darkoshi: (Default)
2009-04-16 07:04 pm

Atlas Shrugged

I'm about a fifth of the way through "Atlas Shrugged", which may not sound like much, but it's a nearly thousand page book. The book is still keeping my interest, and I'm still enjoying it, but it's becoming clearer to me what I don't like about it.

One thing that bothers me is that the world is portrayed as having a small percentage of "good" people, with the remainder being "bad" people. The good people are intelligent, honorable, hard-working, and industrious. The rest of society is portrayed as an odd combination of dim-witted and cunning... dim-witted in that they don't seem to be able to think for themselves, or in that they say things and espouse ideas that don't make any logical sense, and cunning in that they are apparently trying to take advantage of the "good" people's labor and productivity, because they are either too stupid or lazy to do any useful work themselves. These "bad" people are portrayed as totally unlikeable. The way they are described - the adjectives used - make them seem completely ugly/lazy/cowardly/unpleasant.

That whole good versus bad quality of the story makes it seem too fictitious; like a children's cartoon. In some way, it reminds me of George Orwell's story, "Animal Farm".

Another thing that bothers me about the book, is the feeling that the whole story is trying to prove a point which I do not agree with, or only partially agree with. It's not just a feeling; the introduction to the book clearly states that Rand was putting forth her philosophy of something-or-other in the book's story. It seems to be a very pro-capitalism, anti-socialism philosophy. The "good" people are portrayed as industrious businesspeople, who can get anything done they set their mind too, and the only thing that causes them problems is the "bad" people getting in their way. Any mention of doing something for "the public good" is portrayed very negatively.

Another thing which strikes me about Rand's writing, is that she often uses 2 adjectives meaning nearly opposite things, next to each other. Sometimes they don't make any sense together, or it takes effort imagining what is meant by the combination. For example, "belligerent defensiveness". This isn't a bad thing in itself, it just seems curious to me, as if Rand was trying to combine the negative or positive overtones of two words to enhance the overall negative or positive aspect of something, without considering that the meaning of the words don't actually fit together. Most likely though, she did consider it, and did it on purpose.
darkoshi: (Default)
2005-02-13 08:40 pm
Entry tags:

on a different vein... vein? what does that mean? oh, definition 11, not the blood-vessel veins

I saw a truck yesterday with a sign on the back... an American flag with some text, which (approximately) said "Support our troops. No aid or comfort to the enemy".

The Enemy? If the person who designed that sign really thinks there is a group of people who are so distinctly the enemy that they don't even need to specify who those people are, do they really believe anyone would need to be told not to give aid and comfort to those people? Who exactly do they think the enemy is? It boggles me, the world-view the person who created that sign must have had (as well as the people who put such signs on their vehicles).

And it makes me wonder, if I was desperately looking for a job, and was hired to drive a vehicle, but then found out that the vehicle had some such disturbing sign on it like that, what I would do...

.

"Support our troops". That sign is on so many vehicles. In a way, that message by itself doesn't bother me as much. Because, yes, American troops are just people, like any other people, stuck doing difficult things which they might not even want to be doing, and they need support just like everyone else does. And maybe that's what the people (friends and family of troops, etc.) who display those signs mean to imply.

But the blind patriotism that slogan can also seem to imply does bother me. Our troops are just following orders. Do the people who use that slogan want us to support our troops, no matter what orders they are following? Do they not question those orders? Do they not question the people in charge, who are giving those orders? Do they not care what kind of a war those leaders start, or why? Do they really have such an us-versus-them mentality, in that everyone on "our side" is good, no matter what they do, just by virtue of being "on our side", and everyone on the "other side" is bad?

Reminds me a bit of the pep-rallies when I was in high-school. Why were we supposed to be cheering our team so much, and jeering the opposing team, just because they were our opponents in the game? Sure, those were just games, and supporting one side of a game was supposed to be part of the fun, and why not support the side your school's team was on. But I never could understand that mentality, that "we are better than you, just because we are us and not you".
darkoshi: (Default)
2004-01-24 10:39 am
Entry tags:

war

Something the protagonist of the book I'm reading did recently
disturbed me a lot and got me thinking...
Read more... )
darkoshi: (Default)
2003-12-27 02:30 am

lotr movie thoughts

went to see Return of the King finally.
watching the last one, i was rather annoyed by gender issues...
with the men all being expected to fight,
and the women all being expected to wait it out while the men fought.
as well as the minority of female characters.

but today, it didn't much bother me.
because...
i am not a man.
i am not a woman.
in this story, men fight, and women do whatever they do,
but that's their thing. maybe that's how they like doing things.
it has nothing to do with me, because i'm not one of them.

but Legolas is still so fucking cute... ahhhh.
Orlando didn't look nearly as good to me in the Pirates of the Caribbean movie.
It's odd how long blond hair can make such a difference on him.

and what's with scottish accents always being used for gruff characters like that dwarf?
why not ever use a scottish accent for a cute and gentle character?
or does the scottish accent itself lend gruffness to a character?

another issue i have which this movie highlighted for me,
a contradiction in my mind,
is the idea of fighting and war as being an honorable/glorious/exciting thing
versus it being a bad thing.
an exciting fight between good and evil versus boring pacifism.
so much of our culture, so many of our stories, are based on the idea of fights between good and evil.
people proving their strength, skill, and courageousness by fighting.
people living exciting lives by fighting.
risking your life is exciting.
it's just a game.
without any fights, without struggles, things would seem dull.
yet war is bad.
those thousands of non-main-characters who yelled their battle cries and charged and got killed by orcs don't seem very glorious, do they? or do they?
if one has a cause important enough to fight for, one should fight, right?

so many orcs fighting together, their cause must have seemed important to them too. even if it was just the chance for a glorious fight. does that make the cause any less valid?

fiction versus real life.
war is bad.
there is no glory.

just because you've been convinced you're fighting for a noble cause,
doesn't mean you really are.
is your conviction an illusion?
does it matter?
will your victory or your death be any less glorious
as long as you believe you're fighting for a noble cause?

something about such excitement, such intensity,
only being there
when you're truly in a life-and-death situation like that.
that intense joy/fun which is only possible playing such a game at such stakes

but real life doesn't work that way.
you'd just die.

things used to seem exciting
now they seem dull.
that pride/strength/effort thing...
(even that dom/sub thing)
that was there in tae kwon do classes.

ach gosh damn words.
this is too hard to verbalize.