A daily dose of philosophical food for your noodle... bacon for your brain!

Friday, March 31, 2006

Unusual Charges

By Diana Hsieh

The Rocky Mountain News reports:

A Littleton man accused of breaking into homes to masturbate was bound over for trial Tuesday on unusual charges -- two felony counts of burglary with intent to litter.

The article doesn't explain what that means -- any thoughts, lawyers? (Based upon the description of the man's activities, he sounds likely to become far more dangerous to women very soon.)

Read more...

If I Get Sick, Please Don't Pray For Me

By Paul Hsieh

Or at the very least, please don't let me know. According to this recent study:

...[R]esearchers found that having people pray for heart bypass surgery patients had no effect on their recovery. In fact, patients who knew they were being prayed for had a slightly higher rate of complications.
Here's a related article, as well as the full academic paper from the American Heart Journal. (Via Cynical-C.)

Read more...

NYU Responds

By Diana Hsieh

One of the good folks from Front Range Objectivism received a reply to his letter to NYU:

From: John Beckman [john.beckman@nyu.edu]
To: Richard Watts [rw1963@earthlink.net]
Sent: 3/31/2006 6:27:37 AM
Subject: RE: censorship of cartoons

Dear Mr. Watts --

I appreciate your writing to share your thoughts. However, I must disagree with your views on this matter and challenge your understanding of the facts.

The Objectivist Club, a recognized student organization, indicated a few days ago that it intended to host an event about free speech and the Danish cartoons. This was all well and fine. It emerged later that the event would include an actual display of the cartoons.

As awareness of the event spread around campus, Muslim organizations at NYU asked the University to intervene to prevent the display, indicating that they considered the cartoons grievously offensive.

Frankly, it is not clear why a discussion of free speech and the Danish cartoons could not have taken place without the display of the cartoons. Given the sensitivities of one segment of our community, that would have been the preferable course. However, the students of the Objectivist Club felt otherwise.

This decision was a balance between the serious concerns of one segment of our community, on the one hand, and NYU's tradition of free speech and free exchange of ideas on the other. The University decided -- and this seems to be, judging from your letter, a critical area of misunderstanding on your part -- that the traditions of free speech must prevail. The University told both the Objectivist Club and its Muslim community that the display WOULD be allowed at the event.

Any reasonable person knows that the display of these cartoons has been accompanied by violence throughout the world. Every institution has a responsibility to ensure that an event held on its grounds goes off smoothly, safely, and without disruption. The inclusion of the cartoons in the event caused the University decide to limit the audience to members of the NYU community, a rather large group (NYU is America's largest private university) including some 40,000 students and some 15,000 faculty, administrators, and staff.

On Wednesday afternoon, a few hours before the event, the student leadership of the club came to the University and indicated it had changed its mind: it would choose not to display the cartoons, and would like to be able to invite about 75 people to the event who were not members of the NYU community. The University agreed, but let's be clear: the students made this choice, and they made it after the University had indicated to one and all that the event could go forward WITH the cartoons displayed.

Accordingly, I must disagree with your characterization that free speech was abridged on this campus. I am aware that there are outside groups that have sought to portray these circumstances differently, presumably for their own purposes, but these portrayals are not correct.

I hope this provides a better, clearer understanding of events.

-- John Beckman

Since I'm a bit busy this morning, I'll leave the fisking of that for my readers in the comments.

Read more...

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Recovery Ward

By Diana Hsieh

As I recover from yesterday's frantic blogging about NYU's cowardly appeasement of offended Muslims, I want to thank everyone who took the time to write letters to the NYU officials. (Some people didn't post them publicly in the comments, but did CC me.) I can only hope that it made an impression, so that NYU doesn't make this kind of mistake again. Also, I'd like to particularly thank Amit Ghate for his voracious blogging and Instapundit for the traffic-rich link.

Also, I did get an e-mail from one of the organizers of the event indicating that it might be covered on Fox News at 7:00 (EST) tonight, i.e. Shepherd Smith's Fox Report.

Update: Wow, I was just checking my sent mail folder... and I noticed that I sent over 60 e-mails yesterday. No wonder I'm tired.

Read more...

New Features

By Diana Hsieh

As you can see on this very post, I've added some helpful little icons to the top of each post. The first is just a permalink to the post, so that you don't have to scroll all the way down to the bottom of the post for that. The second allows you to easily e-mail the post to someone.

Also, for the sake of new readers of NoodleFood, let me note that the most recent comments from all posts can be found aggregated on this one page.

Read more...

In What Language Do Deaf People Think?

By Paul Hsieh

According to this interesting 2003 Straight Dope column, people who are born deaf can and do indeed think linguistically, but in some form of gestural language rather than a spoken language.

The profoundly, prelingually deaf can and do acquire language; it's just gestural rather than verbal. The sign language most commonly used in the U.S. is American Sign Language, sometimes called Ameslan or just Sign...

...Sign equips native users with the ability to manipulate symbols, grasp abstractions, and actively acquire and process knowledge -- in short, to think, in the full human sense of the term.

...The answer to your question is now obvious. In what language do the profoundly deaf think? Why, in Sign (or the local equivalent), assuming they were fortunate enough to have learned it in infancy. The hearing can have only a general idea what this is like -- the gulf between spoken and visual language is far greater than that between, say, English and Russian. Research suggests that the brain of a native deaf signer is organized differently from that of a hearing person. Still, sometimes we can get a glimpse. [Oliver] Sacks writes of a visit to the island of Martha's Vineyard, where hereditary deafness was endemic for more than 250 years and a community of signers, most of whom hear normally, still flourishes. He met a woman in her 90s who would sometimes slip into a reverie, her hands moving constantly. According to her daughter, she was thinking in Sign. "Even in sleep, I was further informed, the old lady might sketch fragmentary signs on the counterpane," Sacks writes. "She was dreaming in Sign."

This meshes nicely with Rand's observation in the Appendix to Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology on "The Role of Words":
So the word is not the concept, but the word is the auditory or visual symbol which stands for a concept. And a concept is a mental entity; it cannot be perceived perceptually. That's the role played by words.

...One's mind first has to grasp the isolation and the integration which represents the formation of a concept; but to complete that process -- and particularly to retain it, and later to automatize it -- a man needs a verbal symbol.

...Now observe an interesting issue: a case like Helen Keller. She couldn't use either auditory or visual symbols. She had to be taught tactile symbols. She had to learn some mental condensation, some form of perceptual substitution or perceptual shorthand in order to be able to grasp the perceptual world at all. She had only tactile means. And she learned, and she was able to communicate, even to think and write. But prior to the time of learning this type of physical symbol, she was not able to grasp or deal with anything [conceptually], as far as could be observed. Therefore I wouldn't say the symbol has to be auditory or visual. If a mind is born handicapped in a certain way, there can be a substitute. Assuming a healthy child, the auditory and visual symbols are the easiest and the most productive. You can do more by that method. But some other method has to do if a person is handicapped.

The principle here is that in order to deal with a wide range of knowledge, you have to reduce the concretes to a single concrete, a concrete of a different order, a symbolic concrete.

Read more...

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

NYU Cowardice

By Diana Hsieh

From an ARI Press Release about tonight's panel on the Danish cartoons at NYU:

"In a seemingly mundane decision, New York University has sacrificed the principle underlying its flourishing and the survival of civilization--free speech," said Dr. Yaron Brook of the Ayn Rand Institute. NYU is refusing to protect a student group's right to display the Danish cartoons of Mohammad at a panel discussion on free speech on March 29.

The group's event was to be open to the public, but at the last minute NYU retreated. Under the pretense of maintaining campus security, the administration contradicted its own stated policy on free speech by requiring that, if the cartoons are displayed, the event be limited only to "members of the NYU community." The student group now must turn away more than 150 members of the public who had planned to attend the panel.

"The university's shameful appeasement of Muslim and anti- free-speech groups--which have vowed to protest the event--underscores the urgent need to display the cartoons in defense of freedom of speech," said Dr. Brook.

"Free speech protects the rational mind: it is the freedom to think, to reach conclusions and express one's views without fear of coercion of any kind. And it must include the right to express unpopular and offensive views, including outright criticism of religion. NYU--which like other universities grants tenure to protect intellectual freedom--ought to recognize the crucial importance of this principle and defend it.

"If intimidation and threats are allowed to compel writers, cartoonists, thinkers and institutions of learning into self- censorship, the right to free speech is lost. If Muslims are allowed to pressure critics of Islam into silence, critics of religion will be next. And then everyone else."

FIRE has also issued a condemnatory press release about the last-minute change in policy. It included this line:

"This is a classic case of the heckler's veto," noted FIRE's Lukianoff. "NYU is shamelessly clamping down on an event purely out of fear that people who disagree with the viewpoints expressed may disrupt it. These immoral, last-minute restrictions must be lifted."

Betsy Speicher sent me the link to the ARI press release, as well as this announcement from the apparent Heckler-in-Chief, namely Maheen Farooqi, President of the Islamic Center at NYU.
From: Maheen H Farooqi
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2006 22:43:35-0800
To: maheen@nyu.edu
Subject: Action Alert - Racist Cartoons at NYU

Dear Community Leader,

This Wednesday, March 29th, an event is being sponsored by the Objectivist Club, an OSA club, and its purpose is to analyze the issue of free speech with an emphasis on a series of cartoons recently published in a Danish newspaper that depicted the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, and Islam in a highly offensive manner. These cartoons have lead to riots, protests, beatings, and even deaths on an international level and now they are being displayed at NYU at the aforementioned event. We at the Islamic Center are all for discourse and dialogue and we would encourage the Objectivist Club to partake in whatever discussion they would like.

We, however, would not encourage racism is any shape or form, and to us and many others, these cartoons are racist and we adamantly oppose their display. As such, we are asking you and your club to help us speak out against and protest the display of these cartoons in any shape or form. The event itself and the topic that the students would like to discuss is not problematic in any way, but the pictures themselves are just hatred and there is no justification in preaching something that breeds that kind of hate. We will be organizing a protest for this Wednesday at around 5:30pm and will be having an organizational meeting for it tomorrow on the 7th floor of Kimmel at 7pm. If you are interested in helping us with this, please contact me at maheen@nyu.edu as soon as possible. Even if you cannot attend the meeting and would be interested in helping, please send me an email to let me know.

If you can ask your membership to make the following announcement in their classes it would be greatly appreciated:

Tomorrow the Objectivist Club is sponsoring an event that will display a series of cartoons recently published in a Danish newspaper. These cartoons depict the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) and Islam in a highly offensive manner. These same cartoons unfortunately have lead to riots, protests, beatings, and deaths all around the world. We are asking all students to stand in solidarity with us as we seek to protest hatred and discrimination on OUR CAMPUS. On Wednesday we will be meeting at Kimmel at 5:30 PM in protest of the University's decision to allow the cartoons to be displayed. Remember that this same type of manifestation of hatred has lead to the murder of many innocent people. We can look as far back as the 1930's in the years prior to the Holocaust when Nazi Germany circulated hate-filled images of our Jewish brothers and sisters throughout society. Contemporary situations such as Rwanda have also caused bloody genocides. It is necessary for all of us to stand together and speak out against this, as hatred does not discriminate against any color, race, creed, or religion; all it does is hate.

"First they came for the Communists but I was not a Communist so I did not speak out; Then they came for the Socialists and the Trade Unionists but I was not one of them, so I did not speak out; Then they came for the Jews but I was not Jewish so I did not speak out. And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak out for me."

Martin Niemoller, 1892-1984

Thank you for your cooperation,

With Peace,
Maheen Farooqi
________________________
Maheen H Farooqi
President
Islamic Center at NYU
maheen@nyu.edu

The equation of criticism of Islam with racism is a standard sophistry from those who wish to insulate their religious beliefs from criticism. Racism is evil because a person's race is neither chosen, nor of any moral significance. In contrast, people do choose their religious beliefs: even a child raised in a religion can choose to reject it, once he reaches adulthood. And religions are of moral significance: as fundamental beliefs, they strongly influence the whole course of a person's life, including the actions regarded as moral or immoral.

Moreover, the invocation of the Holocaust in this context is beyond disgusting. The cartoons critical of Islam were drawn in part due to the widespread Muslim hatred of and violence toward Jews. (Even worse, many Muslims explicitly call upon their brothers to finish the job that Hitler started!) Moreover, to suggest that criticism of Islam might lead to slaughter of Muslims is nothing more than an intimidation tactic. Critics of Islam do not deny that Muslims are fully human, with all the same rights to peacefully practice their religion as everyone else. They are saying that Islam is a barbaric religion destructive to human life. And they are right to say that: just consider 9/11, the brutal murder of Theo van Gogh, the fatwa against Salman Rushdie, the waves of Palestinian suicide bombers in Israel, and the Abdul Rahman's narrow escape from beheading for blasphemy in Afghanistan.

At this late moment, I wonder what -- if anything -- can be done. (I've sent news tips to Denver's local papers and tv news. You might take a few moments to do the same.)

Update 1: You can also send a polite but firm e-mail to John Sexton (the President of NYU) at john.sexton@nyu.edu and Bob Butler (Director of Student Activities) at bob.butler@nyu.edu. (Here's a link for both addresses at once.) Here's my letter:

Dear Mr. Sexton and Mr. Butler,

I learned this morning that NYU has decided, at the very last minute, to bar the public from tonight's Panel Discussion on the Danish Cartoons if the cartoons themselves are shown. I am gravely disturbed by this decision.

Free speech includes the freedom to offend the sensibilities of the faithful. In face of unjustified intimidation from Muslims, NYU ought to have stood up for free speech by protecting the panel from any disturbance, not by attempting to diminish its impact (by forbidding the display of the cartoons) or its reach (by forbidding the entry of the general public).

Consider the consequences of your decision. By capitulating this time, you've forsaken the principle necessary to withstand pressure from other groups to withdraw some speaker deemed offensive. What ground can you stand upon when the Campus Republicans attempt to bar Michael Moore from speaking? Or when the Christian groups band together to bar an atheist? If those groups threaten trouble, will you demand concessions from those speakers too, like that Michael Moore can't say anything mean about President Bush or that the atheist must refrain from arguing his full case against God? Soon, no speech would be permitted, lest even innocuous comments about the sunny weather offend the depressed or mentions of a good grade on an exam offend those who chose not to study. Once speech is limited on the grounds that it might offend some people, the principle of free speech is destroyed.

I urge you to reverse this last-minute change in policy.

Respectfully,
Diana Hsieh

--------------------------
Diana Mertz Hsieh
Graduate Student
Department of Philosophy
University of Colorado at Boulder

Please feel free to post your letters in the comments!

Update 2: ARI just sent the following letter to its NY-area donors:
As you know, the Objectivist club at NYU is planning to hold an event in support of free speech on March 29. At the event they plan to display the Danish cartoons while engaging in a panel discussion on free speech. This event was planned as a public event--some of you might have RSVP'd for it.

Unfortunately, this morning we found out that the University, under the pretense of security, is limiting the event to "members of the NYU community" only. This is in contradiction to their own policy regarding free speech. The only way they claim they would allow non-NYU attendees, is if the cartoons are not shown. The student group has refused this condition--they have refused to be silenced. Thus, we cannot guarantee that non-NYU attendees will be able to get into the event. We continue to try to challenge the NYU administration regarding this decision.

However, in spite of the uncertainty, we would like to encourage all those who RSVP'd and anyone else who would like to show their support for free speech to show up at NYU. We have learned that Muslim groups are planning to demonstrate outside Kimmel Center at 5.30PM. We cannot allow them to be the only ones showing their true colors! We urge you to go to the NYU campus to support your right to free speech--the same support you have shown through generous donations to ARI.

If intimidation and threats are allowed to compel writers, cartoonists, thinkers and institutions of learning into self-censorship, the right to free speech is lost. If Muslims are allowed to pressure critics of Islam into silence, critics of religion will be next. And then everyone else.

Update 3: Amit Ghate pointed out the underhanded tactics by Muslims, as reported in this FIRE blog post:
[FIRE panelist] Greg [Lukianoff] is leaving for New York shortly; he, the other panelists, and the student organizers are forging ahead. In the meantime, since NYU's president failed to respond to a phone call from Greg yesterday, we're calling on NYU publicly to repudiate mob rule and restore freedom of speech on its campus. And in case you don't believe that things are really so bad up there, check out the e-mail that has come into FIRE's possession:
I want to thank those of you who have sent e-mails. NYU has decided to let the event continue so the Islamic Center has decided to step things up. The event is tomorrow at 7 at E&L in Kimmel. Tickets are being distributed for free via Ticket Central. The Islamic Center would like everyone to get tickets to this event so we can kill their attendance figures.

Let's remember, we have no problem with dialogue but the cartoons go against Muslims for two reasons. First, the depiction of the Prophet Muhammed (peace be upon him) is strictly forbidden. Secondly, it makes a horrible generalization that all Muslims are terrorists.

Therefore I ask you to go to ticket central, get two tickets for this event, and rip them up.

Update 4: Betsy Speicher also alerted me the source of the trouble, namely a letter from Muslim activist Yvonne Ridley urging protests against this event by Muslims. I'd actually already seen it posted on this blog (via some now-forgotten source). Here it is:
The NYU intends to display the cartoons, please send emails asking for civility.

We have just recieved this letter from Stop Political Terror one of our supporting organisations, by our sister Yvonne Ridley.

as'salaamu alaykum,

Our brothers and sisters in New York desperately need our help and support.

On March 29th, this Wednesday, an event is being held by a student organization at New York University called the Objectivist Club. The event's purpose is to analyze the issue of free speech with an emphasis put on the vile cartoons published in Denmark that depicted the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, and Islam in a highly offensive manner.

The student group is also planning on displaying the cartoons at the event. I joined Muslim students in an emergency meeting with the university and its administration on Friday to ensure the display will not go ahead. The event itself poses no problems but the pictures, as you know, are racist, offensive and there is really no justification in preaching something that breeds that kind of hate against Muslims. The students at NYU need our help. Can we all send a simple, polite email to John Sexton john.sexton@nyu.edu, the president of NYU, as well as Bob Butler bob.butler@nyu.edu , the director of student activities as NYU, letting them know of your concerns.

I did tell the students that I would try and rally support overseas - so let's show the NYU administration that if they mess with our brothers and sisters in New York they mess with all of us.

The following is a letter that has already been sent to President Sexton earlier by the imam of the Islamic centre.

Your sister in Islam

Yvonne Ridley

Betsy's e-mail made me realize that I'd received an e-mail from that very same woman, shortly after posting this blog entry! I even wrote her back, not realizing who she was. Here's her e-mail:
From: Hermosh@aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 12:28 PM
To: diana@dianahsieh.com
Subject: re cartoon saga

dear Diana,

May I first compliment you on your 'noodle' page, very lively and great fun.
but I am a wee bit alarmed re-your 'hysteria' over the Danish cartoons and the very thought that they could be compared to the cartoons used by the Nazis to demonise the Jewish community during the 30s.
This information has come from aminenet Jewish cartoonist Leon Kuhn whose grandparents were murdered by Nazis, victims of the Holocaust.
In his own research he discovered the cartoons which demonised the Jewish people showed them as subversives with bombs hidden in their clothing. One such image showed a Jewish man with grenades hidden in his ringlets.
Ofcourse these are obvious parallels, and I am amazed with your background you seem to be so insensitive to this whole issue.
Yvonne Ridley
London, UK

I just love the obvious lie about her liking NoodleFood! Here's my reply. (Remember, I just thought she was some random commenter.)
From: Diana Hsieh
Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 12:45 PM
To: 'Hermosh@aol.com'
Subject: RE: re cartoon saga

Yvonne,

Perhaps instead of focusing upon a concrete similarity -- that of cartoons critical of a group -- you might ask whether the cartoons in each case have any merit. In the case of the Jews in the 1930s, they did not. They were motivated by the fantasies of anti-Semitism, the same variety that motivates the actual bombings by Muslims of innocent Jews and others today. In contrast, the Danish cartoons were inspired by those actual bombings (and other forms of violence) -- widely supported by Muslims today.

Muslims are in no danger whatsoever of being herded into concentration camps by non-Muslims. They have all the freedoms afforded by the civilized West. Instead, it is Muslims advocating the extermination of non-Muslims -- and practicing that ideology with their bombs.

Diana.

After I realized who she was, she wrote me back, just saying, "will reply tomorrow Diana, am busy - have a good day." And I just replied, "Don't bother replying. I know who you are now -- and what you're trying to do at NYU."

Wow.

Update 5: Canonist reports that the press is effectively barred from the event:
A notice just went out over the AP that the event tonight is closed to the press. I called FIRE to ask what happened, and they said that NYU was closing the event to anyone who didn't register before noon yesterday. That is essentially shutting out the press, as in all likelihood few even heard of the event until yesterday afternoon. As anyone covering the City knows, even an appearance by Bill Clinton requires a pre-registration of at most a few hours.


Update 6: Right Wing Reason has a very thorough report on the event, although he wasn't able to stay until the end. He even has pictures!

Update 7: Here's another account of the event.

Update 8: Yvonne Ridley wrote me back:
From: Hermosh@aol.com
Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2006 6:06 AM
To: "Diana Hsieh"
Subject: RE: re cartoon saga

Dear Diana,

I'm sorry you feel like that. I am, indeed, very transparent in all my dealings which is why I sent you my full name.
And I was genuine about the layout and design of your site.
But, OK, I respect your wishes and your right to hold the views you do.
Yvonne Ridley

Oh yes! I'm so very sure that if her Muslim brothers and sisters were in power, Yvonne Ridley, dedicated apologist for Muslim terrorism, would defend "[my] right to hold the views [I] do." Not.

Update 9: I got an e-mail from one of the organizers of the NYU event indicating that it might be covered on Fox News at 7:00 (EST) tonight, i.e. Shepherd Smith's Fox Report.

Update 10: Eugene Volokh observed that NYU's actions violated its own stated policies. He also talked to an NYU official about the reasons for its response, and pointed out the inadequacies thereof.

Update 11: FIRE has blogged an interesting report on the NYU panel, most notably that university officials forced a student to remove his t-shirt because it featured the bomb-in-the-turban cartoon, that only about half the duly registered public was admitted, and that at least some members of the press were turned away.

Update 12: One of the good folks from Front Range Objectivism received a response to his letter of protest from NYU's John Beckman.

Read more...

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Eric Barnhill's Improvisations

By Diana Hsieh

My long-time friend Eric Barnhill is an amazing concert pianist doing all kinds of interesting work in music theory and education. He recently e-mailed me about his new music improvisation blog. He said:

You being the blogger you are, I thought you might like to know I started my own blog -- but it's a blog of actual music! I improvise a new piece and put it up every day, or close to it. I'm also telling you because I think you'll like the music. I explain why I'm doing it, and the central role I think improvisation needs to play in musical creativity, over at the site. Let me know if you ever check it out. http://ericbarnhill.wordpress.com. Keep up your good work!

I finally had a chance to check out some of Eric's improvisations late last week. My first, second, and third thought upon hearing the most recent recording was basically: Holy *@!&@^#, that's improvisation?!?" I had the same thought about the next one I heard. And the one after that. Eric was right: I do like them. And I look forward to listening to the rest of them!

Read more...

Marriage Is For White People

By Paul Hsieh

One reason that black American culture is in so much trouble is because of bad ideas such as this. Here are some chilling observations from an astute black female writer.

...But as a black woman, I have witnessed the outrage of girlfriends when the ex failed to show up for his weekend with the kids, and I've seen the disappointment of children who missed having a dad around. Having enjoyed a close relationship with my own father, I made a conscious decision that I wanted a husband, not a live-in boyfriend and not a "baby's daddy," when it came my time to mate and marry.

My time never came.

For years, I wondered why not. And then some 12-year-olds enlightened me.

"Marriage is for white people."

That's what one of my students told me some years back when I taught a career exploration class for sixth-graders at an elementary school in Southeast Washington. I was pleasantly surprised when the boys in the class stated that being a good father was a very important goal to them, more meaningful than making money or having a fancy title.

"That's wonderful!" I told my class. "I think I'll invite some couples in to talk about being married and rearing children."

"Oh, no," objected one student. "We're not interested in the part about marriage. Only about how to be good fathers."

And that's when the other boy chimed in, speaking as if the words left a nasty taste in his mouth: "Marriage is for white people."
And,
Although slavery was an atrocious social system, men and women back then nonetheless often succeeded in establishing working families. In his account of slave life and culture, "Roll, Jordan, Roll," historian Eugene D. Genovese wrote: "A slave in Georgia prevailed on his master to sell him to Jamaica so that he could find his wife, despite warnings that his chances of finding her on so large an island were remote. . . . Another slave in Virginia chopped his left hand off with a hatchet to prevent being sold away from his son." I was stunned to learn that a black child was more likely to grow up living with both parents during slavery days than he or she is today, according to sociologist Andrew J. Cherlin.

Read more...

Monday, March 27, 2006

OAC Deadline Approaching

By Diana Hsieh

The application deadline for Ayn Rand Institute's Objectivist Academic Center is approaching quickly:

This is a reminder that the deadline for submitting an application to the Objectivist Academic Center (OAC) is April 16, 2006.

The undergraduate program is designed for high school and college students who want to systematically study philosophy and Objectivism while developing their thinking and communication skills. The program offers students an unique opportunity to study one-on-one with leading Objectivist intellectuals and to get individualized feedback. OAC students are also eligible for other specialized ARI programs such as conference scholarships, graduate advisors and teaching skills workshops. We have also just entered a pilot program whereby students can get college credit for OAC courses, which will lighten the courseload students will have to take at their universities or colleges.

I cannot possibly recommend the OAC strongly enough. Although I skipped the first and third years, I've found my two years of courses to be of stellar quality. In particular, the second year course on Objectivism taught by Onkar Ghate far surpassed all the dozens of philosophy class I've taken as an undergraduate at Washington University and as a graduate student at Boulder. (Non-students can audit that course and any others for a fee.)

The only downside to my OAC classes has been the extra burden of work without credit from Boulder, although given the education offered, that was an easy price to pay. Still, I'm delighted to see that students might be able to get credit for their OAC classes this year, since that might make a difference to others, particularly undergraduates.

More details on the program of study, as well as the application form, are available on ARI's web site. Again, I cannot recommend this program highly enough. It has exceeded my wildest hopes for education in Objectivism.

And speaking of applications, I think I probably need to officially apply for the graduate program!

Read more...

True and False

By Diana Hsieh

A true gem from Overheard in New York:

Girl: Excuse me, do you have any biographies of TuPac?
Library guy: Probably, though they'd be with the other biographies on the second floor.
Dude: But isn't this the fiction section?
Library guy: It is. You might be able to find some books about him in non-fiction.
Girl: "Non-fiction"?
Library guy: Non-fiction means true.
Dude: ...And fiction means false.
Library guy: Sort of.
Girl: So if it's in non-fiction then that means he must still be alive.
Library dude: I don't think you understand.

--Brooklyn Public Library, Grand Army Plaza

Read more...

Ragnar Danneskjold Project?

By Diana Hsieh

I recently received this interesting announcement from Objectivist Ed Thompson:

This is to report yet another outrage perpetrated against Microsoft.

As an investor, I regularly receive complex legal notices petitioning me to join a class action lawsuit against some company. I trash them. Shorn of the typical incomprehensible legalese, this is the first notice I've ever seen that I can comprehend. It's in English. And all I have to do is collect my loot.

The heading reads, "Consumers and Businessmen May Claim Microsoft Settlement Benefits."

The proposed settlement arises from allegations that Microsoft violated New York antitrust and unfair competition laws. Consumers who acquired certain Microsoft products for use in New York over the past TWELVE years are eligible to collect an estimated $350 million. No proof of purchase required.

http://microsoftnysettlement.com

Googling produced a list of seventeen states with like settlements:

http://www.microsoft.com/mscorp/legal/class

Legal History:

http://www.dcd.uscourts.gov/microsoft-2001.html

We can fight this. Class Members can write to the court if they do not like the settlement. Of course, the court anticipates exactly the opposite of what we will write, as to what is fair.

One can also ask the Court for permission to speak at a "Fairness Hearing." I intend to ask.

This is an opportunity for Objectivists to affect favorably an outcome of the continued unjust persecution of Microsoft. Since there are seventeen states involved, there are many venues for us to participate. Even those living elsewhere might participate through a proxy, if you have a willing friend or relative who qualifies for an award.

Note: vouchers may be donated to a charity. If enough of us put in claims worth up to $60 and donate our vouchers to ARI, then ARI can take the accumulated vouchers--blood money, actually--up to a total of $10,000, and donate them to Microsoft--publicly. Call it the Ragnar Danneskjold project. It may make for a good public relations campaign, similar to BB&T's principled stand regarding eminent domain. (I presume that's $10,000 per state, which could yield up to a total of $170,000.)

Feel free to contact me off-line, if you intend to participate.

I have no idea whether ARI is interested in any such "Ragnar Danneskjold Project," but an individual certainly could claim his voucher, then donate it to Microsoft. And people can request to speak out in whatever way permitted by the court settlement. (I can't do anything, at least not yet, since Colorado isn't one of the states involved in the settlement.)

A final thought: In the time since Microsoft lost its antitrust case, the company has seemed stopped in its tracks, stagnating rather than innovating. Maybe that's just a fluke, or maybe I haven't paid adequate attention to the news. However, I've heard that IBM suffered exactly that effect as a result of its major antitrust woes of the 1980s. And stagnation would seem to be the natural result of the government breathing down your neck to ensure that your great creativity is not harming your weaker, slower competitors.

Read more...

Sunday, March 26, 2006

Rand Redux

By Diana Hsieh

Wonderful! The New York Times has a positive short comment on The Objective Standard, under the title of "Rand Redux." (Obviously, the bit about TOS being a Canadian journal is inaccurate, but that's very minor.)

Here it is, in full:

The Objective Standard is a new Canadian journal based on Ayn Rand's philosophy of Objectivism. The first issue opens with an editorial statement that advances the magazine's point of view with admirable forthrightness.
Altruism is not good for one's life. If accepted and practiced consistently, it leads to death. This is what Jesus did. If accepted and practiced inconsistently, it retards one's life and leads to guilt. This is what most altruists do. An altruist might not die from his morality -- so long as he cheats on it -- but nor will he live fully. Insofar as a person acts against the requirements of his life and happiness, he will not make the most of his life. ...

Egoism is good for one's life. If accepted and practiced consistently, it leads to a life of happiness. If accepted and practiced inconsistently -- well, there is no reason to be inconsistent here. Why not live a life of happiness. Why sacrifice at all? What reason is there to do so? In the entire history of philosophy, the number of answers to this question is exactly zero.

Awesome!

Read more...

Posting on SoloPassion

By Diana Hsieh

Over the past few days, I've been arguing quite a bit over on SoloPassion. That's new for me, since I'd always refused to enter the debates on SOLO before.

Previously, when SOLO was SoloHQ, I didn't think I would be heard, given the regular posters' propensity to (1) insult me viciously and (2) misrepresent my position, and (3) criticize my views without reading my writings. However, after the split of SoloHQ, the worst people gravitated to Rebirth of Reason and Objectivist Living. As of last week, I thought I was reasonably likely to get a fair hearing at SoloPassion, thanks in substantial part to the ground laid by Linz Perigo, Jim Valliant, Holly Valliant, and Casey Fahey. So I decided to jump into the fray -- albeit with some trepidation.

I've since posted on a wide variety of topics, including TOC's ongoing sanction of the Brandens, the influence of Kant's ideas in history, the evaluation of people affiliated with ARI, David Kelley's sanction of subjectivism in speaking to the Laissez Faire Supper Club, Robert Mayhew's editing of Ayn Rand Answers, and the rift between ARI and George Reisman and Edith Packer. While I've been subject to some personal attacks in lieu of argument, that's been pretty rare. And I'm happy to report that I've gotten the respectful hearing for which I hoped, including from people who continue to disagree with me. That's heartening.

So if you're interested to see what I've written -- and the responses thereto -- you can find all the threads in which I've posted on my tracking page.

Read more...

Saturday, March 25, 2006

Abdul Rahman

By Diana Hsieh

Eugene Volokh has done some good blogging on the horrifying case of Abdul Rahman, the man in grave danger of losing his head in Afghanistan for converting to Christianity. (Did we really fight a war to "liberate" that country from the Islamic radicals?!?)

Oh, and Mark Steyn recounts this great story in an op-ed of multiculturalism in action:

In a more culturally confident age, the British in India were faced with the practice of "suttee" -- the tradition of burning widows on the funeral pyres of their husbands. Gen. Sir Charles Napier was impeccably multicultural:

"You say that it is your custom to burn widows. Very well. We also have a custom: When men burn a woman alive, we tie a rope around their necks, and we hang them. Build your funeral pyre; beside it, my carpenters will build a gallows. You may follow your custom. And then we will follow ours."

If the United States fails to protect Abdul Rahman from these Muslim barbarians, if we permit the government we put in power and now maintain in power to murder a man for rejecting Islam, then we may as well just slit out own throats -- before the Muslims do it for us.

Read more...

Jack Bauer...

By Paul Hsieh

...Man of the Ages

Read more...

Marxist Dictators Versus Marxist Intellectuals

By Diana Hsieh

In the comments, Ergo raised a good question about the moral judgment of Marxist dictators versus Marxist intellectuals. So I'd like to sketch an answer to the question: Why and how is the Marxist intellectual morally worse than the Marxist dictator?

The key point is that the Marxist intellectual willfully makes possible all the brutal rights-violations of the Marxist dictator. That's no accident, it's the explicit end of his intellectual work. How so?

  • The intellectual offers a moral defense of the dictatorship of the proletariat. He uses people's existing bad ideas (e.g. altruism, mysticism) as a weapon against them in order to push them into far worse ideas. As a professional intellectual, he has the upper hand against ordinary people not trained in the art of philosophic detection. In part, that means that he must evade on a massive scale to make his arguments, whereas ordinary people may accept them due to confusion, passivity, or minor evasions. By his arguments, the intellectual disarms the actual and potential victims of the dictator of any moral objection to the means and/or ends of the dictator. Without that, the people would immediately rise up in rebellion against the unjustified brute force threatening to crush them.

  • The intellectual's moral defense of the dictatorship of the proletariat also emboldens the petty power lusters of the world to seize power. In a free society, such a person could aspire to no more than the leadership of a criminal gang. The intellectual presents that seizure of power as morally right and historically inevitable -- and thereby fosters and rationalizes the power lust of the future dictator.

  • Once the dictator is in power, the Marxist intellectual conceals and excuses his inevitable brutality and mass slaughter. He is thereby sanctions those crimes. (In this respect, he's like an uncle who approvingly nods and even offers helpful tips as his nephew rapes a young girl. Even if the nephew would have raped her anyway, the uncle is still morally guilty.) In so doing, the intellectual preserves the power of the dictator, often for decades upon decades beyond its natural life. If his arguments are even partially accepted in free countries, thanks to the bad premises people already accept, then he morally disarms the potential outside opponents of the Marxist dictatorship. Consequently, they will not exert any kind of pressure upon the dictatorship to reform, nor treat its espionage seriously, nor punish it with economic sanctions, nor invade to cut off the head of the expanding empire. Instead, his own country will prop up the Marxist dictatorship with aid of various kinds.

    At least in the case of Soviet Russia, the Marxist intellectuals did all that -- with exactly the consequences I've outlined. Without their help, Soviet Russia would not have lasted for all those decades. In fact, it never would have even come into existence.

    While I do think that the Marxist intellectual must evade more than the dictator -- if only for the simple reason that he's called upon to think more in the course of his work -- I don't think the magnitude of his evil is a solely function of the magnitude of his evasion. (A hermit in the woods may evade all day long, but I wouldn't call him evil, for the simple reason that the scale of his destruction is so small. He's just immoral.)

    To be valid, the moral judgment should integrate mind and body by asking: What does the evasion accomplish in reality? So we need to pay attention to the scale of the destruction of values involved. In the case of the Marxist intellectual, he did not just make the mass murder of Stalin possible, he also made that of Lenin, Mao, and Pol Pot possible. He also promoted socialism in Europe and America -- with substantial success.

    However, and this is critical, the fact that the Marxist intellectual is more evil than the Marxist dictator does not mean that the dictator is not fully evil. The dictator is absolutely 100% morally black, without the slightest shred of good in him. My point is rather that the evil of the Marxist intellectual is of broader scope. Despite his veneer of civility, he is a danger to every living creature on the planet. By leveraging people's ordinary altruism into even just some sympathy for socialism, he is teaching them to submit to the yoke of whatever dictator might arise, while also encouraging the rise of that dictator. (And yes, that does require more evasion than just driving the yoke.) Without that intellectual legwork, the dictators wouldn't stand a chance.

    I haven't covered all the possible angles on this topic, not even all those raised by David Kelley in Truth and Toleration. In particular, I haven't touched upon the argument that any given Marxist intellectual is just one voice in a loud chorus, nor upon the point that the intellectual persuades others while the dictator forces them. Still, I hope that the above comments constitute at least a clarifying start.

    Read more...
  • Friday, March 24, 2006

    "Please Help Me Lie!"

    By Diana Hsieh

    In her otherwise awful book How Could You Do That?!, Dr. Laura rightly observes that the most common kind of question asked on her radio show is "Now that I've done all these things I shouldn't have done, how can I avoid the consequences I knew, but denied, and just hoped would not happen?" In my capacity as a moral philosopher, I've certainly seen my share of that plea for help with irresponsibility, including from some supposed Objectivists. Yet this "Dear Abby" column is perhaps the most strikingly blatant example ever:

    DEAR ABBY: My heart is pounding and I'm at my wit's end. This situation is difficult to explain. I'm afraid that other readers may be facing the same horror that I'm dealing with, so please advise us on how to handle an extremely delicate situation.

    My husband has it in his head to do genetic testing for "genealogy" purposes. It isn't cheap. One of the places he wants testing from charges a couple of hundred dollars. He has asked me to have it done, too. I told him I wasn't interested and I thought it was too expensive.

    Now he wants to have our 17-year-old son tested. I have argued that our son should not have his DNA on record anywhere, that he really needs both parents to give consent for testing, and it costs too much.

    The horror I really have is that, 18 years ago, I made an awful mistake. I don't know if my husband is the father of our son. I'm having panic attacks about his finding out how awful I was 18 years ago.

    Can you issue advice that these DNA tests should not be used on minor children, and that there are powerful reasons why not? Can you think of any other reasons I can give for not having him tested so I can convince my husband to drop the idea? Please don't reveal where we live. You can say it's Minnesota. -- IN A PANIC!

    DEAR IN A PANIC!: Oh, what a tangled web we weave when first we practice to deceive. (And no, I didn't coin the phrase.)

    Although you have my sympathy, I think it takes a lot of gall to ask me to lie in my column. I cannot come up with a reason why your son should not be tested because there are reasons why everyone should be -- particularly before having children. (Two of them are Tay-Sachs and sickle-cell anemia.) I have news for you. Your husband already has his suspicions about whether he fathered the boy. That's why he's determined to have him tested. If I were you, I'd take a few deep breaths and come clean before the guano hits the fan -- and that's the best advice I can offer. Confession is good for the soul.

    Contrary to Abby, I regard genetic testing as a pointless waste of money without some significant familial or racial history of testable genetic disease. (If Paul and I were to have children, we certainly wouldn't need to be tested for Tay-Sachs and sickle-cell anemia! Our offspring would have hybrid vigor!) And I don't think Abby has reason to so definitely conclude that the father wishes the boy to the tested because of doubts about his paternity. It's a plausible hypothesis though, since the offered justification of "genealogy purposes" seems weak. That being said, I'm delighted to see Abby call this woman to the carpet for the "gall" of asking for help in more lying to conceal her misdeeds.

    At this point, I suppose I should mention that my paper on such false excuses, "False Excuses: Honesty, Wrongdoing, and Moral Growth," published in 2004 in the Journal of Value Inquiry (Volume 38, Number 2, pages 171-185), is available here. (I didn't write this post intending to plug that paper, but I suppose the topic caught my attention for good reason!)

    Read more...

    The Kat and the Kleenex Box

    By Diana Hsieh

    This is yet another damn funny cat video.

    Read more...

    Yaron Again

    By Diana Hsieh

    From ARI:

    Dr. Yaron Brook is scheduled to appear on CNBC's "On the Money" tonight, March 24, 2006 between 7 and 8 pm Eastern (4 and 5 pm Pacific), to discuss the unjust opposition to Wal-Mart's attempt to enter the banking business.

    Update from ARI:

    Dr. Yaron Brook's appearance on CNBC's "On the Money" originally scheduled for tonight, March 24, 2006 between 7 and 8 pm Eastern time has been cancelled at the last minute. We regret if this inconvenienced you in any way.

    Read more...

    Free Speech Campaign Update

    By Diana Hsieh

    This is a most welcome update from ARI about the Free Speech Campaign:

    Unveiling the Danish Cartoons: A Discussion of Free Speech and World Reaction

    CAMPAIGN EVENTS UPDATE

    We would like to give you a brief update on our success thus far in ARI's "Unveiling the Danish Cartoons: A Discussion of Free Speech and World Reaction" project.

    We have already held two highly successful panel discussions--at UCLA and at Johns Hopkins University--which drew an audience of hundreds of students, educators and concerned citizens, and which received widespread media attention. A third event, announced earlier, will be held at the University of Southern California on April 11.

    And as of today, the cartoons themselves are online at ARI's Web site.

    Further, I also am pleased to announce that two additional panel discussions are in the works, at the following venues:

    * New York University, March 29
    * The University of Chicago, April 25

    These events have attracted a very high level of discussion and debate--made possible in part by the caliber of the individuals who have participated in the panel discussions. In that vein, I'm very pleased to announce that we can confirm that one of the panelists for the April 11 event at USC will be Dr. Daniel Pipes, director of the Middle East Forum, a prize-winning columnist and one of the first analysts to understand the threat of radical Islam.

    The new events scheduled for NYU and the University of Chicago are the direct result of the successes we've already had with the UCLA and Johns Hopkins panel discussions.

    The discussion that you will hear in these panels cannot be found anywhere else. We encourage you to stand up for your right to free speech by attending these important events.

    UPCOMING EVENTS

    The Ayn Rand Institute is supporting and participating in three speaking events, which are free and open to the public.

    Unveiling the Danish Cartoons: A Discussion of Free Speech and World Reaction

    New York University
    New York, New York
    Wednesday, March 29, 2006
    Please RSVP for this event here.
    More details are here, including a PDF event flyer.

    University of Southern California
    Los Angeles, California
    Tuesday, April 11, 2006
    More details are here.

    University of Chicago
    Chicago, Illinois
    April 25, 2006
    Time and location TBA

    MORE INFORMATION

    To learn more about the Ayn Rand Institute's Free Speech Campaign, please visit our Campaign page.

    For information on other upcoming events, please visit the events page.

    For more information:
    Phone: 949-222-6550 ext. 234
    E-mail: events@aynrand.org

    Copyright (c) 2006 Ayn Rand(R) Institute. All rights reserved.

    The Ayn Rand Institute, 2121 Alton Pkwy, Ste 250, Irvine, CA 92606

    On the page about the campaign, I noticed that ARI needs more donations to fund these events:
    How You Can Help

    While we have achieved more than 90% of our initial fundraising goal of $33,000, the addition of more panel discussions has led us to revise our goal to $48,000.

    For us to succeed in executing this campaign, we need your help now.

    Any contribution that you can make to ARI to help offset these costs would be greatly appreciated.

    I certainly urge those of you who care to live in a civilized society to donate to ARI for this campaign, particularly if you haven't done so already.

    Read more...

    Thursday, March 23, 2006

    'Just War Theory' vs. American Self-Defense

    By Diana Hsieh

    I'm delighted to pass on this announcement from Craig Biddle, the editor of The Objective Standard:

    Yaron Brook's latest talk, "'Just War Theory' vs. American Self-Defense,"
    which he delivered at the National Press Club last week, can now be heard online for free:

    http://www.theobjectivestandard.com/events.asp#audiojwt

    I hope you will enjoy this vital talk. Please forward this information to anyone who you think might be interested.

    The summary of the text from the web site reads:
    The Bush administration's pseudo-war is a self-sacrificial disaster. Nearly five years after President Bush declared "war on terrorism," victory is nowhere in sight. American soldiers continue to die in Iraq for no clear self-defense purpose, while enemy regimes such as Iran and Saudi Arabia continue to sponsor Islamic terrorism and spread anti-Americanism without fear of reprisal. The cause of America's continuing insecurity is not any practical inability to defeat our enemies--America can militarily crush any enemy it chooses--but our leaders' unwillingness to do what is necessary to defeat them. The only path to American security is real war, self-interested war, a war of genuine American self-defense. In this talk, Dr. Brook presents the principles of "Just War Theory," the altruistic theory guiding the Bush administration's so-called "War on Terrorism," and contrasts them with the principles of a proper, moral approach to American self-defense.

    My first issue of The Objective Standard arrived a few days ago. I've been itching to read it, but all that I've had time to do is gaze longingly at its lovely red-and-cream cover. (It's a beautifully formatted journal: nice big pages with clean readable text.) Since I'm now on break from my classes at Boulder, I'm certain that I'll be able to set aside time this weekend to read it.

    Read more...

    Yaron on CNBC Again

    By Diana Hsieh

    From ARI:

    Dr. Yaron Brook is scheduled to appear today, March 23, 2006, between 5 and 6 pm Eastern (2 and 3 Pacific), on CNBC's program "Kudlow and Company" to debate the issue of FCC indecency fines.

    Hooray! I love watching Yaron on television.

    Read more...

    Spring Break!

    By Diana Hsieh

    Hooray! I'm now officially on Spring Break from Boulder!

    I lectured on Pascal's Wager to the full Intro Philosophy class this morning... and now I'm free! (Normally I just teach my two recitations on Wednesday.) The lecture went well, I think.

    In fact, I'm not totally free of classes. I have Scott Powell's First History class tonight and next Thursday. I also have classes with ARI's Objectivist Academic Center later this week and next. My Objective Communication class is meeting on Friday evening, my final op-ed for my Intermediate Writing class due on Sunday, then that class meets on Wednesday evening. Still, that's all fun work -- and attending those classes doesn't require a 60 mile / 60 minute commute to Boulder!

    I have tons of paper writing to do during my break from classes at Boulder, as well as a stack of Intro Phil papers to grade. So Spring Break is definitely not a vacation. It's mostly just a reprieve from my draining four-days-a-week commute. Still, even just that is most welcome.

    Read more...

    Meow Meow, Woof Woof

    By Diana Hsieh

    A few days ago, I searched Google Video for cat dog in the hopes of finding this funny short video of a cat effectively warding off a hungry dog. (I'd received the video via e-mail, but I wanted to blog it. In the meantime, I found a few other darn funny cat-dog videos, such as a fat cat fighting a losing battle over its food, dog and cat wrestling, cat taunting dog on a leash, puppy outclassed in fight with massive cat, and cat making biscuits on an conked-out puppy. Of course, nothing beats the previously-blogged cat fight.

    Read more...

    Wednesday, March 22, 2006

    My History with Nathaniel and Barbara Branden

    By Diana Hsieh

    I wrote the substance of this post on my personal history with Nathaniel and Barbara Branden quite some time ago. At the time of writing, my purpose was to more fully explain my strongly negative judgment of the Brandens, as well to use my own case to examine some of the errors commonly committed by honest admirers of Objectivism in the course of judging them. However, the publication of Jim Valliant's The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics (PARC) rendered that whole enterprise thoroughly superfluous. For any honest inquirer, Mr. Valliant presents an overwhelming case against the Brandens. He does not merely prove that they manipulated, deceived, and abused Ayn Rand all those decades ago, but also that they continue to do so to this day. (And, I should add, they do so with the blessing and assistance of The Objectivist Center.)

    So at this point, I'm mostly just posting this history for the record. Still, I think that my errors in judging Nathaniel and Barbara Branden indicate the great value of The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics, particularly to young people new to Objectivism. Certainly, my own history with the Brandens, and probably even with TOC, would have been radically different if I could have read that book ten years ago. (That's why I'm such an enthusiastic supporter of the book.)

    So here is my history with Nathaniel and Barbara Branden...

    Early in my freshman year of college in the fall of 1993, I read Ayn Rand's major philosophic anthologies -- The Virtue of Selfishness, Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal, and Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology -- for the very first time. Just a few short months later, in February 1994, I read Nathaniel Branden's article "The Benefits and Hazards of the Philosophy of Ayn Rand." At the time, my basic view of the article was very positive. I was too much of a novice to understand the gross inaccuracies in Branden's claims about Objectivism, let alone the fallacies and falsehoods of his criticisms thereof. I wrongly read the article as identifying and criticizing certain common but significant errors of Objectivists in applying the philosophy, rather than as critical of the principles of the philosophy itself. Or at least I regarded his criticisms as valid to that extent. (Unfortunately, my e-mail record is a bit spotty on this point.)

    Of course, Nathaniel Branden was clear enough that he blamed Objectivism in that article -- and elsewhere. For example, in response to my "Yet Another Heretic" post to MDOP in February 1994, he wrote:

    I AM SORRY TO TELL YOU THAT THESE FOOLISH PEOPLE ARE ONLY DOING WHAT AYN RAND TAUGHT US ALL TO DO. DON'T IMAGINE THAT THEIR POSITION IS A PERVERSION OF OBJECTIVISM AS HELD BY RAND. PEIKOFF IS RAND'S PRODUCT. SHE IS HIS FRANKENSTEIN. I OUGHT TO KNOW. I'M SOMETHING OF AN EX MONSTOR MYSELF.

    In my reply, I clearly rejected Branden's criticisms of Objectivism, unfortunately while still accepting his basic portrayal of Ayn Rand (and Leonard Peikoff) as demanding dogmatic agreement from Objectivists. That's not surprising, since at that point, I'd already accepted David Kelley's views about the injustice of the various "purges" in the Objectivist movement.

    The next month, I read Nathaniel Branden's memoir, Judgment Day. My reaction to that work was more mixed. I was completely enthralled by the brilliance of Ayn Rand's mind as portrayed in his first meeting with her. Yet as the story progressed, I was deeply dismayed by her seeming irrationality in her dealings with other people. Knowing the ways in which strong emotions can distort memories over time, I did have some reservations about the reliability of Branden's recollections. Yet I never really suspected outright, devious, and wholesale deception from him. I'm not entirely sure why not. I was likely naive, in that I tend to find grand-scale dishonesty utterly bizarre as a strategy in life. I was also likely impressed by his seemingly frank admissions of his own past wrongdoing. Obviously, I should have seriously considered the possibility of ongoing deception, given his admitted willingness to live in a mess of lies for so many years.

    In those early years, I also read a few of Nathaniel Branden's other books, namely The Psychology of Self-Esteem, The Psychology of Romantic Love, and The Six Pillars of Self-Esteem. I enjoyed them all to varying degrees. I attended a weekend seminar he conducted in Chicago in October 1994. During the seminar itself, I was favorably impressed by Branden's intelligence, insight, and consistency with my (limited) understanding of Objectivism. (Later, once I knew more, I realized that his grasp of Objectivism was superficial at best.) About a year later, in November 1995, I heard him speak at the Cato Institute on "The Philosophical Foundations of a Free Society." In response to a question, he claimed a close affinity for Objectivism:
    Questioner: I'm wondering if you see yourself as a spokesperson for Objectivism and also how you'd contrast yourself with others who certainly do, like Leonard Peikoff or David Kelley.

    Branden: I have struggled with that question for a long time. I don't technically think of myself as a spokesperson for Objectivism because I'm no longer teaching Objectivism; I'm developing my own work and my own ideas. But if you ask me: In the main, am I in large agreement with the Objectivist philosophy? Yes. Do I have differences with Rand? Yes. Will historians probably say those differences are not that important and that in fundamentals Branden was an Objectivist? I'm sure of it, if anybody cares.

    So I don't really care that much about the labels anymore. I think that I certainly know that philosophy very intimately well, and I think it has enormous contribution to make to human well-being, and I have benefited from it in my own thinking enormously.

    From my perspective at the time, Nathaniel Branden seemed very Objectivist, regardless of his tumultuous history with Ayn Rand. My doubts about his portrayal of Ayn Rand slowly faded into the background.

    After graduating from college in May 1997, I moved to Los Angeles in search of web programming work. As I was job hunting, I approached Nathaniel Branden about the possibility of developing a web site for him, mostly so that I would have some work for my portfolio. (It wasn't because I was a big fan of his work, since I wasn't.) That began my long tenure as his webmaster. For many years, we had a reasonably friendly business relationship, mostly consisting of infrequent e-mails about the web site. While living in southern California, I also attended a few gatherings of people interested in Objectivism held at his house.

    During those years, I never bothered to read Barbara Branden's biography The Passion of Ayn Rand, except for a page or two. Predictably enough, I'd totally lost interest in the details of Ayn Rand's life after accepting Nathaniel Branden's basic portrait of her. Reading Passion seemed like an unnecessary and unpleasant chore. In those years, I did frequently hear disparaging stories about Ayn Rand from people in and around David Kelley's then-named Institute for Objectivist Studies (IOS). Unfortunately, I didn't realize that Barbara Branden's biography was often the only source for those stories. I presumed her to be fairly reliable reporter of the early history of the Objectivist movement because Passion seemed to be the widely-confirmed truth. (What a vicious circle!) Also, I thought of her as reliable simply because she was a first-hand observer of events. As with Nathaniel Branden, I did not seriously consider the possibility of grand deception, personal bias, or the like.

    So in time, I came to accept the broad strokes of Nathaniel and Barbara Branden's portraits of Ayn Rand's character. Despite my admiration for the philosophy she created, I concluded that Ayn Rand was often deeply irrational in her dealings with other people. It was a harsh disappointment at first, but one which I felt bound to accept in light of the seemingly well-established facts. (I can vividly remember a moment of grappling with that bitter conflict in my freshman dorm room.) I concluded that I would not have liked to have ever met Ayn Rand, since we surely would have been at odds. (Augh!) Obviously, I failed to examine the portraits of Ayn Rand created by Nathaniel and Barbara Branden critically enough, in substantial part because I was too quick to accept the standard view of Ayn Rand found in IOS/TOC circles.

    Without a doubt, the Brandens' portrayals of Ayn Rand were widely taken for granted in the intellectual circles of IOS/TOC in which I involved myself (to varying degrees) for ten years. That's hardly surprising, given David Kelley's reliance upon and praise for Barbara Branden's biography in making his allegations of recurring tribalism in the Objectivist movement in Truth and Toleration. Kelley conceded that he did not regard Ayn Rand as "entirely responsible for the tribal character of the [Objectivist] movement," but then wrote:
    It is clear to me that Ayn Rand was a woman of remarkable integrity, who largely embodied the virtues she espoused. But it is also clear that she had certain other traits often found in great minds who have waged a lonely battle for their ideas: a tendency to surround herself with acolytes from whom she demanded declarations of agreement and loyalty; a growing sense of bitter isolation from the world; a quickness to anger at criticism; a tendency to judge people harshly and in haste. These faults did not outweigh her virtues; I consider them of minor significance in themselves. But they were real, and I thought [Barbara] Branden's book, whatever its other shortcomings, gave a reasonably fair and perceptive account of them (T&T 75, emphasis added).

    In the mid-1990s, David Kelley invited Nathaniel and Barbara Branden to actively participate in IOS/TOC. For the past decade, both have done so to varying degrees. Nathaniel Branden has spoken at TOC's Summer Seminar almost every year for the past ten years. He has been prominently featured at other TOC conferences, including "Reclaiming Spirituality From Religion" (1999) and "Success: What it Is and What it Takes" (2004). Both Nathaniel and Barbara Branden were invited to speak at "Atlas and the World," although Barbara had to cancel at the last moment due to illness. Barbara Branden was featured as the keynote speaker at the 10th anniversary banquet in 1999. TOC's magazine, Navigator, published two articles by Nathaniel Branden and favorably reviewed The Art of Living Consciously and The Six Pillars of Self-Esteem. In 1998, Navigator welcomed the publicity from the then-forthcoming movie The Passion of Ayn Rand based upon Barbara Branden's biography. In a 2003 book review of by William F. Buckley's Getting It Right, Robert Bidinotto clearly treated Barbara Branden's biography and Nathaniel Branden's memoirs as accurate and reliable accounts of Ayn Rand's life, even referring to "Barbara Branden's excellent biography, The Passion of Ayn Rand." TOC's book service reissued his Basic Principles of Objectivism course, as well as edited versions of his essays from Who is Ayn Rand?, "The Moral Revolution in Atlas Shrugged" and "The Literary Method of Ayn Rand." Both Nathaniel and Barbara were interviewed for the so-called Objectivist History Project in 2003, 2004, and 2005. (Nathaniel was interviewed twice.)

    Perhaps most telling of all, despite the publication of Jim Valliant's The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics, both Nathaniel and Barbara Branden are slated to speak at the upcoming 2006 Summer Seminar. Barbara Branden will speak on "Rage and Objectivism." Nathaniel Branden will speak on "The Implications of Love." Together, they will be publicly interviewed on the topic of "Galt's Gulch and Objectivist Community." (Uncle! Those three topics are so pathetically ironic as to be beyond my capacity to mock.)

    Predictably, once Nathaniel and Barbara Branden became officially involved with IOS/TOC, the general attitude toward them among IOS/TOC supporters shifted in a significantly positive direction. Self-selection was partly at work; most of the few people who strongly objected to their presence, such as Joan and Allan Blumenthal and Jim Lennox, quietly abandoned the organization. Others stayed but tended to keep their objections quiet. Many devout fans of Nathaniel Branden began attending the Summer Seminars largely to hear him speak, to the point that people sometimes joked about him "holding court" in discussions with far too many people gathered in concentric circles around him. Also, more than a few individuals adopted a more positive view of the Brandens at this time. I suspect that many people, particularly those confused or undecided about them, were swayed by their trust in David Kelley's judgment. They were also likely influenced by Nathaniel Branden's charm, large persona, and seeming friendliness to Objectivism. Moreover, given the pre-existing break with ARI, people generally ignored or dismissed the contrary testimony of ARI-affiliated scholars who personally knew Ayn Rand and/or the Brandens as biased hagiography. Many people attempted to erect an untenable wall between the person of Ayn Rand and her fiction and philosophy, disclaiming any interest in the person, even though disdain for person clearly bled over into disdain for the fiction and philosophy. (All that was certainly true in my own case, I'm sorry to report.)

    Notably, all those changes happened without any serious discussion about the honesty and objectivity of Barbara Branden's portrayal of Ayn Rand in The Passion of Ayn Rand and Nathaniel Branden's in Judgment Day. Personally, while I often heard objections to the quality of the Brandens' writings and lectures, moral objections to their involvement in a supposed Objectivist organization were not just rare, but non-existent. Nathaniel Branden was such a regular fixture at TOC that he was widely regarded as the Benevolent Patriarch of Objectivism. Correspondingly, Ayn Rand was generally seen as the Wicked Witch of Objectivism. For so many years, I went along with all that.

    Now let me pause here to offer an assessment of all that.

    While writing up the bulk of this history in the summer of 2004, I came to a hard judgment about myself: Over the course of far too many years, I defaulted on the task of morally judging Nathaniel and Barbara Branden, particularly Nathaniel. To be clear, the fundamental problem was not that my moral judgment was in error, nor that my method of moral judgment was flawed, but rather that I refrained from moral judgment. Here's what happened -- or rather, did not happen. I did not come to a clear and solid evaluation of the Brandens' actions and character based upon the evidence available to me. When the evidence seemed mixed and confused, I did not set myself the task of answering the critical questions, e.g. "Are the Brandens' trustworthy recorders of Ayn Rand's life?" and "Are their criticisms of Objectivism just?" and "Are the Brandens genuine allies of Objectivism?" Instead, my judgments tended to drift along in confusion, pushed here and there by the evidence close at hand. As a result, I passively absorbed a fairly positive view of both Nathaniel and Barbara Branden, as well as a correspondingly negative view of Ayn Rand, from the culture of IOS/TOC. My negligence in this case resulted in substantial injustice, not just to Ayn Rand but also to all those who saw through the con game of the Brandens years ago.

    And yes, it was important for me to come to a clear moral judgment of the Brandens, particularly Nathaniel. Nathaniel and Barbara Branden were not mere distant strangers, but intellectuals actively involved in an organization claiming to represent and promote Objectivism. So by supporting and promoting that organization, I was also indirectly supporting and promoting Nathaniel and Barbara Branden's unjust and dishonest attacks upon Ayn Rand's philosophy and character. I was helping to send the message to the world, including to newbie Objectivists, that Nathaniel and Barbara Branden are basically friends of Objectivism, that their criticisms thereof are honest and reasonable, and that their portraits of Ayn Rand are generally correct. By participating in an self-described "Objectivist" movement which welcomed the Brandens as friends, I implicitly sanctioned -- and even encouraged -- those nasty smear articles on Ayn Rand and Objectivism based upon the "stunning revelations" of the Brandens. From an outside perspective, if even defenders of Ayn Rand's philosophy accept that she lived a sordid life, then that's all fair game, right? (Every single person who still chooses to associate with TOC in any way, shape, or form, is guilty of the same injustice, even if sometimes critical of the Brandens. That's why I think it's so critical for the few honest ones to read The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics -- and then sever their ties with TOC.) Even worse, as Nathaniel's webmaster, I personally and directly promoted his work, including his attacks upon Ayn Rand and Objectivism. So due to my failure to judge the Brandens as I ought to have, I was destroying the very values I wished promote.

    All in all, I feel a rather mushy and foul disappointment with myself for this failure to properly judge the Brandens. Even given my limited context of knowledge, I could have and ought to have done better. In contrast, although my ten years with IOS/TOC was predicated on substantial error on my part, at least those errors were mine. I made them, by my own conscious judgment and deliberate choice, because I believed David Kelley to be on the side of the true and the good. In contrast, with the Brandens, my failure to judge meant that I passively allowed others to decide for me. I had no malicious motive: I did not wish to think ill of Ayn Rand, as so many of the nasty folks on "Rebirth of Reason" and "Objectivist Living" clearly do. Still, I allowed my confusions to get the better of me; I passively accepted the standard views at TOC; I defaulted on the responsibility of moral judgment. At least that black cloud has a small silver lining: that failure provided me with an enormously clear lesson in the real-life importance of moral judgment. As with all philosophic issues, if you do not decide for yourself, you allow others to decide for you.

    So let me now return to my history.

    My turning point with respect to the Brandens began in 2003, as I was editing my introductory course on Objectivism, Objectivism 101, for the 2003 TOC Summer Seminar. I decided to add a brief biographical sketch of Ayn Rand to the first lecture, focusing on her life up through the writing of the novels. For some background, I skimmed the early chapters of Barbara Branden's The Passion of Ayn Rand, as well as the material covering the same time period in her biographical essay from Who Is Ayn Rand?, both for the first time.

    Although I was delighted by some of the childhood stories in The Passion of Ayn Rand, my overwhelming response was disgust at the barrage of disparaging, gratuitous, and arbitrary psychologizing of Ayn Rand. Barbara Branden seemed determined to spin the worst possible interpretations from the most innocuous facts. In order to do so, she routinely interjected herself into the story to draw some unwarranted negative conclusions about Ayn Rand's psychology, usually about her deeply repressed subconscious motives. She refused to allow her readers to form their own judgments based upon the facts presented. It was infuriating. (I'll rip apart some examples in a later post.)

    At the time, I recognized that Barbara Branden's basic evaluations of Ayn Rand were less than objective, even malevolent. I suspected that her account of her own years with Ayn Rand was similarly, if not more seriously, poisoned by bias. I wondered whether Nathaniel Branden's memoir was similarly flawed. In addition to these worries about the Brandens' portrayals of Ayn Rand, I also wondered what justice was rightly due the creator of Objectivism, whatever her personal conduct. In particular, I was disturbed by the contrast between my tepidly mixed feelings toward Ayn Rand and my wholehearted reverence for Aristotle. After all, Aristotle advocated slavery! (As it turned out, I didn't need to solve that dilemma, since I soon realized that it was based upon a false premise about Ayn Rand's private conduct.)

    My assessment of these matters was substantially hampered by the thought that I faced the Herculean task of having to find out the truth about those long-gone days of the Nathaniel Branden Institute. I thought, for example, that I had to determine who was responsible for the stifling atmosphere around NBI, if such existed at all. That seemed impossible to me, as I couldn't blindly trust the claimed recollections of one side of the conflict while arbitrarily ignoring or discounting the other. Nor was I going to adopt some cowardly middle position. I wanted to judge for myself based upon direct knowledge of the facts, but such knowledge seemed out of my reach. (In fact, I could have largely decided these questions first-hand by listening to Ayn Rand's Ford Hall Forum lectures, as I did in 2005. Her tone in the lectures is serious but not angry -- and her benevolent responses to all sorts of questions were clearly nothing like the dogmatic authoritarianism portrayed by the Brandens.)

    For the next few months, I was overwhelmingly busy with work in graduate school, not to mention with my efforts to get to the root of my unhappiness with The Objectivist Center. I pursued my questions about the Brandens only on occasion, mostly by speaking to a few trusted friends who'd attended NBI lectures and seeking out various criticisms of the Brandens.

    Finally, in the spring of 2004, I was able to come to firm moral conclusions about both Nathaniel and Barbara Branden. In the course of reading some of their recent writings on Ayn Rand and Objectivism, I realized that I did not need to somehow uncover the hidden truths of decades past. Those writings were revealing enough on their own. As indicated in my "Unnecessary Evidence" post, further consideration of Barbara's arbitrary psychologizing of Ayn Rand in her biography, combined with her too-often-ludicrous posts in NoodleFood's comments, were reason enough for me to judge her guilty of longstanding, malicious injustice toward Ayn Rand. Since then, her behavior has only confirmed that judgment: she arbitrarily accused her then-friend Lindsay Perigo of alcoholism, invented ludicrous fairy tales about Leonard Peikoff, offered fantastically twisted interpretations of Ayn Rand's personal journal entries, and more. As for Nathaniel, re-reading his "Benefits and Hazards" article told me more than I needed to know about his character. For him to promulgate such amorphous, slippery, and context-dropping criticisms of Objectivism, even while asserting his great authority on the subject, was beyond the pale. (I'd like to blog on his particular charges someday, since some are quite cleverly constructed, almost worthy of Ellsworth Toohey.) And so I concluded that Nathaniel and Barbara Branden were and are dishonest, unjust, and generally vile people. I told them so in a private e-mail in June 2004. I announced that judgment in my August 2004 blog post, Unnecessary Evidence, after Nathaniel Branden decided to play a malicious practical joke upon me -- by trespassing upon my property, no less. (My e-mail to the Brandens is reproduced in that blog post.)

    Since then, Jim Valliant published The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics. He sealed the case against them, revealing them as dishonest, unjust, and malicious critics of Ayn Rand and Objectivism -- to this very day. Before I read the book, I did not think that I could possibly think worse of Nathaniel and Barbara Branden. I was wrong.

    In the meantime, the leadership of TOC is steadfastly refusing to consider the issue. In the wake of the revelations about the ongoing immorality of Nathaniel and Barbara Branden in The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics, they are suddenly disclaiming all interest in Ayn Rand's life, while simultaneously refusing to even read the book. TOC is too committed to "openness" and "tolerance" to make the requisite moral judgments of the Brandens. As someone said in the NoodleFood comments recently, they're willing to tolerate everything -- except genuine Objectivists.

    With the publication of The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics, all those who claim some affinity for Ayn Rand's philosophy of Objectivism face a stark choice: EITHER Ayn Rand and Objectivism OR Nathaniel and Barbara Branden. It is simply not logically possible to value both Objectivism and its would-be destroyers. The middle ground is gone forever. For many years, I thought that I could and ought to stand on that middle ground. I'm delighted to have been proven wrong, since that leaves me free to admire Ayn Rand in the way she so richly deserves.

    More than anything else, that is the great value of Jim Valliant's The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics.

    Read more...

    Tuesday, March 21, 2006

    Noodly Bloggy Rolly Update

    By Diana Hsieh

    I forgot to mention that I updated the blogroll last week. I mostly added various blogs by Objectivists and fellow-travelers, so if that's of interest to you, go take a look. (My blogroll is too big right now, so I'll have to do some pruning next time I update it!) I should probably mention that my blogroll is entirely my creation and responsibility; my co-bloggers are not involved in the selection or ordering.

    Bloggers who wish a place on my blogroll should drop me an e-mail to that effect, so that I can check out the blog for a time before my next scheduled update. (Yes, I schedule blogroll updates as a recurring task in Outlook. Otherwise, it would never get done.)

    Last week, I also added the stunning pictures of all the NoodleFoodlers that you see on the right, but that's harder to miss! (Still, now you have a comment thread in which to praise us for our good looks!)

    Read more...

    Oh, This Should be Good

    By Diana Hsieh

    From ARI:

    Dr. Yaron Brook is scheduled to appear on CNBC's "On the Money" tonight, March 21, 2006 at 7 PM Eastern time (4 PM Pacific).

    He will discuss a law passed today by the lower house of the French National Assembly which would force Apple, Sony and Microsoft to share proprietary anti-copy technologies so that rivals can offer compatible services and players.

    Read more...

    Jim Valliant in Chicago on April 15th

    By Diana Hsieh

    The Chicago Objectivist Society is hosting two lectures by Jim Valliant about The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics on April 15th:

    Ayn Rand and the Virtue of Integrity by James Valliant

    James Valliant, the author of The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics, is presenting two new lectures to the Chicago Objectivist Society. For the last twenty years, Ayn Rand has been the victim of attacks on her behavior and psychology inspired by the biographies of Nathaniel Branden and Barbara Branden. Finally, a critical response to the Branden's allegations has been published, The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics, by James S. Valliant.

    In this two-part lecture, Mr. Valliant first examines the problems with the Brandens' accounts. The second part of this lecture is a unique insight into Ayn Rand's character from the only author who has had access to her private journals.

    "Jim Valliant... is one of the few people that knows what he's talking about when he says something." -- Leonard Peikoff, author of Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand

    Part I: Ayn Rand and the Virtue of Integrity

    This engaging lecture lays to rest the myths about Ayn Rand's life and character that have been promulgated by her detractors. It is highlighted by extensive, never-before-published personal journal entries of Ayn Rand. These passages are immensely valuable, not only in revealing the claims of Rand's critics to be profoundly inaccurate and unjust, but also in showcasing her epochal mind at work resolving complex questions of personal life.

    Part II: Working With Ayn Rand's Journals

    Mr. Valliant will discuss the process of writing this book, how and why the Estate of Ayn Rand made Rand's private journals available to Mr. Valliant - and his surprise at the dramatic confirmation of his hypotheses. Mr. Valliant will describe his experience working with Rand's Estate, and share his insights about Ayn Rand's personality - her serenity and rationality, her righteous anger, her careful moral judgment of others, and, above all, her remarkable integrity.

    About James Valliant

    James Valliant is the author of *The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics* and the editor of Ayn Rand's private journals used during his research. His op-eds have appeared in publications such as The San Francisco Chronicle.

    He has been a Deputy District Attorney in the San Diego area for over 16 years. Mr. Valliant is a magna cum laude graduate of New York University with a degree in philosophy. He received his JurisDoctorate from the University of San Diego. With his wife, he created the 1995 television interview show, Ideas in Action, the winner of two prestigious Cinema in Industry (CINDY) Awards.

    Mr. Valliant is a regular expert commentator on several news programs in San Diego, California, including Fox 6 and KUSI news programs as a religious, legal, and political analyst. His next book is on the origins of the New Testament, and will be titled, Behind the Cross.

    Date: Saturday, April 15th

    Time:
    12:30-1:00 pm: Author Meet and Greet/Reception
    1:00-2:40 pm: Part I: Lecture + Author Signing
    2:45-4:00 pm: Lunch Break
    4:00-6:00 pm: Part II: Lecture + Author Signing

    8:00 pm: Dinner with Mr. Valliant
    Location: Downtown Chicago at the DePaul University Campus. More specific information will be provided to registrants.

    Cost: $44 per person ($34 full time students) before April 3rd
    $49 ($39 full time students) after April 3rd

    Enrollment: E-mail contact@chicagoobjectivists.org your RSVP.

    You can pay with a credit card via the Chicago Objectivist Society's web page.

    Read more...

    Monday, March 20, 2006

    Inside Scientology

    By Diana Hsieh

    Jim Lindgren has posted two nice summaries of the brouhaha over the damn funny South Park episode on Scientology. For those of you who might have missed it, it's available online, apparently with the blessing of Parker and Stone.

    In February, Rolling Stone published a lengthy article on Scientology, based in part upon substantial cooperation by the Church. The author, Janet Reitman, had "unprecedented access to its officials, social programs and key religious headquarters," but she did not write a fluff article in exchange. She presents the facts and then allows her readers to draw their own conclusions. Overall, I think the article is a very good survey of Scientology.

    Perhaps the most moving -- and most telling portion of the article was the last section:

    During the time I was researching this piece, I received a number of e-mails from several of the Scientologists I had interviewed. Most were still technically members of the church in good standing; privately they had grown disillusioned and have spoken about their feelings for the first time in this article. All of the young people mentioned in this story, save Natalie, are considered by the church hierarchy to be Potential Trouble Sources. But many have begun to worry they will be declared Suppressive Persons.

    Their e-mails expressed their second thoughts and their fears.

    "PLEASE, let me know what you will be writing in the story," wrote one young woman. "I just want to make sure that people won't be able to read it and figure out who I am. I know my mom will be reading."

    "The church is a big, scary deal," wrote another. "My [initial] attitude was if this information could save just one person the money, heartache and mind-bending control, then all would be worth it. [But] I'm frightened of what could happen."

    "I'm about two seconds away from losing my whole family, and if that story comes out with my stuff in it, I will," wrote a third. "I'm terrified. Please, please, please . . . if it's not too late . . . help me keep my family."

    One particularly frantic e-mail arrived shortly before this story was published. It came from a young Scientologist with whom I had corresponded several times in the course of three or four months. When we first met, she spoke passionately and angrily about the impact of the church on herself and those close to her.

    "Please forgive me," she wrote. "The huge majority of things I told you were lies. Perhaps I don't like Scientology. True. But what I do know is that I was born with the family I was born with, and I love them. Don't ask me to tear down the foundation of their lives." Like almost every young person mentioned in this piece, this woman was given a pseudonym to protect her identity, and her family's. But it wasn't enough, she decided. "This is my life . . . Accept what I tell you now for fact: I will not corroborate or back up a single thing I said.

    "I'm so sorry," she concluded. "I hope you understand that everyone I love is terribly important to me, and I am willing to look beyond their beliefs in order to keep them around. I will explain in further detail, perhaps, some other day."

    Wow.

    Read more...

    Back to TOP