Sponsored Message from American Liberty Watch
Friend,
I know what it's like to lose everything in a fire. That happened to me in November of 2007 when the Corral Canyon Fire destroyed my home along with 55 of my neighbors' homes.
l was flying back from San Francisco, where I'd spent Thanksgiving with family. Looking out of the airplane window, I could see an enormous, angry mushroom cloud, as if Malibu had been hit with an atomic bomb.
The next day, I learned that my little roll-on bag and the clothes on my back were the only physical possessions I now owned in the world. That plus a scorched plot of land where, other than an incinerated “fireproof safe,” all other remnants of what had been my house appeared to have been beamed off the face of the earth.
But of course, I had other inner possessions: my mind, my attitude, and my determination to persevere.
I also had the inspiration provided by Ayn Rand, how she overcame the loss of her family and her country and remade herself in the very city where I now needed to do the same.
Then I had the practical tools of Objectivism, helping me apply reason to identify and solve problems, motivating me to move forward in this ultimately benevolent universe, refusing to see myself as a victim, drawing on the pride I'd earned in past accomplishments to fuel the confidence to power through the rebuilding process.
But young people today don't have such tools. Surveys show Generation Z is anxious, fearful, and lacking in confidence, agency, and direction. They're besieged by narratives of victimhood and resentment. They lack the heroic vision of human possibility so magnificently presented in the literature of Ayn Rand.
The Atlas Society is on a mission to change that. We understand that daily reading among young people has plummeted over the last 50 years. So we're finding other ways to engage young people with Ayn Rand's literature, like adapting her famous novels and screenplays into other forms of media, like graphic novels, animated videos, and pocket guides.
Please invest in our efforts to bring Ayn Rand's literature and philosophy to the younger generation by donating $10, $35, $50, or more today. Click here to donate now. >>>
It's not just about finding the inner reserves to deal with the shock of total loss. It's about finding the strength, confidence, and resilience to move forward and rebuild. Tragically, as those here who decide to rebuild their homes will soon learn, their nightmare is just beginning as they embark on the dystopian journey of trying to navigate the costly, opaque, and interminable permitting process.
This is an ordeal I know only too well.
I managed to be the second of the 55 fire victims in our canyon to rebuild. It took me three years - two of those tied up with dealing with securing seemingly endless permits.
One I recall with particular bitterness: the Fire Department itself said it would withhold their permit unless I, a private citizen, paid for and undertook the widening of the public road in front of my house.
The public road...
For libertarians and Objectivists who are invariably mocked with the rejoinder, “But who will build the roads?” my state of affairs held a particular irony.
Apparently, for the government, the answer to that particular perennial question was: “Well, the fire victim, of course.”
At least that was their answer until I threatened to unleash a legal firestorm of my own. Inspired by Ayn Rand, I refused to provide the “sanction of the victim” to provide tacit moral support in my own victimization.
Now, I want to inspire the next generation to break out of the victimhood mentality that robs them of their individual dignity and agency. You can help The Atlas Society spread Ayn Rand's philosophy by clicking below.
Of course, the entire experience changed me. How could it not?
It gave me a visceral appreciation of the value of property-not as mere “stuff” but as a manifestation of work, time, productivity, and creativity. A living embodiment of choices and priorities. Those who'd say to fire victims, “Well, at least you're still alive,” don't know that several of my elderly neighbors who'd also lost their homes died within a year or so of the fires. The stress was just too much.
While the stress of the rebuilding process didn't kill me, it certainly aged me.
The Coastal Commission, in particular, refused to let me rebuild my entire 3,000 square foot home, despite my having presented evidence that that's precisely what I'd been paying property taxes on for years prior.
Like a faceless bureaucrat out of Atlas Shrugged, they'd repeat, “Our hands are tied.”
It's that kind of bureaucratic indifference, incompetence, and, yes, envy that will now confront the thousands who've lost everything in these ongoing fires.
That torture and humiliation will be compounded by the dawning realization that government indifference, incompetence, envy, and outright anti-humanity led to policies and priorities that made the destruction wreaked by these fires so much worse than they had to be:
When asked whether her magnum opus was a prophecy, Ayn Rand famously replied: “Atlas Shrugged is not a prophecy of our unavoidable destruction, but a manifesto of our power to avoid it if we choose to change our course.”
This begs the question: Will the residents of Los Angeles - especially those who've lost their homes and their businesses - will they choose to change course?
Will they realize the extent to which the incompetence of the elected leaders they voted for resulted in policies and priorities that made the destruction of the ongoing fires so much worse than it had to be?
Will the excruciating years ahead of dealing with the permitting process make them ask: “Why does it have to be this way?”
It doesn't - and didn't - have to be this way.
But Californians, at least those who haven't already “gone Galt” and moved out of state, will need to choose to change course.
They need...
At The Atlas Society, we are helping young people from across the country and around the world choose to change course. To reject the damaging doctrines of irrationalism, envy, self-sacrifice, brute force, and collectivism that have brought centuries of chaos and misery into the lives of millions of individuals.
You can help The Atlas Society offer these young people a rational and moral alternative in the marketplace of philosophical ideas by clicking below.
I hope with all my heart that the victims of these latest fires make it through stronger, wiser, and more resilient.
And I hope that that wisdom includes a reevaluation of continuing to support the same leaders and same policies that will lead to the same results next time we've got 80 mph Santa Ana winds blowing through Southern California's notoriously flammable landscape.
To do otherwise is to invite an inevitable repeat of the destruction that we see all around us today in the wake of these fires.
And if that comes to pass, despite this tragically teachable moment, then what other response is possible except the immortal lines from Atlas Shrugged?
“Brother, you asked for it.”
If you want to help the next generation choose to change course, embrace reality, and chart a more rational, productive, and pro-human future, this is your chance.
Please invest in our efforts by donating today.
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Thank you,
Jennifer Anju Grossman (JAG)
CEO
The Atlas Society
The Atlas Society is a 501(c)(3) Not For Profit Organization. All donations are tax-deductible.
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