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Politics : The Obama - Clinton Disaster -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John who wrote (32525)6/28/2010 7:23:49 PM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 103300
 
John Galt is a fictional character in Ayn Rand's novel Atlas Shrugged. Although he is absent from much of the text, he is the subject of the novel's often repeated question, "Who is John Galt?," and the quest to discover the answer.

As the plot unfolds, Galt is acknowledged to be a creator and inventor who symbolizes the power of the individual capitalist. He serves as an idealistic counterpoint to the social and economic structure depicted in the novel. The depiction portrays a society based on oppressive bureaucratic functionaries and a culture that embraces the stifling mediocrity and egalitarianism of socialistic idealism. In this popular mass ideology, the industrialists of America were a metaphorical Atlas of Greek mythology, holding up the world, whom Galt convinces to "shrug," by refusing to lend their productive genius to the regime any longer.

en.wikipedia.org

GZ



To: John who wrote (32525)6/29/2010 8:53:53 AM
From: Cage Rattler2 Recommendations  Respond to of 103300
 
John Galt (sp. corrected) comes from Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged and is an antithesis to parasitic characters like Obama.