>>2873
>You're using a false dichotomy.
I'm not. I mean any measure that involves regulation, no matter how small.
>Its why Finnish schools are awesome.
They are awesome because they are the least authoritarian school system. The US schools don't teach competitiveness, they teach obedience.
>Power plants are natural monopolies
They aren't. You can still choose between different ones.
>Deregulation leads to Enron scandals.
Regulation - and there's already a shitton of regulation - didn't prevent the Enron scandal. It didn't prevent the economic crisis, neither in Europe nor the US. It is, however, a huge pain in the ass for entrepreneurs everywhere.
>You need to smash companies apart again and again when they inevitably consolidate if efficiency is the goal.
A free market would do that on its own. Economy of scale, cartels being inherently unstable... that kind of stuff.
>Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith, and nearly any philosopher frim that era.
I know this idea isn't new. I'd like to have it explained, instead of being referred to a book. That's just cheap.
>Rich idiot better man up and selflessly give me some fucking water from his swimming pool or I'm gonna start a communist revolution, chain and blow his brains out. He doesn't deserve to live if he's not using his resources to help me to get water. Objectivism would lead to a Communist backlash.
So would democratic socialism, because looters gonna loot. Communism must be killed as an idea, slowly and steady, to get rid off it. Democratic socialism does a piss poor job at it. Instead, it makes concessions to the revolutionaries who want to put everyone and everything into the gulag.
>Schindler is not an Objectivist. He was a shitty businessman his whole life, and was only good at corrupting officials for government contracts during the excesses of war. Hardly the paradign of Objectivist efficiency.
Whether he was a good or a bad businessman is completely irrelevant. My point was that what you deem altruism is perfectly compatible with objectivism. Giving away parts of your income to help others is not just allowed, but encouraged under objectivism.
>socrates should only care about his own skin
Says who? I'm sure he would've given his life in the name of his philosophy or his students. Giving it to uphold a corrupt law was as selfless as it was pointless.
>You still haven't shown me martyrs who made ultimate sacrifices
Neither have you.
>An army of men raised to be Objectivists would drop their weapons and run like dogs when the Nazis invaded their country.
Nope, because an army of objectivists would rather die than allow themselves and their loved ones to be enslaved by the nazis.