The
Sociology of the Ayn Rand Cult
by Murray
N. Rothbard
Written in 1972, this
was the first piece of Rand revisionism from the libertarian
standpoint.
In
the America of the 1970s we are all too familiar with the religious
cult, which has been proliferating in the last decade.
Characteristic of the cult (from Hare Krishna to the "Moonies" to
EST to Scientology to the Manson Family) is the dominance of the
guru, or Maximum Leader, who is also the creator and ultimate
interpreter of a given creed to which the acolyte must be
unswervingly loyal. The major if not the only qualification for
membership and advancement in the cult is absolute loyalty to and
adoration of the guru, and absolute and unquestioning obedience to
his commands. The lives of the members are dominated by the guru’s
influence and presence. If the cult grows beyond a few members, it
naturally becomes hierarchically structured, if only because the
guru cannot spend his time indoctrinating and watching over every
disciple. Top positions in the hierarchy are generally filled by the
original handful of disciples, who come to assume these positions by
virtue of their longer stint of loyal and devoted service. Sometimes
the top leadership may be related to each other, a useful occurrence
which can strengthen intra-cult loyalty through the familial bond.
The
goals of the cult leadership are money and power. Power is achieved
over the minds of the disciples through inducing them to accept
without question the guru and his creed. This devotion is enforced
through psychological sanctions. For once the acolyte is imbued with
the view that approval of, and communication with, the guru are
essential to his life, then the implicit and explicit threat of
excommunication – of removal from the direct or indirect presence of
the guru – creates a powerful psychological sanction for the
"enforcement" of loyalty and obedience. Money flows upward from the
members through the hierarchy, either in the form of volunteer labor
service contributed by the members, or through cash payments.
It
should be clear at this point in history that an ideological cult
can adopt the same features as the more overtly religious cult, even
when the ideology is explicitly atheistic and anti-religious. That
the cults of Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, Trotsky, and Mao are
religious in nature, despite the explicit atheism of the latter, is
by now common knowledge. The adoration of the cult founder and
leader, the hierarchical structure, the unswerving loyalty, the
psychological (and when in command of State power, the physical)
sanctions are all too evident.
The Exoteric and the Esoteric
Every religious cult has two sets of differing and
distinctive creeds: the exoteric and the esoteric. The exoteric
creed is the official, public doctrine, the creed which attracts the
acolyte in the first place and brings him into the movement as a
rank-and-file member. The quite different creed is the unknown,
hidden agenda, a creed which is only known to its full extent by the
top leadership, the "high priests" of the cult. The latter are the
keepers of the Mysteries of the cult.
But
cults become particularly fascinating when the esoteric and exoteric
creeds are not only different, but totally and glaringly in mutual
contradiction. The havoc that this fundamental contradiction plays
in the minds and lives of the disciples may readily be imagined.
Thus, the various Marxist-Leninists cults officially and publicly
extol Reason and Science, and denounce all religion, and yet the
members are mystically attracted to the cult and its alleged
infallibility.
Thus, Alfred G. Meyer writes of Leninist views on party
infallibility:
Lenin seems to have believed that the party, as organized
consciousness, consciousness as a decision-making machinery, had
superior reasoning power. Indeed, in time this collective body took
on an aura of infallibility, which was later elevated to a dogma,
and a member’s loyalty was tested, in part, by his acceptance of it.
It became part of the communist confession of faith to proclaim that
the party was never wrong.... The party itself never makes
mistakes.1
If
the glaring inner contradictions of the Leninist cults make them
intriguing objects of study, still more so is the Ayn Rand cult,
which, while in some sense is still faintly alive, flourished for
just ten years in the 1960s; more specifically, from the founding of
the Nathaniel Branden lecture series in early 1958 to the
Rand-Branden split ten years later. For not only was the Rand cult
explicitly atheist, anti-religious, and an extoller of Reason; it
also promoted slavish dependence on the guru in the name of
independence; adoration and obedience to the leader in the name of
every person’s individuality; and blind emotion and faith in the
guru in the name of Reason.
Virtually every one of its members entered the cult through
reading Rand’s lengthy novel Atlas
Shrugged, which appeared in late 1957, a few months before
the organized cult came into being. Entering the movement through a
novel meant that despite repeated obeisances to Reason, febrile
emotion was the driving force behind the acolyte’s conversion. Soon,
he found that the Randian ideology sketched out in Atlas was
supplemented by a few non-fiction essays, and, in particular, by a
regular monthly magazine, The Objectivist Newsletter (later,
The Objectivist).
The Index of Permitted Books
Since every cult is grounded on a faith in the infallibility
of the guru, it becomes necessary to keep its disciples in ignorance
of contradictory infidel writings which may wean cult members away
from the fold. The Catholic Church maintained an Index of Prohibited
Books; more sweeping was the ancient Muslim cry: "Burn all books,
for all truth is in the Koran!" But cults, which attempt to mold
every member into a rigidly integrated world view, must go further.
Just as Communists are often instructed not to read anti-Communist
literature, the Rand cult went further to disseminate what was
virtually an Index of Permitted Books. Since most neophyte Randians
were both young and relatively ignorant, a careful channeling of
their reading insured that they would remain ignorant of non- or
anti-Randian ideas or arguments permanently (except as they were
taken up briefly, brusquely, and in a highly distorted and hectoring
fashion in Randian publications).
The
philosophical rationale for keeping Rand cultists in blissful
ignorance was the Randian theory of "not giving your sanction to the
Enemy." Reading the Enemy (which, with a few carefully selected
exceptions, meant all non- or anti-Randians) meant "giving him your
moral sanction," which was strictly forbidden as irrational. In a
few selected cases, limited exceptions were made for leading cult
members who could prove that they had to read certain Enemy works in
order to refute them. This book-banning reached its apogee after the
titanic Rand-Branden split in late 1968, a split which was the moral
equivalent in miniature of, say, a split between Marx and Lenin, or
between Jesus and St. Paul. In a development eerily reminiscent of
the organized hatred directed against the arch-heretic Emanuel
Goldstein in Orwell’s 1984,
Rand cultists were required to sign a loyalty oath to Rand;
essential to the loyalty oath was a declaration that the signer
would henceforth never read any future works of the apostate and
arch-heretic Branden. After the split, any Rand cultist seen
carrying a book or writing by Branden was promptly excommunicated.
Close relatives of Branden were expected to – and did – break with
him completely.
Interestingly enough for a movement which proclaimed its
devotion to the individual exertion of reason, to curiosity, and to
the question "Why?" cultists were required to swear their
unquestioning belief that Rand was right and Branden wrong, even
though they were not permitted to learn the facts behind the split.
In fact, the mere failure to take a stand, the mere attempt to find
the facts, or the statement that one could not take a stand on such
a grave matter without knowledge of the facts was sufficient for
instant expulsion. For such an attitude was conclusive proof of the
defective "loyalty" of the disciple to his guru, Ayn Rand.
Steel-Hardened Cadre Man
Frank Meyer writes, in his The Moulding of
Communists,2
of the series of crises that Communists repeatedly go through in
their career in the Party. From his account, it is clear that the
rank-and-file member joins the party from being attracted to the
official or exoteric creed; but, as he continues in the Party and
rises through its hierarchical structures, he is confronted with a
series of crises that test his mettle, that either drive him out of
the party or convert him increasingly into a steel-hardened cadre
man. The crises might be ideological, say, justifying slave labor
camps or the Stalin-Hitler pact, or it might be personal, to
demonstrate that one’s loyalty to the party is higher than to
friends, family, or loved ones. The continuing pressure of such
crises leads, unsurprisingly, to a very high turnover in Communist
ranks, creating a sea of ex-Communists far larger than the party
itself at any given time.
A
similar but far more intensive process remained at work throughout
the years of the Randian movement The Randian neophyte typically
joined the movement emotionally caught by Atlas and impressed
by the concepts of reason, liberty, individuality, and independence.
A series of crises and growing inner contradictions was then
necessary to gain power over the minds and lives of the membership,
and to inculcate absolute loyalty to Rand, both in ideological
matters and in personal lives. But what mechanisms did the cult
leaders use to develop such blind loyalty?
One
method, as we have seen, was to keep the members in ignorance.
Another was to insure that every spoken and written word of the
Randian member was not only correct in content but also in form, for
any slight nuance or difference in wording could and would be
attacked for deviating from the Randian position. Thus, just as the
Marxist movements developed jargon and slogans which were clung to
for fear of uttering incorrect deviations, the same was true in the
Randian movement. In the name of "precision of language," in short,
nuance and even synonyms were in effect prohibited.
Another method was to keep the members, as far as possible,
in a state of fevered emotion through continual re-readings of
Atlas. Shortly after Atlas was published, one
high-ranking cult leader chided me for only having read Atlas
once. "It’s about time for you to start reading it again," he
admonished. "I have already read Atlas thirty-five times."
The
rereading of Atlas was also important to the cult because the
wooden, posturing, and one-dimensional heroes and heroines were
explicitly supposed to serve as role models for every Randian. Just
as every Christian is supposed to aim at the imitation of Christ in
his own daily life, so every Randian was supposed to aim at the
imitation of John Galt (Rand’s hero of heroes in Atlas.) He
was always supposed to ask himself in every situation "What would
John Galt have done?" When we remind ourselves that Jesus, after
all, was an actual historical figure whereas Galt was not, the
bizarrerie of this injunction can be readily grasped. (Although from
the awed way Randians spoke of John Galt, one often got the
impression that, for them, the line between fiction and reality was
very thin indeed.)
Her Bible
The
Biblical nature of Atlas for many Randians is illustrated by
the wedding of a Randian couple that took place in New York. At the
ceremony, the couple pledged their joint devotion and fealty to Ayn
Rand, and then supplemented it by opening Atlas – perhaps at
random – to read aloud a passage from the sacred text.
Wit
and humor, as might be gathered from this incident, were verboten
in the Randian movement. The philosophical rationale was that
humor demonstrates that one "is not serious about one’s values." The
actual reason, of course, is that no cult can withstand the piercing
and sobering effect, the sane perspective, provided by humor. One
was permitted to sneer at one’s enemies, but that was the only humor
allowed, if humor that be.
Personal enjoyment, indeed, was also frowned upon in the
movement and denounced as hedonistic "whim-worship." In particular,
nothing could be enjoyed for its own sake – every activity had to
serve some indirect, "rational" function. Thus, food was not to be
savored, but only eaten joylessly as a necessary means of one’s
survival; sex was not to be enjoyed for its own sake, but only to be
engaged in grimly as a reflection and reaffirmation of one’s
"highest values"; painting or movies only to be enjoyed if one could
find "rational values" in doing so. All of these values were not
simply to be discovered quietly by each person – the heresy of
"subjectivism" – but had to be proven to the rest of the cult. In
practice, as will be seen further below, the only safe aesthetic or
romantic "values" or objects for the member were those explicitly
sanctioned by Ayn Rand or other top disciples.
As
in the case of all cults and sects, a particularly vital method for
moulding the members and keeping them in line was maintaining their
constant and unrelenting activity within the movement. Frank Meyer
relates that Communists preserve their members from the dangerous
practice of thinking on their own by keeping them in constant
activity together with other Communists. He notes that, of the major
Communist defectors in the United States, almost all defected only
after a period of enforced isolation. In short, they had room to
think for themselves (e.g. ,being in the army, going underground,
etc.). In the case of Randians – particularly in New York City,
where the movement was largest and Rand and the top hierarchy all
lived – activity was continuous. Every night one of the top Randians
lectured to different members expounding various aspects of the
"party line": on basics, on psychology, fiction, sex, thinking, art,
economics, or philosophy. (This structure reflected the vision of
Utopia outlined in Atlas Shrugged itself, where every evening
was spent with the heroes and heroines lecturing to each other.)
Failure to attend these lectures was a matter of serious
concern in the movement. The philosophical rationale for the
pressure to attend these meetings went as follows:
- Randians
are the most rational people one could possibly meet (a
conclusion derived from the thesis that Randianism was
rationality in theory and in practice);
- You, of
course, want to be rational (and if you didn’t, you were in
grave trouble in the movement);
- Ergo, you
should be eager to spend all your time with fellow Randians and
a fortiori with Rand and her top disciples if possible.
The
logic seemed impeccable, but what if, as so often happens, one
didn’t like, even couldn’t stand, these people? Under Randian
theory, emotions are always the consequence of ideas, and incorrect
emotions the consequence of wrong ideas, so that therefore, personal
dislike of other (and especially of leading) Randians must be due to
a grave canker of irrationality which either had to be kept
concealed or else confessed to the leaders. Any such confession
meant a harrowing process of ideological and psychological
purification, supposedly ending in one’s success at achieving
rationality, independence, and self-esteem and therefore an
unquestioning and blind devotion to Ayn Rand.
One
incident of suppressed doubt of Randian tenets is revealing of the
psychology of even the leading cult members. One top young Randian,
a veteran of the movement in New York City, admitted privately one
day that he had grave doubts on a key Randian philosophic tenet: I
believe it was the fact of his own existence. He was deathly afraid
to ask the question, it being so basic that he knew he would be
excommunicated on the spot for simply raising the point; but he had
complete faith that if Rand should be asked the question, she would
answer it satisfactorily and resolve his doubts. And so he waited,
year after year, hoping against hope that someone would ask the
question, be expelled, but that his own doubts would then be
resolved in the process.
In
the manner of many cults, loyalty to the guru had to supersede
loyalty to family and friends – typically the first personal crises
for the fledgling Randian. If non-Randian family and friends
persisted in their heresies even after being hectored at some length
by the young neophyte, they were then considered to be irrational
and part of the Enemy and had to be abandoned. The same was true of
spouses; many marriages were broken up by the cult leadership who
sternly informed either the wife or the husband that their spouses
were not sufficiently Randworthy. Indeed, since emotions resulted
only from premises, and since the leaders’ premises were by
definition supremely rational, that top leadership presumed to try
to match and unmatch couples. As one of them asserted one day: "I
know all the rational young men and women in New York and I can
match them up." But suppose that Mr. A was matched with Miss B and
one of them didn’t like the other? Well, once again, "reason"
prevailed: the dislike was irrational, requiring intensive
psychotherapeutic investigation to purge oneself of the erroneous
ideas.
Psychological Hold
The
psychological hold that the cult held on the members may be
illustrated by the case of one girl, a certified top Randian, who
experienced the misfortune of falling in love with an unworthy
non-Randian. The leadership told the girl that if she persisted in
her desire to marry the man, she would be instantly excommunicated.
She did so nevertheless, and was promptly expelled. And yet, a year
or so later, she told a friend that the Randians had been right,
that she had indeed sinned and that they should have expelled her as
unworthy of being a rational Randian.
But
the most important sanction for the enforcement of loyalty and
obedience, the most important instrument for psychological control
of the members, was the development and practice of Objectivist
Psychotherapy. In effect, this psychological theory held that since
emotion always stems from incorrect ideas, that therefore all
neurosis did so as well; and hence, the cure for that neurosis is to
discover and purge oneself of those incorrect ideas and values. And
since Randian ideas were all correct and all deviation therefore
incorrect, Objectivist Psychotherapy consisted of (a) inculcating
everyone with Randian theory – except now in a supposedly
psycho-therapeutic setting; and (b) searching for the hidden
deviation from Randian theory responsible for the neurosis and
purging it by correcting the deviation.
It
is clear that, considering the emotional and psychological power of
the psychotherapeutic experience, the Rand cult had in its hands a
powerful weapon for reinforcing and sanctioning the moulding of the
New Randian Man. Philosophy and psychology, explicit doctrine,
social pressure, and therapeutic pressure, all reinforced each other
to generate obedient and loyal acolytes of Ayn Rand.
It
is no wonder that the enormous psychological pressure of cult
membership led to an extremely high turnover in the Randian
movement, relatively far more so than among the Communists. But so
long as he was in the movement, a new Randian Man emerged, a grim
and joyless figure indeed. For a while the Randians would discourse
at length on "happiness," and on the alleged fact of their perpetual
state of being happy, it became clear on closer examination that
they were happy only by definition. That in short, in Randian
theory, happiness refers not at all to the ordinary language meaning
of subjective states of contentment or joy, but to the alleged fact
of using one’s mind to the fullest (i.e., in agreement with Randian
precepts).
In
practice, however, the dominant subjective emotions of the Randian
cultist were fear and even terror: fear of displeasing Rand or her
leading disciples; fear of using an incorrect word or nuance that
would get the member into trouble; fear of being found out in the
"irrationality" of some ideological or personal deviation; fear,
even, of smiling at an unworthy (i.e., non-Randian) person. Such
fear was greater than that of a Communist member, because the
Randian had far less leeway for ideological or personal deviation.
Furthermore, since Rand had an absolute and total line on every
conceivable question of ideology and daily life, all aspects of such
life had to be searched – by oneself and by others – for suspicious
heresies and deviations. Everything was the object of fear and
suspicion. There was the fear of making an independent judgement,
for suppose that the member was to make a statement on some subject
on which he did not know Rand’s position, and then were to find out
that Rand disagreed. The Randian would then be in grave trouble,
even if the only problem were that his language was a bit
differently nuanced. So it was far more prudent to keep silent and
then check with headquarters for the precisely correct line.
Check With Headquarters
Thus, one time a leading Randian attorney was giving a speech
on Randian political theory. During the question period, he was
caught short by being asked how he could reconcile Rand’s support
for the compulsory subpoena power with the Randian political axiom
of non-initiation of force. He hemmed and hawed, and then said that
he had to think about this – a code phrase for hurriedly checking
with Rand and the other leaders on the proper answer.
Part
of the continuing need to check with headquarters came from the fact
that Rand, though considered infallible by her disciples, changed
her mind a great deal, particularly on concrete personalities or
institutions. The fundamental line change on Branden is a glaring
example, as well as the line change on other formerly high-ranking
Randians who were expelled from the movement. But far more frequent
if less important were changes of position on show business folk
whom Rand might have met. Thus, the "line" on such people as Johnny
Carson or Mike Wallace (prominent TV personalities) changed rapidly
– largely because of Rand’s discovering various heresies and alleged
betrayals on their part. If the Randian member was not attuned to
these changes, and happened to aver that Carson was "rational" or
had a benevolent "sense of life" when he had already been designated
as irrational or malevolent, he was in for serious trouble and
inquiry into the rationality of his own premises.
Driven by their conception of rational duty, every Randian
lived in – and indeed was himself – a community of spies and
informers, ready to ferret out and denounce any deviations from
Randian doctrine. Thus, one time a Randian, walking with a girl
friend, told her that he had attended a party at which several
Randians had made an impromptu tape imitating the voices of the top
Randian leaders. Stricken by this dire information and after
spending a sleepless night, the girl rushed to inform the top
leadership of this terrible transgression. Promptly, the leading
participants were called on the carpet by their Objectivist
Psychotherapist and bitterly denounced in their "therapy" sessions:
"After all," said the therapist, "you wouldn’t mock God." When the
owner of the tape refused the therapist’s demand to relinquish it so
that it could be inspected in detail, his doom as a member of the
movement was effectively sealed.
No
Randian, even the top leadership, was exempt from the all-pervasive
fear and repression. Every one of the original cadre, for example,
was placed on probation at least once, and was forced to demonstrate
his loyalty to Rand at length and in numerous ways. How such an
atmosphere of fear and censorship crippled the productivity of
Randian members may be seen by the fact that not one of the top
Randians published any books while in the movement (all of Branden’s
books, for example, were published after his expulsion). The only
exception that proves the rule was the authorized exercise in
uncritical adulation, Who Is Ayn Rand? by Barbara Branden.
But
if the Randian lived in a state of fear and awe of Rand and her
leading disciples, there were psychological compensations; for he
could also live in the exciting and comforting knowledge that he was
one of a small number of elect, that only the members of this small
band were in tune with reason and reality. The rest of the world,
even those who were seemingly intelligent, happy, and successful,
were really living in limbo, cut off from reason and from
understanding the nature of reality. They could not be happy because
cult theory decreed that happiness can only be achieved by being a
committed Randian; they couldn’t even be intelligent, since how
could seemingly intelligent people not be Randians, especially if
they commit the gravest sin – failing to become Randians once they
were exposed to this new gospel.
Excommunications and Purges
We
have already mentioned the excommunications and "purges" in the
Randian movement. Often, the excommunications – especially of
important Randians – proceeded in a ritual manner. The errant member
was peremptorily ordered to appear at a "trial" to hear charges
against him. If he refused to appear – as he would if he had any
shred of self-respect left – then the trial would continue in
absentia, with all the members present taking turns in denouncing
the expelled member, reading charges against him (again in a manner
eerily reminiscent of 1984). When his inevitable conviction
was sealed, someone – generally his closest friend – wrote the
excommunicate, a bitter, febrile, and portentous letter, damning the
apostate forevermore and excluding him forever from the Elysian
fields of reason and reality. Having his closest friend take the
leading part in the heresy proceeding was of course important as a
way of forcing the friend to demonstrate his own loyalty to Rand,
thereby clearing himself of any lingering taint by association. It
is reported that when Branden was expelled, one of his closest
former friends in New York sent him a letter proclaiming that the
only moral thing he could do at that point was to commit suicide – a
strange position for an allegedly pro-life, pro-individual-purpose
philosophy to take.
The
break with the apostate – even if once closest friends – had to be
uncompromising, permanent, and total. Thus, a woman, very high in
the Randian hierarchy, once hired a Randian girl to be her assistant
in editing a magazine. When the woman was summarily expelled from
the movement, her assistant refused to talk to her at all, except
strictly in the line of business – a position steadfastly maintained
despite the obvious tensions at the office that had to result.
As
is true of all witch-hunting groups, the greatest sin was not so
much the specific transgressions of the member, but any refusal to
sanction the heresy-hunting procedure itself. Thus, Barbara Branden
reported that her greatest sin was held to be her refusal to attend,
and therefore to sanction the legitimacy of, her own trial, and
other purgees have had similar tales to tell.
It
should come as no surprise to learn that, in contrast to most other
psychotherapies, the Objectivist Psychotherapists served as stern
moral guardians for the troops. "Immoral" patients were expelled
from therapy, a practice that reached its apogee when patients of
Objectivist Psychotherapists were expelled for simply asking their
therapists the reasons for the Rand-Branden split.
Thus, kept in ignorance of the world, of facts, ideas, or
people who might deviate from the full Randian line, held in check
by adoration and terror of Rand and her anointed hierarchy, the
grim, robotic, joyless Randian Man emerged.
For
the moulding processes of the cult did succeed in creating a New
Randian Man – for so long as the man or woman remained in the
movement. People were invariably transformed by the moulding process
from diverse, often likeable men and women to grim, tense, hostile
poseurs – whose personalities could best be summed up by the word
"robotic." Robotically, the Randians intoned their slogans,
generally imitating the poses and manner of Nathaniel and Barbara
Branden, and further, imitating their common cult vision of heroes
and heroines of the Randian fictional canon. If any criticism of
Rand or her disciples were made, or any arguments were pressed that
they could not answer, the Randians would adopt a tone of high
offense: "How dare you say such a thing about her?," turn on their
heels and stomp off. No smile, nor many other human qualities,
managed to shine through their ritualized facade. Many of the young
men managed to look like carbon copies of Branden, while the young
women tried to look like Barbara Branden, replete with the
cigarette-holder held aloft, derived from Ayn Rand herself, that was
supposed to symbolize the high moral standards and the mocking
contempt wielded by Randian heroines.
Son of Rand
Some
Randians emulated their leader by changing their names from Russian
or Jewish to a presumably harder, tougher, more heroic Anglo-Saxon.
Branden himself changed his name from Blumenthal; it is perhaps not
a coincidence, as Nora Ephron has pointed out, that if the letters
of the new name are rearranged, they spell, B-E-N-R-A-N-D, Hebrew
for "son of Rand." A Randian girl, with a Polish name beginning with
"G-r," announced one day that she was changing her name the
following week. When asked deadpan, by a humorous observer whether
she was changing her name to "Grand," she replied, in all
seriousness, that no she was changing it to "Grant" – presumably, as
the observer later remarked, the "t" was her one gesture of
independence.
If
looking and talking and even being named like the top Randians was
the most "rational" way to act, and seeing them as much as possible
was the most rational form of activity, then surely residing as
close as possible to the leaders was the rational place to live.
Thus, the typical New York Randian, upon his or her conversion,
would leave his parents and find an apartment as close to Rand’s as
possible. As a result, virtually the entire New York movement lived
with a few square blocks of each other in Manhattan’s East 30’s,
many of the leaders in the same apartment house as Rand’s.
If
continuing an intense psychological pressure was in part responsible
for the extremely high turnover among Randian disciples, another
reason for this turnover was the very fact that the movement had a
rigid line on literally every subject, from aesthetics to history to
epistemology. In the first place it meant that deviation from the
correct line was all too easy: Preferring Bach, for example, to
Rachmaninoff, subjected one to charges of believing in a "malevolent
universe." lf not corrected by self-criticism and psychotherapeutic
brainwashing, such deviation could well lead to ejection from the
movement. Secondly, it is difficult to impose a rigid line on every
area of life and thought when, as was the case with Rand and her top
disciples, they were largely ignorant of these various disciplines.
Rand admitted that reading was not her strong suit, and the
disciples, of course, were not allowed to read the real world of
heresies even if they had been inclined to do so. And so the young
convert – and they were almost all young – began to buckle when he
learned more about his own chosen subject. Thus, the historian, upon
learning more his subject, could scarcely rest content with long
outdated Burkhardtian clichés about the Renaissance, or the pap
about the Founding Fathers. And if the disciple began to realize
that Rand was wrong and oversimplified in his own field, it was easy
for him to entertain fundamental doubts about her infallibility
elsewhere.
Rational Tobacco
The
all-encompassing nature of the Randian line may be illustrated by an
incident that occurred to a friend of mine who once asked a leading
Randian if he disagreed with the movement’s position on any
conceivable subject. After several minutes of hard thought, the
Randian replied: "Well, I can’t quite understand their position on
smoking." Astonished that the Rand cult had any position on smoking,
my friend pressed on: "They have a position on smoking? What is it?"
The Randian replied that smoking, according to the cult, was a moral
obligation. In my own experience, a top Randian once asked me rather
sharply, "How is it that you don’t smoke?" When I replied that I had
discovered early that I was allergic to smoke, the Randian was
mollified: "Oh, that’s OK, then." The official justification for
making smoking a moral obligation was a sentence in Atlas
where the heroine refers to a lit cigarette as symbolizing a
fire in the mind, the fire of creative ideas. (One would think that
simply holding up a lit match could do just as readily for this
symbolic function.) One suspects that the actual reason, as in so
many other parts of Randian theory, from Rachmaninoff to Victor Hugo
to tap dancing, was that Rand simply liked smoking and had the need
to cast about for a philosophical system that would make her
personal whims not only moral but also a moral obligation incumbent
upon everyone who desires to be rational.
If
the Rand line was totalitarian, encompassing all of one’s life,
then, even when all the general premises were agreed upon and
Randians checked with headquarters to see who was In or Out, there
was still need to have some "judicial" mechanism to resolve concrete
issues and to make sure that every member toed the line on that
question. No one was ever allowed to be neutral on any issue. The
judicial mechanism to resolve such concrete disputes was, as usual
in cults, the rank one enjoyed in the Randian hierarchy. By
definition, so to speak, the higher-ranking Randian was right, the
lower one wrong, and everyone accepted this Argument from Authority
that might have seemed not exactly consonant with the explicit
Randian devotion to Reason.
One
amusing incident illustrates this decision-by-hierarchy. One day a
dispute over concretes occurred between two certified and
high-ranking Randians, both of whom had been dubbed as rational by
their Objectivist Psychotherapist. Specifically, one was a secretary
to the other. The secretary went to her boss and demanded a raise,
which she rationally intuited was her just desert. The boss,
however, checking his own reason, decided that she was incompetent
and fired her. Now here was a dispute, a conflict of interest,
between two certified Randians. How were all the other members to
decide who was right, and therefore rational, and who was wrong,
irrational, and therefore subject to expulsion? In any truly
rational group of people, of course, it would not be incumbent upon
anyone but these – the only ones familiar with the facts of the case
– to take any position at all. But that sort of benign neutrality is
not permitted in any cult, including the Randian one. Given the need
to impose a uniform line on everyone, the dispute was resolved in
the only way possible: through rank in the hierarchy. The boss
happened to be in the top rank of disciples; and since the secretary
was on a lower rank, she not only suffered discharge from her job,
but expulsion from the Randian movement as well.
The Pyramid
And
the Randian movement was strictly hierarchical. At the top of the
pyramid, of course, was Rand herself, the Ultimate Decider of all
questions. Branden, her designated "intellectual heir," and the St.
Paul of the movement, was Number 2. Third in rank was the top
circle, the original disciples, those who had been converted before
the publication of Atlas. Since they were converted by
reading her previous novel, The
Fountainhead, which had been published 1943, the top circle
was designated in the movement as "the class of '43." But there was
an unofficial designation that was far more revealing: "the senior
collective." On the surface, this phrase was supposed to
"underscore" the high individuality of each of the Randian members;
in reality, however, there was an irony within the irony, since the
Randian movement was indeed a "collective" in any genuine meaning of
the term. Strengthening the ties within the senior collective was
the fact that each and every one of them was related to each other,
all being part of one Canadian Jewish family, relatives of either
Nathan or Barbara Branden. There was, for example, Nathan’s sister
Elaine Kalberman; his brother-in-law, Harry Kalberman; his first
cousin, Dr. Allan Blumenthal, who assumed the mantle of leading
Objectivist Psychotherapist after Branden’s expulsion; Barbara’s
first cousin, Leonard Piekoff; and Joan Mitchell, wife of Allan
Blumenthal. Alan Greenspan’s familial relation was more tenuous,
being the former husband of Joan Mitchell. The only non-relative in
the class of '43 was Mary Ann Rukovina, who made the top rank after
being the college roommate of Joan Mitchell.
These were the disciples before the publication of Atlas.
After that, Branden began his basic lecture series, which soon
evolved into the Nathaniel Branden Institute, the organizational arm
of the movement. Eventually, NBI was established in Rand’s
symbolically heroic Empire State Building, although it resided
unheroically in the basement. In New York City, the various lectures
and lecture series were put on in person; outside New York, each
city or region had a designated NBI representative, who was in
charge of putting on performances of the lectures on tape. The NBI
rep was generally the most robotic and faithful Randian in his
particular area, and so attempts were made, largely though not
always totally successfully, to duplicate the atmosphere of awe and
obedience pervading the mother section in New York. Determined
efforts were made to translate Rand’s mass readership of her
best-selling works into faithful disciples who would first subscribe
to The Objectivist, and then keep attending NBI taped
lectures in their area, thus being inducted into the movement. If a
flow of magazines, tapes, and recommended books went out from NBI to
the rank-and-file members of the movement, a flow of money and
volunteer labor inevitably travelled the reverse path, not excluding
payments for psychotherapeutic services.
It
has been evident throughout this paper that the structure and
implicit creed, the actual functioning, of the Randian movement, was
in striking and diametric opposition to the official, exoteric creed
of individuality, independence, and everyone’s acknowledging no
authority but his own mind and reason. But we have not yet precisely
focused upon the central axiom of the esoteric creed of the Randian
movement, the implicit premise, the hidden agenda that insured and
enforced the unquestioning loyalty of the disciples. That central
axiom was the assertion the "Ayn Rand is the greatest person that
has ever lived or ever shall live." If Ayn Rand is the greatest
person of all time, it follows that she is right on every question,
or at the very least, will far more likely be correct at any time
than the mere disciple, who grants himself no such all-encompassing
greatness.
Typical of this attitude was a meeting of leading young
Randians attended by a friend of mine. The meeting turned into a
series of testimonials, in which each person in turn testified to
the overriding influence that Ayn Rand had been in his own life. As
one of them explained: "Ayn Rand has brought to the world the
knowledge that A is A, and that 2 and 2 equal 4." When a top
Randian, on hearing that a notoriously refractory member who was in
the process of leaving the movement had written a parody in the
Randian philosophical manner, a "proof" that Ayn Rand was God, the
Randian, in genuine puzzlement, asked: "He’s kidding, isn’t he?"
There was a generally consuming concern with greatness and
rank among the Randians. It was universally agreed that Rand was the
greatest person of all time. There was then a friendly dispute about
the precise ranking of Branden among the all-time all-stars. Some
maintained that Branden was the second greatest of all time; others
that Branden tied for second in a dead heat with Aristotle. Such was
the range of permitted disagreement within the Randian movement.
The
adoption of the central axiom of Rand’s greatness was made possible
by Rand’s undoubted personal charisma, a charisma buttressed by her
air of unshakeable arrogance and self-assurance. It was a charisma
and an arrogance that was partially emulated by her leading
disciples. Since the rank-and-file disciple knew in his heart that
he was not all-wise or totally self-assured, it became all too easy
to subordinate his own will and intellect to that of Rand. Rand
became the living embodiment of Reason and Reality and by some
quality of personality Rand was able to bring about the mind-set in
her disciples that their highest value was to earn her approval
while the gravest sin was to incur her displeasure. The ardent
belief in Rand’s supreme originality was of course reinforced by the
disciples’ not having read (or been able to read) anyone whom they
might have discovered had said the same things long before.
Ejection From Paradise
The
Rand cult grew and flourished until the irrevocable split between
the Greatest and the Second Greatest, until Satan was ejected from
Paradise in the fall of 1968. The Rand-Branden split destroyed NBI,
and with it the organized Randian movement. Rand has not displayed
the ability or the desire to pick up the pieces and reconstitute an
equivalent organization. The Objectivist fell back to The
Ayn Rand Letter, and now that too has gone.
With
the death of NBI, the Randian cultists were cast adrift, for the
first time in a decade, to think for themselves. Generally, their
personalities rebounded to their non-robotic, pre-Randian selves.
But there were some unfortunate legacies of the cult. In the first
place, there is the problem of what the Thomists call invincible
ignorance. For many ex-cultists remain imbued with the Randian
belief that every individual is armed with the means of spinning out
all truths a priori from his own head – hence there is felt to be no
need to learn the concrete facts about the real world, either about
contemporary history or the laws of the social sciences. Armed with
axiomatic first principles, many ex-Randians see no need of learning
very much else. Furthermore, lingering Randian hubris imbues many
ex-members with the idea that each one is able and qualified to spin
out an entire philosophy of life and of the world a priori. Such
aberrations as the "Students of Objectivism for Rational Bestiality"
are not far from the bizarreries of many neo-Randian philosophies,
preaching to a handful of zealous partisans. On the other hand,
there is another understandable but unfortunate reaction. After many
years of subjection to Randian dictates in the name of "reason,"
there is a tendency among some ex-cultists to bend the stick the
other way, to reject reason or thinking altogether in the name of
hedonistic sensation and caprice.
We
conclude our analysis of the Rand cult with the observation that
here was an extreme example of contradiction between the exoteric
and the esoteric creed. That in the name of individuality, reason,
and liberty, the Rand cult in effect preached something totally
different. The Rand cult was concerned not with every man’s
individuality, but only with Rand’s individuality, not with
everyone’s right reason but only with Rand’s reason. The only
individuality that flowered to the extent of blotting out all
others, was Ayn Rand’s herself; everyone else was to become a cipher
subject to Rand’s mind and will.
Nikolai Bukharin’s famous denuciation of the Stalin cult,
masked during the Russia of the 1930’s as a critique of the Jesuit
order, does not seem very overdrawn as a portrayal of the Randian
reality:
It
has been correctly said that there isn’t a meanness in the world
which would not find for itself and ideological justification. The
king of the Jesuits, Loyola, developed a theory of subordination, of
"cadaver discipline," every member of the order was supposed to obey
his superior "like a corpse which could be turned in all directions,
like a stick which follows every movement, like a ball of wax which
could be changed and extended in all directions"... This corpse is
characterized by three degrees of perfection: subordination by
action,
subordination of the will, subordination of the intellect. When the
last degree is reached, when the man substitutes naked subordination
for intellect, renouncing all his convictions, then you have a
hundred percent Jesuit.3
It
has been remarked that a curious contradiction existed with the
strategic perspective of the Randian movement. For, on the one hand,
disciples were not allowed to read or talk to other persons who
might be quite close to them as libertarians or Objectivists. Within
the broad rationalist or libertarian movement, the Randians took a
100% pure, ultra-sectarian stance. And yet, in the larger political
world, the Randian strategy shifted drastically, and Rand and her
disciples were willing to endorse and work with politicians who
might only be one millimeter more conservative than their opponents.
In the larger world, concern with purity or principles seemed to be
totally abandoned. Hence, Rand’s whole-hearted endorsement of
Goldwater, Nixon, and Ford, and even of Senators Henry Jackson and
Daniel P. Moynihan.
Neither Liberty Nor Reason
There seems to be only one way to resolve the contradiction
in the Randian strategic outlook of extreme sectarianism within the
libertarian movement, coupled with extreme opportunism, and
willingness to coalesce with slightly more conservative heads of
State, in the outside world. That resolution, confirmed by the
remainder of our analysis of the cult, holds that the guiding spirit
of the Randian movement was not individual liberty – as it seemed to
many young members – but rather personal power for Ayn Rand and her
leading disciples. For power within the movement could be secured by
totalitarian isolation and control of the minds and lives of every
member; but such tactics could scarcely work outside the movement,
where power could only hopefully be achieved by cozying up the
President and his inner circles of dominion.
Thus, power not liberty or reason, was the central thrust of
the Randian movement. The major lesson of the history of the
movement to libertarians is that It Can Happen Here, that
libertarians, despite explicit devotion to reason and individuality,
are not exempt from the mystical and totalitarian cultism that
pervades other ideological as well as religious movements.
Hopefully, libertarians, once bitten by the virus, may now prove
immune.
Bibliographical Note
Of
the several works on Randianism, only one has concentrated on the
cult itself: Leslie Hanscom, "Born Eccentric," Newsweek
(March 27, 1961), pp. 104–05. Hanscom brilliantly and wittily
captured the spirit of the Rand cult from attending and reporting on
one of the Branden lectures. Thus, Hanscom wrote:
After three hours of heroically rapt attention to Branden’s
droning delivery, the fans were rewarded by the personal apparition
of Miss Rand herself – a lady with drilling black eyes and Russian
accent who often wears a brooch in the shape of a dollar sign as her
private icon….
"Her
books," said one member of the congregation, "are so good that most
people should not be allowed to read them. I used to want to lock up
nine-tenths of the world in a cage, and after reading her books, I
want to lock them all up." Later on, this same chap – a
self-employed "investment counselor" of 22 – got a lash of his
idol’s logic full in the face. Submitting a question from the floor
– a privilege open to paying students only – the budding Baruch
revealed himself as a mere visitor. Miss Rand – a lady whose glare
would wilt a cactus – bawled him out from the platform as a "cheap
fraud." Other seekers of wisdom came off better. One worried
disciple was told that it was permissible to celebrate Christmas and
Easter so long as one rejected the religious significance (the topic
of the night’s lecture was the folly of faith). A housewife was
assured that she needn’t feel guilty about being a housewife so long
as she chose the job for non-emotional reasons….
Although mysticism is one of the nastiest words in her
political arsenal, there hasn’t been a she-messiah since Aimee
McPherson who can so hypnotize a live audience."4
At
least as revelatory as Hanscom’s article were the predictable howls
of overkill outrage by the cult members. Thus, two weeks later,
under the caption "Thugs and Hoodlums?", Newsweek printed
excerpts from Randian letters sent in reaction to the article. One
letter stated: "Your vicious, vile, and obscene tirade against Ayn
Rand is a new low, even for you. To have sanctioned such a stream of
abusive invective…is an act of unprecedented moral depravity. A
magazine staffed with irresponsible hoodlums has no place in my
home." Another man wrote that "one who has read the works of Miss
Rand and proceeds to write an article of this caliber can only be
motivated by villainy. It is the work of a literary thug." Another
warned, "Since you propose to behave like cockroaches, be prepared
to be treated as such." And finally, one Bonnie Benov revealed the
inner axiom: "Ayn Rand is...the greatest individual that has ever
lived." Having fun with the cult, Newsweek printed a particularly
unprepossessing picture of Rand underneath the Benov letter, and
captioned it: "Greatest Ever?"5
Notes
1. Alfred G.
Meyer, Leninism
(New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1962), pp. 97–98. A
particularly vivid expression of this communist faith was put
forward by Trotsky, in a speech at the 1924 Congress of the Soviet
Communist Party:
Comrades,
none of us wishes to be or can be right against the party. In
the last instance the party is always right, because it is the
only historic instrument which the working class possesses, for
the solution of its fundamental tasks.... One can be right only
with the party and through the party because history has not
created any other way for realization of one’s
rightness.
In Isaac
Duetscher, The
Prophet Unarmed. (New York: Random House, 1965), p.
139.
On all this,
see in particular Williamson M. Evers, "Lenin and His Critics on
the Organizational Question," (unpublished MS.) pp.
15ff.
2. Frank S.
Meyer, The Moulding of Communists: The Training of the
Communist Cadre (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1961).
3. Nikolai
Bukharin, Finance Capital in Papal Robes: A Challenge
(New York: Friends of the Soviet Union, n.d.), pp. 10–11. Also
see Evers, "Lenin and his Critics," p. 15.
4.
Newsweek (March 27, 1961), p. 105.
5.
Newsweek (April 10, 1961), pp. 9, 14.
Copyright © 1972, 1990 by Murray N. Rothbard. Copyright ©
2003 by the Ludwig von Mises
Institute. All rights reserved.
Murray Rothbard
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