http://www.alternet.org/books/how-ayn-rand-became-big-admirer-serial-killer?akid=12725.294211.ZA7bwi&rd=1&src=newsletter1030979&t=23
One reason most countries don't find the time to embrace Ayn Rand's
thinking is that she is a textbook sociopath. In her notebooks Ayn Rand
worshiped a notorious serial murderer-dismemberer, and used this killer
as an early model for the type of "ideal man" she promoted in her more
famous books. These ideas were later picked up on and put into play by
major right-wing figures of the past half decade, including the key
architects of America's most recent economic catastrophe -- former Fed
Chair Alan Greenspan and SEC Commissioner Chris Cox -- along with other
notable right-wing Republicans such as Supreme Court Justice Clarence
Thomas, Rush Limbaugh and South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford.
The
loudest of all the Republicans, right-wing attack-dog pundits and the
Teabagger mobs fighting to kill health care reform and eviscerate
"entitlement programs" increasingly hold up Ayn Rand as their guru.
Sales of her books have soared in the past couple of years; one poll
ranked Atlas Shrugged as the second most influential book of the 20th century, after the Bible.
The
best way to get to the bottom of Ayn Rand's beliefs is to take a look
at how she developed the superhero of her novel, Atlas Shrugged, John
Galt. Back in the late 1920s, as Ayn Rand was working out her
philosophy, she became enthralled by a real-life American serial killer,
William Edward Hickman, whose gruesome, sadistic dismemberment of
12-year-old girl named Marion Parker in 1927 shocked the nation. Rand
filled her early notebooks with worshipful praise of Hickman. According
to biographer Jennifer Burns, author of Goddess of the Market, Rand was
so smitten with Hickman that she modeled her first literary creation --
Danny Renahan, the protagonist of her unfinished first novel, The Little
Street -- on him.
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