motor of the world" by withdrawing the "minds" that drive society's growth and productivity. In their efforts, these "men of the mind" hope to demonstrate that a world in which the individual is not free to create is doomed, that civilization cannot exist where men are slave to society and government, and that the destruction of the profit motive leads to the collapse of society.
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